The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Agriculture in Brazil: How land-use choices affect biodiversity and the global climate [179d]
- The secret life of baobabs: How bats and moths keep Africa's giant trees alive [179d]
- What 50 years of buried data tell us about Canada's mining oversight [179d]
- Researchers introduce a new tool for more accurate RNA modification detection from nanopore signals [179d]
- Populist parties choose divisive issues on purpose, researchers say [179d]
- ESA's HydroGNSS Scout satellites ready for launch [179d]
- Plush neuron makes AI approachable, simplifies neural networks for middle schoolers [179d]
- Student-built CubeSat to study solar wind and space weather from orbit [179d]
- Woodpeckers grunt and brace their bodies like athletes to maximize drilling power [179d]
- Revealing how cells adhere to the surface of plastic scaffolds [179d]
- New retrieval method boosts accuracy of open-path infrared gas sensing [179d]
- Bureaucracy in agriculture fails to take farmers' traditional knowledge and experience into account: Study [179d]
- Functional restoration of the Atlantic Forest: Exploring its limits and proposing alternatives [179d]
- Peering inside 3D chaotic microcavities with X-ray vision [179d]
- Kinase atlas uncovers hidden layers of cell signaling regulation [179d]
- Gyromorphs combine liquid and crystal traits to enhance light-based computers [179d]
- Mapping a new frontier with AI-integrated geographic information systems [179d]
- Experimental evolution uncovers how bacteria develop drug resistance [179d]
- Textbook view of NMDA receptor calcium signals upended by new findings [179d]
- Bees and fish exposed to crop chemicals show significant behavioral changes [179d]
- Carob leaf and pomegranate peel extracts may help reduce incidence of 'soapy olive' disease [179d]
- New deep learning model enhances roadside air pollutant forecasting accuracy [179d]
- Three newly discovered toads give birth to live young [179d]
- 'Hidden' binding pocket in nuclear receptors offers alternative drug targets [179d]
- Many factors influence the fate of pharmaceutical residues in the soil [179d]
- Sounds modify visual perception: New links between hearing and vision in the rodent brain [179d]
- Quantum nonlocality may be inherent in the very nature of identical particles [179d]
- What really happened on Easter Island? Ancient sediments rewrite the 'ecocide' story [179d]
- Arrival of boll weevils in U.S. South brought long-term benefits for Black sons born afterward [179d]
- Quantum 'pinball' state of matter in electrons allows both conducting and insulating properties, physicists discover [179d]
- West Coast mammal-eating killer whales are two distinct communities that rarely mix, finds study [179d]
- Social identification with a team boosts fans' social well-being [179d]
- Breakthrough could connect quantum computers at 200X the distance [179d]
- Not-so-model behavior: Popular software tools may give faulty forecasts [179d]
- Mathematicians model the menace of mosquitoes [179d]
- Illegal shark fin trade persists despite protections [179d]
- Asian summer monsoon's unusual role in 2021 Pacific Northwest heat wave revealed [179d]
- Space dust reveals Arctic ice conditions before satellite imaging [179d]
- Physicists observe key evidence of unconventional superconductivity in magic-angle graphene [179d]
- The enzyme that doesn't act like one: NUDT5 controls DNA building block production through structure, not catalysis [179d]
- In the US, Western rivers may be allies in the fight against climate change [179d]
- Evolution and human height: Mathematician calculates physical limits to how tall we can grow [179d]
- How quantum computers can aid the search for room-temperature superconductors [179d]
- How the US cut climate-changing emissions while its economy more than doubled [179d]
- A brief history of congressional oversight, from Revolutionary War financing to Pam Bondi [179d]
- Why Bill Gates' climate memo is being celebrated by skeptics while frustrating scientists [179d]
- Creating better tools to read our DNA's hidden instructions [179d]
- Northern lights may be visible in parts of the US due to solar storms [179d]
- Competing rivals can become powerful partners in global markets [179d]
- Unraveling water's effect on chitin nanocrystals [179d]
