The Brutalist Report - science
- Summer's best meteor shower peaks soon. But the moon will interfere with viewing the Perseids [210d]
- Nigerian scientists await return of Egusi seeds sent to space [210d]
- Landslide risk doesn't always rise after a wildfire, Columbia River Gorge study finds [210d]
- Quantum technologies—'Standards currently offer a greater chance of success than regulation,' says researcher [210d]
- AI model enhances crop growth monitoring with minimal field data [210d]
- Vision model brings almost unsupervised crop segmentation to the field [210d]
- Gossip is good for romance, study finds [210d]
- Engineer teams up with renowned poet to encode poetry into a 'deathless bacterium' [210d]
- Deep learning tool sets benchmark for accurate rice panicle counting across growth stages [210d]
- Study unveils novel approach that turns cotton straw into eco-friendly products [210d]
- Organic molecule achieves both strong light emission and absorption for displays and imaging [211d]
- Water in nanospace: Surfaces, not confinement, rule until the thinnest limits [211d]
- North Atlantic faces more hurricane clusters as climate warms [211d]
- Home is where the airfields are: What happens when hawks are moved from Los Angeles airports [211d]
- 3D holographic imaging tracks lysosomal changes in live cells without chemical labels [211d]
- Chesapeake Bay grasses see record gains in salty waters, offset by losses in central region [211d]
- New theory may solve quantum 'jigsaw puzzle' for controlling chemical reactions [211d]
- The US just got a new X-ray laser toolkit to study nature's mysteries [211d]
- How a rare cycad's wax crystals conjure blue without pigment [211d]
- Tsunami detectives at work: Marine geologists discuss the science behind the destructive waves [211d]
- Molecular timeline provides insights into how immune cells switch into attack mode [211d]
- From 'reef-friendly' sunscreens to 'sustainable' super, greenwashing allegations are rife—here's how the claims stack up [211d]
- Are you in a mid-career to senior job? Don't fear AI—you could have this important advantage [211d]
- Public data reveal extent of air quality impacts during 2025 Los Angeles wildfires [211d]
- The universe's first stars unveiled in turbulent simulations [211d]
- Move over Mercury—Chiron is in retrograde: What even is Chiron? [211d]
- Nascent RNA profiling uncovers molecular drivers of cellular differentiation [211d]
- Telomere-to-telomere assembly of two Medicago genomes uncovers evolutionary landscape of plant centromeres [211d]
- Triggered interfacial synthesis strategy enables rapid customization of ultrathin 2D metal-organic framework membranes [211d]
- ALMA observations reveal dual fragmentation modes in high-mass star-forming cloud [211d]
- The great apes' guide to human nature [211d]
- Ultrathin metal and semiconductor films emit multicolor light, paving way for new optical sensing devices [211d]
- Room-temperature synthesis produces hollow nanodome catalyst, slashing fuel cell costs and extending life [211d]
- Fungus metabolites may help ghost shrimp survive [211d]
- Sunlight-activated material turns PFAS in water into harmless fluoride [211d]
- Scientists build an 'evolution engine' to rapidly reprogram proteins [211d]
- Decoding sweet potato DNA: New research reveals surprising ancestry [211d]
- Oldest known docodontan fossil found in Greenland narrows the evolutionary gap [211d]
- International community must reverse cuts to Rohingya humanitarian aid, study says [211d]
- New survey reveals shifting work landscape regarding hybrid work and AI use [211d]
- Quantum 'Starry Night': Physicists capture elusive instability and exotic vortices [211d]
- How online language choices may signal self-harm risk [211d]
- Tariffs can improve U.S. economy, but global trade realities, retaliation, could offset gains [211d]
- America's divisions causing workplace dysfunction [211d]
- US to rewrite its past national climate reports [211d]
- SpaceX agrees to take Italian experiments to Mars [211d]
- New species teem in Cambodia's threatened karst [211d]
- Bugs are popular pets in nature-loving Japan, buzzing with lessons about ecology and species [211d]
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