Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
@uchadaya.bsky.social
š¤ 2207
š„ 31
š 33
Astronomy & Astrophysics Editor at Nature, very invested in better life on Earth. Views my own.
pinned post!
If you, like countless others, wonder why GDP numbers look great while your economic experience goes to sh*t, there's a wealth of research explaining why. GDP is simply not a good/complete measure of economic health.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
End GDP mania: how the world should really measure prosperity
The obsession with economic output as a measure of human development puts sustainability on the back burner. Researchers can now help to devise better indicators.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03144-y
3 months ago
1
0
0
Got to review a book about the history and legacy of Leon Foucaultās pendulum experiment. Here it is, free to read:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
2 months ago
0
2
1
If you, like countless others, wonder why GDP numbers look great while your economic experience goes to sh*t, there's a wealth of research explaining why. GDP is simply not a good/complete measure of economic health.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
End GDP mania: how the world should really measure prosperity
The obsession with economic output as a measure of human development puts sustainability on the back burner. Researchers can now help to devise better indicators.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-03144-y
3 months ago
1
0
0
Wrote my very first book review! Free for you to read:
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
loading . . .
A portrait of Einstein as an engaged citizen
Nature Astronomy - A portrait of Einstein as an engaged citizen
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-025-02613-8.epdf?sharing_token=3UZBraLJ0i8N7kB7tc0kIdRgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0NqpfecdGKSvPN0wN1n7Y97AEy-Vea0neHXTQKxfiz6EA-xDUm-D5P-NYPtDe-S1Qm74hxuUVle6qnQ75U1vc_4XOuu0EdLr3jMfdUz4ng_7dlKCp1UWhyNSYBjfl5SLpw%3D
6 months ago
0
1
0
āThis isnāt just one of those moments where you say, āIf it gets bad, Iāll leave'[.] It already has.ā
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
US brain drain: the scientists seeking jobs abroad amid Trumpās assault on research
Five US-based researchers tell Nature why they are exploring career opportunities overseas.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-01489-y
8 months ago
0
2
0
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Our World in Data
8 months ago
If you want to reduce the carbon footprint of your diet, less meat is nearly always better than sustainable meat.
5
197
86
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Nature
8 months ago
The US administration is eroding the freedoms on which the nationās success has been based
https://go.nature.com/4jRfcfs
loading . . .
US researchers must stand up to protect freedoms, not just funding
Curtailment of freedoms and disregard for the rule of law in the United States is destroying the ability of science to serve the nationās, and the worldās, interests. Researchers can take action.
https://go.nature.com/43sKi7q
2
88
40
Science does not have to find aliens to be very cool.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Signs of life on a distant planet? Not so fast, say these astronomers
Bold claims of ābiosignatureā molecules trigger an outpouring of scepticism.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-01264-z
9 months ago
0
4
2
There are lots of great papers out there on the limitations of claiming the existence of "life" from the detection of certain molecules; here is just one. The astrobiology community itself has plenty of nuanced discussions on the defining life beyond Earth.
liebertpub.com/doi/full/10....
loading . . .
Is There Such a Thing as a Biosignature? | Astrobiology
The concept of a biosignature is widely used in astrobiology to suggest a link between some observation and a biological cause, given some context. The term itself has been defined and used in several ways in different parts of the scientific community involved in the search for past or present life on Earth and beyond. With the ongoing acceleration in the search for life in distant time and/or deep space, there is a need for clarity and accuracy in the formulation and reporting of claims. Here, we critically review the biosignature concept(s) and the associated nomenclature in light of several problems and ambiguities emphasized by recent works. One worry is that these terms and concepts may imply greater certainty than is usually justified by a rational interpretation of the data. A related worry is that terms such as ābiosignatureā may be inherently misleading, for example, because the divide between life and non-lifeāand their observable effectsāis fuzzy. Another worry is that different parts of the multidisciplinary community may use non-equivalent or conflicting definitions and conceptions, leading to avoidable confusion. This review leads us to identify a number of pitfalls and to suggest how they can be circumvented. In general, we conclude that astrobiologists should exercise particular caution in deciding whether and how to use the concept of biosignature when thinking and communicating about habitability or life. Concepts and terms should be selected carefully and defined explicitly where appropriate. This would improve clarity and accuracy in the formulation of claims and subsequent technical and public communication about some of the most profound and important questions in science and society. With this objective in mind, we provide a checklist of questions that scientists and other interested parties should ask when assessing any reported detection of a ābiosignatureā to better understand exactly what is being claimed.
https://liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/ast.2023.0042
9 months ago
0
3
0
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Science Magazine
9 months ago
It took an extension to the extension of the extension, but after more than 3 years of negotiations, governments around the globeābut notably, not the United Statesāhave finally agreed on a treaty to improve how the world prevents, prepares for, and responds to future pandemics.
scim.ag/4lDYcLe
loading . . .
