The Brutalist Report - phys
- Anti-environmentalism is on the rise but it's full of contradictions [295d]
- Study finds half the remaining habitat of Australia's most at-risk species is unprotected [295d]
- Study reveals influence behind illegal bear bile consumption in Việt Nam [295d]
- Satellites offer new view of Chesapeake Bay's marine heat waves [295d]
- Controlling quantum motion and hyper-entanglement [295d]
- A new nanometer-scale measurement tool exploits the quantum properties of light for better precision and speed [295d]
- A rule-breaking, colorful silicone that can conduct electricity [295d]
- Scientists have figured out how extinct giant ground sloths got so big and where it all went wrong [295d]
- Brain drain? More like brain gain: How high-skilled emigration boosts global prosperity [295d]
- The formation of a new exoplanet can cause chemical discrepancies in paired stars [295d]
- Is the world ready for a catastrophic solar storm? [295d]
- Scientists develop automated system to monitor methane absorption in forest soils [295d]
- Fully protected marine areas in Brazil are contaminated by microplastics [295d]
- Three bombesin-like peptides may help control reproductive smooth muscle movement [295d]
- Integrated urban planning found to slow rural depopulation in Spain [295d]
- Study reveals land-use changes and ecological trends in China's Tarim River Basin [295d]
- Reciprocity between humans and nature: Key to safeguarding planetary health [295d]
- Flower strips planted with at least two flower species provide 70% more natural enemies of pests [295d]
- Flowers unfold with surprising precision, despite unruly genes [295d]
- Diversity is key to ecosystem stability, says 20-year study [295d]
- Lake sediment analysis Holocene warming trend, decoding 10,400 years of tropical Australasia's climate [295d]
- Conservation sweet spots: How protecting nature helps both birds and humans in the US [295d]
- The scent of death? Worms experience altered fertility and lifespan when exposed to dead counterparts [295d]
- Detailed observations of 15 protoplanetary disks reveal new dynamics in planet formation [295d]
- 3D visualizations reveal that molten sulfide could percolate through solid rock to form a planetary core [295d]
- Why Europe's fisheries management needs an overhaul [295d]
- A newly discovered type of superconductor is also a magnet [295d]
- From chaos to clarity: new tool finds connections in complex cell data [295d]
- A decade after the release of 'The Martian,' a planetary scientist checks in on real-life Mars exploration [295d]
- Two-step method dismantles bacterial biofilms and prevents regrowth for months [295d]
- Atom-swapping method successfully applied to complex organic structures—new possibilities for drug design [295d]
- 'Selfish' genes called introners proven to be a major source of genetic complexity [295d]
- Redox-switchable dyes offer tunable fluorescence for advanced bioimaging and optical applications [295d]
- Get ready for another busy Atlantic hurricane season, but maybe not as crazy as 2024 [295d]
- Rare May nor'easter brings rain and chance of snow to New England before Memorial Day [295d]
- Mining enough copper to develop the world will require its price to more than double, says study [295d]
- AI is here to stay, let students embrace the technology [295d]
- Survey shows educational impact of Antarctic citizen science program among travelers [295d]
- Record precision achieved in measuring muonic helium-3 nucleus radius [295d]
- Canadian Food Policy Advisory Council: A collaborative approach to strengthening food systems [295d]
- New test uses oyster waste to track devastating parasite [295d]
- How the dinosaur-killing extinction could help save modern bivalves [295d]
- How competition between algae is transforming the gulf of Maine [295d]
- An artificial protein that moves like something found in nature [295d]
- Ancient DNA used to map evolution of fever-causing bacteria [295d]
- Evidence shows AI systems are already too much like humans. Will that be a problem? [295d]
- Trust in scientists in Ireland lower in younger generation, new study [295d]
- Hawaiian volcanic rocks reveal Earth's core contains vast hidden gold reserves [295d]
- Odd binary star system has a huge planetary companion [295d]
- New method helps identify hormone-disrupting chemicals—without animal testing [295d]
- Frequent large-scale wildfires are turning forests from carbon sinks into super‑emitters, warn scientists [295d]
- Deep ocean technology offers never before seen images of lost WWI submarine [295d]
- Study shows employees assigned more complex projects early in their work history had better career outcomes [295d]
- NASA's Dragonfly mission sets sights on Titan's mysteries [295d]
- Improved rubber processing makes material ten times stronger and resistant to cracking [295d]
- Scientists design gene delivery systems for cells in the brain and spinal cord [295d]
- Axolotl tail injury activates distant neurons in brain to promote regeneration, scientists discover [295d]
- Integrating coral fusion, fragmentation, and microbiome science offers new path for reef restoration [295d]
- Study shows domain walls in ferroelectrics can be the most stable state, enabling high-density memory [295d]
- Teachers knew what children needed to recover from the pandemic—but their insights were ignored [295d]
- One-pot protein screening accelerates bioscience and drug discovery [295d]
- The deluge in NSW sounds a warning to rural and regional communities elsewhere [295d]
- 'Perfect bodies and perfect lives': How selfie-editing tools are distorting how young people see themselves [295d]
- Coral die-off in restoration project tied to low levels of beneficial bacteria in microbiome [295d]
- Worker-led programs are tackling gender-based violence in supply chains, but they're at risk [296d]
- Climate change may make it harder to reduce smog in some regions [296d]
- Discovery of DNA switch that controls TB growth could help unlock its antibiotic resistance secrets [296d]
- Nocturnal pollinators just as important as their daytime colleagues, study finds [296d]
- Microwave technologies can give hummus longer shelf life, eliminating need for chemical preservatives [296d]
Previous Day