The Brutalist Report - phys
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- States across the wildfire-prone Western US are using AI for early detection [44d]
- Why endless scrolling gets harder to stop: Three drivers of problematic internet use revealed [44d]
- What's stopping kids from learning useful skills? Short answer: Exams [44d]
- We might have massively underestimated Io's thermal output [44d]
- Politicians are not ignoring you, statistical analysis suggests [44d]
- Want to predict wildfire severity? Research says look to the state of vegetation [44d]
- AI-powered lab discovers brighter lead-free nanomaterials in 12 hours [44d]
- Giving voice to older homeless women navigating streets and shelters [44d]
- Antibiotic-resistant bacteria turn up in six lakes, with urban waters hit hardest [44d]
- Climate change increases spillover risk of rodent-borne arenaviruses, study warns [44d]
- Hidden risk pushes 459 Northwest communities higher on wildfire danger scale [44d]
- Is it wrong to pay incarcerated people in jail? This Pennsylvania county says no [44d]
- New insight could change how we break down 'forever chemicals' [44d]
- Invisible at the curb: New 3D model maps reveal hidden ultrafine traffic particle hotspots [44d]
- Synchrotron X-rays uncover hidden protein binding sites, enabling two new functions [44d]
- Research finds under-24s illegally targeted by Dutch gambling ads [44d]
- Plaster-making technique previously attributed to the Romans appears 8,000 years earlier in Motza [44d]
- DNA-reading AI reconstructs ancestry in minutes, matching top statistical methods [44d]
- Open-source, 3D-printed platform enables low-cost, standardized electrocatalytic research [44d]
- Buried electrical pathways across the US reveal new clues about Earth's interior and power grid risks [44d]
- Lockable phone pouches in schools can improve student well-being over time, not test scores or bullying [44d]
- Chemists capture light-matter hybrid particles traveling long distances [44d]
- Study finds benefits in being older college student while working [44d]
- 'Re-meandered' rivers can slow flows while widening wildlife habitat [44d]
- Eucalyptus bark points the way to cleaner water and air [44d]
- Plant genes shape bacterial evolution in legume bond [44d]
- A quiet Alaska fault is missing the fluids scientists expected, and it's changing what we know about earthquake zones [44d]
- Optically dark gamma-ray burst reveals an unusually wide jet [44d]
- Bullying is common in elementary school, and it's more likely to happen in classrooms that are chaotic [44d]
- Electric double layer unlocks molecular switch behind battery and hydrogen reactions [44d]
- Denmark's 'hands‑off' approach to parenting could offer a blueprint for raising more resilient, self‑reliant kids [44d]
- No more guesswork in drug design—atomic-resolution method exposes what trial and error keep missing [44d]
- The COVID‑19 pandemic exposed the load mothers carry—a burden that's still being ignored today [44d]
- Why keeping collaborative remote work environment options open is key for business innovation [44d]
- Scientists unlock new way to engineer next-generation glass [44d]
- Symmetry says these crystal vibrations can never mix, but an exotic quantum phase rewrites the rules [44d]
- Wars destroy lives and the climate. Why aren't we counting military emissions? [44d]
- How 'digital twins' could help predict the fate of a forest [44d]
- Magnon lifetime extended 100x paves the way for mini quantum computers [44d]
- Mathematical framework solves asteroid route planning exactly for first time [44d]
- How should schools teach AI? Three models to consider [44d]
- Time-varying magnetic fields can engineer exotic quantum matter [44d]
- How to make public spaces accessible, safe and attractive for an aging population [44d]
- Louisiana's shrinking coast may offer world early guide to climate adaptation [44d]
- Social media use may reflect stress relief and belonging more than habit [44d]
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