The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Can jarrah forests be recovered after bauxite mining? [31d]
- The most energetic neutrino ever detected could be primordial [31d]
- Low wages, poor training put security guards—and the public—at risk, study finds [31d]
- Education saves lives: New study reveals global link between learning and longevity [31d]
- New study reveals how video games support children's well-being [31d]
- Chernobyl's exclusion zone is a beacon of biodiversity—but it faces new threats from Russia's invasion [31d]
- Neutrinos caught on camera: Testing the first prototype of a new elementary particle detector [31d]
- El Niño season predicted to start as early as next month [31d]
- High-resolution imaging shines light on nanoscale nuclear organization [31d]
- Light near surface of ultra-thin optical fibers can sort twisted nanoparticles [31d]
- Re-engineered human cells boost gene-editing particle potency across multiple delivery systems [31d]
- Bipartisan-cited science is rarely used by policymakers, study finds [31d]
- Light-activated electrolyte oxidizes water to promote tumor cell death [31d]
- Machine learning identifies catalyst 'sweet spot' for greener urea from waste gases [31d]
- Simplifying clean hydrogen production with a new all-in-one photocatalytic cocatalyst [31d]
- Natural-language AI helps chemists design molecules step by step [31d]
- Human-altered estuaries now drive stronger tides farther inland [31d]
- Chromosomes condense in three timed chemical waves during cell division, study shows [31d]
- Scientists call for integrating three energy demand goals into climate policy by 2035 [31d]
- Promising H5N1 vaccine protects dairy calves and mice against severe disease [31d]
- A mother's gift: Plastid-derived structures help sea urchin development and dispersal [31d]
- Genomic tool untangles how microbes spread—even when they look almost identical [31d]
- Extra sets of chromosomes may help aggressive tumor cells spread, study finds [31d]
- Inside the competition for capital at some of the world's biggest banks [31d]
- Self-regulating process governs cosmic order inside star clusters [31d]
- Carbon nanotubes are closing the gap on copper conductivity [31d]
- Waste biomass helps unlock hydrogen and formate in lower-energy electrolysis [31d]
- Scientists map hidden magnetism on the sun's far side [31d]
- Why delaying climate action now means higher seas by 2100 [31d]
- Sombrero Galaxy's vast halo emerges in rare detail 30 million light-years away [31d]
- 'Aquila Booster' challenges theoretical limits of particle acceleration in pulsar wind nebulae [31d]
- LAMOST maps open cluster NGC 1647, linking broad main sequence to differential reddening [31d]
- Gravity's subtle effect on light could improve groundwater, volcano and carbon storage monitoring [31d]
- 42 lost pages of the new testament manuscript discovered [31d]
- Amazon recovery masks diversity loss as fires, droughts and windstorms reshape forest edges [31d]
- First gap-free peanut genomes reveal genes behind bigger seeds and better oils [31d]
- New approach to detect ultra-rare part-per-sextillion isotopes could also sharpen dark matter searches [31d]
- Warming El Nino set to return in mid-2026: UN [31d]
- Could warming seas bring great white sharks back to the North Sea? A 5‑million‑year‑old shark tooth may provide clues [31d]
- Beavers leave a trail as they head into the Arctic and reshape the landscape [31d]
- Lower-intensity coconut farming boosts yields and soil health in West Africa [31d]
- One blue whale song unlocks oceans of data [31d]
- Orbital dances unlock true masses of Orion's young stars [31d]
- This battered Jurassic sea giant held on against the odds, and its fossil hints at an unexpected survival strategy [31d]
- An agricultural mosaic in Taiwan [31d]
- Some rays flash decoy eyes while others never do, as evolution's hidden trade-off comes into focus [31d]
- Quantum 'dark modes' no longer block phonon control, opening new paths for scalable devices [31d]
- One-way phonon synchronization could survive noise and defects, theoretical physicists suggest [31d]
- Even early deliveries annoy consumers [32d]
- How deceptive content reached millions of voters during the 2020 US elections [32d]
- How electron structure affects light responses in moiré materials [32d]
- Wild Balkan berries keep gin taste steady as climate shifts [32d]
- A third of animal habitats on land could experience multiple extreme events by 2085, new study suggests [32d]
- Wildfires spread towards northern Japan town [32d]
- Q&A: Apollo astronaut Schmitt talks about getting back to the moon and life in the universe [32d]
- A massive, unstable ice block stalls Everest climbers at base camp [32d]
- This 2,200-year-old Roman wreck hid a repair story that rewrites how ancient ships survived long voyages [32d]
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