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Study shows the majority of California"s coastal airports are vulnerable to increased flooding caused by climate change

Most of California's population and its largest airports are located along the Pacific coastline, which is increasingly impacted by storm surges, sea level rise, and erosion due to climate change. In the next 30 years, sea level along the coast is ex.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgDec 6th, 2022

Dogma-challenging telomere findings may offer new insights for cancer treatments

A new study led by University of Pittsburgh and UPMC Hillman Cancer Center researchers shows that an enzyme called PARP1 is involved in repair of telomeres, the lengths of DNA that protect the tips of chromosomes, and that impairing this process can.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News1 hr. 41 min. ago

Discharge of scrubber water into the Baltic Sea is responsible for hundreds of millions in costs

Discharge from ships with so-called scrubbers cause great damage to the Baltic Sea. A new study from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, shows that these emissions caused pollution corresponding to socioeconomic costs of more than €680 milli.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News1 hr. 41 min. ago

Self-critical perfectionism gnaws on students" well-being already in lower secondary school, says study

Young people's perfectionism is manifested as concern over their competence and fear of making mistakes......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News9 hr. 9 min. ago

Grief, unity, and resilience: Study examines the impact of memorial days in Israel

A recent study at the Hebrew University examines the impact of memorial days in Israel on national unity amidst political polarization......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News9 hr. 9 min. ago

Study explores whether psychological capital will help with work engagement in tough moments

A quarrel with a co-worker, task overload, a difficult relationship with the boss; each of us reacts slightly differently to problematic events in our professional lives. Such events often result in decreased work motivation and engagement......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News9 hr. 9 min. ago

Researchers explore raw materials and firing technology for porcelain from late sixth-century Xing kiln

In the process of firing ceramics, the appearance, structure and properties of ceramics are determined by raw materials and firing technology, so the study of raw materials and firing technology of ancient ceramics has always been a very important ar.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News15 hr. 9 min. ago

Eating the way we do hurts us and the planet, Canadian study finds

In an age of abundance and variety in food options, are Canadians eating better than they were half a century ago? According to a recent paper by researchers at McGill University and the International Food Policy Research Institute, those relying on.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News15 hr. 9 min. ago

Ultrathin samples with surface phonon polariton enhance photoinduced dipole force

A new study has been led by Prof. Xing-Hua Xia (State Key Lab of Analytical Chemistry for Life Science, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Nanjing University). While analyzing the infrared photoinduced force response of quartz, Dr. Jian Li.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News15 hr. 9 min. ago

Study reveals rockburst processes, characteristics and triggering mechanisms

Field observations have revealed that highly stressed D-shape tunnels experience sidewall rockburst triggered by impact loads stemming from rock blasting or other mining-related dynamic disturbances......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News15 hr. 9 min. ago

Bee body mass, pathogens and local climate influence heat tolerance

How well bees tolerate temperature extremes could determine their ability to persist in a changing climate. But heat tolerance varies between and within populations, so a research team led by Penn State entomologists examined bee physical traits—su.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 9 min. ago

License suspensions disproportionately hurt marginalized communities, finds study

Drivers in New York state were issued more than 1 million license suspensions in 2017, and about two-thirds of them were for "traffic debt"—failure to pay a traffic ticket or to appear in traffic court—while less than 10% were for driving infract.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 9 min. ago

Do good lessons promote students" attention and behavior?

Students are better able to regulate themselves in lessons that they consider to be particularly well implemented. This is the conclusion drawn from a study by the DIPF | Leibniz Institute for Research and Information in Education, published in the j.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 9 min. ago

Study of new method used to preserve privacy with US census data suggests accuracy has suffered

A small team of political scientists, statisticians and data scientists from Harvard University, New York University, and Yale University, has found that by switching to a new method to better protect privacy, the U.S. Census Department has introduce.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

Variety in building block softness makes for softer amorphous materials

Scientists from Tokyo Metropolitan University have created a new model for disordered materials to study how amorphous materials resist stress. They treated groups of atoms and molecules as squishy spheres with varying softness......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

Scientists use high pressure NMR spectroscopy to study structure of dynamic proteins

A pressure of 3,000 bar is applied to the cold shock protein B of Bacillus subtilis in a small tube in the NMR spectroscopy laboratory at the University of Konstanz. This is roughly three times the water pressure at the deepest point of the ocean. Th.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

Compared to billions of years ago, Venus has almost no water: New study may reveal why

Planetary scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered how Venus, Earth's scalding and uninhabitable neighbor, became so dry......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

Turbid waters keep the coast healthy, finds study

To preserve the important intertidal areas and salt marshes off our coasts for the future, we need more turbid water. That is one of the striking conclusions from a new study conducted by a Dutch-Chinese team of researchers and published in Nature Ge.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

Researchers find Northern Hemisphere glaciation enhances orbital- and millennial-scale Asian winter monsoon variability

In a study published in Nature Communications, researchers have documented that persistent millennial-scale Asian winter monsoon (AWM) intensity fluctuations were superimposed on 41-kyr and ~100-kyr orbital variability during both the warmer (higher.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

A leap toward carbon neutrality: New catalyst converts carbon dioxide to methanol

Researchers at the University of Michigan have developed a catalyst material known as cobalt phthalocyanine that converts carbon dioxide—a significant driver of climate change—into renewable fuels such as methanol......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago

Collecting live snakes in remote Amazon regions for study is no easy task—here"s how we do it

Brazil records an average of 29,000 snakebites a year, leading to around 130 deaths. And it is in the Amazon that the greatest number of cases occur. This region is home to 38 of the 75 species of venomous snakes recorded in Brazil......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated News18 hr. 41 min. ago