Not exact matches
In a breakthrough study, an
international team of scientists,
including Professor Nikolai Brilliantov from the University
of Leicester, has solved an age - old scientific riddle
by discovering that planetary rings, such as those orbiting Saturn, have a universally similar particle distribution.
This could mean the environmental impact from the fallout may last much longer than previously expected according to a new study
by a
team of international researchers,
including scientists from The University
of Manchester.
A new review
by an
international team of scientists,
including Stony Brook University Professor Liliana M. Dávalos, reports an analysis
of the incredibly diverse «lost world»
of Caribbean fossils that
includes giant rodents, vampire bats, enigmatic monkeys, ground sloths, shrews and dozens
of other ancient mammals.
The study —
by an
international team of scientists that
included John L. Gittleman, dean
of the University
of Georgia Odum School
of Ecology — was led
by Stuart L. Pimm
of Duke University and Clinton N. Jenkins
of the Instituto de Pesquisas Ecológicas in Brazil.
An
international team of scientists led
by the UK's John Innes Centre and
including scientists from Australia, Portugal, China and Italy has perfected a way
of watching genes move within a living plant cell.
An
international team of scientists, led
by researchers from the University
of Tuebingen and the Max Planck Institute for the Science
of Human History in Jena, successfully recovered and analyzed ancient DNA from Egyptian mummies dating from approximately 1400 BCE to 400 CE,
including the first genome - wide nuclear data from three individuals, establishing ancient Egyptian mummies as a reliable source for genetic material to study the ancient past.
The
international team of researchers, led
by the University
of Southampton and
including scientists from the National Oceanography Centre, the University
of Western Australia, the University
of South Florida, the Australian National University and the University
of Seigen in Germany, analysed data from 10 long - term sea level monitoring stations located around the world.
A new scientific paper
by a University
of Maryland - led
international team of distinguished
scientists,
including five members
of the National Academies, argues that there are critical two - way feedbacks missing from current climate models that are used to inform environmental, climate, and economic policies.
The findings were made
by an
international team of researchers led
by Ms Caitlin Gionfriddo and Dr John Moreau from the University
of Melbourne, and also
included scientists from the Centre for Systems Genomics at the University
of Melbourne, the US Geological Survey and Lawrence Livermore National Lab.
A new study
by an
international team of scientists, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, warns that many large fish species,
including many
of the sharks and rays
of Europe, are threatened with extinction.
The research was carried out
by an
international team including scientists based at The Institute
of Cancer Research, London, the University
of Glasgow and Ohio State University in the US.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Gravitational waves — ripples in the fabric
of space - time — have been observed for the second time,
by an
international team of scientists that
includes UMD physicists.
A planet 100 light - years away that resembles a young Jupiter has been discovered
by an
international team of astronomers that
includes six UCLA
scientists.
An
international team of researchers, lead
by Patrick Kelly, and
including University
of Tokyo School
of Science Assistant Professor and Kavli IPMU Associate
Scientist Masamune Oguri, were able to discover this star, which they have named Icarus, because its brightness had been magnified
by 2000 times
by the gravity
of a larger object in front
of it.
Apr. 14, 2016 — An
international research
team that
included scientists from Vanderbilt University Medical Center has found a novel way to counteract obesity in mice —
by stimulating the growth
of blood vessels in fat tissue.
These claims were subsequently disputed in an article in Eos (Rahmstorf et al, 2004)
by an
international team of scientists and geologists (
including some
of us here at RealClimate), who suggested that Shaviv and Veizer's analyses were based on unreliable and poorly replicated estimates, selective adjustments
of the data (shifting the data, in one case
by 40 million years) and drew untenable conclusions, particularly with regard to the influence
of anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations on recent warming (see for example the exchange between the two sets
of authors).
The analysis
by a
team of scientists −
including from Climate Analytics and the
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) − who have published key research papers on the science, impacts and policy aspects
of the 1.5 ˚C limit is the centrepiece
of a collection
of content
by Nature Climate Change, Nature Geoscience and Nature journals, titled Targeting 1.5 °C.