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Showing 1–27 of 27 results
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  • The Venus Express mission has returned its first findings on the harsh atmosphere of our sister planet. It's another step towards explaining how Venus turned out so differently from our balmy home.

    • Andrew P. Ingersoll
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 450, P: 617-618
  • Genome-wide association analyses based on whole-genome sequencing and imputation identify 40 new risk variants for colorectal cancer, including a strongly protective low-frequency variant at CHD1 and loci implicating signaling and immune function in disease etiology.

    • Jeroen R. Huyghe
    • Stephanie A. Bien
    • Ulrike Peters
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 51, P: 76-87
  • Observations of broadband emission from lightning on Jupiter at 600 megahertz show a lightning discharge mechanism similar to that of terrestrial lightning and indicate increased moist convection near Jupiter’s poles.

    • Shannon Brown
    • Michael Janssen
    • John Connerney
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 558, P: 87-90
  • The long-term Lorenz energy cycle of Earth’s global remains poorly explored. Here, the authors use three independent meteorological data sets from the modern satellite era (1979–2013) to examine the temporal characteristics of such a cycle.

    • Yefeng Pan
    • Liming Li
    • Andrew P. Ingersoll
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 8, P: 1-8
  • The E3 ligase SIFI is identified as a dedicated silencing factor of the integrated stress response, a finding that has implications for the development of therapeutics for neurodegenerative diseases caused by mitochondrial protein import stress.

    • Diane L. Haakonsen
    • Michael Heider
    • Michael Rapé
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 626, P: 874-880
  • Juno’s microwave radiometer data could measure the water concentration in the deep atmosphere of Jupiter (0.7 to 30 bar) at the equator: \(2.7^{+2.4}_{-1.7}\) times the solar O/H abundance, with a thermal vertical structure compatible with a moist adiabat.

    • Cheng Li
    • Andrew Ingersoll
    • Zhimeng Zhang
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 4, P: 609-616
  • The extraction of the wind pattern, vorticity and divergence down to a scale of 200 km from the cluster of cyclones at Jupiter’s north pole shows evidence of an anticyclonic ring, which is needed to keep the system stable, around the central cyclone. No signatures of convection are observed at 200 km scales.

    • Andrew P. Ingersoll
    • Shawn P. Ewald
    • William R. Young
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 6, P: 1280-1286
  • The stability over time of the zonal jets on the giant planets has been debated. An analysis of observations from the Cassini spacecraft reveals an acceleration of wind velocities in Saturn’s high-altitude equatorial jet between 2004 and 2009, by 20 m s−1 at tropopause level and by 60 m s−1 in the stratosphere.

    • Liming Li
    • Xun Jiang
    • Kevin H. Baines
    Research
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 4, P: 750-752
  • Infrared images of Jupiter taken by the Juno spacecraft reveal an energy transfer driven by moist convection. This mechanism is expected to enhance heat transfer, which might also be relevant to Earth’s atmosphere.

    • Lia Siegelman
    • Patrice Klein
    • Giuseppe Sindoni
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 18, P: 357-361
  • This Review gives an overview of some pivotal open questions on planetary formation and evolution, with water as the underlying common theme, and how the planetary and exoplanetary communities can help each other in addressing them.

    • Andrew P. Ingersoll
    Reviews
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 1, P: 1-7
  • Small lightning flashes detected on Jupiter by Juno have shallow origins above the 2-bar level of Jupiter’s atmosphere where temperatures are too low for liquid water to exist.

    • Heidi N. Becker
    • James W. Alexander
    • Paul G. Steffes
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 584, P: 55-58
  • Mary Relling and colleagues explore the effects of ancestry on the pharmacogenomics of relapse in acute lymphoblastic leukemia. They found that Native American ancestry was associated with risk of relapse but that differences in relapse risk were abrogated by the addition of a single extra phase of chemotherapy.

    • Jun J Yang
    • Cheng Cheng
    • Mary V Relling
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 43, P: 237-241
  • In our own solar system, Venus is too hot, Mars is too cold and Earth is just right. Simulations show that making an icy planet habitable is not as simple as melting its ice: many icy bodies swing from too cold to too hot, bypassing just right.

    • Andrew P. Ingersoll
    News & Views
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 10, P: 545