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Release date: 1-Apr-2025 3:15 PM EDT
Professor Part of Study on New Fossil Carnivorous Mammals from Himalayan Foothills
Harrisburg University of Science and Technology

According to a new study published in Journal of Mammalian Evolution, two newly unearthed fossil specimens add important information to our collective knowledge of carnivorous mammals.

Release date: 1-Apr-2025 3:15 PM EDT
New Breast Imaging Legislation to Help Thousands Across New Jersey
Susan G. Komen

Susan G. Komen庐, the world鈥檚 leading breast cancer organization commends Senators Linda Greenstein (D-Middlesex) and Britnee N. Timberlake (D-East Orange) and Assemblymembers Lisa Swain (D-Fair Lawn) and Margie Donlon, M.D., (D-Ocean Township) for working with Komen to ensure that everyone has equitable access to diagnostic and supplemental breast imaging, by eliminating the financial barriers patients face in accessing needed breast cancer screening.

麻豆传媒: 1920_elemental-diet-cedars-sinai.jpg?10000
Release date: 1-Apr-2025 3:05 PM EDT
New Cedars-Sinai Study Shows How Specialized Diet Can Improve Gut Disorders
Cedars-Sinai

A new study from Cedars-Sinai examined whether a specialized diet could improve symptoms of gastrointestinal disorders linked to an imbalance in gut microbiota.

麻豆传媒: Oxygen Tweaking May Be the Key to Optimizing Particle Accelerators
Release date: 1-Apr-2025 2:20 PM EDT
Oxygen Tweaking May Be the Key to Optimizing Particle Accelerators
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Many particle accelerators rely on superconducting radiofrequency components made of niobium. Nuclear physicists found that dissolving oxygen atoms a few micrometers into niobium greatly improves the performance of components made of the metal. Now, the researchers are perfecting a model using different processes for adding oxygen. The model helps to predict and optimize component performance.

麻豆传媒: Preventable pediatric cancer mortality surges in areas of armed conflict, exceeding rates in non-conflict regions
Release date: 1-Apr-2025 12:20 PM EDT
Preventable pediatric cancer mortality surges in areas of armed conflict, exceeding rates in non-conflict regions
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

A collaborative research effort in global childhood cancer has revealed the significant negative impact of living in regions of armed conflict on pediatric cancer outcomes.

麻豆传媒: 20250331-concretecanoe-nt.jpg?itok=DUc7Jkdc
Release date: 1-Apr-2025 12:00 PM EDT
Engineering event to feature concrete canoes, steel bridges, surveying
University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Can concrete canoes float, or will they sink? That鈥檚 what hundreds of college students will discover during one of the signature competitions of the American Society of Civil Engineers鈥 Mid-Ame

Release date: 1-Apr-2025 11:25 AM EDT
Charging electric vehicles 5x faster in subfreezing temps
University of Michigan

A modified manufacturing process for electric vehicle batteries, developed by University of Michigan engineers, could enable high ranges and fast charging in cold weather, solving problems that are turning potential EV buyers away.

麻豆传媒: A Step Toward Plant-Based Gelatin
27-Mar-2025 5:10 PM EDT
A Step Toward Plant-Based Gelatin
American Institute of Physics (AIP)

In Physics of Fluids, researchers present gum tragacanth as a plant-based alternative to gelatin for creating edible films. The team developed films containing different concentrations of gelatin and gum tragacanth and monitored their survivability in water and saline solutions.

Released: 1-Apr-2025 9:55 AM EDT
Study Reveals Significant Gaps in Chronic Inflammatory Skin Condition Treatment and Patient Awareness
George Washington University

A study from the George Washington University unveils insights into the treatment experiences and perceptions of people living with a significantly disabling chronic inflammatory skin conditio

麻豆传媒: Scientists Merge Two 鈥淚mpossible鈥 Materials Into New Artificial Structure
Released: 1-Apr-2025 9:35 AM EDT
Scientists Merge Two 鈥淚mpossible鈥 Materials Into New Artificial Structure
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

An international team led by Rutgers University-New Brunswick researchers has merged two lab-synthesized materials into a synthetic quantum structure once thought impossible to exist and produced an exotic structure expected to provide insights that could lead to new materials at the core of quantum computing. The work, described in a cover story in the journal Nano Letters, explains how four years of continuous experimentation led to a novel method to design and build a unique, tiny sandwich composed of distinct atomic layers.


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