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Categories: Biology: Microbiology, Chemistry: Inorganic Chemistry
Published New material transforms light, creating new possibilities for sensors
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A new class of materials that can absorb low energy light and transform it into higher energy light might lead to more efficient solar panels, more accurate medical imaging and better night vision goggles.
Published Breaking through the limits of stretchable semiconductors with molecular brakes that harness light
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A research team develops a highly stretchable and high-performance organic polymer semiconductor.
Published Mirror, mirror on the wall... Now we know there are chiral phonons for sure
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New findings settle the dispute: phonons can be chiral. This fundamental concept, discovered using circular X-ray light, sees phonons twisting like a corkscrew through quartz.
Published Sustainable technique to manufacture chemicals
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A newly published study details a novel mechanochemistry method that can produce chemicals using less energy and without the use of solvents that produce toxic waste.
Published Breakthrough: Scientists develop artificial molecules that behave like real ones
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Scientists have developed synthetic molecules that resemble real organic molecules. A collaboration of researcher can now simulate the behavior of real molecules by using artificial molecules.
Published When water temperatures change, the molecular motors of cephalopods do too
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Working with live squid hatchlings, scientists find the animals can tune their proteome on the fly in response to changes in ocean temperature via the unique process of RNA recoding. The findings inspire new questions about basic protein function.
Published Dentists identify new bacterial species involved in tooth decay
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Large study in children reveals Selenomonas sputigena as a key partner of Streptococcus in cavity formation.
Published Octopuses rewire their brains to adapt to seasonal temperature shifts
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Octopuses don't thermoregulate, so their powerful brains are exposed to -- and potentially threatened by -- changes in temperature. Researchers report that two-spot octopuses adapt to seasonal temperature shifts by producing different neural proteins under warm versus cool conditions. The octopuses achieve this by editing their RNA, the messenger molecule between DNA and proteins. This rewiring likely protects their brains, and the researchers suspect that this unusual strategy is used widely amongst octopuses and squid.
Published Physicists discover an exotic material made of bosons
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Take a lattice -- a flat section of a grid of uniform cells, like a window screen or a honeycomb -- and lay another, similar lattice above it. But instead of trying to line up the edges or the cells of both lattices, give the top grid a twist so that you can see portions of the lower one through it. This new, third pattern is a moiré, and it's between this type of overlapping arrangement of lattices of tungsten diselenide and tungsten disulfide where physicists found some interesting material behaviors.
Published Calculation shows why heavy quarks get caught up in the flow
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Theorists have calculated how quickly a melted soup of quarks and gluons -- the building blocks of protons and neutrons -- transfers its momentum to heavy quarks. The calculation will help explain experimental results showing heavy quarks getting caught up in the flow of matter generated in heavy ion collisions.
Published Water molecules define the materials around us
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A new paper argues that materials like wood, bacteria, and fungi belong to a newly identified class of matter, 'hydration solids.' The new findings emerged from ongoing research into the strange behavior of spores, dormant bacterial cells.
Published Remains of an extinct world of organisms discovered
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Newly discovered biomarker signatures point to a whole range of previously unknown organisms that dominated complex life on Earth about a billion years ago. They differed from complex eukaryotic life as we know it, such as animals, plants and algae in their cell structure and likely metabolism, which was adapted to a world that had far less oxygen in the atmosphere than today.
Published To groom or not to groom: 'Triage' in the ant kingdom
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Social ants are masters of cooperative disease defense. They collectively take care of each other to prevent the spread of infections within a colony. But how does an individual ant know whom it should groom? A multidisciplinary team of researchers combined experimental and theoretical approaches to get a detailed look into ants' sanitary decision-making.
Published Coral disease tripled in the last 25 years. Three-quarters will likely be diseased by next century
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Research suggests warming temperatures will see nearly 80 per cent of coral in reefs diseased in the next 80 years.
Published Biological clocks of people and malaria parasites tick in tune
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Could the next weapon against malaria come from a better understanding of biological clocks? A new study shows that malaria parasites sync their gene activity with the circadian rhythms of their host, like two pendulum clocks with synchronized swings. If scientists can identify the molecular signals behind this mysterious synchronicity, they might be able to develop new anti-malarial drugs that throw malaria's internal clock out of step with its host, essentially 'jet-lagging' the parasites.
Published More complex than expected: Catalysis under the microscope
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Usually, catalytic reactions are analyzed by checking which chemicals go into a chemical reactor and which come out. But as it turns out, in order to properly understand and optimize catalysts, much more information is necessary. Scientists developed methods to watch catalytic reactions with micrometer resolution under the microscope -- and the process is much more complex than previously thought.
Published The problems with coal ash start smaller than anyone thought
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Burning coal doesn't only pollute the air. The resulting ash can leach toxic chemicals into the local environments where it's kept. New research shows that the toxicity of various ash stockpiles relies heavily on its nanoscale structures, which vary widely between sources. The results will help researchers predict which coal ash is most environmentally dangerous.
Published A compound from fruit flies could lead to new antibiotics
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Research shows that the natural peptide, called drosocin, protects fruit flies from bacterial infections by binding to ribosomes in bacteria. Once bound, drosocin prevents the ribosome from making new proteins.
Published Viruses hidden in coral symbiont's genetic material are a potential threat to reefs
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Microscopic algae that corals need for survival harbor a common and possibly disease-causing virus in their genetic material.
Published Robot 'chef' learns to recreate recipes from watching food videos
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Researchers have trained a robotic 'chef' to watch and learn from cooking videos, and recreate the dish itself.