The Brutalist Report - phys
- Light-induced symmetry changes in tiny crystals allow researchers to create materials with tailored properties [115d]
- Megastudy finds a simple way to boost math progress [115d]
- UbiREAD: Cracking the ubiquitin code of protein degradation [115d]
- We're one step closer to a giant interferometer on the moon [115d]
- Chemical analysis of Codonopsis lanceolata roots shows significant vasodilatory effects from compound [115d]
- Israeli public prefers faster earthquake warnings—even at the cost of lower accuracy, study reveals [115d]
- Why can't physicists decide if warp drives are real? [115d]
- How valuable substances can be extracted from wood and plastic waste [115d]
- Egg prices soar as outdated supply chains crack under pressure [115d]
- Maize cultivation in Nigeria: Better predicting pest and climate risks [115d]
- Tree diversity helps forests buffer extreme heat and cold, study finds [115d]
- Research uncovers the illegal trade of pet chimpanzees from Guinea-Bissau [115d]
- Advances to prevent food fraud in the consumption of virgin olive oil and pine nuts [115d]
- Colombia's lonely chimp Yoko finds new home in Brazil [115d]
- Webb unmasks true nature of the 'Cosmic Tornado' spiral galaxy [115d]
- Family businesses are more sustainable, study finds [115d]
- OQTOPUS: Researchers launch open-source quantum computer operating system [115d]
- Managing legacy munitions in the Baltic Sea: Expedition AL628 investigates suspect sites [115d]
- How light stabilizes a stress-response protein to help plants survive harsh environments [115d]
- A new thermal steam vent is grabbing attention in ever-changing Yellowstone National Park [115d]
- Stressors female farmers face: Study cites animal loss, succession planning as key stressors [115d]
- Northernmost record of toxic pufferfish in Mediterranean raises alarm [115d]
- Leaders who can view challenges in a future or past perspective likely to be effective, study finds [115d]
- Exploring the future of frozen water [115d]
- Climate patterns and water quality linked in farming landscapes [115d]
- As many as 30% of beech trees killed by beech leaf disease, study shows [115d]
- Time to stop blaming bats and newts for blocking development? A new fund could support nature and ease building delays [115d]
- When systems suddenly tip: New insights into hard-to-predict transitions [115d]
- New study uncovers key pathways in hydronium and hydroxide ion neutralization [115d]
- Traditional breeding falls short in boosting soybean photosynthesis [115d]
- After greening comes darkness, and it really does matter [115d]
- Can one buy the greatest gift? [115d]
- Innovation forums: Big ideas to reverse trajectory of community violence [115d]
- What rules actually prohibit us from building a warp drive? [115d]
- Meters closer, miles faster: A novel cryogenic in-memory computing scheme to bridge AI with quantum computing [115d]
- A multifunctional composite catalyst for sustainable wastewater remediation [115d]
- Mountains as biodiversity engines: How uplift may shape species evolution [115d]
- Empowering adolescents to change their own behavior in school [115d]
- Zoom bias: The social costs of having a 'tinny' sound during video conferences [115d]
- Biologists discover ancient neurohormone that controls appetite [115d]
- Organic molecules of unprecedented size discovered on Mars [115d]
- The secret behind pedestrian crossings—and why some spiral into chaos [115d]
- Genomic sequencing reveals previously unknown genes that make microbes resistant to drugs and hard to kill [115d]
- Wealthy Africans often don't pay tax. The answer lies in smarter collection, says expert [115d]
- NASA scientists are clocking wildflower blooms to understand our ever-changing planet [115d]
- Wildfires, windstorms and heat waves: How extreme weather threatens nature's essential services [115d]
- Susceptibility to bovine tuberculosis in cattle traced to key genes [115d]
- Carbon cycle feedbacks may amplify global heating risk, study warns [115d]
- Patterned spintronic emitter enables room-temperature THz polarization control for wireless and biomedical applications [115d]
- Scalable nanotechnology-based lightsails developed for next-generation space exploration [115d]
