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University of Southern Denmark

University of Southern Denmark

The University of Southern Denmark, with campuses located in the southwestern part of Denmark – i.e. Funen, Southern Jutland and Zealand – is a research and educational institution with deep regional roots and an international outlook.

Robots and cameras of the future could be made of liquid crystals

A different approach: Can we save more lives if we let resistant bacteria live?

Speeding up vaccine development by more than one million times while minimizing costs

An aerographene pump weighing only 450 grams can lift an elephant

A new antibiotic fights resistant bacteria and needs help reaching patients

Acoustic waves on microchips opens the door to a low-heat, low-energy fast internet

Are seawater-based Na-ion batteries the future of sustainable batteries?

Helping save endangered species with a new mathematical model

  One of the greatest challenges in saving endangered species is to predict if an animal population will die out. Accurate and reliable models are crucial for conservationists. What does the blue whale have in common with the Bengal tiger and the green turtle? They share the risk of extinction and are classified as endangered

Helping save endangered species with a new mathematical model

To Save An Entire Species, All You Need Is $1.3 Million

How much would you pay to save a species from becoming extinct? A thousand dollars, $1 million or $10 million or more? A new study shows that a subset of species – in this case 841 to be exact – can be saved from extinction for about $1.3 million per species per year, but only

To Save An Entire Species, All You Need Is $1.3 Million

Scientists bring oxygen back to dead fjord

More and more of the world’s waters are seriously lacking oxygen. Could we use pumps to bring oxygen and thus higher life back into these waters? A Danish/Swedish research team says yes. They installed pumps in a Swedish fjord that showed a strong oxygen deficit and now they report that all the right oxygen-loving organisms

Scientists bring oxygen back to dead fjord

New material steals oxygen from air

Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark have synthesized crystalline materials that can bind and store oxygen in high concentrations.The stored oxygen can be released again when and where it is needed. We do fine with the 21 per cent oxygen in the air around us. But sometimes we need oxygen in higher concentrations; for

New material steals oxygen from air

Nature inspires a greener way to make colorful plastics

Long before humans figured out how to create colors, nature had already perfected the process — think stunning, bright butterfly wings of many different hues, for example. Now scientists are tapping into those secrets to develop a more environmentally friendly way to make colored plastics. Their paper on using structure — or the shapes and

Nature inspires a greener way to make colorful plastics

Nasal spray may soon replace the pill to deliver drugs to the brain

When the doctor gives us medicine, it is often in the shape of a pill. But when it comes to brain diseases, pills are actually an extremely ineffecient way to deliver drugs to the brain, and according to researchers from University of Southern Denmark we need to find new and more efficient ways of transporting

Nasal spray may soon replace the pill to deliver drugs to the brain

New technique promises cheaper second-generation biofuel for cars

Now scientists have a new technique that avoids the expensive enzymes Producing second-generation biofuel from dead plant tissue is environmentally friendly — but it is also expensive because the process, as used today, needs expensive enzymes, and large companies dominate this market. Now scientists have a new technique that avoids the expensive enzymes. The production

New technique promises cheaper second-generation biofuel for cars

Chemist gets US patent for solution to resistance problem

A chemist based at the University of Copenhagen has just taken out a patent for a drug that can make previously multidrug-resistant bacteria responsive to antibiotics once again. Jørn Bolstad and his chemist colleagues hope that the substance will soon be able to tackle the tremendous problems associated with multidrug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). But first, they need

Chemist gets US patent for solution to resistance problem

Surprising diversity in aging revealed in nature

Increasing weakness with age is not a law of nature In our youth we are strong and healthy and then we weaken and die – that’s probably how most would describe what ageing is all about. But, in nature, the phenomenon of ageing shows an unexpected diversity of patterns and is altogether rather strange, conclude

Surprising diversity in aging revealed in nature

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