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Looking inside the radioactive box
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Watching a fuel cell catalyst grow
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What does the catalytic site converting methane to methanol look like?
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How bacteria reduce metal toxicity to plants
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Controlling the warp and weft of molecules that are knitted together
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How do dislocations shuffle to grow crystals?
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Quantifying bone bridging across longitudinal growth zones in the tibia
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New imaging technique to map multiple elements during the solidification of alloys
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Autophagy receptor for endoplasmic reticulum turnover
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Studies reveal mechanism and structure of potential drug targets
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Faster, higher resolution phase-based 3D X-ray images with a beam-tracking approach
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Highly active mineral made in bulk for the first time and studied at Diamond
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A new material promises huge leaps in computer data storage
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A new material promises huge leaps in computer data storage
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Identification of a unique controller of bacterial RNA production
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Novel liquid crystal structures with amazing properties
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Watching crystallisation as it happens in metal-organic frameworks
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New study enables characterisation of nanomedicine drug-delivery
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The fate of Fröhlich polarons in strontium titanate
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2015 saw the Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy (ARPES) beamline, known as I05, publish 22 articles in 13 different journals (including Nature Nanotechnology, Science, and Nature Physics). Here we get a taste of what I05 can do, and with summaries of the big hitters from last year.