Living organisms are like exquisite works of art, and their language is the gene. A gene is a sequence of segments on a long DNA chain with a specific function; it is the basic unit of hereditary information. DNA is like the paper that carries the text; its classic double helix structure and strict base pairing rules (A with T, C with G) ensure ultra-high fidelity information replication. When a cell needs to "read" instructions, the long DNA chain undergoes intricate folding and compression, combining with histones and other proteins to form a highly organized structure—a chromosome—thus safely storing molecules several meters long within the micrometer-sized cell nucleus. From DNA to chromosomes, it is a wise encapsulation of information from linear sequences to three-dimensional spatial organization. The immersive exhibit "The Essence of Life" (2728*2717*4121mm) is designed to decipher this microscopic "book of nature." Visitors are first drawn to a huge slice of cell model, direct