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Verdict on the Xiaomi 15S Pro: One of the best smartphones in 2025 – Notebookcheck
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Webb uncovers secrets of dark matter in cosmic collision zone
The James Webb Space Telescope has delivered the clearest, deepest images yet of the Bullet Cluster, unveiling thousands of faint, distant galaxies and offering the most precise map of dark matter in this iconic colliding galaxy cluster.
“With Webb’s observations, we carefully measured the mass of the Bullet Cluster with the largest lensing dataset to date, from the galaxy clusters’ cores all the way out to their outskirts,” said lead author Sangjun Cha, a PhD student at Yonsei University in Seoul.
Previous studies relied on less lensing data, leading to less precise estimates of the system’s mass.
“Webb’s images dramatically improve what we can measure in this scene – including pinpointing the position of invisible particles known as dark matter,” said co-author Kyle Finner, an assistant scientist at Caltech.
How light shows the dark
The Bullet Cluster is made of two massive galaxy clusters bound by gravity. It acts as a natural gravitational lens that magnifies background galaxies.
James Jee, a professor at Yonsei University and research associate at UC Davis, is a co-author of the study. “Gravitational lensing allows us to infer the distribution of dark matter,” he said.
To visualize this effect, Jee compares it to ripples on a pond. You can’t see the clear water unless there are ripples that distort the shapes of the pebbles below – just as dark matter distorts the light from galaxies behind it.
By measuring thousands of galaxies, the scientists used Webb’s images to weigh visible and invisible mass in the cluster.
The team also mapped the faint glow of intracluster stars – those not bound to any single galaxy. These drifting stars may closely trace dark matter.
Webb’s dark matter reveal
Webb’s observations produced a layered view, combining near-infrared data with X-ray imagery from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, revealing hot gas in pink, the bullet shape in the cluster, and the newly refined dark matter distribution in blue.
“We confirmed the intracluster light can be a reliable tracer of dark matter, even in a highly dynamic environment like the Bullet Cluster,” Cha said.
This strengthens the case that these unbound stars closely trace dark matter’s invisible scaffolding.
The new map reveals detailed structure, including an asymmetric mass region on the left side of the larger cluster. This feature indicates prior collisions that have left behind signatures in the distribution of matter.
Mysterious nature of dark matter
Dark matter does not emit, reflect, or absorb light, making it notoriously difficult to study. Yet the Bullet Cluster offers a rare laboratory, showing dark matter separated from hot gas during a cosmic collision while still aligning with the galaxies.
“As the galaxy clusters collided, their gas was dragged out and left behind, which the X-rays confirm,” Finner explained. “Webb’s observations show that dark matter still lines up with the galaxies – and was not dragged away.”
The results set tighter constraints on the possibility of dark matter particles interacting with each other. They support theories that dark matter passes through itself without friction, consistent with its mysterious and ghostly nature.
Clues to a chaotic past
The elongated mass and clumps in the new map hint at a more complex history for the Bullet Cluster, suggesting multiple collisions over billions of years.
“A more complicated scenario would lead to a huge asymmetric elongation like we see on the left,” Jee said.
The Bullet Cluster, located in the Carina constellation 3.8 billion light-years from Earth, is so massive that even Webb’s powerful NIRCam could only capture part of it.
“It’s like looking at the head of a giant,” Jee explained. “Webb’s initial images allow us to extrapolate how heavy the whole ‘giant’ is, but we’ll need future observations of the giant’s whole ‘body’ for precise measurements.”
Future missions, deeper maps
NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, launching by May 2027, will complement Webb’s discoveries with wide-field near-infrared imaging.
The Roman telescope will enable complete mass estimates of the Bullet Cluster and allow scientists to simulate its ancient collision in detail.
“With Roman, we will have complete mass estimates of the entire Bullet Cluster, which would allow us to recreate the actual collision on computers,” Finner said.
Through these detailed observations, Webb is enriching our understanding of dark matter. It’s also advancing knowledge of how massive structures form and evolve, offering a clearer view of the hidden forces shaping the cosmos.
