The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Cracking the pear genome: How students helped unlock a new tool for the pear industry [356d]
- Direct laser writing on halide perovskites: From mechanisms to applications [356d]
- Revealing environmental exposure to liquid crystal monomers from digital displays [356d]
- Not just a lodger: Novel host-guest assembly provides enhanced reactivity [356d]
- Chiral transmission by an open evolution trajectory in a non-Hermitian system [356d]
- Unlocking the climate secrets of North China with ancient tree rings [356d]
- Global warming may intensify the modulation of tropical cyclone genesis by summer intraseasonal oscillation [356d]
- Why do tree frogs lay their eggs on the ground? [356d]
- Do school grades influence parental support? [356d]
- In vivo production of CAR-T cells using virus-mimetic fusogenic nanovesicles [356d]
- A universal insertion of various molecules into ionic crystals under high pressure [356d]
- Photocatalytic synthesis of arylacetic acid via C=C double bond cleavage with carbon dioxide [356d]
- Ultra-flat optics for broadband thermal imaging [356d]
- Online gaming is bringing RAF families closer [356d]
- Satellite data unlocks drought impact on southwest China's carbon cycle [356d]
- New method for tracking water bodies improves security against extreme events [356d]
- China's urban jungles: How city parks are winning the battle against concrete [356d]
- Shark-bitten orcas in the Northeastern Pacific could be a new population of killer whale [356d]
- Climate: Carbon capture tech is booming, and confusing [356d]
- Arctic cooperation at a standstill because of Russia's war in Ukraine: Report [356d]
- New technique in tiny tool tuning: Making microscopic measurements more accurate [356d]
- Businesses are ready for April's total solar eclipse with celestial-themed doughnuts and beer [356d]
- Artificial intelligence brings a virtual fly to life [356d]
- Marriages in the US are back to pre-pandemic levels, CDC says [356d]
- Flying first on Ariane 6 [356d]
- The rules of invention do not reflect the realities of the inventive process. Here's how to fix it [356d]
- Compact robot takes flight to support CERISS initiative [356d]
- Media scientist studies benefits and risks of smartphone use among children and adolescents [356d]
- Are eco-friendly hotels inconvenient? [356d]
- Earth just had its warmest February on record: Report [356d]
- Manuports in the context of archaeology [356d]
- More than 16,000 chemicals can be found in plastic, and many are harmful: Report [356d]
- Why unexploded ordnances pose physical, and environmental, risks [356d]
- Study finds maize roots adapt to different tillage practices [356d]
- Universities at a crossroads with AI, says study [356d]
- A green revolution: How forests are changing and what it means for the planet [356d]
- Einasto Supercluster: The new heavyweight contender in the universe [356d]
- Animal photo editing and its impact on donations to conservation charities [356d]
- Improved life satisfaction may decrease illegal forest use in protected areas [356d]
- Protein fragments ID two new 'extremophile' microbes—and may help find alien life [356d]
- Bridging the gap: Computer scientists develop model to enhance water data from satellites [356d]
- Urgent need for science-based approach to shark conservation [356d]
- Researchers develop a new strategy to enhance blue perovskite LED performance [356d]
- Brighter, cheaper blue light could revolutionize screen technology [356d]
- Gender and racial discrimination uncovered in leadership positions at Australia's leading universities [356d]
- We teach school kids about safe sex. We also need to teach safe sexting, researchers say [356d]
- Meet the kowari: A pint-sized predator on the fast track to extinction [356d]
- Malaria, smallpox, polio: Here's how we know life in ancient Egypt was ravaged by disease [356d]
- New excitation method of stimulated Raman scattering achieves natural-linewidth-limit spectral lines [356d]
- The 'baritone' of red giants refines cosmic distance measurements [356d]
- Even inactive deep-sea 'smokers' are densely colonized by microbial communities, study shows [356d]
- Hormonally up-regulated neu-associated kinase (HUNK) unveils a new function in cellular transport regulation [356d]
- Meteorology research: Weak polar vortex makes weather more predictable [356d]
- Scientists develop new system to record 2D crystal synthesis in real time [356d]
- Advocates push to extend Lake Tahoe restoration for another decade [356d]
- Is grizzly bear reintroduction 'a death sentence' or restoring nature? Idaho comments are torn [356d]
- German greenhouse gas emissions dropped sharply last year, raising hopes of meeting 2030 target [356d]
- Printed polymer allows researchers to explore chirality and spin interactions at room temperature [356d]
- Driving photochemistry with sub-molecular precision [356d]
- New research suggests that our universe has no dark matter [356d]
- Scientists generate new targeted protein degradation system that tunes a cell's own proteins [356d]
- DNA origami-based vaccine platform enhances anti-tumor responses through nanometer-precise spacing of molecules [356d]
- Oil resources should stay underground to meet the commitments of the Paris Agreement, study finds [356d]
- Study finds lands used for grazing can worsen or help climate change [356d]
- Study shows that antibiotics targeting the same enzyme elicit varied responses [356d]
- Scientists find hundreds of unique species in Africa's newest and most threatened ecoregion [356d]
- Global climate databases work with incorrect data for the tropics, study shows [356d]
- New framework embraces uncertainty to make sense of history [356d]
- Boosted exciton mobility approaching the Mott-Ioffe-Regel limit in a 2D Ruddlesden-Popper perovskite [356d]
- GALILEO: Scientists propose a new method to search for light dark matter [356d]
- Research team identifies three bacteria species in the human gut that can break down cellulose [356d]
- New electron microscopy technique for thermal diffusion measurements [356d]
- Researchers present the world's oldest long-necked marine reptile [356d]
- An invisible water surcharge: Climate warming increases crop water demand in the San Joaquin Valley [356d]
- Snakes: The new, high-protein superfood [356d]
- Arctic nightlife: Seabird colony bursts with sound at night [356d]
- Whale of a tail: Scientists track unique humpback 'fingerprint' [356d]
- With bites rare, experts want sharks to shed scary reputation [356d]
- Thai tourist hotspot Chiang Mai tops world's most polluted cities [356d]
- SpaceX comes close to completing test flight of mega rocket but loses spacecraft near end [356d]
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