The Brutalist Report - phys
- Direct measurement of a subtle current phase relation shows potential for more stable superconducting qubits [78d]
- Addressing climate change and inequality: A win-win policy solution [79d]
- Combating promotion and tenure bias against Black and Hispanic faculty [79d]
- Electricity-driven catalyst offers climate-neutral methane production [79d]
- Antarctic 'greening' at dramatic rate, satellite data show [79d]
- Research links El Niño to Atlantic weather a year later, could enhance long-range weather forecasting [79d]
- Traces of antimatter in cosmic rays reopen the search for 'WIMPs' as dark matter [79d]
- How future heat waves at sea could devastate UK marine ecosystems and fisheries [79d]
- Research reveals how media coverage helped successfully mitigate forest fires in the Brazilian Amazon [79d]
- Liquefied natural gas carbon footprint is worse than coal, study finds [79d]
- Hexagonal magnetic defects could lead to energy-efficient neuromorphic computing [79d]
- Scientists develop novel method for strengthening PVC products [79d]
- New microchip captures exosomes for faster, more sensitive lung cancer detection from a blood draw [79d]
- A new tool for faster, more in-depth analysis of nuclear properties and mass data [79d]
- New research uncovers how climate and soil shape tree and shrub wood density across ecosystems [79d]
- Fused molecules could serve as building blocks for safer lithium-ion batteries [79d]
- New article provides orientation to using implementation science in policing [79d]
- Cellular agriculture research manages to culture pork fat tissue on rye protein scaffolds [79d]
- Qualitative study examines how ordinary people 'sense' water quality [79d]
- Study suggests statistical 'noise' affects perceived evolutionary rates [79d]
- Sentinel-2 data reveal significant seasonal variations in intertidal seagrass [79d]
- How Soviet legacy has influenced foreign policy in Georgia and Ukraine [79d]
- X-rays advance understanding of Earth's core-mantle boundary and super-Earth magma oceans [79d]
- NASA's laser comms demo makes deep space record, completes first phase [79d]
- Study identifies compounds that extend longevity of Japanese morning glory flowers [79d]
- A new era of solar observation: International team produces global maps of coronal magnetic field [79d]
- Genetic database shows some fungal crops became completely reliant on ants 27 million years ago [79d]
- The true global impact of species-loss caused by humans is far greater than expected, study reveals [79d]
- To really be greener, businesses need to look to the boardroom [79d]
- Community sports need provincial 'assist' to thrive, says report [79d]
- Lunar mission data analysis finds widespread evidence of ice deposits [79d]
- The secret to healthy and sustainable fish fingers: An expert explains [79d]
- New lunar distress system could safeguard future astronauts [79d]
- Outdoor businesses and venues could benefit from boosting birdsong sound biodiversity [79d]
- Move over, heartfelt chats, it's the gift that counts [79d]
- 'Tough and uncompromising' training capable of transforming social work culture [79d]
- Physicists achieve strong coupling of Andreev qubits via microwave resonator [79d]
- Centuries ago, the Maya storm god Huracán taught that when we damage nature, we damage ourselves [79d]
- Investigating 'purist' organizations motivations—can they survive in a world of compromise? [79d]
- The darker side of human rights for great apes [79d]
- Unique IDs for individual (digital) specimens from natural history museums streamline and future-proof science [79d]
- 2-billion-year-old rock could help understand very early life on Earth and the hunt for evidence of life on Mars [79d]
- Engineers create a chip-based tractor beam for biological particles [79d]
- Quantum researchers come up with a recipe that could accelerate drug development [79d]
- Scientists offer a detailed look at the skeleton of an ancient predator that thrived in extreme conditions [79d]
- Football can improve well-being of people in UK prisons, and could help stop reoffending [79d]
- There were more black holes in the early universe than we thought, research finds [79d]
- Decolonizing the curriculum hasn't closed the gap between Black and white students in the UK: Here's what might work [79d]
- Why climate activists keep targeting art galleries despite public outcry [79d]
- Study: Wildfires will make the land absorb much less carbon, even if warming is kept below 1.5°C [79d]
- Lessons from Cyclone Gabrielle: Five key health priorities for future disaster response [79d]
- Mathematicians and climate researchers build new models for understanding polar sea ice [79d]
- People infer the past better than the future, study finds [79d]
- Ancient protein structure may have enabled early molecular evolution and diversification [79d]
- Mercury's magnetic landscape mapped in 30 minutes [79d]
- Five-mile asteroid impact crater below Atlantic captured in 'exquisite' detail by seismic data [79d]
- Plants have a backup plan to pass down accurate chromosome copies [79d]
- The medicines we take to stay healthy are harming nature. Here's what needs to change [79d]
- Opinion: When even fringe festival venues exclude people with disability, cities need to act on access [79d]
- More consumption, more demand for resources, more waste: Why urban mining's time has come [79d]
- Return-to-office mandates may not be the solution to downtown struggles that Canadian cities are banking on [79d]
- Africa's famous Serengeti and Maasai Mara are being hit by climate change—a major threat to wildlife and tourism [79d]
- Scientists find plant-like behavior in human cells [79d]
- New species of clearwing moth from Guyana discovered in Wales [79d]
- Miami-Dade study questions reliability of land surface temperature for heat risk assessment [79d]
- Scientists design silver nanoparticle–based self-hygienic resin for use in dental applications [79d]
- Celebrating the fungus among us: How fungi support, restore ecosystems [79d]
- Economists recognized early on in the pandemic that working from home is here to stay [79d]
- Study sheds light on limitations of zooplankton for inactivating pathogen contaminated water [79d]
- Climate change is causing algal blooms in Lake Superior for the first time in history [79d]
- Protection decisions loom for endangered North Atlantic right whales [79d]
- Logic with light: Introducing diffraction casting, optical-based parallel computing [79d]
- Wastewater bacteria can break down plastic for food, yielding new possibilities for cleaning up plastic waste [79d]
Previous Day