The Brutalist Report - phys
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- New research shows link between workplace bullying and conspiracy beliefs [1294d]
- Bills with research language more likely to advance through legislative process [1294d]
- 'Forever chemicals' persist through wastewater treatment, may enter crops [1294d]
- Elevated levels of arsenic and other metals found in Nevada's private wells [1294d]
- How many bees can you fit in an X-ray machine? Researchers peer inside swarms for a deeper look at their distribution [1294d]
- Cancer drug could potentially be used against malaria [1294d]
- Spritacular: NASA's new citizen science project to capture elusive upper atmospheric electrical phenomena on camera [1294d]
- New tool can help with coordinating climate and air-quality policies to improve public health [1294d]
- Ozone hole continues shrinking in 2022, NASA and NOAA scientists say [1294d]
- Layered double hydroxides for oxygen evolution reactions [1294d]
- People with paranormal beliefs more likely to be spooked by science and the COVID-19 vaccine, sociologists suggest [1294d]
- Physicists see light waves moving through a metal [1294d]
- New research shows three distinct attitudes toward improving stormwater management [1295d]
- Researchers investigate fighting tumors with magnetic bacteria [1295d]
- Promoting cigarette brands in TV shows yields unexpected results [1295d]
- Global economy must green faster to prevent dire climate impacts [1295d]
- Honeycrisp genome will help scientists breed better apples [1295d]
- Webb offers never-before-seen details of early universe [1295d]
- A faster way to find and study topological materials [1295d]
- New class of porous metal nanoparticles will yield new capabilities in absorption, chemical sensing and separations [1295d]
- Earth on track to warm above 2 degrees Celsius despite climate action [1295d]
- Sensor disguised as a sea turtle egg allows conservationists to remotely predict nest hatching time [1295d]
- One-stop hydrogen shop: Reducing the cost of a future energy carrier [1295d]
- New technique for arranging nanoscale particles on a surface without damaging the material [1295d]
- Considering COVID a hoax is 'gateway' to belief in conspiracy theories [1295d]
- Reddit comments show equal interest in female versus male politicians, but less respect [1295d]
- 2D graphdiyne a potential key element for future generations of energy storage and conversion technologies [1295d]
- Shining the light on asbestos [1295d]
- Successful synthesis of rare isotopic atropisomers with high rotational stability [1295d]
- Sustainable way to make breast cancer drug could boost South African production [1295d]
- ESA plans for low-orbiting navigation satellites [1295d]
- Creating the world's largest SiC aspherical mirror [1295d]
- Research examines the relationship between surfers and sharks [1295d]
- Automatic text simplification: Efficacy in the foreign language classroom [1295d]
- Research into ancient lineage of microscopic fungi upends assumptions about its genetic relationships [1295d]
- More than meets the fly: Related species share space by (mostly) staying apart [1295d]
- Scientists warn in report that climate change has pushed Earth to 'code red' [1295d]
- The missing link of experience cocreation in shared coupons [1295d]
- Craters and cracks on Mars' Terra Sirenum region [1295d]
- UN weather agency: Greenhouse gases reach new record in 2021 [1295d]
- Study investigates crosstalk between mitochondria and lysosomes [1295d]
- A pocket full of water molecules—how actin filaments drive the cell's motion [1295d]
- Popular pharmaceutical target in cells may prove even more useful [1295d]
- New evidence of biochemical states and force working in concert [1295d]
- Key regulator of cell growth deciphered [1295d]
- Crime, COVID and climate change—South African tourism faces many threats, but it's resilient [1295d]
- School shootings are already at a record in 2022—with months still to go [1295d]
- The most horrifying part of Halloween is the useless piles of waste it creates. Why not do it differently? [1295d]
- Young voters are more likely to skip midterm elections than presidential races [1295d]
- How imperfections can actually improve alloys [1295d]
- Scientists discover exotic quantum state at room temperature [1295d]
- Finding microbes rarer than a ticket to the moon [1295d]
- Most Americans do trust scientists and science-based policy-making [1295d]
- Could energy efficiency be quantum computers' greatest strength yet? [1295d]
- How the threat of 'taxpayer-funded abortion' is being used to mobilize conservative religious voters [1295d]
- Democratic and Republican voters both love civility, but nobody can agree on what civility is [1295d]
- Building subsidized low-income housing actually lifts property values in a neighborhood [1295d]
- What tropical trees can teach about the environment [1295d]
- How old is the oldest ice in Antarctica? [1295d]
- Study sheds light on life cycle of tree roots [1295d]
- Teeth analysis provides hints about the diet of an Iron Age woman [1295d]
- How gender, race, age and voter ID laws affect whether a voter actually casts a ballot [1295d]
- High-frequency monitoring reveals riverine nitrogen removal [1295d]
- Molecular mechanism of a protein that regulates endoreduplication and cell growth in Arabidopsis [1295d]
- Forests in protected Indigenous lands are healthier, scientists find [1295d]
- Nano-sized islands open possibilities for application of single-atom catalysts [1295d]
- New Scottish fossil sheds light on the origins of lizards [1295d]
- Scientists discover material that can be made like a plastic but conducts like a metal [1295d]
- How Twitter fueled the Black Lives Matter movement [1295d]
- Four reasons affordable housing is slow to recover after disasters like hurricanes, and what communities can do about it [1295d]
- Astrophysicists make observations consistent with the predictions of an alternative theory of gravity [1295d]
- Controlling the effect of drugs more precisely [1295d]
- Antifouling coatings can reduce algal growth while preserving coral settlement [1295d]
- Researchers unveil local electronic structure of lanthanide-doped double perovskites [1295d]
- Climate crisis: Transition of global economy way off track [1295d]
- Using a passive optical monitoring technique to retrieve tropospheric ozone profiles [1295d]
- Climate Questions: Who are the big emitters? [1295d]
- First radio-astronomy cryogenic receivers with all-metal 3D-printed RF components [1295d]
- Government regulation and information presentation may determine palatability of the concept of gene-edited food [1295d]
- Elucidation of proteins controlling the sleep and awake transition [1295d]
- Ancient DNA pushes herring trade back to the Viking age [1295d]
- Resistance genes mapped for drugs to treat parasitic worms [1295d]
- Researchers compress light 12 times below the diffraction limit in a dielectric material [1295d]
- Submerged plants reduce greenhouse gas emissions from shallow lakes and ditches [1295d]
- Scientists develop a promising sorbent for removing antibiotics from wastewater [1295d]
- Study investigates variability of V1180 Cas [1295d]
- Global change may foster short-term evolutionary adaptation in microbes [1295d]
- Scientists publish major study on near-Earth asteroids [1295d]
- New technique to determine age will open new era of planetary science, researchers say [1295d]
- Getting a grip on a strongly magnetized neutron star's geometry [1295d]
- Study of scavenging activity in south-eastern Australia shows value of carnivore conservation and rewilding [1295d]
- 2,700 year-old rock carvings discovered in Iraq's Mosul [1295d]
- Climate pledges still 'nowhere near' enough for 1.5C: UN [1295d]
- UV-to-red light converting films accelerate plant growth, could help improve global food supply issues [1295d]
- We need to stop thinking of insects as 'creepy crawlies' and recognise their keystone role in ecosystems, say scientists [1295d]
- Force firms to reveal their impact on nature: major businesses [1295d]
- Doctors say 'fossil fuel addiction' kills, starves millions [1295d]
- New research shows how octopuses may have evolved [1295d]
- 'Virtual autopsy' identifies a 17th-century mummified toddler hidden from the sun [1295d]
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