
Alexander Ware
Articles
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Aug 27, 2024 |
progress.org.uk | Joanne Delange |Alexander Ware
I have been patiently waiting for Make People Better, a film centred around Dr He Jiankui's controversial (to say the least) creation of genome-edited babies, to reach our shores since 2022. For distribution reasons the film is still unavailable in the UK. Fortuitously, the filmmakers have also released an accompanying podcast series, available in the UK on all major streaming platforms.
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Oct 8, 2023 |
dx.doi.org | Woo Chang |Alexander Ware |Allison Green
Download Hi-Res ImageDownload to MS-PowerPointCite This:ACS Nano 2023, XXXX, XXX Terms & Conditions Most electronic Supporting Information files are available without a subscription to ACS Web Editions. Such files may be downloaded by article for research use (if there is a public use license linked to the relevant article, that license may permit other uses).
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Jul 31, 2023 |
progress.org.uk | Joanne Delange |Alexander Ware
This is a double review, covering two podcasts: one from BBC World Service's Science In Action, and one from the Guardian's Science Weekly. Both share a common theme, addressing recent advances in the generation of stem-cell-based embryo models (SCBEMs).
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Jun 5, 2023 |
opg.optica.org | Morgan Bergthold |Alexander Ware |C. Harris |Noah Mansfield
AbstractWe present a spectrally selective, passively cooled mid-wave infrared bolometric absorber engineered to spatially and spectrally decouple infrared absorption and thermal emission. The structure leverages an antenna-coupled metal–insulator–metal resonance for mid-wave infrared normal incidence photon absorption and a long-wave infrared optical phonon absorption feature, aligned closer to peak room temperature thermal emission.
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Mar 28, 2023 |
cell.com | Alexander Ware |Sutton Bonington Campus |Dylan Jones |Paulina Flis
8An D. Zhou Y. Li C. Xiao Q. Wang T. Zhang Y. Wu Y. Li Y. Chao D.Y. Messing J. Wang W. Plant evolution and environmental adaptation unveiled by long-read whole-genome sequencing of Spirodela. Our results support a model of progressive vestigiality of roots across the duckweeds. Subtle anatomical differences between genera and species exist, opening the door to this organ’s utilization as a model for deepening our understanding of vestigiality and organ loss.
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