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2017

  • Temperature changes starting to make it easier for malaria to climb the Ethiopian highlands

    The highlands of Ethiopia are home to the majority of the country’s population, the cooler climate serving as a natural buffer against malaria transmission. New data now show that increasing temperatures over the past 35 years are eroding this buffer, allowing conditions more favourable for malaria to begin climbing into highland areas. That is the […]

  • Could renewable ‘power-by-wire’ help fix China’s air pollution problems?

    Bringing renewable power ‘by wire’ from western China to its power-hungry Eastern cities could have benefits for both local air quality and global climate change, new research has found. The study, published today in the journal Environmental Research Letters, examined if ongoing power transmission capacity investment in China – driven largely by concerns over air […]

  • Study proves viability of quantum satellite communications

    Researchers in Canada have taken a significant step towards enabling secure quantum communication via moving satellites, as announced by the Canadian Government in April 2017. Their study, published today in the new journal Quantum Science and Technology, demonstrates the first quantum key distribution transmissions from a ground transmitter to a quantum payload on a moving […]

  • 3D printing breakthrough heralds ‘new era’ for advanced skin models

    Scientists in South Korea have come up with a new method for 3D printing human skin, which both shortens the process and reduces the cost. Reporting their results today in the journal Biofabrication, the team from Pohang University of Science and Technology demonstrate a new 3D cell printing strategy, for engineering a 3D human skin […]

  • Rising sea levels leave US coastal areas facing increased flood risk by 2050

    US coastal areas should prepare for more frequent and more severe flooding in the next 35 years and beyond, a new study has warned. According to the research, carried out by Princeton and Rutgers universities, without cutting carbon emissions, the US coastline’s risk of a ‘100-year flood’ is likely to see an average 40-fold increase […]

  • IOP Publishing launches Remarq pilot on a number of journals

    RedLink is pleased to announce a pilot of Remarq™ on several IOP Publishing journals, including the Journal of Optics, the New Journal of Physics, Nanotechnology, and Biofabrication. Remarq is a new tool for the publishing community offering annotation, commenting, article sharing, and collaboration, all on the publisher’s site and utilizing the version of record. Remarq […]

  • Physicists add amplifier to quantum communication toolbox

    High-security data encryption could be applied over greater distances thanks to latest demonstration, result also benefits scalable memory systems. Quantum encryption using single photons is a promising technique for boosting the security of communication systems and data networks, but there are challenges in applying the method over large distances due to transmission losses. Using conventional […]

  • Study uncovers widespread leak risk for US underground natural gas storage wells

    With the average well built in 1963, more than 1 in 5 active US underground natural gas storage (UGS) wells could be vulnerable to leaks due to obsolete well designs, according to a new study from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. These obsolete wells operate in 19 states across 160 UGS facilities […]