The Brutalist Report - science
- American Eel as an emerging consumer target [486d]
- Annual report shows fossil CO₂ emissions at record high in 2023 [486d]
- Interpreting the afterglow of a black hole's breakfast [486d]
- Research shows that wildfires have erased two decades' worth of air quality gains in western United States [486d]
- Collisions change how fast ions surf on plasma waves in fusion experiments and beyond [486d]
- National climate assessment offers new insights on community resilience and adaptation [486d]
- Researchers urge caution with 'net zero' in climate policy [486d]
- Consistency key to corporate expressions of racial solidarity, says study [486d]
- Applying pulp mill waste to soil could be a win-win for the environment and industry [486d]
- Small publishers increasingly important for translated literature, researcher says [486d]
- 3D models for placing nanoparticles in the palm of your hand [486d]
- Tracking undetectable space junk [486d]
- Q&A: How to choose the perfect Christmas tree [486d]
- Neutron capture research offers insight into astrophysics and detector design [486d]
- Study shows how ethical brands fare in a recession [486d]
- People may support climate action more strongly if they understand how their health is at risk [486d]
- New book anticipates a world of military robots, and the need to regulate them [486d]
- Three benefits of genetically improved Christmas trees [486d]
- ALICE records about 12 billion heavy-ion collisions [486d]
- Researchers design limestone putty nanogenerator to harvest energy from everyday motion to power small devices [486d]
- Could our body's 'bleach' be key to fighting a common fungal pathogen? [486d]
- Artificial intelligence tackling global water shortages [486d]
- Polarized hetero-structured luminant: The 'marriage' of 2D materials and 0D quantum dots [486d]
- Deep sea sensor reveals that corals produce reactive oxygen species [486d]
- Strange burn: New research identifies unique patterns in Utah wildfires [486d]
- Engineered surface helps boiled bubbles jump to carry more heat [486d]
- Pioneering the future: An innovative approach to plant synthetic genomics [486d]
- Soil drought weakens forest microclimatic cooling, study finds [486d]
- Advancing food safety: Natural alternatives for meat preservation [486d]
- 'Doughnut' beams help physicists see incredibly small objects [486d]
- New study examines long-term negative effects of COVID-19 pandemic on well-being of young people [486d]
- Lift-off for EIRSAT-1, Ireland's first ever satellite [486d]
- Q&A: Unveiling a new era of imaging—engineers lead breakthrough microscopy techniques [486d]
- Capital, canaries, or catalysts: Insurance industry's role in tackling climate change risks [486d]
- Study explains the rapid deterioration of one of painter Juan Miró's favorite colors [486d]
- In hotter regions, mammals shown to seek forests and avoid human habitats [486d]
- Decoupled direct payments make agriculture more productive, finds study [486d]
- Why is religious attendance linked to more anxiety in US South Asians? [486d]
- Decoding flavonoid metabolism: A closer look at plant-based diets [486d]
- Counteracting bone and muscle loss in microgravity [486d]
- Plugging the holes left by exiting colleagues can pay off, says researcher [486d]
- Using clay to combat eternal toxins: Scientists clarify basis for innovative PFAS filter made of clay [486d]
- 'Unintended consequences': friction at COP28 over green trade [486d]
- Optical data storage breakthrough increases capacity of diamonds by circumventing the diffraction limit [486d]
- Conspiracy theories negatively affect their targets, new research shows [486d]
- The case of a persistent bully, from victim to perpetrator [486d]
- Clean energy innovation or illusion? JETP climate funds [486d]
- Controversial carbon credits flood COP28, yet still no rules [486d]
- Mapping Mars: Deep learning could help identify Jezero Crater landing site [486d]
- British research ship crosses paths with world's largest iceberg as it drifts out of Antarctica [486d]
- New technique efficiently offers insight into gene regulation [486d]
- Universities urged to turn campuses paperless to cut deforestation rates [486d]
- AI model directly compares properties of potential new drugs [486d]
- A 10-billion-year, 50,000-light-year journey to a black hole [486d]
- Does Betelgeuse even rotate? Maybe not [486d]
- Outcomes associated with participation in high-quality early care and education [486d]
- Sustainability schemes deployed by business most often ineffective, research reveals [486d]
- Why all civilian lives matter equally, according to a military ethicist [486d]
- Online 'likes' for toxic social media posts prompt more—and more hateful—messages, researcher says [486d]
- COP28: 7 food and agriculture innovations needed to protect the climate and feed a rapidly growing world [486d]
- 9 out of 10 South African criminals reoffend, while in Finland it's 1 in 3—here is why [486d]
- Tackling climate change can improve public health in Africa: New report highlights how [486d]
- We're in an El Niño. So why has Australia been so wet? [486d]
- COP28: Health is finally on the agenda, but there's more to do as we face continued climate extremes [486d]
- Researchers: Australia has its first framework for AI use in schools, but it needs to proceed with caution [486d]
- Equitable sentencing can mitigate anti-Black racism in Canada's justice system [486d]
- Payment controversy over 'The Elephant Whisperers' provokes questions about documentary storytelling [486d]
- Native American mothers separated from their children experience a raw, ongoing grief that has no end, says researcher [486d]
- PFAS forever chemicals found in English drinking water. Why are they everywhere and what are the risks? [486d]
- Why are people still flying to climate conferences by private jet? [486d]
- MicroRNA holds clues to why some mammals are cancer-prone [486d]
- Unexpected discovery at the air-water interface for CO₂ reaction impacting geophysical and biological cycles [486d]
- How mountains affect El Niño-induced winter precipitation [486d]
- Ultralight ultrafast enzymes: Isotopes more powerful than previously thought [486d]
- Researchers crack the cellular code on protein folding, offering hope for many new therapeutic avenues [486d]
- Brains of newborns aren't underdeveloped compared to other primates, finds new study [486d]
- Earliest-known fossil mosquito suggests males were bloodsuckers too [486d]
- Wind of (climate) change: Himalayan glaciers react, blow cold winds down their slopes [486d]
- More than 100 'magic mushroom' genomes point the way to new cultivars [486d]
- Researchers map crocodile family tree to shed light on their evolution [486d]
- New study into solute transport and solidification mechanisms in additive manufacturing [486d]
- Study shows that artificial light is luring birds to cities and sometimes to their deaths [486d]
- On/off in trillionths of a second: Optically controlled magnetic fields [486d]
- Shedding light on health and zombie cells in aging [486d]
- Engineers tackle hard-to-map class of materials [486d]
- Nature inspires a new wave of biotechnology [486d]
- Researchers characterize translation inhibition in CRISPR-Cas antiviral defense system [486d]
- Researchers suggest use of natural fermentation may have led to early human brain size increase [486d]
- Superconducting nanowires detect single protein ions [486d]
- Aging societies more vulnerable to collapse, suggests analysis [486d]
- Breakthroughs in nanosized contrast agents and drug carriers through self-folding molecules [486d]
- New theory claims to unite Einstein's gravity with quantum mechanics [486d]
- A method to resolve quantum interference between photoionization pathways with attosecond resolution [486d]
- Generative model unveils secrets of material disorder [486d]
- Researchers show excited electrons straightening the skewed lattice of perovskite nanocrystals [486d]
- Rains pound southern India ahead of cyclone [486d]
- Hard to bear: UK's only pandas return to China [486d]
- Dark galactic region nicknamed 'The Brick' explained with Webb findings [486d]
- 'DNA curtain' technology provides real-time visualization of replication for new scientific insights [486d]
- New young and highly scattered pulsar discovered with ASKAP [486d]
Previous Day