Chemistry & Physics
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 18-Aug-2025 12:11 ET (18-Aug-2025 16:11 GMT/UTC)
Silent witnesses: corals pinpoint the start of deforestation in Borneo
University of LeicesterPeer-Reviewed Publication
- University of Leicester scientists analyse the chemical composition of corals to spot the signs of deforestation
- Corals absorb trace elements in water into their skeletons, which provides a proxy for nearby soil erosion
- Fills a huge gap in environmental data on deforestation impacting coastal ecosystems
- Journal
- Scientific Reports
Space Park Leicester developing technology for ultra-clean mini-lab to potentially contain extra-terrestrial samples returned to Earth
University of LeicesterBusiness Announcement
- University of Leicester’s science and innovation park to lead on a European Space Agency project to build a Double-Walled Isolator (DWI) to support analysis of extra-terrestrial samples
- Samples could be stored and handled and initially analysed in the DWI, to reduce the risk of cross contamination on Earth
- Work has started with funding of €5 million
- Funder
- European Space Agency
Dissolved carbon storage and flux dynamics in China’s inland waters over the past 30 years
Science China PressPeer-Reviewed Publication
In a paper published in National Science Review, a research team led by Chinese scientists quantifies changes in dissolved carbon storage within China's lakes and reservoirs alongside dissolved carbon fluxes in rivers over the past three decades, systematically revealing how climate change, anthropogenic disturbances, and water chemistry factors collectively drive the dynamics of dissolved carbon in inland waters. The study finds that dissolved carbon storage across China's inland waters has increased significantly during this period, with riverine carbon fluxes primarily driven by climate and human factors, while lake and reservoir carbon storage is dominated by water chemistry controls.
- Journal
- National Science Review
- Funder
- National Natural Science Foundation of China, the CAS Project for Young Scientists in Basic Research
SUNER-C concludes after three years dedicated to unlocking the renewable energy future
Institute of Chemical Research of Catalonia (ICIQ)Reports and Proceedings
- Funder
- European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme
Researchers reveal key differences in STING inhibition between humans and mice
Arc InstitutePeer-Reviewed Publication
- Journal
- Nature Chemical Biology
- Funder
- NIH/National Institutes of Health
Entanglement battery powers quantum reversibility
University of Warsaw, Faculty of PhysicsPeer-Reviewed Publication
Just over 200 years after French engineer and physicist Sadi Carnot formulated the second law of thermodynamics, an international team of researchers has unveiled an analogous law for the quantum world. This second law of entanglement manipulation proves that, just like heat or energy in an idealised thermodynamics regime, entanglement can be reversibly manipulated, a statement which until now had been heavily contested. The new research – released on July 2, 2025 in Physical Review Letters – deepens understanding of entanglement’s basic properties and provides critical fundamental insight into how to efficiently manipulate entanglement and other quantum phenomena in practice.
- Journal
- Physical Review Letters