How scientists are trying to solve something RFK Jr. hates about your food
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Monica Giusti studied two test tubes partially filled with a light lilac-colored liquid. A perplexed look crossed her face. The Ohio State...
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Know what the Bible says and understand why it matters with the fully revised NIV Study Bible featuring updated notes, full-color design, and Comfort Print typography designed for immersive reading.
A trusted companion for deep personal study, sermon prep, and devotional reading highlighted in our faith and leadership coverage.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Monica Giusti studied two test tubes partially filled with a light lilac-colored liquid. A perplexed look crossed her face. The Ohio State...
(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- The global precision fermentation industry generated $1.3 billion in 2021, and is anticipated to generate $34.9 billion by 2031, witnessing a CAGR of 40.5% ...
Not long ago, the idea of diagnosing a disease with a droplet of blood was considered a pipe dream. Today, this technology could soon become a reality.
(MENAFN - Market Press Release) November 19, 2025 4:37 am - Apelo Consulting has released a report on "Global Digital Therapeutics Market (By Component, Application, End User, Region), Key company ...
(MENAFN - Market Press Release) November 19, 2025 3:36 am - The Automated Machine Learning (AutoML) market was valued at USD 2,132.6 Million in 2024 and is expected to register a revenue CAGR of ...
As our evolution slows and industrialization and technology accelerates, a growing body of research suggests that human biology is struggling to keep pace. Many of the chronic stress-related health issues we face today aren’t personal failings or modern inconveniences – they’re the predictable result of forcing Stone Age physiology into a world it was never built for.Continue ReadingCategory: Biology, ScienceTags: University of Zurich, anthropology, Anthropocene, Evolution, Human, nature, Urban Planning
Denton Loudermill Jr. watched every Kansas City Chiefs game at his sister’s house with his family. The Kansas native and his late father were diehard fans. So, when the 2024 Super Bowl champions’ victory parade coincided with the one-year anniversary of his dad’s death, Loudermill thought attending would be healing. He donned a Chiefs-red sweatshirt, [...]The post Grieving family blames false US shooting accusations for death of NFL fan appeared first on Digital Journal.
Pecans, America's only native major nut, have a storied history in the United States. Today, American trees produce hundreds of millions of pounds of pecans—80% of the world's pecan crop. Most of that crop stays here. Pecans are used to produce pecan milk, butter and oil, but many of the nuts end up in pecan pies.
(MENAFN - GlobeNewsWire - Nasdaq) Laser Printer Market driven by rising office automation, high-speed printing demand, cost efficiency, improved print quality, expanding SMB usage, and growth in ...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA unveiled close-up pictures on Wednesday of the interstellar comet that’s making a quick one-and-done tour of the solar system.
In two new papers, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign explore the reconstruction of multispectral and hyperspectral images from RGB for chemical analysis of sweet potatoes and maize.
*HSP90 buffers certain BRCA1 mutations, allowing them to persist in humans and promote resistance to PARP inhibitor treatments*Low-dose HSP90 inhibition restored PARP inhibitor sensitivity in HSP90-buffered BRCA1-mutant cells*Researchers identified specific features of HSP90 buffering to determine patients most likely to benefit from combination treatment
Researchers are developing a method to recreate conditions of hypersonic flight to test materials for new aircraft. The upgraded Advanced Photon Source is key to this effort.
The rare interstellar comet, also known as 3I/ATLAS, was first discovered in July and has been photographed several times.
This Tiny 'Spark' Could Help Solve The Mystery of Lightning's Origins ScienceAlertScientist captures tiny particles for clues on what sparks lightning Phys.orgLaser tweezers help scientists solve mystery of lightning bolt trigger Interesting Engineering
A new study of 1960s maps, many of which were created by young people, has provided important fresh evidence of the timing and extent of habitat losses caused by agricultural intensification and urban growth in England and Wales.
