Evidence
An international team involving four University of Oxford researchers has harnessed the exquisite sensitivity of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to achieve the first precise characterisation of interstellar dust during the early stages of the Universe. The study, published this week in Nature, not only sheds light on the composition of early cosmic dust, but may also provide valuable insights into the formation of stars and planets.
Estimated reading time: 2 minute(s)
Latest: Psychiatryai.com #RAISR4D
Cool Evidence: Engaging Young People and Students in Real-World Evidence
Real-Time Evidence Search [Psychiatry]
AI Research
James Webb Space Telescope detects interstellar dust grains in the first billion years of cosmic time
🌐 90 Days
VR Related Evidence Matrix
- Integrated smart dust monitoring and prediction system for surface mine sites using IoT and machine learning techniques
- Oxford early career researchers shine in Parliamentary competition
- Innovative technique reveals that leaping atoms remember where they have been
- Researchers achieve breakthrough in silicon-compatible magnetic whirls
- Researchers discover a coral superhighway in the Indian Ocean
- Colistin resistant bacteria found in mothers and newborn babies in Nigeria
- Oxford researchers launch updated carbon offsetting principles
- Things to know about AI for your career
- Space Ultrasound: A Proposal for Competency-based Ultrasound Training for In-flight Space Medicine
- Green Space and Internalizing or Externalizing Symptoms Among Children
- Workshop - Early Modern Capitalism: Trade, Risk and Profit
- Longitudinal study of personal space in autism
- Researchers find oldest undisputed evidence of Earth’s magnetic field
- Oxford University to mark 70th anniversary of Sir Bannister’s four-minute mile with local community
- Benefits of participatory involvement of patients in the development of a dermatological treatment app-A report from the practice
- AI ethics are ignoring children, say Oxford researchers
- Updates from the IOI with Sir Stewart Cole and Prof Craig Maclean
- Inhibition and working memory capacity modulate the mental space-time association
- Enforce net zero with global ‘ground rules,’ say Oxford academics
- Cancer related research in the Million Women Study: key findings
- Julia Bray (University of Oxford) |‘Medieval Arabic Literature: What Do You Know, and What Can You Do with It?’
- Genomic, functional, and metabolic enhancements in multidrug-resistant Enterobacter bugandensis facilitating its persistence and succession in the International Space Station
- The association between childhood adverse experiences and internet addiction: A meta-analysis
- Designing combinational herbal drugs based on target space analysis
- LEAP conference
- Medical Humanities ECR & DPhil Writing Group TT2024
- Depression, stress, and anxiety versus internet addiction in early and middle adolescent groups: the mediating roles of family and school environments
- 2024 Oxford University of Sanctuary Fair
- Workshop: Getting started in policy engagement
- Spotl:ght: Illuminating Engineering
- Emerging Threats and Technology Group: Annual Threats Report & Journal Launch
- Brian James: Prevention of future deaths report
- Telomeres and aging: on and off the planet!
- Nurturing an organizational context that supports team-based primary mental health care: A grounded theory study
- Careers in International Organisations, Diplomacy & Think Tanks for Researchers
- The world’s most prolific carbon-fixing enzyme is slowly getting better
- The Loss of Spatiality and Temporality in Twilight Consciousness: The Emergence of Exogenous Psychosis Induced by Novel Psychoactive Substances
- The Loss of Spatiality and Temporality in Twilight Consciousness: The Emergence of Exogenous Psychosis Induced by Novel Psychoactive Substances
- New database sheds light on violence in Greek detention facilities
- New study links hospital privatisation to worse patient care
- Breakthrough promises secure quantum computing at home
- Oxford Martin researchers explore global views on data privacy
- Oxford Technology & Security Nexus — AI in the Workplace and Employment Power Dynamics
- Mechanisms of Brain State Control: Joint Meeting of Oxford Neuroscience & Neurocure Cluster of Excellence, Charité Universitätsmedizin, Berlin
- Virtual Reality Simulation for Medical Educators
- Does Competition Change Character? Left of War in the Maritime Domain
- New trial to study how the human immune system adapts to ‘tolerate’ malaria parasites
- Oxford Spring School in Advanced Research Methods 2024
- Session 1: Using a theory of change in an Agile Sprint (online webinar)
- New study reveals insight into which animals are most vulnerable to extinction due to climate change
- Session 3: Co-creation and stakeholder engagement for impact in an Agile Sprint (online webinar)
- Indigenous approaches to “Nature”: Insights at a time of Planetary Crisis
- Integrating Biomarkers From Virtual Reality and Magnetic Resonance Imaging for the Early Detection of Mild Cognitive Impairment Using a Multimodal Learning Approach: Validation Study
- More social birds are more adventurous feeders, study finds
- The Montreal Cognitive Assessment detects cognitive deficits that go unnoticed during clinical observation in the acute phase after stroke
- Open scholarship: introduction to open science framework at Oxford
- Landmark study definitively shows that conservation actions are effective at halting and reversing biodiversity loss
- Four ‘outstanding research leaders’ at Oxford awarded major European Research Council grants
- Application of AI in Sepsis: Citation Network Analysis and Evidence Synthesis
- Schizophrenia, the very idea: On self-disorder, hyperreflexivity, and the diagnostic concept
- James Day: Prevention of future deaths report
- The Evolution of Monotremes: New Fossils, New Insights
- New funding for development of world's first lung cancer vaccine
- Digital Gait Measures Capture 1-Year Progression in Early-Stage Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 2
Evidence Blueprint
James Webb Space Telescope detects interstellar dust grains in the first billion years of cosmic time
☊ AI-Driven Related Evidence Nodes
(recent articles with at least 5 words in title)
More Evidence
James Webb Space Telescope detects interstellar dust grains in the first billion years of cosmic time
🌐 365 Days
VR Related Evidence Matrix
- Toward an interdisciplinary approach to assess the adverse health effects of dust-containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and metal(loid)s on preschool children
- AI that automatically detects methane plumes from space could be a powerful tool in combating climate change.
