The Brutalist Report - phys
- Should farm fields be used for crops or solar? Research suggests both [71d]
- Court backlogs are clogging the system; new research finds a surprising fix [71d]
- Microplastics: What's trapping the emerging threat in our streams? [71d]
- How changes in lemur brains made some mean girls nice [71d]
- Scientists finally confirm vitamin B1 hypothesis from 1958 [71d]
- How safe is the air to breathe? 50 million people in the US don't know [71d]
- Researchers develop compact superradiant Smith-Purcell device with ultra-narrow linewidth [71d]
- NASA's Lucy spacecraft beams back pictures of an asteroid shaped like a lumpy bowling pin [71d]
- Sustainable climate policies can benefit both environment and social justice, researchers say [71d]
- Weather forecasting technique speeds up electrocatalyst degradation predictions [71d]
- Hybrid surface combines hydrophobic nanowires and hydrophilic channels to prevent condensation flooding [71d]
- High-tech sticker can identify real human emotions [71d]
- Non-native trees gain ground in eastern US, reducing native species diversity [71d]
- Early medieval European collapse: How imbalanced social-ecological acceleration led to a tipping point [71d]
- Synergistic catalyst enables targeted cleavage of ethane C–H bonds in tandem with CO₂ activation [71d]
- With federal funding in question, artists can navigate a perilous future by looking to the past [71d]
- Long-term study maps greenhouse gas emissions from agricultural soils [71d]
- It's a quantum zoo out there, and scientists just found a dozen new 'species' [71d]
- Addressing working memory can help students with math difficulty improve word problem-solving skills [71d]
- Did it rain or snow on ancient Mars? New study suggests it did [71d]
- Michael B. Jordan plays identical twins in 'Sinners'—what's the truth about these sibling relationships? [71d]
- Research uncovers how soil proteins and organic matter stabilize carbon over millennia [71d]
- How a 19th-century treaty shaped the modern world's measurements [71d]
- How a new project combines science, community and Indigenous art to restore life in the Baaka-Darling River [71d]
- What if Mother Earth could sue for mistreatment? Experts discuss Ecuador's success [71d]
- Tree rings and models paint a picture of past, present and future drought [71d]
- Himalayan snow at 23-year low, threatening 2 billion people: report [71d]
- How activity in Earth's mantle led the ancient ancestors of elephants, giraffes, and humans into Asia and Africa [71d]
- A green comet likely is breaking apart and won't be visible to the naked eye [71d]
- From fava beans to future foods: Researchers turn to plant-based proteins for a healthier planet [71d]
- Microplastics still slip through wastewater treatment plants, carrying pollutants and threatening long-term health [71d]
- Urban heat islands: A double-edged sword for city dwellers' survival [71d]
- Federal laws don't ban rollbacks of environmental protection, but they don't make it easy [71d]
- Engineering a hydrogen-bonding microenvironment to boost CO₂ electroreduction [71d]
- Twinkling star reveals the shocking secrets of turbulent plasma in our cosmic neighborhood [71d]
- Ancient Greenland rocks in Iceland reveal effects of Late Antique Little Ice Age [71d]
- Canadian wildfire smoke cooled New York by 3°C and trapped air toxicants, researchers find [71d]
- How bacteria use sneaky chemistry to disable plant defenses [71d]
- A secret mathematical rule has shaped the beaks of birds and other dinosaurs for 200 million years [71d]
- Exposure to perceptible temperature rise increases concern about climate change, higher education adds to understanding [71d]
- Endowments aren't blank checks, but universities can rely on them more heavily in turbulent times [71d]
- Mathematical model modulates the anomalous Hall angle in a magnetic topological semimetal [71d]
- For the first time, wild chimpanzees have been pictured eating and sharing 'boozy' fruit [71d]
- Claims of 'anti-Christian bias' sound to some voters like a message about race, not just religion [71d]
- Slave trade database moving to Harvard [71d]
- Three ways Pope Francis influenced the global climate movement [71d]
- Low effort, high visibility: What bumper stickers say about our values and identity [71d]
- A new concept for an astrobiology mission to Enceladus [71d]
- What blew up the local bubble? [71d]
- Searching for life on Mars in the snow and ice [71d]
- How astronomers compare telescopes [71d]
- 'Puppy blues': How to cope with the exhaustion and stress of raising a puppy [71d]
- Delivering payloads to Mars with CHAMPS [71d]
- Women are steadier leaders in times of crisis, but they are still being overlooked [71d]
- Scientists found a potential sign of life on a distant planet—an astronomer explains why many are still skeptical [71d]
- Crime is nonpartisan and the blame game on crime in cities is wrong—on both sides [71d]
- As views on spanking shift worldwide, most US adults support it, and 19 states allow physical punishment in schools [71d]
- Scientists can tell healthy and cancerous cells apart by how they move [71d]
- Astronomers uncover missing merger companion and dark matter bridge in the Perseus cluster [71d]
- The evidence for ancient supernovae is buried underground [71d]
- Astronomers determine the fate of a compact dwarf galaxy [71d]
- The research-backed way to go from powerless to proactive at work [71d]
- Mountain lion seen for first time in Texas county, officials say [71d]
- A California environmental law makes it 'too damn hard' to build: But do Democrats have the will to reform it? [71d]
- More black bears seen in Lower Michigan: Here's how to avoid them, DNR says [71d]
- Why did four whales wash up in San Francisco Bay in a week and a half? [71d]
- Machine learning model to predict the fitness of AAV capsids for gene therapy [72d]
- Turning down starlight to spot new exoplanets [72d]
- More ticks carry Lyme disease bacteria in pheasant-release areas, research shows [72d]
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