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| Journals Energy Newsletter for 2026-04-03 ( 6 items ) |
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CUNY: When Math and Physics Disagree About Quantum Condensation (10)
NEW YORK, April 3 (TNSjou) -- The City University of New York Graduate Center issued the following news:
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When Math and Physics Disagree About Quantum Condensation
A study by Professor Alexios Polychronakos shows that mathematical results can be misleading in predicting when Bose-Einstein condensation occurs, revealing that real physical systems can behave differently than pure math would suggest.
At extremely low temperatures, matter can behave in remarkable ways.
One example is Bose- more PR
HKU Astrophysicists Find Saturn's Magnetic Bubble Differ from Earth-Based Models (10)
HONG KONG, April 2 -- The University of Hong Kong issued the following news release:
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HKU Astrophysicists Find Saturn's Magnetic Bubble Differ from Earth-Based Models
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Latest research led by Professor Zhonghua YAO of the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences (DEPS) at The University of Hong Kong (HKU) has found that auroras on Saturn behave markedly differently from those on Earth, appearing uneven and shifted to one side rather than forming the familiar symmetrical rings around t more PR
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: Cryogenic Micro-Calorimetry Offers a Novel Material-Dating Method for Nuclear Forensics and Safeguards (10)
LIVERMORE, California, April 3 (TNSjou) -- The U.S. Department of Energy Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory issued the following news:
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Cryogenic micro-calorimetry offers a novel material-dating method for nuclear forensics and safeguards
The moment nuclear material is produced, processed or purified, it sets off a hidden countdown, marked by the half-life of its radioactive atoms as they begin to decay. For scientists tracking the origins of these substances, decoding this natural c more PR
Rudeness may be rewarded - as a response to rudeness (10)
ITHACA, New York, April 2 -- Cornell University posted the following news:
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Rudeness may be rewarded - as a response to rudeness
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If you don't have anything nice to say, perhaps it's OK to say it anyway - if responding to someone who has treated you or your team rudely, new Cornell research suggests.
Civil responses to disrespectful behavior remain the best option. But in a variety of contexts - from hockey fights to the workplace - experiments showed that people view an uncivil acti more PR
U.S. Conflict With Iran Topic of CRS Report (10)
WASHINGTON, April 2 (TNSLrpt) -- The Congressional Research Service issued the following report (No. R48887) on March 26, 2026, entitled "U.S. Conflict with Iran."
The report is written by Middle Eastern affairs specialists Clayton Thomas, Christopher M. Blanchard, Jeremy M. Sharp and Jim Zanotti:
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SUMMARY
U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, 2026, have sparked a wide-reaching regional conflict, with ongoing U.S. and Israeli air operations in Iran and Iranian retaliatory st more PR
UConn Engineering Professor Embraces Uncertainty For Stronger Engineering Systems (10)
STORRS, Connecticut, April 2 -- The University of Connecticut posted the following news:
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UConn Engineering Professor Embraces Uncertainty For Stronger Engineering Systems
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A few years after receiving the National Science Foundation Early CAREER Award, UConn College of Engineering Assistant Professor Hongyi Xu is demonstrating how embracing uncertainty can lead to stronger, smarter engineering systems.
Xu's research focuses on a simple, but challenging, fact, which is that not everyt more PR
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