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Searching for the decay of nature"s rarest isotope: Tantalum-180m

Tantalum is one of the rarest elements and has multiple stable isotopes. The least abundant tantalum isotope, Ta-180 is found naturally in a long-lived excited state, a feature unique to this isotope. In excited states, a nuclei's protons or neutrons.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgMar 18th, 2024

AI-driven approach challenges traditional views on protein structure

In a recently published article in Nature Communications,, a team offers an AI-driven approach to explore structural similarities and relationships across the protein universe. The team includes members from the University of Virginia—including Phi.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsOct 10th, 2024

Yes, nature is complex—but saving our precious environment means finding ways to measure it

Nature loss directly threatens half the global economy. The rapid destruction of biodiversity should alarm the many Australian businesses dependent on nature, such as those in agriculture, tourism, construction and food manufacturing. Yet nature cons.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 10th, 2024

Scientists accelerate uranium beam with record power

Scientists and engineers at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) have reached a new milestone in isotope studies. They accelerated a high-power beam of uranium ions and delivered a record 10.4 kilowatts of continuous beam power to a target. The.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 10th, 2024

Trial results set benchmark for future clinical applications of lipidomic technologies

Results of the first phase of the Ceramide Ring Trial have been published in Nature Communications, representing a significant landmark in the field of lipidomics......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 10th, 2024

Researchers discover new isotope plutonium-227

A research team led by researchers at the Institute of Modern Physics (IMP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) has synthesized a new plutonium isotope, plutonium-227. Their study is published in Physical Review C......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 10th, 2024

New photonics approach enhances quantum computation efficiency

A recent study, published in Nature Photonics, by Prof. Yaron Bromberg and Dr. Ohad Lib from the Racah Institute of Physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has made significant strides in advancing quantum computing through their research on ph.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsOct 9th, 2024

Increase access to nature in all daily environments and in education, say environmental scientists

Although access to nature is a basic human right, people's actual use of green spaces is subject to inequalities. A Kobe University-led research team analyzed what conditions make it more likely that people are exposed to nature across generations: t.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 8th, 2024

Key molecule in wound healing identified through mapping of long non-coding RNA molecules

A new study from Karolinska Institutet and the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences has identified an RNA molecule that is important for skin wound healing. The research, published in Nature Communications, may have implications for the treatment of h.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 8th, 2024

Q&A: How artificial lights are dimming firefly survival rates

While light bulbs make our nights brighter, they are dimming the social lives, and survival rates, of some of nature's natural light-makers: fireflies......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 8th, 2024

Detecting Planck-scale dark matter by leveraging quantum interference

While various studies have hinted at the existence of dark matter, its nature, composition and underlying physics remain poorly understood......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 8th, 2024

UN biodiversity summit in Colombia aims to turn words into action

Two years after a landmark UN-brokered deal to protect nature from a massive wave of destruction, delegates will gather at a new COP in Colombia in late October to assess their progress......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 7th, 2024

Astronomers investigate the nature of a fast-spinning intermediate polar

Using various X-ray space observatories, astronomers from Columbia University in New York and elsewhere have investigated CTCV J2056–3014—an intermediate polar containing one of the fastest-spinning white dwarfs. Results of the study, published S.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsOct 7th, 2024

Drowned by hurricane, remote N.Carolina towns now struggle for water

Nicole Crane, exhausted, tearful and unwashed after a week of searching for a neighbor swept away by the raging waters of Hurricane Helene, dreams of taking a shower......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsOct 7th, 2024

Addressing climate change and inequality: A win-win policy solution

Climate change and economic inequality are deeply interconnected, with the potential to exacerbate each other if left unchecked. A study published in Nature Climate Change sheds light on this critical relationship using data from eight large-scale In.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 4th, 2024

Traces of antimatter in cosmic rays reopen the search for "WIMPs" as dark matter

One of the great challenges of modern cosmology is to reveal the nature of dark matter. We know it exists (it constitutes more than 85% of the matter in the universe), but we have never seen it directly and still do not know what it is......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 4th, 2024

Centuries ago, the Maya storm god Huracán taught that when we damage nature, we damage ourselves

The ancient Maya believed that everything in the universe, from the natural world to everyday experiences, was part of a single, powerful spiritual force. They were not polytheists who worshipped distinct gods but pantheists who believed that various.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 3rd, 2024

The medicines we take to stay healthy are harming nature. Here"s what needs to change

Evidence is mounting that modern medicines present a growing threat to ecosystems around the world. The chemicals humans ingest to stay healthy are harming fish and other animals......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 3rd, 2024

People infer the past better than the future, study finds

If you started watching a movie from the middle without knowing its plot, you'd likely be better at inferring what had happened earlier than predicting what will happen next, according to a new Dartmouth-led study published in Nature Communications......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 3rd, 2024

Study reveals oyster reefs once thrived along Europe"s coasts—now they"re gone

Oysters once formed extensive reefs along much of Europe's coastline—but these complex ecosystems were destroyed over a century ago, new research shows. The paper, published in the journal Nature Sustainability, is titled "Records reveal the vast h.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 3rd, 2024

Study: Conservative users" misinformation sharing drives higher suspension rates, not platform bias

A new paper, "Differences in misinformation sharing can lead to politically asymmetric sanctions," published today in Nature suggests that the higher quantity of social media policy enforcement (such as account suspensions) for conservative users cou.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsOct 2nd, 2024