The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Study proposes large-scale biomanufacturing workflow to produce natural killer cells and extracellular vesicles [730d]
- Innovation linked to international exports for both rural and urban firms [730d]
- 'Branded access offers' dilute parent brand via perceived lack of consumer commitment: Study [730d]
- Examining the blowtorch effect of satellite reentry through video [730d]
- Economist: Tens of billions of dollars in forest products are being overlooked [730d]
- Unraveling the song of ice and fire across the American landscape with machine learning [730d]
- New study finds potential targets at chromosome ends for degenerative disease prevention [730d]
- Scientists discover first nitrogen-fixing organelle [730d]
- Juice aces Callisto flyby test [730d]
- Traces of DNA in the stomachs of predatory snails provide new insights into the ecology of placozoans [730d]
- New study reveals novel approach for combating 'resting' bacteria [730d]
- NASA's PACE data on ocean, atmosphere, climate now available [730d]
- Researchers map 33 new big game migrations across American West [730d]
- Report links H&M, Zara to environmental destruction in Brazil [730d]
- A compact metasurface array-based system for single-shot spectroscopic ellipsometry measurement [730d]
- Researchers develop method to extract useful proteins from beer-brewing leftovers [730d]
- How hybrid work is reinventing management [731d]
- More than two dozen Colorado water systems exceed EPA's new limits on 'forever chemicals' [731d]
- Food security in developed countries shows resilience to climate change [731d]
- Developing nutrient-rich fertilizer from toxic ammonia [731d]
- Research finds dairy farmers receptive to methane-reducing seaweed feed [731d]
- NASA technology helps guard against lunar dust [731d]
- Genetic underpinnings of environmental stress identified in model plant [731d]
- Scientists find blue light makes buildings more deadly to migrating birds [731d]
- Ant pheromones may help protect hikers and campers from ticks [731d]
- Firms embracing diversity may trade short-term pain for long-term gain [731d]
- Team develops method to help investors predict firms' decision-making, optimize portfolios, generate greater returns [731d]
- Trapped in the middle: Billiards with memory framework leads to mathematical questions [731d]
- How much of Venus's atmosphere is coming from volcanoes? [731d]
- Wireless power transmission could enable exploration of the far side of the moon [731d]
- The next-generation triggers for CERN detectors [731d]
- What do bird dreams sound like? [731d]
- Americans think AI will harm privacy and elections: Report [731d]
- Scientists develop biofortified rice to combat nutrient deficiencies [731d]
- A landslide forced me from my home—and I experienced our failure to deal with climate change at first hand [731d]
- No two worms are alike: New study confirms that even the simplest marine organisms tend to be individualistic [731d]
- Survey tallies consumer attitudes toward lab-grown meat alternatives [731d]
- The heat is on: What we know about why ocean temperatures keep smashing records [731d]
- San Francisco Bay study highlights value of salt marsh restoration for flood risk reduction and climate resilience [731d]
- A molecular moon lander: Insight into molecular motion on surfaces at the nanoscale [731d]
- Plant more native trees to reduce landslide risk, control erosion, say researchers [731d]
- Biologists reveal how gyrase resolves DNA entanglements [731d]
- Study reveals giant store of global soil carbon [731d]
- Elephant tourism often involves cruelty. Here are steps toward more humane, animal-friendly excursions [731d]
- Beautiful nebula, violent history: Clash of stars solves stellar mystery [731d]
- Most countries do not take a fair share of refugees. Here's how we could incentivize them [731d]
- 'Pretty privilege': Attractive people considered more trustworthy, research confirms [731d]
- What is happening to US higher education? [731d]
- Fault maturity or orientation: Which matters more for quakes? [731d]
- Peter Higgs transformed what we know about the building blocks of the universe [731d]
- Researchers develop standard methodology for the sensory analysis of wine [731d]
- Defect removal of 2D semiconductor crystals: Trapping oxygen molecules offers greater control [731d]
- Verifying the mathematics behind ocean modeling [731d]
- Domestic violence survivors seek homeless services from a system that often leaves them homeless [731d]
- A new spin on organic shampoo makes it sudsier, longer lasting [731d]
- Why intending to conserve an area for only 25 years should not count in Australia's 30% land protection target [731d]
- Swifts need more nest boxes, but that alone won't be enough. Here's why [731d]
- Why some of British Columbia's kelp forests are in more danger than others [731d]
- Technology makes it easy for lawyers to work across borders. Regulations should too [731d]
- Efficiency boost: Dual light pulses minimize energy for phase transitions [731d]
- Scientists find new paths to steer and optimize electrochemical processes [731d]
- Cannibalism and genome duplication in nematodes [731d]
- Corporate climate pledge weakened by carbon offsets move [731d]
- Israel accused of using AI to target thousands in Gaza, as killer algorithms outpace international law [731d]
- Ghanaians love rice—how smallholder farmers could harvest more of it with the help of machines [731d]
- Laser-patterned thin films that swell into kirigami-like structures offer new opportunities in hydrogel technology [731d]
- An economist explains: Textbook economics is badly flawed when it comes to climate change [731d]
- How full are major California reservoirs as state exits another wet winter? [731d]
- Officials brace for 'uncertainty' in water transfers to Lake Mead [731d]
- Discovery of the first fractal molecule in nature [731d]
- A new tool for tracing the family trees of cells [731d]
- Machine learning model sheds new light on muscle development [731d]
- Hybrid intelligence can reconcile biodiversity and agriculture [731d]
- New technological advance for fast and efficient 3D imaging of objects [731d]
- From negative results to new discoveries in chloroplast biochemistry [731d]
- Altered oceanic crust may contribute to arc magmas [731d]
- Unraveling the behavior of nanoconfined water and ice in extreme conditions [731d]
- Researchers discover the secret of how termites build their giant nests [731d]
- Researchers resolve old mystery of how phages disarm pathogenic bacteria [731d]
- Tropical coral-infecting parasites discovered in cold marine ecosystems [731d]
- Study identifies increased threat to coastlines from concurrent heat waves and sea level rises [731d]
- Advanced microscopy technique offers a new look inside cells [731d]
- Liquid-metal transfer from anode to cathode without short circuiting [731d]
- Pacific cities found to be much older than previously thought [731d]
- Scientists find new ways to convert inhibitors into degraders, paving the way for future drug discoveries [731d]
- Female zebra finches seek mate who sings one song just right [731d]
- Nanoscale movies shed light on one barrier to a clean energy future [731d]
- Rock permeability, microquakes link may be a boon for geothermal energy [731d]
- Keys to the genome: Unlocking the package with 'pioneer transcription factors' [731d]
- New advances promise secure quantum computing at home [731d]
- Ghost roads speed destruction of Asia-Pacific tropical forests, finds study [731d]
- Team finds evidence of commonly conducted ritualized human sacrifice across Europe in the Stone Age [731d]
- In Russia's Far East, a new heavy-lift rocket blasts off into space after two aborted launches [731d]
- Earthquakes may not be primary driver of glacial lake outburst floods [731d]
- Researchers find baby stars discharge plume-like 'sneezes' of magnetic flux during formation [731d]
- Oxidant pollutant ozone removes mating barriers between fly species, study finds [731d]
- Nothing is everything: How hidden emptiness can define the usefulness of filtration materials [731d]
- Cloud engineering could be more effective 'painkiller' for global warming than previously thought [731d]
- Pork labeling schemes 'not helpful' in making informed buying choices, say researchers [731d]
- Ocean currents threaten to collapse Antarctic ice shelves, study finds [731d]
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