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University of Copenhagen Articles
Edible QR code can be the medicine of the future
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have developed a new method for the production of medicine. They print medical drugs in QR coded patterns onto an edible material. The production can be tailored to fit each patient and has the potential to protect against wrong medication and fake medicine according to the researchers. For the last 100 years, researchers have constantly pushed the boundaries for our knowledge about medicine and ho...
Technique unveils core of tissues and tumours
Scientists from the Biotech Research & Innovation Centre (BRIC) at the University of Copenhagen have developed a method to reveal the structure of tissues and tumours with unprecedented detail, by completely dissolving away cells and leaving the delicate extracellular matrix intact. The matrix surrounds the cells in every organ of our bodies, and provides shape and structure to the organ.
Enzyme-like drugs against Alzheimer's disease
Catalytic molecules are emerging as powerful medicines. European scientists exploited this paradigm of modern medicine to produce novel drugs against Alzheimer's disease. The growing incidence and socioeconomic burden of Alzheimer's disease emphasises the need for novel therapies. Medium sized peptide-transition metal complexes can act as enzymes and perform proteolysis of pathogen substrates, overcoming many of the difficulties encountered ...
Eyetracking data can improve language technology
Research from the University of Copenhagen shows that recordings of gaze data -- within a few seconds -- can reveal whether a word causes a reader problems. This insight could be used to alleviate reading problems with software that offer translations of difficult words or suggest easier texts as soon as readers experience problems. The technology may thus have a significant impact on the educational system, particularly because gaze data can now...
Astronomers get millions of hours on supercomputers
Researchers from Astrophysics and Planetary Science at the Niels Bohr Institute have just been granted 91 million CPU hours on European supercomputers for three major research projects.
Superfast light source made from artificial atom
New research results from the Niels Bohr Institute show that light sources can be made much faster by using a principle that was predicted theoretically in 1954. The results are published in the scientific journal, Physical Review Letters. Researchers at the Niels Bohr Institute are working with quantum dots, which are a kind of artificial atom that can be incorporated into optical chips. In a quantum dot, an electron can be excited (i....
Researchers use sunlight to produce chemicals and energy
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have discovered a natural process they describe as "reverse photosynthesis," by which the energy in solar rays breaks down plant biomass rather than building it, as is the case with photosynthesis. The sunlight is collected by chlorophyll, the same molecule used in photosynthesis. Combined with a specific enzyme, the energy of sunlight breaks down plant biomass, with possible applications in chemicals, ...
Heavy nuclei collide at new record high energy
The world’s most powerful accelerator, the 27 km long Large Hadron Collider (LHC) operating at CERN in Geneva established collisions between lead nuclei at the highest energies ever. The LHC has been colliding protons at record high energy since the summer, but now the time has now come to collide large nuclei (nuclei of lead, Pb, consist of 208 neutrons and protons).