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| Science Research in Professional Journals Newsletter for 2025-09-29 ( 4 items ) |
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Arms Control & Nonproliferation - Catalog of Treaties & Agreements Topic of CRS Report (Part 1 of 6) (10)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 (TNSLrpt) -- The Congressional Research Service issued the following report (No. RL33865) on Sept. 25, 2025, entitled "Arms Control and Nonproliferation: A Catalog of Treaties and Agreements."
The report is written by defense policy analyst Anya L. Fink and nonproliferation specialists Mary Beth D. Nikitin and Paul K. Kerr.
Here are excerpts:
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Summary
Arms control and nonproliferation are two of the policy tools that the United States has used to implement its nat more PR
Cranfield University: How a 3000-year-old Copper Smelting Site Could Be Key to Understanding the Origins of Iron (10)
CRANFIELD, England, Sept. 27 (TNSjou) -- Cranfield University issued the following news release:
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How a 3000-year-old copper smelting site could be key to understanding the origins of iron
Research from Cranfield University sheds new light onto the transition from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, showing how experimentation with iron-rich rocks by copper smelters may have sparked the invention of iron.
The work reanalysed metallurgical remains from a site in southern Georgia: a 3000-year more PR
NTT DOCOMO Earns Third Place Worldwide in 'RecSys Challenge 2025' (10)
TOKYO, Japan, Sept. 27 -- NTT (formerly Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp.) issued the following news release:
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NTT DOCOMO Earns Third Place Worldwide in the "RecSys Challenge 2025"
NTT DOCOMO, INC. announced today that it has achieved third place globally in the RecSys Challenge 2025, a premier international data science competition held as part of the ACM Conference on Recommender Systems (RecSys)*1.
The RecSys Challenge brings together leading researchers and engineers from around more PR
University of Bristol: Climate Change is Supercharging Europe's Biggest Hail, Study Shows (10)
BRISTOL, England, Sept. 27 (TNSjou) -- The University of Bristol issued the following news release:
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Climate change is supercharging Europe's biggest hail, study shows
Global warming may lead to less frequent but bigger and more devastating hail storms, new research has revealed.
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Climate experts from Newcastle University, the Met Office, and the University of Bristol used European-wide km-scale simulations to model future changes to hail with global warming. The study, published in t more PR
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