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INNOVATIVE PRODUCTS
A fashionable chemical and biological threat detector-on-a-ring. According to a global analyst firm called CCS Insight, wearable electronics will be a $34 billion industry by 2020. Wearable chemical sensors currently in. 12.10.2017. BIZARRE PARASITE FROM THE JURASSIC A fine-grained mudstone ensured the good state of preservation of the fossil. For the international team of scientists from the University of Bonn, the Linyi University (China), the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (China), the University of Kansas (USA) and the Natural History Museum in London (England), the insect larva is aspectacular find:
THE HUMAN FACTOR IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE The other key factor in the development of AI applications is the human one. SmartAIwork is a collaborative project involving Fraunhofer IAO, together with the Institute of Human Factors and Technology Management IAT at the University of Stuttgart, and various partners. Its object is to show how AI can help make clerical work moreproductive
ECOLOGISTS EXPLAIN WHY THE WORLD IS GREEN Hydroelectric schemes usually generate a barrage of criticism from conservationists. But the flooding of a Venezuelan valley 20 years ago has provided ecologists with the ideal outdoor laboratory to answer one of ecology’s oldest and thorniest questions: why is the world green? Reporting their results in the March issue of the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Ecology, a team lead by INEEL USES EXTREMOPHILE BACTERIA TO EASE BLEACHING’S INEEL uses extremophile bacteria to ease bleaching s environmental cost. In the steamy waters of Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs lives a type of bacterium that could help make industrial bleaching cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Scientists have found Thermus brockianus bacteria produce a hardy enzyme that can beput to work
BACTERIA DYE JEANS
Biotech bugs turn indigo blue in a green way. Jeans dyed blue by bacteria may soon be swaggering down the streets. Researchers have genetically modified bugs to churn out the indigo pigment used to stain denim. The process could be a greener rival to chemical indigo production. Originally extracted from plants, indigo dye is now made from coal or oil, with potentially toxic by THE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN HEMOCHROMATOSIS Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a disease characterised by excessive absorbance and storage of iron in the body, which results from a mutation in HFE, a gene involved in iron regulation. In addition, HH patients have an abnormal immune system (IS), and it has been suggested that the IS is also involved in HH iron deregulation. And now, research by a team of Portuguese scientists about to ELEVATED INFLAMMATORY ENZYME, LP-PLA2, SIGNIFICANTLY GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) is actively investigating Lp-PLA2 inhibitors and the role they may play in further reducing the risk of stroke and coronary heart disease. Lp-PLA2 is an enzyme that helps process a form of low-density lipoprotein, or “bad,” cholesterol (LDL-C) into products within atherosclerotic plaques and produces signals withinthe
HANDHELD SCANNER REVEALS VASCULARIZATION IN PSORIASIS Handheld scanner reveals vascularization in psoriasis patients. A newly developed tissue scanner allows looking under the skin of psoriasis patients. Source: Helmholtz Zentrum München. Psoriasis (Psoriasis vulgaris) is an inflammatory skin disease that is characterized by small to palm-sized patches of severely scaling skin. NEW PRODUCT INTRODUCTION AEROSPACE & DEFENSE The conference New Product Introduction Aerospace & Defense (September 25 & 26, 2008, Frankfurt/Germany) will deal with the topic. Attending this conference will allow A&D Managers to uncover and retain the key to bring innovative products faster to market and will provide a closer look into major players` success stories.INNOVATIVE PRODUCTS
A fashionable chemical and biological threat detector-on-a-ring. According to a global analyst firm called CCS Insight, wearable electronics will be a $34 billion industry by 2020. Wearable chemical sensors currently in. 12.10.2017. BIZARRE PARASITE FROM THE JURASSIC A fine-grained mudstone ensured the good state of preservation of the fossil. For the international team of scientists from the University of Bonn, the Linyi University (China), the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (China), the University of Kansas (USA) and the Natural History Museum in London (England), the insect larva is aspectacular find:
THE HUMAN FACTOR IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE The other key factor in the development of AI applications is the human one. SmartAIwork is a collaborative project involving Fraunhofer IAO, together with the Institute of Human Factors and Technology Management IAT at the University of Stuttgart, and various partners. Its object is to show how AI can help make clerical work moreproductive
ECOLOGISTS EXPLAIN WHY THE WORLD IS GREEN Hydroelectric schemes usually generate a barrage of criticism from conservationists. But the flooding of a Venezuelan valley 20 years ago has provided ecologists with the ideal outdoor laboratory to answer one of ecology’s oldest and thorniest questions: why is the world green? Reporting their results in the March issue of the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Ecology, a team lead by INEEL USES EXTREMOPHILE BACTERIA TO EASE BLEACHING’S INEEL uses extremophile bacteria to ease bleaching s environmental cost. In the steamy waters of Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs lives a type of bacterium that could help make industrial bleaching cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Scientists have found Thermus brockianus bacteria produce a hardy enzyme that can beput to work
