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Ett blodigt ”cold case” får en internationell lösning

När det gäller kriminalvärldens ouppklarade brott används ofta ny DNA-teknik för att lösa gamla fall. Så är det också med blodgåtornas ”cold cases”, där man genom att jämföra olika patientprover med varandra ser proteinmönster och DNA-ledtrådar som till slut kan resultera i nya blodgrupper. Nyligen löstes ett nästan trettioårigt blodmysterium, genom ett samarbete mellan Lunds universitet, Region S

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/ett-blodigt-cold-case-far-en-internationell-losning - 2025-10-15

Lunds universitet lanserar Studiechansen

Lunds universitet öppnar helt nya kurser inför hösten genom satsningen Studiechansen. Två tematerminer har skapats inom hållbarhet och global hälsa. Studiechansen syftar till att fler ska få möjlighet att studera och bygga kompetens inför framtiden. Regeringen har under våren satsat extra utbildningspengar för att lindra effekterna av coronapandemin. Lunds universitet har fått drygt 50 miljoner kr

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/lunds-universitet-lanserar-studiechansen - 2025-10-15

Antiviral metod mot herpes banar väg för bekämpning av obotliga virusinfektioner

Forskare i Lund har upptäckt en ny metod för att behandla alla humana herpesvirus. Den nya bredspektrum-metoden riktar sig mot fysikaliska egenskaper i virusets arvsmassa i stället för som i tidigare behandlingsmetoder, mot virala proteiner. Behandlingen består av nya molekyler som penetrerar virusets proteinhölje och hindrar generna från att lämna viruset för att infektera cellen. Det unika med

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/antiviral-metod-mot-herpes-banar-vag-bekampning-av-obotliga-virusinfektioner - 2025-10-15

Nytt blodprov upptäcker Alzheimers sjukdom lika exakt som dyra och komplicerade metoder

Alzheimers sjukdom är svårdiagnosticerad vilket kan försvåra möjligheten att ge bästa möjliga behandling och vård. I en internationell studie som nu publiceras i den ansedda tidskriften JAMA beskriver forskare ett nytt blodprov som upptäcker Alzheimers sjukdom redan innan de första symtomen utvecklats och har samma tillförlitlighet som dyra, komplicerade och mer svårtillgängliga metoder. Forskarna

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/nytt-blodprov-upptacker-alzheimers-sjukdom-lika-exakt-som-dyra-och-komplicerade-metoder - 2025-10-15

ERC grant for one-step Covid detection

Christelle Prinz, professor of solid state physics and affiliated to NanoLund, receives 150,000 euros to further develop research results that are considered to have great innovation potential by the European Research Council. For several years, physicist Christelle Prinz has developed nanotechnology to diagnose and study diseases in various ways, such as cancer. In an ongoing ERC project, she and

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/erc-grant-one-step-covid-detection - 2025-10-15

Observing the emergence of a quantum phase transition shell by shell

By studying cold atoms, researchers have in a unique way been able to observe a precursor to a quantum phase transition, and thereby study physical processes that can be compared to the Higgs mechanism. The discovery can, among other things, provide more knowledge about quantum mechanical processes that are similar to the processes in which matter changes its state from gas, liquid, or solid form

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/observing-emergence-quantum-phase-transition-shell-shell - 2025-10-15

Prestigious ERC consilidator grant awarded to Caterina Doglioni

What is all the dark matter in the universe made of? Could it be connected to new particles that can be produced at the Large Hadron Collider? Caterina Doglioni, assistant senior lecturer in particle physics, will search for new particles beyond the known fundamental components of matter with the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Caterina Doglioni is receiving around SEK 20 mill

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/prestigious-erc-consilidator-grant-awarded-caterina-doglioni - 2025-10-15

ERC grant awarded to research project on protein motors

Building engines – out of proteins. That’s the aim for a research project, coordinated by Heiner Linke at NanoLund, Lund University in Sweden. The project is now being funded by the European Research Council (ERC) – it received a EUR 10 million ERC Synergy Grant. The 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to researchers who developed molecular machines, that is, molecules that convert light int

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/erc-grant-awarded-research-project-protein-motors - 2025-10-15

Anne L’Huillier wins the Max Born Award

The Optical Society, OSA, awards NanoLundian Atomic Physics professor Anne l’Huillier the Max Born Award for pioneering work in ultrafast laser science and attosecond physics. Anne L’Huillier, professor of Atomic Physics and affiliated member of NanoLund, has been awarded the Optical Society Max Born Award 2021 “for pioneering work in ultrafast laser science and attosecond physics, realizing and u

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/anne-lhuillier-wins-max-born-award - 2025-10-15

