- + UAH Business of Space Conference highlights NASA - Blue Origin partnership; restored Apollo Test Stand celebrates 500th hot-fire test —In an era defined by ambitions to return to the Moon and push onward to Mars, a groundbreaking partnership between NASA and Blue Origin is demonstrati...
- + Astronomer Chris Impey to receive 2026 Lewis Thomas Prize—Impey, Distinguished Professor of Astronomy at the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory, will receive the Lewis Thomas Prize for Writing about ...
- + Electric Field Tunes Vibrations to Ease Heat Transfer—New research from the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory, in collaboration with The Ohio State University and Amphenol Corporation, ...
- + When Geometry Matters: Gradient-Wall Microresonators Enable Large-Scale Optical Trapping—Optical trapping is a powerful tool for manipulating microscopic particles, but conventional approaches often suffer from limited trapping range and p...
- + From Pest to Plastic Fighter: Cockroach Metabolism Unlocks Rapid Polystyrene Degradation—Plastic pollution remains one of the most persistent environmental crises, with polystyrene (PS) among the hardest polymers to break down due to its s...
- + Too Many Deer in Your Area? Birth Control Could Help—<img src="https://www.newswise.com/legacy/image.php?image=https://now.tufts.edu/sites/default/files/styles/large_1366w_912h/public/uploaded-assets/...
- + Breaking Through Water Treatment Limits with Defect-Free, High-Efficiency Next-Generation Ceramic Filters!—Dr. Hong-Ju Lee and Dr. In-Hyuk Song of the Nano Materials Research Division at the Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS) have successfully deve...
- + LLNL and Meta Co-Develop Future of Materials with Groundbreaking Polymer Chemistry Dataset for Training AI Models—In a pioneering partnership to accelerate materials discovery with artificial intelligence (AI), researchers from Lawrence Livermore National Laborato...
- + Thermodynamic Computing Advances with Design and Training—What if the thermal noise that hinders the efficiency of both classical and quantum computers could be used as a power source? What if computers could...
- + Deepfake Songs Are Exploding. This Tool Shuts Them Down.—In collaboration with the startup company Cauth AI, faculty and students at Binghamton University, State University of New York have developed My Musi...
- + FAU Lands $4.5M U.S. Air Force T-1A Jayhawk Flight Simulator—FAU has received a U.S. Air Force T-1A Jayhawk Mixed Reality and 3D Motion flight simulator through an in-kind grant from the U.S. Air Force Office of...
- + KRICT Launches Equipment Training for Uzbek Chemical Researchers—Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT, President Young-Kuk Lee) announced that it has officially launched a research equipment traini...
- + How Argonne's Aurora Supercomputer Is Opening Up New Horizons for Fusion Energy Research—With Argonne's Aurora supercomputer, scientists are simulating various aspects of fusion energy reactors in the goal to create a powerful, emission-fr...
- + Digital Science Partners with HERSA to Build Security, Integrity and Trust in UK Research—Digital Science and HERSA are partnering to boost research security and integrity for UK universities, and to build trust in science.
- + Safe Artificial Intelligence Isn't Enough, According to New Georgia Tech Research—Fairness, honesty, and transparency are needed in AI for it to benefit humanity.
- + Bird Flu Rampant Among Black Vultures—More than four out of every five dead black vultures examined by University of Georgia researchers tested positive for highly pathogenic avian influen...
- + Artificial Intelligence Makes X‑Ray Spectroscopy Five Times Faster, Smarter and Less Prone to Human Error—Argonne scientists have created an AI-driven method that dramatically speeds up a powerful X-ray technique. The new approach reduces the number of mea...
- + UAH hosts inaugural Army Best Drone Warfighter competition—The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), a part of The University of Alabama System, hosted the inaugural Army Best Drone Warfighter Competition...
- + Can Biology Fight Back? Emerging Strategies to Protect Animals From Microplastic Damage—Microplastics and nanoplastics are increasingly recognized as pervasive environmental contaminants that accumulate in animals through food chains, pos...
- + Can Greener Clothes Flatten Carbon Emissions? New Pathways for China's Textile Industry—The textile and apparel industry is one of the most carbon-intensive sectors embedded in modern lifestyles, yet its emissions remain poorly understood...
- + Breakthrough in Overcoming Tribocorrosion in Marine Metals!—A joint research team led by Dr. Young-Jun Jang and Dr. Jongkuk Kim of the Extreme Materials Research Institute, in collaboration with Dr. Sungmo Moon...
- + Why Thickness Matters: Revealing a Hidden Lever in Ph-Responsive Polymer Surfaces—Strong polyelectrolyte brushes are widely used to engineer smart surfaces, yet they have long been considered insensitive to pH changes. New research ...
