The world awoke one morning in late March 2023 to the news that at least 38…
Category: Phys.org
Phys.org
Are rich people more intelligent? Here's what the science says
From “White Lotus” to “Succession,” there’s high demand for television dramas about the super rich. The…
NASA looks back at 50 years of gamma-ray burst science
Fifty years ago, on June 1, 1973, astronomers around the world were introduced to a powerful…
New research reveals harrowing stories of murdered Indigenous women and the failure of police to act
(Editor’s note: This article mentions acts of intimate partner violence against First Nations people.) …
Researchers unveil long-sought noncanonical cleavage mechanism in miRNA biogenesis
To discover and thoroughly demonstrate the newly identified noncanonical cleavage mechanism, the Hong Kong University of…
Looking at the development and use of human body-based measurements across cultures
A trio of cognitive scientists and culturist researchers at the University of Helsinki has taken a…
Analysis of lightweight nuclei from gold ion collisions offers insight into primordial matter phase changes
Physicists analyzing data from gold ion smashups at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a U.S.…
Using AI to push the boundaries of wildlife survey technologies
In their research, associate professor from the NRS Department Tiejun Wang and his master’s student Zijing…
An optical method to polarize free electrons in a laboratory setting
Polarized electrons are electrons in which spins have a “preferred” orientation or are preferentially oriented in…
Two-year voyage finds Pacific coral reef biodiversity is far greater than we know
The diversity of the Pacific coral reef microbiome—microorganisms which help drive and maintain reef productivity and…