OncoAssure Clinical Study Validates Novel Test for Prostate Cancer Management

OncoAssure_Publication_Associate_Image_w-1
Novel cancer test that addresses unmet needs in prostate cancer management is now available for commercialisationOncoAssure today announced that results of its clinical study validating OncoAssure Prostate, a novel test for prostate cancer management, have been published in European Urology Focus, a peer-reviewed and open access journal. OncoAssure...
Continue reading
  802 Hits
802 Hits

New Study Sheds Light on Origins of Life on Earth

Origins-of-life-image
 Addressing one of the most profoundly unanswered questions in biology, a Rutgers-led team has discovered the structures of proteins that may be responsible for the origins of life in the primordial soup of ancient Earth.The study appears in the journal Science Advances.The researchers explored how primitive life may have originated on our pla...
Continue reading
  873 Hits
873 Hits

Risks of using AI to grow our food are substantial and must not be ignored, warn researchers

dronegettyimagescrop
Artificial intelligence (AI) is on the cusp of driving an agricultural revolution, and helping confront the challenge of feeding our growing global population in a sustainable way. But researchers warn that using new AI technologies at scale holds huge risks that are not being considered. Imagine a field of wheat that extends to the horizon, b...
Continue reading
  454 Hits
454 Hits

UCT’s and Sasol’s significant step toward CO2 hydrogenation technology

2021-09-07_hydrogenation-technology
 A team of researchers from the Catalysis Institute at the University of Cape Town (UCT) and integrated energy and chemical company Sasol have made advancements in the use of commercial iron catalyst, produced cheaply and at large‑scale at Sasol's Secunda plant, which will enable conversion of unavoidable or biogenically derived carbon dioxide...
Continue reading
  801 Hits
801 Hits

Superflare with Massive, High-Velocity Prominence Eruption

2304_main_inoue
 A team of Japanese astronomers used simultaneous ground-based and space-based observations to capture a more complete picture of a superflare on a star. The observed flare started with a very massive, high-velocity prominence eruption. These results give us a better idea of how superflares and stellar prominence eruptions occur.Some stars hav...
Continue reading
  569 Hits
569 Hits

West Antarctic Ice Sheet retreated, re-advanced up to 160 miles since last ice age

drone-view-of-the-historic-expedition-from-dec-2018-jan-2019
 Mines' Ryan Venturelli led the new study, published in AGU Advances, that constrained the Antarctic subglacial carbon cycle for the first timeThe West Antarctic Ice Sheet is melting rapidly, raising concerns it could cross a tipping point of irreversible retreat in the next few decades if global temperatures rise 1.5 to 2.0 degrees Celsius (2...
Continue reading
  396 Hits
396 Hits

From Western Sydney University to orbit: stellar new camera tech on the International Space Station

Project_Falcon_Neuro_on_the_ISS_1
 In a world-first, Western Sydney University and the United States Air Force Academy have successfully received neuromorphic data sent from space after launching ground-breaking neuromorphic cameras on the International Space Station (ISS).Developed and built by the University's International Centre for Neuromorphic Systems (ICNS), the space-b...
Continue reading
  370 Hits
370 Hits

Cassowaries still crucial to seed dispersal, study shows

Cassowary-3-1
 Cassowaries continue to be one of nature's most critical gardeners, with a new study into seed dispersal through their scats reaffirming their role in the ecological function of pockets of remnant rainforests.The study led by Charles Darwin University (CDU) explored whether the southern cassowary remains important to native seed dispersal in ...
Continue reading
  531 Hits
531 Hits

New 2D nanomaterial membrane unleashes ocean energy

frothy-ocean-waves-break-over-rocks_550x275
 When thinking of renewable energy sources, it is often solar or wind that spring to mind first – but what about ocean energy?The ocean covers more than 70 per cent of the earth's surface – providing enormous potential for renewable and clean energy. Institute for Frontier Materials (IFM) researchers hope to unlock this potential.In a paper pu...
Continue reading
  477 Hits
477 Hits

Building a shared future for all life by supporting biological diversity

Peter-Harrison-at-Lizard-Island20211125_11-low-res-720x475
 From discovering a new frog species or learning more about shy tropical dolphins, to improving the production of food crops like hempseed and coffee, Southern Cross University researchers are working alongside nature to ensure longevity and viability of plant and animal species.Their stories of hope, innovation and collaboration underpin 'Bui...
Continue reading
  568 Hits
568 Hits

