The Brutalist Report - phys
- An Australian chemist just won the Nobel Prize. Here's how his work is changing the world [144d]
- Fire provides long-lasting benefits to bird populations in Sierra Nevada National Parks [144d]
- Bay scallops surge on Virginia's Eastern Shore [144d]
- How family size shapes education spending [144d]
- Parched soils can spark hot drought a nation away [144d]
- SpaceX targets nighttime launch of competitor Amazon's satellites [144d]
- Sped-up evolution may help bacteria take hold in gut microbiome [144d]
- Who you talk to influences how you talk, researcher finds [144d]
- Investigating genetic structure and predicted habitat expansion of endemic tree species in Southeast Asia [144d]
- Hydropower dams face uncertain future as climate change drives sedimentation and glacier disappearance [144d]
- Individual electrons trapped and controlled above 1 K, easing cooling limits for quantum computing [144d]
- Q&A: The 'undertaker' cells of taste, one of our least understood senses [144d]
- How Europe's largest bat catches and eats birds mid-air [144d]
- Analysis finds gaps in forest carbon offset projects, with most overstating climate impacts [144d]
- These songbirds learn more from siblings than from parents [144d]
- Citizen scientists help reveal importance of light on bird behavior during 2024 eclipse [144d]
- Genetically encoded biosensor tracks plants' immune hormone in real time [144d]
- Southern right whales are having fewer calves: What this says about ocean health [144d]
- Do British people want to leave the ECHR? What a decade of polls reveals [144d]
- Quantum fluctuations found hidden beneath classical optical signals in polaritons [144d]
- New research finds defining childhood portrait of Marie Antoinette is really her sister [144d]
- Storms are changing. Should hurricane scale change too? [145d]
- Astronomers detect lowest mass dark object ever measured using gravitational lensing [145d]
- Climate change may increase the spread of neurotoxin in the oceans [145d]
- Poultry growers: Have you checked your water lines lately? [145d]
- Mathematical models reveal a 'hidden order' in dryland vegetation worldwide [145d]
- From toilet cleaners to tail-tugging—new study reveals complex social behaviors of naked mole-rats [145d]
- Absorptive roots drive forest soil carbon accumulation through iterative effects, study finds [145d]
- Ultra-sensitive light-based sensor developed for handheld Alzheimer's blood test [145d]
- A step toward AI modeling of the whole Earth system [145d]
- Toxoplasmosis: How the pathogen exploits its own cell envelope [145d]
- Where fish feed ingredients come from key for sustainability, new study finds [145d]
- Hate acts increased in California in 2024, new data show [145d]
- Q&A: Exploring metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with chemist [145d]
- Early planting to avoid heat doesn't match current spring wheat production, study finds [145d]
- 'Polite racism' is the subtle form of racial exclusion. Here's how to move beyond it [145d]
- Research suggests rich people tend to be more selfish, but why is that? [145d]
- Refinery fires, other chemical disasters may no longer get safety investigations [145d]
- Plant functional diversity varies greatly with seasonal cycles and wet-dry periods, satellite images reveal [145d]
- Life through lens: How photos unlock stories behind places [145d]
- More people believe in conspiracy theories than you might think [145d]
- Proactive teams still need leadership and focus, study finds [145d]
- Old puzzle around protein distribution in plant cells solved with discovery of lipid switch [145d]
Previous Day