Quantcast
Channel: American Gastroenterological Association in the news
Browsing all 14071 articles
Browse latest View live

Unexpected energy barrier for uptake of hydrogen in tungsten wall of fusion...

The reactor walls of future fusion reactors will absorb fusion fuel one million times slower than previous research had indicated. A layer of bound hydrogen on the surface of the tungsten wall seems to...

View Article


Cryptic new species of wild cat identified in Brazil

Researchers reporting in Current Biology on November 27 have identified a cryptic new species of wild cat living in Brazil. The discovery is a reminder of just how little scientists still know about...

View Article


Key protein responsible for controlling communication between brain cells...

Scientists are a step closer to understanding how some of the brain's 100 billion nerve cells co-ordinate their communication. The study is published today in the journal Cell Reports.

View Article

Slowly cooled DNA transforms disordered nanoparticles into orderly crystal

Nature builds flawless diamonds, sapphires and other gems. Now a Northwestern University research team is the first to build near-perfect single crystals out of nanoparticles and DNA, using the same...

View Article

By targeting enzyme in mosquito-borne parasite, researchers aim to eliminate...

Using advanced methodologies that pit drug compounds against specific types of malaria parasite cells, an international team of scientists, including researchers at the University of California, San...

View Article


Lakes discovered beneath Greenland ice sheet

The study, published in Geophysical Research Letters, discovered two subglacial lakes 800 metres below the Greenland Ice Sheet. The two lakes are each roughly 8-10 km2, and at one point may have been...

View Article

Fast, furious, refined: Smaller black holes can eat plenty

(Phys.org) —Gemini observations support an unexpected discovery in the galaxy Messier 101. A relatively small black hole (20-30 times the mass of our Sun) can sustain a hugely voracious appetite while...

View Article

Pills of the future: Scientists develop way to successfully give nanoparticle...

Drugs delivered by nanoparticles hold promise for targeted treatment of many diseases, including cancer. However, the particles have to be injected into patients, which has limited their usefulness so...

View Article


Glaciers sizzle as they disappear into warmer water

Scientists have recorded and identified one of the most prominent sounds of a warming planet: the sizzle of glacier ice as it melts into the sea. The noise, caused by trapped air bubbles squirting out...

View Article


What's the sound of a hundred thousand soccer fans?

Mention vuvuzela to soccer fans, and they may cringe. The plastic horn rose to prominence during the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, where tens of thousands of those instruments blared in packed...

View Article

Economic development can only buy happiness up to a 'sweet spot' of $36,000...

Economists have shed light on the vexed question of whether economic development can buy happiness – and it seems that life satisfaction actually dips among people living in the wealthiest countries.

View Article

Bitcoin rises above $1,000

The virtual currency bitcoin Wednesday broke above $1,000 per unit, quintupling in a month, according to Mt. Gox, which manages trading in bitcoin.

View Article

SOHO shows new images of Comet ISON

As Comet ISON heads toward its closest approach to the sun—known as perihelion—on Nov. 28, 2013, scientists have been watching through many observatories to see if the comet has already broken up under...

View Article


Physicists find a way to study coldest objects in the universe

They are the coldest objects in the Universe and are so fragile that even a single photon can heat and destroy them.

View Article

Research team quantifies 'the difficulties of reproducibility'

(Phys.org) —A key pillar of "the scientific method" is reproducibility, one way to prove another scientist's experimental claims. If the experiment and its results can be reproduced, the validity of...

View Article


Sorting good germs from bad, in the bacterial world

(Phys.org) —Arizona State University scientists have developed a microfluidic chip, which can sort good germs from bad.

View Article

The secrets of octopus suckers

(Phys.org) —Research published today in the Royal Society journal Interface investigates how octopus suckers help them attach to surfaces and examines how artificial sucker-like materials compare.

View Article


Nanoscale coatings improve stability and efficiency of devices for renewable...

(Phys.org) —Splitting water into its components, two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen, is an important first step in achieving carbon-neutral fuels to power our transportation infrastructure –...

View Article

Engineers turn to origami to solve astronomical space problem (w/ Video)

BYU engineers have teamed up with a world-renowned origami expert to solve one of space exploration's greatest (and most ironic) problems: lack of space.

View Article

ATLAS sees Higgs boson decay to fermions

The ATLAS experiment at CERN has released preliminary results that show evidence that the Higgs boson decays to two tau particles. Taus belong to a group of subatomic particles called the fermions,...

View Article
Browsing all 14071 articles
Browse latest View live