Environmental Science and Engineering
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Environmental engineers reshape understanding of airborne pollution particles
Environmental engineers reshape understanding of airborne pollution particles Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor From sizzling bacon in the kitchen to wildfire smoke in the sky, cooking and pollution release microscopic particles that affect humans' health, the air they breathe, and even weather and climate. New research from Virginia Tech is poised to upend how scientists think about the structure of these tiny airborne droplets and what that means for predictions...
Tokenomics: Quantifying Where Tokens Are Used in Agentic Software Engineering
Computer Science > Software Engineering [Submitted on 20 Jan 2026] Title:Tokenomics: Quantifying Where Tokens Are Used in Agentic Software Engineering View PDF HTML (experimental)Abstract:LLM-based Multi-Agent (LLM-MA) systems are increasingly applied to automate complex software engineering tasks such as requirements engineering, code generation, and testing.
Atmospheric wave theory falls short in explaining rising extreme weather, study suggests
Atmospheric wave theory falls short in explaining rising extreme weather, study suggests Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Across much of the northern hemisphere, extreme weather events like heat waves and heavy precipitation have increased in frequency and severity over the last several decades. A new study from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) shows that one proposed partial explanation, so-called "quasiresonant...
Stretching by outer eddies sets the turbulent breakup rate of drops and bubbles
Announce Type: replace Abstract: Fragmentation of drops and bubbles in turbulence controls interfacial area generation, mixing, and transport in environmental and engineering flows. The nonlinear coupling between interfacial and hydrodynamic stresses has long prevented predictive modeling, a challenge we here overcome by decomposing the flow into outer and inner regions. We show that breakup is driven by isolated events of extreme interfacial stretching caused by the non-local action of the...
Medicinal plants yield carbon nanoparticles that glow red and flag toxic metals
Medicinal plants yield carbon nanoparticles that glow red and flag toxic metals Stephanie Baum Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor What do iron, lead and nickel have in common? These heavy metals are an indispensable part of many industries. However, they also share a dark reality: They are serious environmental and public health threats.
Satellite images reveals mangroves rebounding worldwide — but here's why they could still 'drown'
Satellite images reveals mangroves rebounding worldwide — but here's why they could still 'drown' A new study finds mangrove forests are no longer shrinking worldwide, offering hope for coastal protection and climate resilience. But other research warns sea level rise could reduce their ability to store carbon. Mangrove forests, long considered among the world's most threatened ecosystems, are now showing signs of global rebound, a new study reports.
Policy recommendations in climate-related research often 'an afterthought', analysis finds
Policy recommendations in climate-related research often 'an afterthought', analysis finds Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Too often, policy recommendations in climate-related research are either an afterthought or stray too far into advocacy, a new analysis has found. Researchers led by the University of Cambridge conducted a systematic review of more than 3,000 scientific papers focused on climate change mitigation and found that recommendations on how to turn...
AI could consume up 3% of world's electricity the UN warns
AI could consume up 3% of world's electricity the UN warns AI could soon use more water than we need to drink, UN report finds. One argument often used to quell concerns about the rising energy and resource demand of data centers is that artificial intelligence (AI) models will need less in the future as they improve and become more efficient. But this seemingly logical thinking is a trap, according to a new United Nations report that quantifies the environmental costs of AI.
A new origin story for multicellular life points to physics, not genes alone
A new origin story for multicellular life points to physics, not genes alone Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor How did life make the leap from single cells to coordinated, multicellular organisms? And how do genetically identical cells still perform a version of that feat every time an embryo begins to take shape? In a new Perspective paper appearing in the journal Nature Biotechnology, Bren Professor of Biology and Biological Engineering Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz...
Global mangrove forests rebound, offering hopeful sign for climate and coastal resilience
Global mangrove forests rebound, offering hopeful sign for climate and coastal resilience Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Mangrove forests, once considered one of the world's most threatened coastal ecosystems, are showing signs of recovery worldwide, according to new research from Tulane University that finds decades of losses largely offset by regrowth and expansion. The study, based on four decades of satellite data and published in the journal Science, finds...