BACTERIA DYE JEANS
Biotech bugs turn indigo blue in a green way. Jeans dyed blue by bacteria may soon be swaggering down the streets. Researchers have genetically modified bugs to churn out the indigo pigment used to stain denim. The process could be a greener rival to chemical indigo production. Originally extracted from plants, indigo dye is now made from coal or oil, with potentially toxic by THE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN HEMOCHROMATOSIS Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a disease characterised by excessive absorbance and storage of iron in the body, which results from a mutation in HFE, a gene involved in iron regulation. In addition, HH patients have an abnormal immune system (IS), and it has been suggested that the IS is also involved in HH iron deregulation. And now, research by a team of Portuguese scientists about to ELEVATED INFLAMMATORY ENZYME, LP-PLA2, SIGNIFICANTLY GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) is actively investigating Lp-PLA2 inhibitors and the role they may play in further reducing the risk of stroke and coronary heart disease. Lp-PLA2 is an enzyme that helps process a form of low-density lipoprotein, or “bad,” cholesterol (LDL-C) into products within atherosclerotic plaques and produces signals withinthe
HANDHELD SCANNER REVEALS VASCULARIZATION IN PSORIASIS Handheld scanner reveals vascularization in psoriasis patients. A newly developed tissue scanner allows looking under the skin of psoriasis patients. Source: Helmholtz Zentrum München. Psoriasis (Psoriasis vulgaris) is an inflammatory skin disease that is characterized by small to palm-sized patches of severely scaling skin. NEW PRODUCT INTRODUCTION AEROSPACE & DEFENSE The conference New Product Introduction Aerospace & Defense (September 25 & 26, 2008, Frankfurt/Germany) will deal with the topic. Attending this conference will allow A&D Managers to uncover and retain the key to bring innovative products faster to market and will provide a closer look into major players` success stories. NEW GLIAL CELLS DISCOVERED IN THE BRAIN Implications for brain repair Neurons, nerve cells in the brain, are central players in brain function. However, a key role for glia, long considered support cells, is emerging. A research A VITAL TOOL TO STUDY VIRUS EVOLUTION IN THE TEST TUBE The University of Queensland, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity, Monash University, and Queensland Health have developed a technology to manipulate viruses synthetically allowing rapid EASY DETECTION OF MATERIALS A team at Landshut University of Applied Sciences has developed a low-cost, mobile near-infra-red spectrometer which provides information about different substances; the goal is its further development up to and LIGHTING UP ULTRAFAST MAGNETISM IN A METAL OXIDE A schematic of the resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) and resonant elastic x-ray scattering (REXS) setups. The square in the middle represents the sample, which is struck with a laser (pump) and then x-rays (probe) almost immediately after. INSULATORS: SAFE UNDER MAXIMUM LOAD Insulator strings connect the live conductor to overhead-line towers. Researchers at TU Graz simulated for the first time when and under what conditions different loads act X-RAY SCANNER SPOTS CANCERS AND ANALYZES DRUGS IN MINUTES New technology could speed cancer diagnosis, ensure surgeons remove 100% of a tumor and inspect drugs for dangerous chemicals. Engineers at Duke University have demonstrated a prototype X-ray scanningmachine
VISUALIZING CEMENT HYDRATION ON A MOLECULAR LEVEL Imaging technique could enable new pathways for reducing concrete’s hefty carbon footprint, as well as for 3-D printing of concrete. Theconcrete world that
ECOLOGISTS EXPLAIN WHY THE WORLD IS GREEN Hydroelectric schemes usually generate a barrage of criticism from conservationists. But the flooding of a Venezuelan valley 20 years ago has provided ecologists with the ideal outdoor laboratory to answer one of ecology’s oldest and thorniest questions: why is the world green? Reporting their results in the March issue of the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Ecology, a team lead by LOCAL SEVERE STORM FORECASTS PROOFED BY USING A NEW HYBRID Despite global coverage, each LEO sounder provides observations only twice per day for a given location. However, the hyperspectral IR sounders from geostationary Earth orbiting (GEO) satellites can provide higher resolution 4-D temperature (including time), moisture, and dynamic motion information needed to initialize, or start a modelsimulation.
HOW PLANTS CONSERVE WATER Modern cultivated plants have forgotten how to conserve water. Rainer Hedrich, Chairman of the Department of Molecular Plant Physiology and Biophysics at the University of Würzburg, is among those interested in the consequences of protracted periodsINNOVATIVE PRODUCTS
A fashionable chemical and biological threat detector-on-a-ring. According to a global analyst firm called CCS Insight, wearable electronics will be a $34 billion industry by 2020. Wearable chemical sensors currently in. 12.10.2017. BIZARRE PARASITE FROM THE JURASSIC A fine-grained mudstone ensured the good state of preservation of the fossil. For the international team of scientists from the University of Bonn, the Linyi University (China), the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (China), the University of Kansas (USA) and the Natural History Museum in London (England), the insect larva is aspectacular find:
HOW DO ROTOR BLADES DEFORM IN WIND GUSTS? Make tiny particles visible and detect them. In order to be able to measure turbulent flow and deformation of the rotor blades simultaneously, two methods are combined: The Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) method and photogrammetric measurements. With the PIV method, a laser makes tiny particles visible, which are added tothe air.
