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Offshore wind farms could help capture carbon from air and store it long-term, saving money – a geophysicist explains how

  • Written by David Goldberg, Lamont Research Professor, Columbia University
imageThe U.S. had seven operating offshore wind turbines with 42 megawatts of capacity in 2021. The Biden administration's goal is 30,000 megawatts by 2030.AP Photo/Michael Dwyer

Off the Massachusetts and New York coasts, developers are preparing to build the United States’ first federally approvedutility-scale offshore wind farms – 74...

Read more: Offshore wind farms could help capture carbon from air and store it long-term, saving money – a...

Opioid overdose: A bioethicist explains why restricting supply may not be the right solution

  • Written by Travis N. Rieder, Director of the Master of Bioethics degree program at the Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University
imageWhat's the best way to solve America's opioid overdose crisis?BackyardProduction/ iStock via Getty images

Year after year, America’s drug overdose crisis is worsening.

In the 12-month period ending in June 2021, the most recent period for which there is reliable data, more than 101,000 people died from drug overdose in the U.S., – an...

Read more: Opioid overdose: A bioethicist explains why restricting supply may not be the right solution

Yizker bikher books commemorate Holocaust deaths – but also celebrate Jewish communities' life

  • Written by Jennifer Rich, Professor of Sociology, Rowan University
imageA group of schoolgirls in Czyzew, Poland, before the Holocaust.Czyżew Yizkor Book by Shimon Kanc/New York Public Library

Each year on Jan. 27, the anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp complex in Poland, an International Day of Commemoration memorializes the victims of the Holocaust. This somber day focuses on the...

Read more: Yizker bikher books commemorate Holocaust deaths – but also celebrate Jewish communities' life

How mRNA and DNA vaccines could soon treat cancers, HIV, autoimmune disorders and genetic diseases

  • Written by Deborah Fuller, Professor of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Washington
imageNucleic acid vaccines use mRNA to give cells instructions on how to produce a desired protein.Libre de Droit/iStock via Getty Images

The two most successful coronavirus vaccines developed in the U.S. – the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines – are both mRNA vaccines. The idea of using genetic material to produce an immune response has opened up...

Read more: How mRNA and DNA vaccines could soon treat cancers, HIV, autoimmune disorders and genetic diseases

What's a 990 form? A charity accounting expert explains

  • Written by Sarah Webber, Associate Professor of Accounting, University of Dayton
imageMost nonprofits must file this paperwork with the IRS every year. Dean R Specker/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Most tax-exempt nonprofits must file a 990 form with the Internal Revenue Service every year, typically in mid-May.

The 990 is purely informational. Nonprofits commit to serve an “approved purpose” – such as fighting...

Read more: What's a 990 form? A charity accounting expert explains

More women in a STEM field leads people to label it as a 'soft science,' according to new research

  • Written by Alysson Light, Assistant Professor of Psychology, University of the Sciences
imageHow seriously people take particular scientific disciplines partly depends on how many women enter them.skynesher/E+ via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

One factor that influences the use of the labels “soft science” or “hard science” is gender bias, according to rec...

Read more: More women in a STEM field leads people to label it as a 'soft science,' according to new research

How many bones do penguins have?

  • Written by Julie Sheldon, Clinical Assistant Professor of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, University of Tennessee
imageSpecialized anatomy means flightless penguins are master swimmers.Christopher Michel , CC BY-SAimage

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


How many bones do penguins have? – Sawyer, age 7, Media, Pennsylvania


As a zoo and wildlife...

Read more: How many bones do penguins have?

Kazakhstan's internet shutdown is the latest episode in an ominous trend: digital authoritarianism

  • Written by Margaret Hu, Professor of Law and of International Affairs, Penn State
imageWhile security forces in Kazakhstan cracked down on street protests, the country's internet service went dark.AP Photo/Vladimir Tretyakov

The Kazakhstan government shut off the internet nationwide on Jan. 5, 2022, in response to widespread civil unrest in the country. The unrest started on Jan. 2, after the government lifted the price cap on liquid...

Read more: Kazakhstan's internet shutdown is the latest episode in an ominous trend: digital authoritarianism

Schools join the fight against human trafficking

  • Written by Lumina Albert, Associate Professor of Management and Director of the CSU Center for Ethics and Human Rights, Colorado State University
imageProtests around the world aim to end human trafficking.Horacio Villalobos/Corbis via Getty Images

Education leaders across the U.S. are trying to figure out how to effectively teach students about the risks and warning signs of human trafficking, which includes being forced into domestic servitude, commercial labor or sex work.

According to 2019...

Read more: Schools join the fight against human trafficking

Tonga eruption was so intense, it caused the atmosphere to ring like a bell

  • Written by Kevin Hamilton, Emeritus Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Hawaii
imageThe volcano shortly before its eruption.Maxar via Getty Images

The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai eruption reached an explosive crescendo on Jan. 15, 2022. Its rapid release of energy powered an ocean tsunami that caused damage as far away as the U.S. West Coast, but it also generated pressure waves in the atmosphere that quickly spread around the world....