- + Griffin In The Loop: A Digital Multiphysics Test Bed For Next-Gen Reactors—As U.S. energy demand increases, advanced nuclear energy has emerged as an important option for 24-7 reliable electricity and heat generation.
- + A Molecular Fix for Sodium-Ion Batteries' Weakest Link—Sodium-ion batteries are emerging as a promising alternative to lithium-based systems, but their performance has long been limited by unstable anode m...
- + DOE National Quantum Research Centers Reach Breakthrough Towards Building Scalable Quantum Computers—A partnership between the Quantum Science Center and the Quantum Systems Accelerator, two U.S. Department of Energy national quantum information scien...
- + KRICT Successfully Concludes the 2026 International Forum on Next-Generation Secondary Batteries—Amid intensifying global competition for technological leadership in secondary batteries, a major international platform for global collaboration and ...
- + Plants Speak in Chemicals -- Scientists Are Learning How to Listen—Plants may look inert and harmless, but, at any given moment, they're waging chemical warfare against attackers, preparing tissues to withstand freezi...
- + University of Utah's Agreement with Federal Patent Officials to Help Propel Innovation Across Mountain West—The University of Utah is now home to a federally run community engagement office established by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, or USPTO, to he...
- + Two Argonne scientists receive 2025 DOE Early Career Research Awards—Two Argonne scientists, David Kaphan and Yong Zhao, have been named to the U.S. Department of Energy's Early Career Research Program for separate proj...
- + Department of Energy Award to Power Nuclear Research with Machine Learning—Georgia Tech's Qi Tang has received an Early Career Research Program award from the Department of Energy's Office of Science. The $875,000 grant suppo...
- + Sniffer Dogs Team Up with Air Sampling Device to Tackle Wildlife Trafficking—Wildlife trafficking is worth an estimated USD$20 billion a year and is very hard to track. However, thanks to a new Australian study using sniffer do...
- + ETRI Unveils "Safe LLaVA," a Vision Language Model with Enhanced Safety—Korean researchers have achieved a breakthrough in the safety of generative AI. They developed a vision language model optimized for safety and releas...
- + New Microscopy Technique Lets Scientists See Cells in Unprecedented Detail and Color—BETHESDA, MD - Scientists have developed a new imaging technique that uses a novel contrast mechanism in bioimaging to merge the strengths of two powe...
- + Scientists Show How Your Body Senses Cold--And Why Menthol Feels Cool—BETHESDA, MD - When you step outside on a winter morning or pop a mint into your mouth, a tiny molecular sensor in your body springs into action, aler...
- + Sometimes Less Is More: Scientists Rethink How to Pack Medicine into Tiny Delivery Capsules—BETHESDA, MD - The tiny fatty capsules that delivered COVID-19 mRNA vaccines into billions of arms may work better when they're a little disorganized....
- + Researchers Discover How Tuberculosis Bacteria Use a "Stealth" Mechanism to Evade the Immune System—BETHESDA, MD - Scientists have uncovered an elegant biophysical trick that tuberculosis-causing bacteria use to survive inside human cells, a discover...
- + Scientists Build Low-Cost Microscope to Study Living Cells in Zero Gravity—BETHESDA, MD - As space agencies prepare for human missions to the Moon and Mars, scientists need to understand how the absence of gravity affects liv...
- + A Hidden Reason Inner Ear Cells Die - And What It Means for Preventing Hearing Loss—BETHESDA, MD - Proteins long known to be essential for hearing have been hiding a talent: they also act as gatekeepers that shuffle fatty molecules ac...
- + Scientists Discover Why We Know When to Stop Scratching an Itch—BETHESDA, MD - When you scratch an itch, something tells your brain when to stop. That moment of relief, when scratching feels enough is not accidenta...
- + Produce Hydrogen and Oxygen Simultaneously From a Single Atom! Achieve Carbon Neutrality with an 'All-in-One' Single-Atom Water Electrolysis Catalyst—The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST, President Oh Sang-rok) announced that a research team led by Dr. Na Jongbeom and Dr. Kim Jong Min...
- + Argonne's Upgraded X-Ray Source Being Linked with Nation's Top Supercomputers to Handle Increased Data Flow—In a major step toward accelerating scientific discovery, the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory is working to tightly inte...
- + New 'Scimitar-Crested' Spinosaurus Species Discovered in the Central Sahara—The first indisputable evidence of a new species of Spinosaurus in over a century belongs to S. mirabilis, named for its scimitar-shaped crest and fou...
- + Argonne Battery Breakthroughs Power Success for U.S. Industry—Working with industry is a central part of battery research at Argonne. Collaborative efforts with U.S. companies have contributed to substantial batt...
