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Artificial daylight lacks commercial interest, and a geologist’s thirst for knowledge kickstarts the bid for the Channel Tunnel, in our weekly dip into Nature’s archive.
Researchers say unexpected victory for Masoud Pezeshkian could spell improvements to human rights, investment in science and academic freedom - if Iran's top leaders give him space to act.
Older populations might be more protected than younger ones because of exposure to ‘matched’ strains during childhood, but an H5N1 pandemic is likely to take a major toll all the same.
Walkouts, petitions and tweets: how a grass-roots movement led by students, postdocs and tenured academics radically changed government policy on science funding.
The integration of a chiral halide perovskite semiconductor into a light-emitting diode (LED) structure made from a III–V optoelectronic semiconductor creates a spin-LED that achieves 15% circularly polarized emission at room temperature without a magnetic field — a potential boon for spintronics and other spin‑based technologies.
A gas of molecules that interact over long distances has been cooled to mere nanokelvins, resulting in the emergence of a state known as a Bose–Einstein condensate — the first of its kind in this type of molecular system.
An application needs to stand out from the crowd and avoid being filtered out by automated hiring systems. Nature spoke to industry experts to get their tips on how to make sure your CV gets seen.