The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Action urged over climate change's impact on hydropower and wildlife [476d]
- Team manipulates intracellular signal transduction using optogenetic technology [476d]
- How war and climate crisis are reshaping the global fertilizer industry [476d]
- A tether covered in solar panels could boost the ISS's orbit [476d]
- Chinese 'artificial sun' sets a record towards fusion power generation [476d]
- NASA rockets to fly through flickering, vanishing auroras [476d]
- Garden ponds: Hidden gems of urban biodiversity conservation [476d]
- Skin-penetrating nematodes' love-hate relationship with CO₂ could lead to new parasitic infection treatments [476d]
- Illuminating an asymmetric gap in a topological antiferromagnet [476d]
- Study of deadly dog cancer reveals new clues for improved treatment [476d]
- Building sentence structure may be language-specific, brain activity study finds [476d]
- Peptides that can remove microplastics identified [476d]
- Seeing the unseen: New method reveals 'hyperaccessible' window in freshly replicated DNA [476d]
- Simplified redesign of proteins can improve ligand binding [476d]
- The ash left behind by the Los Angeles wildfires might be toxic, experts warn [476d]
- Harnessing electromagnetic waves and quantum materials to improve wireless communication technologies [476d]
- Governor proposes banning cellphones in schools throughout New York state starting next fall [476d]
- City-dwelling spur-winged lapwings move around more than their rural counterparts [476d]
- New findings shed light on cell health: Key insights into the recycling process inside cells [476d]
- Natural features and oil and gas structures influence the movement of whale sharks across the seascape [476d]
- Reversing age-related fertility decline in male fruit flies: The crucial role of seminal fluid [476d]
- Transforming China's food system: Researchers assess potential pathways for sustainability [476d]
- How the new NASA and India Earth Satellite NISAR will see Earth [476d]
- Does the world need a 'universal language' of accounting? [476d]
- Scientists succeed in trapping molecules to perform quantum operations for the first time [476d]
- Extreme climate pushed thousands of lakes in West Greenland 'across a tipping point,' study finds [476d]
- Looking to Kenya's Lake Victoria and cyanobacteria for what may come for Lake Erie [476d]
- Innovative process converts urine into slow-release crystal fertilizer [476d]
- Pesticide mixtures shown to be present in soil and plants all year round, not just during application times [476d]
- Large bipedal dinosaur footprints discovered: Possible evidence of Mongolian giant Saurolophus [476d]
- Novel perovskite growth method leads to ultrahigh-resolution micro-LED displays [476d]
- Nanoislands on silicon enable switchable topological textures for new electronic applications [476d]
- Systems engineering of cell factories almost doubles output, offering a sustainable fossil-fuel alternative [476d]
- Scientists harness the power of 'layered' crystals for energy innovation [476d]
- Harnessing proteins to clean contaminated soil [476d]
- Ship slime build-up: Biofilm growth model could enable lower costs and emissions in ocean transport [476d]
- How nonprofits pitch in before, during and after disasters strike [476d]
- Learning your political opponents don't actually hate you can reduce toxic polarization and antidemocratic attitudes [476d]
- Women were at the center of iron age Britain. New find reminds us how misogyny has shaped our view of the past [476d]
- Scientists discover compound to combat malaria's resurgence in warming climates [476d]
- Beer sold in grocery stores drives higher sales in other categories [476d]
- AI model simulates 500 million years of evolution to generate a new fluorescent protein [476d]
- Melting temperature and phase stability of iron under core-like conditions shed light on Earth's geodynamics [476d]
- Regeneratively farmed is the new buzz label on supermarket shelves, but what does it actually mean? [476d]
- Women are seen as 'saviours' or 'victims' in climate change debates: Why this is a problem [476d]
- Survey with American employees reveals 'workers want a say in their work' [476d]
- Lessons from 'stop and frisk' can help Philly police use drones to improve safety without compromising civil liberties [476d]
- I'm an economist. Here's why I'm worried the California insurance crisis could trigger broader financial instability [476d]
- Electrons in twisted graphene form novel 1/3 fractional quantum Hall state [476d]
- Next-gen fibers: Smart textile can sense light, pressure, smell and even taste [476d]
- How do we survive crises—then and now? Archaeologists examine four common resilience strategies [476d]
- Extreme supersonic winds measured on a planet outside our solar system [476d]
- Size matters for foodborne pathogens: Poop from small birds unlikely to pose food safety risk for farmers [476d]
- Lab-grown intestines: Protein printing mimics human gut structures [476d]
- Nickel mining a serious concern for climate action, reveals study [476d]
- A new frontier in understanding electron dynamics: Imaging with attosecond short X-ray flashes [476d]
- New evidence suggests megaflood refilled the Mediterranean Sea 5 million years ago [476d]
- Ceramic catalyst uses sodium and boron to drive sustainable industrial reactions [476d]
- Electrochemical process recycles CO₂ from flue gases with just 2% concentration [477d]
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