Global pandemic treaty finalized, without U.S., in āa victory for multilateralismā
Three years in the making, the accord aims to increase equity and avoid errors of the COVID-19 pandemic
https://scim.ag/4lDYcLe
6
233
81
Can't believe we have to be writing about this in 2025, but here you go.
add a skeleton here at some point
9 months ago
0
2
1
Most people still trust science, but most also believe it is increasingly politicised, which drives them to non-institutional sources and riskier behaviour. What we can do about it:
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Scienceās big problem is a loss of influence, not a loss of trust
Evidence shows that science and scientists remain highly trusted. But genuine scientific voices are not shouting loud enough over the noise to hold sway.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-01068-1
9 months ago
0
4
2
Editorial: The skies are a shared resource. We spend public money and push the limits of technology to look into the depths of the Universe - but now often see private communication satellites instead. Solutions exist, but regulation and enforcement are lacking.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Cleaning up space: how satellites and telescopes can live together
Satellites connect people around the world but they also interfere with astronomersā views of the cosmos. There are ways to reduce these tensions.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00788-8
10 months ago
0
4
2
Space debris is not an abstract or distant problem - it crash-lands in or right next to human settlements around the world. And with tens of thousands of launches every year, this is not getting any better unless we fundamentally change both design and regulation.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Space debris is falling from the skies. We need to tackle this growing danger
Why failing to control defunct satellites leaves everyone at risk from their impacts.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00797-7
10 months ago
0
5
2
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Alexandra Witze
10 months ago
Do you like
#science
? Do you think
#journalism
is a Good Thing? If so, please join me as a donor to
@theopennotebook.bsky.social
ā the free resource that provides tools for writers to cover climate change, global health, technology & other crucial issues.
www.theopennotebook.com/the-page-tur...
.
loading . . .
The Page Turners Collective: Give Monthly to Support Our Work Every Day - The Open Notebook
By joining the Page Turners Collective, our community of monthly recurring donors, you become a cornerstone of our efforts to nurture and support science journalism around the world.
https://www.theopennotebook.com/the-page-turners-collective-recurring-giving/
0
18
5
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Science Magazine
10 months ago
Researchers have created three-dimensional maps of the interstellar dust extinction curve within the Milky Way galaxy. The results provide improved extinction corrections for astronomical observations. Learn more in this week's issue of Science:
scim.ag/41M1gLX
0
76
16
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Alexandra Witze
11 months ago
The last month has seen shock & sorrow in the US research community, with grant freezes & cuts, mass firings of government scientists, & much more. Now many are fighting back.
@heidiledford.bsky.social
reports for
@nature.com
on the rise of scientist-activists:
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
š§Ŗ
loading . . .
US science is under threat ā now scientists are fighting back
Researchers are organizing protests and making their voices heard as Trump officials slash funding and lay off federal scientists.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00661-8
7
187
73
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Nature Portfolio
11 months ago
āPublication-based evaluation has shaped and sometimes distorted academia. The community faces a choice: maintain the status quo, or experiment with new measures that better align with our values,ā writes Kelly-Ann Allen in a Nature World View article.
#Academicsky
š§Ŗ
loading . . .
