The Brutalist Report - phys
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- New model finds the lower size limit for habitable exoplanets [34d]
- Birds of prey in South Africa are in trouble—a study analyzes data from 16 years of road counts [34d]
- Algal bloom crisis shows climate risks need evaluative governance [34d]
- Generative AI may significantly reduce the number of animal experiments [34d]
- Scurvy's skeletal fingerprint found in California's Late Holocene archaeological sites [34d]
- Chip-scale photonic approach achieves ultralow-noise microwave and millimeter-wave signal generation [34d]
- Why prescribed fire often fails: Scorched invasive shrubs can resprout instead of die [34d]
- Pet loss is difficult for people—what about for other pets? [34d]
- New research examines 'remorse bias' in legal decision-making [34d]
- NASA fuel cell tests pave way for energy storage on the moon [34d]
- Unexplored interactions between electrons and atomic nuclei shed light on dark matter [34d]
- Aquifer recharge could buffer water scarcity, yet policy blocks uptake in five countries [34d]
- Brazilian microfossils interpreted as animal traces are actually algae and bacteria, research reveals [34d]
- Lab-grown diamond device could change how radiation doses are measured [34d]
- Snow and glacier ecosystems across remote Antarctic island reveal hidden microbial diversity [34d]
- Heat index maps uncover when city greening cools most—and when it can backfire [34d]
- Nudge theory was all about taking responsibility, but it allowed big business to look the other way [34d]
- Researchers find coherent ferrons—polarization waves with potential across quantum and telecom applications [34d]
- Metagenomics and AI could unlock uncultivated bacteria and archaea [34d]
- From AI companions to climate action, we undervalue what lies ahead [34d]
- Smarter search for fuel-cell catalysts uses machine learning [34d]
- Hidden proton pathways emerge as ultrathin polymer film method splits interface signals [34d]
- What it would have been like to experience the dinosaur‑killing asteroid armageddon: A blow‑by‑blow account [34d]
- Climate patterns may shape where violent conflict risks are amplified [34d]
- Relaxing rules on carbon markets would undermine climate action, scientists warn [34d]
- How carbon dioxide cools the upper atmosphere—and warms Earth below [34d]
- Inland seas may face widespread heat waves by midcentury as warming accelerates [34d]
- Can plants hear? Latest research offers new insights [34d]
- Shark face study uncovers 400-million-year-old blueprint shared across jawed vertebrates [34d]
- Looped polymers unlock stronger, faster molecular binding through entropy, model suggests [34d]
- How AI can lead to false arrests and wrongful convictions [34d]
- New alien-life test could help Mars and Europa missions read organic molecules [34d]
- Study finds airborne testing could help spot equine herpesvirus at major events [34d]
- Light reshapes metal-organic framework to harvest airborne water [34d]
- New AI tool predicts how cells choose their future—helping uncover hidden drivers of development [34d]
- Vessel tracking reveals how invasive seaweed could spread across New Zealand [34d]
- Wildfire smoke's hidden ozone threat may be adding thousands of US deaths each year [35d]
- Pentagon releases UFO files that go back to the Apollo moon missions [35d]
- How the evolution of blockchain is changing our ideas about trust [35d]
- Why gradual environmental change can trigger sudden species collapse and fragmented populations [35d]
- Antarctic sea ice defied global warming for decades—now, hidden ocean heat is breaking through [35d]
- Hubble survey sets up Roman's future look near Milky Way's center [35d]
- How the Atlantic herring adapted to the brackish water of the Baltic Sea [35d]
- What happens when scientists trust AI more than colleagues? [35d]
- JWST spots two early black holes growing far faster than their galaxies [35d]
- Saturn's icy rings likely formed from lost moon Chrysalis [35d]
- How a single star can reshape an entire galaxy [35d]
- New research highlights how wildfires are harming fish [35d]
- Resilient quantum sensor monitors Earth's magnetic field from space for 10 months [35d]
- No more 'just say no'—Canadian schools will soon have a roadmap to address student substance use [35d]
- The material science behind a spacecraft's impact armor [35d]
- Seismic attenuation techniques reveal what lies beneath Taiwan [35d]
- A roadmap for safer, explainable protein-design AI [35d]
- Buried in Sudan's desert, 280 vast stone circles reveal a vanished cattle-herding culture [35d]
- The birds and the babies: Humans and zebra finches have a similar technique for learning to speak [35d]
- Meet the mosquito terminator—a spider that likes us and eats our enemies [35d]
- When your workplace doesn't match your ethical outlook—the problem of 'moral injury' [35d]
- Why ocean warming experiments may be making misleading predictions [35d]
- Tips and tricks guide for writing and responding to peer reviews released [35d]
- Fresh brew, harsh bite: Coffee's bitter edge finally comes into full molecular view [35d]
- Katalyst wraps testing at NASA Goddard for Swift boost mission [35d]
- Advanced construction techniques and domestic layouts discovered in Roman-Byzantine villages of Syria [35d]
- Black holes don't live forever, but they might live long enough to look like white holes [35d]
- Machine learning proves that graphene is hydrophobic [35d]
- The G-value paradox: Why similar genes can lead to very different brains [35d]
- An everyday sweetener offers a surprisingly powerful engine for transparent, stretchable electronics [35d]
- Anonymous school tip lines reveal patterns in threats, mental health concerns among youth, study finds [35d]
- Where scientists watch the forest breathe, findings uproot how people think about forest-atmosphere interactions [35d]
- Earth's first continents may trace back to subduction 3.5 billion years ago [35d]
- 'Natural', 'vegan', 'eco-friendly': Australia's food sustainability claims lack regulation [35d]
- 'Elegant triangle' experiment suggests quantum internet may be closer than we think [35d]
- Analysis shows no evidence greed benefits societies or organizations [35d]
- More Star Wars-like worlds emerge as 27 planet candidates with two suns discovered [35d]
- Industrial fishing has been depleting midwater fish for decades, new study finds [35d]
- How social science helps keep bugs off corn [35d]
- The National Science Board purge, explained [35d]
- Old plant populations offer new clues to climate resilience [35d]
- When uncertainty spikes, chasing rewards backfires and a more informed strategy pulls ahead [35d]
- Complex habitat crucial to brush-tailed rock-wallaby survival [35d]
- Publisher's first sustainable impact report showcases positive impact on society and the environment [35d]
- War‑driven sea detours are reshaping shipping routes, putting whales off South Africa in sudden peril [35d]
- Deep beneath Swiss Alps, researchers trigger 8,000 tiny quakes in controlled test [35d]
- Q&A: How jellyfish bycatch could be a valuable collagen source for cosmetics and biotech [35d]
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