Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Phys.org

Gravity's subtle effect on light could improve groundwater, volcano and carbon storage monitoring

Gravity's subtle effect on light could improve groundwater, volcano and carbon storage monitoring
ShareXFacebook

A study by University of Wollongong (UOW) physicist Dr. Enbang Li has demonstrated that gravity can subtly influence the behavior of light, a breakthrough that could underpin future technologies for monitoring groundwater, tracking glacier melt, locating mineral deposits and detecting underground changes linked to volcanic activity and carbon storage.

P

Source

Phys.org

Read full article at Phys.org

Opens original article in a new tab

Advertisement

Related Science Stories

Promising H5N1 vaccine protects dairy calves and mice against severe disease
Phys.org

Promising H5N1 vaccine protects dairy calves and mice against severe disease

Researchers at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln have developed a vaccine approach that shows promise in protecting against highly pathogenic bird flu, demonstrating strong efficacy in both mice and cattle. Avian influenza (H5N1) has disrupted agricultural systems globally, leading to the culling of more than 166 million commercial poultry birds in the United States since 2022. In 2024, the virus spread to dairy cattle—an unprecedented interspecies transfer—and subsequently caused illness in ab

Read more →
A mother's gift: Plastid-derived structures help sea urchin development and dispersal
Phys.org

A mother's gift: Plastid-derived structures help sea urchin development and dispersal

During the development of marine organisms—from fertilization through to juvenile stages—it is often observed that the eggs released into the water column are initially supplied with only a small fraction of the energy they require. The remaining reserves needed for growth must be obtained from the environment through filtering food—like phytoplankton—from the water column. This strategy of providing many eggs with only a small amount of energy each often leads to the loss of almost all potentia

Read more →
Genomic tool untangles how microbes spread—even when they look almost identical
Phys.org

Genomic tool untangles how microbes spread—even when they look almost identical

Researchers have developed a powerful new tool that can track how microbes spread between people with unprecedented precision, offering new ways to prevent infections and improve treatments in the future. The research, published April 24 in Nature Microbiology, describes how the new tool, called TRAnsmision Clustering of Strains (TRACS), uses genomics to distinguish between closely related strains of microbes.

Read more →
Advertisement