The study is published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, CXC
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Driving a Porsche 911 GT3 RS At Monza Was a Religious Experience
They don’t call Monza the “Temple of Speed” for nothing. Except for three chicanes added over the decades, this is as classic a racing circuit as they used to be—a couple of straights connected by fast right-hand corners. Lewis Hamilton’s 2020 pole lap here was at an average of 164.267 miles per hour. If you want to go faster on a closed circuit, you’ll need an actual oval.
Monza is maybe one of the few race tracks where you can really experience what the new Porsche 911 GT3 RS is capable of. Pirelli laid a GT3 RS on its OEM-fit Trofeo RS tires for us to drive at its media event for the new P Zero family. You can read about the rest of the tires here, but this experience required its own story.
The 992-generation GT3 RS has been out for a few years now, and I’d driven it on track previously, but that didn’t prepare me for what it was like at Monza. This car’s radical aero package generates 900 pounds of downforce at 124 mph and 1,895 pounds at 177 mph. Few road cars can match that downforce figure, and you’ll need a hypercar to beat it. The figures are broadly comparable to what a 911 GT3 R race car would run around a high-speed track like Le Mans… or, for that matter, Monza.
Photo by: Porsche
Photo by: Wikimedia Commons / Will Pittenger
Obviously, downforce creates drag, which reduces top speed. That might sound like a bad thing at a place like Monza, and yes, in a racing environment, you wouldn’t want to run too much wing here. But Monza’s two ultra-fast right-handers, Curva Grande at the top, and the Parabolica at the bottom, let you experience the full effects of the GT3 RS’s downforce. It feels otherworldly.
To better describe this, it’s worth briefly explaining how tire and aero grip work. A tire has a maximum grip level in both lateral and longitudinal acceleration, measured in G-force or simply “G,” which is the force on our body exerted by acceleration in any direction.
You can plot out that force in a 2-D circle on a graph, which is helpful for looking at how combined lateral (turning) and longitudinal (accelerating and braking) forces a tire can take before losing grip. You might be able to corner, accelerate, and brake separately at a maximum of 1 G each, but if you’re accelerating and turning at the same time, you can only have a portion of each direction’s maximum achievable grip.
This friction circle is ever-changing, impacted by the wear level and temperature of the tire, slip angle, the friction coefficient of the road surface, and the vehicle’s weight transfer under acceleration, braking, and turning. If you go to racing school, you dive deep into all of this, but what you need to know here is that on its own, a tire is only capable of taking so much lateral and longitudinal acceleration before losing grip.
Photo by: Pirelli
It is a vast oversimplification to say that, in cornering, pure mechanical grip from the tire alone decreases with speed past a certain point… but that’s basically the case. Aerodynamic grip, created from downforce-generating wings, splitters, diffusers, etc., essentially makes the 2-D traction circle bigger. But what’s especially interesting is that downforce rises with the square of speed: In other words, aero grip increases with speed. Not infinitely, of course, because the tires can only handle so much, but enough that it fundamentally changes your approach to driving.
In practice, it goes like this. Curva Grande is really just a flat-out run from the slow first chicane to the less slow second chicane. Mentally, I couldn’t get myself to keep my foot to the floor.
My experience isn’t uncommon. If you’ve spent your track time in low-grip road cars, or even race cars with high mechanical grip but little to no aero, getting your head around downforce is tricky. Intellectually, you know what the car can do—or at least you have some concept of it—but getting yourself to go against your instincts honed through years of prior driving experience is hard. Especially when you don’t want to ball up someone else’s Porsche GT3 RS.
With another session, ideally after a look at a data comparison between me and someone quicker, I could’ve maybe gotten there. But I had a hell of a time regardless. The feeling of G-force on your body as you accelerate through the corner and downforce rises is like nothing else. I’m thankful this car has bucket seats and six-point harnesses, because if it didn’t, I don’t think I could hold myself up.
Photo by: Pirelli
The feeling of G-force on your body as you accelerate through the corner and downforce rises is like nothing else.
Then there’s the braking. I decided to be a bit conservative, but still brake a little later than I did in the Carrera GTS. Even I knew I could go deeper in this car because of the downforce, but I’m still too early. There’s something a bit demoralizing about arriving at corner entry far slower than you need to be, but for me, that gives way to astonishment at what the car is capable of. It forces you to rethink what’s possible, and the added context of a “normal” sports car like a Carrera GTS just makes what the GT3 RS does that much more astonishing.