NASA Releases Images of Comet 3I/ATLAS: It ‘Doesn’t Look Like a Spacecraft’ The New York TimesView Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Through NASA’s Multiple Lenses NASA Science (.gov)Nasa releases close-up pictures of comet flying by from another star system The GuardianFirst Limit on Technological Radio Transmission from 3I/ATLAS Avi Loeb – MediumNASA missions captures images as an interstellar comet zips by Mars CNN
Harvard economist Lawrence Summers is stepping away from his teaching and administrative roles at the university as the school investigates his connections to Jeffrey Epstein , the New York Times reports. Summers, who previously served as Harvard's president, will also step down as director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and...
The Acoustical Society of America will host two virtual press conferences as a part of their joint meeting with Acoustical Society of Japan and offer in-person sessions throughout the week. The virtual press conferences will feature a wide range of newsworthy sessions from the upcoming meeting, including presentations on the use of sound for pest control, the ideal artificial electric vehicle noise, detecting gunshots from illegal rainforest poaching, and more. Media are invited to register for the virtual press conferences and/or attend in-person conference sessions.
In the weeks after perihelion, Masi photographed 3I/ATLAS shortly after it emerged from behind the sun's glare.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's office has released almost 1,400 pages of emails with Elon Musk's companies—though the vast majority are blacked out, per a new report from ProPublica . The release comes after a public records request from the Texas Newsroom, which sought to shed light on the relationship...
The new method helps policymakers determine which parts of an energy system have the biggest impact and merit extra attention.
The ISRO on Wednesday announced that it has successfully demonstrated the boot-strap mode start test of the CE20 Cryogenic engine, which powers the upper stage of the Launch Vehicle Mark -3 (LVM3) rocket.The test was conducted for 10 second under vacuum conditions at the High-Altitude Test (HAT) facility at ISRO Propulsion Complex, Mahendragiri on November 7, it said.According to ISRO, the CE20 cryogenic engine is already qualified for operation at thrust levels between 19 and 22 tonnes with a single start in flight and is cleared for use in the Gaganyaan missions.Under normal conditions, the engine ignition begins under tank head pressure, followed by a turbopump start up using a stored gas start-up system, the space agency said. For future missions, multiple in-flight restarts of the CE20 engine will be required for mission flexibility, towards multi-orbit missions.With the current configuration, each restart requires an additional start-up gas bottle and associated systems,
Most vessel traffic in Scotland's Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) is going undetected, potentially putting at risk the marine creatures these sites are meant to protect, new research has found.
Rebecca Stup '23, MS '26, is a master's student in the lab of Antonio DiTommaso, a weed ecologist and associate dean and director of the Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station (Cornell AES). DiTommaso's lab has been exploring planting wildflower strips along farmland as a strategy to increase biodiversity, attract pollinators and combat weeds.
A Washington State University-led study in Guatemala found the sources of drinking water people believe to be safe and clean often contain potentially dangerous bacteria.
Temperate rainforests are among the rarest habitats on Earth, supporting unique biodiversity and providing vital benefits from climate regulation and natural flood management to supporting human well-being.
What makes plants tolerant to nutrient fluctuations? An international research team led by the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and involving the Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research (IPK) has conducted a study on the micronutrient boron. The researchers analyzed 185 gene data sets from the model plant Arabidopsis. Their goal is to then be able to transfer the findings to the important crop plant rapeseed.
Katalyst Space Technologies will use Northrop Grumman's air-launched Pegasus rocket for its upcoming mission, which will send a spacecraft to boost the orbit...
Katalyst selects Pegasus to launch Swift reboost mission SpaceNewsPrivate mission to save NASA space telescope will launch in 2026 on a rocket dropped from a plane SpacePegasus XL dusted off for NASA’s Swift rescue run theregister.comNASA will invest $30 million to move a disused telescope that could fall to Earth in 2026 Earth.com
Howard Howland, Ph.D. ’68, a neurophysiologist who studied the eyes of humans and animals, died Oct. 26 in Ithaca. He was 92.
Eight Cornell faculty, including Provost Kavita Bala, are featured as “New Heroes” in a portrait series by Christopher Michel, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine’s inaugural artist-in-residence.
