The Brutalist Report - science
- No new articles in the last 24 hours.
- Female earwigs may also use their forceps as weapons in battles for mates [97d]
- Biotech uses fermentation to produce milk proteins without cows [97d]
- A new source of natural antibiotics hidden within our own proteins [97d]
- New tool defines more precisely which areas to prioritize in environmental conservation plans [97d]
- Harvesting the data in the stars [97d]
- Irish family law system causes 'secondary victimization,' reveals research [97d]
- Climate change and interactions between species are changing the distribution of brown bears in Europe [97d]
- A deep look at Cosmic Noon: Prodigious star formation by special galaxies reveals Milky Way's origin story [97d]
- Transparent coating can prevent growth of algae on underwater solar cells [97d]
- Computational tool helps to identify long non-coding RNAs in plants [97d]
- Galaxy clusters are on course to crash again, according to Chandra X-ray Observatory [97d]
- Bee truck crashes pose steep economic losses for beekeepers, says expert [97d]
- Engineered nanostructures boost CAR T-cell potency and longevity for cancer therapy [97d]
- Demand-side policies crucial for net-zero heating, say researchers [97d]
- How violent is Britain? New study examines conflicting trends in official violent crime statistics [97d]
- Graphene foam supports lab-grown cartilage for future osteoarthritis treatments [97d]
- 'A love affair with the sea': The NZ scientist who overcame hurdles to dedicate her life to studying the ocean [97d]
- AI-based method uses geostationary satellite data for hourly monitoring of carbon absorption [97d]
- Reusable Chinese rocket soft-lands in the ocean in a new test [97d]
- What life on Europa needs [97d]
- What is Fusarium graminearum, the fungus US authorities say was smuggled in from China? [97d]
- Biggest boom since Big Bang: Astronomers uncover most energetic explosions in universe [97d]
- Using plain English in terms-of-use contracts could garner more consumer trust for digital service companies [97d]
- Universal law of quantum vortex dynamics discovered in superfluid helium [97d]
- Ancient DNA analysis reveals regional migration patterns and local interactions in coastal Papua New Guinea [97d]
- The Great Lakes are in an extreme new era, with implications for the region's weather, economy and ecology [97d]
- Fluorescent light reveals invisible smoke at high altitudes [97d]
- Symmetry breaking in meniscus splitting: Boundary conditions reveal surprising behavior [97d]
- Heat waves greatly influence parasite burden and disease spread, research suggests [97d]
- First genetic 'toggle switch' for plants paves the way for smarter farming [97d]
- Chemists discover simple way to build bigger molecules, one carbon at a time [97d]
- Clay-based nanomaterials offer solution to capture carbon dioxide and combat climate change [97d]
- Unlocking the timecode of the Dead Sea Scrolls [97d]
- How male mosquitoes target females—and avoid traps [97d]
- Brazil confirms bird flu case at zoo [97d]
- Air quality worsens in eastern US as Canadian wildfire smoke hangs over Midwest [97d]
- How extreme heat affects America's most vulnerable [97d]
- Productivity response to salary transparency suggests workers care more about wage fairness than wage equality [97d]
- Young people who witness domestic violence are more likely to be victims of it. Here's how we can help them [97d]
- Extreme weather's true damage cost is often a mystery. That's a problem for understanding storm risk [97d]
- Museum specimens offer new lens on pollution history [97d]
- 'String breaking' observed in 2D quantum simulator [97d]
- From sovereignty to sustainability: A brief history of ocean governance [97d]
- The heaviest proton emitter: New type of atomic nucleus discovered [97d]
- Research challenges conventional theories of how cells detect electrical fields [97d]
- Data-driven method reveals how (un)predictable complex systems can be [97d]
- Climate is an everyday story, but media coverage still spikes around special environment days, UN summits [97d]
- What if the Big Bang wasn't the beginning? Research suggests it may have taken place inside a black hole [97d]
- Wild cockatoos in Western Sydney learn how to drink from water fountains [97d]
