The Brutalist Report - science
- Algae can clean sewage without electricity or chemicals; we put it to the test in South Africa [49d]
- Artificial insemination a win for Zimbabwe's farmers [49d]
- Majority of riders and drivers in UK 'gig economy' suffer anxiety over ratings and pay, study suggests [49d]
- One lawsuit just helped melt the fossil fuel industry's defense against being held accountable for climate change [49d]
- Working model reveals how protein anillin controls asymmetry during embryonic cell division [49d]
- Subantarctic Mode Waters traced to distinct origins in Indian and Pacific oceans [49d]
- Immunosuppressive nanoparticles slow atherosclerosis progression in animal models [49d]
- Transparent film uses graphene for stable, light-responsive applications [49d]
- Historic village water tanks provide a lifeline for amphibians [49d]
- Q&A: Exploring ultra-high-temperature ceramics for fusion energy [49d]
- Amphibians face mounting threats as heat waves and droughts intensify worldwide [49d]
- Fish with legs and sea slug thieves: Researcher reveals lessons from unusual organisms [49d]
- Experimenting with generative AI to kibbitz and futz towards more inclusive futures [49d]
- Framing social issues as 'civil rights' can sometimes backfire [49d]
- Tech can empower home care workers, not just surveil them [49d]
- New research examines PFAS contamination at Holloman Lake in New Mexico [49d]
- Imported ladybird beetles save Grenada's ice cream fruit [49d]
- Three ways the government can silence opinions it disagrees with, without using censorship [49d]
- Virtual reality is beneficial for remote instruction, says study, but there's a time limit [49d]
- Northern lights could be visible again in some US states after weekend solar storms [49d]
- New model helps to figure out which distant planets may host life [49d]
- Children need more say in their education; here's why it matters [49d]
- Passing stars could have a significant impact on the future of our solar system [49d]
- Some countries are undermining Western sanctions against Russia, study finds [49d]
- Advanced orbital constellations for solar storm defense [49d]
- Traveling to Mars and Ceres using Lunar Gateway as a springboard [49d]
- Have astronomers identified the lost star of 1408? [49d]
- We need to be looking for life in 'continuous' habitable zones, say researchers [49d]
- Supercomputer simulation reveals how merging neutron stars form black holes and powerful jets [49d]
- Iron from coal and steel industries alters North Pacific ecosystem, study reveals [49d]
- Hijacking the cell: How poxvirus modifies ribosome function to spread [49d]
- Will surging sea levels kill the Great Barrier Reef? Ancient coral fossils may hold the answer [49d]
- Cheaper food or a compromise on standards? Why the UK's trade deal with the US is sounding alarm bells [49d]
- Practical ways families can foster kids' love of literacy during the summer months [49d]
- Playing with fire: Harnessing lava to build sustainable cities [49d]
- Long-awaited mystery fungus sought by LSD's inventor discovered [49d]
- Hurricane season is here, but FEMA's policy change could leave low-income areas less protected [49d]
- Detroit's population grew in 2023, 2024—a strategy to welcome immigrants helps explain the turnaround [49d]
- Veterans' protests planned for D-Day latest in nearly 250 years of fighting for their benefits [49d]
- Decades of searching and a chance discovery: Why finding Leadbeater's possum in NSW is such big news [49d]
- Satellite data reveals forest soil moisture measurement methods are inadequate [49d]
- AI-guided chemistry enables on-demand protein activation in living mice [49d]
- Aromatic micelles enable aqueous 100 nm-sized polycavity particles for better dye incorporation [49d]
- Switchable catalytic nanointerfaces can extend hydrogen production system lifespan [49d]
- High-res seismic imaging provides detailed internal view of Campi Flegrei caldera [49d]
- How seaweed is a powerful, yet surprising, climate solution [49d]
- Linking pay to performance boosts AI use in decision-making [49d]
- Prime numbers have fascinated mathematicians for centuries—technology is revolutionizing the search [49d]
