The Brutalist Report - science
- Exploring acoustic design for better, quieter prisons [483d]
- Singing in the rain: Why the bundengan sounds better wet [483d]
- Exploring the limitations of asteroid crater lakes as climate archives [483d]
- Review of education highlights network ethnography in researching global education policy [483d]
- Satellite observations reveal latitudinal variability and asymmetry in local temperature responses to land cover changes [483d]
- Examining advances in additive manufacturing of promising heterostructures and their biomedical applications [483d]
- A theoretical framework for integrating diversity and organizational embeddedness [483d]
- Digital marketplace: The role of probabilistic selling strategies in the travel industry [483d]
- Scientists develop a new high-efficiency mercury removal photocatalyst [483d]
- Novel mineral piezocatalysts offer innovative approaches for soil remediation [483d]
- Scandinavia's oldest known ship burial is located in mid-Norway [483d]
- Forecasting forest health using models to predict tree canopy height [483d]
- Opinion: COP28 president is wrong—science clearly shows fossil fuels must go (and fast) [483d]
- The silver bullet that wasn't: Glyphosate's declining weed control over 25 years [483d]
- Picking up good vibrations: The surprising physics of the didgeridoo [483d]
- AI tool could increase the number of people exiting homelessness, reduce racial bias in services: Report [483d]
- Dunes and native plants to sprout next year on a California's harbor beach [483d]
- Digital goods generate more than $2.5 trillion in consumer welfare a year, research finds [483d]
- NASA engineers push limits of physics to focus light [483d]
- Incarcerated women punished at higher rates for minor infractions than men, study shows [483d]
- Recent advances in built-in electric-field-assisted photocatalytic dry reforming of methane [483d]
- Linguistics study claims that languages are louder in the tropics [483d]
- Study finds plant nurseries are exacerbating the climate-driven spread of 80% of invasive species [483d]
- Much effort, little prey: Poor foraging success drives bats away from cities [483d]
- Unlocking a climate puzzle: Study reveals hidden physics in quasi-linear temperature-radiation link [483d]
- Method for containing toxins from mine waste could protect drinking water, prevent cancer [483d]
- SPAGINS: A novel approach to predicting nuclear fragmentation in gamma-induced spallation [483d]
- A deep-learning framework for drug–drug interactions and drug–target interactions prediction [483d]
- NASA's interstellar mapping probe prepares for a 2025 launch [483d]
- The future of urban mobility in emerging economies [483d]
- Identifying the fish species present in a river based on traces of their DNA [483d]
- Bacteria's mucus maneuvers: Study reveals how snot facilitates infection [483d]
- Study: German youth show weaker performance in math, reading and science compared to 2018 [483d]
- 'Friendly' hyenas are more likely to form mobs, research shows [483d]
- From a fossil to an animal skin: Authentic objects vs replicas in museum education programs [483d]
- Chinese scientists reveal novel mechanism of angiosperm self-incompatibility [483d]
- Narratives clash in the war taking place on social media [483d]
- How 'angry feminist claims' have the power to inform and mobilize voters [483d]
- Workplace culture is preventing men from taking paternity leave [483d]
- Revolutionizing biorefineries: Advancing toward sustainable third-generation technologies in CO₂ utilization [483d]
- Europa clipper could help discover if Jupiter's moon is habitable [483d]
- Replacing bone saws with smart lasers [483d]
- Three decades of data in Bangladesh show elevated risk of infant mortality in flood-prone areas [483d]
- Implementing a basic income means overcoming myths about the 'undeserving poor' [483d]
- Will wide binaries be the end of MOND? [483d]
- The short-term rain forecast system is broken. Can AI do a better job of predicting deadly floods? [483d]
- Red sprites are best seen from space [483d]
- Will Japanese encephalitis return this summer? What about other diseases mosquitoes spread? [483d]
- Essay emphasizes need for antiblackness framework to reduce inequality in school discipline [483d]
- Study suggests existence of a universal, nonverbal communication system [483d]
- Rats are more human than you think—and they certainly like being around us [483d]
- Study links political civility to the productivity of state legislatures [483d]
