The Brutalist Report - phys
- Fighting coastal erosion with electricity [32d]
- For first time, DNA tech offers both data storage and computing functions [32d]
- Portugal seeks EU help as wildfire threatens UNESCO-listed forest [32d]
- Australian penguin dies, ending famous 'same-sex power couple' [32d]
- Volcanic eruption grounds flights in New Zealand [32d]
- Climate change a mixed blessing for sun-starved Irish vintners [32d]
- Research team designs AI approach to drought zoning in Canada [32d]
- Antarctica vulnerable to invasive species hitching rides on plastic and organic debris, oceanographic model shows [32d]
- Modeling study suggests heat-related deaths in Europe could triple by century's end under current climate policies [32d]
- Canada lynx confirmed in Vermont for 1st time since 2018 [33d]
- The real price of the 'zero-price effect': Study presents evidence from online classified real estate service [33d]
- Study shows successful use of ChatGPT in agriculture education [33d]
- Want to improve your company's performance? Here's why hiring directors with international experience can help [33d]
- Advanced orbital angular momentum mode switching in multimode fiber utilizing an optical neural network chip [33d]
- What really drives consumers to sign up for community-supported agriculture? [33d]
- New study uncovers the complex dynamics of self-deprecating remarks in Korean entertainment [33d]
- Eyes in the sky and on the ground: Enhanced dryland monitoring with remote sensing [33d]
- From plows to pixels: Comprehensive rice mapping with satellite technology [33d]
- Lipid nanoparticle mRNA therapy improves survival in mouse models of maple syrup urine disease [33d]
- 'Internet of fish' empowering Lake Victoria women [33d]
- Bulwark of blooms: The lily's secret armor against plant pathogens [33d]
- A new pandemic could ride in on animals we eat, study warns [33d]
- Killing giant ragweed just got harder for some Wisconsin farmers [33d]
- High school book club with prisoner on Death Row explores the complexities, joys of Black life [33d]
- Q&A: Professors discuss democracy in the internet age [33d]
- Unveiling glycoRNAs: New study proves they do exist [33d]
- Ancient microbes linked to evolution of human immune proteins [33d]
- Facts alone fall short in correcting science misinformation [33d]
- The disappearing mountains and hungry volcano: Researching the evolution of the Teton Range [33d]
- Survival tactics: AI-driven insights into chromatin changes for winter dormancy in axillary buds [33d]
- From genome to grocer's aisle: Decoding the Chinese cherry for firmer fruits [33d]
- Vernicia montana's genome unearths new breeding horizons [33d]
- Study tracks decades of extreme heat, cold in Upper Midwest [33d]
- AI exhibits racial bias in mortgage underwriting decisions, researchers find [33d]
- Exploring the benefits of AI in veterinary medicine and education [33d]
- Study calls for locally inclusive public health adaptation strategies to climate change [33d]
- The underrated impact of humidity in predicting heat-related deaths [33d]
- LLMs are unsuited for meeting the standards of Platonic epistemology in education, researchers find [33d]
- Scientists help turn whisky waste into valuable commodity [33d]
- New data on radiation show missions to Jupiter's moon Europa are possible [33d]
- The Wow! Signal deciphered—it was hydrogen all along, study says [33d]
- Deplatforming puts sex workers at risk, study says [33d]
- Honey bees may play key role in spreading viruses to wild bumble bees [33d]
- Cryo-ET study elucidates protein folding helpers in their natural environment [33d]
- Birds have accents, too: Researchers find cultural change in the dialects of parrots over 22-year period [33d]
- Subadult loggerhead sea turtle returns to Atlantic Ocean in Florida after rehabilitation [33d]
- Humpbacks are among animals who manufacture and wield tools, researchers say [33d]
- Using AI to link heat waves to global warming [33d]
- To kill mammoths in the Ice Age, people used planted pikes, not throwing spears, researchers say [33d]
- Modeling study finds highest prediction of sea-level rise unlikely [33d]
- Freeze-frame: Researchers develop world's fastest microscope that can see electrons in motion [33d]
- Human-wildlife overlap expected to increase across more than half of land on Earth by 2070 [33d]
