The Brutalist Report - science
- Waste management workers have gone from hero to zero in the public's eyes since the pandemic, UK research says [111d]
- With new analysis, Apollo samples brought to Earth in 1972 reveal exotic sulfur hidden in moon's mantle [111d]
- Bacteria may influence accumulation of gold nanoparticles in spruce tree needles [111d]
- Politics may follow you on the road, bumper sticker study finds [111d]
- Researchers turn coffee and plastic waste into climate solution [111d]
- Spain culls cattle to contain lumpy skin disease [111d]
- Southern right whales awe admirers in Patagonia after coming back from brink of extinction [111d]
- Research team explores inclusion at conferences [111d]
- Researchers integrate waveguide physics into metasurfaces for advanced light control [111d]
- AI streamlines search for catalysts to clear hydrogen production hurdles [111d]
- Digital twin for forests developed with help of new laser scan technology [111d]
- Student-led study finds sex education fails 2SLGBTQIA+ students [111d]
- How to solve the remote work stalemate—study offers tools for successful hybrid work [111d]
- Dog treats recalled nationwide over Salmonella risk to pets [111d]
- 3I/ATLAS's coma proves another cometary formation theory [111d]
- Plastic pollution disrupts recovery of threatened coral reefs [111d]
- Regenerative farming can boost soil carbon in Ethiopia, but climate change limits gains [111d]
- Cryo-imaging gives deeper view of thick biological materials [111d]
- Stretchable waveguides maintain stable transmission even when bent or twisted [111d]
- Map of bacterial gene interactions uncovers targets for future antibiotics [111d]
- Naturally fast-growing spruce trees have many long fibers, case study shows [111d]
- YouTube shapes young people's political education, but the site simplifies complex issues [111d]
- How to conduct post-atrocity research: Key insights from practitioners in the field [111d]
- Science costs money—research is guided by who funds it and why [111d]
- Virtual particles: How physicists' clever bookkeeping trick could underlie reality [111d]
- Quantum uncertainty captured in real time using femtosecond light pulses [111d]
- Satellite scans can estimate urban emissions [111d]
- How biological motors achieve maximum efficiency [111d]
- More than a quarter of Canadian teens have experienced sexual violence online [111d]
- Accelerating climate modeling at a lower cost [111d]
- How the Southern Ocean controlled climate and atmospheric carbon dioxide during the lukewarm interglacials [111d]
- Lake Tahoe algae experiment suggests seasonal shifts ahead [111d]
- Mysterious signs on Teotihuacan murals may reveal an early form of Uto-Aztecan language [111d]
- Sweet taste cells resist nerve damage through c-Kit protein, study finds [111d]
- Location, individual circumstances impact caregiver well-being, researchers find [111d]
- Report: Sustainability in supply chains is still firm-level priority [111d]
- Molecular motors drive new non-invasive cancer therapies [111d]
- World's first known butt-drag fossil trace was left by a rock hyrax in South Africa 126,000 years ago [111d]
- Third dimension of data storage: Physicists demonstrate first hybrid skyrmion tubes for higher-density quantum computing [111d]
- Key wheat genes that control plant height and grain size identified [111d]
- From engines to nanochips: Physicists redefine how heat really moves [111d]
- Q&A: The essential role of the urban tree microbiome—a key to city health [111d]
- Trust found to be more important than cost in climate policy [111d]
- Novel intracellular trafficking pathway discovered in plant cells [111d]
- Harnessing GeSn semiconductors for tomorrow's quantum world [111d]
- Bringing the digital revolution to direct exoplanet imaging with LCD technology [111d]
- We need a solar sail probe to detect space tornadoes earlier, researchers say [111d]
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