PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Inaugural editorial: the Energy and Environment Nexus

2025-08-26
(Press-News.org) Introducing Energy & Environment Nexus (E&E Nexus) – a pioneering, open-access platform dedicated to the critical intersection of energy systems and environmental challenges. We explicitly prioritize research exploring the dynamic interplay between energy and the environment, where innovation meets impact.

E&E Nexus Scope Spans Key: 

????Interdisciplinary Science of Energy & Environment
????Renewable Energy & Low-Carbon Technologies
????Energy Materials & Nanotechnology
????Solid Waste Resource Utilization
????Pollution Control & Ecological Restoration
????Energy Storage & Smart Systems
????Environmental Monitoring & Modeling
????Emerging Technologies & Risk Management
????AI in Energy, Environment & Nexus
????Policy, Society & Global Systems

Publish for FREE in 2025-2027!

E&E Nexus is waiving all Article Processing Charges (APCs) for accepted papers during the 2025, 2026, and 2027 calendar years.

Explore aims, scope, and submission details: https://www.maxapress.com/een

Act Now - Submissions Open! Our submission portal is newly launched and actively accepting manuscripts.

Read the inaugural editorial now: https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/een-0025-0001

https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/een-0025-0001

Submit your transformative research to Energy & Environment Nexus today and publish open-access for free until 2028!

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

As World Alzheimer’s Month approaches, supporting personhood for family members with dementia is key

2025-08-26
One of the great challenges faced by families coping with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia is learning how to communicate effectively with the person impacted by the disease while also upholding their personhood, or sense of personal value. A new study from UConn researcher Amanda Cooper – published in time for World Alzheimer’s Month in September and World Alzheimer’s Day on Sept. 21 - offers concrete recommendations on what to do and what not to do to support personhood for a family member living with dementia. “These ...

Acosta to examine moisture-driven polar ice growth & its impact on global sea level

2025-08-26
Paul Acosta, Assistant Research Professor, Atmospheric, Oceanic and Earth Sciences (AOES), College of Science, will receive funding for the project: “Collaborative Research: Mechanisms of moisture-driven ice growth: a warm Miocene data-model comparison.” He and his collaborators will use state-of-the-art isotope-enabled general circulation and ice sheet models to test a suite of hypothesized mechanisms for precipitation-driven Antarctic ice growth during the Middle Miocene (17-15 Ma). The proposed ...

Mount Sinai scientists identify three potent human antibodies against mpox, paving the way for new protective therapies

2025-08-26
A team from the Microbiology Department at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has discovered three powerful monoclonal antibodies from a person who had previously been infected with mpox (formerly known as monkeypox). These antibodies, which target the viral protein A35, blocked viral spread in laboratory in vitro tests and, most importantly, protected rodents from severe disease and fully prevented death. The findings, published August 22 in Cell, also reveal that humans previously infected with mpox carry high levels of these protective antibodies in their blood, ...

Smarter robot planning for the real world

2025-08-26
Self-driving vehicles, drones, and robotic assistants are transforming industries including transportation, logistics, and health care. With new developments in hardware, AI, and machine learning, these autonomous agents can sense their surroundings with greater accuracy, understand complex environments, and engage in sophisticated reasoning.  But despite such advancements, deploying robots in dynamic, real-world settings—and getting them to do what we want—remains difficult. “The overarching problem deals with robot capabilities,” says Cristian-Ioan Vasile, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering and mechanics in Lehigh University’s ...

Optimization of biosafety laboratory management via an AI-driven intelligent system

2025-08-26
ChatGPT and other generative AI models have achieved notable progress in natural language processing and generation, showing great potential in the medical field, such as automatically generating medical exam questions and answers, acting as personalized learning assistants, supporting course design, and aiding in medical imaging analysis. These models are also expected to be pivotal in training biosafety laboratory researchers by providing interactive learning experiences. In this study, a dataset of 62 text-based and 8 image-based biosafety questions was collected ...

Mouse neurons that identify friends in need and friends indeed

2025-08-26
A special set of neurons directs mice’s attention to or away from their peers, depending on the situation. The Kobe University discovery has implications for finding causes for neuropsychiatric conditions such as autism spectrum disorder or schizophrenia. Social interactions abound with decisions: How much time do we spend with a friend? Do we prioritize time with a friend who looks distressed? Like for all behavior, there are specialized clusters of neurons in the brain that are responsible for fine-tuning such complex behavior, and it is known that developmental defects in these areas are related ...