- Increasing frozen food temperature by 3°C could enhance global food chain sustainability, say experts [483d]
- Why regional differences in global warming are critical [483d]
- Building boom boosts malaria-carrying, invasive mosquito in Ethiopia, evidence shows [483d]
- What does Australian-grown coffee taste like, and how does it compare? Research describes its unique 'terroir' [483d]
- Artificial intelligence plus your cell phone means better maps of earth [483d]
- Image: Hubble views a double cluster of glowing galaxies [483d]
- What happens after net zero? The impacts could play out for decades, with poorest countries still feeling the heat [483d]
- From excitement to disillusionment—new research identifies 4 emotional stages of professional careers [483d]
- Protecting power grids from space weather [483d]
- COP28: With a 'loss and damage' fund in place, protecting climate refugees is more urgent than ever [483d]
- Humans, rats and dogs pushed the takahē into Fiordland—new genetic research maps its dramatic journey [483d]
- Holiday co-parenting after separation or divorce: 6 legal and practical tips for surviving and thriving [483d]
- Even a brief experience of poverty enough to harm a children's development [483d]
- Green macroalga caulerpa has replaced seagrass in Florida's Indian River Lagoon [483d]
- New genetic research uncovers the lives of Bornean hunter-gatherers [483d]
- If you want to avoid 'giving away your first born,' make sure you read the terms and conditions before signing contracts [483d]
- A shipboard monitoring system is giving researchers much-needed measurements of Antarctic wind, waves and ice [483d]
- Mohamed Amin was a famous Kenyan photojournalist—there's much more to his work than images of tragedy [483d]
- 'Inert' ingredients in pesticides may be more toxic to bees than scientists thought [483d]
- Services across England now lag far behind East Germany, as experts call for 'universal basic infrastructure' in UK [483d]
- Astronomers determine the age of three mysterious baby stars at the heart of the Milky Way [483d]
- Physicist explains X-rays that shouldn't exist in 'cold' plasma [483d]
- Top space telescope from Europe seeks to solve riddles of the universe [483d]
- SETI: How we're searching for alien life at previously unexplored frequencies [483d]
- Was going to space a good idea? [483d]
- Securing the global food supply despite EU regulations [483d]
- Closer look at the Menga dolmen shows it was one of the greatest engineering feats of the Neolithic [483d]
- Why iconic trees are so important to us—and how replacing those that fall is often complicated [483d]
- Researcher: With a cruel summer ahead, why is Australia so unprepared? [483d]
- Report: 1.5°C pathways can still be achieved while combining fairness and global climate protection [483d]
- Getting climate funds to conflict zones—a case for working with armed groups and local communities [483d]
- Socotra archipelago: Why the Emiratis have set their sights on the Arab world's Garden of Eden [483d]
- A forestry scientist explains how to choose the most sustainable Christmas tree, no matter what it's made of [483d]
- Science is a human right—and its future is enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights [483d]
- Hate crimes are on the rise—but the narrow legal definition makes it hard to charge and convict, researcher says [483d]
- New study finds that male pathology in songbirds drives avian epidemic dynamics [483d]
- How a thumb-sized climate migrant with a giant crab claw is disrupting the Northeast's Great Marsh ecosystem [483d]
- As school students strike for climate once more, here's how the movement and its tactics have changed [483d]
- New math approach provides insight into memory formation [483d]
- Saturn's icy moon may hold the building blocks of life [483d]
- Sulfur-cycling microbes could lead to new possibilities in river-wetland-ocean remediation [483d]
- Students around the world suffered huge learning setbacks during the pandemic, study finds [483d]
- Climate change by numbers [483d]
- Nanomaterial with 'light switch' kills Gram-negative or Gram-positive bacteria [483d]
- Research shows how important protein keeps our cell membranes in balance [483d]
- 'Shocking' discovery: Electricity from electric eels may transfer genetic material to nearby animals [483d]
- Using machine learning to identify microbiota patterns important for plant protection [483d]
- From infamy to ingenuity—bacterial hijack mechanisms as advanced genetic tools [483d]
Previous Day