Move beyond āpublish or perishā by measuring behaviours that benefit academia
A standardized system to measure contributions in mentorship, collaboration and more could bring about systemic change in science.
https://go.nature.com/41wFKfo
3
45
10
āFor much of our 155-year history, the United States has been the global leader in research [ā¦]. With the changes now under way, the new administration seems to be inclined to recklessly consign that to history. We at Nature denounce this assault on science.ā
add a skeleton here at some point
11 months ago
0
5
3
I remember when my PhD salary as a Smithsonian fellow was on the line during a govt shutdown during Trump 1.0, my friends offering to lend me money. I left soon after because it was bad enough; I don't think I saw this coming.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Postdocs and PhD students hit hard by Trumpās crackdown on science
As US federal grants remain frozen and budget cuts loom, anxiety and fear grip early-career researchers.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00550-0
11 months ago
0
4
0
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Nature Portfolio
11 months ago
āPublic communication must move beyond stories of doom and gloom, which ā although realistic ā have the unfortunate effect of making many people step away, instead of engaging in the conversation,ā writes Harini Nagendra in Nature. š§Ŗ
loading . . .
How scientists can drive climate action: celebrate nature and promote hope
After years of storytelling and running classes and festivals, Iāve seen first-hand how a love of nature makes people want to protect it.
https://go.nature.com/4hQzgh5
1
40
12
Expert peer reviewers and editors do their/our best to catch falsified data, but ~0.1% of papers are eventually discovered as fraudulent and retracted. These are canaries in the goldmine of publish-or-perish academic environments.
add a skeleton here at some point
11 months ago
0
2
1
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Science Magazine
11 months ago
Electric cars are coming by the millions. But what will happen to all the dead batteries? Learn more on
#NationalBatteryDay
:
https://scim.ag/4hG9FHv
4
88
15
I first dipped my toes into research as field assistant to my cousin Devi Vijay during her PhD on community-organised palliative healthcare. Now she has co-launched a deeply thoughtful zine on this timeless question: how can we care for each other? Also available on Spotify:
sabr.org.in
loading . . .
Sabr: A care collaborative
People's Care Collaborative
https://sabr.org.in/
11 months ago
0
1
0
On the nose - "By framing humanityās challenges as simple engineering problems rather than complex systemic ones, technologists position themselves as decisive architects of our future, crafting grand visions that sidestep the messier, necessary work of social, political and collaborative change."
loading . . .
Hereās Why Elon Muskās āFork in the Roadā Is Really a Dead End
Elon Muskās Fork in the Road isnāt just a sculptureāitās a monument to the tech worldās obsession with civilizational survival, which has its roots in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/elon-musks-fork-in-the-road-is-really-a-dead-end/
11 months ago
0
5
1
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Nature
11 months ago
Use this form to tell us how the new US administration is affecting your research, or suggest future coverage
https://go.nature.com/42SyoUu
loading . . .
Are the Trump teamās actions affecting your research? How to contact Nature
Use this form to share information with Natureās news team, or to make suggestions for future coverage.
https://go.nature.com/42SyoUu
0
148
142
So pleased to see the very first paper from JAXA's XRISM mission on our pages! It was a very long journey to the first X-ray microcalorimeter, and allows us to directly measure the speed of astrophysical plasmas like never before.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
loading . . .
The bulk motion of gas in the core of the Centaurus galaxy cluster - Nature
X-ray spectroscopic observations of the Centaurus galaxy cluster with the X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission satellite show that the hot gas flows along the line of sight relative to the central g...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08561-z
11 months ago
0
4
1
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Alexandra Witze
11 months ago
Did you need distraction from the rest of the world today? I got you covered with a story about Earth's inner core. It's changing shape! And rotating weird! š§Ŗ
loading . . .
Earthās mysterious inner core really is changing shape
Earthquakes ringing through the planet illuminate how its heart is transforming.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00395-7
5
74
22
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Anne Applebaum
11 months ago
The world's richest man is taking food and medicine from the world's poorest children
www.nytimes.com/2025/02/05/o...
loading . . .
Opinion | The Worldās Richest Men Take On the Worldās Poorest Children
Iāve seen U.S.A.I.D. operate around the world, and itās not woke ā itās lifesaving.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/05/opinion/usaid-spending-trump-musk.html?smid=nytcore-android-share
983
25940
11706
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Alexandra Witze
11 months ago
"The scientific community must be clear-eyed about the path ahead." - Gretchen Goldman of
@ucsusa.bsky.social
on Trump 2.0 in
@nature.com
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
āDespair is not an optionā ā how scientists can help protect federal research
Government scientists in the US must be clear-eyed and continue to serve the public.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00290-1
1
36
11
"Good governance of emerging technologies requires inclusion of a variety of experts from the outset, and decision-makersāincluding scientistsāmust understand that concerns that may seem ignorant or irrelevant may actually represent different, but valid, understandings of the problem."
loading . . .
