Trusted by the world’s leading institutions

clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients
Newswise: Monitoring diseases through sweat becomes accessible to everyone
Released: 28-May-2024 11:00 AM EDT
Monitoring diseases through sweat becomes accessible to everyone
National Research Council of Science and Technology

Dr. Kim Joohee from the Bionics Research Center at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) and Professor John A. Rogers from Northwestern University jointly announced the development of a convenient sweat monitoring device that does not require physical activity but delivers drug stimulation through the skin.

28-May-2024 6:05 AM EDT
Prenatal exposure to air pollution associated with increased mental health risks
University of Bristol

A baby’s exposure to air pollution while in the womb is associated with the development of certain mental health problems once the infant reaches adolescence, new research has found.

Newswise: Harnessing Green Energy from Plants Depends on Their Circadian Rhythms
23-May-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Harnessing Green Energy from Plants Depends on Their Circadian Rhythms
American Institute of Physics (AIP)

Plant hydraulics drive the biological process that moves fluids from roots to plant stems and leaves, creating streaming electric potential, or voltage, in the process.

Newswise: A Cleaner Way to Produce Ammonia
Released: 28-May-2024 10:30 AM EDT
A Cleaner Way to Produce Ammonia
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Ammonia is the starting point for the fertilizers that have secured the world’s food supply for the last century. It’s also a main component of cleaning products, and is even considered as a future carbon-free replacement for fossil fuels in vehicles.

Newswise: New Research Supports Expansion of Kidney Donation to Include Organs from Deceased Patients Who Once Had Dialysis
Released: 28-May-2024 10:00 AM EDT
New Research Supports Expansion of Kidney Donation to Include Organs from Deceased Patients Who Once Had Dialysis
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers from Johns Hopkins Medicine propose a novel approach to addressing the pressing issue of a kidney donor shortage through findings that suggest a promising method to expand the pool of available kidney donors by utilizing deceased donors on dialysis for kidney transplants.

Newswise: Image sensor: Better cameras with perovskite
Released: 28-May-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Image sensor: Better cameras with perovskite
Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology

Capturing three times more light: Empa and ETH researchers are developing an image sensor made of perovskite that could deliver true-color photos even in poor lighting conditions. Unlike conventional image sensors, where the pixels for red, green and blue lie next to each other in a grid, perovskite pixels can be stacked thus greatly increasing the amount of light each individual pixel can capture.

Newswise: Low-cost, high-precision: a new ambiguity resolution method for urban GNSS positioning
Released: 28-May-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Low-cost, high-precision: a new ambiguity resolution method for urban GNSS positioning
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A cutting-edge method for Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) ambiguity resolution has been developed, promising to enhance the accuracy and reliability of urban positioning. This innovative approach addresses the longstanding challenge of obtaining precise location data in built-up environments where signals are often obstructed.

Released: 28-May-2024 9:05 AM EDT
Study Sheds Light on Shady World of Text Message Phishing Scams
North Carolina State University

Researchers have collected and analyzed an unprecedented amount of data on SMS phishing attacks, shedding light on both the scope and nature of SMS phishing operations. The work also identifies avenues that law enforcement can use to address phishing operations.

Newswise: Apple versus doughnut: How the shape of a tokamak impacts the limits of the edge of the plasma
Released: 28-May-2024 8:30 AM EDT
Apple versus doughnut: How the shape of a tokamak impacts the limits of the edge of the plasma
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory

PPPL scientists have developed a new theoretical model about the edge of a plasma, which can become unstable and potentially damage a fusion reactor. The model refines ideas about a critical obstacle on the path to harnessing clean energy from this fourth state of matter.

Newswise: Major accidents at production facilities can be detected from a distance in real time through “sounds”
Released: 28-May-2024 12:00 AM EDT
Major accidents at production facilities can be detected from a distance in real time through “sounds”
National Research Council of Science and Technology

For the first time in the country, KIMM develops “three-dimensional acoustic intensity-based leak detection technology” for detecting pipeline damages. New technology can help to reduce costs by 30 percent, while enhancing safety by allowing prompt response to large-scale accidents at production facilities within the golden hour.


close
1.6076