ABILITY GROUPS HARM CHILDREN'S EDUCATION, SAY SUSSEX Two new separate studies show that sorting school children into sets is neither an accurate way of assessing ability, nor is it beneficial to their learning.Research by Jo Boaler, Marie Curie Professor of Education at Sussex, revealed that children in mixed ability mathematics classes outperformed those grouped by ability. She reviewed a new way of grouping children that also resulted in CONCORDE: WE CAN REBUILD IT! University of Surrey staff and students are taking part in the rebuilding of Concorde 202. They will be reassembling some key parts of Concorde’s engine air intakes on campus over the next few months. The work coincides with the imminent arrival of contractors at Brooklands Museum who will be joining the wings and fuselage back together. The parts being refurbished by UniS volunteers will INEEL USES EXTREMOPHILE BACTERIA TO EASE BLEACHING’S INEEL uses extremophile bacteria to ease bleaching s environmental cost. In the steamy waters of Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs lives a type of bacterium that could help make industrial bleaching cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Scientists have found Thermus brockianus bacteria produce a hardy enzyme that can beput to work
THE SHAPE OF MELTING IN TWO DIMENSIONS The shape of melting in two dimensions. A movie depicting the hexatic phase transition of a two-dimensional hard particle system of hexagons under external pressure. On the left, red and green particle pairs indicate the structure of defects in the system. On the right, blue and yellow particles show how defects migrate within the system THE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN HEMOCHROMATOSIS Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a disease characterised by excessive absorbance and storage of iron in the body, which results from a mutation in HFE, a gene involved in iron regulation. In addition, HH patients have an abnormal immune system (IS), and it has been suggested that the IS is also involved in HH iron deregulation. And now, research by a team of Portuguese scientists about to STUDY SHOWS MASSIVE MAGMA CHAMBER LIES BENEATH VESUVIUS Mount Vesuvius, the volcano most famous for blanketing the towns of Pompei and Herculaneum with lava and debris in 79 A.D., may be sitting atop a reservoir of magma that covers more than 400 square kilometers, a new study suggests. The finding, reported in the current issue of the journal Science by a group of Italian and French scientists, may lead to more accurate monitoring of the area CHALLENGES FACING THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL AREAS IN Challenges facing the development of rural areas in transition countries. Most of the rural areas in transition countries are characterised by an inadequate infrastructure and service provision, weak employment and income growth, a poor education system and rising poverty. When quality of life and economic prospects are brought intoINNOVATIVE PRODUCTS
A fashionable chemical and biological threat detector-on-a-ring. According to a global analyst firm called CCS Insight, wearable electronics will be a $34 billion industry by 2020. Wearable chemical sensors currently in. 12.10.2017. BIZARRE PARASITE FROM THE JURASSIC A fine-grained mudstone ensured the good state of preservation of the fossil. For the international team of scientists from the University of Bonn, the Linyi University (China), the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (China), the University of Kansas (USA) and the Natural History Museum in London (England), the insect larva is aspectacular find:
HOW DO ROTOR BLADES DEFORM IN WIND GUSTS? Make tiny particles visible and detect them. In order to be able to measure turbulent flow and deformation of the rotor blades simultaneously, two methods are combined: The Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) method and photogrammetric measurements. With the PIV method, a laser makes tiny particles visible, which are added tothe air.
