NATURE
How mud brought France and England together — 150 years ago
Nature, Published online: 09 July 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-02229-4 Artificial daylight lacks commercial interest, and a geologist’s thirst for knowledge kickstarts the
Storm-chasing seabirds served supper by cyclones
Tropical cyclones are agents of destruction for many organisms and ecosystems, but for some seabirds the massive storms are a
how can uptake be increased?
Many people are reluctant to get vaccinations, often owing to a fear of needles or misinformation about the jabs.Credit: Genaro
How to beat ‘superhuman’ AI
Hello Nature readers, would you like to get this Briefing in your inbox free every week? Sign up here. The
Iran elects heart surgeon as president: scientists are hopeful
Iran has elected a former heart surgeon as its next president. Scientists expect Masoud Pezeshkian, who ran the nation’s health
How PhD students and other academics are fighting the mental-health crisis in science
On the first day of her class, Annika Martin asks the assembled researchers at the University of Zurich in Switzerland
Canada just hiked PhD and postdoc pay — here’s how to get your country to do it, too
Graduate students and postdoctoral scholars often struggle to make ends meet, despite playing a crucial part in driving research and
Ultracold molecules that interact from afar form elusive quantum state
Nature, Published online: 09 July 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-02134-w A gas of molecules that interact over long distances has been cooled to
Chiral perovskites deliver spin control to a conventional semiconductor
RESEARCH BRIEFINGS 09 July 2024 The integration of a chiral halide perovskite semiconductor into a light-emitting diode (LED) structure made
Huge neutrino detector sees first hints of particles from exploding stars
Super-Kamiokande’s underground tank must be drained for major maintenance work.Credit: Takumi Harada/Yomiuri Shimbun via AP/Alamy Every few seconds, somewhere in