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2127 artiklar · sida 44 av 86

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Researchers have built a portable chromatography system that runs on standard batteries and compressed gas, eliminating the need for bulky power supplies. The advance could transform how companies conduct quality testing and drug analysis in remote locations, field settings, and smaller labs where traditional equipment is impractical.EN

2024-01-01 · Sensors and Actuators A-Physical · , ,
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Researchers have developed a crystalline plastic that conducts ions as effectively as standard polymer electrolytes while remaining mechanically stable at temperatures up to 120°C. The breakthrough could lower manufacturing costs and enable lithium metal batteries to operate in harsh environments, opening new markets in electric vehicles and industrial equipment.EN

2024-01-01 · Solid State Ionics · , , et al.
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Scientists have demonstrated precise control over multi-modal scattering in microwave frequency combs—a breakthrough that could improve performance and reliability of wireless communication systems. The advance is relevant to telecommunications infrastructure, IoT networks, and secure wireless applications where signal clarity and predictability directly affect operational efficiency.EN

2024-01-01 · Applied Physics Letters · , , et al.
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Researchers discovered that how polymer chains are structured—not just what they're made of—determines how well ions move through battery electrolytes. The finding could guide engineers toward cheaper, more efficient solid-state batteries for electric vehicles and grid storage.EN

2024-01-01 · ChemElectroChem · , , et al.
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Researchers found that common Swedish mosquitoes can be infected with Japanese encephalitis virus, a serious pathogen spreading across Asia. The discovery suggests Europe's warming climate could eventually enable the disease to establish itself on the continent, prompting insurers, public health agencies, and medical device makers to prepare for potential outbreaks.EN

2024-01-01 · Parasites & Vectors · , , et al.
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All 14 major hospitals surveyed in Sweden have adopted 3D printing technology, with 11 now using it for complex oral surgeries. The widespread adoption suggests additive manufacturing is moving from experimental to standard practice in hospitals, potentially reducing surgery time and improving outcomes—a shift that could reshape surgical device markets and hospital workflows.EN

2024-01-01 · Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery · , , et al.
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Researchers have developed a faster, more accurate approach to quantile regression—a statistical technique widely used in finance, healthcare, and supply chain management to forecast extreme outcomes. The method handles real-world data patterns better than current industry standards, potentially improving risk assessments and decision-making across sectors reliant on edge-case predictions.EN

2024-01-01 · Communications in statistics. Simulation and computation · ,
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Swedish researchers found that tracking calls to a national healthcare hotline outperformed traditional metrics like test positivity rates and vaccination data when forecasting COVID-19 hospital admissions one week ahead. The finding suggests health systems should invest in call center analytics as an early warning system for resource planning.EN

2024-01-01 · Spatial and Spatio-temporal Epidemiology · , , et al.
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Researchers have cracked a long-standing mathematical puzzle about infinitely repeating patterns in geometric space, opening new pathways for understanding fluid dynamics and physical systems. The breakthrough could accelerate computational models used in engineering, physics simulations, and financial risk analysis—fields where precise geometric mapping directly impacts product design and decision-making.EN

2024-01-01 · Journal of Geometric Analysis · ,
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Researchers have developed a technique to identify which buildings and facilities push electricity grids toward peak demand — and it works better than previous approaches. The finding matters because cities and utilities need this precision data to manage the energy transition and avoid blackouts as electrification accelerates.EN

2024-01-01 · Energy · , , et al.
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Researchers found that neural networks can predict dangerous wave forces seconds in advance—critical for protecting wave energy converters—but uncertainty in these predictions could still cause equipment failure. The gap between what AI predicts and what actually happens threatens the economic viability of an emerging renewable energy sector.EN

2024-01-01 · Renewable energy · , ,
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Researchers have mapped how electrons behave in complex five-metal carbides, uncovering charge-transfer mechanisms that engineers can now predict and control. The findings could unlock tougher, more durable coatings for cutting tools, aerospace components, and high-wear industrial equipment—potentially extending product lifespans and reducing manufacturing costs.EN

