The Brutalist Report - phys
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- Young people risk drifting into serious online offenses through a slippery slope of high-risk digital behavior [94d]
- Handmade learning: Students weave sustainability lessons into rag rugs [94d]
- Can a hashtag help prevent atrocities? Study shows social media can be a powerful tool [94d]
- Rural coworking spaces thrive on community ties and mixed funding models [94d]
- British redcoat's lost memoir reveals harsh realities of life as a disabled veteran [94d]
- Chemists determine structure of fuzzy coat that surrounds Tau proteins [94d]
- Study shows how kidnapping of athlete's father influenced society, president across continents [94d]
- Staying single for longer affects young people's well-being, study finds [94d]
- A new form of graphene-derived material could unlock next-generation printed electronics [94d]
- Tuning spin waves—using commercially available devices at room temperature [94d]
- LGBTQ+ Aussies face work participation inequalities, finds study [94d]
- Skin-boosting lipids revealed within rice bran by-products [94d]
- Graphene coatings can serve as an eco-friendly alternative to biocides [94d]
- Neutral-atom arrays, a rapidly emerging quantum computing platform, get a boost from researchers [94d]
- Museum design quietly determines what visitors see and what they miss [94d]
- Ultrasound-activated nanoparticles in immune cells trigger targeted inflammatory response [94d]
- An innovative new tool draws on emojis to improve consumer sentiment analysis [94d]
- There's an intensifying kind of threat to academic freedom: Watchful students serving as informants [94d]
- Black Ivory coffee: Elephant gut bacteria may contribute to its smooth, chocolaty flavor [94d]
- From a new flagship space telescope to lunar exploration, global cooperation will make 2026 an exciting year for space [94d]
- Whether or not US acquires Greenland, the island will be at the center of a massive military build-up in the Arctic [94d]
- Why don't antibiotic-making bacteria self-destruct? [94d]
- India shows how urban forests can help cool cities, as long as planners understand what nature and people need [94d]
- Rocks and rolls: The computational infrastructure of earthquakes and physics of planetary science [94d]
- AI sheds light on hard-to-study ocean currents [94d]
- Why people believe misinformation even when they're told the facts [94d]
- Bis-pseudoindoxyls: A new class of single benzene-based fluorophores for bioimaging applications [94d]
- CRISPR–Cas3 genome-editing system holds therapeutic potential [94d]
- Bulk inorganic crystals grown from water emit 'handed' light [94d]
- The US military has a long history in Greenland, from WWII mining to a nuclear-powered Army base built into ice [94d]
- Researchers film foraging strategy of wood mice choosing between healthy and moth-damaged chestnuts [94d]
- Atomic-level surface control boosts brightness of eco-friendly nanosemiconductors by 18-fold [94d]
- Climate engineering would alter the oceans, reshaping marine life. Our new study examines each method's risks [94d]
- Human–wildlife conflict in Zimbabwe is a crisis: Who is in danger, where, and why? [94d]
- Ancient teeth are treasure troves of data on Iron Age lifestyles [94d]
- Avocadoes may become easier to grow in India—but not if global emissions remain high [94d]
- Eleven novel factors essential for mouse zygote development discovered [94d]
- Plants use bacterial-like gene to make alkaloids, offering new route for sustainable medicines [94d]
- How prolonged maternal care in horses builds better brains and improves social skills [94d]
- Peering below Callisto's icy crust with ALMA [94d]
- Revealing the parental role in preventing childhood internet addiction and how to combat it [94d]
- A CRISPR fingerprint of pathogenic C. auris fungi for precision diagnostics [94d]
- To show LGBTQ+ support, experts say look beyond pride month [94d]
- Quantum simulator reveals how vibrations steer energy flow in molecules [94d]
- Youth rank safety as top priority again, study shows [94d]
- Medieval burials shed light on Menga dolmen's multicultural significance over thousands of years [94d]
- Researchers expand human genome map to 2.37 million regulatory DNA elements [94d]
- Overly involved parents may hold their kids back professionally [94d]
