The Brutalist Report - science
- Life, death and mowing: Study reveals Britain's poetic obsession with the humble lawnmower [195d]
- Synthetic materials mimic seashells to enhance energy absorption [196d]
- Low-emission zones linked to improved air quality in Belgian cities [196d]
- Microbial monitoring in reef waters offers accessible tool for ecosystem management [196d]
- Researchers find elevated levels of mercury in Colorado mountain wetlands [196d]
- Ocean microbes offer clues to environmental resilience [196d]
- Theoretical model provides fresh route to more efficient cooling using light and heat [196d]
- Optimizing rice mill lab analysis can improve yield, consumer qualities [196d]
- Very different mammals follow the same rules of behavior: Research hints at an underlying architecture [196d]
- Healing the ozone hole helps the Southern Ocean take up carbon, study reveals [196d]
- Ancient ocean sediments link changes in currents to cooling of Northern Hemisphere 3.6 million years ago [196d]
- Subtle ligand modifications in aluminum complexes unlock enhanced solid-state light emission [196d]
- GPS for proteins: Tracking the motions of cell receptors [196d]
- Structural mechanism reveals how antibiotic resistance to fusidic acid works [196d]
- Scientists map activation of prostaglandin E₂ receptor EP1 at atomic level [196d]
- Finely-tuned TiO₂ nanorod arrays enhance solar cell efficiency [196d]
- Tracking down 'annihilation photons' could lead to unique binary systems [196d]
- Advancing Martian geology mapping with machine learning tools [196d]
- From landslides to pharmaceuticals: High-precision model simulates complex granular and fluid interactions [196d]
- Continuous flow process enables safer production of antibacterial drugs from bio-based furfural [196d]
- How to aerobrake a mission to Uranus on the cheap [196d]
- Synthetic molecules encode and decode 11-character password using electrical signals [196d]
- Executive pay is starting to look the same everywhere: That could hurt performance, study suggests [196d]
- Light-to-electricity nanodevice found in cyanobacteria reveals how early life utilized sunlight to make oxygen [196d]
- Not saying it's aliens: SETI survey reveals unexplained pulses from distant stars [196d]
- AI can help students learn better when used creatively, say educators [196d]
- Scientists observe collective behavior of femtoscopic droplets at CERN [196d]
- Communication complexity, once thought to be uniquely human, discovered in orangutans [196d]
- Ultrahigh throughput screening yields improved DNA polymerase [196d]
- An 'invisible order' in glass shapes vibrations in the terahertz frequency range [196d]
- 'Manu jumping': The physics behind making humongous splashes in the pool [196d]
- Optical technique detects ultra-weak atomic motion in crystals with high precision [196d]
- Scientists identify new defense mechanism in CRISPR system [196d]
- Krypton-81 method enables million-year dating of 1-kg Antarctic ice samples [196d]
- Red-sea-star-inspired polyurethane enables rapid underwater self-healing [196d]
- Advancing toward cellulose-based materials for effective and sustainable food packaging [196d]
- Novel molecular maneuver helps malaria parasite dodge the immune system [196d]
- Designing the future of clean energy: 2D Janus heterobilayers lead the way [196d]
- Laser ultrasound used to reveal the elasticity of space rock for the first time [196d]
- Rising temperatures lead to unexpectedly rapid carbon release from soils [196d]
- Homo erectus from the seabed—new archaeological discoveries in Indonesia [196d]
- Working from home isn't significantly changing where people live, study reveals [196d]
- World's biggest polluters are least affected by environmental damage and conflict, study finds [196d]
- Spring in the Alps now begins almost a week earlier than it did 25 years ago [196d]
- Landing on the moon is an incredibly difficult feat—2025 has brought successes and shortfalls [196d]
- Are mountain species on the brink? They may be more resilient than we thought [196d]
- Hubble captures the Large Magellanic Cloud [196d]
- Why we fall for fake health information—and how it spreads faster than facts [196d]
- Martian resource potential and challenges for future human activities [196d]
- TESS has found exoplanets. Can it find rings around them? [196d]
- A CubeSat to capture a supernova's UV spectrum [196d]
- Could dark matter be evolving over time, and not dark energy? [196d]
- Students use AI for their assignments—this AI tutor can actually help them learn [196d]
- The space race is being reshaped by geopolitics, offering opportunities for countries such as New Zealand [196d]
- Citizen science cloud-watching project needs your photos of night-shining clouds [196d]
- Study finds unfair expectations place extra pressure on new teachers [196d]
- Two distinct exciton states observed in 2H stacked bilayer molybdenum diselenide [196d]
- Banning young people from social media sounds like a silver bullet—global evidence suggests otherwise [196d]
- How Denmark's oysters are transforming foodies into citizen scientists [196d]
- The 'Fredo effect': Why one out of three family businesses is inherited by the wrong person [196d]
- 70 South African white rhinos to be relocated to Rwanda [196d]
- Nose cone glitch wipes Australian rocket launch [196d]
- Language a barrier in biodiversity work: Study suggests an English abstract may increase readership [196d]
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