The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Large tundra wildfire in southwest Alaska threatens villages [891d]
- Rare wetland plant found in Arizona now listed as endangered [891d]
- Research reveals the science behind this plant's blue berries [891d]
- Newly discovered Fast Radio Burst 190520 prompts more questions due to strange behavior [891d]
- The Earth moves far under our feet: A new study shows that the inner core oscillates [891d]
- Determining which wavelengths of UV light work best for COVID-19 virus disinfection [891d]
- Early investors can forecast future of startup companies [891d]
- Can we make graphite from coal? Researchers start by finding new carbon solid [891d]
- Multi-dimensional approach is needed to protect woody plants in Xishuangbanna [891d]
- The secret carbon decisions plants are making about our future [891d]
- Puzzling out the structure of a molecular giant [891d]
- Researchers create rapid test for deadly infections in livestock, starting with pigs [891d]
- Women in simulated space missions demonstrate more sustainable leadership [891d]
- Scientists reveal fluid-rock interactions at a shallow subduction zone in the Mariana forearc [891d]
- Bull shark 'baby food' under extreme threat [891d]
- La Nina climate cycle could last into 2023: UN [891d]
- Italy to kill 1,000 pigs in swine fever outbreak [891d]
- Aging dams could soon benefit from $7B federal loan program [891d]
- Climate: Africa's energy future on a knife's edge [891d]
- Ningaloo corals are ill-equipped to handle future climate change [891d]
- Hierarchically porous carbon networks embedded with single iron sites for efficient oxygen reduction [891d]
- Improving job quality reduces depression and anxiety for women [891d]
- Mechanotransduction: Using nuclear mechanics to understand health and diseases [891d]
- Virtual child sexual abuse material depicts fictitious children, but it can be used to disguise real abuse [891d]
- 'Olfactory identity': Researcher studies the history of deodorant [891d]
- Ten new coral species discovered in science collections [891d]
- Hydrodynamic model of fish orientation in a channel flow [891d]
- The spread of millet from East Asia to Central Europe [891d]
- Astronomers may have detected a 'dark' free-floating black hole [891d]
- Anti-aging clues lurk in lysosomes, the recycling centers of the cell [891d]
- Intense drought conditions could make this summer one of the hottest in Texas history [891d]
- Words matter: How to reduce gender bias with word choice [891d]
- Moving furniture in the micro-world [891d]
- Tyrosine chassis for sustainable, high-yield production of useful compounds in yeast smart cells [891d]
- One of Australia's tiniest mammals is heading for extinction, but you can help [891d]
- Targeted wastewater surveillance has a history of social and ethical concerns [891d]
- Newly discovered fast radio burst challenges what astronomers know about these powerful astronomical phenomena [891d]
- Water repellency as the first step to life on land one billion years ago [891d]
- Improving ocean general circulation models [891d]
- Novel fluorescent organohydrogel proposed to achieve dual information encryption [891d]
- Methane emissions detected over offshore platform in the Gulf of Mexico [891d]
- Lab earthquake study justifies pumping CO2 underground to avert climate warming [891d]
- New eco-friendly synthesis method uses alumina as a recyclable catalyst [891d]
- Glimpses of quantum computing phase changes show researchers the tipping point [891d]
- Unique molecular CODE: Paramagnetic encoding of molecules [891d]
- Researchers observe continuous time crystal [891d]
- Scientists observe large-scale, ordered and tunable Majorana-zero-mode lattice [891d]
- Theory suggests quantum computers should be exponentially faster on some learning tasks than classical machines [891d]
- Thin-skinned blue line: Police fight against defunding, showing their true colors [891d]
- Climate scientist explains why global warming can continue long after emissions end [891d]
- Study suggests responsible ownership is key to preventing dog attacks [891d]
- Magnetizing laser-driven inertial fusion implosions [891d]
- 65,000-year-old 'stone Swiss Army knives' show early humans had long-distance social networks [891d]
- NASA's NuSTAR mission celebrates ten years studying the X-ray universe [891d]
- People overestimate groups they find threatening. When 'sizing up' others, bias sneaks in [891d]
- Decoding a key part of the cell, atom by atom [891d]
Previous Day