Anduril has 15 business lines creating everything from surveillance and attack drones to autonomous fighter jets and sensors to go into space.
The Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has successfully completed the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) and released its first physics results.
Two UBC Okanagan engineering students are transforming classroom research into a practical tool for communities facing increasing wildfire risk.
Targeting and treating diseases first requires being able to find specific cells--which is challenging because they travel within the body and can "hide."
NASA is providing more images and information about the interstellar object that's passing through our solar system right now, known as 3I/ATLAS.
"DMT is illegal."The post The “Sober” RFK Jr. Has Allegedly Been Smoking DMT appeared first on Futurism.
The Nexus of Open Science symposium took place on Nov. 14, bringing together leaders in neuroscience, clinical research, biomedical engineering and data science to explore topics ranging from FAIR data and software standards to improving the accessibility of AI tools in biomedical contexts like neuroimaging. Among the talks given, Georg Oeltzschner, Associate Professor of Radiology and Radiological Science at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, discussed a topic that may sound rather familiar to students with Organic Chemistry experience: Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. To those without previous exposure, however, a NMR spectroscopy diagram may just look like a series of arbitrary peaks."Ultimately, because the protons in these compounds have characteristic chemical environments and their local electron density changes the magnetic field locally," Oeltzschner explained, "each chemical environment has a different frequency, and these sets of frequencies are highly characteristic for different molecules."Outside dreaded organic chemistry midterms, NMR spectroscopy holds great utility in real-world applications, providing a non-invasive pathway to detect compounds in the human body, helping to diagnose and monitor the progression of diseases."In the human brain, we are able to differentiate about 20 molecules at about millimolar levels... We get markers of neuronal health, cell growth, neurotransmitters, antioxidants, markers of tumors and metabolites that are involved in energy metabolism," Oeltzschner said.One specific example of NMR spectroscopy's utility in disease monitoring lies in the field of neuro-oncology, in which researchers are interested in tracking the effects of the tumor-suppressing drugs ivosidenib and vorasidenib on low-grade gliomas with the isocitrate dehydrogenase-1 (IDH1) mutation. This mutation is unique because it produces a compound called 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG), which interferes with normal gene expression, epigenetic regulation and cellular differentiation. The drawback to traditional imaging methods, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), is that the effects these drugs have on tumor growth require months or even years to clearly manifest. This causes substantial delays in optimizing treatment regimens for patients in limited time. Meanwhile, magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy may serve as a viable alternative."If we do MR spectroscopy, we see a response to ivosidenib treatment within days to weeks," Oetzlschner said. "The 2-HG signal disappears within days of treatment commencement... [Thus,] spectroscopy is a useful modality to quickly determine if the target engagement is actually working as intended. This is a piece of information that oncologists are very keen to obtain, especially because they cannot get it with any other imaging modality."Although MR spectroscopy holds great potential for imaging applications, it is important to acknowledge that MR spectroscopy diagrams themselves are not images. Unlike qualitative images, quantitative spectroscopy diagrams (spectra) are not intuitively interpretable and require extensive analysis - many organic chemistry students can testify to the difficulty of interpreting NMR spectra. Because spectra are not images, they are often not very compatible with an infrastructure of disease diagnosis and monitoring that heavily relies on images. A significant barrier to the advancement of spectroscopy in medical applications lies in the difficulty of reproducibility."The main problem is, we're looking at [super weak] signals... so this is a fight against noise at every turn... Ultimately... MR spectroscopy estimates of metabolite concentrations. But to get there from our raw data, we have all these [processing] steps that have to happen in between."There are a multitude of ways to process the spectra data and reduce noise, depending on the research or clinical context. Each differing decision, however, affects the end results and interpretation. The processing step of modeling also presents its own challenges."Why do we have to model spectroscopy data in the first place? Again, we want more than the qualitative approach... The [parameters] that we care most about are the amplitudes [signal integrations] that tell us how