The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Reconnecting the last wild landscapes of the Javan leopard [6d]
- Q&A: How approval processes drive up housing costs in major cities [6d]
- The next-generation Very Large Array prototype gathers its first light [6d]
- Great apes: What we know about their cognition, cooperation and curiosity after two decades of research [6d]
- Asteroid dirt is 'fluffier' than we thought [6d]
- Species of Brazilian moths described in honor of Orixás, foundational deities of Afro-Brazilian religions [6d]
- Hybrid work is not always the golden compromise employees expect—even as more companies implement it [6d]
- Monitoring reveals elevated antidepressant levels in some waterways [6d]
- Dynamic nanogates let longer molecules pass faster through flexible pores [6d]
- Q&A: Why scientists are studying a microbe they found in a sink [6d]
- Nitric oxide overload jams plant immune signals, researchers find [6d]
- A new capability to detect chemical weapons involves two existing methods [6d]
- Tanzania's iconic heritage sites face damage from state-backed tourism [6d]
- How methane policy will make or break the climate crisis [6d]
- How Jupiter may have redirected life's ingredients toward Earth 4.5 billion years ago [6d]
- Plants boost carbon uptake through water efficiency, not heat adaptation, global analysis reveals [6d]
- AI offers promise for agriculture, but smallholder farmers risk being left behind [6d]
- Interstellar object 3I/ATLAS reveals no technosignatures in seven-hour radio scan [6d]
- A very strong El Niño is approaching. Here's what we can expect [6d]
- Research could pave the way for more resilient winter cereals in warmer climates [6d]
- Japan's new seafloor record could sharpen megathrust earthquake warnings in Nankai Trough [6d]
- Why 'psychopath' is a dangerous label when it comes to criminal justice [6d]
- Thundering footsteps warn caterpillars of lethal ladybeetle attacks [6d]
- Why doesn't coffee taste like caffeine? [6d]
- PFAS in ski wax: Despite bans, these forever chemicals linger in wax rooms—so does their health risk [6d]
- Programmable chemistry unlocks drugs only in target cells, aiming to cut side effects [6d]
- Temperature gaps help sneeze clouds stay denser and travel farther, experiments show [6d]
- Water-wave tweezers steer tiny 'surfers' without touching them [6d]
- Antimicrobial peptide naturally found in cows breaks Klebsiella biofilms and kills drug-resistant bacteria [6d]
- New route to tailor-made diamond nanoparticles holds promise for quantum applications [6d]
- A novel strategy to predict the phase diagram of nickel-cobalt alloys [6d]
- We can predict space weather—what if we could also stop it? [6d]
- Integrating citizen science with experimental data uncovers how switchgrass adapts flowering by region [6d]
- Brightness 'gap' in ancient star cluster reveals missing red dwarfs [6d]
- Sunrise III data release opens rare high-altitude solar views that could sharpen space weather forecasts [6d]
- Dogs respond to human tone without words, hinting at communication older than language [6d]
- Nanomagnets control diamond qubits, pointing to more scalable quantum hardware [6d]
- Attribution constraints reveal stronger future intensification of the upper‑level Hadley circulation [6d]
- Arctic river deltas face rising climate pressure while holding vast frozen carbon reserves [6d]
- Open-source software unlocks rapid DNA structure generation and analysis in one workflow [6d]
- Social networks outsmart cognitive biases: How herding in networks makes populations more rational [6d]
- Giant fan-shaped structure found under East Antarctica [6d]
- Real-time fish interaction enlarges young guppy brains, while screen time falls short [6d]
- Cleaner recycling method unlocks reusable plastics from mixed packaging [6d]
- Aluminum oxide's irregular atomic surface explains its low reactivity [6d]
- Warming unlocks ancient carbon in Tibetan permafrost, triggering climate tipping point [6d]
- Out-of-plane ice bridges reveal new way to suppress frost spreading [6d]
- 8 out of 10 northern fulmar seabirds have plastic in their stomachs, finds study [6d]
- 'Don't scare the cat!' Engineers find smarter way to measure quantum systems [6d]
- Greenland shark genome reveals clues to 400-year lifespan [6d]
- Political cues steer dating decisions, with cross-party matches often rejected by young Americans [6d]
- Armed with AI, study identifies prey from predator crunching sounds [6d]
- Even 'safe' air pollution levels can carry health risks [6d]
- SWOT satellite gets clearer ocean data after fix for hidden underwater wave interference [6d]
- Overarming America: Game theory explores how fear and social pressure drive gun purchases [6d]
- Abortion restrictions associated with lower female medical school applicant numbers [6d]
- Teen well-being improving after years of post-pandemic concern, major study finds [6d]
- Half-ton early bovines roamed 4-million-year-old grasslands in Europe [6d]
- Egypt fossils show modern ocean fish rose rapidly after dinosaur extinction [6d]
- Traditional, patriarchal Japanese terms for husband and wife may now be perceived as neutral [6d]
- Printed manga may give the brain a storytelling advantage [6d]
- Octopuses learn mirror-guided navigation to locate prey [6d]
- Most detailed map of the universe's hidden magnetic fields released [6d]
- 2026 World Cup: Spain in the lead, but title race remains wide open [6d]
- Portable UV spectrometer can detect air pollutants across 2.5 km with high precision [6d]
- Self-regulation can curb students' overconfidence in AI [6d]
- Chip-scale 'acoustic atom' controls sound waves to imitate atomic energy levels and advance computing [6d]
- Why 'charming' matters: Study reveals the power of puffery on consumer behavior [6d]
- Spider webs capture hidden fungal diversity in Thai rice fields [6d]
- Studying impact flashes to detect missile and meteorite composition [6d]
- HETDEX opens massive Cosmic Noon dataset to scientists, novices and AI [6d]
- UN calculates nation-sized environmental footprints for AI and data centers [6d]
- 'BBQ sauce' phase may link little red dots to quasars [6d]
- Q&A: Experts discuss rise of profanity from politicians [6d]
- Mars mission ends: NASA declares Maven dead after six months of silence [6d]
- Deep-Earth seismic anomalies may be explained by newly discovered manganese compound [6d]
- Why do male chimpanzees throw rocks at the same trees for more than a decade? [6d]
- Climate change may shift hailstorms toward Earth's poles—new study [6d]
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