The Parabolica might be the best corner on the track, though the surprisingly quick Lesmos runs it close. Despite looking fairly tight on the track map, it’s fast, and you get back to power so early, the car seemingly straining against its limits, until it (and you) can take a breath on the main straight.
I don’t want to say the GT3 RS is a race car for the street, because in some ways, it’s more advanced than a 911 GT3 race car, with its adjustable differential, active aero, and, well, the fact that it’s got a nice leather interior. But not much else with a license plate quite delivers the same race-car experience, and at a place like Monza, that’s especially obvious.
Photo by: Pirelli
For as alien as the car feels to someone of my experience, it’s also very approachable. The car isn’t nervous, it just dares you to up your game to match its capabilities. And a huge credit to Pirelli for making such a friendly tire in the Trofeo RS. The company’s engineers all talk about maintaining a nice plateau of grip once you’re past the tire’s peak, rather than a sudden drop-off. Maybe the peak isn’t quite as high for one fast lap, but realistically, the tire offers more speed for longer.
There are other tracks where you can take full advantage of the GT3 RS’s downforce, but not many are quite so evocative. Even beyond its “Temple of Speed” nickname, there’s something vaguely religious about the place. Maybe it’s Italy, where everything inspires that sort of reverence.
Or maybe it’s the way that the RS’s 9,000-rpm flat-six noise echoes between the grandstands, the trees, the bridge on the way to the variante Ascari, and everywhere else. Maybe it’s knowing you’re at the one of the oldest purpose-built tracks still in operation in the world, second only to Indy.
It’s a place for the indoctrinated to worship, and no points for guessing my beliefs.
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Visma-Lease a Bike is trialling carbon spoked Reserve wheels at the Tour de France
Visma–Lease a Bike is testing new carbon-spoked Reserve wheels at the 2025 Tour de France.
The rims are pre-existing – we spotted 34 and 57mm deep front wheels, and a 64mm-deep rear wheel – but all have been reverse-engineered with carbon spokes. The 57/64 combination appears to be a new wheelset designed specifically for the updated S5, which we’ve also seen at this year’s Grand Départ (look out for a gallery on that bike coming soon).
Until now, Reserve hasn’t employed carbon spokes in its wheels.
Carbon spokes are generally considered to be lighter and stiffer than steel spokes. Ashley Quinlan / Our Media In order to fit the spokes, Cervélo’s sports marketing director Richard Keeskamp said Reserve (a sibling brand of Cervélo) worked with hubset specialists Tune, to develop custom hubs with a lightweight shell and ceramic bearings.
The spokes attach to the rim via alloy nipples, which, in theory, makes them easier to replace.
Reserve has worked with hub specialists Tune. Ashley Quinlan / Our Media The design is similar in principle to that adopted by Hunt on its 48 Limitless UD Carbon Spoke Disc wheelset (plus others) and the FFWD Raw 44 hoops.
Keeskamp confirmed to BikeRadar that, in this case, the spokes are just as aerodynamic as their steel counterparts due to their bladed design.
Keeskamp said that the spokes were being trialled in deeper wheels because there was no aerodynamic drawback. Ashley Quinlan / Our Media We weren’t able to weigh the wheels, but Keeskamp confirmed the carbon spokes were chosen for their lighter weight (relative to most steel spokes), as well as the more lively ride sensation they offer.
This tallies with my broad reflections when testing the Hunt and FFWD wheels, while Keeskamp said that the Visma pros who have tried the wheels were enjoying how they handled when climbing and descending.
Expect to see them raced in anger when the Tour hits the mountains, and Jonas Vingegaard and co. try to usurp pre-race favourite Tadej Pogačar.
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Raftery on the up in Junior ERC but wary of possible Roma downs
Co-driven by Hannah McKillop, Raftery finished fourth in the Hankook-equipped category on last month’s ORLEN OIL 81st Rally Poland to equal her fourth-place finish in Hungary in 2024.
Although Rally di Roma Capitale wasn’t part of the Junior ERC schedule in 2024 under the championship’s event rotation system, Raftery is aware of what’s in store having tackled the event alongside former co-driver Ronan Comerford in 2023.