ABILITY GROUPS HARM CHILDREN'S EDUCATION, SAY SUSSEX Two new separate studies show that sorting school children into sets is neither an accurate way of assessing ability, nor is it beneficial to their learning.Research by Jo Boaler, Marie Curie Professor of Education at Sussex, revealed that children in mixed ability mathematics classes outperformed those grouped by ability. She reviewed a new way of grouping children that also resulted in CONCORDE: WE CAN REBUILD IT! University of Surrey staff and students are taking part in the rebuilding of Concorde 202. They will be reassembling some key parts of Concorde’s engine air intakes on campus over the next few months. The work coincides with the imminent arrival of contractors at Brooklands Museum who will be joining the wings and fuselage back together. The parts being refurbished by UniS volunteers will INEEL USES EXTREMOPHILE BACTERIA TO EASE BLEACHING’S INEEL uses extremophile bacteria to ease bleaching s environmental cost. In the steamy waters of Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs lives a type of bacterium that could help make industrial bleaching cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Scientists have found Thermus brockianus bacteria produce a hardy enzyme that can beput to work
THE SHAPE OF MELTING IN TWO DIMENSIONS The shape of melting in two dimensions. A movie depicting the hexatic phase transition of a two-dimensional hard particle system of hexagons under external pressure. On the left, red and green particle pairs indicate the structure of defects in the system. On the right, blue and yellow particles show how defects migrate within the system THE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN HEMOCHROMATOSIS Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a disease characterised by excessive absorbance and storage of iron in the body, which results from a mutation in HFE, a gene involved in iron regulation. In addition, HH patients have an abnormal immune system (IS), and it has been suggested that the IS is also involved in HH iron deregulation. And now, research by a team of Portuguese scientists about to STUDY SHOWS MASSIVE MAGMA CHAMBER LIES BENEATH VESUVIUS Mount Vesuvius, the volcano most famous for blanketing the towns of Pompei and Herculaneum with lava and debris in 79 A.D., may be sitting atop a reservoir of magma that covers more than 400 square kilometers, a new study suggests. The finding, reported in the current issue of the journal Science by a group of Italian and French scientists, may lead to more accurate monitoring of the area CHALLENGES FACING THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL AREAS IN Challenges facing the development of rural areas in transition countries. Most of the rural areas in transition countries are characterised by an inadequate infrastructure and service provision, weak employment and income growth, a poor education system and rising poverty. When quality of life and economic prospects are brought into AI SYSTEM DETECTS SARS-COV-2 ON CT SCANS The method presented in the paper uses CT scans (left) and a so-called ground glass opacity (center) in order to detect infections with SARS-CoV-2 as well as acute or chronic illnesses - it marks the area upon which the diagnosis is based on a so-called heatmap (right) forthe medical staff.
SAVING THE CLIMATE WITH SOLAR FUEL Produced in a sustainable way, synthetic fuels contribute to switching mobility to renewable energy and to achieving the climate goals inroad traffic. In
LIGHTING UP ULTRAFAST MAGNETISM IN A METAL OXIDE A schematic of the resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) and resonant elastic x-ray scattering (REXS) setups. The square in the middle represents the sample, which is struck with a laser (pump) and then x-rays (probe) almost immediately after. NEW MARINE SCALE WORM SPECIES FIRST TO PROVIDE EVIDENCE OF The discovery was published on March 29 as the cover of the Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. “The species is characterized by males being dwarf, with their minute bodies always riding on the dorsal side of females,” said paper author Naoto Jimi, postdoctoral researcher at the National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and VISUALIZING CEMENT HYDRATION ON A MOLECULAR LEVEL Imaging technique could enable new pathways for reducing concrete’s hefty carbon footprint, as well as for 3-D printing of concrete. Theconcrete world that
RISC-V FUNCTIONAL SAFETY PROCESSOR IP CORE The Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS and semiconductor intellectual property provider CAST, Inc. announced the immediate availability of EMSA5-FS, a fault-tolerant embedded RISC-V processor IP core designed to meet the most stringent functional safety requirements of automotive, air-borne, and other safety-critical applications. NEW FORM OF SILICON COULD ENABLE NEXT-GEN ELECTRONIC AND A team led by Carnegie’s Thomas Shiell and Timothy Strobel developed a new method for synthesizing a novel crystalline form of silicon with a hexagonal structure that could potentially be used to create next-generation electronic and energy devices with enhanced properties that exceed those of the “normal” cubic form of silicon usedtoday.
MAGNETISM DRIVES METALS TO INSULATORS IN NEW EXPERIMENT Like all metals, silver, copper, and gold are conductors. Electrons flow across them, carrying heat and electricity. While gold is a good conductor under any conditions, some materials have the property of behaving like metal conductors only if temperatures are high enough; at low temperatures, they act like insulators and do not do a good job of carrying electricity. MAKING AI APPLICATIONS IN MEDICINE SAFER Artificial intelligence already facilitates the everyday lives of many doctors in medicine. For example, when X-rays or MRI scans are taken, it detects disease patterns, helps with diagnoses and recommendstreatments.
HOW LIVER METASTASES CAN BE STOPPED An important role within this tumour microenvironment is played by connective tissue cells, the so-called cancer associated fibroblasts (CAF). A research team led by PD Dr. Ingmar Mederacke, senior physician at the Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Endocrinology at Hannover Medical School (MHH), together with scientists from Columbia University in the USA, has investigatedINNOVATIVE PRODUCTS
A fashionable chemical and biological threat detector-on-a-ring. According to a global analyst firm called CCS Insight, wearable electronics will be a $34 billion industry by 2020. Wearable chemical sensors currently in. 12.10.2017. BIZARRE PARASITE FROM THE JURASSIC A fine-grained mudstone ensured the good state of preservation of the fossil. For the international team of scientists from the University of Bonn, the Linyi University (China), the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (China), the University of Kansas (USA) and the Natural History Museum in London (England), the insect larva is aspectacular find:
HOW DO ROTOR BLADES DEFORM IN WIND GUSTS? Make tiny particles visible and detect them. In order to be able to measure turbulent flow and deformation of the rotor blades simultaneously, two methods are combined: The Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) method and photogrammetric measurements. With the PIV method, a laser makes tiny particles visible, which are added tothe air.
