The Brutalist Report - phys
- A slowly spinning universe could solve the Hubble tension [335d]
- Study explores how food manufacturers respond to state regulations [335d]
- Hubble spots stellar sculptors in nearby galaxy [335d]
- Bergantes River could be important route for Neolithization of Lower Aragon in Spain [335d]
- Lucy spacecraft prepares for second asteroid encounter [335d]
- Live imaging captures DNA folding in sperm cells for the first time [335d]
- ATLAS gets under the hood of the Higgs mechanism [335d]
- Iraq sandstorm leaves 1,800 people with respiratory problems: Health officials [335d]
- Soil organic carbon is at risk in a large part of European agricultural land [335d]
- How mobile devices shape the way Gen Z interacts with brands, spends money [335d]
- 'Molecular glues' offer a possible therapeutic approach for autoimmune conditions [335d]
- New pathoblocker can stop Salmonella infections early on [335d]
- Microscopy method breaks barriers in nanoscale chemical imaging [335d]
- Satellites underestimate power plant CO₂ emissions by 70%, study reveals [335d]
- To avoid parasites, some fruit flies sacrifice sleep [335d]
- Social Security's trust fund could run out of money sooner than expected due to changes in taxes and benefits [335d]
- Understanding DNA repair: How a 'twisting switch' and SUMO4 protein could refine cancer therapies [335d]
- Archaeologists measure and compare size of 50,000 ancient houses to learn about history of inequality [336d]
- Archaeologists discover historical link between inequality and sustainability [336d]
- An alternative to artificial fertilizers: Small peptides enhance symbiosis between plants and fungi [336d]
- Study cracks code for increasing sustainability of pest-killing proteins in genetically engineered crops [336d]
- Infection control: How the Salmonella pathogen survives a hostile environment [336d]
- Artful single-atom catalysts can enable sustainable chemical and pharmaceutical synthesis [336d]
- 'Ozone-climate penalty' adds to India's air pollution [336d]
- Why 'de-extinct' dire wolves are a Trojan horse to hide humanity's destruction of nature [336d]
- Climate-proof seed trials yield results in Rwanda [336d]
- Tidal flooding on Indian lake demands lasting solutions [336d]
- How insects and the smallest animals survive Antarctica [336d]
- Nested hierarchies in job skills underscore importance of basic education [336d]
- Scientists say they 'de-extincted' dire wolves: Experts are skeptical [336d]
- Early education changes spur unexpected drop in test scores in the Philippines—a lesson for policymakers [336d]
- 401(k) plans and stock market volatility: What you need to know [336d]
- Playing and exploring outdoors brings risk, and that's good for children [336d]
- Are Britons really poorer than they were 20 years ago, or does it just feel that way? [336d]
- Mathematicians solve centuries-old mystery of how 'broken' tulips get their stripes [336d]
- Cooler, faster, better: Crystal waves enable ultrafast heat transfer for cooler electronics [336d]
- Perceived consensus drives moral intolerance in a time of identity-driven politics and online bubbles [336d]
- How and where is nuclear waste stored in the US? [336d]
- AI enables prediction of El Niño events in South Atlantic Ocean months in advance [336d]
- Ancient DNA research aids de-extinction efforts and reveals surprising dire wolf ancestry [336d]
- Comprehensive fruit fly behavior dataset maps genetic diversity to decode animal behavioral patterns [336d]
- Fighting honey fraud with AI technology [336d]
- Researchers investigate circular RNA's influence on muscle development in cerebral palsy [336d]
- GraphBAN: Making drug discovery faster and more affordable through artificial intelligence [336d]
- Tropical bounty: How forests can turn into chemical factories [336d]
- When ice ages end, ocean circulation fine-tunes ocean heat [336d]
- Illegal poisonings imperil European raptors and could disrupt ecosystem health [336d]
- Copernicus may have leaned on ancient Muslim astronomer in developing his cosmological system [336d]
- Harnessing photocatalysis: Hydrogen generation and organic synthesis explored through new database [336d]
- Scientists unveil model to predict estuarine water flow and pollution [336d]
- Ocean wave formation study improves forecasting for coastal flood protection [336d]
- Ultra-thin, flexible silicone nanosensor could have huge impact on brain injury treatment [336d]
- Public protesters are our socially connected friends and neighbors, not angry loners [336d]
- The largest flood in Earth's history burst through Gibraltar and Sicily and refilled the entire Mediterranean [336d]
- Molecular nanocages can remove 80–90% of PFAS from water [336d]
- Pikachu protesters, Studio Ghibli memes and the subversive power of cuteness [336d]
- Companies will still face pressure to manage for climate change, even as government rolls back US climate policy [336d]
- A new family of enzymes can induce targeted cuts in single-stranded DNA [336d]
- Terminations at US government agencies that monitor extreme weather events will have negative effects [336d]
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