The Brutalist Report - science
- New study counters idea that Jupiter's mysterious core was formed by a giant impact [1d]
- Managing soil fertilization levels can make for more efficient and productive crops [1d]
- 3D X-ray study reveals how rock grains move and stress builds [1d]
- How moisture changes the rules of atmospheric blocking [1d]
- Self-reinforcing cascades: How ideas, beliefs, and innovations spread in the digital age [1d]
- Why empty supermarket shelves make you uneasy, even if you don't want the missing items [1d]
- Secretive mini space shuttle set for Space Coast launch; late-night sonic boom possible [1d]
- The 'Mississippi Bubble' and the complex history of Haiti [1d]
- Hidden impacts of spraying: Exploring the effects of fungicide use on corn health and microbiome [1d]
- Wrinkles in atomically thin materials unlock ultraefficient electronics [1d]
- Hidden symmetries unlock new ways to control light in quantum materials [1d]
- Symmetry-based Floquet optical selection rules help explain light-induced sidebands [1d]
- The stunning astrogeology of the Apollo missions [1d]
- Remote work spurs grassroots environmental action in New York City [1d]
- Alternating pulses enhance copper's role in converting CO₂ to valuable fuels [1d]
- Global rules shaping the treeline under climate change revealed [1d]
- Imperfect light sources achieve new benchmark in secure quantum communication [1d]
- Beyond Arrakis: Dune researchers confront real-life perils of shifting sand formations [1d]
- Scientists harness polaritons, making a leap in molecular charge transfer [1d]
- Weaving peptide nanonets to fight bacterial infections [1d]
- Viruses hidden within fungi could be secret drivers of deadly lung infections [1d]
- Scientists develop map of how cells work together to become a brain [1d]
- Record EU wildfires burned over million hectares in 2025: analysis [1d]
- Synchronized breathing can spread diseases for Bottlenose dolphins and other cetaceans [1d]
- Slow, steady tissue forces may be as important as genes and biochemistry in shaping developing organs [1d]
- Nanopore technique for measuring DNA damage could improve cancer therapy and radiological emergency response [1d]
- Dark matter in gas giants could collapse into detectable black holes, model suggests [1d]
- Hawai'i-grown lemons and limes ready for export [1d]
- New AI tool tracks early signs of hurricane formation [1d]
- Grandparenting from a distance: What's lost when families are separated, and how to bridge the gap [1d]
- Forest disturbances are reshaping the world's carbon balance, study shows [1d]
- How NASA's Artemis II lunar science operations will inform future missions [1d]
- PET plastic gets antimicrobial boost through plasma treatment and zinc nanoparticles [1d]
- Q&A: Study reveals how cellular waste disposal system deals with stress [1d]
- Overcoming disordered energy in light-matter interactions [1d]
- Birds in light-polluted areas stay up late into the night [1d]
- Zoo populations may hold key to saving Pacific pocket mouse [1d]
- Zooming in reveals a world of detail: Protein mapping technique reveals inner workings of cells [1d]
- DNA from extinct hominin may have helped ancient peoples survive in the Americas [1d]
- What traits matter when predicting disease emergence in new populations? [1d]
- Sediment analysis challenges view that rise of plants triggered shift from braided to meandering rivers [1d]
- A global wildfire paradox: Human impacts worsen even as total burned area declines [1d]
- Measuring how molecules communicate: New method quantifies partial charges [1d]
- How a 'perfect storm' triggered a marine heat wave and sent salmon lice into overdrive [1d]
- First comprehensive transport model of a plasma membrane calcium pump could inform new drug development [1d]
- Upconversion nanoparticles can aid the application of molecular motors [1d]
- Ultrathin metasurface enables high-efficiency vectorial holography [1d]
- Black holes may be the engines driving the universe's dark energy [1d]
- SpaceX to launch secret X-37B space plane Thursday [1d]
- AI could stop hotels and restaurants wasting food, energy and talent—yet adoption remains low [1d]