Unique research project on electrons awarded grant

A research project on how to observe and control the movement of electrons will soon commence at LTH thanks to a multi-million donation from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. Per Eng-Johnsson, professor at the Division of Atomic Physics, will receive just over SEK 25 million for doing something that no one has done before. He aims to combine two different laser-based techniques to study ho

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/unique-research-project-electrons-awarded-grant - 2025-10-15

ERC Starting Grant rewarded to Pablo Villanueva Perez

NanoLund affiliated researcher recieves funding to develop a new microscope. Pablo Villanueva Perez, associate senior lecturer in Synchrotron Radiation Physics, will develop a completely new X-ray microscope to improve the study and filming of different materials in 3D. Today this is done using microtomography (μCT) by irradiating a rotating sample with X-rays so that it is struck from different d

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/erc-starting-grant-rewarded-pablo-villanueva-perez - 2025-10-15

Could singing spread Covid-19?

If silence is golden, speech is silver – and singing the worst. Singing doesn’t need to be silenced, however, but at the moment the wisest thing is to sing with social distancing in place. The advice comes from aerosol researchers at Lund University in Sweden. They have studied the amount of particles we actually emit when we sing – and by extension – if we contribute to the increased spread of Co

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/could-singing-spread-covid-19 - 2025-10-15

X-rays and neutrons entering the metals and manufacturing industries

Researchers from the two Strategic Research Areas NanoLund and SPI (Sustainable Production Initiative, Chalmers and Lund University) have joined forces in a new collaboration together with major Swedish companies from the metals and manufacturing industries. The project aims to facilitate and improve the industry’s use of MAX IV and ESS through direct collaborations between industrial and academic

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/x-rays-and-neutrons-entering-metals-and-manufacturing-industries - 2025-10-15

How to make smarter and more efficient electronics

We are facing new challenges, and consequently we need the development of electronics to continue. But the question is: how do we do that? Mattias Borg, co-coordinator of Exploratory Nanotechnology, explains how. The basis of the electronics we use today, such as home computers and mobile phones, was invented more than 50 years ago. And in recent years its development has begun to stall. According

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/how-make-smarter-and-more-efficient-electronics - 2025-10-15

Double innovation prize to NanoLund

NanoLund researchers Martin Hjort, Yang Chen, and Martin Borgström have been awarded the Lund University and Sparbanken Skåne’s prize for future innovations. Their projects are named “Overcoming the shortage of blood stem cell donations with the help of nanotechnology” and “Transparent solar cells: solar cell windows”. What innovations will we see in the future? Eight of the most innovative ideas

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/double-innovation-prize-nanolund - 2025-10-15

Researchers find evidence of elusive Odderon particle

For 50 years, the research community has been hunting unsuccessfully for the so-called Odderon particle. Now, a Swedish-Hungarian research group has discovered the mythical particle with the help of extensive analysis of experimental data from the Large Hadron Collider at CERN in Switzerland. In 1973, two French particle physicists found that, according to their calculations, there was a previousl

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/researchers-find-evidence-elusive-odderon-particle - 2025-10-15

How stars form in the smallest galaxies

The question of how small, dwarf galaxies have sustained the formation of new stars over the course of the Universe has long confounded the world’s astronomers. An international research team led by Lund University in Sweden has found that dormant small galaxies can slowly accumulate gas over many billions of years. When this gas suddenly collapses under its own weight, new stars are able to arise

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/how-stars-form-smallest-galaxies - 2025-10-15

Mercury emission from the “Terracotta Army” emperor Qin´s mausoleum in Xian measured by lidar

According to  2200 years old records, the so far never opened tomb of emperor Qin should contain large amounts of liquid mercury, forming lakes and rivers of a large-scale “map” of China, which had been unified by him.  Recently, the research group of Prof. Sune Svanberg, part-time active at South China Normal University in Guangzhou, and currently remaining as part-time senior professor at the Ph

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/mercury-emission-terracotta-army-emperor-qins-mausoleum-xian-measured-lidar - 2025-10-15

Anders Johansen has been chosen to be Wallenberg Scholar

Anders Johansen, professor in Astronomy at Lund University, has been chosen to be Wallenberg Scholar. The Wallenberg Scholar program focuses on Sweden's leading senior researchers. It was implemented because researchers need long-term funding without the distraction of pressure to secure external grants in order to carry out world-class research. The grant can be freely used for research for five

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/anders-johansen-has-been-chosen-be-wallenberg-scholar - 2025-10-15

Nuclear physicist’s voyage towards a mythical island

Theories were introduced as far back as the 1960s about the possible existence of superheavy elements. Their most long-lived nuclei could give rise to a so-called “island of stability” far beyond the element uranium. However, a new study, led by nuclear physicists at Lund University, shows that a 50-year-old nuclear physics manifesto must now be revised. The heaviest element found in nature is ura

https://www.fysik.lu.se/en/article/nuclear-physicists-voyage-towards-mythical-island - 2025-10-15