The material looks like a mosaic of intersecting ellipses, parabolas or hyperbolas. Its structure, which has intrigued physicists for a century, has been revealed by means of Weyl-Poincaré invariance.
Brazilian researchers, in collaboration with French colleagues, analyzed more than 1,000 specimens of Hevea brasiliensis available in South American public germplasm banks.
Findings published in Cell show that in the presence of potentially pathogenic bacteria, the neurons that innervate the intestine modulate the immune response to avoid excessive inflammation and tissue damage.
A new species of fungus discovered in the Brazil nut tree ecosystem in the Amazon belongs to the genus Penicillium, from which Fleming obtained the first antibiotic.
A new book investigates how the political experience of Spain's colonies in the Americas was elaborated by the leaders of the Brazilian independence process, inspiring concrete action.
A training program offered in collaboration with George Washington University aims to promote the commercial development of innovative products, processes and services.
A methodology developed at the University of São Paulo will help clarify the link between zika infection and microcephaly and measure the real extent of the epidemic.
An array consisting of gold nanoparticles is inkjet printed on plastic and can be used to measure various biological processes associated with variations in electrical potential.
Microscopic analysis has confirmed that the Colônia Crater, near the Billings reservoir on the outskirts of Brazil's largest city, was produced by an asteroid or comet.
Glomerular filtration rate fell by 18% in patients with suspended hormone replacement during radioiodine treatment, according to a study by Brazilian scientists published in Thyroid.
A study indicates that sponges, the oldest animals in the world, are sources of compounds that could lead to the production of medicines to fight various diseases.
Llanosuchus tamaensis is a species of notosuchian, a suborder of crocodylomorphs that evolved in Gondwana, the ancient supercontinent that gave rise to Africa, South America, Australia, Antarctica, and India.
Research center unveiled in São Paulo aims to help surmount challenges of mass production to achieve high quality standards required for industrial applications.
In partnership with Brazilian legal experts, U.S. historian Rebecca Scott is analyzing documents to gain an understanding of the factors that characterize present day labor analogous to slavery.
Concepts from graph theory and complex networks together with tools such as gene network inference help map structural and functional aspects between genes, pinpointing therapeutic targets for diseases.
Leadership of FAPESP and the Ohio State University highlight the success of the institutional agreement between them that has already selected 43 collaborative projects.
Finding new targets for the treatment of adrenocortical cancer, multiple myeloma and resistant hypertension is the goal of studies presented during FAPESP Week Michigan-Ohio.
Scientists say that the challenge in cities like São Paulo lies in integrating public policies related to climate change with policies that pertain to housing, urban planning, and water resources management.