much of a particular metabolite is in our spectrum. These optimization problems tend to be ill defined; really difficult to solve," Oeltzschner explained.By the time the quantification step is completed, the same data may produce drastically different conclusions in the hands of separate labs. Consequently, the results become non-reproducible and regularization becomes necessary. For a long time, scientific research was held in the hands of an exclusive few, with high entry barriers for non-expert users, but that has gradually begun to change for the better in recent years. Oetzlschner and his collaborators have joined the fight for more open and equitable science by developing an open-source platform, Osprey, for processing and quantitative analyzing in-vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy data."Osprey basically pulls all these modules into one automated workflow," Oeltzschner explained. "No matter what scanner your data come from, it's loaded and processed in a fully vendor-agnostic way. The tools to load and process these are all now out in the open for anyone to use. Anyone can read these data sets. There's no need to reinvent the wheel and write your own code for this anymore."Although versatile and streamlined, Osprey is just one step of a much larger scientific movement - one guided by a simple desire to share."We're trying to continue this innovative spirit. None of these aforementioned tools [including Osprey] were explicitly funded, so this was largely a labor of love by the people who believed that the field needed change," Oetzlschner emphasized. "We hope that we have made first steps towards bringing spectroscopy into the fold and making it more accessible to people who want to use it."
More people are falling behind on paying their bills to keep on the lights and heat their homes, according to a new analysis of consumer data—a warning sign for the US economy and another political headache for President Trump, the AP reports. Past due balances to utility companies jumped...
SpaceX launched another batch of its Starlink internet satellites in a nighttime liftoff from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Tuesday (Nov. 18).
Golden Retriever Stuns TikTok With His Hockey Skills PetHelpful
In striking new statistics, experts warn of social media's growing grip on young people, with use among children and teens soaring by more than 200% since before COVID and showing no sign of decline.
Altris Engineering to Commence Gap Analysis Leading into an Optimised Preliminary Economic Assessment for the Ashram Rare Earth Project
(MENAFN - EIN Presswire) EINPresswire/ -- Neurological disease research has long been constrained by two key issues: lengthy research cycles and the lack of physiological relevance in existing in ...
A first-of-its-kind collaboration, the Hill-Maini Lab hosts two-Michelin-star chef to explore how creativity, technology, and taste help shape a more sustainable future for food.
The day-long celebration offered family-friendly learning, free giveaways and simple science experiments designed to spark curiosity.The post AstroDay brings space, Sun and discovery to Kona first appeared on University of Hawaiʻi System News.
The innovative Celeritas project, led by the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, provides a software tool that makes sure simulations used to analyze particles can run on the fastest supercomputers, accelerating answers about the nature of the universe.
A new report shows that happiness in the U.S. is falling at one of the fastest rates in the developed world. CBS News correspondent Lana Zak has more.
United Nations climate talks are bubbling to a critical point, with host Brazil pressing negotiators to make progress on key issues. Brazil sent a direct letter to nations and released a draft text on Tuesday that pressed for decisions on...
A new study published in JAMA Network Open analyzed national hospital admission data from 2016 to 2023 to assess whether decriminalizing psychedelics--such as psilocybin ("magic mushrooms")--has led to more people needing emergency or inpatient care.
Ca' Foscari University of Venice is co-directing a major international archaeological mission in the Kasserine region of Tunisia. The excavations, focused on the area of ancient Roman Cillium, on the border with present-day Algeria, concentrate on imposing structures linked to oil production, including two torcularia, olive pressing facilities, one of which has been identified as the second largest Roman oil mill in the entire Empire.
Retailers don't need big financial incentives to get consumers to return used clothing—but they do need the right message. A new peer-reviewed study in the journal Manufacturing & Service Operations Management finds that simply telling consumers their returned items will be "kept out of landfills" significantly increases participation in take-back programs. But when retailers disclose that they may resell those items for profit, participation plummets.
The crew of Shenzhou-21 awaits a new spacecraft after their own ship was used to rescue the crew of the previous mission. The previous mission's ship was damaged by space debris and may not be safe to fly.