Raftery has previous Rally di Roma Capitale experience to count on
© ERC
“The temperature is going to be the biggest challenge, it’s going to be 35 or 40 degrees outside the car which means inside the car it’s going to be nearly double that,” said the 24-year-old from Ireland. “Maintaining focus and concentration over a long weekend and be able to commit to the notes is very important.
Each rally this year we’ve improved our pace and our seconds per kilometre and that’s our goal again this weekend coming
“With the temperatures we need to look at the tyres and manage and maintain them as best as we can and it’s the same with the brakes. Two of the stages are over 30 kilometres each so it’s a big challenge. I’m expecting it to be the most difficult event of the year but with the right preparation it will be interesting to see how we get on. Each rally this year we’ve improved our pace and our seconds per kilometre and that’s our goal again this weekend coming.”
After three rounds, Raftery, who drives a Peugeot 208 Rally4 for HRT Racing, is seventh in the Junior ERC standings, which is headed by ADAC Opel Rally Junior Teams Calle Carlberg. The Swede, runner-up in 2024, makes his Rally di Roma Capitale debut having won the last two rounds.
Jaspar Vaher will be a contender aboard his Lancia Ypsilon Rally4 HF
© ERC
Welshman Ioan Lloyd is second in the standings followed by Spaniard Sergi Pérez, Swede Victor Hansen and Estonian Jaspar Vaher, who competes in a Lancia Ypsilon Rally4 run by MS Munaretto. Finn Tuukka Kauppinen pilots a second Lancia for the Italian squad.
Keelan Grogan and Craig Rahill compete under the Motorsport Ireland Rally Academy banner in Peugeot 208 Rally4s, also the car of choice for Italians Francesco Dei Ceci and Tommaso Sandrin, Portugal’s Kevin Saraiva and Swiss newcomer Yohan Surroca.
Estonian Kevin Lempu relies on Ford Fiesta Rally4 power, while Finland’s Leevi Lassila and Austrian Luca Pröglhöf drive Opel Corsa Rally4s with Pröglhöf back in action after missing ORLEN OIL 81st Rally Poland through illness.
Luca Pröglhöf is back in action following illness
© ERC
The thoughts of the entire Junior ERC community remain with the family and friends of Matteo Doretto, who lost his life in a private testing accident in Poland last month. The 2024 Italian Junior champion, who was 21, had been excitedly looking ahead to Rally di Roma Capitale, which would have formed his home event.
Fans across the globe can experience the excitement and drama of the ERC with every stage of every rally broadcast Rally.tv platform. In addition, the ERC is broadcast in a number of countries around the world and fans are advised to check local listings for details.Rally di Roma Capitale: the key numbers
Stage distance: 207.82 kilometres
Total distance: 811.55 kilometres
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Catch-up needed after non-COVID vaccination plunges in first 2 pandemic years
Jernej Furman / Flickr cc Seven in 10 respondents to a 2024 US survey said they would still reach for a home COVID-19 test if they thought they were infected, UMass Chan Medical School researchers report in JAMA Network Open.
The team used the Ipsos KnowledgePanel to ask 2009 adults whether they would test and, if not, the reasons for not testing, from October 31 to November 7, 2024. The average participant age was 51.5 years, 51.2% were women, 60.7% were White, 18.0% were Hispanic, and 12.1% were Black.
The investigators noted that COVID-19 remains a threat, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimating 28,000 to 46,000 related US deaths and 230,000 to 390,000 hospitalizations from October 2024 to April 2025.
“Early identification of infection enables prompt care and steps to reduce spread,” they wrote. “Timely initiation of oral antiviral medications is associated with lower hospitalizations, deaths, and long-COVID incidence among adults at high risk.”
Older, healthy respondents more likely to test
Most participants (70.0%) said they would test if they suspected a COVID-19 infection. Factors tied to intent to test were age older than 60 years, excellent health status, trust in the healthcare system, reliance on data to make health decisions, previous completion of a home test, and Black, Hispanic, or mixed race.
Test hesitancy may delay oral antiviral initiation and could result in missed opportunities to limit transmission.
