News Results (top 2,000 results)
|
Select a resource
Filter by
Sort by
|
News Article
February 14, 2025
This image, released on Feb. 12, 2025, is the deepest X-ray image ever made of the spectacular star forming region called 30 Doradus. By combining X-ray data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory (blue and green) with optical data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope (yellow) and radio data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (orange), this […]
Read more
News Article
February 1, 2012
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is growing exponentially. One reason is that drug resistant proteins are transporting "good" antibiotics, or inhibitors, out of the cells, leaving them to mutate. In a paper recently published in the journal Nature, Brandies University Professor of Biochemistry Dorothee Kern and collaborators including former postdoctoral student Katherine A. Henzler-Wildman, looked at how one of these drug transporters, EmrE, works. The hope is that someday a drug…
Read more
News Article
February 21, 2012
A surprising set of cells may hold potential for aiding nerve transplants in patients who have severe nerve damage -- the type of wound often caused by gunshots, stabbings, car accidents, or action on the battlefield.
Read more
News Article
February 19, 2012
Many experts think graphene could change the face of electronics -- especially if the scientific community can overcome a major challenge intrinsic to the material. Oxidation could be the answer, in a new method developed by Northwestern University researchers.
Read more
News Article
May 5, 2023
A suspicious trail of starlight may just be a spiral galaxy seen edge on, not stars that formed in the wake of a runaway supermassive black hole.
Read more
News Article
April 5, 2023
The finding suggests that early galaxies might have gained more of their bulk from streams of cold gas instead of in violent galaxy collisions.
Read more
News Article
April 25, 2012
A team led by scientists at CSHL publishes research today indicating a striking association between genes found disrupted in children with autism and genes that are targets of FMRP, the protein generated by the gene FMR1, whose dysfunction causes Fragile-X syndrome.
Read more
News Article
February 13, 2012
Emotions are an important factor that must be taken into account when designing any type of software. This is the conclusion reached through a research project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid that analyzes the role played by feelings in the users and developers of computer systems.
Read more
News Article
February 27, 2012
Research in which Universidad Carlos III of Madrid is participating analyzes the trafficking of women in China, a crime that is related to that country's great imbalance in the proportion of men to women, which has become worse since the 1980s.
Read more
|








