The Brutalist Report - phys
- The possible applications of olive pomace: A study reveals the most sustainable option [18d]
- NASA's Artemis II plans to send a crew around the moon to test equipment and lay the groundwork for a future landing [18d]
- Q&A: What we've learned about how students are using AI, and how to help them [18d]
- Mediterranean pine needle loss analyzed for more efficient forest management [18d]
- A human tendency to value expertise, not just sheer power, explains how some social hierarchies form [18d]
- Why the idea of an 'ideal worker' can be so harmful for people with mental health conditions [18d]
- Cryogenic cooling material composed solely of abundant elements reaches 4K [19d]
- Medieval women used falconry to subvert gender norms [19d]
- Why futuristic, tech-centered 'smart city' projects are destined to fail [19d]
- Reading the moon's diary, one speck of dust at a time [19d]
- Innate biases of newborn animals inspire adaptive decision-making model [19d]
- Political division in the US surged from 2008 onward, study suggests [19d]
- What's the point of a space station around the moon? [19d]
- Reproduction in space, an environment hostile to human biology [19d]
- Urban light pollution disrupts nighttime melatonin in wild nurse sharks [19d]
- Study finds long-term research partnerships can strengthen sustainable urban farming [19d]
- Modeling finds old-growth wildfire risk highest where low-severity fires once burned [19d]
- New framework maps seven pillars for judging research trustworthiness [19d]
- One-of-a-kind 'plasma tunnel' recreates extreme conditions spacecraft face upon reentry [19d]
- Under snowpacks, microbes drive a winter-to-spring nitrogen pulse, study finds [19d]
- Global plastics treaty negotiations: Success is still possible, researchers argue [19d]
- Agave or bust! Mexican long-nosed bats head farther north in search of sweet nectar [19d]
- SpaceX grounds Falcon 9 missions, could impact ISS launch [19d]
- Even larvae mind the social bubble: How they adjust their behavior in response to social surroundings [19d]
- The rise and fall (and rise again) of gold prices: What's going on? [19d]
- Supermassive black holes sit in 'eye of their own storms,' studies find [19d]
- AI systems could identify math anxiety from student inputs and change feedback [19d]
- Warmer Northeast Atlantic waters and heavy fishing leave cod and haddock chasing smaller prey [19d]
- A UK climate security report backed by the intelligence services was quietly buried until now [19d]
- Not an artifact, but an ancestor: Why a German university is returning a Māori taonga [19d]
- Study highlights stressed faults in potential shale gas region in South Africa [19d]
- Cosmic radiation brought to light: Researchers measure ionization in dark cloud for the first time [19d]
- Research finds 'cheap stock' options common before IPOs, averaging fivefold gains [19d]
- Ozone-depleting CFCs detected in historical measurements—20 years earlier than previously known [19d]
- New mineral sunscreen reduces white cast by using tetrapod-shaped zinc oxide [19d]
- Physicists achieve near-zero friction on macroscopic scales [19d]
- Maps offer neighborhood-level insight into American migration [19d]
- The unraveling of the shrew, in winter: Studies decode genetic basis of seasonal organ shrinkage in mammals [19d]
- No fences needed: GPS collars show 'virtual fencing' is next frontier of livestock grazing [19d]
- Photosynthesis: Study reveals how minerals are involved in homeostasis of chloroplasts [19d]
- Solid, iron-rich megastructure under Hawaii slows seismic waves and may drive plume upwelling [19d]
- A new class of strange one-dimensional particles [19d]
- Did we just see a black hole explode? Physicists think so—and it could explain (almost) everything [19d]
- NASA's Crew-12 begins quarantine before February launch to space station [19d]
- Climate change threatens the Winter Olympics' future, and even snowmaking has limits for saving the Games [19d]
- How play and social connection may help some dogs understand words [19d]
- AI challenges established norms in higher education [19d]
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