Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (60)
Search Results
- 60
Academic Journals
- 60
- Search Terms:
- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Geoff Brumfiel Washington The head of counterintelligence at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California has resigned following revelations that he had a sporadic, 15-year affair with an alleged...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): L. Alff (corresponding author) [1]; Y. Krockenberger [1]; B. Welter [1]; M. Schonecke [1]; R. Gross [1]; D. Manske [2]; M. Naito [3] The ground state of superconductors is characterized by the long-range...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Stefano Pluchino [1]; Angelo Quattrini [2, 3]; Elena Brambilla [1]; Angela Gritti [4]; Giuliana Salani [1]; Giorgia Dina [2]; Rossella Galli [4]; Ubaldo Del Carro [3]; Stefano Amadio [3]; Alessandra Bergami...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Charles Herrick [1] Protecting the Ozone Layer: Science and Strategy by Edward A. Parson Oxford University Press: 2003. 396 pp. $65 Protecting the Ozone Layer: The United Nations History by S. O....
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Martin Kemp [1] Nets and neuroses The obsessional art of Yayoi Kusama uses repetition to express her fears of obliteration in infinity. [illus. 1] It is increasingly common for artists to make a...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): David Cyranoski Tokyo [illus. 1] Researchers in Taiwan say they are being shut out of the global investigation into the pneumonia-like disease that is sweeping the world because their country isn't...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Lennox Cowie (corresponding author) One of the big questions in observational cosmology is when and where the stars in galaxies formed. Giant optical telescopes can now pick out galaxies at huge distances...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Quirin Schiermeier Munich [illus. 1] Winds of change are set to blow through the Polish Academy of Sciences, according to the plant biologist freshly elected to run the organization. The academy -- like...
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Erika Check Washington [illus. 1] A therapeutic vaccine could help patients with HIV to take a break from their exacting drug treatments, according to a prominent immunologist. Brigitte Autran, a...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Gerlinde B. De Deyn (corresponding author) [1]; Ciska E. Raaijmakers [1]; H. Rik Zoomer [2]; Matty P. Berg [2]; Peter C. de Ruiter [3]; Herman A. Verhoef [2]; T. Martijn Bezemer [1]; Wim H. van der Putten [1]...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Tom Clarke The epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is freezing up biomedical research in Toronto, Canada, as medical-school administrators are forced to reduce access to hospital buildings....
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jeanne Mager Stellman (corresponding author) [1]; Steven D. Stellman [2, 3]; Richard Christian [4]; Tracy Weber [1]; Carrie Tomasallo [1] Between 1961 and 1971 herbicide mixtures, nicknamed by the coloured...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jonathan M. Scholey (corresponding author); Ingrid Brust-Mascher; Alex Mogilner During the nineteenth century, the discovery that cells reproduce themselves by dividing into two illuminated the very origin...
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Ryosuke Hayama [1, 2]; Shuji Yokoi [1]; Shojiro Tamaki [1]; Masahiro Yano [3]; Ko Shimamoto (corresponding author) [1] The photoperiodic control of flowering is one of the important developmental processes...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Paul Smaglik [1] Richard Sykes, university administrator and devil's advocate, wonders why a student graduating from his institution would ever want to go on to do a PhD. Other options are much more...
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Hannah Hoag Washington [illus. 1] The wallets of newly qualified US chemists are getting lighter for the first time since the mid-1990s. The American Chemical Society's annual salary survey shows that the...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedThe Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory grew out of a lab established in 1952 by a group of dedicated individuals who believed they could do better than Los Alamos, and build a hydrogen bomb. Some of them also...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): M. Casolino (corresponding author) [1]; V. Bidoli [1]; A. Morselli [1]; L. Narici [1]; M. P. De Pascale [1]; P. Picozza [1]; E. Reali [1]; R. Sparvoli [1]; G. Mazzenga [2]; M. Ricci [2]; P. Spillantini [3]; M....
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Dan Falk [1] [illus. 1] Less than a decade ago, planetary scientists were working with a tiny data set: the nine members of our Solar System. But the past few years have been a boom time for planet hunters...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 422, Issue 6933) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Lawrence Steinman (corresponding author) Multiple sclerosis affects nearly one million people worldwide, subjecting people from young adulthood onwards to repeated immunological attacks on the brain and...