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"scientific atmosphere" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It describes an environment or atmosphere that is focused on or characterized by scientific principles and research. Example: The laboratory was buzzing with activity, creating a bustling scientific atmosphere where new discoveries were being made every day.
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Though he became, in law and in spirit, an American, he preserved and encapsulated the scientific atmosphere of Copenhagen and Göttingen, the world's main centres of physics in the 1920s and 1930s.
No wonder the best minds flock to the U.S., making the scientific atmosphere even more vibrant and global.
It was very impressive to experience a different way of working, especially the very concentrated scientific atmosphere.
IST Austria fosters an interdisciplinary scientific atmosphere: The Institute offers one PhD program with courses for graduate students in all fields of the natural and formal sciences.
I chose to work with flies because there are many labs using Drosophila at UNC-CH, creating an outstanding scientific atmosphere with a great deal of topic diversity".
It helps our scientists remain intellectually involved and maintain a basic research focus, and it really adds to the scientific atmosphere across the company," says Donald Nicholson, vice president and franchise worldwide basic research head at Merck Research Laboratories.
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For example, one respondent suggested that 'Sex workers who are educated enough to be involved in a managerial role often do not wish to expose their sex work status to fellow researchers', while another respondent felt it was important to 'Create the scientific social atmosphere so that researchers do not fear to out themselves as sex workers or former sex workers'.
"We have to improve the scientific and research atmosphere, because it's important that we educate the scientists who can create new jobs for Michigan," says Trudy Huebner, a candidate for the University of Michigan Board of Regents.
Filled with pyrotechnics and more than a few flying projectiles, the demonstrations illustrated scientific principles in an atmosphere that was more circus than lecture hall.
In the atmosphere of scientific inquiry that followed the Royal Society's foundation, and around the time of the publication of Isaac Newton's Principia (1687), Henry Purcell was writing his Ode to St Cecilia, patron saint of music.
A slightly aimless chemistry graduate with an interest in projects that took him out into the wild, in 1956 he started to build instruments that could measure the proportion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, a scientific topic which, back then, was barely even a backwater.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com