Read more: Tonga eruption was so intense, it caused the atmosphere to ring like a bell

More Articles ...

  1. Thich Nhat Hanh, who worked for decades to teach mindfulness, approached death in that same spirit
  2. Why 30 out of 32 NFL head coaches are white -- behind the NFL's abysmal record on diversity
  3. Why most NFL head coaches are white -- behind the NFL's abysmal record on diversity
  4. Pope Benedict accused of mishandling sex abuse cases: 4 essential reads
  5. Ukraine got a signed commitment in 1994 to ensure its security – but can the US and allies stop Putin's aggression now?
  6. The sunsetting of the child tax credit expansion could leave many families without enough food on the table
  7. Alpha then delta and now omicron – 6 questions answered as COVID-19 cases once again surge across the globe
  8. Conflicts between nursing home residents are often chalked up to dementia – the real problem is inadequate care and neglect
  9. About 1 in 3 child care workers are going hungry
  10. 5 things to know about why Russia might invade Ukraine – and why the US is involved
  11. What is bioengineered food? An agriculture expert explains
  12. How the Biden administration is making gains in an uphill battle against Russian hackers
  13. A year after Navalny's return, Putin remains atop a changed Russia
  14. Supreme Court rejects Trump's blocking of Jan. 6 docs: 3 key takeaways from ruling
  15. How antisemitic conspiracy theories contributed to the recent hostage-taking at the Texas synagogue
  16. The better you are at math, the more money seems to influence your satisfaction
  17. Stressed out at college? Here are five essential reads on how to take better care of your mental health
  18. Overruling Roe may not be conservatives' best strategy – Brown v. Board of Education shows how Supreme Court can uphold precedent while gutting its meaning
  19. ShakeAlert earthquake warnings can give people time to protect themselves – but so far, few have actually done so
  20. Pain and anxiety are linked to breathing in mouse brains – suggesting a potential target to prevent opioid overdose deaths
  21. The Electoral Count Act of 1887 is showing its age – here's how to help Congress certify a presidential election with more certainty
  22. Beavers offer lessons about managing water in a changing climate, whether the challenge is drought or floods
  23. Why getting Congress to fund help for US children in poverty is so hard to do
  24. How the pandemic's unequal toll on people of color underlines US health inequities – and why solving them is so critical
  25. CORBEVAX, a new patent-free COVID-19 vaccine, could be a pandemic game changer globally
  26. What 13th-century Christian theologian Thomas Aquinas can teach us about hope in times of despair
  27. What causes a tsunami? An ocean scientist explains the physics of these destructive waves
  28. Batteries get hyped, but pumped hydro provides the vast majority of long-term energy storage essential for renewable power – here’s how it works
  29. State efforts to close the K-12 digital divide may come up short
  30. The omicron variant is deepening severe staffing shortages in medical laboratories across the US
  31. Microsoft purchase of Activision Blizzard won't clean up gamer culture overnight: 5 essential reads about sexual harassment and discrimination in gaming and tech
  32. Yes, it's easier to get birth control than it was in the 1970s – but women still need abortion care
  33. Taliban 2.0 aren't so different from the first regime, after all
  34. More than masks and critical race theory – 3 tasks you should be prepared to do before you run for school board
  35. Sperm donation is largely unregulated, but that could soon change as lawsuits multiply
  36. Why massive new youth sports facilities may not lead to the tourist boom many communities hope for when they build them
  37. Fact-checking may be important, but it won't help Americans learn to disagree better
  38. These machines scrub greenhouse gases from the air – an inventor of direct air capture technology shows how it works
  39. How 'mechanical trees' pull carbon dioxide from the air and lock it away – an inventor of direct air capture tech explains
  40. Why do plants grow straight?
  41. Building machines that work for everyone – how diversity of test subjects is a technology blind spot, and what to do about it
  42. Remembering Martin Luther King Jr.: 5 things I've learned curating the MLK Collection at Morehouse College
  43. What Supreme Court's block of vaccine mandate for large businesses will mean for public health: 4 questions answered
  44. Colleges accused of conspiring to make low-income students pay more
  45. The #BettyWhiteChallenge highlights the growth of animal philanthropy and the role of rescues
  46. What made Bob Saget's Danny Tanner so different from other sitcom dads
  47. Seditious conspiracy charge against Oath Keepers founder and others in Jan. 6 riot faces First Amendment hurdle
  48. Civil war in the US is unlikely because grievance doesn't necessarily translate directly into violence
  49. Sugar detox? Cutting carbs? A doctor explains why you should keep fruit on the menu
  50. The metaverse is money and crypto is king – why you'll be on a blockchain when you're virtual-world hopping