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Robin Polt and Hannah Kuo Feinberg

Following nature's rules, researchers develop new methods for treating degenerative neurological disease

July 26, 2022

Researchers have developed a new class of drugs that is able to cross the blood-brain barrier. The technology has been licensed to the startup Teleport Pharmaceuticals.

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A worker in protective clothing disinfects surfaces in a market where meat is sold.

Studies link COVID-19 to wildlife sales at Chinese market, find other scenarios extremely unlikely

July 26, 2022

Analyses based on locations and viral sequencing of early cases indicate the COVID-19 pandemic started in Wuhan's Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, with two separate jumps from animals to humans.

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stars, gas and dust in space

Webb Telescope's stunning first images made possible by UArizona instruments and expertise

July 12, 2022

After decades of development, a nail-biting launch and months of space travel and commissioning, NASA has released the first images captured by the James Webb Space Telescope. The images hint at the beginning of years of space science, made possible in part by the 21 UArizona researchers who have played a role in developing and managing Webb's onboard instruments.

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Artist's impression of the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft kicking up rocks during sample collection on asteroid Bennu's surface

OSIRIS-REx scientists: Taking asteroid sample was like punching a ball pit

July 7, 2022

Before-and-after data from the few seconds it took the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to collect a sample from asteroid Bennu revealed a surprise: The particles of Bennu's exterior are so loosely packed, they act more like a fluid than a solid.

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fly synapse

New research could explain unknown causes of epilepsy

July 6, 2022

In many cases of epilepsy – which disrupts electrical activity in the brain and often results in seizures – the underlying cause is unknown. UArizona researchers may have found an explanation for some forms of epilepsy.

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two women working at a machine in the desert

Counting krypton: Water miles below Earth's surface isn't as old as scientists once thought

July 6, 2022

As the Colorado River carved the Grand Canyon, it flushed away ancient groundwater. The discovery was made using a new method that determines the age of water based on how much of the radioactive element krypton-81 is present.

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Jules Moutet

Solving renewable energy challenges with a new kind of nontoxic battery

June 29, 2022

With a startup called CarbeniumTec, researchers in the College of Science and the College of Medicine – Tucson aim to bring to market new technology that reimagines how electricity is stored.

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Glacier in Northeast Greenland

Study solves long-standing mystery of what may have triggered ice age

June 23, 2022

Combining advanced climate model simulations with marine sediment analyses, a new study reveals what may have triggered massive ice sheets to form in Scandinavia, ringing in the last glacial period some 100,000 years ago.

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Scientist Spotlight: Laura Condon

June 20, 2022

Dr. Condon, an exemplary hydrologist at UArizona, was selected for the series for her outstanding research and mentoring efforts within the College of Science community.

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Hubble took this image of the Spirograph Nebula, a dying star surrounded by its envelope of gas and dust.

Dying stars could seed interstellar medium with carbon nanotubes

June 16, 2022

Evidence suggests that carbon nanotubes, tiny tubes consisting of pure carbon, could be forged in the envelopes of dust and gas surrounding dying stars. The findings propose a simple, yet elegant mechanism for the formation and survival of complex carbon molecules in space.

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