The Brutalist Report - science
- Newly discovered magnetic interactions could lead to novel ways to manipulate electron flow [981d]
- Outer space is not the 'Wild West': There are clear rules for peace and war [981d]
- Mosquito species from Asia poses growing risk to Africa's anti-malaria efforts [981d]
- Assessing the effect of hydraulic fracturing on microearthquakes [981d]
- Next generation patient avatars: Expanding the possibilities with micro-organospheres [981d]
- How microchip imaging cytometry makes laboratory testing more economical, easy-to-use, and accessible [981d]
- Active odd-mode-metachannel provides a new avenue to future single-conductor systems [981d]
- Wildfire experts provide guidance for new research directions [981d]
- Common ingredient in household products could be contributing to antibiotic resistance [981d]
- Study reveals novel mechanism behind epilepsy and drug modulation [981d]
- How do we know that time exists? [981d]
- New report sheds light on cross-border displacement [981d]
- Complex patterns: Building a bridge from the large to the small [981d]
- Open-source software enables researchers to visualize nanoscale structures in real time [981d]
- Looking inside a neutron star: New model will improve insights gleaned from gravitational waves [981d]
- Soil microbes-mediated enzymes promoted the ecological recovery of mine on Loess Plateau [981d]
- Study reveals ligand recognition mechanism of orphan receptor GPR119 [981d]
- New research could shed light on of how carbon dioxide release from Southern Ocean might affect climate change [981d]
- Scientists have explained the diversity of hydrocarbon molecules by their 'magicity' [981d]
- Rethinking how youth learn about climate change [981d]
- Discovery of a long-nosed 'shrew mouse' on a mountain in the Philippines will help to protect giant eagles [981d]
- How Atlantic air alters India's food and water supply [981d]
- New study links the decline of alpine bees to climate change [981d]
- Swarms of microrobots could be solution to unblocking medical devices in body [981d]
- The simultaneous study of both workload distribution and division of labor [981d]
- Researcher studies the effects of online 'sharenting' and the risks facing kids [981d]
- World could save 700 million metric tons of CO2 if people cycled more, study shows [981d]
- Warming oceans may force New Zealand's sperm and blue whales to shift to cooler southern waters [981d]
- COVID-19 disrupted the agriculture sector in India, but not agricultural practices [981d]
- 'Forever chemicals' destroyed by simple new method [981d]
- Bioengineering better photosynthesis increases yields in food crops [981d]
- Drought blamed for dozens of cow poisoning deaths in Italy [981d]
- The complex origins of Apiaceae and the current state of research [981d]
- How does the autophagic pathway regulate low-nitrogen tolerance in tomato? [981d]
- Compact QKD system paves the way to cost-effective satellite-based quantum networks [981d]
- The effect of Martian ionospheric dispersion on SAR imaging [981d]
- Study reveals changeable tendency of soil organic carbon and total nitrogen in dryland [981d]
- Grains of dust from asteroid Ryugu older than our solar system [981d]
- Noise affects life on the seafloor [981d]
- Scientific team reveals the correct evolutionary relationships among possums [981d]
- Why banning hikes to the world's tallest tree will never work [981d]
- De-extinction company plans to bring back the Tasmanian tiger [981d]
- New study cautions against over-interpreting influence of climate on cultural change and catastrophe [981d]
- CRISPR-based technology targets global crop pest [981d]
- High-quality superconducting qubits fabricated with CMOS-compatible technologies [981d]
- Developing the building blocks of the future for photovoltaics [981d]
- Politicians are getting older, but do voters care? Sort of [981d]
- By design: From waste to next-gen carbon fiber [981d]
- Study identifies gut bacteria that regulate cholesterol [981d]
- Study first to explore 'walking' sharks on the move in early life stages [981d]
- Burning membranes for molecular sieving [981d]
- What could we do to cool the Arctic, specifically? [981d]
- Australia may be heading for emissions trading between big polluters [981d]
- Research shows middle-aged men led the violence in 1994 genocide in Rwanda [981d]
- La Vuelta air not always healthy [981d]
- Immune system: First image of antigen-bound T-cell receptor at atomic resolution [981d]
- COVID–19 has encouraged sustainable behaviors in Australia [981d]
- Mathematical methods for analyzing single-cell transcriptomic data [981d]
- Exploring quantum electron highways with laser light [981d]
- To hit 82% renewables in eight years, we need skilled workers. And labor markets are already overstretched [981d]
- Scientists unravel 'Hall effect' mystery in search for next generation memory storage devices [981d]
- Mosquitoes have neuronal fail-safes to make sure they can always smell humans [981d]
- How adaptive changes in cellular fluids enable marine life to cope with abiotic stressors [981d]
- Study explores the co-occurrence of intimate partner violence and child maltreatment [981d]
- Team describes versatile in situ method to prepare plasmonic gold nanoparticle arrays [981d]
- April the museum dinosaur is still revealing new discoveries [981d]
- Study: A controversial SEC rule did little to rein in excessive CEO pay [981d]
- What the declining caribou populations, and total hunting ban, mean for Inuit communities in Labrador [981d]
- As oceans warm, snapping shrimp sound a warning [981d]
- Team investigates collective actuation of an elastic network of 'mini-robots' [981d]
- Researchers untangle the physics of high-temperature superconductors [981d]
- Greenland's Indigenous population favors extracting and exporting sand from melting ice sheet [981d]
- Climate change threatens food supply chains with impacts on diet quality, income [981d]
- Federal study: New climate law to slice carbon pollution 40% [981d]
- Cyprus row over threat to dig up protected turtle nests [981d]
- Five dead after storms lash France's Corsica: police [981d]
- A precise measurement of the neutral weak form factor of Ca-48 [981d]
- Key mechanisms of airway relaxation in asthma revealed in new study [981d]
- Turning to the laws of physics to study how cells move [981d]
- Europe's Rhine River runs dry [981d]
- Plant-nibbling insects may make it cloudier and cooler [981d]
- Viruses thrive in aquatic plants in Florida's springs [981d]
- Text messages and emojis: Do they enrich our language or denigrate it? [981d]
- Low-income tenants face significant discrimination on Craigslist [981d]
- Prickly and safe: Boron nitride vs. antibiotics [981d]
- Biochar may help fight against harmful algal blooms [981d]
- Researchers track Twitter to learn what people value in New York City parks [981d]
- Team finds that biological nanofibrils can efficiently extract valuable metal elements from water [981d]
- New support for 'intrinsic' charm quarks [981d]
- Previously unknown protein turns plants into dwarfs [981d]
- New photocatalyst boosts water splitting efficiency for clean hydrogen production [981d]
- 'Molecular movies' shed light on enzyme involved in greenhouse gas production [981d]
- New model describes puffs, slugs and the role of randomness in transitional turbulence [981d]
- More than one asteroid could have spelled doom for the dinosaurs [981d]
- Voyager, NASA's longest-lived mission, logs 45 years in space [981d]
- A fluid interaction inspires a breakthrough in fluid dynamics [981d]
- Arctic mercury levels drop during the depths of the winter [981d]
- Team reveals surprising details of crucial energy-producing enzyme [981d]
- New technology identifies molecular properties of cells and maps their location within tissues [981d]
- See the largest image the James Webb Space Telescope has taken to date [981d]
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