The Brutalist Report - science
- Companies that self-regulate to curb harmful practices increase profits, finds study [129d]
- Einstein predicted how gravity should work at the largest scales. And he was right, suggests new research [129d]
- New nitrification inhibitor developed for better nitrogen use in agriculture [129d]
- New model combines data to improve typhoon forecasting [129d]
- AI and astronomy: Neural networks simulate solar observations [129d]
- New study explores negative effect of unethical practices on buyer-supplier relationships [129d]
- Protecting nature can safeguard cities from floods [129d]
- Investing in appearance makes us better contributors to society, experiments suggest [129d]
- Keeping a cell's nucleolus compact may be key to fighting aging [129d]
- Uranus's swaying moons could help spacecraft seek out hidden oceans [129d]
- Fossil amphibians found in burrows where they waited for the next rainy season [129d]
- Political opinions can influence our product choices, including chocolate, research finds [129d]
- Managing forests with smart technologies [129d]
- Research on discrimination: Access to professional networks is crucial [129d]
- New transformer-based AI model enhances precision in rice leaf disease detection [129d]
- Family matters: Living near relatives makes us heroic and harsh [129d]
- Astronomers measure cosmic electrons at the highest energies to date [129d]
- X-ray diffraction enables measurement of in-situ ablation depth in aluminum [129d]
- Study detects methane emissions in the palm oil industry in Indonesia, Malaysia and Colombia [129d]
- Spin-powered crystals dramatically improve water splitting process for clean hydrogen production [129d]
- Europa Clipper: Millions of miles down, instruments deploying [129d]
- User language distorts ChatGPT information on armed conflicts, study shows [129d]
- Axion dark matter may make spacetime ring [129d]
- New model can predict marine heat waves, extreme ocean acidity months in advance [129d]
- Beeches thrive in France's Verdun in flight from climate change [129d]
- Mathematical modeling reveals the explosive secret of the squirting cucumber [129d]
- Framework uncovers what makes large numbers of 'squishy' grains start flowing in biological processes [129d]
- Planetary scientist proposes an alternative theory for what lies beneath the surfaces of Uranus and Neptune [129d]
- New mechanism in bacterial DNA enzyme opens pathways for antibiotic development [129d]
- Biodiversity is not a luxury: Study explores the connection between wealth and ecosystem health [129d]
- Sombrero Galaxy dazzles in new Webb images and video [129d]
- Plastic pollution talks must not fail: UN environment chief [129d]
- New AI tool generates realistic satellite images of future flooding [129d]
- Mini proton accelerator ELISA is now taking data [129d]
- First right whales of season gorge on critical food off Massachusetts, giving hope for a strong year [129d]
- Historical analysis helps to re-date a King's tribute to his late English Queen [129d]
- This week's space station science: Leads on cancer drugs, satellite sustainability, glass from magnesium silicates [129d]
- COP29: Five critical issues still left hanging after an underwhelming UN climate summit in Azerbaijan [129d]
- Tick tubes help reduce the parasites on mice, but time and frequency matter [129d]
- Music by homegrown artists much less likely to feature in Australian Top 100 charts since arrival of digital streaming [129d]
- Study reveals pay gap between mothers and fathers that persists long after children grow up [129d]
- XRISM mission looks deeply into 'hidden' stellar system [129d]
- The Amborella genome: A window into the origins of plant sex and reproduction [129d]
- The whole story of human evolution, from ancient apes via Lucy to us, in one long read [129d]
- Meat has a distinct taste, texture, aroma. A biochemist explains how plant-based alternatives mimic the real thing [129d]
- Global heating is a social issue. The EU has a duty to mitigate it, and our data shows it is failing [129d]
- Record-breaking run on Frontier sets new bar for simulating the universe in exascale era [129d]
- Milestone legal case from 35 years ago holds important lessons for how courts deal with scientific evidence today [129d]
- Warm and friendly or competent and straightforward? What students want from AI chatbots in the classroom [129d]
- Scientists develop AI tool for personalized phage therapy as a targeted alternative to antibiotics [129d]
