The Brutalist Report - science
- Research shows Democrats trust doctors more than Republicans post-pandemic [214d]
- Hot Schrödinger cat states created [214d]
- Oxygen is running low in inland waters—and human activities are to blame [214d]
- Battle of the sex chromosomes: How competition affects X vs. Y sperm fitness [214d]
- Drone and camera combo offers affordable drought-tolerance selection for corn [214d]
- Air pollution and extreme heat increase mortality in India [214d]
- The world's most powerful ocean current could slow by 2050 [214d]
- Planarian worms can regenerate into a more youthful version of themselves [214d]
- Mathematicians uncover the hidden patterns behind a $3.5 billion cryptocurrency collapse [214d]
- Four space tourists return to Earth after a private flight over the poles [214d]
- Image: A chance alignment in Lupus [214d]
- Research suggests attacks on higher ed part of a 'political playbook' since the Civil Rights Movement [214d]
- Hubble spots star cluster NGC 346 [214d]
- Expert warns of misinterpretations in AI-generated research hypotheses [214d]
- Beyond photorespiration: A systematic approach to unlocking enhanced plant productivity [214d]
- Label-free fluorosensor detects enteroviral RNA with high selectivity and sensitivity [214d]
- Ancient lakes and rivers unearthed in Arabia's vast desert [214d]
- Iron nitride's magnetoelastic properties show potential for flexible spintronics [214d]
- How do diverse plants get sick in the wild? Researchers head outdoors to answer a blue-sky question [214d]
- Bacteria's viral defense mechanism linked to antibiotic resistance [214d]
- Enhancing heat transfer using the turbulent flow of viscoelastic fluids [214d]
- A mission that could reach Mercury on solar sails alone [214d]
- Here's how we could quickly raise temperatures on Mars [214d]
- Scientists discover deep-sea microplastic hotspots driven by fast-moving underwater avalanches [214d]
- Polymers with flawed fillers boost heat transfer in plastics, study reveals [214d]
- Long-term studies at Jasper Ridge yield insights into oak ecosystems [214d]
- Nations divided ahead of decisive week for shipping emissions [214d]
- Study reveals hidden funding channels for police departments [214d]
- Underwater robotic gliders provide new insights into the impact of a melting megaberg [214d]
- Microscopy reveals signs of life in Earth's extremes, boosting search for alien life [214d]
- Fear of rejection shapes children's peer group behavior [214d]
- Scientists reveal new toxin that damages the gut [214d]
- Persistent underconfidence: Why we doubt our own abilities even when we're good at something [214d]
[ai]
- Gendered expectations extend to science communication [214d]
- An exception to the laws of thermodynamics: Shape-recovering liquid defies textbooks [214d]
- Certain sunflower strains can be induced to form seeds without pollination [214d]
- Massive Jupiter storm churns ammonia deep into planet's atmosphere [214d]
- California announces plans to relax protections for wolves as population grows [214d]
- Soil conditions significantly increase rainfall in world's megastorm hotspots, study shows [214d]
- Artificial sweetener shows surprising power to overcome antibiotic resistance [214d]
- Being alone has its benefits—a psychologist flips the script on the 'loneliness epidemic' [214d]
- Honda to test renewable tech in space soon [214d]
- Picky eaters by day, buffet by night: Butterfly and moth diets sync to plant aromas [214d]
- Access to reliable internet and digital devices tied to college graduation rates during COVID-19 [214d]
- Subreddits study highlights the hidden ways that hate speech spreads [214d]
- Combining polarized light methods reveals hidden molecular orientations with precision [214d]
- Southern Ocean warming may affect tropical drought and rainfall more than Arctic warming [214d]
- New guide seeks to advance DNA library of marine species [214d]
- Sex stereotypes shape children's play in Australian homes [214d]
- How the 'manosphere' spreads through online gaming, influencers and algorithms [214d]
- Bonobos create phrases in similar ways to humans, new study suggests [214d]
- Yes, data can produce better policy—but it's no substitute for real-world experience [214d]
- Astronomers discover doomed pair of spiraling stars on our cosmic doorstep [214d]
- 'It's gone': Conservation science in Thailand's burning forest [214d]
- Clamping down on 'forever chemicals' [214d]
- Crops under threat as surprise March heat wave hits Central Asia: study [214d]
- Yana, a 130,000-year-old baby mammoth, goes under the scalpel [214d]
- The race to save the Amazon's bushy-bearded monkeys [214d]
- Flooding in southeastern Oregon prompts evacuation orders, school closures and health concerns [214d]
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