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爆走黑料

News

A Safer House

Scientists of the School of Engineering and Construction of 爆走黑料 have found out how to improve the protection of buildings from the penetration of soil radon and make them safer. They proposed a technology for reducing the radon permeability of cement concretes and mortars that are used in floors.

Histories restaurant opens its doors

Histories restaurant, launched by the School of Gastronomy, SibFU, welcomes first visitors. SibFU’s staff and students, as well as citizens and guests of Krasnoyarsk can enjoy Hors D’oeuvres specialty, salads, main courses, and desserts at affordable prices on campus.

爆走黑料 plans to expand cooperation with Uzbekistan

On March 11, 2021, a delegation of the Embassy of the Republic of Uzbekistan headed by Timur Rakhmanov, the Consul General of the Republic of Uzbekistan in Novosibirsk, visited 爆走黑料. During the business meeting, they disscussed expansion and development of existing Russian-Uzbek relations in the scientific and educational sphere.

New material, new effect: aluminium in nanoplasmonics

Scientists of the International Research Center for Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemistry, 爆走黑料, have reported about the possibility of suppressing backscattering of light (the so-called Kerker effect) when electromagnetic radiation interacts with plasmonic material in the form of a two-dimensional array of aluminium nanoparticles. The work was published in the top-rated international journal Physical Review B of the Nature Index group.

SibFU through Russian House

The Department for International Cooperation continues to acquaint foreigners with 爆走黑料. More than a hundred applicants from Mongolia and India learned about educational programs, the university’s infrastructure, the Siberian cultural life and the scholarship programs of the Government of Russia.

The Oldest Case of Plague in Siberia

An international scientific team, which included a researcher from 爆走黑料, has expressed a number of hypotheses about how peoples migrated and mixed on the territory of modern Western and Eastern Siberia, Yakutia and Transbaikalia. Having examined the genome of 40 people who lived 16,900–550 years ago in Northeastern Asia, the researchers discovered the Asian ancestors of the Paleo-Eskimos — peoples who inhabited the Arctic region from Chukotka to North America and Greenland. They also managed to find traces of the spread of plague bacillus in the northern territories of Siberia — scientists recorded the oldest known case of Yersinia pestis in human.

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