The Brutalist Report - science
system |
|
- Loss functions and constraints improve sea surface height prediction [141d]
- Commercially viable biomanufacturing: Designer yeast turns sugar into lucrative chemical 3-HP [141d]
- The 'Age of Fishes' began with mass death, fossil database reveals [141d]
- Important new source of oxidation in the atmosphere found [141d]
- The vast majority of US rivers lack any protections from human activities, new research finds [141d]
- Identifying where lithium ions reside in a new solid-state electrolyte that could lead to improved batteries [141d]
- How personality traits influence the way we flirt with others [141d]
- Vulnerable populations shoulder larger number and higher intensity of environmental burdens, study finds [141d]
- Scientists map development of pancreas transport channels that deliver digestive enzymes [141d]
- New method reveals how mutations drive transthyretin amyloidosis and guides precision drug design [141d]
- A single gene underlies begomovirus resistance in eggplant [141d]
- Superconducting detector captures hot spots with submicron resolution [141d]
- New chemical method makes it easier to select desirable traits in crops [141d]
- A tug-of-war explains a decades-old question about how bacteria swim [141d]
- Laser pulse 'sculpting' unlocks new control over particle acceleration [141d]
- Photographing climate change: Ice porters on the frozen Chadar river [141d]
- How Mycobacterium tuberculosis safeguards itself from foreign DNA [141d]
- Reviving antibiotics with two-faced nanoparticles [141d]
- Cold neutral gas in early universe prompts rethink of galaxy cluster evolution [141d]
- Engines of light: New study suggests we could increase useful energy obtained from sunlight [141d]
- Seaweed farms boost long-term carbon storage by altering ocean chemistry, study shows [141d]
- Catching a radical in motion with µSR spectroscopy [141d]
- System can diagnose infections in 20 minutes, aiding fight against drug resistance [141d]
- Scientists call for 'systems reset' to redefine sustainable development [141d]
- Lysosomes in focus: New study reveals how cells keep them intact [141d]
- Whale hunting began 5,000 years ago in South America, a millennium earlier than previously thought [141d]
- Himalayan balsam's damaging impact on rivers revealed in new study [141d]
- 'Command center' cell that orchestrates tooth root formation discovered [141d]
- Hybrid parasites threaten progress against one of the world's most widespread neglected diseases [141d]
- An ultra-fast quantum tunneling device for the 6G terahertz era [141d]
- Most people believe climate change primarily affects others [141d]
- Scientists find more active black holes in dwarf and Milky Way-sized galaxies by cutting through glare of star formation [141d]
- How quiet galaxies stay quiet: Cool gas feeds black holes in 'red geysers' [141d]
- SpaceX targets afternoon launch of 2nd Space Coast mission of 2026 [141d]
- Can we use bees as a model of intelligent alien life to develop interstellar communication? [141d]
- Pets suffer in extreme heat: Animal welfare expert explains how we can help them [141d]
- When bushfires make their own weather [141d]
- How does glass 'shake' and why does it start flowing when pushed hard enough? [141d]
- Ganges Delta under a winter shroud of fog [141d]
- A better way to sell premade food could cut waste and boost sales [141d]
- Deciphering symbiotic code: Research unlocks 'secret handshake' between legumes and rhizobia [141d]
- What past global warming reveals about future rainfall [141d]
- Study finds food waste compost less effective than potting mix alone [141d]
- Uncovering a secret room that a giant virus creates inside its host amoeba [141d]
- Single-cell testing shows which antibiotics actually kill bacteria, not just stop growth [141d]
- New Zealand's rare flightless parrot begins breeding again [141d]
- Hundreds of thousands without power as Storm Goretti pummels Europe [141d]
- NASA, in a rare move, cuts space station mission short after an astronaut's medical issue [141d]
- Ocean temperatures hit another record high in 2025 [141d]
Previous Day