ABILITY GROUPS HARM CHILDREN'S EDUCATION, SAY SUSSEX Two new separate studies show that sorting school children into sets is neither an accurate way of assessing ability, nor is it beneficial to their learning.Research by Jo Boaler, Marie Curie Professor of Education at Sussex, revealed that children in mixed ability mathematics classes outperformed those grouped by ability. She reviewed a new way of grouping children that also resulted in CONCORDE: WE CAN REBUILD IT! University of Surrey staff and students are taking part in the rebuilding of Concorde 202. They will be reassembling some key parts of Concorde’s engine air intakes on campus over the next few months. The work coincides with the imminent arrival of contractors at Brooklands Museum who will be joining the wings and fuselage back together. The parts being refurbished by UniS volunteers will INEEL USES EXTREMOPHILE BACTERIA TO EASE BLEACHING’S INEEL uses extremophile bacteria to ease bleaching s environmental cost. In the steamy waters of Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs lives a type of bacterium that could help make industrial bleaching cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Scientists have found Thermus brockianus bacteria produce a hardy enzyme that can beput to work
THE SHAPE OF MELTING IN TWO DIMENSIONS The shape of melting in two dimensions. A movie depicting the hexatic phase transition of a two-dimensional hard particle system of hexagons under external pressure. On the left, red and green particle pairs indicate the structure of defects in the system. On the right, blue and yellow particles show how defects migrate within the system THE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN HEMOCHROMATOSIS Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a disease characterised by excessive absorbance and storage of iron in the body, which results from a mutation in HFE, a gene involved in iron regulation. In addition, HH patients have an abnormal immune system (IS), and it has been suggested that the IS is also involved in HH iron deregulation. And now, research by a team of Portuguese scientists about to STUDY SHOWS MASSIVE MAGMA CHAMBER LIES BENEATH VESUVIUS Mount Vesuvius, the volcano most famous for blanketing the towns of Pompei and Herculaneum with lava and debris in 79 A.D., may be sitting atop a reservoir of magma that covers more than 400 square kilometers, a new study suggests. The finding, reported in the current issue of the journal Science by a group of Italian and French scientists, may lead to more accurate monitoring of the area CHALLENGES FACING THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL AREAS IN Challenges facing the development of rural areas in transition countries. Most of the rural areas in transition countries are characterised by an inadequate infrastructure and service provision, weak employment and income growth, a poor education system and rising poverty. When quality of life and economic prospects are brought intoINNOVATIVE PRODUCTS
A fashionable chemical and biological threat detector-on-a-ring. According to a global analyst firm called CCS Insight, wearable electronics will be a $34 billion industry by 2020. Wearable chemical sensors currently in. 12.10.2017. BIZARRE PARASITE FROM THE JURASSIC A fine-grained mudstone ensured the good state of preservation of the fossil. For the international team of scientists from the University of Bonn, the Linyi University (China), the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology (China), the University of Kansas (USA) and the Natural History Museum in London (England), the insect larva is aspectacular find:
HOW DO ROTOR BLADES DEFORM IN WIND GUSTS? Make tiny particles visible and detect them. In order to be able to measure turbulent flow and deformation of the rotor blades simultaneously, two methods are combined: The Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) method and photogrammetric measurements. With the PIV method, a laser makes tiny particles visible, which are added tothe air.
ABILITY GROUPS HARM CHILDREN'S EDUCATION, SAY SUSSEX Two new separate studies show that sorting school children into sets is neither an accurate way of assessing ability, nor is it beneficial to their learning.Research by Jo Boaler, Marie Curie Professor of Education at Sussex, revealed that children in mixed ability mathematics classes outperformed those grouped by ability. She reviewed a new way of grouping children that also resulted in CONCORDE: WE CAN REBUILD IT! University of Surrey staff and students are taking part in the rebuilding of Concorde 202. They will be reassembling some key parts of Concorde’s engine air intakes on campus over the next few months. The work coincides with the imminent arrival of contractors at Brooklands Museum who will be joining the wings and fuselage back together. The parts being refurbished by UniS volunteers will INEEL USES EXTREMOPHILE BACTERIA TO EASE BLEACHING’S INEEL uses extremophile bacteria to ease bleaching s environmental cost. In the steamy waters of Yellowstone National Park’s hot springs lives a type of bacterium that could help make industrial bleaching cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Scientists have found Thermus brockianus bacteria produce a hardy enzyme that can beput to work
THE SHAPE OF MELTING IN TWO DIMENSIONS The shape of melting in two dimensions. A movie depicting the hexatic phase transition of a two-dimensional hard particle system of hexagons under external pressure. On the left, red and green particle pairs indicate the structure of defects in the system. On the right, blue and yellow particles show how defects migrate within the system THE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN HEMOCHROMATOSIS Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a disease characterised by excessive absorbance and storage of iron in the body, which results from a mutation in HFE, a gene involved in iron regulation. In addition, HH patients have an abnormal immune system (IS), and it has been suggested that the IS is also involved in HH iron deregulation. And now, research by a team of Portuguese scientists about to STUDY SHOWS MASSIVE MAGMA CHAMBER LIES BENEATH VESUVIUS Mount Vesuvius, the volcano most famous for blanketing the towns of Pompei and Herculaneum with lava and debris in 79 A.D., may be sitting atop a reservoir of magma that covers more than 400 square kilometers, a new study suggests. The finding, reported in the current issue of the journal Science by a group of Italian and French scientists, may lead to more accurate monitoring of the area CHALLENGES FACING THE DEVELOPMENT OF RURAL AREAS IN Challenges facing the development of rural areas in transition countries. Most of the rural areas in transition countries are characterised by an inadequate infrastructure and service provision, weak employment and income growth, a poor education system and rising poverty. When quality of life and economic prospects are brought into AI SYSTEM DETECTS SARS-COV-2 ON CT SCANS The method presented in the paper uses CT scans (left) and a so-called ground glass opacity (center) in order to detect infections with SARS-CoV-2 as well as acute or chronic illnesses - it marks the area upon which the diagnosis is based on a so-called heatmap (right) forthe medical staff.