- + SciComm Webinar on the Challenges in Peer Review, Preprints, and Predatory Publishing - Registration Open Now—"All the Science That's Fit to Promote" is the topic for the February Research to Practice Webinar
- + New Review Identifies Pathways for Managing PFAS Waste in Semiconductor Manufacturing—As semiconductor manufacturing rapidly expands to meet growing global demand for generative AI and advanced electronics, a new review published in Env...
- + Tiny RNA Molecules in Sperm, Big Impact on Baby Health—Mounting evidence from research on nematodes to mice indicate that a father's environment, such as what he eats or if he is exposed to stress or toxic...
- + Science on the Double: How an AI-Powered 'Digital Twin' Accelerates Chemistry and Materials Discoveries —Scientists have developed Digital Twin for Chemical Science, an AI-powered platform that facilitates real-time analysis of chemical reactions essentia...
- + Origami-Inspired Space Structure Is Compact When Launched, Expanded in Space—High-powered satellites use electromagnetic waveguides to deliver energy from one component to another. Typically, they are made of heavy, inflexible ...
- + Chulalongkorn University's Engineering Prepares for "SMRs"--Newer, Safer Small Nuclear Power Plants for Clean Energy in Thailand —Chulalongkorn University aims for carbon neutrality, promotes knowledge in nuclear energy and Small Modular Reactor (SMR) technology, safer small-scal...
- + When a Little Disease Helps: How Mild Leaf Infection Builds Healthier Soils—Plants constantly interact with soil microbes, shaping whether soils promote or suppress future plant growth. This study reveals that not all plant di...
- + How a Single Gene Keeps Melon Fruits in Check—Fruit shape is a defining trait that influences both crop quality and consumer preference, yet its genetic control remains poorly understood in many f...
- + Can We Predict Ionospheric Turbulence? A Bayesian Model Offers a Global Warning System—Space weather can disrupt satellite navigation and communication systems by triggering rapid fluctuations in the ionosphere. A new study introduces a ...
- + One Strategy to Block Both Drug-Resistant Bacteria and Influenza: New Broad-Spectrum Infection Prevention Approach Validated—A research team led by Drs. Choong-Min Ryu and Hwi Won Seo at the Infectious Disease Research Center of the Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and...
- + NNSA Administrator Williams Visits LLNL to Discuss Stockpile Modernization, AI and Future Deterrence—U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Under Secretary for Nuclear Security and Administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration ...
- + Q&A: Growing Novel Ultra-Pure Materials for Tomorrow's Electronics—Pairing elements such as sulfur, selenium or tellurium with metals produces compounds whose atomic interactions give them unusual and useful electrica...
- + Fossil Evidence Reveals How Grey Wolves Adapt Diets to Climate Change—Grey wolves adapt their diets as a result of climate change, eating harder foods such as bones to extract nutrition during warmer climates, new resear...
- + KRICT Develops Microfluidic Chip for One-Step Detection of PFAS and Other Pollutants—The research team overcame these issues by designing a trap-based microfluidic device that confines a small volume of extractant droplet inside a micr...
- + WHOI Scientist Catherine Walker Joins NASA-Selected EDGE Satellite Mission—Satellite measuring land, polar, and coastal regions could launch by 2030
- + AI Captures Particle Accelerator Behavior to Optimize Machine Performance—A team of data scientists and accelerator experts at Jefferson Lab, working in collaboration with university and DOE national laboratory partners, hav...
- + Protecting Against Large Damaging Energy Bursts in Fusion Energy Devices—In fusion devices, plasmas can develop large instabilities that release strong energy bursts. These energy bursts can damage the device's interior. Re...
- + A Wearable Textile Sensor Sets New Standard for Continuous Heart and Vessel Monitoring—Continuous cardiovascular monitoring is vital for preventing and managing heart disease, yet most wearable devices struggle with motion artifacts and ...
- + Unlocking Hidden Iron Power Boosts Sodium-Ion Battery Performance—Sodium-ion batteries are emerging as a promising alternative to lithium-based systems for large-scale energy storage, but their energy density has lon...
- + New Study Shows mRNA Therapy Could Protect Patients From Radiation-Induced Skin Damage Caused by Cancer Treatment—Radiation therapy is highly effective at killing cancer cells, but it often harms healthy skin around the treatment area, a common side effect experie...
- + Battery Game Changer: AI Identifies Key Conditions for All-Solid-State Battery Electrolyte Materials—A research team led by Dr. Byungju, Lee at the Computational Science Research Center of the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST, President...
- + Building an Algorithm for Oral Health—With a new lab and course, Tufts University School of Dental Medicine expands the role of AI in research and curriculum
- + China's Building Boom Emerges as a Hidden Driver of Air-Pollution Deaths—Construction-related activities are responsible for roughly half of China's premature deaths linked to ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5), accord...
- + China's Water-Supply Carbon Emissions: The Hidden Impact of Economic Growth—Water supply systems are crucial to urban infrastructure but are also significant contributors to carbon emissions, with their electricity-intensive p...