- Why spotting a liar can be harder than you think [1d]
- Organizational intolerance reduces gender differences in empathy for workplace harassment targets [2d]
- 'Ultra-fresh' fashion reshapes the industry, with a cost to the environment [2d]
- Parenting strategies are shifting as neuroscience brings the developing brain into clearer focus [2d]
- How the racist study of skulls gripped Victorian Britain's scientists [2d]
- Saving the giants of the Australian forest [2d]
- Close-up images reveal asteroid debris plume after DART impact [2d]
- Rising temperatures linked to declining moods around the world [2d]
- Reports from 65 years of snow and avalanche research now digitized [2d]
- Multilingual scholars should look inward to better support learners, researcher says [2d]
- Ångström-scale optical microscopy deciphers conformational states of single membrane proteins [2d]
- Evidence from Neolithic burial pits reveals gruesome war practices [2d]
- Heat-stressed Australian forests are thinning fast, producing carbon emissions [2d]
- Marine mammal stranding rates have risen around Scotland's coastline in the last 30 years [2d]
- Terrain complexity index helps scientists predict soil erosion and plant diversity in mountains [2d]
- Human disturbances drive significant soil carbon loss in hyper-arid deserts, study reveals [2d]
- Defect engineering accelerates carrier relaxation in GaN-based LEDs [2d]
- Groundwater: How scientists explore the mysteries of ancient aquifers [2d]
- Hurricane Erin brings coastal flooding to N. Carolina, Virginia [2d]
- How many giraffe species are in Africa? New scientific analysis quadruples the count [2d]
- Dingoes are not domestic dogs—new evidence shows these native canines are on their own evolutionary path [2d]
- Optimizing how cells self-organize: Computational framework extracts genetic rules [2d]
- Cities obey the same laws of living systems, researchers claim [2d]
- Big quakes in lower North Island 'clustered' in time, study shows [2d]
- Ultrafast X-ray laser tracks the motion of a single electron during a chemical reaction [2d]
- Brightest-ever fast radio burst allows researchers to identify its origin [2d]
- Learning from punishment: Model makes sense of the cognitive processes humans use [2d]
- Photonic origami folds glass into microscopic 3D optical devices [2d]
- Nanobody scaffolds enable cryo-EM imaging of smallest protein structure yet [2d]
- One catalyst, two reactions: Multiple reaction steps now possible in one vessel using inexpensive cerium [2d]
- Scientists discover how heat 'awakens' carbon food source for deep Earth biosphere [2d]
- Gene sequencing uncovers differences in wild and domesticated crops [2d]
- Urgent need to restrict unhealthy marketing to children [2d]
- Study maps New Zealand's residential carbon emissions [2d]
- Rare pygmy whale swallows plastic bag and dies on Honduras coast [2d]
- Tissue origami: Using light to study and control tissue folding [2d]
- How Giraffatitan moved its massive tail: 3D reconstructions provide biomechanical insight [2d]
- What happened before the Big Bang? Computational method may provide answers [2d]
- Deep learning automates defect detection in 2D materials [2d]
- Nanodroplets could speed up the search for new medicine [2d]
- Nanodroplets could speed up the search for new medicine [2d]
- Lead-resistant lizards in New Orleans could hold clues to combating lead poisoning [2d]
- YSO-G29: Astronomers probe the nature of a massive young stellar object [2d]
- Block Island bird study reveals some good news for the island's migrating songbirds [2d]
- Nostalgia is an asset in company acquisitions: Research challenges conventional wisdom about emotions [2d]
- Two different types of asteroids may actually share same origin story [2d]
- Inside the perilous journey of a familiar Northwest summer bird [2d]
- At Mono Lake, visitors witness the stark toll of LA's water use [2d]
- Giant cows hunted to extinction in 1627. Now, their ancestor is making comeback [2d]
- Ibex motif linked to fertility and celestial symbolism in ancient Near East art [2d]
Previous Day