The research is featured on the cover of The Journal of Chemical Physics. The equations can also be applied to many other systems that combine processes with different time scales.
Researchers at the University of São Paulo are developing statistical and computational techniques to analyze large biological datasets, such as MRI brain scans.
Sprace Game 2.0, developed with FAPESP’s support, presents particle physics concepts in a virtual mission to colonize Mars. The game can be downloaded free of charge.
At the evaluation meeting, the steering committee highlighted forthcoming challenges for the program, such as intensifying exchanges between research groups and building links with school teachers.
The program is being developed by a team at the Research, Innovation and Dissemination Center for Neuromathematics, which is supported by FAPESP. The first module is available for download.
Research into the use of ionized gas to destroy bacteria that cause infections in teeth and gums has been chosen to represent Brazil at the annual meeting of the International Association for Dental Research.
A research study featured on the cover of the journal Science Signaling explains the interplay of a chemical reaction known as phosphorylation, which is catalyzed by kinases.
In an interview with Agência FAPESP, Kurt Wüthrich talked about how he began to develop the award-winning technique of protein structural analysis, driven by the desire to improve his athletic performance.
Microorganisms identified by researchers are able to eliminate toxic contaminants found in industrial wastewater; findings from the study were presented at the Brazil-U.K. Frontiers of Engineering meeting.
The Journal of Applied Physics features an article that describes a possible experiment for detecting the particle proposed by Italian physicist Ettore Majorana, who Enrico Fermi compared to Isaac Newton.
A study conducted at the University of São Paulo using information gathered by the oceanographic research vessel Alpha-Crucis is published in a Geological Society book.
Study describes a new pathway for the build up of the superoxide dismutase protein, which may be involved in the mechanism of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Researchers from the University of São Paulo and the University of California, Berkeley, found that Xylella fastidiosa produces nanoscale lipid particles to travel and spread more easily in plants.
Researchers present studies underway at the Food Research Center, funded by FAPESP, along with food policies in place at the World Food Center of UC Davis.
This conclusion is from an assessment report on the global implementation of renewal energy systems drafted by scientists from Brazil and 24 other countries at the request of a UNESCO agency.