The proportion endorsing each reason for not testing were perceived lack of a reason to test (53.6%), a belief that a positive test result wouldn’t be useful (30.1%), lack of trust in tests (20.7%), forgetting that testing is an option (19.4%), preference of not knowing the results (9.1%), lack of awareness of where to procure a test (5.8%), inability to pay for testing (4.9%), and other reasons (8.3%).
The authors called for raising awareness of the value of testing. “Nearly one-third of US adults would not or might not test for suspected COVID-19, largely because they do not see value in testing,” they wrote. “Test hesitancy may delay oral antiviral initiation and could result in missed opportunities to limit transmission.”
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Deaths from uterine cancer projected to rise sharply over next two decades
Uterine cancer rates in the United States are expected to climb significantly over the next 25 years, with Black women projected to face the highest burden, according to a new study.
Researchers found that while most cancer rates in the U.S. have declined, uterine cancer incidence increased by 0.7% annually between 2013 and 2022, and death rates rose by 1.6% each year from 2014 to 2023. Black women are already twice as likely to die from uterine cancer as women of other races and ethnicities. It’s a disparity expected to widen even further.
“Overall, uterine cancer is one of the few cancers where both incidence and mortality have been increasing, and prior studies have consistently shown significant racial disparities among Black and white women,” said lead author Dr. Jason D. Wright of Columbia University.
RELATED STORY | New study finds CT scans could be a major contributor to cancer in the US
Using a model based on U.S. population data, researchers projected mortality rates to nearly triple for Black women by 2050, rising from 14.1 to 27.9 per 100,000. In comparison, White women’s rates are expected to increase from 6.1 to 11.2 per 100,000.
Wright noted that factors such as obesity, lower hysterectomy rates, later diagnoses and more aggressive tumor types contribute to the disparity. The study suggests that if effective screening were developed, it could significantly reduce the disease burden.
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Defending champions Erm and Araujo face tough opposition in Talence | PREVIEWS
Estonia’s Johannes Erm and Colombia’s Martha Araujo, winners of Decastar last year, will be up against quality opposition when they defend their titles at the World Athletics Combined Events Tour Gold meeting in Talence this weekend (5-6).
Erm won the decathlon in Talence last year with 8589, capping a memorable season that also included European gold, with a PB of 8764, and a sixth-place finish at the Olympic Games. He has carried that momentum through to 2025, earning world indoor silver with a national heptathlon record of 6437.
The 27-year-old has contested just one outdoor competition so far this year, a three-discipline ‘triathlon’ at the Bislett Games in Oslo, where he clocked 14.54 in the 110m hurdles, long jumped 7.09m and threw 56.29m in the javelin.
He’ll be up against several men who have already put down a strong decathlon marker this season.
Niklas Kaul is one of those. The German finished equal third in Götzis five weeks ago with 8575, the second-best score of his career behind the 8691 PB he set when winning the 2019 world title.
Puerto Rico’s Ayden Owens-Delerme finished a few positions behind Kaul in Götzis, placing seventh with a season’s best of 8486. The 25-year-old, whose PB of 8732 was set last year, will be chasing the World Championships qualifying standard of 8550 with a view to making it to Tokyo in September and improving on the fourth-place finish he achieved at the 2022 World Championships.
Karel Tilga also knows what it’s like to finish just outside of the medals at a World Championships; the Estonian placed fourth in Budapest two years ago, setting a PB of 8681. More recently he placed ninth in Götzis with a season’s best of 8405, making him the top performing Estonian this year.
Several others in the field – including Germany’s Tim Nowak, Belgium’s Jente Hauttekeete and Estonian duo Rasmus Roosleht and Niels Pittomvils – will be chasing either the World Championships qualifying standard or world ranking points.
The same is true of most of the contender in the women’s heptathlon.
Defending Decastar champion Araujo has enjoyed a strong season so far, winning the South American title with 6396 and then finishing third in Götzis with 6475 – a 46-point improvement on the continental record she set in Talence last year.
The 29-year-old, who finished seventh at the Olympics last year, is now looking for a further 25-point improvement so that she can secure the World Championships qualifying standard.
She’ll be pushed all the way by US duo Michelle Atherley and Taliyah Brooks, both of whom should contend for victory this weekend.
Atherley, the overall winner of the World Athletics Combined Events Tour last year, recently finished fourth in Götzis with 6425, just 40 points shy of her PB. After finishing third in Talence last year, she’s targeting a higher place on the podium this time.
