Carney: mi aspetto che gli Usa rispettino la sovranità del Canada – Notizie – Ansa.it

Il premier canadese Mark Carney ha dichiarato di aspettarsi che l’amministrazione statunitense “rispetti la sovranità canadese”, dopo le notizie di stampa relative a incontri tra funzionari del Dipartimento di Stato Usa e attivisti indipendentisti della provincia dell’Alberta. “Sono sempre molto chiaro su questo punto nelle mie conversazioni con il presidente…

Salgono a quattro gli indagati per il rogo di Crans-Montana – Notizie – Ansa.it

Assenza prolungata dei controlli di sicurezza nei locali pubblici di Crans-Montana e sopralluoghi non abbastanza approfonditi: la procura di Sion, che sta indagando sulla strage di Capodanno nel Constellation dove sono morte 40 persone e 116 sono rimaste ferite, si sta concentrando ora sulle responsabilità del Municipio della stazione sciistica.…

A diabetes drug shows surprising promise against heart disease

Research building on earlier work in type 2 diabetes suggests the experimental drug IC7Fc may also help protect against heart disease. A new study reports that the drug can lower cholesterol levels and reduce inflammation, two major contributors to cardiovascular problems. An international research team led by Leiden University Medical…

A simple blood test could spot Parkinson’s years before symptoms

Researchers led by a team at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden have identified biological markers that appear in the earliest stages of Parkinson’s disease, before major damage occurs in the brain. These early changes leave detectable traces in the blood, but only for a short time. The findings highlight…

Ancient oceans stayed oxygen rich despite extreme warming

The Arabian Sea contained more oxygen about 16 million years ago than it does today, even though Earth’s climate was warmer at the time. Powerful monsoons, shifting ocean currents, and connections between seas strongly influence oxygen levels, showing that ocean health depends on more than temperature alone. Over very long…

Scientists found a way to cool quantum computers using noise

Quantum computers only work when they are kept extremely cold. The problem is that today’s cooling systems also create noise, which can interfere with the fragile quantum information they are supposed to protect. Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden have now introduced a new type of minimal quantum…