An important class of drug used to treat cancer patients could be used to treat brain aneurysms, according to new research published this week.
* This article was originally published here
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Discover the Vitality of Your Bile Duct Network
School Dinners Boost Food Variety in Picky 13-Year-Olds
Study Reveals Lung Capacity Evolution from Childhood to Old Age
Study Suggests Brain Neurons Key in Type 2 Diabetes
Brain Chemical Alters Connectivity via Astrocytes
Study Links Social Violence to Child Abuse
Decoding Brazil's Diverse Genetic Makeup
Uncovering Mechanisms of Fear Memory Formation
Biomedical Science in the United States: A Crucial Juncture
Addressing Staffing Challenges in Neonatology: A Call for Reform
Female Reproductive Tract Inflammation Impacts Conception
New Blood Test Detects Early Alzheimer's Signs
Decades-Long HIV Vaccine Challenge: Targeting Virus Variants
Link Found Between Type 2 Diabetes and Cortical Thickness
Adhd Linked to Obesity in Urban Environments
Researchers from Amsterdam UMC Take Step Towards HIV Vaccine
Peanut Allergy Risk Reduced in Children: UK Clinical Trial
Rare but Aggressive T-Cell Lymphoma in Children
USask Researchers Find Breast Cancer Cell Target
Covid-19 Vaccination Disparities Among Elderly Swedes
Study in Pediatrics Shows Success in Addressing Menstrual Poverty
Study Shows Enhanced Rabies Vaccine Delivery in Tanzania & Kenya
Origins of Human Infectious Diseases: Bats and Viruses
Study Reveals Lower Stress Adaptation in Long COVID-19 Patients
Brain Cell's Vital Role in Information Processing
Design Gap in Asian New Towns: Aging Population's Urban Disconnect
Breastfeeding Duration and First Birth Age Impact TNBC Risk
Study at EuroPerio11: Periodontal Regeneration Benefits Teeth
American Academy of Pediatrics Updates PDA Treatment
The Dark Side of Medications: How Drugs Can Make Us Sicker
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Tree Leaves Signal Volcano Activity: NASA-Smithsonian Collaboration
Exploring Climate-Neutral Cities: HeiGIT's Climate Action Navigator
Arctic Warming Intensifies Methane Emissions
Factors Influencing Emergency Sheltering Decisions
Gene Therapy Advancement: Key Tool Near Realization
Study on Electro-Optic Sampling in Quantum Physics
Novel Low-Thermal-Effect Crystal Enhances Laser Brightness
Sweet Discovery by ARS Scientists Benefits Citrus Industry
Kobe University Research Uncovers Bismuth's Quantum Potential
Understanding Intramolecular Charge Transfer for Technology
Europa Clipper's UVS Completes Commissioning for Jovian Mission
"Nasa's Perseverance Rover Captures Deimos, Mars's Moon"
Medieval Skeleton Reveals Social Attitudes on Disability
Airline Industry's Green Push: Offset Carbon Emissions
Horse Migration: Inter-Continental Exchange Unveiled
Male Workers Shying Away from Lucrative "Feminine" Jobs
Microbiologist Urges Search for Extremophiles in Homes
Organ Donor Registration Made Simple
Researchers Propose Pathways for Marine Spatial Planning
New Imaging System for Monitoring Fast-Spinning Objects
Enhanced Experimental Model Reveals Embryo Formation Insights
Florida's Nature Coast Seagrass Study: Ecosystem Health Revealed
Early Asians' Prehistoric Migration: Genomics Study Reveals Long Journey
Winter Challenge for Honeybee Colonies: Survival Tactics and Pollen Importance
Study Shows AI Can Help Consumers Avoid Overdraft Fees
Game Lab Graz Team Develops Solution for Communicating Complex Scientific Content
"Scientists Develop Efficient DNA Editor for Gene Therapy"
Sterols: Key Lipids in Eukaryotic Cells
University of Kentucky Study Revolutionizes Magnetic Energy Understanding
Impact of Small Ocean Features on Marine Ecosystems
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China Must Generate Over Half Power from Wind & Solar by 2035
Clean power surge needed: China's 2035 climate plan must aim high
Animal Collaboration: Bees, Ants, Starlings Unite
Teaching theory of mind to robots can enhance collaboration
Environmental and Social Intersections in Lagos: Emmanuel Taiwo's Journey
PhD researcher focuses on clean energy justice for underserved communities
Semiconductor Process Enhances Cell Signals
Simple heating step boosts pressure sensitivity in semiconductor materials eightfold
The Versatile Uses of Grout in Construction
Formula studied for a type of grout capable of 'self-repairing' cracks in large buildings
Spectacular Growth of NFTs in Sports Industry
NFTs in sports: How to be on alert to the dangers of fraud and counterfeiting
Challenges of Urban Autonomous Mobility
When autonomous mobility learns to wonder
Impact of Renewable Energy Visibility on Public Acceptance
The cost of keeping wind turbines out of sight
EU Accuses TikTok of Breaking Digital Rules
EU accuses TikTok of violating digital rules over ads
China blasts new US rule banning use of Huawei's Ascend advanced computer chips
China Blasts U.S. Ban on Huawei Ascend Chips
Coinbase Warns of $20 Million Data Breach
Study finds inappropriate ads common on websites aimed at children
Researchers Analyze Ads on Free Children's Learning Websites
Coinbase said cyber crooks stole customer information and demanded $20 million ransom payment
Umeå University Enhances Solar Heat Efficiency
Advanced coatings boost the competitiveness of solar thermal energy
Explainable AI framework reveals how element combinations boost alloy strength and durability
Strengthening Multiple Principal Element Alloys with AI
