Lange Zeit war es ruhig geworden um den wackeren Marsrover Perseverance. Doch jetzt schreibt der unverwüstliche Roboter neue Schlagzeilen: Denn laut der NASA fand der Marsrover möglicherweise Hinweise auf Leben auf dem Roten Planeten. Den entscheidenden Fund machte Perseverance bereits im Juli 2024. Damals fuhr der Marsrover durch ein ausgetrocknetes, 400 Meter breites Flussbett namens Neretva Vallis im sogenannten Jezero-Krater (45 Kilometer breit). Wasser, das in den Jezero-Krater strömt...| PC-WELT
Wissenschaftler aus den USA und China haben bereits 2024 entdeckt, dass der Erdkern seine Bewegung verlangsamt und sogar gestoppt hat – bezogen auf die Erdkruste. Doch bisher nahm die breite Öffentlichkeit kaum Notiz von dieser bemerkenswerten Änderung. Der Erdkern besteht aus Metallen und macht, wie der Name schon sagt, das Innere der Erde aus. Er besteht aus einem flüssigen äußeren Kern (aus Eisen und Nickel und weiteren Elementen; hier entsteht das Magnetfeld der Erde) und einem fes...| PC-WELT
Mehrere Stadtteile von Berlin sind seit Dienstag von einem massiven Stromausfall betroffen. Darunter Johannisthal, Bohnsdorf, Niederschöneweide, Grünau, Adlershof, Altglienicke und umliegende Ortsteile. Auch heute müssen zahlreiche Einwohner ohne Strom auskommen, da die Wiederherstellung der Stromversorgung erst ab morgen erfolgen soll. Für circa 50.000 Haushalte bedeutet das, dass sie zunächst komplett auf Technik verzichten müssen. Ohne Strom ist weder Kochen noch Fernsehen, noch Dusc...| PC-WELT
Dr. Mario Wriedt is investigating the use of metal-organic frameworks to physically bind to and remove per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances from contaminated sites, including water resources. Check out the video by clicking on the play button. University of Texas at Dallas scientists are working to limit the lifespan of potentially hazardous forever chemicals by developing […]| News Center
Five University of Texas at Dallas faculty members received 2025 Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) awards from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to support research to design innovative electric machines, improve robotic-system security, create temperature sensations for virtual reality users, advance digital-storage technology and synthesize new drugs. The recipients of the five-year grants include […]| News Center
A University of Texas at Dallas researcher uses a serological pipette and pipette controller to feed adherent mammalian cells cultured in a dish. Researchers have developed a method that creates unique, tamper-proof genetic “fingerprints” to protect engineered cells from being copied. Genetically engineered cell lines used in biomedical research have long been prone to misidentification […]| News Center
To ensure continued power reliability, new solutions are needed to keep up with growing energy demands.| @theU
Once-in-a-century crop failures could strike every decade by 2100, according to new research from UBC.| UBC News
B.C. is pushing mineral mining to meet clean energy demand, but UBC experts stress the need to balance growth with Indigenous rights and the environment.| UBC News
Dean by day, cruciverbalist by night, Dr. Mark MacLachlan discusses the science behind the art of his hobby as a crossword creator for The New York Times and more.| UBC News
Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have received a National Science Foundation grant to use artificial intelligence to design a new kind of plastics that can be easily broken down and recycled. The post AI to spark new recyclable plastics design appeared first on The Source.| The Source | Washington University in St. Louis
Wildlife researchers at Washington University in St. Louis tracked pigeons in two cities to see what affects their density. The post Pigeons of St. Louis: A new look at a cosmopolitan bird appeared first on The Source.| The Source | Washington University in St. Louis
The plan supports Class II underground injection control wells associated with the Lisbon Valley Gas Plant near Moab, Utah.| attheu.utah.edu
The observatory is set to unveil the cosmos in sharper focus, capturing stars across the visible and near-infrared spectrum like never before.| Georgia State News Hub
Where Haida Gwaii tapers to a storm-scoured point, a scatter of low, wave-washed rocks called the Kerouard Islands cradles one of British Columbia’s most important wildlife sites: the Cape St. James rookery. This is the only Steller sea lion breeding rookery in Gwaii Haanas and one of only a handful along the entire BC coast – an engine for the species’ recovery and a living barometer of ocean health. Where & What It Is Cape St. James forms the southern […] The post The Cape St. James...| British Columbia Magazine
Shifting electricity consumption to times when the grid has a greater supply from alternative energy sources could help reduce carbon dioxide emissions significantly, according to a new University of Texas at Dallas study. UT Dallas engineers, who collaborated with researchers from Harvard University and Nantum AI, developed a new model that optimizes the timing of […]| News Center
