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Machine Learning Fast-Forwards Solar Cell Design
Researchers in Australia have harnessed AI to produce solar cells from the mineral perovskite in just a matter of weeks, bypassing years of human labor and human error to optimize the cells.
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Air Pollution May Be Interfering With Prenatal Hormone Activity
Researchers from Rutgers University have uncovered the potential impact of exposure to air pollution on prenatal hormone health and infant reproductive development.
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Climate Engineering May Be the Key to Slowing Down Antarctic Ice Loss
Scattering sunlight-reflecting particles in the atmosphere could slow rapid melting in West Antarctica and reduce the risk of catastrophic sea-level rise, according to a study led by Indiana University researchers.
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Printing Robots With Bones, Ligaments, and Tendons
For the first time, researchers have succeeded in printing a robotic hand with bones, ligaments and tendons made of different polymers using a new laser scanning technique.
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Microplastics Found in Clouds Could Be Affecting the Weather
Researchers have analyzed microplastics in clouds above mountains. They suggest that these tiny particles could play a role in cloud formation and, in turn, affect weather.
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Researchers Turn the Dregs of Wine Into Jelly Sweets
Researchers in Turkey have demonstrated how a waste product of wineries can be reused as an ingredient in gelatine-based sweets.
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Ancient Europe May Not Have Been One Dense Forest After All
For decades, we believed that outside ice ages Europe was mostly covered by dense forest before the arrival of modern humans. Now, a new study shows that there was far more open and semi-open vegetation than conventionally expected.
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New Data Model Can Assess Falling Rock Risk in the Andes
Researchers developed a new method to assess the risk associated with rockfalls in the mountains, taking into account various triggering factors and all the issues exposed.
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An Intravenous Needle That Softens in the Body on Insertion
Researchers have developed an intravenous needle that softens and flexes when in the body, reducing the risk of damage to the blood vessel as patients receive medication.
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A Bee Virus May Be Getting Less Deadly in New York
Researchers have found that the deadly deformed wing virus (DMV) may have evolved to be less deadly in at least one U.S. forest. The findings could help inform solutions to mitigate the virus in managed honey bee colonies.
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