The Brutalist Report - phys
- Fossil algae show a lake once existed on Lesotho's Mafadi summit, but it vanished about 150 years ago [60d]
- NASA Mars rover captures rock that could hold fossilized microbes [60d]
- Philippine coast guard says oil leaking from sunken tanker [60d]
- Spacecraft to swing by Earth, moon on path to Jupiter [60d]
- Thousands evacuate season's biggest wildfire in northern California [60d]
- New process uses light and enzymes to create greener chemicals [60d]
- Outsourcing conservation in Africa: NGO management reduces poaching and boosts tourism, but raises risks for civilians [60d]
- Two shark species documented in Puget Sound for first time [60d]
- Developing a nano-treatment to help save mangroves from deadly disease [60d]
- New study disputes Hunga Tonga volcano's role in 2023–24 global warm-up [61d]
- Exploring cadmium-induced alterations in the expression profile of microRNAs [61d]
- New aerospace and building materials could repair themselves thanks to fungi and bacteria [61d]
- Exploring the effects of initial microbiota on microbial succession during eggplant fermentation [61d]
- New self-powered electrostatic tweezer enhances object manipulation and microfluidics [61d]
- What's really behind the ad label? The dark arts influencers are using to get your likes [61d]
- Study warns of rise of 'new chauvinism' fueled by right-wing populism [61d]
- New research on legal aid cuts shows wasted money and 'embarrassing' data gaps in UK [61d]
- Climate is most important factor in where mammals choose to live, study finds [61d]
- Team develops novel hybrid scheme for compressible flow computations [61d]
- Surveys reveal vast mangrove damage along Great Barrier Reef and restoration hotspots [61d]
- AI makes useless noise widely useful in synchronizing physical oscillators [61d]
- Twisted carbon nanotubes could achieve significantly better energy storage than advanced lithium-ion batteries [61d]
- 3D models show dolphins already used narrow-band sound waves for orientation 5 million years ago [61d]
- Using fire management to see how ticks... tick [61d]
- Paris 2024: How the Olympics shape—and are shaped by—geopolitics [61d]
- Raman spectroscopy offers new insights into ionic liquid acidity [61d]
- Is this how you get hot Jupiters? [61d]
- New clam species discovered in South Africa's kelp forest [61d]
- Clearance of deer cull carcasses is a loss to ecosystem, finds Scotland study [61d]
- Communicating numbers boosts trust in climate change science, research suggests [61d]
- More money, empowerment—and less chance of domestic abuse for women working in coffee industry [61d]
- Building blocks for the future: Rhodium-catalyzed [2+2+1] cycloaddition achieves high enantioselectivity [61d]
- New interaction network in endocytosis process discovered [61d]
- Image: NASA's Orion spacecraft gets lift on Earth [61d]
- NASA supports burst test for orbital reef commercial space station [61d]
- Rain, cooling slow huge blaze in Canada's Jasper park [61d]
- Brazilian dunes dotted with dazzling pools make UNESCO heritage list [61d]
- Not one, but two meteor showers are about to peak—here's how to catch the stellar show [61d]
- Most of the glyphosate in European rivers may not come from farming, researchers suggest [61d]
- Living in a plastic world: Tackling plastic pollution [61d]
- 'What if there were a butch Barbie?' Barbie's gender politics investigated [61d]
- China: Still the world's biggest emitter, but also an emerging force in climate diplomacy [61d]
- Gang crackdown: Why anti-patch policies backfire—and what would actually work [61d]
- Increased demand for metals and minerals needed for clean energy transition puts 4,000+ species at risk, finds study [61d]
- New understanding of fly behavior has potential application in robotics, public safety [61d]
- Canadians are using Facebook less as a source of news, finds report [61d]
- How solar storms play havoc with our lives [61d]
- How roads are reshaping and scarring our planet, and even changing animals' DNA [61d]
- Why school suspensions and exclusions have risen dramatically in England—and what could be done [61d]
- The chaotic history of Paris Olympics. One games nearly ended the movement—and the other helped save it [61d]
- Timber venues, river swimming and re-use: How the Paris Olympics is going green—and what it's missing [61d]
- Craft cider is surprisingly good for the environment [61d]
- New method for 3D quantitative phase imaging eliminates need for digital phase recovery algorithms [61d]
- Novel tunable ultrasonic liquid crystal light diffuser paves the way for next-gen indoor lighting [61d]
- Evacuations remain in place as firefighters battle 900-acre Grove fire in Southern California for second day [61d]
- Atomic 'GPS' elucidates movement during ultrafast material transitions [61d]
- Ancient DNA analyses imply brucellosis pathogen evolved with development of farming [61d]
- How a warming Arctic is accelerating global climate change [61d]
- Balancing instability and robustness: New mathematical framework for dynamics of natural systems [61d]
- Exploring what happens when different spherical objects hit the water [61d]
- Scientists control bacterial mutations to preserve antibiotic effectiveness [61d]
- Folded peptides are more electrically conductive than unfolded peptides, study reveals [61d]
- How Staphylococcus slips around between biological environments [61d]
- Invasive, blood-sucking fish 'may hold the key to understanding where we came from,' say biologists [61d]
- X-ray microCT unveils ancient pottery techniques [61d]
- ATLAS probes uncharted territory with LHC Run 3 data [61d]
- Kepler's 1607 pioneering sunspot sketches solve solar mysteries 400 years later [61d]
- 'Kink state' control may provide pathway to quantum electronics [61d]
- New nanoparticles boost immune system in mice to fight melanoma and breast cancer [61d]
- Physicists introduce method for mechanical detection of individual nuclear decays [61d]
- Study sheds more light on the nature of pulsar PSR J1227−6208 [61d]
Previous Day