The TReNDS Center has hit a new stride, earning dual National Institutes of Health grants aimed at tackling Alzheimer’s disease progression and advancing multimodal brain imaging techniques in neuropsychiatric disorders.| Georgia State News Hub
UBC researchers have developed ToothPortal, a secure teledentistry app that streamlines dental care for seniors in long-term care and enhances training for dentistry students.| UBC News
Western tent caterpillars swarm in massive numbers every decade, then vanish. UBC’s Dr. Judith Myers shares insights from 50 years of research into their mysterious cycles.| UBC News
UBC researchers uncover a massive new RNA virus in farmed Pacific oysters during a mass die-off in B.C., Canada.| UBC News
UBC researchers have identified the bacterial culprit behind sea star wasting disease, solving a decade-long mystery and opening the door to recovery efforts for devastated marine ecosystems.| UBC News
New research explores how everyday assumptions—not just policies—can quietly steer women away from system-focused roles in STEM.| UBC News
The Barcelona CryoZoo has received a grant from the international organisation Revive & Restore to advance research on stem cell reprogramming in wild animal species.| EMBL
Scientists identified individual stem cell-like cells responsible for leukaemia relapses in kids and precisely characterised their molecular properties.| EMBL
Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy Megan Connors is helping to lead sPHENIX, a large scientific collaboration based at Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, N.Y., that aims to explore the extreme conditions of the early universe by using high-energy ion collisions.| Georgia State News Hub
At this year’s Formula Sun Grand Prix, the Stanford Solar Car Project won second place in the Single Occupant Vehicle Class with its car, Azimuth. The post Stanford Solar Car Project zooms to second place finish at Formula Sun Grand Prix appeared first on The Stanford Daily.| The Stanford Daily
Tech accelerationists are working to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) into government. It is a rapidly growing movement, but the speed the technology is advancing is outpacing concerns about risks, explains Joe Allen, the AI editor for Steve Bannon’s War Room, to Andrew Muller for The New American. The push is being backed by several movements; ... The post The Dark Enlightenment: Fusing AI and Government appeared first on The New American.| Video - The New American
More than one in three corals in areas frequented by parrotfish were bleached, which can mean starvation or death for the corals.| UGA Today
In a world where content is easier to create than ever, the brands that win will be those with something real to say.| Entrepreneur
Unbeknownst to most, there is an “omniwar” raging all around them in every domain of human existence as a numerically tiny group of totalitarians seeks to end human freedom and self-government as we know it, warned longtime academic and author David Hughes in this interview on Behind The Deep State with The New American magazine ...| The New American
Artificial intelligence is here to stay. UW–Madison students are grappling with its promise and perils.| onwisconsin.uwalumni.com
The post How Will You Use Technology to Shape Our Future? appeared first on Wharton Global Youth Program.| Wharton Global Youth Program
Dr. Kianoosh Yousefi is developing a model based on machine learning to improve hurricane forecasting. Yousefi’s work is supported by an Office of Naval Research 2025 Young Investigator Program award. Tiny droplets of sea spray generated at the ocean surface can affect the intensity and evolution of hurricanes and other tropical storms. Their impact, however, […]| News Center
Odum School graduate students Christian Swartzbaugh and Mackenzi Hallmark are working with the Tennessee Aquarium and local residents to save an endangered minn| Odum School of Ecology
A new UBC study reveals that the brighter the orange on a male guppy, the more virile it is, solving a long-standing evolutionary puzzle about their flashy colours.| UBC News
July 14, 2025 marks 65 years of research at what is now Gombe Stream Research Center in Tanzania. In our last segment, we shared some of the 🔗 magical moments that have happened at Gombe through research that continues to this day. As the longest-running study of wild chimpanzees in the world, Gombe unlocks new insight into our closest living relatives with each year that passes. We are learning more than ever about the importance of social bonds, the effect of parental care on infant de...| Jane Goodall's Good for All News
This July 14, we’re celebrating both 🔗 World Chimpanzee Day and the 65th anniversary of research at what is now Gombe National Park. But how do you capture the wonder of 65 years of ongoing studies? To quote Dr. Jane Goodall, the best way to get to the heart is with stories. In our last segment, we introduced you to some of the 🔗 great minds of Gombe research. Now, learn what has inspired them throughout their connection to Gombe. From tool use to new species, Gombe has brought us...| Jane Goodall's Good for All News
