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Balancing instability and robustness: New mathematical framework for dynamics of natural systems
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Balancing instability and robustness: New mathematical framework for dynamics of natural systems

Scientists all over the world use modeling approaches to understand complex natural systems such as climate systems or neuronal or biochemical networks. A team of researchers has now developed a new mathematical framework that explains, for the first time, a mechanism behind long transient behaviors in complex systems.
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How a warming Arctic is accelerating global climate change
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How a warming Arctic is accelerating global climate change

Three recent papers authored by Ted Schuur, Regents' professor of biological sciences at Northern Arizona University, and other researchers around the world, organized through the Permafrost Carbon Network, investigate the biological processes taking place in the warming Arctic tundra and provide insight into what we can expect from that region as the climate continues to change.
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Ancient DNA analyses imply brucellosis pathogen evolved with development of farming
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Ancient DNA analyses imply brucellosis pathogen evolved with development of farming

Scientists analyzed ancient DNA extracted from an 8,000-year-old sheep bone and detected the Brucella melitensis pathogen. Brucellosis affects millions of people every year and causes significant harm to the welfare of livestock.
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Atomic 'GPS' elucidates movement during ultrafast material transitions
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Atomic 'GPS' elucidates movement during ultrafast material transitions

Scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have created the first-ever atomic movies showing how atoms rearrange locally within a quantum material as it transitions from an insulator to a metal. With the help of these movies, the researchers discovered a new material phase that settles a yearslong scientific debate and could facilitate the design of new transitioning materials with commercial applications.
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Novel tunable ultrasonic liquid crystal light diffuser paves the way for next-gen indoor lighting
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Novel tunable ultrasonic liquid crystal light diffuser paves the way for next-gen indoor lighting

It is no mystery that light is essential to human life. Since the discovery of fire, humans have developed various artificial light sources, such as incandescent lamps, gaslights, discharge lamps, and light-emitting diodes (LEDs). The distribution and intensity of artificial lights indoors are important factors that affect our ability to study and work effectively and influence our physical and mental health.
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New method for 3D quantitative phase imaging eliminates need for digital phase recovery algorithms
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New method for 3D quantitative phase imaging eliminates need for digital phase recovery algorithms

A study from the University of California, Los Angeles, published in Advanced Photonics introduces a cutting-edge approach to 3D Quantitative Phase Imaging (QPI) using a wavelength-multiplexed diffractive optical processor.
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Increased demand for metals and minerals needed for clean energy transition puts 4,000+ species at risk, finds study
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Increased demand for metals and minerals needed for clean energy transition puts 4,000+ species at risk, finds study

New research has found that 4,642 species of vertebrates are threatened by mineral extraction around the world through mining and quarrying, and drilling for oil and gas.
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New understanding of fly behavior has potential application in robotics, public safety
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New understanding of fly behavior has potential application in robotics, public safety

Why do flies buzz around in circles when the air is still? And why does it matter? In a paper published in Current Biology, University of Nevada, Reno Assistant Professor Floris van Breugel and Postdoctoral Researcher S. David Stupski respond to this previously unanswered question. Their answer could hold a key to public safety—specifically, how to better train robotic systems to track chemical leaks.
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New interaction network in endocytosis process discovered
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New interaction network in endocytosis process discovered

AP180 is a protein involved in endocytosis and in signal transmission between nerve cells. This protein, which largely lacks a three-dimensional structure, has never been fully studied.
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Communicating numbers boosts trust in climate change science, research suggests
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Communicating numbers boosts trust in climate change science, research suggests

The intuition to distill hard numbers like "90 percent" into words like "almost all" may help make science and statistics more accessible, but new research shows that isn't necessarily the best way to engage people online.
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