The Brutalist Report - phys
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- The hidden cost of a failed property auction [31d]
- Heat waves are now everyday disasters. Governments need to do more to protect people [31d]
- How ion channels inside cells manipulate the cytoskeleton [31d]
- How did the ethanol boom of the 2000s impact farm values in the Midwest? [31d]
- Soil also suffers from heat waves: Organic waste boosts its tolerance to 50°C [31d]
- The 'silent' invasion of a widespread freshwater jellyfish across Europe [31d]
- Spain gears up for August total solar eclipse [31d]
- New reversible conductive glue could reshape electronics repair, recycling, and material recovery [31d]
- Mitochondrial fission helps immune cells kill bacteria and could counter resistance [31d]
- New study provides rule of thumb to estimate land sustainability in river deltas [31d]
- Scientists estimate sunlight in 18th and 19th century Tokyo using historical diaries [31d]
- Old journals unlock monthly climate shifts behind Japan's 1830s famine [31d]
- Historical DNA connects 1.3 million living relatives to 17th-century Maryland settlers [31d]
- Tiny ocean life helps scientists estimate whale prevalence off the California coast [31d]
- Improved life satisfaction linked to being in nature [31d]
- Q&A: Is it time to expand our thinking about dark matter? A new study says yes [31d]
- Researchers uncover chemical origins of the Perseus cluster of galaxies [31d]
- A new model for predicting plant resistance can help prepare for climate change [31d]
- Digital environments can generate moderate levels of psychological overload among university students [31d]
- Physics in uncharted waters: The mysteries of marine snow [31d]
- Engineered proteins store digital files with 30 times density at one-tenth cost [31d]
- Hyperspectral imaging to map Gran Dolina's oldest sediments and fossils in infrared [31d]
- In productive ecosystems, larger animals capture more energy per species—but human pressure is reshaping the balance [31d]
- Indonesia may soon lose its last glaciers [31d]
- Buried in dark waters, viruses reshape one of Earth's largest carbon systems [31d]
- Seeing the invisible: The limits of two-photon vision [31d]
- Biodegradable sensors attached to plants detect pesticides in 3 minutes [31d]
- Building density, not trees, was strongest predictor of home loss in Los Angeles firestorms [31d]
- A fresh approach to peppermint: 250 new variants could boost flavor and fight disease [31d]
- Silk made into strong plastic-like materials with 6G potential [31d]
- Childhood disadvantage can limit the social benefits of intelligence later in life, new research shows [31d]
- Webb discovers one of the universe's first galaxies [31d]
- A new method could help Washington shellfish farmers control a pesky shrimp [31d]
- Mathematical analysis reveals a hidden 'golden rule' in abstract art [31d]
- Summers are getting longer each year, and it isn't all fun and games [31d]
- A 'super El Niño?' Why it's too early to forecast one with certainty, but not too soon to prepare [31d]
- New AI system classifies India rainfall better, cutting false alarms and missed heavy rain [31d]
- NASA's Psyche spacecraft buzzing Mars on its way to a rare metal asteroid [31d]
- The 'Big Three' asset managers use auditor-sharing for portfolio management [31d]
- Combinations of climate extremes may prompt carbon budget rethink [31d]
- Discovery of antimicrobial peptides in ant venom has far-reaching implications [31d]
- Large-scale eDNA survey reveals hidden factors that affect regional fish communities [31d]
- Mathematicians prove existence of Kaleidocycles then unlock their exact motion [31d]
- Astrophysicists use 'space archaeology' to trace the history of a spiral galaxy [31d]
- Will future missions to the moon be sustainable? It may depend on whom you ask [31d]
- String theory is uniquely derived from basic assumptions about the universe, physicists show [31d]
- How much is a bat worth? Their deaths cost taxpayers and the wider economy [31d]
- Sex-related differences in hoverfly eyes give insight into their aerodynamic powers [31d]
- A child's environment may shape how their brain solves problems [31d]
- Study finds more than 84% of dogs show signs of fear, anxiety [31d]
- Most Australian 'wild dogs' are predominantly dingoes [31d]
- Why emus can't fly: A 'time switch' in bird embryos holds the answer [31d]
- Autonomous underwater robot discovers hidden coral reef 'hotspots' [31d]
- Why marimbas cost so much and how hickory could change music classrooms [31d]
- Vocal fry stereotype unravels as men and older voices show more creak [31d]
- Machine-learning method maps the uncertainty of biodiversity scenarios: The Bigfoot connection [31d]
- 'Learning recession' in US schools predates pandemic: Report [32d]
- The high‑tech shipbuilding methods that helped Vikings dominate the seas [32d]
- Hairy new fish species discovered in the Great Barrier Reef [32d]
- Privately educated CEOs seen as 'safer bets' despite no evidence they are [32d]
- 'PrincipalGPT' creates a new AI blueprint for legal literacy in the classroom [32d]
- More than half of US faces worst drought in decades, says expert [32d]
- Reducing fear is critical for improving trust in law enforcement, study finds [32d]
- We keep thanking machines and forests for one strange reason, and it is reshaping human bonds [32d]
- Satellite launch pollution is rapidly accumulating in the upper atmosphere [32d]
- Koala milk may hold key to better care for orphaned joeys [32d]
- How AR tech augments STEM teaching [32d]
- What gives stevia its sweetness? Scientists uncover the genetic secret [32d]
- Study provides detailed assessment of shifts in toxin producing phytoplankton abundance [32d]
- Meltwater flushed methane from Greenland seabed during ice-sheet retreat, researchers reveal [32d]
- 'Last titan': Southeast Asia's biggest dinosaur discovered [32d]
- One in four 2026 World Cup games could face dangerous heat across North America: researchers [32d]
- Baby bugs must play 'game of roulette' to find survival partners before time runs out [32d]
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