July 14, 2025 celebrates not only 🔗 World Chimpanzee Day, but also the 65th anniversary of research at what is now Gombe National Park in Tanzania. What began with Dr. Jane Goodall trekking into the forest to learn about chimpanzees continues to this day in what is now the longest-running wild chimpanzee study in the world. This research has expanded to include an extensive baboon study, and now incorporates cutting-edgetechnology, such as using Geographic Information Systems to map and tr...| Jane Goodall's Good for All News
Discover how 65 years of Gombe chimpanzee research at the Jane Goodall Institute’s Gombe Stream Research Center shaped science and conservation.| Jane Goodall's Good for All News
As usual, the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) showcased some exciting new amputee-facing technology. The star of the 2025 show, a first-of-its-kind bionic leg, walked off with a prestigious “Best of Innovation” award. The post Best Technology for Amputees at CES 2025 appeared first on Amplitude.| Amplitude
Artificial intelligence has been improving amputees’ lives at least since the C-Leg debuted in the 1990s. But the emergence of ChatGPT and other large-language models (LLMs) has given rise to all sorts of new AI applications. The post Eight New Ways AI Is Shaping the Future of Amputee Care appeared first on Amplitude.| Amplitude
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have tested a cell therapy to toughen up residual-limb skin —and they’re seeking amputee volunteers to help them refine the method.| Amplitude
Make a point to use mechanical pencils in your daily work, or donate some to school districts and charities that help schoolkids with these necessary supplies.| Days Of The Year
Read more to learn how ChatGPT is revolutionizing content creation and discover how it can enhance your content marketing efforts.| Entrepreneur
It's time we make IT automation work for us: streamline processes, boost efficiency and drive growth with the right tools and strategy.| Entrepreneur
Deepseek was set up as a research initiative unconstrained by commercial imperatives, with the aim of achieving...| London Review of Books
New technique could help source critical minerals vital for green transition| UBC News
Wildfires pollute waterways and could affect their ability to sequester carbon, recent University of British Columbia research shows.| UBC News
New study offers the most comprehensive view of Parkinson's gut microbiome, linking it to xenobiotics breakdown and inflammation.| EMBL
University of Rochester scientists discover that long-lived bats resist cancer due to strong immune systems and genes, offering clues about human aging.| News Center
By connecting independently-led programs, Cole helped cultivate a collaborative network that opens opportunities to community college and formerly incarcerated students.| The Stanford Daily
"Billions upon billions" of data records belonging to millions of Chinese citizens have been briefly exposed online, according to cybersecurity researchers.| Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
Valeria Aspinall saw the first female Tapir Valley tree frog in 2020. The tiny, critically endangered frog exists only in a 20-acre wetland in Costa Rica.| Odum School of Ecology
Lab assistants work in the cell assembly room at the Batteries and Energy to Advance Commercialization and National Security prototyping facility at The University of Texas at Dallas. The University of Texas at Dallas gave stakeholders a first look at a new facility designed to help researchers and industry partners fast-track energy storage innovation and […]| News Center
Doctors could one day use the new liquid biopsy to keep monitoring patients and tweaking treatments as part of standard care.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Our experts are helping us sort through the cancer studies at ASCO, the world's biggest cancer conference.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
EMBL scientists are on a quest to investigate the underlying biological processes that enable regeneration in jellyfish, which could also help us understand how wounds heal| EMBL
UW–Madison could lose tens of millions of dollars in annual research support due to a proposed change in federal funding. But what’s really at stake? The university’s ability to advance life-saving research and innovation.| News
Materials science and engineering doctoral student Jiaqi Ke conducts electrochemical testing using a three-electrode cell setup to evaluate the stability of a newly developed electrolyte. An emerging technology to make lithium-ion batteries safer and more powerful involves using solid rather than liquid electrolytes, the materials that make it possible for ions to move through the […]| News Center