2024-01-01 · Journal of The American Ceramic Society · , , et al.
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Researchers have developed a method to optimize concrete structure design during 3D printing, reducing material use while maintaining structural integrity. By varying wall thickness based on stress patterns, printed concrete beams achieved up to 63% better strength-to-weight performance than conventional designs—a breakthrough that could significantly lower construction costs and environmental impact.EN

2024-01-01 · Virtual and Physical Prototyping · , , et al.
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Researchers have developed faster computational methods to analyze large non-Hermitian Toeplitz matrices, mathematical structures central to signal processing, wireless networks, and machine learning. The breakthrough could accelerate simulations and optimizations across telecommunications, data science, and engineering applications where these matrices are essential.EN

2024-01-01 · Numerical Linear Algebra with Applications · , , et al.
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A Nigerian election study reveals that voters intentionally disclose vote buying when surveyed directly rather than through anonymous methods. The finding upends assumptions about survey methodology and suggests bribery networks operate on trust—not deception—reshaping how researchers and policymakers should measure electoral corruption.EN

2024-01-01 · Quality and quantity · , ,
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Researchers have developed a faster way to prove that generic drugs work as well as brand-name versions, even when clinical trials involve limited data. The technique could accelerate approvals for difficult-to-test products like eye drops and inhalers, potentially reducing development costs and getting cheaper medicines to patients sooner.EN

2024-01-01 · CPT · , , et al.
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Researchers have developed a practical way to measure how wood deforms slowly under sustained stress—a critical property for designing buildings and wind turbines that must remain stable for 30+ years. The findings fill a gap in material data that engineers have lacked, potentially enabling more efficient and cost-effective structural designs.EN

2024-01-01 · Mechanics of time-dependant materials · , , et al.
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Engineers have cracked why 3D-printed superalloy components for gas turbines lose critical strength during manufacturing—and mapped out a heating schedule to fix it. The discovery matters because it could unlock cost savings and design flexibility for aerospace and power generation companies already betting on additive manufacturing for high-stakes engine components.EN

2024-01-01 · Materials Today Communications · , , et al.
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Researchers have developed a faster method for template matching—a core computer vision task used in object detection and image tracking—that maintains accuracy while handling high-resolution images. The breakthrough could accelerate deployment of vision systems in applications from autonomous vehicles to medical imaging, where processing speed directly impacts operational costs.EN

2024-01-01 · Pattern Recognition · ,
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Researchers have mapped how air moving through collapsing airways generates the wheezing sounds doctors hear during respiratory illness. The work could lead to acoustic sensors that detect lung collapse and disease progression earlier, with applications for remote patient monitoring and diagnostic devices.EN

2024-01-01 · Journal of the Acoustical Society of America · , , et al.
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Researchers found that speeding up laser 3D printing of high-performance metals creates more defects that dramatically reduce fatigue strength—a critical problem for aerospace and energy industries. The discovery reveals a hard tradeoff: manufacturers can't simply scale up production without sacrificing reliability in components that must survive repeated stress cycles.EN

2024-01-01 · Journal of Materials Research and Technology · , , et al.
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Scientists have released a detailed data library tracking radioactive fuel composition and decay signatures from molten salt reactors—a promising next-generation nuclear technology. The breakthrough enables regulators and inspectors to verify spent fuel and monitor proliferation risks, clearing a critical pathway for commercializing this alternative reactor design.EN

2024-01-01 · Data in Brief · , , et al.
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Researchers have solved a fundamental challenge in simulating fluids with varying densities—a problem that has plagued computational engineers for years. The breakthrough enables faster, more accurate predictions for everything from oil pipelines to chemical reactors, potentially reducing design time and improving safety across industries reliant on fluid dynamics modeling.EN

2024-01-01 · Journal of Computational Physics · ,
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Researchers have developed a faster computational method for solving complex physics simulations that can now run in parallel across thousands of processors. The advance could shave months off climate modeling, materials research, and engineering projects—cutting both time-to-market and computing costs for industries relying on high-precision simulations.EN

2024-01-01 · Numerical Linear Algebra with Applications · , ,
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Researchers at Sweden's KTH university have created a digital replica of a campus building that lets students learn how real-time data flows through smart infrastructure. The approach could reshape how companies and institutions train workers on managing energy-intensive buildings as sustainability pressures mount.EN

2024-01-01 · MATEC Web of Conferences · , ,