- Oxford researchers develop 3D printing method that shows promise for repairing brain injuries
- Complex 33-beam simulated galactic cosmic radiation exposure impacts cognitive function and prefrontal cortex neurotransmitter networks in male mice
- Oxford chemists achieve breakthrough achievement: hazard-free production of fluorochemicals
- Women diagnosed with early breast cancer today are much less likely to die from the disease than 20 years ago
- New Oxford study sheds light on the origin of animals
- Researchers successfully train a machine learning model in outer space for the first time
- Integrated smart dust monitoring and prediction system for surface mine sites using IoT and machine learning techniques
- Oxford scientists launch ambitious roadmap for a circular carbon plastics economy
- Researchers extract ancient DNA from a 2,900-year-old clay brick, revealing a time capsule of plant life
- Oxford joins Imperial and York in £12 million fusion power industry partnership
- Oxford opens the UK’s first Space Innovation Lab
- ‘Seeking the Cosmic Secrets’ with Dr Tinashe Mushakavanhu
- Oxford early career researchers shine in Parliamentary competition
- Innovative technique reveals that leaping atoms remember where they have been
- Researchers achieve breakthrough in silicon-compatible magnetic whirls
- Researchers discover a coral superhighway in the Indian Ocean
- COP28 Expert Comment from across Oxford University
- Researchers issue urgent call to save the world’s largest flower -Rafflesia - from extinction
- Colistin resistant bacteria found in mothers and newborn babies in Nigeria
- Associations of Subjective Memory with Life Space and Neighborhood Built Environment in Older Adults in the ACTIVE Study
- Oxford researchers launch updated carbon offsetting principles
- Silence to Solidarity: Using Group Dynamics to Reduce Anti-Transgender Discrimination in India - Duncan Webb
- Things to know about AI for your career
- Global impact of Oxford University Innovation highlighted in new report
- Alcohol consumption increases the risks of over 60 diseases
- Armed to the hilt: Study solves mystery behind bacteria’s extensive weaponry
- Space Ultrasound: A Proposal for Competency-based Ultrasound Training for In-flight Space Medicine
- Oxford to launch UK’s first trials unit dedicated to precision-prevention and early detection studies
- Green Space and Internalizing or Externalizing Symptoms Among Children
- New ‘droplet battery’ could pave the way for miniature bio-integrated devices
- New study offers hope in early detection of oesophageal cancer
- Workshop - Early Modern Capitalism: Trade, Risk and Profit
- New AI tool could help predict viral outbreaks
- From square to cube: Hardware processing for AI goes 3D, boosting processing power
- Remote collaborations deliver fewer scientific breakthroughs, says Oxford co-led research
- Oxford-led study shows how AI can detect antibiotic resistance in as little as 30 minutes
- Longitudinal study of personal space in autism
- Researchers find oldest undisputed evidence of Earth’s magnetic field
- Oxford University to mark 70th anniversary of Sir Bannister’s four-minute mile with local community
- Multi-billion-dollar risk to economic activity from climate extremes affecting ports: Oxford report
- Fixing the broken food system would unlock trillions of dollars in benefits, study finds
- Keeping track of time: Horizontal spatial biases for hours, days, and months
- Loss of Cognitive Flexibility Practice Effects in Female Rats Exposed to Simulated Space Radiation
- Oxford-Harrington Rare Disease Centre Launches Pioneering Therapeutics Accelerator to Advance Innovative Treatments for Rare Diseases
- Benefits of participatory involvement of patients in the development of a dermatological treatment app-A report from the practice
- First digital atlas of human fetal brain development published
- Oxford research on poverty, unemployment, terrorism and global kleptocracy celebrated for real-world impacts
- AI ethics are ignoring children, say Oxford researchers
- New study could help unlock ‘game-changing’ batteries for electric vehicles and aviation
- Early-life diseases linked to lifelong childlessness
- Updates from the IOI with Sir Stewart Cole and Prof Craig Maclean
- Inhibition and working memory capacity modulate the mental space-time association
- Oxford University’s volcanic research showcased at Royal Society’s Summer Science Exhibition
- Enforce net zero with global ‘ground rules,’ say Oxford academics
- FCDO Minister meets with University of Oxford’s vaccine researchers
- Government welcomes university spin-out review co-chaired by Oxford’s Vice-Chancellor
- Lister Prize Presentation James Davies - Using base pair mapping of chromatin structure to interrogate genome function
- Cancer related research in the Million Women Study: key findings
- Julia Bray (University of Oxford) |‘Medieval Arabic Literature: What Do You Know, and What Can You Do with It?’
- New research finds that reducing antibiotic usage in animal feed is not enough to combat antibiotic resistance
- Randomized trial comparing standard versus light intensity parent training for anxious youth
- Genomic, functional, and metabolic enhancements in multidrug-resistant Enterobacter bugandensis facilitating its persistence and succession in the International Space Station