The Cannes premiere of Satyajit Ray’s 1970 classic, Aranyer Din Ratri, showcased its newly restored 4K version, captivating audiences and celebrating Indian cinema. The meticulous restoration invol…| Indrosphere
Dr. Kamil Sarac (left) works with computer science graduate student Adithya Chintala at a meeting of students in the Computer Security Group and CyberCorps: Scholarship for Service program at UT Dallas. Sarac, professor of computer science and associate head for faculty affairs, directs the program. The University of Texas at Dallas has been redesignated as […]| News Center
By Veronica Gonzalez | April 2, 2025 From seat cushions to mattresses to insulation, foam is everywhere — even if we don’t always see it. Now, researchers at The University of Texas at Dallas have fused chemistry with technology to create a 3D-printed foam that is more durable and more recyclable than the polymer […]| News Center
By Amanda Siegfried | March 28, 2025 Researchers at The University of Texas at Dallas have invented a new, inexpensive method for fabricating artificial muscles for potential use in robots, in comfort-adjusting jackets that become more thermally insulating as the surrounding air becomes colder, and as mechanical energy harvesters. In a study published in the […]| News Center
University of Texas at Dallas experts recently collaborated with a Texas-based health care technology company to enhance its medical coding automation platform by incorporating the most recent advances in artificial intelligence (AI) that emulate human reasoning. CorroHealth Inc., a leader in autonomous medical coding, leverages large language models (LLMs) and natural language processing (NLP) in […]| News Center
From left: Dr. Xianming (Simon) Dai, Deepak Monga PhD’24 and Dr. Yaqing Jin developed a new theory to explain heat transfer on advanced surfaces while testing a new surface that they designed to collect and remove condensates rapidly. When University of Texas at Dallas researchers tested a new surface that they designed to collect and […]| News Center
The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument maps distant objects in the universe to study dark energy. The instrument is installed on the Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona, shown here beneath star trails captured in a long-exposure image. (Credit: KPNO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/B. Tafreshi) A new analysis of data collected over three years […]| News Center
University of Texas at Dallas scientists are investigating how structures made from several layers of graphene stack up in terms of their fundamental physics and their potential as reconfigurable semiconductors for advanced electronics. Graphene is a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a flat honeycomb pattern whereby each hexagon is formed by six carbon […]| News Center
Dr. Wei Li received a grant from NASA to develop a platform that could overcome some of the challenges in building permanent structures in harsh, thin-atmosphere and low-gravity environments. Before humans can colonize the moon or Mars, scientists and engineers must first develop techniques for building permanent structures and pressurized habitats in harsh, thin-atmosphere and […]| News Center
Dr. Todd Griffith has been working to create an offshore turbine that makes wind energy in deep ocean water more accessible. “Our turbine is designed to make offshore wind power safe, efficient and affordable,” he said. Inside Dr. Todd Griffith’s laboratory stands a 6-foot-tall wind turbine that looks like an upside-down eggbeater; it’s actually a […]| News Center
IBM replaced some human resources employees with AI, then used the resulting funds to hire more software engineers and sales staff. IBM's total workforce count has gone up as a result.| Entrepreneur
Our research shows childhood exposure to a toxin produced by some E. coli strains could partly explain the rise in bowel cancer in under-50s.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Dario Amodei, CEO of $61 billion AI startup Anthropic, said that AI will take over coding tasks but software engineers will still have jobs — for now. Anthropic received investments from Google and Amazon.| Entrepreneur
For International Women's Day 2025, we're celebrating three inspirational women and the contributions they have made to cancer research| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Cancer Grand Challenges is offering up to £20m funding to teams that can answer seven of the biggest and most important questions in cancer.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
We’re excited to announce two new partners for the International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection as it moves into its next phase| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
A history of the Thordarson Electric Manufacturing Company, part of our research archive dedicated to 20th century Chicago manufacturers and their products.| Made-in-Chicago Museum
In “Outside the Box,” I interrogate ChatGPT to better understand how AI “reasons.” It’s like a conversation with an intelligent friend,| Fair Observer
