In recent years, as the impacts of climate change have become more pronounced, tree-planting has frequently been touted as a “natural climate solution” to capture and store planet-warming carbon dioxide emissions while also conserving biodiversity and improving quality of life for people.
The forecasts could help fishing fleets, ocean managers, and coastal communities anticipate the effects of marine heatwaves
Carbon monoxide is an odorless and colorless gas made when fossil fuels burn incompletely. It’s also a silent killer.
Researchers have developed a technique that could help fine-tune the production of monoclonal antibodies and other useful proteins.
By analyzing enzyme activity at the organism, tissue, and cellular scales, new sensors could provide new tools to clinicians and cancer researchers.
Sperm counts have halved in the last 50 years – one possible explanation could be because the sex chromosomes are fighting each other, new Danish research suggests.
A new study suggests mobile data collected while traveling over bridges could help evaluate their integrity.
Pacemakers and other medical devices, as well as long-distance drones and remote sensors, could require fewer battery replacements with new approach.
Parts of the human genome now available to study for the first time are important for understanding genetic diseases, human diversity, and evolution
A new study led by UC Santa Cruz researchers suggests that pumas in the Santa Cruz Mountains don’t make accurate assessments of where they are most likely to be killed by humans, especially when it comes to the threat of being killed in retaliation for loss of livestock.
Branchlike metallic filaments can sap the power of solid-state lithium batteries. A new study explains how they form and how to divert them.
New system can teach a group of cooperative or competitive AI agents to find an optimal long-term solution.
New research reveals a scalable technique that uses synthetic data to improve the accuracy of AI models that recognize images.
Researchers have developed a programmable optical device for high-speed beam steering.
A new study provides practical guidelines for using biomarkers to identify ‘smoke taint’ in grapes and wines affected by the smoke from wildfires
This research is an important milestone in the pursuit of a vaccine against the virus that can cause severe respiratory disease in children and the elderly
Melt rates measured at the base of the ice sheet are several orders of magnitude higher than previous estimates
Battery power from electric vehicles to the grid could open a fast lane to a net-zero future.
UCSC chemists developed a simple method to make aluminum nanoparticles that split water and generate hydrogen gas rapidly under ambient conditions
Assistant Professor of Sociology Juan Manuel Pedroza recently published the first nationwide data analysis on immigration scams that target noncitizens.