AGU August Days of Action: Scientists Stepping Up for Science – The Bridge: Connecting Science and Policy

Scientists play a vital role in serving communities by deepening our understanding of the world and driving advances that improve public health, safeguard the environment, improve safety, and more. However, recent Administration policies are putting these contributions at risk, threatening the ability of America’s scientists to carry out this critical work. Scientists are not standing…

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Agent Design Patterns: The Missing Link Between AI Demos and Business Value

The enterprise AI market is currently suffering from a huge hangover. Over the past two years, decision makers have been inundated with demonstrations of autonomous agents booking flights, writing code, and analyzing data. However, the reality on the ground is totally different. While experimentation is at an all-time high, deploying reliable, autonomous agents in production…

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Challenging the paradigms established by S. Dey et al. – Community of European Solar Radio Astronomers

Polarization measurements of solar radio emissions are key diagnostics of coronal plasma, magnetic fields, and propagation effects, and can provide additional constraints on emission mechanisms. At meter wavelengths, circular polarization (CP) has long been exploited in solar radio studies, while linear polarization (LP) was assumed to be absent. This view arose from the expectation that…

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One of the most complete human ancestors ever found is not who we thought he was

In 1998, researchers discovered one of the most complete human ancestral fossils known in South Africa’s Sterkfontein Caves. Nearly two decades later, Ronald Clarke, the paleoanthropologist who led the excavation and analysis, identified the remains as a Australopithecus prometheuswhile others argued that it was a African Australopithecus. New research suggests it’s neither. In investigation Published…

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