SAVING THE CLIMATE WITH SOLAR FUEL Produced in a sustainable way, synthetic fuels contribute to switching mobility to renewable energy and to achieving the climate goals inroad traffic. In
LIGHTING UP ULTRAFAST MAGNETISM IN A METAL OXIDE A schematic of the resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) and resonant elastic x-ray scattering (REXS) setups. The square in the middle represents the sample, which is struck with a laser (pump) and then x-rays (probe) almost immediately after. NEW MARINE SCALE WORM SPECIES FIRST TO PROVIDE EVIDENCE OF The discovery was published on March 29 as the cover of the Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research. “The species is characterized by males being dwarf, with their minute bodies always riding on the dorsal side of females,” said paper author Naoto Jimi, postdoctoral researcher at the National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and VISUALIZING CEMENT HYDRATION ON A MOLECULAR LEVEL Imaging technique could enable new pathways for reducing concrete’s hefty carbon footprint, as well as for 3-D printing of concrete. Theconcrete world that
RISC-V FUNCTIONAL SAFETY PROCESSOR IP CORE The Fraunhofer Institute for Photonic Microsystems IPMS and semiconductor intellectual property provider CAST, Inc. announced the immediate availability of EMSA5-FS, a fault-tolerant embedded RISC-V processor IP core designed to meet the most stringent functional safety requirements of automotive, air-borne, and other safety-critical applications. NEW FORM OF SILICON COULD ENABLE NEXT-GEN ELECTRONIC AND A team led by Carnegie’s Thomas Shiell and Timothy Strobel developed a new method for synthesizing a novel crystalline form of silicon with a hexagonal structure that could potentially be used to create next-generation electronic and energy devices with enhanced properties that exceed those of the “normal” cubic form of silicon usedtoday.
MAGNETISM DRIVES METALS TO INSULATORS IN NEW EXPERIMENT Like all metals, silver, copper, and gold are conductors. Electrons flow across them, carrying heat and electricity. While gold is a good conductor under any conditions, some materials have the property of behaving like metal conductors only if temperatures are high enough; at low temperatures, they act like insulators and do not do a good job of carrying electricity. MAKING AI APPLICATIONS IN MEDICINE SAFER Artificial intelligence already facilitates the everyday lives of many doctors in medicine. For example, when X-rays or MRI scans are taken, it detects disease patterns, helps with diagnoses and recommendstreatments.
