Nature highlights three key graphics from the week in science and research.
The world’s most powerful machine for smashing high-energy particles together has. The Large Hadron Collider at CERN, Europe’s particle-physics laboratory near Geneva, is equipped with innovative ways to search for new physics.
These should give more precision to measurements of known particles, such as the Higgs boson. But, as this graphic explains, physicists also want to know whether a host of odd recent results are genuine anomalies, which might help to fill some gaps in understanding about the Universe.
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Uplift of the central transantarctic mountains - Nature CommunicationsThe source of the Transantarctic Mountains’ high elevation has remained unclear. Here, the authors present data from a 550 km long magnetotelluric geophysical transect showing that uplift is likely to be mechanical via cantilevered flexure along a master boundary fault and not upper mantle or lower crustal thermal mechanisms.
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Associate Editor, Nature Briefing📢 We're still accepting applications for this exciting role working on the Nature Briefing! (Note that following some technical issues with our jobs site, the deadline has now been extended until this Wednesday, June 1st)
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Bonnie Wright's Favorite Ways To De-Stress & Connect With Nature DailyOur relationships with nature are so uniquely different and intimate. Here, actress, filmmaker, and activist thisisbwright shares some of her favorite ways to re-center and connect with nature. 🌿
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PhD pay, COVID’s health burden — the week in infographicsNature highlights three key graphics from the week in science and research.
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Ultracold gas bubbles on the space station could reveal strange new quantum physicsYes, this is a real quantum physics experiment.
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