Viewing Asilomar from the Global South
To many in the scientific community, the 1975 Asilomar Conference on Recombinant DNA stands as a singular achievement. This experiment in governance seemed to demonstrate that citizens could trust sci...
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adw2511
11 months ago
0
1
0
Oldish news, but news to me - a
@science.org
paper from a few months ago that showed that putting tartazine (which makes Cheetos and Doritos orange) on mice and chicken makes them transparent
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
(Funded, like so much else, by the NIH and NSF)
loading . . .
Achieving optical transparency in live animals with absorbing molecules
Optical imaging plays a central role in biology and medicine but is hindered by light scattering in live tissue. We report the counterintuitive observation that strongly absorbing molecules can achiev...
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adm6869
12 months ago
0
4
1
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Nature
12 months ago
Astronomers have traced the origin of a fast radio burst to the edge of an ancient galaxy ā suggesting that these mysterious, millisecond-long flashes of energy are even weirder than previously thought
https://go.nature.com/42xWJ
yH
loading . . .
Flashes from ancient galaxy deepen mystery of fast radio bursts
Unusual detection bolsters evidence that the mysterious signals can be caused by different astrophysical events.
https://go.nature.com/42xWJyH
1
63
10
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Alexandra Witze
12 months ago
Scientists, share your stories of how the US federal changes are affecting you. Max's deets are ā¬ļø
add a skeleton here at some point
0
12
5
Transitioning to green energy is necessary but not sufficient - we also desperately need to consume less (and check
ourworldindata.org/grapher/co-e...
for where your country ranks)
add a skeleton here at some point
12 months ago
0
11
1
What a pleasure to attend the
@a4e.org
5 Year Anniversary meeting! Online, of course. I particularly love the accountability tools and action items they are developing for astronomers (but really any researchers). Tl/dr: Be honest about your footprint, know how you can reduce it, and just do it. 1/n
12 months ago
3
8
1
Space exploration, and especially the emphasis on humans in space, got its first big boost during the Cold War; here we are again.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
What Trump 2.0 means for science: the likely winners and losers
The incoming US president is expected to gut support for research on the environment and infectious diseases, but could buoy work in artificial intelligence, quantum research and space exploration.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00052-z
12 months ago
0
1
1
Imagine not being allowed to spend more on the healthcare of your citizens because of lending rules made by a different country in 1948.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
2025 must be the year when the rules of global finance are reformed
The current international financial architecture is a key reason that the UN Sustainable Development Goals are failing. A landmark conference in Spain must make progress in reforming it.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-04159-7
12 months ago
0
2
1
#fromthearchive: What works in north-south research collaborations.
www.nature.com/articles/d4158...
loading . . .
Four global-south researchers making cross-border collaborations count
Researchers in the developing world navigate many roadblocks when partnering with the global north, but the benefits can be wide-reaching.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03902-w
about 1 year ago
0
2
0
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Magdalena Skipper
about 1 year ago
Science could solve some of the worldās biggest problems. Why arenāt governments using it? Our global survey finds that most specialists are unhappy with systems to provide science advice to policymakers.
#sciencepolicy
š§Ŗ@natureportfolio.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Science could solve some of the worldās biggest problems. Why arenāt governments using it?
A Nature global survey finds that most specialists are unhappy with systems to provide science advice to policymakers.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03906-0
0
14
5
We have the data - plastic bans work. And they need to be implemented.
add a skeleton here at some point
about 1 year ago
0
2
1
reposted by
Dr Urmila Chadayammuri
Nature Portfolio
about 1 year ago
A study in Nature Communications shows that most buildings in eight global cities fail the 3-30-300 benchmark for urban nature, due to insufficient tree canopy. Cities need better planting conditions and governance to support tree growth.
https://go.nature.com/3CM0B4y
š§Ŗ
1
66
23
It wasn't easy before, and it's not getting easier.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
loading . . .
Limits on foreign students are harming research, universities warn
The UK, Canadian and Australian governments have introduced immigration restrictions for students.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03807-2
about 1 year ago
0
3
0
you reached the end!!
feeds!
log in