The Brutalist Report - science
- Research suggests political differences may prompt neighbors to move [477d]
- CERN researchers measure speed of sound in the quark–gluon plasma more precisely than ever before [477d]
- NASA's final tally shows spacecraft returned double the amount of asteroid rubble [477d]
- Compulsory voting can reduce political polarization in the US, study finds [477d]
- Harnessing light with hemispherical shells for improved photovoltaics [477d]
- Unique manufacturing method produces more appealing vegan meat [477d]
- Can astronomers use radar to spot a cataclysmic asteroid? [477d]
- Games in the classroom and the boardroom: How 'serious games' are helping us learn [477d]
- Music education, support networks, and continuity are key factors regulating adolescents' arts participation, says study [477d]
- First operation of a two-color mode in an infrared free-electron laser [477d]
- Belgian researchers provide a strong boost to sustainable agriculture [477d]
- Climate change has brought forward the flowering period in Doñana National Park by 22 days, finds study [477d]
- Researchers develop new integration technique for efficient coupling of III-V and silicon [477d]
- Image: Sentinel-1 captures Tobago oil spill [477d]
- Wars in Ukraine and Gaza could soon affect our approach to the North Pole, researcher warns [477d]
- NASA experiment sheds light on highly charged moon dust [477d]
- NASA Artemis science, first intuitive machines flight head to moon [477d]
- New species of pirate spiders discovered on South Atlantic island [477d]
- Bridging the opportunity gap in social sector AI [477d]
- Video: What does a warming Arctic mean for the future? [477d]
- A strategy for integrating online digital data for monitoring biodiversity [477d]
- Q&A: Machine-learning model tracks trends in public finance research [477d]
- Bacteria in the Arctic seabed are active all year round, researchers find [477d]
- Martians wanted: Apply here now for NASA's simulated yearlong Mars mission [477d]
- 5,000 atoms are all you need: The smallest solid-state ferroelectricity [477d]
- Another clue into the true nature of fast radio bursts [477d]
- Even if we can't see the first stars, we could detect their impact on the first galaxies [477d]
- Ground-based lasers could accelerate spacecraft to other stars [477d]
- Extraction of raw materials could rise 60% by 2060—and making mining 'greener' won't stop the damage [477d]
- Meet Bilophila wadsworthia—a gut microbe that's both friend and foe [477d]
- Viewpoint: Migratory animals face mass extinction—but as a conservationist, I'm optimistic [477d]
- Developers in England will be forced to create habitats for wildlife—here's how it works [477d]
- Why prices are so high—8 ways retail pricing algorithms gouge consumers [477d]
- Forest Service warns of budget cuts ahead of a risky wildfire season—what does that mean for safety? [477d]
- A Bronx school district offers lessons in boosting student mental health [477d]
- NASA announces OSIRIS-REx bulk sample mass: 121.6 grams [477d]
- Deep data—and big money—are driving a new era in political advertising [477d]
- Data science shown to expedite return of ancestral Indigenous remains [477d]
- Stabilizing mRNA vaccines for delivery to cells [477d]
- Drowning in 'digital debt'? AI assistants can help—but we must use them carefully [477d]
- Measuring neutrons to reduce nuclear waste: New technique paves the way for improved nuclear waste treatment facilities [477d]
- Entrepreneurship on the periphery: Between precarious work and the search for a meaningful life [477d]
- 'Live fast, die young': Agriculture is transforming entire ecosystems [477d]
- Increased access to water may be a threat to nomadic livestock farmers in the long term [477d]
- AI will let us read 'lost' ancient works in the library at Herculaneum for the first time [477d]
- Study finds quantum state of a rotating superfluid can discharge in three ways [477d]
- New synthesis method uses light reaction on a water surface [477d]
- New toolbox allows engineering of genomes without CRISPR [477d]
- Newly discovered bacterial defense system functions as self-destruct button [477d]
- Q&A: Pork, pathogens and progress—a close look at PRRSV research [477d]
- Acoustic invention enhances ultrasound to access enclosed metal spaces [477d]
- Researchers expand ways to improve the selectivity of catalytic reactions [477d]
- How bananas can be used to fight the plastic waste crisis [477d]
- Advanced artificial photosynthesis catalyst uses CO₂ more efficiently to create biodegradable plastics [477d]
- Lab study creates artificial magnetosphere to explore spontaneous excitation of chorus emissions [477d]
- Toxoplasmosis: Researchers identify protein that evolved alongside infection machinery [477d]
- Researchers shed light on river resiliency to flooding [477d]
- Diamond quantum memory with Germanium vacancy exceeds coherence time of 20 ms [477d]
- Flea toad may be world's smallest vertebrate [477d]
- Aurora borealis dynamics suggest the polar vortex is breaking up again [477d]
- Scientists identify genetic mechanism responsible for plant leaf diversity [477d]
- Georgia cities face tall task to meet new air pollution standard [477d]
- Erratic weather fueled by climate change will worsen locust outbreaks, study finds [477d]
- Nanomaterial with potential to tackle multiple global challenges could be developed without risk to human health [477d]
- New chip opens door to AI computing at light speed [477d]
- Big firms with $7 tn exit climate investment pressure group [477d]
- 11 cold-stunned sea turtles returned to Atlantic after rehabilitation in Florida [477d]
- Paleontological analysis shows renowned fossil thought to show soft tissue preservation is in fact just paint [478d]
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