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כתבות אחרונות מאתר 'Phys'
Phys

Managed wetlands a culinary hot spot for SF bay fish, but they need delivery options‎

California's Bay Area may be a culinary hot spot for people, but food options for fish in the San Francisco Estuary have been limited and declining in recent decades. A new study from the University of California, Davis, shows there is a part of the estuary that is teeming with fish food—the managed wetlands of Suisun Marsh.

03:09
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Phys

How graphene oxide kills bacteria while sparing human cells‎

Hygiene in everyday items that touch the body—such as clothing, masks, and toothbrushes—is critically important. The underlying principle of how graphene selectively eliminates only bacteria has now been revealed. In Advanced Functional Materials, a KAIST research team presents the potential for a next-generation antibacterial material that is safe for the human body and capable of replacing antibiotics.

02:43
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Phys

Researchers describe protein structure microbes used to control light conversion‎

Wildfire smoke is teeming with them. Researchers have employed them to develop energy-dense biofuels like rocket, marine, and jet fuels. Scientists have engineered rice paddies that interact differently with them, causing lower methane "burping." They can be used to extract valuable metals like lithium and copper from plants like seaweed.

01:33
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Phys

Ancient alphabets, new insights: Researchers uncover hidden links among the letters‎

With artificial intelligence (AI) as an essential tool, San Diego State University researchers have discovered surprising similarities among ancient writing systems from Africa and the Caucasus region of Eurasia. Their study suggests that the Armenian alphabet may be more closely related in structure to the ancient Ethiopic writing system than linguists and historians previously thought. The paper is published in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities.

00:32
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Phys

Binding to RNA is not enough—changing its shape is what makes a drug work, study reveals‎

Ribonucleic acids (RNAs) serve as messengers between DNA and protein production, and perform a wide variety of regulatory functions across different cellular processes. This makes them an interesting target for drug designers. Molecular genetics researcher Danny Incarnato (University of Groningen) studies how small-molecule drugs could interfere with RNA structure and function. In a new paper published on March 23 in the journal Nature Communications, he shows that small molecules that bind to RNA only rarely affect its function, while molecules that change RNA structure have a bigger effect.

00:14
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Phys

In world first, antimatter taken on test drive at CERN‎

CERN scientists on Tuesday pulled off the unprecedented feat of transporting antiprotons by road, successfully test-driving the world's first antimatter delivery system, with an eye to one day supplying research labs across Europe.

23:41
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Phys

A mass mating event in the lab reveals how yeast cells choose partners‎

While humans often struggle to find a partner who is both physically attractive and a reliable co-parent, yeast may already have cracked the formula for the perfect match. When choosing mates, these single-celled organisms tend to pick partners that may increase the chances of their offspring's success, according to a new study by scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science, published in Cell Reports.

23:11
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Phys

ZTF discovers a new mass-transferring brown dwarf binary system‎

Astronomers from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and elsewhere report the discovery of a binary system consisting of two brown dwarfs undergoing stable mass transfer. The detection of the system, designated ZTF J1239+8347, was made with the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and is detailed in a paper published March 18 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

22:04
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Phys

Who do you think you are? What DNA tests reveal—and what they don't‎

For more than 40 years, the Golden State Killer haunted California. A serial rapist and murderer active in the 1970s and '80s, he eluded detectives for decades. By 2018, hope of identifying him was fading, until a woman—curious about her ancestry—spat into a plastic tube and mailed it to a genealogy company.

22:04
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Phys

The time capsule in the salt flat‎

There is a place in northern Chile, 3,500 meters above sea level in the Andean Altiplano, where almost nothing survives. The Salar de Pajonales is a salt flat of savage extremes temperatures swinging from −23°C to 26°C, solar radiation among the highest measured anywhere on Earth, annual rainfall that barely registers, and winds that rip across the surface at over 100 kilometers per hour. And yet, life is there.

21:04
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