We re-examine the expected yield of Gaia astrometric planet detections using updated models for giant-planet occurrence, the local stellar population, and Gaia’s demonstrated astrometric precision. Our analysis combines a semi-analytic model that clarifies key scaling relations with more realistic Monte Carlo simulations. We predict 7,500±2,100 planet discoveries in the 5-year dataset (DR4) and 120,000±22,000 over [...]The post On The Exoplanet Yield Of Gaia Astrometry appeared first on Astrobiology.
A study published in Strategic Management Journal sheds light on the subtle yet significant role that unelected officials play in helping corporations secure successful contract bids.
Researchers at Rice University and Oak Ridge National Laboratory have unveiled a physics-based model of magnetic resonance relaxation that bridges molecular-scale dynamics with macroscopic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signals, promising new insight into how contrast agents interact with water molecules. This advancement paves the way for sharper medical imaging and safer diagnostics using MRI.
Dusk starts to settle across the landscape. The dirt trail, lit by the last licks of sunlight, winds through the trees. The sound of your shuffling footfalls fills the quiet.
Fifty-seven percent of Australians are willing to pay more for clothing made from natural fibers, new Swinburne research reveals.
Researchers at the Institute for Molecular Science (IMS) have definitively resolved a two-decade-long controversy regarding the direction of electron spin on the surface of gold.
The thermodynamic dissipation theory for the origin of life asserts a thermodynamic imperative for the origin of life, suggesting that the fundamental molecules of life originated as self-organized molecular photon dissipative structures (chromophores or pigments) that proliferated over the ocean surface to absorb and dissipate into heat the Archean solar soft UV-C (205-285 nm) and [...]The post Abiogenesis On Different Star Types; a Dissipative Photochemical Perspective appeared first on Astrobiology.
The World Institute of Kimchi (President: Hae Choon Chang), a government-funded research institute under the Ministry of Science and ICT, has confirmed in a new study that bacteriophages, which were previously considered a 'nuisance' during the process of food fermentation, actually play the role of key helpers that facilitate the survival of lactic acid bacteria (LAB).
As golden hour settles over Avtar Dhillon’s farm in Abbotsford, B.C., rows of delicate purple flowers are in full bloom. Inside lies an ancient spice some Canadian farmers are beginning to get excited about.
Ocean Tunneling May Have Set Off an Ancient Pacific Cooldown eos.org
Chulalongkorn University proudly congratulates Assoc. Prof. Dr. Pitcha Jongvivatsakul and Dr. Rongrong Cheacharoen for receiving the 23rd L'Oreal-UNESCO For Women in Science 2025 Award.
The interstellar object 3I/ATLAS, dubbed the "spaceship" that has captivated scientists across the globe
Researchers at MIT Lincoln Laboratory have developed a first-of-its-kind hydrophone built around a simple, commercially available microphone. The device, leveraging a common microfabrication process known as microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), is significantly smaller and less expensive than current hydrophones, yet has equal or exceeding sensitivity. The hydrophone could have applications for the U.S. Navy, as well as industry and the scientific research community.
Quantum imaging settles 20-year debate on gold surface electron spin direction Phys.org
The emergence of protocells from a dilute prebiotic environment is a fundamental challenge in origins-of-life research which requires the simultaneous overcoming of molecular dilution, the establishment of metabolic cycles and the formation of selectively permeable compartments. But where and how such critical conditions are satisfied is very obscure and debated. We demonstrate, using contemporary model [...]The post Mineral-guided Molecular Enrichment: An Interfacial Driving Force For Protocell Emergence On Early Earth appeared first on Astrobiology.
Savannah Dunn tells us what she learned about treating snakes during her time with the Turtle Rescue Team.