FSU researchers find sea urchin die-offs threaten Caribbean coral reefs

UrchinsWeb-900x600
 The sustained loss of a once abundant species of sea urchin in the Caribbean could also result in the functional extinction of diverse coral species from the region's reefs, according to new research from a Florida State University team.The urchin species Diadema antillarum has long been considered the most important grazer in the Caribbean, ...
Continue reading
  346 Hits
346 Hits

ANU research creates satellite maps for emergency help

shutterstock_1220769802-2
 First responders would be furnished with almost-instant satellite maps of the natural disasters they are tackling thanks to a new algorithm that Australian National University (ANU) researcher Associate Professor Dale Roberts is preparing as part of the University's Climate, Energy and Disaster Solutions Institute.Associate Professor Roberts ...
Continue reading
  397 Hits
397 Hits

Rutgers Sandy Operation Helps Forecasters Predict Severe Storms, Saving Livelihood Worldwide

Travis-Miles
 Researchers continue to advance hurricane science, leading to increased forecast accuracy and lead timesAs Superstorm Sandy approached the New Jersey coastline, a single Rutgers glider deployed off Tuckerton by hurricane scientists at Rutgers University Center for Ocean Observing Leadership (RUCOOL), provided an ominous warning.The water mass...
Continue reading
  687 Hits
687 Hits

Inter­disciplinary frontier research in quantum science

galileo13
 Quantum computers, tap-proof data transfer or highly sensitive sensors. Quantum mechanical properties such as superposition and entanglement form the basis of many of tomorrow's technological systems.In the interdisciplinary research focus of quantum information and technology, scientists at Ulm University investigate quantum physical phenome...
Continue reading
  355 Hits
355 Hits

World-first 'weather service' for water quality

preview
CSIRO, Australia's national science agency, working with artificial intelligence researchers at La Trobe University, has launched a world-first mission to deploy an extensive network of Earth observation satellites and ground-based water sensors.AquaWatch Australia is a network delivering near real-time monitoring and forecasting for water quality ...
Continue reading
  632 Hits
632 Hits

Quantum code developed at Purdue University could tackle problems from semiconductors to commodities

NEMO5_Featured
 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — A unique library of computer code, built on equations derived for quantum mechanics, could be used to model problems as diverse as the flow of electrons through a nanoscale device or the price of copper in a commodities market. Begun more than a decade ago through the Nanoelectronic Modeling Group at Purdue University, ...
Continue reading
  545 Hits
545 Hits

Giant babies return to reef in major step for forest-scale kelp restoration

Ocean-Imaging_59279-sml
 Baby giant kelps were planted across 7000 square metres of reef in southeast Tasmania last month, in the first attempt at 'forest-scale' kelp restoration in the Southern Hemisphere.If successful, the unique restoration project will create an area resembling a natural giant kelp forest. It's the result of over four years of dedicated research ...
Continue reading
  845 Hits
845 Hits

Insects affect electric fields in the atmosphere, researchers find

Electric-honeybee-article
The electric charge of insects can cause changes in the electricity of the atmosphere which are comparable with weather processes, researchers at the University of Bristol and University of Reading have found.By measuring atmospheric electricity near a swarm of bees in flight, this study, published today in iScience, is the first to recognise biolo...
Continue reading
  552 Hits
552 Hits

New Weapons in the Battle Against Herbicide-Resistant Weeds

field
 If you're lucky enough to live somewhere with a backyard, you're probably also used to doing daily battle with your local weeds. And if you think weeding a backyard is tough, imagine how challenging it is to keep an entire farm free of weeds!Herbicide-resistant weeds are setting up home on farms across Australia and the world, and can outcomp...
Continue reading
  725 Hits
725 Hits

Eavesdropping on the Earth itself

ntb_2109255461
 This summer, a coalition of researchers led by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology reported the first-ever use of a fibre-optic cable network to eavesdrop on whales in the Arctic. Now they suggest these networks be used to establish a low-cost global ocean-earth observatory.The more-than 1.2 million km of fibre-optic cables tha...
Continue reading
  622 Hits
622 Hits

 

©2023 EDUCOM NET. All Rights Reserved.

If you find an inaccuracy or you have comments on the description of the university or program - please let us know info@educom.net