- Spain orders poultry indoors as bird flu spreads [179d]
- Deer slow can down forest diversity—even in sunny forest gaps [179d]
- World must face 'moral failure' of missing 1.5C: UN chief to COP30 [179d]
- UN says 2025 to be among top three warmest years on record [179d]
- Arizona's Willcox basin is sinking fast due to groundwater extraction [179d]
- Brewery waste can be repurposed to make nanoparticles that can fight bacteria [179d]
- Cold case solved: Team confirms identity of medieval duke from Árpád and Rurik dynasties [179d]
- Access to water has a long racial history in Durban: I followed the story in the city's archives [179d]
- Climate change will bring a surge in High Arctic groundwater discharge that will result in contaminant spread [179d]
- Older adults share more political misinformation. Here's why. [179d]
- Motor protein 'hook' reveals how neurons deliver cargo with precision [179d]
- Lessons from Ireland inform US debates on school choice [179d]
- New polariton technology could advance thin infrared detectors in various industries [179d]
- Compact laser system shows 80% efficiency for ultrashort light pulses is possible [179d]
- Wildfire risk making timberland less valuable, long harvest rotations less feasible [179d]
- Researchers unite to frame deportations as a national health crisis [179d]
- Simply turning up the heat could transform chemical manufacturing [179d]
- Entanglement swapping using sum-frequency generation between single photons demonstrated for first time [179d]
- Temperature triggers distinct RhRu₃Oₓ reaction mechanisms, offering clues for better water-splitting catalysts [179d]
- Three nonlinear optical materials achieve sub-200-nm cutoff edges for advanced photonics [179d]
- Digital map increases Roman Empire road network by 100,000 kilometers [179d]
- Growing transgenic plants in weeks instead of months by hijacking a plant's natural regeneration abilities [179d]
- Can birds imitate R2-D2? Yes, and some are surprisingly good at it [179d]
- Boys are still in the grip of crippling masculine stereotypes: 6 findings from a new survey [179d]
- Porn not 'inherently harmful,' says first inquiry of its kind in Australia [179d]
- How the plastics industry shifted responsibility for recycling onto you, the consumer [179d]
- What if the path to ending fossil fuels looked like the fight to end slavery? [179d]
- Why even pro-climate action organizations may pull in different directions [179d]
- AI can help the government spend billions better. But humans have to be in charge [179d]
- How to cook the perfect pasta—we used particle accelerators and reactors to discover the key [179d]
- Pupils from affluent households are more than 40% more likely to gain a place at a top secondary school, study shows [179d]
- NASA's ESCAPADE mission to Mars—twin satellites dubbed Blue and Gold will launch in early November [179d]
- Scientists map DNA folding at single base-pair resolution in living cells [179d]
- A long, bumpy caterpillar-like wormhole may connect two black holes [179d]
- Typhoon Kalmaegi hits Vietnam after killing 140 in Philippines [179d]
- Bright blue aurora formation: Hyperspectral camera captures first precise altitude distribution [179d]
- AI-designed antibodies created from scratch [179d]
- Finding the balance for food security in conflict zones [179d]
- Zuckerberg, Chan shift bulk of philanthropy to science, focusing on AI and biology to curb disease [179d]
- Social gender norms deepen elderly care burdens for Thai women [179d]
- China, world's top carbon pollutor, likely to overdeliver on climate goals. Will that be enough? [179d]
- Rapa Nui's catastrophic deforestation: Invasive rats, not just humans, may be to blame [179d]
- No fences: Research shows high-tech collars keep cattle from straying [179d]
- Nearby pulsar offers insights into emission physics near the death line [179d]
- How manure can be transformed into animal feed [179d]
- From the depths to discovery: Tiny limpet reveals big secrets of the deep sea [179d]
- Electrified atomic vapor system enables new nanomaterial mixtures [179d]
- Scanning nanoprobe microscope reveals the hidden flexibility of cancer cells [179d]
- The JWST puts Io's volcanic nature in the spotlight [179d]
- SXDF-NB1006-2 is a young starburst galaxy experiencing ionized gas outflows, observations find [179d]
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