Brooks, who represented the USA at the 2023 World Championships and 2024 Olympics, took world indoor bronze earlier this year. Having posted some strong individual marks outdoors, she’ll be keen to improve on her PB of 6408 in what will be her first heptathlon of 2025.
Austria’s also Verena Mayr returns to Talence. The 30-year-old has the best PB of the field (6591), though that was set back in 2019, the year in which she earned world bronze.
Germany’s Vanessa Grimm, who placed fourth at this year’s World Indoor Championships, and world U20 champion Jana Koscak of the Czech Republic are among the other podium contenders.
Leading entries
Women’s heptathlon
Verena Mayr (AUT) 6591
Martha Araujo (COL) 6475
Michelle Atherley (USA) 6465
Taliyah Brooks (USA) 6408
Vanessa Grimm (GER) 6323
Jana Koscak (CRO) 6293
Tori West (AUS) 6245
Esther Conde-Turpin (FRA) 6230
Sarah Lagger (AUT) 6225
Beatrice Juskeviciute (LTU) 6192Men’s decathlon
Johannes Erm (EST) 8764
Ayden Owens-Delerme (PUR) 8732
Niklas Kaul (GER) 8691
Karel Tilga (EST) 8681
Tim Nowak (GER) 8282
Jente Hauttekeete (BEL) 8268
Rasmus Roosleht (EST) 8241
Niels Pittomvils (EST) 8222
Kendrick Thompson (BAH) 8182
Risto Lillemets (EST) 8156Continue Reading
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A newly forming ocean may split Africa apart, scientists say
A plume of molten rock deep beneath eastern Africa is pulsing upward in rhythmic surges, slowly splitting the continent apart and potentially marking the birth of a new ocean.
At least, that’s what a team of researchers led by Emma Watts of the Swansea University in the U.K. recently discovered. More specifically, the scientists’ new study found that the Afar region of Ethiopia is underlain by a plume of hot mantle that rises and falls in a repeated pattern, almost like “a beating heart.” These pulses, the team says, are closely tied to overlying tectonic plates and play a key role in the slow rifting of the African continent.
“We found that the mantle beneath Afar is not uniform or stationary — it pulses, and these pulses carry distinct chemical signatures,” Watts said in a statement. “That’s important for how we think about the interaction between Earth’s interior and its surface.”
The Afar region, which covers the northeastern region of Ethiopia, is one of the few places on Earth where three tectonic rift systems meet — the Red Sea Rift, the Gulf of Aden Rift and the Main Ethiopian Rift. As the tectonic plates in this so-called “triple junction” are pulled apart over millions of years, the crust stretches, thins, and eventually breaks, signaling an early step in the formation of a new ocean basin. Geologists have long suspected that a plume of hot mantle lies beneath this region and helps drive the rifting process — but, until now, little was known about how that plume behaves.
To study what lies beneath, researchers collected over 100 volcanic rock samples from across Afar and the Main Ethiopian Rift. They combined this fieldwork with existing geophysical data and advanced statistical modeling to better understand the structure and composition of the crust and underlying mantle.
A landscape shot at the Dallol volcano in the Afar Region in Ethiopia. (Image credit: A.Savin via Wikimedia Commons) Their analysis revealed a single, asymmetric plume beneath the region, marked by repeating chemical patterns or “geological barcodes,” according to the new study.” The chemical striping suggests the plume is pulsing,” study co-author Tom Gernon of the University of Southampton said in the statement. “In places where the plates are thinner or pulling apart faster, like the Red Sea Rift, those pulses move more efficiently — like blood through a narrow artery.”
“We found that the evolution of deep mantle upwellings is intimately tied to the motion of the plates above,” study co-author Derek Keir of the University of Southampton added in the same statement.
“This has profound implications for how we interpret surface volcanism, earthquake activity, and the process of continental breakup.”
The team’s study was published on June 25 in the journal Nature Geoscience.
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Brain tumor growth patterns may help inform patient care management | News | Notre Dame News
Assistant Professor Meenal Datta (Credit: Wes Evard) As brain tumors grow, they must do one of two things: push against the brain or use finger-like extensions to invade and destroy surrounding tissue.