- Redefining physics to roll a ball vertically [49d]
- Human-caused dust events linked to fallow farmland [49d]
- Kids care deeply about our planet, so adults need to start listening [49d]
- If it looks like a dire wolf, is it a dire wolf? How to define a species is a scientific and philosophical question [49d]
- Creating better policy with consensus-building tools [49d]
- Why trust is a key ingredient in scientific innovation [49d]
- New guide explores how cemeteries can conserve local flora [50d]
- Uncovering the chemistry of interstellar space [50d]
- First national stocktake of Australia's food system reveals hidden costs and big opportunities [50d]
- Heat watch study reveals local hot spots and climate vulnerabilities across 10 cities [50d]
- How the birth of a child changes parents' environmental and climate concerns [50d]
- UK registers warmest spring on record: Weather service [50d]
- A global view of men's experiences with partner violence [50d]
- Spain records highest May temperature on record [50d]
- Examining why women ascend the corporate ladder more slowly than men [50d]
- Massive plume of ash, gas spews from Italy's Mount Etna [50d]
- Rewiring corporate accounting in Vietnam [50d]
- PFAS could be replaced with safe graphene oxide solution [50d]
- Archaeologists find new evidence of ancient slave labor in southern Iraq [50d]
- Air-quality monitoring underestimates toxic emissions to Salton Sea communities, study finds [50d]
- Protecting world's most vulnerable populations from mosquito-borne disease [50d]
- Advancing deep space travel with nuclear propulsion [50d]
- Researchers gather knowledge on the phenomenon of atmospheric rivers in Antarctica [50d]
- Towards topological quantum batteries: Theoretical framework addresses two long-standing challenges [50d]
- Human-AI relationships: New scale measures our attachment patterns [50d]
- Accessible water quality monitoring method combines colorimetric testing with human-guided digital analysis [50d]
- Three new orchid species endemic to Costa Rica and Panama discovered [50d]
- Geological time capsule highlights Great Barrier Reef's resilience [50d]
- New data from ALICE may contribute to solving the cosmic muon puzzle [50d]
- Nitrogen loss on sandy shores: The big impact of tiny anoxic pockets [50d]
- Close encounters of the galactic kind: Simulations suggest Milky Way and Andromeda may not collide after all [50d]
- Breaking monogamy: Mate-switching found to have no effect on chick success in Seychelles warblers [50d]
- Interactive website maps religious diversity across Mississippi [50d]
- Your ketchup will see you now: Solid-phase properties reveal when yield stress fluids start to flow [50d]
- Insect protein that blocks bacterial infection shows potential for medical implants [50d]
- Cave records show that US's deepest river gorge Hells Canyon is only 2.1 million years old [50d]
- Ultra-thin lenses halve incident wavelength to make infrared light visible [50d]
- Asteroseismology study uncovers new pulsation modes in ultra-massive white dwarf [50d]
- Shelved Europa Lander mission concept could be used to explore Enceladus instead [50d]
- What 174 years of bushfire records teach us about emergency management [50d]
- Lab-made infuzide shows promise against multidrug resistance [50d]
- Imaging tools helping to unlock new stories from ancient human history [50d]
- Enhancing molecular machine learning with quantum-chemical insight [50d]
- 5,000-year-old Egyptian blue pigment recreated using ancient methods [50d]
- Finding a better way to distinguish life from nonlife [50d]
- Machine learning reveals new hydrogenation reaction mechanism for superhydride [50d]
- New laser smaller than a penny can measure objects at ultrafast rates [50d]
- Statistical modeling reveals mating tip for prairie bird species: You should be dancing [50d]
- Tabletop particle blaster: How tiny nozzles and lasers could replace giant accelerators [50d]
- Information entropy untangles vortices and flows in turbulent plasmas [50d]
- Sugar-based sensors offer rapid, low-cost detection of snake venom [50d]
- Using a novel X-ray technique, researchers find more durable form of copper capable of splitting water [50d]
Previous Day