The Brutalist Report - phys
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- It's coyote puppy season; here's what you need to know [37d]
- Carbon trading cuts emissions better than carbon taxes [37d]
- A milestone voyage for Antarctic science [37d]
- A 60-year old mystery about the moon's magnetosphere is finally solved [37d]
- Ticketmaster's Eras Tour chaos made worse by crisis communication failures [37d]
- Maize mysteries: Scientists uncover new information on how DNA works in maize [37d]
- Why sugar breakdown matters beyond energy—new insights into how it makes cells move [37d]
- Study identifies causes of potato dry rot in Colorado [37d]
- High-resolution electron microscopy sheds light on the cellular responses to stress [37d]
- Clustering-based AI forecasts river water levels using just a few long records [37d]
- Amazonian chocolate: Combining cocoa clones with different post-harvest processes balances flavor and nutritional value [37d]
- Milk-derived nanoparticles may enable physicians to target aggressive bile duct cancer [37d]
- Bull sharks form social relationships with specific 'friends,' research reveals [37d]
- Q&A: Reevaluating reaction rates to better understand the stars [37d]
- Life, but not as we know it [37d]
- A clear roadmap for engineering combs of light [37d]
- JWST maps Europa's CO₂ beyond Tara Regio, hinting at subsurface exchange [37d]
- A galaxy next door is transforming, and astronomers can see it happening [37d]
- Climate action could prevent over 13 million premature deaths, but equity choices matter for global health [37d]
- Laser-assisted electron scattering seen with circularly polarized light for the first time [37d]
- New study offers insight into tissue-specific gene regulation of sheep [37d]
- What you study in school shapes your voting choices in adulthood [37d]
- Microbes in Antarctica survive the freezing and dark winter by living on air [37d]
- Light-controlled hydrogel mimics soft human tissue for more realistic cell studies [37d]
- Gold nanoclusters could selectively recognize chiral biomolecules to help detect certain diseases [37d]
- Tiny tools, sharp aim: Nanobodies target tumors with precision [37d]
- Not just spin—electron orbitals can provide new method for controlling magnetism [37d]
- Personal change thresholds may explain why popular policies fail to spread [37d]
- Structural modeling reveals phage proteins that manipulate bacterial immune signaling [37d]
- Location of reforestation projects has greater effect on climate than number of trees planted, study shows [37d]
- Why some metals turn transparent: A key mechanism for touchscreen conductors [37d]
- Frog-cell 'neurobots' grow self-organized nervous systems and alter gene activity [37d]
- Breathing in nanoparticles could enable a 10-minute pneumonia check at point of care [37d]
- Photorespiration may help maintain plant epigenome by fueling C1 metabolism [37d]
- Hunted by Neanderthals, giant elephants traveled hundreds of kilometers across ice-age Europe [37d]
- ChatGPT can provide original mathematical proofs, researchers show [37d]
- Single-cell data reveal a cellular 'developmental hourglass' in vertebrate embryos [37d]
- To protect Artemis II Astronauts, NASA experts keep their eyes on the sun [37d]
- Do political social media ads influence the outcome of elections? [37d]
- Rapid sequencing method offers same day detection of antibiotic resistance [37d]
- Half of Native Hawaiian University of Hawaiʻi students experience period poverty, study reveals [37d]
- Satellite mapping reveals recent and large-scale habitat changes across the Southern Ocean's seascapes [37d]
- AI analysis of nanoribbon assembly reveals protein design principles [37d]
- Molecular chains with bite: Customized carbon nanoribbons open a cleaner path to molecular electronics [37d]
- Cannibalism takes major bite out of young blue crabs, but the shallows offer a refuge [37d]
- Origin of lowest density super-puff planet remains a hazy mystery [37d]
- Ryugu asteroid samples contain all DNA and RNA building blocks, bolstering origin-of-life theories [37d]
- Extremely rare second-generation star discovered inside ancient relic dwarf galaxy [37d]
- Paleontologists uncover a new Spinosaurus species by following a clue from a decades‑old book into the Sahara Desert [37d]
- Sugar-processing enzyme has a hidden second job—controlling when cells divide [37d]
- Whale song remix: Study shows that humpbacks shift pitch when a neighbor joins in [37d]
- Ocean bacteria team up to break down biodegradable plastic [37d]
- How big data is transforming what we know about the universe [37d]
- Sea turtles, shrinking beaches and rising seas: Study finds nesting sites running out of room [37d]
- The first modern rocket launched 100 years ago, beginning a century of both innovations and challenges for spaceflight [37d]
- Building a reference manual for how cells connect with each other [37d]
- ISS study identifies thresholds for muscle atrophy and fiber changes in reduced gravity [37d]
- Failing to succeed: Why post‑secondary students need more room to mess up [37d]
- Coastal ocean chemistry now substantially shaped by humans [37d]
- The seven hour explosion nobody could explain [37d]
- Turning mosquitoes into flying vaccine carriers to protect against bat-borne viruses [37d]
- Computational model predicts telomere length from routine biopsy slide images [37d]
- Ice satellite detects powerful geomagnetic storm with precision [37d]
- Managed retreat in Europe more widespread than previously assumed [37d]
- Oldest known whale recording could unlock mysteries of the ocean [37d]
- Globular cluster NGC 5824 is embedded in a dark matter halo, study suggests [37d]
- SpaceX and Reflect Orbital plans would 'permanently scar' night sky, researchers warn [37d]
- Photonics and nanotech could spot cancer signals 5 to 8 years earlier [38d]
- Volunteers find oddly high solar flare rates [38d]
- Planning Titan entry? New lab tests flag nitrogen-driven heat shield debris risks [38d]
- Plastic bottles transformed into Parkinson's drug using bacteria [38d]
- A new class of molten planet stores abundant sulfur in a perpetual magma ocean [38d]
- Could reduced air pollution from climate mitigation boost crop yields and lower hunger risk? [38d]
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