Previous research found tumors that push — or put mechanical force on the brain — cause more neurological dysfunction than tumors that destroy tissue. But what else can these different tactics of tumor growth tell us?
Now, the same team of researchers from the University of Notre Dame, Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital, and Boston University has developed a technique for measuring a brain tumor’s mechanical force and a new model to estimate how much brain tissue a patient has lost. Published in Clinical Cancer Research, the study explains how these measurements may help inform patient care and be adopted into surgeons’ daily workflow.
“During brain tumor removal surgery, neurosurgeons take a slice of the tumor, put it on a slide and send it to a pathologist in real-time to confirm what type of tumor it is. Tumors that originally arise in the brain, like glioblastoma, are prescribed different treatments than tumors that metastasize to the brain from other organs like lung or breast, so these differences inform post-surgical care,” said Meenal Datta, assistant professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering at Notre Dame and co-lead author of the study.
“By adding a two-minute step to a surgeon’s procedure, we were able to distinguish between a glioblastoma tumor versus a metastatic tumor based on mechanical force alone.”
Datta and collaborators collected data from 30 patients’ preoperative MRIs and their craniotomies, which include exposing the brain and using Brainlab neuronavigation technology. This technology provides surgeons with real-time, 3D visualization during brain surgeries and is considered commonly available for neurological procedures. Neurosurgeons can use this technique to measure the bulge caused by brain swelling from the tumor’s mechanical forces before the tumor is resected.
Then this patient data was used to determine whether brain tissue was displaced by a tumor’s mechanical force or replaced by a tumor. The researchers found that when there is more mechanical force on the brain (displacement), the swelling will be more substantial. But when a tumor invades and destroys surrounding tissue (replacement), the swelling will be less significant.
The researchers created computational models based on a point system of measurements and biomechanical modeling that can be employed by doctors to measure a patient’s brain bulge, to determine the mechanical force that was being exerted by the tumor, and to determine the amount of brain tissue lost in each patient.
Funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation and various cancer research foundations, this study is among the first to show how mechanics can distinguish between tumor types.
“Knowing the mechanical force of a tumor can be useful to a clinician because it could inform patient strategies to alleviate symptoms. Sometimes patients receive steroids to reduce brain swelling, or antipsychotic agents to counter neurological effects of tumors,” said Datta, an affiliate of Notre Dame’s Harper Cancer Research Institute. Datta recently showed that even affordable and widely used blood pressure medications can counter these effects. “We’re hoping this measurement becomes even more relevant and that it can help predict outcomes of chemotherapy and immunotherapy.”
To get a better idea of what else mechanical force could indicate, the research team used animal modeling of three different brain tumors: breast cancer metastasis to the brain, glioblastoma and childhood ependymoma.
In the breast cancer metastasis tumor, researchers used a form of chemotherapy that is known to work in reducing metastasis brain tumor size. While waiting for the tumor to respond to the chemotherapy, the team found that a reduction in mechanical force changed before the tumor size was shown to change in imaging.
“In this model, we showed that mechanical force is a more sensitive readout of chemotherapy response than tumor size,” Datta said. “Mechanics are sort of disease-agnostic in that they can matter regardless of what tumor you are looking at.”
Datta hopes that doctors employ the patient models from the study to continue to grow the field’s understanding of how mechanical force can improve patient care management.
In addition to Datta, co-lead authors include Hadi T. Nia at Boston University, Ashwin S. Kumar at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and Saeed Siri at Notre Dame. Other collaborators include Gino B. Ferraro, Sampurna Chatterjee, Jeffrey M. McHugh, Patrick R. Ng, Timothy R. West, Otto Rapalino, Bryan D. Choi, Brian V. Nahed, Lance L. Munn and Rakesh K. Jain, all at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
Datta is also affiliated with Notre Dame’s Eck Institute for Global Health, the Berthiaume Institute for Precision Health, NDnano, the Warren Center for Drug Discovery, the Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society and the Boler-Parseghian Center for Rare Diseases. She is also a concurrent faculty member in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and a faculty adviser for Notre Dame’s graduate programs in bioengineering and materials science and engineering.
Contact: Brandi Wampler, associate director of media relations, 574-631-2632, brandiwampler@nd.edu
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