- Networked friendships may lower loneliness, research suggests [129d]
- Cop29: Indigenous communities still being sold short as the world decides how to regulate carbon markets [129d]
- Study finds suburban school districts diversified in 20 years, but urban districts saw more racial isolation [129d]
- Researchers claim Tutankhamun's burial mask may have been made for a woman—but there is reason to doubt [129d]
- UK water companies now have to release live sewage spill data—why more transparency is key to cleaner rivers [129d]
- Exploring life at its simplest: Scientists create a 'minimal cell membrane' with just two lipids [129d]
- Long-term study reveals warming climates threaten Florida scrub-jay [129d]
- Cyanobacterial circadian clock uses an AM radio-like mechanism to control cellular processes [129d]
- Herodotus' theory on Armenian origins debunked by first whole-genome study [129d]
- By first grade, children begin to perceive collective punishment as unfair [129d]
- Why Monday is the most dangerous day on a building site [129d]
- Brighter and more efficient LEDs with low polarization resist 'efficiency droop' [129d]
- Wood ants that actively combat plant diseases could be used in organic apple orchards [129d]
- Why parents need to be like Big Ted and 'talk aloud' while they use screens with their kids [129d]
- Gamified investing apps are becoming more popular—but can be risky for young investors [129d]
- Why some countries are more likely to believe nuclear war won't happen to them [129d]
- Human exclamations of pain are similar across the world, new study reveals [129d]
- Australia in a baby bust? It's not that simple—and a panic won't help [129d]
- Scalable production of high-quality organoids: Innovative platform utilizes 3D engineered nanofiber membrane [129d]
- Unusual supernova observations grant astronomers a peek into the cosmic past [129d]
- A 4.45 billion-year-old crystal from Mars reveals the planet had water from the beginning [129d]
- Will the US withdraw from the Paris Agreement? An expert's take on climate policy under Trump [129d]
- Fuji apple study finds genetic mechanisms behind high-yield trees [129d]
- Study exposes global 'blind spot' in human rights protections for dissidents [129d]
- Earth-bound asteroids 'could be tracked more precisely' with new equation [129d]
- Researchers pioneer method to detect dehydration in plants [129d]
- Civil lawsuits study reveals effectiveness of environment-focused litigation in US, but also large inequalities [129d]
- Hidden pocket in human bitter taste receptor discovered [129d]
- Alternate stream water-testing method detects emerging contaminants [129d]
- New book on the sociology of death, dying and bereavement [129d]
- Study finds ZnO nanorods achieve 98.3% Faraday efficiency in CO₂ reduction [129d]
- New design standards for stream crossings to help mitigate pollution [129d]
- Scientists produce high-power attosecond X-ray pulses at megahertz repetition rates [129d]
- Research on key host pathways has implications for Ebola and beyond [129d]
- Nonlinear Compton scattering with a multi-petawatt laser mimics astrophysical phenomena [129d]
- A new carbon-negative method to produce essential amino acids [129d]
- Study identifies path to design stable, durable polymer membranes for clean energy [129d]
- Acoustic properties of rock sites may have inspired prehistoric art [129d]
- Google DeepMind develops an AI-based decoder that identifies quantum computing errors [129d]
- Oldest US firearm unearthed in Arizona, a bronze cannon linked to Coronado expedition [129d]
- Machine learning approach discovers crystallizable organic semiconductors [129d]
- Using sunlight to recycle black plastics: Researchers leverage additive to make materials chemically useful [129d]
- Polymeric nanomaterials can detect harmful substances in extreme environments [129d]
- Social media buzz may predict election results earlier in tight races [129d]
- Is video tech effective for children with speech-related disabilities? [129d]
- EcoCommons Australia: A powerful new tool for ecological modeling [129d]
- 'Bomb cyclone' adds to growing extreme weather trend [129d]
- Bird divorce rates may be linked to fluctuations in rainfall [129d]
- Unlocking cities' potential for climate-resilient urban futures [129d]
- Is 'bypassing' a better way to battle misinformation? Researchers say new approach has advantages over the standard [129d]
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