- + Common Drug Residues Trigger Synaptic Damage in Fish Brains—Pharmaceutical residues in aquatic environments are increasingly recognized as hidden neurotoxic threats. New research reveals that chronic exposure t...
- + Sustainable Wastewater Treatment: Scaling Decentralized Systems for Dense Urban Areas—The global search for sustainable urban wastewater management solutions has led to the exploration of scaled decentralized systems (SDSs) that reduce ...
- + Two UAH CCRE Doctoral Researchers Secure Patents to Defend Against Sophisticated Cyber Attacks—Transforming doctoral research into patented technology is a challenging achievement, particularly while completing a Ph.D. Dr. Aaron Werth and Dr. Ri...
- + How AI Is Accelerating Disease Biology Research
- + Smaller, Smarter, Speedier, Stacked: Engineering Next-Gen Computing—At Georgia Tech, engineers are finding new ways to shrink transistors, make systems more efficient, and design better computers to power technologies ...
- + Georgia Tech Researchers Commercialize New Technology for Faster Water and Environmental Monitoring- Skopii—Through the startup Skopii, Georgia Tech researchers are translating lab-developed imaging and AI technology into a market-ready platform for faster, ...
- + Georgia Tech Computing Hosts Venture Capital Summit to Push Research Beyond the Lab—The College of Computing is working to connect student and faculty entrepreneurs with early-development startup support.
- + Is the Whole Universe Just a Simulation?—How do you know anything is real? Some things you can see directly, like your fingers. Other things, like your chin, you need a mirror or a camera to ...
- + Confronting the Roadblocks in Medical Technology Innovation—Clinicians and researchers outlined why breakthrough devices often fall short in clinical settings and emphasized the need for interdisciplinary colla...
- + From Fusion to Self-Driving Cars, High Performance Computing and AI are Everywhere in 2026—Georgia Tech researchers say HPC and artificial intelligence (AI) advances this year are poised to improve how people power their homes, design safer ...
- + Why Lithium Metal Batteries Fail--and How Mechanics May Hold the Key—Lithium metal batteries promise dramatically higher energy density than today's lithium-ion systems, yet their widespread use remains limited by unsta...
- + KRICT Demonstrates 100kg per day Sustainable Aviation Fuel Production from Landfill Gas—A research team led by Dr. Yun-Jo Lee at the Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology (KRICT), in collaboration with EN2CORE Technology Co., Lt...
- + Argonne-Northwestern Research Collaborations on Display at Recent Technical Meeting—The Northwestern-Argonne Institute for Scientific and Engineering Excellence (NAISE) hosted a technical meeting in September, at which researchers, fa...
- + Securing America's Critical Materials Supply Chain
- + A Molecular Shield Against Light: Stabilizing Perovskite Solar Cells at Record Efficiency—Perovskite solar cells have reached power conversion efficiencies comparable to established photovoltaic technologies, yet their vulnerability to ligh...
- + AI meets electrocatalysis: Lessons from three decades and a roadmap ahead—Electrocatalysis sits at the heart of clean hydrogen production, fuel cells, and carbon dioxide conversion, yet progress toward scalable, high-perform...
- + The Science Behind the Syringe—University of Miami engineers are partnering with AbbVie to reshape the future of injectable dermal products through advanced materials research.
- + AI Streamlines Deluge of Data from Particle Collisions—Scientists have developed a novel artificial intelligence (AI)-based method to dramatically tame the flood of data generated by particle detectors at ...
- + Why Ozone Persists: The Invisible Chemistry Behind Clean Air—Surface ozone pollution remains stubbornly persistent even as emissions of traditional precursors decline. New research reveals that oxygenated volati...
- + Better Brain-Machine Interfaces Could Allow the Paralyzed to Communicate Again—Biomedical engineer Chethan Pandarinath collaborates with neurosurgeons and scientists across the country in a massive project to help patients with A...
- + Mini Tornadoes Spin Out Dried Cellulose Nanofibers—Researchers at the University of Maine and the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) are collaborating on a new way t...
- + FAU Engineering Launches the Center for Omics Technologies and Data Engineering—FAU engineering's Center for Omics Technologies and Data Engineering (CODE) advances innovation in engineering and computation, using AI-driven analyt...
- + Zooming in, Zooming Out: Q&A with SLAC's Deputy Director for Science & Technology Alberto Salleo—Less than a year into his new role as SLAC's deputy lab director for science and technology and chief research officer, Salleo is leaning into his pen...
- + Scientists Uncover Why Some Brain Cells Resist Alzheimer's Disease—New research by UCLA Health and UC San Francisco has uncovered why certain brain cells are more resilient than others to the buildup of a toxic protei...
As of 3/10/26 4:10am. Last new 3/9/26 7:27am. Score: 454
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