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Published Bowtie resonators that build themselves bridge the gap between nanoscopic and macroscopic
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Two nanotechnology approaches converge by employing a new generation of fabrication technology. It c...
Published New type of star gives clues to mysterious origin of magnetars
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Magnetars are the strongest magnets in the Universe. These super-dense dead stars with ultra-strong...
Published MXene-coated devices can guide microwaves in space and lighten the payload
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One of the most important components of satellites that enable telecommunication is the waveguide, w...
Published Understanding how soil traps carbon
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With 2,500 billion tons of carbon, soil is one of Earth's largest carbon sinks. Researchers used exp...
Published Big impacts from small changes in cell
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Tiny things matter -- for instance, one amino acid can completely alter the architecture of the cell...
Published First evidence of how the Asian malaria mosquito is spreading drug-resistant malaria in Africa
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Research has led to the discovery of the role played by the Asian malaria mosquito (Anopheles stephe...
Published Stranger than friction: A force initiating life
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As the potter works the spinning wheel, the friction between their hands and the soft clay helps the...
Published Zika's shape-shifting machinery, and a possible vulnerability
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Viruses have limited genetic material -- and few proteins -- so all the pieces must work extra hard. ...
Published Only 18% of the global land area that is needed for human well-being and biodiversity is currently protected
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An international group of researchers finds that conserving about half of global land area could mai...
Published The sweet stuff: How insects tell sugars apart
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Whereas humans have one receptor on their tongues that can detect all sorts of sweet things, from re ...
Published No win-win? Input-efficient technologies might not be so efficient after all
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To address natural resource scarcity, pollution, and other harmful effects of climate change, some s...
Published Some plastic straws degrade quicker than others
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Not all plastics are created the same, and some last longer in the ocean than others. Scientists hav ...
Published Have researchers found the missing link that explains the mysterious phenomenon known as fairy circles?
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Fairy circles, a nearly hexagonal pattern of bare-soil circular gaps in grasslands, initially observ...
Published Cell types in the eye have ancient evolutionary origins
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In a comparative analysis across vertebrates of the many cell types in the retina -- mice alone have...
Published Researchers uncover mechanisms behind enigmatic shapes of nuclei
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White blood cells known as neutrophils feature a nucleus that is structured strikingly different tha...
Published How food availability could catalyze cultural transmission in wild orangutans
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The proverb "necessity is the mother of invention" has been used to describe the source from which o...
Published It turns out, this fossil 'plant' is really a fossil baby turtle
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Researchers re-examined a plant fossil found decades ago in Colombia and realized that it wasn't a p...
Published A bright idea for recycling rare-earth phosphors from used fluorescent bulbs
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Recycling facilities collect glass and mercury from thrown away fluorescent bulbs, but discarded lig...
Published Artificial intelligence makes gripping more intuitive
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Artificial hands can be operated via app or with sensors placed in the muscles of the forearm. New r...
Published How many fish constitute a school?
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Physicists are also interested in fish -- above all when they are researching the formation of struc ...