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Sexual Harassment Still Pervades Science

How academic institutions can prevent sexual harassment and protect scientists.....»»

Category: scienceSource:  sciamJun 10th, 2023

Illuminating the unavoidable imperfections of nanostructures

A new study by a collaborative team from the University of Twente and the e-Science Center in Amsterdam compares the transmission of light through a utopian model with a real 3D nanostructure. These nanostructures are integral to our daily technologi.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 29th, 2024

Chemists achieve PFAS-free synthesis of fluorinated pharmaceutical and agrochemical compounds

Chemists at the University of Amsterdam have developed a method to furnish a range of molecules with a trifluoromethyl group attached to a sulfur, nitrogen or oxygen atom. Their procedure, which is published in Science, avoids the use of PFAS reagent.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 29th, 2024

Drowning tomatoes for science

I can barely hear Esther Ngumbi over the roar of greenhouse fans as she shows me around her rooftop laboratory in Morrill Hall. The benches are full of tomato plants, and the tomatoes don't look good. Half of the plants are submerged in bins of water.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 29th, 2024

Researcher: Playing technology games and making science fun helps young kids solve visual problems, grasp ideas better

As I watched my sons, Wavhudi and Rivhavhudi, play games on my phone before bedtime, I was captivated by their enthusiasm and how deeply they were engaged—especially when the games involved math or science. Both boys experienced speech delays and I.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 29th, 2024

Protein mutant stability can be inferred from AI-predicted structures

Researchers at the Center for Algorithmic and Robotized Synthesis within the Institute for Basic Science have taken a significant step forward in understanding the stability of proteins by leveraging the power of AI......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsAug 29th, 2024

What if you flew your warp drive spaceship into a black hole?

Warp drives have a long history of not existing, despite their ubiquitous presence in science fiction. Writer John Campbell first introduced the idea in a science fiction novel called Islands of Space......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsAug 29th, 2024

Q&A: Protecting people and animals from eastern equine encephalitis

With mosquito-borne disease eastern equine encephalitis currently circulating in New England, Emily Reinhardt '20 (CAHNR), assistant clinical professor, and Ash Nakashima, graduate student, in UConn's Department of Pathobiology and Veterinary Science.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 28th, 2024

How a survey of over 2,000 women in the 1920s changed the way Americans thought about female sexuality

American women still have fewer orgasms than men, according to new research that suggests that decades after the sexual revolution, the "orgasm gap" is still very much in effect......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 28th, 2024

Children and the internet: Helping kids navigate this modern minefield

The United States' most senior public health official, surgeon-general Vivek Murthy, believes social media platforms should come with warning labels. The United Nations' education, science and culture agency says smartphones should be banned in schoo.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 28th, 2024

Reconfigurable sensor can detect particles 0.001 times the wavelength of light

In recent years, advances in photonics and materials science have led to remarkable developments in sensor technology, pushing the boundaries of what can be detected and measured. Among these innovations, non-Hermitian physics has emerged as a crucia.....»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsAug 27th, 2024

Toy Inventor’s Notebook: Weather Bird

Make a science toy that can forecast the weather. The post Toy Inventor’s Notebook: Weather Bird appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers......»»

Category: gadgetSource:  makezineonlineRelated NewsAug 27th, 2024

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov awaits charges in France as firm denies law-breaking

Telegram accused of not cooperating on drug trafficking and child sexual content. Enlarge / Pavel Durov, CEO and co-founder of Telegram, speaks at TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2015 on September 21, 2015, in San Francisco, California. (c.....»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsAug 26th, 2024

Researchers propose inexpensive 2.2-kilometer telescope that could make exoplanet movies

Can a kilometer-scale telescope help conduct more efficient science, and specifically for the field of optical interferometry? This is what a study recently posted to the preprint server arXiv hopes to address......»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsAug 26th, 2024

Physicists ease path to entanglement for quantum sensing

Nothing in science can be achieved or understood without measurement. Today, thanks to advances in quantum sensing, scientists can measure things that were once impossible to even imagine: vibrations of atoms, properties of individual photons, fluctu.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 26th, 2024

Nontoxic ceramic could replace lead-based electronic components

The ceramic produced in Prof. Igor Lubomirsky's lab at the Weizmann Institute of Science seemed too good to be true. It belongs to a class of materials that are the backbone of many essential technologies but that unfortunately also create an environ.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 24th, 2024

Saturday Citations: Tarantulas and their homies; how mosquitoes find you; black holes not mysterious at all

So much science news this week. It's like a torrential deluge of information bursting explosively through a levee of ignorance. Who built that levee, anyway? How did they get that through the legislature? Anyway, of the hundreds of stories we reporte.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 24th, 2024

Bioengineers develop a new environmentally friendly adhesive polymer

A team of bioengineers at the University of California, Berkeley, has developed a new kind of environmentally friendly adhesive polymer. In their study, published in the journal Science, the group used an electrophilic stabilizer to prevent a certain.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 23rd, 2024

Citizen science project identifies 20 new astronomical discoveries

A citizen science project, which invites members of the public to take part in identifying cosmic explosions, has already identified 20 new astronomical discoveries......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 23rd, 2024

Researchers demonstrate metasurfaces that control thermal radiation in unprecedented ways

Researchers with the Advanced Science Research Center at the CUNY Graduate Center (CUNY ASRC) have experimentally demonstrated that metasurfaces (two-dimensional materials structured at the nanoscale) can precisely control the optical properties of t.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsAug 23rd, 2024

Hydrogels can learn to play Pong

Work could lead to new "smart" materials that can learn and adapt to their environment. This electroactive polymer hydrogel "learned" to play Pong. Credit: Cell Reports Physical Science/Strong et al......»»

Category: topSource:  arstechnicaRelated NewsAug 23rd, 2024