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Among others but still feeling alone? A Naperville man has an app for that

Updated 5/2/2021 9:32 AM Now that we re well into Year Two of the coronavirus pandemic, much of the attention is focused on younger people. The direct observation is that more young adults are becoming infected with the virus. But there is an indirect concern, too. Beyond getting sick, many young adults social, emotional and mental well-being has been impacted by the pandemic, reads a warning on the website for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.   Quinn Dellinger has an app for that. I had this idea while I was sitting at an airport, says Dellinger, 22, of Naperville. He looked around and saw a lot of people his age, who probably had a lot in common.

Academic Libraries Led Universities Into the Socially Distant Era Now They re Planning for What s Next

Academic Libraries Led Universities Into the Socially Distant Era Now They re Planning for What s Next
chronicle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from chronicle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New 2D Superconductor Forms at Higher Temperatures Than Ever Before

New 2D Superconductor Forms at Higher Temperatures Than Ever Before New interfacial superconductor has novel properties that raise new fundamental questions and might be useful for quantum information processing or quantum sensing. Interfaces in solids form the basis for much of modern technology. For example, transistors found in all our electronic devices work by controlling the electrons at interfaces of semiconductors. More broadly, the interface between any two materials can have unique properties that are dramatically different from those found within either material separately, setting the stage for new discoveries. Like semiconductors, superconducting materials have many important implications for technology, from magnets for MRIs to speeding up electrical connections or perhaps making possible quantum technology. The vast majority of superconducting materials and devices are 3D, giving them properties tha

People of Color Breathe More Unhealthy Air from Nearly All Polluting Sources

Scientific American People of Color Breathe More Unhealthy Air from Nearly All Polluting Sources A trend of disproportionate exposure to deadly air pollution among Asian, Hispanic and Black people persists in most cases regardless of the emission source, a study finds Print Air pollution disproportionately affects people of color across the vast majority of emission sources, including industry, gas- and diesel-fueled motor vehicles and construction, according to new findings. Credit: Mark Wilson Advertisement Communities of color in the U.S. have long reported health problems from heavy exposure to polluted air. In recent decades a growing body of data have bolstered these reports by showing that Asian, Black and Hispanic people are exposed to relatively higher concentrations of potentially deadly air pollution on average, compared with white people. But some policy makers have questioned whether these trends hold across sources of such pollution which can vary regionally and

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