HOW LIVER METASTASES CAN BE STOPPED An important role within this tumour microenvironment is played by connective tissue cells, the so-called cancer associated fibroblasts (CAF). A research team led by PD Dr. Ingmar Mederacke, senior physician at the Department of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Endocrinology at Hannover Medical School (MHH), together with scientists from Columbia University in the USA, has investigated* Fachgebiete
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Verfahrenstechnologie FORSCHUNG AUS BRAUNSCHWEIG ERMÖGLICHT INNOVATIVE ARZNEIMITTEL Braunschweig baut seine Stärken in der Herstellung individueller Arzneimittel weiter aus. Dafür kooperieren erstmals das Fraunhofer-Institut für Schicht- und Oberflächentechnik IST und das Zentrum für Pharmaverfahrenstechnik (PVZ) der TechnischenUniversität…
04.06.2021
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Biowissenschaften Chemie NEUE DESIGNER-PROTEINE MACHEN ISOFORME NICHTINVASIV SICHTBAR Isoforme sind Varianten von Proteinen, die aus einem einzelnen Gen entstehen. Sie sind der Grund, warum wir weitaus mehr Proteine als Gene besitzen. Ein Ungleichgewicht der Isoforme steht in Verbindung…04.06.2021
Physik Astronomie
WIE QUANTENPUNKTE MITEINANDER „SPRECHEN“ KÖNNEN Wie sich die Kommunikation zwischen zwei Quantenpunkten mit Licht beeinflussen lässt, hat nun eine Gruppe am HZB theoretisch ausgearbeitet. Dabei zeigt das Team um Annika Bande auch Wege, umden…
04.06.2021
Kommunikation Medien TV-DOKU: IM LABYRINTH DER PRODUKTE Seit etlichen Jahrzehnten analysiert die Verhaltensökonomie den Menschen im Spannungsfeld zur Wirtschaft. Wie der Mensch online, aber auch im Geschäft beim gigantischen Labyrinth der Angebote zu Kaufentscheidungen kommt, was die…04.06.2021
Verfahrenstechnologie FORSCHUNG AUS BRAUNSCHWEIG ERMÖGLICHT INNOVATIVE ARZNEIMITTEL Braunschweig baut seine Stärken in der Herstellung individueller Arzneimittel weiter aus. Dafür kooperieren erstmals das Fraunhofer-Institut für Schicht- und Oberflächentechnik IST und das Zentrum für Pharmaverfahrenstechnik (PVZ) der TechnischenUniversität…
04.06.2021
Biowissenschaften Chemie SALPEN DÜNGEN DAS SÜDPOLARMEER EFFEKTIVER ALS KRILL Kotballen der Manteltiere sorgen für höhere Verfügbarkeit von Eisen als die von Krill. Forschende des Alfred-Wegener-Instituts haben erstmals experimentell die Freisetzung von Eisen aus den Kotballen vonKrill und Salpen…
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Förderungen Preise
KLIMA-SCHNELLTEST FÜR KORALLEN GEFÖRDERT Beitrag zur Korallenrettung: Paul G. Allen Family Foundation fördert Konstanzer Schnelltest „CBASS“ zur Ermittlung der Klimaresistenz von Korallen mit insgesamt 4 Millionen Dollar. Ein mobiler Schnelltest für Korallen soll in…04.06.2021
Veranstaltungsnachrichten 9. TECHNOLOGIEFORUM – FAHRERLOSE TRANSPORTSYSTEME UND MOBILE ROBOTERDES FRAUNHOFER IPA
Wandlungsfähige Produktionen oder der boomende Onlinehandel stellen höchste Anforderungen an die Intralogistik. Auch die Corona-Pandemie verstärkt den Trend zur Automatisierung. Neue Ansätze und Anwendungen rund um mobile Systeme präsentiert das…04.06.2021
Biowissenschaften Chemie LEUKÄMIEFORSCHUNG: WICHTIGE GENETISCHE SCHALTSTELLE FÜR DIE FRÜHE BLUTBILDUNG ENTSCHLÜSSELT Blutbildende Stammzellen sind der Ursprung aller verschiedenen Blutkörperchen. Wie und wo entscheidet sich aber, zu welcher Art von Blutzelle sich eine Stammzelle entwickelt? Ein Forscherteam unter Leitung von Wissenschaftlern am…04.06.2021
Biowissenschaften Chemie EINGEFÄRBTE TUMORE VERRATEN FRÜHZEITIG IHREN SCHLECHTEN EINFLUSS So klein und schon so böse… Forschung in Wien und Cambridge: Neues genetisches Modell ermöglicht frühzeitige Darmkrebserkennung bei Mäusen schon bei der Veränderung der ersten Zelle – Entdeckungebnet auch…
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Innovative Produkte
„MAGNUS“- DESINFEKTIONSMITTEL AUS DER TÜRKLINKE Die Hände schon desinfizieren, während man die Tür öffnet. Ein interdisziplinäres Gründungsteam aus Studenten und Absolventen der Universität und Universitätsmedizin Göttingen (UMG) entwickelt zurzeit einen Desinfektionsmittelspender, der die klassischeTürklinke…
04.06.2021
