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- SpaceX launched a rocket carrying the first 60 satellites of Starlink, a planned satellite mega constellation that aims to provide internet from space. (more)

- President of Ghana His Excellency Mr. Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was appointed as one of the UN Sustainable Development Goals Advocates. (more)

- Canadian researchers have invented a stable, affordable way to store fragile vaccines for weeks at a time at temperatures up to 40C. (more)

- Nepalese Sherpa Kami Rita set a new Mount Everest record, making it to the top for the 24th time. (more)

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- Duncan Laurence of the Netherlands won the 2019 Eurovision Song Contest with 492 points for his song Arcade. (more)

- Egypt officially opened the world’s widest suspension bridge named Rod al-Farag Axis Bridge across the Nile. (more)

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D+ Editors' Picks
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New Approach Shows Regeneration of Severely Damaged Lung
Lung transplantation, the only life-saving therapy for an increasing population of patients with end-stage lung disease, is severely limited by the number of available donor organs. Currently, up to 80% of donor lungs are rejected for serious but potentially reversible injuries. Since the beginning of transplantation in 1960s, clinicians and scientists have been trying to address the critical shortage of donor organs.
Now, a multidisciplinary team from Columbia Engineering and Vanderbilt University has—for the first time—demonstrated in a clinically relevant model that severely damaged lungs can be regenerated to meet transplantation criteria. In a study published on Nature Communications’ website, the researchers describe the cross-circulation platform that maintained the viability and function of the donor lung and the stability of the recipient for 36 to 56 hours. (More)
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