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19 Oct 2022
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19 Oct 2022
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19 Oct 2022
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18 Oct 2022
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20 Oct 2022
Dozens of papers co-authored by Nobel laureate raise concerns
Which COVID studies pose a biohazard? Lack of clarity hampers research
Nord Stream blasts spark concern over chemical-weapons contamination
Tuna catch rates soared after creation of no-fishing zone in Hawaii
Imperialism’s long shadow: the UK universities grappling with a colonial past
How monkeypox is spreading, and more — this week’s best science graphics
Embrace wobble to level flight without a horizon
A protein that mobilizes the cofactor molecule haem for use in cells
An assembly line for an improved human reference genome
The first genomic portrait of a Neanderthal family
Condensed phase isomerization through tunneling gateways
Arnab Choudhury Jessalyn A. DeVine Alec M. Wodtke
Additive manufacturing of micro-architected metals via hydrogel infusion
Max A. Saccone Rebecca A. Gallivan Julia R. Greer
Recognition of cyclic dinucleotides and folates by human SLC19A1
Qixiang Zhang Xuyuan Zhang Pu Gao
The field of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics research is new and consequently it’s expanding at a rapid rate.
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12 Oct 2022
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A guest-edited collection of features, comment and analysis examines researchers’ experiences of racism, the impacts of systemic racism and how science can and must change.
Black and Hispanic people face huge hurdles at technology companies and in computer-science education in the United States, with far-reaching consequences for science and all of society.
Many research institutions in the United Kingdom gained prominence as the British Empire reached its zenith — bringing them a painful reckoning as they attempt to decolonize.
Atomic hydrogen observations in the vicinity of Stephan’s Quintet are reported, showing a large gaseous structure of around 0.6 Mpc in size in the velocity range of 6,550–6,750 km s − 1 .
Researchers are working on an ‘e-nose’ that could someday assist people who have lost their sense of smell. Plus, optical clocks could redefine the second and a telescope-blinding burst could be the brightest of all time.
Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks.
During evolution, key physiological changes enabled vertebrates to achieve a more active lifestyle. A comparison between living animals challenges current ideas on the timing of one such change in our ancestors.
Microorganisms store some genetic information on non-chromosomal elements. The emergence of a surprising version of these elements shifts our understanding of their diversity and potential roles.
Molecular networks have been developed that can classify complex mixtures of DNA sequences that cannot be categorized by a single linear classifier. To do this, artificial ‘neurons’ powered by enzymes are wired together to form an architecture that mimics the structure of a neural network.
Membrane-spanning proteins have many crucial roles in the cell. New findings challenge our current understanding of the route by which such proteins are inserted into the membranes of animal cells.
Human DNA from the Middle Ages reveals that natural selection occurred at pace in survivors of a bubonic plague pandem
Скромный студент стал мужчиной трахнув учительницу
Устроил проникновение в попку молодой подружки
Россиянка возбуждающе позирует в постели для фотографа