- Chemists develop new method to synthesize chiral bridged polycyclic compounds for drug discovery [97d]
- Africa has the highest rate of forest loss in the world—what the G20 can do about it [97d]
- Chemical reaction linking sugar metabolism and cellular protection discovered [97d]
- AI uncovers hidden airport hotspots that support global wildlife trafficking [97d]
- Wetland habitat conservation can help waterbird communities to adjust to climate warming [97d]
- Climate justice for Africa: Three legal routes for countries that suffer the most harm [97d]
- Your WhatsApp messages could get you sacked [97d]
- With a government review underway, we have to ask why children bully other kids [97d]
- How physicists used antimatter, supercomputers and giant magnets to solve a 20-year-old mystery [97d]
- A 1960s idea inspires researchers to study hitherto inaccessible quantum states [97d]
- Medieval scholars believed Scottish independence was entirely compatible with being British [97d]
- Microbes that extract rare earth elements can also capture carbon [97d]
- Peptide bridge enables cofactor channeling in fusion enzyme and cuts NADPH use [97d]
- Do the clouds of Venus really host life? [97d]
- Depriving mice of iron can increase the chance of intersex offspring [97d]
- Weed infestations impact row crop production [97d]
- Rivers release ancient carbon stored in landscapes for millennia back into atmosphere, study reveals [97d]
- The atmosphere's growing thirst is making droughts worse, even where it rains [97d]
- Real-time 3D visualization reveals potent antibacterial and antibiofilm activity against superbacteria [97d]
- Words for birds: Investigating birds and their names with Indigenous people in Amazonia [97d]
- Study details processes that keep pollutants aloft despite a drop in emissions [97d]
- Why biology could be the future of computing and engineering [97d]
- Study reveals true cost of compounding disasters in UN report [97d]
- Nanoparticle smart spray helps crops block infection before it starts [97d]
- Scientists reveal what drove 2023's record-smashing North Atlantic marine heat wave [97d]
- Bat viruses similar to MERS have potential to jump to humans [97d]
- Bacteria hitch a ride on yeast puddles to zoom around [97d]
- Revealing hidden transformations in 2D materials with atomic force microscopes [97d]
- NASA Kennedy digs latest robot test [97d]
- Academics join global call on Meta for more rigorous study of social media impact on children [97d]
- Sols 4556-4558: It's all in a day's (box)work—Mars rover team assesses boxwork terrain structures [97d]
- Invasive South African flower Gazania poses huge risk [97d]
- Study shows how smart limpets keep their cool in warming climate [97d]
- Wasp lookalikes from 33 million years ago fooled ancient birds too [97d]
- Rubin Observatory to detect millions of new solar system objects in vivid detail, simulations suggest [97d]
- Manipulating DNA repair proteins to improve gene editing outcomes [97d]
- Racing to save NJ island before it's swallowed by rising seas [97d]
- Are influencers villains, victims or champions of change? The reality is more complex [97d]
- How bigger molecules can help quantum charge flow last longer [97d]
- Cannibalistic behavior in toad species may reveal hidden clues about evolution, genetics and environment [97d]
- The chicks are alright: What songbirds can teach us about divorce and moving on [97d]
- Study projects that increasing wildfires in Canada and Siberia will actually slow global warming [97d]
- Novel nanozyme prevents excess clotting [97d]
- A three-way interaction that hatches potato parasites [97d]
- Broad-spectrum antiviral compounds discovered [97d]
- 'Resurrection' millet—a plant that revives after severe drought [97d]
- Biofilm distribution helps pinpoint areas where microplastics will accumulate [97d]
- Bluer and better: Improving the water solubility and acid stability of guaiazulene [97d]
- Allowing black rhino to roam freely may protect against the dangers of inbreeding [97d]
- Magnetism in new exotic material opens the way for robust quantum computers [97d]
- General framework bridges quantum thermodynamics and non-Markovianity [97d]
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