Nov. 18, 1989: The Cosmic Background Explorer launches Astronomy Magazine
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)
Archaeologists unearth a Bronze Age city that was lost for 3,500 years Earth.com'Sophisticated' Bronze Age city unearthed in Kazakhstan 'transforms our understanding of steppe societies' Live ScienceVast Bronze Age city discovered in the plains of Kazakhstan New ScientistArchaeologists Reveal 3,500-Year-Old ‘City of Seven Ravines’ Newsweek‘Vast’ Bronze Age settlement uncovered for first time by archaeologists The Independent
New oxidation process on the moon revealed China.org.cn'Rust' on the moon? Hematite discovered in China's Chang'e-6 lunar samples news.cgtn.comNew lunar minerals discovered in Chang'e-6 samples mark major scientific breakthrough news.cgtn.com‘Iron rust’ found in lunar soil upends what we knew about Moon’s surface The Independent
University of Illinois researchers have developed a new theoretical framework that could dramatically reduce the cost and complexity of predicting chemical reaction energetics without sacrificing accuracy. The method may one day replace the current computational models used in quantum chemistry.
Resolve Therapeutics, a mid-stage clinical biopharmaceutical company pioneering non-immunosuppressive drugs for inflammatory diseases today announced it will highlight its platform and clinical progress in a presentation entitled "Cell-free Nucleic Acids as Drug Targets in Autoimmunity and Acute Brain Injury".
A research team led by Professor Wang Qining from the School of Advanced Manufacturing and Robotics, Peking University, has developed the world's first portable underwater exoskeleton system that assists divers' knee movement, significantly reducing air consumption and muscle effort during dives.
Researchers at the University of Adelaide, in collaboration with German tech company Compolytics, have developed a non-destructive leaf scanning method that can accurately predict the cannabinoid concentrations of cannabis plants.
The Trump administration on Monday announced a major new proposal that could significantly limit the federal government’s ability to enforce laws concerning pollution in waterways and wetlands.
Researchers from The Grainger College of Engineering have combined their fundamental knowledge of metals with new machine learning techniques to generate detailed spatial maps. Their method paves the way towards faster and more accurate autonomous material design.
After combing through nearly 30 years of data produced by Jefferson Lab's Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) in studies of the proton and its excited states, physicists are getting the most complete picture yet of how hadron mass emerges. The monumental work, featured on the cover of a special edition of the journal Symmetry, spans from CEBAF's first experiments to present day and lays out the future discoveries that would be unlocked by studies with a higher-energy electron beam.
The Columbia Memorial Space Center and the city of Downey celebrated the groundbreaking of its expansion project on Monday, Nov. 17.
Hydrogen fuels represent a clean energy option, but a major hurdle in making its use more mainstream is efficient storage. Hydrogen storage requires either extremely high-pressure tanks or extremely cold temperatures, which means that storage alone consumes a lot of energy. This is why metal hydrides, which can store hydrogen more efficiently, are such a promising option.
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Floating solar panels are emerging as a promising clean energy solution with environmental benefits, but a new study finds those effects vary significantly depending on where the systems are deployed.Researchers from Oregon State University and the U.S. Geological Survey modeled the impact of floating solar photovoltaic systems on 11 reservoirs across six states. Their simulations showed that the systems consistently cooled surface waters and altered water temperatures at different layers within the reservoirs. However, the panels also introduced increased variability in habitat suitability for aquatic species.“Different reservoirs are going to respond differently based on factors like depth, circulation dynamics and the fish species that are important for management,” said Evan Bredeweg, lead author of the study and a former postdoctoral scholar at Oregon State. “There’s no one-size-fits-all formula for designing these systems. It’s ecology - it’s messy.”While the floating solar panel market is established and growing in Asia, it remains limited in the United States, mostly to small pilot projects. However, a study released earlier this year by the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory estimated that U.S. reservoirs could host enough floating solar panel systems to generate up to 1,476 terawatt-hours annually, enough to power approximately 100 million homes.Floating solar panels offer several advantages. The cooling effect of the water can boost panel efficiency by an estimated 5 to 15%. The systems can also be integrated with existing hydroelectric and transmission infrastructure. They may also help reduce evaporation, which is especially valuable in warmer, drier climates.However, these benefits come with questions about potential impacts on aquatic ecosystems, an area that has received limited scientific attention.