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WILLKOMMEN IM INNOVATIONS-REPORT, dem Forum für Wissenschaft, Industrie und Wirtschaft zur Förderung der Innovationsdynamik und Vernetzung von Innovations- und Leistungspotenzialen. Mit mehr als 8.200 internationalen Content-Partnern und über 270.000 Veröffentlichungen über neueste Entwicklungs- und Forschungsergebnisse, interessante Studien und Statistiken sowie innovative Verfahren, Produkte und Dienstleistungen zukunftsorientierter Unternehmen und renommierter wissenschaftlicher Einrichtungen, zählt der innovations-report zu den wichtigen Impulsgebern des internationalen Innovationsgeschehens — online seit über 20 Jahren. Eine besondere Ehre wurde dem innovations-report durch die Nominierung zur renommierten “Dieselmedaille” in der Kategorie “Beste Medienkommunikation” zuteil.PHYSIK ASTRONOMIE
Physik Astronomie
WIE QUANTENPUNKTE MITEINANDER „SPRECHEN“ KÖNNEN Wie sich die Kommunikation zwischen zwei Quantenpunkten mit Licht beeinflussen lässt, hat nun eine Gruppe am HZB theoretisch ausgearbeitet. Dabei zeigt das Team um Annika Bande auch Wege, umden…
04.06.2021
Physik Astronomie
LASERPHYSIK: TEILCHEN BESCHLEUNIGEN TEILCHEN In einer internationalen Kooperation haben Laserphysiker der LMU erstmals einen „hybriden Plasmabeschleuniger“ gebaut. Teilchenbeschleuniger sind für einige der spektakulärsten wissenschaftlichen Entdeckungen der Neuzeit verantwortlich. Sie sind u.a. der Grund, warum…02.06.2021
Physik Astronomie
TOPOLEKTRISCHE SCHALTKREISE Neues Forschungsfeld startet durch … Mit einer jungen experimentellen Methode lassen sich topologische Phänomene viel schneller, günstiger und flexibler untersuchen. Erst vor knapp zwei Jahren haben Forscher:innen des Exzellenzclusters ct.qmat…02.06.2021
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BIOWISSENSCHAFTEN CHEMIE Biowissenschaften Chemie NEUE DESIGNER-PROTEINE MACHEN ISOFORME NICHTINVASIV SICHTBAR Isoforme sind Varianten von Proteinen, die aus einem einzelnen Gen entstehen. Sie sind der Grund, warum wir weitaus mehr Proteine als Gene besitzen. Ein Ungleichgewicht der Isoforme steht in Verbindung…04.06.2021
Biowissenschaften Chemie SALPEN DÜNGEN DAS SÜDPOLARMEER EFFEKTIVER ALS KRILL Kotballen der Manteltiere sorgen für höhere Verfügbarkeit von Eisen als die von Krill. Forschende des Alfred-Wegener-Instituts haben erstmals experimentell die Freisetzung von Eisen aus den Kotballen vonKrill und Salpen…
04.06.2021
Biowissenschaften Chemie LEUKÄMIEFORSCHUNG: WICHTIGE GENETISCHE SCHALTSTELLE FÜR DIE FRÜHE BLUTBILDUNG ENTSCHLÜSSELT Blutbildende Stammzellen sind der Ursprung aller verschiedenen Blutkörperchen. Wie und wo entscheidet sich aber, zu welcher Art von Blutzelle sich eine Stammzelle entwickelt? Ein Forscherteam unter Leitung von Wissenschaftlern am…04.06.2021
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AGRAR- FORSTWISSENSCHAFTEN Agrar- Forstwissenschaften WIE KOOPERATIVE WURZELNETZWERKE GESTRESSTEN BÄUMEN HELFEN KÖNNEN Wer gute Netzwerke hat, kommt besser durch schwierige Lebenslagen. Was für uns Menschen gilt, konnte eine Forschungsgruppe um Uta Berger, Professorin für Forstliche Biometrie und Systemanalyse an der TUDresden,…
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Agrar- Forstwissenschaften „PANDEMIE“ AUF DEM RÜBENACKER Verbundprojekt untersucht Schilf-Glasflügelzikade als Überträger bakterieller Krankheit. Die Verbreitung invasiver Arten ist häufig eine Folge des globalen Wandels und stellt die Landwirtschaft vor große Herausforderungen. In einem neuen Forschungsprojektuntersucht…
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Agrar- Forstwissenschaften DEM GEHEIMNIS DER KAKAO-BESTÄUBER AUF DER SPUR Team unter Göttinger Leitung untersucht Agroforstsysteme in Indonesien … Wie wichtig Bestäuber für erfolgreiche Ernten und damit für die globale Ernährungssicherheit sind, ist weithin anerkannt. Allerdings ist oft nicht geklärt,…03.05.2021
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INFORMATIONSTECHNOLOGIE Informationstechnologie MIT LICHT GEGEN CYBERATTACKEN KÄMPFEN Mit 12 Millionen Euro fördert das Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) im Rahmen von »Vertrauenswürdige Elektronik (Zeus)« das Verbundforschungsprojekt „Silhouette“ (Silicon Photonics for Trusted Electronic Systems). Ziel des Projektes…02.06.2021
Informationstechnologie INNOVATIONEN FÜR DAS QUANTENCOMPUTING MIT TOPOLOGISCHEN ISOLATOREN Die Forschungsstandorte Jülich und Würzburg werden gemeinsam Quanten-Phänomene topologischer Materialien und deren Chancen für das Quantencomputing erkunden. Der Freistaat Bayern fördert das Vorhaben mit 13 Millionen Euro. An der Entwicklung…31.05.2021
Informationstechnologie ROBOTER MÜSSEN SICHER FÜR DEN MENSCHEN SEIN Unternehmen bekommen Hilfe durch neues digitales Tool. Die neue Generation von Robotern arbeitet noch enger mit ihren menschlichen Kollegen zusammen. Sie macht manuelle Arbeit weniger mühsam und interessanter – und…28.05.2021
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