Results 181 to 190 of about 993 (249)

Antimicrobial Residues in a Key Cerrado River: Distribution, Persistence, and Effects on Zebrafish Embryo‐Larval Development

open access: yesEnvironmental Toxicology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT The current study aimed to quantify the antimicrobials amoxicillin (AMX), cefazolin (CFZ), chloramphenicol (CHL), metronidazole (MTZ), and sulfamethoxazole (SX) in effluents and surface water of an important Cerrado river, calculate their half‐lives, and analyze their ecotoxicity following single and combined exposures.
Náthala Maria Simão   +12 more
wiley   +1 more source

Quantitative Structure–Property Relationship for High Flash Point of Ester Oil Molecules and Its Experimental Verification

open access: yesHigh Voltage, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT With the increasing voltage of ester oil‐filled transformers and their application in offshore wind power, developing high‐performance, fire‐resistant esters is crucial for enhancing transformer safety. Flash point, a key indicator of fire‐resistant performance for esters, is directly related to the molecular structures.
Jingwen Zhang   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Non‐Rigid 3D Shape Correspondences: From Foundations to Open Challenges and Opportunities

open access: yesComputer Graphics Forum, EarlyView.
Abstract Estimating correspondences between deformed shape instances is a long‐standing problem in computer graphics; numerous applications, from texture transfer to statistical modelling, rely on recovering an accurate correspondence map. Many methods have thus been proposed to tackle this challenging problem from varying perspectives, depending on ...
A. Zhuravlev   +14 more
wiley   +1 more source

Anselm's Temporal‐Ontological Proof

open access: yesNoûs, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT In his Reply to Gaunilo, Anselm presented two additional arguments for the existence of God beyond those that appear in the Proslogion. In “The Logical Structure of Anselm's Argument,” Robert M. Adams isolates each. One, he develops into a modal ontological argument along the lines of other 20th century ontological arguments (e.g., those of ...
Daniel Rubio
wiley   +1 more source

Invariant Measure and Universality of the 2D Yang–Mills Langevin Dynamic

open access: yesCommunications on Pure and Applied Mathematics, Volume 79, Issue 8, Page 1973-2102, August 2026.
ABSTRACT We prove that the Yang–Mills (YM) measure for the trivial principal bundle over the two‐dimensional torus, with any connected, compact structure group, is invariant for the associated renormalised Langevin dynamic. Our argument relies on a combination of regularity structures, lattice gauge‐fixing and Bourgain's method for invariant measures ...
Ilya Chevyrev, Hao Shen
wiley   +1 more source

Accelerating Perovskite Solar Cell Development Through High‐Throughput Technologies: Computational Simulation, Automated Experimentation, and Intelligent Integration

open access: yesBattery Energy, Volume 5, Issue 4, July 2026.
Moving beyond traditional trial‐and‐error, this review explores how integrating high‐throughput computational simulations, automated experimentation, and machine learning significantly accelerates perovskite solar cell development. By establishing intelligent, closed‐loop workflows, these synergistic technologies pave the way for fully autonomous ...
Yiming Wang   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Black Hole Information Problem. [PDF]

open access: yesEntropy (Basel)
Calmet X, Casadio R, Hsu SDH.
europepmc   +1 more source

Hunting Structural Demons in Digital Reticular Chemistry: Lessons From Metal‐Organic Frameworks

open access: yesIsrael Journal of Chemistry, Volume 66, Issue 4, July 2026.
Digital reticular chemistry is haunted by “structural demons”, chemically invalid models lurking within massive experimental and hypothetical MOF databases. This mini‐review tracks where these anomalies enter the data pipeline, evaluate the modern computational arsenal used to detect them (from rule‐based algorithms to machine‐learning classifiers ...
Yongchul G. Chung, Myoung Soo Lah
wiley   +1 more source

A Dialogue on Revolutions and Revolutionaries in Science: A Perspective From Quantum Mechanics

open access: yesNatural Sciences, Volume 6, Issue 3, July 2026.
ABSTRACT We discuss the notions of scientific revolutions and revolutionaries in the context of the Relativity Revolution and of the First, Second, and Third Quantum Revolutions. We conclude that at the core of the question of what qualifies as a revolution and revolutionary is an assessment of the gradients of knowledge accumulation over time, both at
Ron Folman, Bretislav Friedrich
wiley   +1 more source

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