Science | malaria 'Star Wars' Scientists Take Aim at Mosquitoes Anti-malaria Weapons of Mosquito Destruction can zap bugs 100ft away with lasers By Rob Quinn Posted Mar 14, 2009 4:06 AM CDT Copied New anti-malaria projects are finding novel ways to combat mosquitoes, including lasers, poisoned blood, and weapons that disrupt the senses mosquitoes use to find their human prey. (AP Photo/USDA) Rocket scientists who worked on ways to beat Soviet missiles a generation ago are now using their lasers to zap mosquitoes, the Wall Street Journal reports. Researchers looking for ways to combat malaria have rejigged "Star Wars" technology to create a contraption that can pick off individual mosquitoes from 100 feet away. They believe the technology could someday protect entire villages. Malaria kills a million people a year, but efforts to eradicate it were lagging until researchers recently got a fresh injection of cash from big donors like Bill Gates. Now the scientists who tried to help end the Cold War are “just trying to make a dent in a war that's actually gone on a lot longer and claimed a lot more lives,” says one astrophysicist. Read These Next Ukraine claims world's longest sniper kill. JD Vance is Gavin Newsom's latest online target. Miss Universe contestant dies in freak accident months after wedding. In one day, tragedy for two Carnival Cruise guests. Report an error