- NASA acknowledges record heat but avoids referencing climate change [94d]
- Researchers solve mystery of universe's 'little red dots' [94d]
- Detailed map reveals groundwater levels across the U.S. [94d]
- A 'cosmic clock' in tiny crystals reveals the rise and fall of Australia's ancient landscapes [94d]
- Woolly rhino genome recovered from Ice Age wolf stomach [94d]
- Analyzing Darwin's specimens without opening 200-year-old jars [95d]
- First-ever sanctuary of mountain ice cores in Antarctica preserves these climate archives for centuries [95d]
- Digital twins in the Arctic: How Svalbard is becoming a living lab for marine restoration [95d]
- Common: Being wrong. Less common: Admitting it. Acknowledging being wrong can increase trustworthiness in science [95d]
- Jupiter's hidden depths: Simulation suggests planet holds 1.5 times more oxygen than the sun [95d]
- Do even low-mass dwarf galaxies merge? New clues from the outer stars of a Milky Way satellite [95d]
- Scientists measure cellular membrane thickness inside cells for the first time [95d]
- A nanomaterial flex—MXene electrodes help OLED display technology shine, while bending and stretching [95d]
- First-time use of AI for genetic circuit design demonstrated in a human cell line [95d]
- Major river deltas are sinking faster than sea-level rise, study shows [95d]
- Polyamines guide cellular decisions by altering the phosphoproteomic landscape, study finds [95d]
- AI tools are expanding individual capabilities while contracting scientific attention, research finds [95d]
- What happens when fire ignites in space? 'A ball of flame' [95d]
- Indoor ozone reaction products can make blood thicker [95d]
- After medical issue, SpaceX Crew-11 set to depart space station for overnight splashdown [95d]
- A novel sanctuary in Antarctica is preserving ice samples from rapidly melting glaciers [95d]
- From bolts to blue jets, lightning comes in many strange forms [95d]
- Hydrogel cilia set new standard in microrobotics [95d]
- Physics of foam strangely resembles AI training [95d]
- Takeaway coffee cups release thousands of microplastic particles, research reveals [95d]
- As we begin to assess the fire damage in Victoria, we must not overlook these hidden costs [95d]
- Homo habilis: The oldest and most complete skeleton discovered to date [95d]
- New state of matter discovered in a quantum material [95d]
- Underestimates in global warming pose major climate and financial risks, report shows [95d]
- Why reading for pleasure matters [95d]
- Can a bat catch prey on a mirror? A bat's expert foraging skills revealed using a robot [95d]
- Type Ia supernova delayed-detonation model supported by SN 2024gy observations [95d]
- Lowering deer densities can help restore Scotland's lost Highland mountain woodlands, new research shows [95d]
- Study finds that missionaries pull from same language toolkit to describe experiences [95d]
- Two simple modifications cool Kenyan homes and keep mosquitoes out [95d]
- How 'smart' nanoparticles can deliver targeted gene therapy in osteoarthritis [95d]
- 'Absolutely huge' black coral among largest ever seen [95d]
- Astronomers discover 19 new pulsars by analyzing FAST archival data [95d]
- Scotland's success in ending harmful shelters is at risk, research reveals [95d]
- Fire on ice: The Arctic's changing fire regime [95d]
- Ancient Tethys Ocean shaped Central Asia's landscape, study suggests [95d]
- Siwarha's wake gives it away at Betelgeuse [95d]
- Ground-breaking study evidences flapper skate recovery in Scotland [95d]
- Frozen hydrogen cyanide 'cobwebs' offer clues to origin of life [95d]
- T. rex grew up slowly: New study reveals 'king of dinosaurs' kept growing until age 40 [95d]
- First extensive study into marsupial gut microbiomes reveals new microbial species and antimicrobial resistance [95d]
- Time warp: How marketers express time can affect what consumers buy [95d]
- Crop droughts set to worsen—even as rainfall increases [95d]
- Measuring movement creates a new way to map indoor air pollution [95d]
- 2025 was third hottest year on record: EU, US experts [95d]
- Scientist wins 'Environment Nobel' for shedding light on hidden fungal networks [95d]
- New method allows scientists to 3D-print structures within cells [95d]
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