In “Outside the Box,” I interrogate ChatGPT to better understand how AI “reasons.” It’s like a conversation with an intelligent friend,| Fair Observer
A new testing technique from our scientists is 90% accurate at predicting which high-risk people with IBD will develop bowel cancer.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
A new AI test that looks at immune cells could help people with stage 2 bowel cancer avoid chemotherapy after surgery, cutting side effects.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Our researchers are modifying Salmonella into a treatment that works with the immune system to attack bowel cancer from two sides at once.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Today, Cancer Research UK, the NIHR and the EPSRC are announcing £10 million to create the Cancer Data-Driven Detection programme| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Researchers in the Boulard group at EMBL Rome demonstrated for the first time that the catalytic activity of the OGT enzyme is essential for embryonic development.| EMBL
To end the year, we want to highlight some of our biggest stories of 2024, including big advances in prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.| Cancer Research UK - Cancer News
Scientists have developed a novel approach to human learning through noninvasive manipulation of brain activity patterns.| News Center
A machine-learning model that estimates the total density of microbes in faeces shows that microbial load can strongly influence disease-microbe associations.| EMBL
A multidisciplinary team of UGA researchers aims to enhance the competitiveness of Vidalia onion growers in Georgia by providing them with the ability to confidently detect onion diseases early, enabling them to make management decisions on their crop at a critical time. These abilities, researchers say, should result in increased yield and quality of marketable onions and an overall increase in efficiency and productivity.| newswire.caes.uga.edu
In the years since EMBL was established, its researchers and engineers have provided leadership in structural biology research and services| EMBL
EMBL scientists applied molecular engineering to build photoacoustic probes to label and visualise neurons deep within brain tissue.| EMBL
Chromosomes are glued together during the final stages of cell division by the formation of a liquid-like protein–RNA layer.| EMBL
A new publication from the Cusack group sheds light on how a key avian influenza virus enzyme can mutate to allow the virus to replicate in mammals.| EMBL
The Board of Regents has appointed and reappointed faculty to the system’s highest academic rank, the Regents’ Professor.| Georgia State News Hub
GSU physicist Ramesh Mani has uncovered new states of matter by exploring the behavior of flatland electrons in extreme conditions.| Georgia State News Hub
Museum Artifact: Crane 1/2″ No 1204 Brass Globe Valve (c. 1930s) and 75th Anniversary Medallion (1930) Made By: Crane Company, 4100 S. Kedzie Ave., Chicago, IL [Brighton Park] “I am resolved to conduct my business in the strictest Honesty and Fairness; to avoid all deception and trickery; to deal Fairly with both Customers and Competitors; to be Liberal and Just toward Employees; and to put my Whole Mind upon the Business.” —Resolution supposedly made by R. The post Crane Company, est...| Made-in-Chicago Museum
Museum Artifacts: Victor Adding Machines – Model 210 (c. 1925, donated by Robert Eichhorn) and 600 Series (c. 1939) Made By: Victor Adding Machine Company, 3900 N. Rockwell St., Chicago, IL [North Center] “The design of the VICTOR is a work of art, and has been pronounced by experts the most beautiful adding machine ever produced. It has about one-third the working parts ordinarily used in adding machine construction, The post Victor Adding Machine Co., est. 1918 appeared first on Made-in...| Made-in-Chicago Museum
Sonlight Discover & Do Science F is a complete hands-on homeschool science program for kids in 6th-9th grade.| The Curriculum Choice
In the summer of 1820, a party of transatlantic sportsmen and adventurers made their way through the rocky scrubland of the Arkansas country’s Ozark Mountains on a passenger pigeon hunt. The plentiful birds roosted thick in the canopy of the forest, and on the first day of the expedition, the party of English gentlemen and […]| The History Bandits
“Are you sure this railway can be built?” Henry M. Flagler, co-founder of Standard Oil and “Father of Miami,” posed this question to his chief aide, Joseph R. Parrott, in the winter of 1904. With Parrott’s affirmation, Flagler embarked upon an ambitious, unprecedented engineering feat to connect Key West, 130 miles south of Miami, with […]| The History Bandits
When An Experiment Fails In our homeschool STEM Class, I attempted a little chemistry demonstration - just for fun. I'd originally read about the pumpkin demo here, Rainbow Fire, and I did the experiment as described but as the kids can attest, it didn't work. On the drive home, my kiddos hypothesized that the fact that| Eva Varga