“Understanding the environmental risks and the variability in ecological responses to floating photovoltaic deployment is crucial for informing regulatory agencies and guiding sustainable energy development,” Bredeweg said.The new study used advanced modeling techniques to assess the implications of floating solar panel deployment on entire reservoirs. Researchers examined reservoirs in Oregon, Ohio, Washington, Idaho, Tennessee and Arkansas, analyzing two-month periods in both summer and winter.They found that changes in temperature and oxygen dynamics caused by floating solar panels can influence habitat availability for both warm-water and cold-water fish species. For instance, cooler water temperatures in summer generally benefit cold-water species, though this effect is most pronounced when panel coverage exceeds 50%.The researchers note the need for continued research and long-term monitoring to ensure floating photovoltaic systems support clean energy goals without compromising aquatic ecosystems.“History has shown that large-scale modifications to freshwater ecosystems, such as hydroelectric dams, can have unforeseen and lasting consequences,” Bredeweg said. Co-authors of the paper include Ivan Arismendi of Oregon State’s Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences; Sarah Henkel of the Hatfield Marine Science Center at Oregon State; and Christina Murphy of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Maine Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit.
Recent double-blind, placebo-controlled trials on the multi-ingredient formula Mind Lab Pro® suggest this new wave of natural nootropics may offer genuine cognitive benefits.
Developed through a partnership with industry, the research will help improve efficiency and resiliency for technology used in next-generation electric motors and other applications. When current flows through a wire, it doesn't always have a perfect path. Tiny defects within the wire mean current must travel a more circuitous route, a problem for engineers and manufacturers seeking reliable equipment.
Argonne's 2005 GridFTP breakthrough with Globus wins the SC25 Test of Time Award for transforming how massive datasets move across supercomputing systems to power global research.
At first glance, helping those on the other side of a conflict seems like an act of compassion and progress. Yet new research from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem shows that even seemingly well-intentioned initiatives can produce the opposite result.
img src="https://www.newswise.com/legacy/image.php?image=/images/uploads/2025/11/17/691b2eb34b510_1.jpgwidth=100height=150" alt="Newswise image" /Anthocyanins, the pigments that give blueberries their vivid coloration, are also recognized for their potential health benefits. However, their biological effectiveness depends largely on chemical modifications such as acylation, which can increase molecular stability and human absorption.
Real-life kaiju : What B.C.’s Burgess Shale reveals about bizarre Cambrian creatures Canadian Geographic
An international team of astronomers have employed the Spektr-RG spacecraft and various ground-based telescopes to investigate a distant quasar known as ID830. Results of the new observations, published November 7 on the pre-print server arXiv, indicate that ID830 is the most X-ray luminous radio-loud quasar known to date.
Western Sydney University has launched a groundbreaking new study on the use of intimate partner violence (IPV) by young men aged 16–25. This is the first Australian study on this topic, and the first to speak to young men who use violence themselves.
Ferroelectric materials are used in infrared cameras, medical ultrasounds, computer memory and actuators that turn electric properties into mechanical properties and vice-versa. Most of these essential materials, however, contain lead and can therefore be toxic.
Stargazers across the United States are in for a treat this weekend as the annual Leonids meteor shower lights up the night sky.
The apple of my eye: How I’ve created a plant-health tracker for farmers in Tanzania Nature
Researchers have taken a significant step toward creating a standardized language for describing the aromas of cannabis and hemp.
The Graduate School welcomed nearly 60 new Dean’s Scholars at an event to honor students who were nominated and selected for this distinction for their demonstrated academic excellence, leadership and service.
Future mission to Mars should focus on these caverns. The post Scientist Say They’ve Found Caves on Mars That May Contain Life appeared first on Futurism.
Breakthrough in atomic clock technology promises advances in precise timekeeping and fundamental science University of Toronto
Business professor Adam Mersereau used mathematical models to answer a deceptively simple question with big implications.