- 'Chimpanzee 'engineers' have implications for understanding human technological evolution [115d]
- How mechanical forces can encode function in cells and lead to fibrosis [115d]
- 3D nanotech blankets offer new path to clean drinking water [115d]
- Using algorithms to help find life on icy ocean worlds [115d]
- Breaking antibiotic-resistant bacteria's protective capsules: Study offers insights into combating S. pneumoniae [115d]
- Moiré than meets the eye: Phasons enable interlayer excitons to move at low temperatures for quantum stability [115d]
- Mystery solved: Our tests reveal the tiny algae killing fish and harming surfers on SA beaches [115d]
- Looking for elusive quantum particles? Try a bad metal, researchers suggest [115d]
- Asteroid 2024 YR may not hit Earth in 2032, but it—and others—will keep coming back [115d]
- Giving rivers room to move: How rethinking flood management can benefit people and nature [115d]
- How dramatic daily swings in oxygen shaped early animal life [115d]
- AI reshapes how we observe the stars [115d]
- Could bullying be an evolutionary trait? [115d]
- Updated physical model helps reconstruct sudden, dramatic sea level rise after last ice age [115d]
- China authorizes controversial hydropower project in landslide-prone region of Tibet [115d]
- Cuts to research into inequality, disparities and other DEIA topics harm science [115d]
- Study reveals controlled proton tunneling in water trimers [115d]
- From deluges to drought: Climate change speeds up water cycle, triggers more extreme weather [115d]
- A European startup scrubs its attempt to launch an orbital rocket on its first test flight [115d]
- Engineers redefine how heat transfers on advanced surfaces [115d]
- Modeling the past and future of Antarctica's Aurora Subglacial Basin water flow [115d]
- High-precision quantum gates with diamond spin qubits achieve error rate below 0.1% [115d]
- Electrochemical process that uses carbon dioxide to produce oxygen could be used in space [115d]
- Introduced Pacific oysters provide biodiversity benefits in Australia's Port River [115d]
- Shocking spherules on Mars [115d]
- How a gaming program is giving neurodivergent kids a power up [115d]
- Event Horizon Telescope allows close study of accelerating jets from black holes [115d]
- Analytical model predicts how bacteria navigate obstacles to spread [115d]
- Wide system changes needed for Australian schools to reach equity goals [115d]
- How chromosomes shape up for cell division: Scientists reveal DNA loop formation mechanisms [115d]
- California banned polystyrene: So why is it still on store shelves? [115d]
- How power at work follows you at home—for better and worse [115d]
- Hot streaks boost productivity, study shows [115d]
- Breathing-soliton laser study unveils new complexities in synchronization phenomena [115d]
- Faced with soaring landslide costs, Palos Verdes considers toll on iconic coastal road [115d]
- Climate warming and heat waves are accelerating global lake deoxygenation, study finds [115d]
- Researchers achieve de novo biosynthesis of plant lignans using synthetic yeast consortia [115d]
- Magnetic nanoparticles transport drugs deep into tumors to slow cancer growth [115d]
- New hi-tech buoys improve south coast scientific surveillance [115d]
- Decades-long quest leads to new antibiotic compounds [115d]
- Nature's time machine: How long-term studies unlock evolution's secrets [115d]
- Might the proton decay in other places or at other times? [115d]
- Scientists engineer starfish cells to shape-shift in response to light [115d]
- Historical robber 'Schinderhannes' clearly identified: Skeletons were mixed up about 220 years ago [115d]
- White-collar crimes: 'Fall from grace' and the stigma of reentry into society [115d]
- SpaceX targets end of month for private astronaut polar orbit mission Fram2 [115d]
- Astronomers discover new giant molecular cloud in the Milky Way [115d]
- NASA websites no longer promote 'first woman' on the moon for Artemis [115d]
- Researchers unveil unidirectional light focusing using diffractive optics [115d]
- Embrace change with dynamic conservation models: Study challenges traditional protected area approach [115d]
Previous Day