Why the foam on Belgian beers lasts so long

2025-08-26
Summertime is beer time – even if the consumption of alcoholic beers is declining in Switzerland. And for beer lovers, there is nothing better than a head of foam topping the golden, sparkling barley juice. But with many beers, the dream is quickly shattered, and the foam collapses before you can take your first sip. There are also types of beer, however, where the head lasts a long time. ETH researchers led by Jan Vermant, Professor of Soft Materials, have now discovered just why this is the case. Their study has just been published in the journal Physics of Fluids. The ...

On tap: What makes beer foams so stable?

2025-08-26
WASHINGTON, August 26, 2025 – Beer is one of the world’s most popular drinks, and one of the clearest signs of a good brew is a big head of foam at the top of a poured glass. Even brewers will use the quality of foam as an indicator of a beer having completed the fermentation process. However, despite its importance, what makes a large, stable foam is not entirely understood. In Physics of Fluids, from AIP Publishing, researchers from ETH Zurich and Eindhoven University of Technology investigated the stability of beer foams, examining multiple types of beer at different stages of the fermentation process. Like ...

Overweight older adults face lower risk of death after major surgery

2025-08-26
Older adults who are overweight may face a lower risk of death in the first 30 days following major elective surgery compared with those who have a normal body mass index (BMI), new research suggests. The study, to be published August 26 in the peer-reviewed JAMA Network Open, examined outcomes in older surgical patients and found that being overweight (BMI 25–29.9) was associated with the lowest short-term mortality rates. In contrast, normal and underweight patients had significantly higher risk ...

Body composition, fitness, and mental health in preadolescent children

2025-08-26
About The Study: In this cross-sectional study of preadolescent children, greater lean mass and higher fitness were associated with fewer anxiety and depression symptoms, while higher visceral adipose tissue was associated with increased symptoms of both. Body fat percentage was only associated with greater anxiety. These findings highlight the roles of body composition in mental health and underscore the value of early identification of physical health markers to support children’s well-being and development. Corresponding author: To contact the corresponding author, Lauren B. Raine, M.P.H., Ph.D., email l.raine@northeastern.edu. To ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How microbes control mammalian cell growth

Emergency department pilot program serves rural families

Amid renewable-energy boom, study explores options for electricity market

Study finds improvement in knee pain with exercise and physical therapy

Researchers uncover key mechanism behind chemotherapy-induced nerve damage

Mayo Clinic researchers find enhancing the body’s ‘first responder’ cells may boost immune therapy for cancer

Secret to a long life? In bowhead whales, a protein repairs damaged DNA

MIT study: Identifying kids who need help learning to read isn’t as easy as A, B, C

Plant biomass substance helps combat weeds

Veterans with epilepsy after traumatic brain injury may have higher mortality rates

Who is more likely to lose vision due to high brain pressure?

Scripps Research professor awarded $3.2 million to advance type 1 diabetes research

Anna Wuttig wins Bayer Foundation Early Excellence in Science Award

Electric vehicles outperform gasoline cars in lifetime environmental impact

Kilimanjaro has lost 75 percent of its natural plant species over the last century

Spider web “decorations” may help pinpoint location of captured prey

Ancient tombs reveal the story of Chinese history

1 in 3 university students surveyed from a Parisian suburb report being unable to access desired food, with this food insecurity associated with academic dropout

Researchers uncover oldest 3D burrow systems in Hubei's Shibantan Biota

Discovery of a new principle: chiral molecules adhere to magnets

New algorithm lets autonomous drones work together to transport heavy, changing payloads

Lehigh University team develops computational model to guide neurostimulation therapy for atrial fibrillation

Survival of the blandest: Unusual sharks face highest extinction risk

Research alert: Bioinformatics uncovers regenerative therapy for spinal cord injury

Sustainable chemistry with the help of Artificial Intelligence

Quantum jam sessions teach quantum and jamming

Health care professionals sponsored for H-1B visas in the US

Study shows increase of H1-B visa fees will most impact rural and high-poverty counties

How age affects vaccine responses and how to make them better

MAGIC: AI-assisted laser tag illuminates cancer origins

[Press-News.org] Inaugural editorial: the Energy and Environment Nexus