The Brutalist Report - science
- Light amplification by stimulated emission from electrically driven colloidal quantum dots finally achieved [649d]
- Pressure required to launch a rock from Mars into space much lower than thought, discovers study [649d]
- Frenchman Mountain Dolostone: 500 million-year-old Grand Canyon rock layer finally gets a name [649d]
- Luxury shoppers opting for high-end experiences over goods, suggests study [649d]
- Experiment demonstrates continuously operating optical fiber made of thin air [649d]
- We know that carbon capture from the atmosphere is possible. But how do we get there? [649d]
- New high-speed, two-photon microscope for precise biological imaging [649d]
- European company designs a space station with artificial gravity [649d]
- Australian report: Flood-threatened communities strengthened by their collective insights [649d]
- Researchers detect and classify multiple objects without images [649d]
- Enhancing thermoelectricity with guided impurity position control [649d]
- Advancing neutron diffraction for accurate structural measurement of light elements at megabar pressures [649d]
- Does everybody get 'a piece of the national cake'? How Nigerian politicians cooperate to distribute public resources [649d]
- Hunting for life's building blocks at minus 250 degrees Celsius [649d]
- Study shows more woodlands will not impact tourism [649d]
- A micropaleontology manuscript written 'on the barricades' [649d]
- Do your homework to prep for the 2023 and 2024 eclipses [649d]
- Study finds shoppers' masking compliance influenced their in-store behaviors [649d]
- Novel spider silk materials can be optimized to produce cell-specific effects [649d]
- Recycle? Recover? New framework aids best practice food waste management [649d]
- Study shows having a criminal record does not mean a person is intrinsically immoral [649d]
- Politicians are more likely to support conscription when they don't have draft-age sons [649d]
- Detailed descriptions of modern art may enhance the viewer experience [649d]
- Stone tools reflect three waves of migration of the earliest Homo sapiens into Europe [649d]
- AI is helping astronomers make new discoveries and learn about the universe faster than ever before [649d]
- Black mothers trapped in unsafe neighborhoods signal the stressful health toll of gun violence in the US [649d]
- Study finds steep 66% drop in party registration with automatic voter registration [649d]
- Stage set for a strong El Niño in late 2023, say researchers [649d]
- Studying fundamentals of water as a solvent could lead to greener cellulose-based products [649d]
- The ultra-fast space winds that shape the evolution of galaxies [649d]
- How to protect consumers from deceptive comparison pricing [649d]
- New York becomes first US state to ban gas in new buildings [649d]
- Dark Energy Camera captures the glowing remains of the first documented supernova [649d]
- Scientists find link between photosynthesis and 'fifth state of matter' [649d]
- As rising seas disrupt toxic sites, study finds communities of color are at most risk [649d]
- Defuse anger in the workplace with humor, expert says [649d]
- Evaluating climate reasoning, prior beliefs and partisanship [649d]
- Indo-Pacific corals found to be more resilient to climate change than Atlantic corals [649d]
- 47% of South Africans rely on social grants: Study reveals how they use them to generate more income [649d]
- Thirsty tomatoes emit ultrasonic sounds—and other plants may be listening [649d]
- How do Candida auris and other fungi develop drug resistance? A microbiologist explains [649d]
- Nigeria and digital banking: A revolution still waiting to happen [649d]
- Two trillion tons of greenhouse gases, 25 billion nukes of heat: Are we pushing Earth out of the Goldilocks zone? [649d]
- New catalyst transforms carbon dioxide into sustainable byproduct [649d]
- The history and future of Australia's botanic gardens [649d]
- Math teachers hold a bias against girls when the teachers think gender equality has been achieved, says study [649d]
- From enormous elephants to tiny shrews: How mammals shape and are shaped by Africa's landscapes [649d]
- A fresh look at 1,2,3-cyclohexatriene shows it could be used as a versatile reagent in organic synthesis [649d]
- 2200-year-old guano pile reveals historical adaptations by Andean condors [649d]
- Study shows cigarette butts leak deadly toxins into the environment [649d]
- New technology to isolate and study a single protein paves way to improving understanding of disease processes [649d]
- Used coffee pods can be recycled to produce filaments for 3D printing [649d]
- Astronomers witness star devouring a planet: Possible preview of the ultimate fate of Earth [649d]
- Why do champagne bubbles rise in a straight trajectory? [649d]
- Researchers capture elusive missing step in the final act of photosynthesis [649d]
- Scientists recover an ancient woman's DNA from a 20,000-year-old pendant [649d]
- New tusk-analysis techniques reveal surging testosterone in male woolly mammoths [649d]
- Bacteria can discard damage to survive antibiotic treatment, shows study [649d]
- Fossils or not? Nations split on how to meet climate goals [649d]
- 'Gluing' soft materials without glue [649d]
- Addressing the growing threat of fungal infections to global food security [649d]
- Researchers use base editing to probe blood cell biology [649d]
- Examining how cooperation benefits from peer-punishment [649d]
- Study finds J0049−2525 is the most massive pulsating white dwarf [649d]
- Great apes found to engage in reciprocal food exchange under the right circumstances [649d]
- Evidence-based paper calls for corporal punishment ban [649d]
- Astronomers find distant gas clouds with leftovers of the first stars [649d]
- Indigenous people living near oil fields in the Peruvian Amazon have high levels of metals in their urine [649d]
- Sand dunes offer clues to coastal erosion and how to prevent it [649d]
- How species distribution mediates the global relationship between forest productivity and richness [649d]
- Study identifies traits that help birds adapt to urban living, shows better planning can bolster biodiversity [649d]
- Researchers create salts for cheap and efficient CO2 capture [649d]
- How cells are influenced by their environment as tissues grow [649d]
- Study using X-Ray telescope indicates that dark energy is uniformly distributed in space and time [650d]
- Engineers develop electroconductive hydrogel for biomedical applications [650d]
- Gender gap found in research grant award amounts, re-applications [650d]
- Fighting to save Venezuela's Orinoco Crocodile [650d]
- Dead rivers, flaming lakes: India's sewage failure [650d]
- World should prepare for El Nino, new record temperatures: UN [650d]
- Research reveals an increase in the range of invasive American mink in Europe [650d]
- Researchers study the crowdsourced investigation of Jan. 6, 2021 [650d]
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