The Brutalist Report - science
- Study: For small sellers, sometimes it pays to sell to Amazon—and sometimes not [280d]
- Kenyan crop contamination outbreak inspires grad student to improve rice storage [280d]
- How a 'social good' firm is defined can impact its value creation and value capital [280d]
- Observatory gears up to detect thousands of elusive brown dwarfs, unlocking Milky Way mysteries [280d]
- With the rise of global mobility, researchers say the topic of international employees' adjustment needs attention [280d]
- Study shows naming farm animals reduces preschoolers' desire to eat them [280d]
- Metabolomic insights into soybean defense strategies against diverse pathogens [280d]
- Q&A: 'We lost instruments chewed or crunched by bears and sea otters'—how a researcher listens for elusive belugas [280d]
- 70% of households with children regularly waste food, finds Spanish study [280d]
- Examining the benefits of worksite weight-based discrimination training [280d]
- Solar energy-driven H₂O₂ photosynthesis from water and oxygen using Ba-implanted ordered carbon nitride [280d]
- Silicon photonics light the way toward large-scale applications in quantum information [280d]
- New study highlights the alarming rise of telephone fraud targeting older adults in the UK [280d]
- Earth system scientists discover missing piece in climate models [280d]
- Study shows how narcissistic CEOs influence boards of directors to take more risk [280d]
- The CubeCat-4, a new nanosatellite, is already orbiting the Earth [280d]
- Heavy rains kill at least 35 in eastern Afghanistan: Official [280d]
- Rethinking the Blue Economy: Network assesses impact on coastal communities [280d]
- Study finds language affects how quickly we perceive shades of color [280d]
- Study: Consumption-tracking technology mixed bag for consumers [280d]
- Researchers discover novel deepwater renewal process in Lake Geneva [280d]
- A hopping robot could explore Europa using locally harvested water [280d]
- Research team uses satellite data and machine learning to predict typhoon intensity [280d]
- Researchers directly simulate the fusion of oxygen and carbon nuclei [280d]
- A walking balloon could one day explore Titan—or Earth's sea floor [280d]
- New tool can predict bitterness in foods without prior knowledge of their chemical structures [280d]
- Nano-confinement may be key to improving hydrogen production [280d]
- Superlubricity study shows a frictionless state can be achieved at macroscale [280d]
- How climate change is altering the Earth's rotation [280d]
- Surprising ring sheds light on galaxy formation [280d]
- New concept explains how tiny particles navigate water layers, with implications for marine conservation [280d]
- New study models NZ habitats most vulnerable to gold clam invasion [280d]
- Q&A: What past environmental success can teach us about solving the climate crisis [280d]
- Webb unveils stunning ejecta and CO structures in Cassiopeia A's young supernova [280d]
- Land protection initiatives reduced Amazon deforestation by up to 83%, new analysis finds [280d]
- Can rattlesnakes really climb trees in California? Swim? Here's what experts say [280d]
- Lab develops smallest free-floating bubbles for medical imaging [280d]
- Some artificial sweeteners are forever chemicals that could be harming aquatic life [280d]
- How old are South African fossils like the Taung Child? Study offers an answer [280d]
- Webb investigates eternal sunrises, sunsets on distant world [280d]
- 'The Imaginary' reveals the many positive skills that playing with imaginary friends can develop [280d]
- Weather satellite passes bake and shake tests with flying colors [280d]
- Juice's lunar-Earth flyby: All you need to know [280d]
- Wildfire smoke has a silver lining: It can protect vulnerable tree seedlings [280d]
- Using RNA technology to develop a chemical-free way for controlling flystrike in sheep [280d]
- Solar flares and solar magnetic reconnection get new spotlight in two blazing studies [280d]
- Could resources on Mars support human explorers? [280d]
- Watching sports can be good for you—thanks to its social bonding effects [280d]
- Researchers ask English footballers about the traumatic impact of racial abuse—their answers are sobering [280d]
- Meteorites from Mars help scientists understand the red planet's interior [280d]
- Did plague really decimate Neolithic farmers 5,200 years ago, as a new study suggests? [280d]
- Idiotfruit and tree kangaroos: Why the ancient rainforests of Queensland's Wet Tropics are so distinctive [280d]
- Cosmic wrestling match: New model reveals what the color of a galaxy tells about its distance [280d]
- Zooplankton study challenges traditional views of evolution [280d]
- Observing how light makes a metal—new details about the insulator-to-metal transition in a quantum material [280d]
- Researchers develop library for RNA-based therapeutic approaches with polymer nanoparticles [280d]
- Interdisciplinary approach provides new insights into molecular mechanisms of cholera infection [280d]
- Existence of lunar lava tube cave demonstrated [280d]
- Ladybugs: Understanding the beneficial predators among us [280d]
- Loss of oxygen in bodies of water identified as new tipping point [280d]
- Scorching storms on distant worlds revealed in new detail [280d]
- Unlocking secrets of stomatal regulation: Phosphoactivation of SLAC1 in plant guard cells [280d]
- DNA tests confirm shark that bit California swimmer was juvenile white shark [280d]
- Producing hydrogen and fertilizer at the same time [280d]
- Atomically thin transducers could one day enable quantum computing at room temperature [280d]
- Climate model suggests extreme El Niño tipping point could be reached if global warming continues [280d]
- New method for simultaneous high-resolution measurement of chiral molecules [280d]
- Minneapolis is on the leading edge of biochar, a carbon sequestering material full of promise and still under research [280d]
- New dataset reveals accelerated global soil phosphorus release at higher temperatures [280d]
- Physicists observe excited states in lanthanum-120 [280d]
- As alpine glaciers melt, the corpses of long-lost climbers are being discovered in the ice [280d]
- Climate change threatens overall firefly populations, study shows, but Midwest could see increase [280d]
- Supermassive black holes have masses of more than a million suns—but their growth has slowed as the universe has aged [280d]
[ai]
- Caught in the actinium: New research could help design better cancer treatments [280d]
- Amid a sweltering summer, a new study finds street trees thrive in NYC [280d]
- How astronomers are using pulsars to observe evidence of dark matter [280d]
[ai]
- New low-mass galaxy discovered [280d]
- Atomically controlled MXenes enable cost-effective green hydrogen production [280d]
- Wildlife tracking technology that adheres to fur delivers promising results from trials on wild polar bears [280d]
- Study unveils complexity of zoonotic transmission chains [280d]
- Greece fears water shortages after warmest winter ever [280d]
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