US data center to add batteries without lithium mined overseas
Tech Companies Deploy Novel Energy Storage at US Data Center
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSSunday, 19 May 2019
Just like toothpaste: Fluoride radically improves the stability of perovskite solar cells
Solar cells made of perovskite hold much promise for the future of solar energy. The material is cheap, easy to produce and almost as efficient as silicon, the material traditionally used in solar cells. However, perovskite degrades quickly, severely limiting its efficiency and stability over time. Researchers from Eindhoven University of Technology, energy research institute DIFFER, Peking University and University of Twente have discovered that adding a small amount of fluoride to the perovskite leaves a protective layer, increasing stability of the materials and the solar cells significantly. The solar cells retain 90 percent of their efficiency after 1000 hours operation at various extreme testing conditions. The findings are published today in the leading scientific journal Nature Energy.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
HP Enterprise buying supercomputer star Cray
Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) on Friday announced a $1.3 billion deal to buy supercomputer maker Cray, part of a move to expand into data analysis from connected devices .
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
New laws of robotics needed to tackle AI: expert
Decades after Isaac Asimov first wrote his laws for robots, their ever-expanding role in our lives requires a radical new set of rules, legal and AI expert Frank Pasquale warned on Thursday.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Heroin overdose ED visits decreased from 2017 to 2018
(HealthDay)—From 2017 to 2018, there was a decrease in heroin overdose emergency department visits, although the declines were not consistent among states, according to a study published online May 16 in the American Journal of Public Health.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Artificial intelligence shines light on the dark web
Beneath the surface web, the public form of the internet you use daily to check email or read news articles, exists a concealed "dark web." Host to anonymous, password-protected sites, the dark web is where criminal marketplaces thrive in the advertising and selling of weapons, drugs, and trafficked persons. Law enforcement agencies work continuously to stop these activities, but the challenges they face in investigating and prosecuting the real-world people behind the users who post on these sites are tremendous.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Life goes on under cloud of smog in Mexico City
Scientists say breathing the heavily polluted air in Mexico City these days is like smoking somewhere between a quarter- and a half-pack of cigarettes a day.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Museum volunteers discover new species of extinct heron at North Florida fossil site
When the bones of an ancient heron were unearthed at a North Florida fossil site, the find wasn't made by researchers but by two Florida Museum of Natural History volunteers.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
For many HIV+ women, daily survival takes precedence over viral suppression
According to scientists who study women infected with HIV, statistics often paint an impressionist view of the lives of these women that misses the granular detail that tells the real story. The imprecise big picture is that most of this population is doing a good job at suppressing the virus, but facts gathered on the ground show that many struggle with issues of daily living that can make taking a pill to keep HIV at bay difficult.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Black women more likely to die of breast cancer, especially in the South
When Felicia Mahone was 27, she felt her breast and found a mass. Breast cancer had killed nearly all the women in her family—her mother, two aunts and two cousins. Her doctor, though, downplayed the lump, assuring her everything would be all right.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
When an aircraft landing system is made to enter the spoofing zone
Just what the airplane passenger who is always skittish does not want to hear: Radio navigation on planes for landing purposes is not secure; signals can be hacked.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Dirty data: Firms count environmental costs of digital planet
Technology is often touted as a solution to the world's environmental challenges, but it is also part of the problem: industry executives are facing rising pressure to clean up their energy and resource-intensive business.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
Making the best of sparse information
New findings reported by LMU researchers challenge a generally accepted model of echolocation in bats. They demonstrate that bats require far less spatial information than previously thought to navigate effectively.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
To win online debates, social networks worth a thousand words
Want to win an argument online? Bolstering your social network may be more helpful than rehearsing your rhetorical flourishes.
* This article was originally published here
* This article was originally published here
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