- US Congress members' wealth statistically linked with ancestors' slaveholding practices [33d]
- Life from a drop of rain: New research suggests rainwater helped form the first protocell walls [33d]
- Study reveals devastating power and colossal extent of a giant underwater avalanche off the Moroccan coast [33d]
- How cells use condensation to seal tissues tight [33d]
- Physics meets machine learning for better cyclone predictions [33d]
- Lithospheric oddities may be sculpting continental interiors [33d]
- Surprising mechanism for removing dead cells identified [33d]
- From embers to crisis: The expanding threat of wildfires under global warming [33d]
- Students' toxin research shows public health benefits of citizen science [33d]
- Study finds 'DNA scavengers' can stop some antibiotic resistance from spreading [33d]
- Human manure or 'nightsoil' makes great crop fertilizer—but attitudes to poo-grown produce differ drastically [33d]
- Readers prefer to click on a clear, simple headline—like this one [33d]
- Sharks are taking a bite out of anglers' catch in the Gulf of Mexico, but culling isn't likely to help [33d]
- Q&A: Sierra Leone's women farmers use a custom called bora to access land—but it's making them more vulnerable [33d]
- Calls to ban 'harmful pornography' are rife—here's what teens actually think about porn [33d]
- 'Not my boy.' When teachers are harassed by students, some schools and parents fail to help [33d]
- Do celebrity endorsements make a difference? 19% of young people admit they might [33d]
- The right to disconnect from work—and employer surveillance—is growing globally. Why is NZ lagging? [33d]
- We need far stronger support systems in the fight against gender-based violence, says expert [33d]
- Opinion: Canada must continue cutting emissions regardless of the actions of other polluters [33d]
- What the unique shape of the human heart tells us about our evolution [33d]
- Beyond raising the age of criminal responsibility, African youth need more culturally aware support [33d]
- According to the UN, Canadians with intellectual disabilities are being exploited [33d]
- First visualization of valence electrons reveals fundamental nature of chemical bonding [33d]
- Some Chesapeake Bay goals won't be reached by 2025, EPA evaluation finds [33d]
- Study finds Lausanne toxic soil did not worsen health [33d]
- The power of face time: Insights from zebra finch courtship shed light on later life learning [33d]
- Study says ChatGPT could help people with creativity in everyday tasks [33d]
- More academic freedom leads to more innovation, reports study [33d]
- A maximally entangled quantum state with a fixed spectrum does not exist in the presence of noise, mathematician claims [33d]
- Tissue fluidization during skin repair is crucial for wound healing, study reveals [33d]
- Study shows effective regulation and monitoring is key to tackling emissions of a super-greenhouse gas [33d]
- Self-repairing mitochondria use novel recycling system, study finds [33d]
- Bacteria make thermally stable plastics similar to polystyrene and PET for the first time [33d]
- New heaviest exotic antimatter nucleus discovered [33d]
- Study finds nearly 90% of NYC transit workers have been harassed or assaulted [33d]
- Mobile species are 'glue' which connect different habitats together, study finds [33d]
- Anthropogenic CO₂ study quantifies amount and pathways in coastal ocean waters [33d]
- Quenching the intense heat of a fusion plasma may require a well-placed liquid metal evaporator [33d]
- Study discovers an electric current in the gut that attracts pathogens like Salmonella [33d]
- Researchers observe Floquet states in colloidal nanoplatelets driven by visible pulses [33d]
- Cellular DNA damage response pathways might be useful against some disease-causing viruses [33d]
- Proteins for skin strength also control cell signaling, study suggests [33d]
- Newly discovered, free-living eukaryote is the first known to have lost its mitochondria [33d]
- Paleontologists discover new predatory dinosaur with a distinctive 'eyebrow' [33d]
- Unveiling the hottest period in a million years: The MIS 11c paradox [33d]
- Twisted molecular wires exhibit high single-molecule conductance [33d]
- MeerKAT observations detect a mysterious faint radio ring [33d]
Previous Day