The Brutalist Report - science
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- When NASA's experimental technology detects a tsunami, it may help save lives [13d]
- Yes, AI could boost productivity, but work is about more than maximizing output [13d]
- Why a canceled meeting feels so liberating [13d]
- In Hollywood, teams don't stick together long enough to learn from failure, data reveal [13d]
- Research suggests negative emotions at work can help, depending on leaders' empathy [13d]
- Adding 1,000 immigrants tied to 142 more health workers, fewer elderly deaths [13d]
- Drought spurs rise in antibiotic-resistant soil microbes [13d]
- Male bats sing in the rotor-swept zone of wind turbines, potentially raising collision risk [13d]
- Biosensor detects early fungal outbreaks, advances plant biotechnology [13d]
- Shift in key cosmic inflation measurement could be a statistical artifact [13d]
- Euthanasia rates for stray dogs triple as more animals enter UK shelters [13d]
- Gran Dolina site at Atapuerca reveals almost exclusive use of local chert 400,000 years ago [13d]
- New findings on the first steps in protein synthesis [13d]
- Single-cell sequencing reveals unexpected protist diversity [13d]
- Why cultivating drought-resistant plants disappoints: Soil physics may be the real bottleneck [13d]
- A sudden surge in luminosity: Stacked dyes hint at brighter organic semiconductors [13d]
- Chaos as a matter of direction: Researchers build layered material where order and disorder coexist [13d]
- From slices to whole bodies: How 3D cell atlases could reshape pathology research [13d]
- Is the biggest march in English history a myth? My research shows King Harold sailed down to the battle of Hastings [13d]
- Study reshapes understanding of interaction between organelles in animal cells [13d]
- High-pressure freezing boosts cell survival with less cryoprotectant, study shows [13d]
- First quantum oscillations observed in gallium nitride holes [13d]
- Engineered E. coli can monitor arsenic, offering a cheap biosensor [13d]
- Record-smashing heat continues: 'Basically the entire U.S. is going to be hot' [13d]
- CryoPRISM: A new tool for observing cellular machinery in a more natural environment [13d]
- Researchers reveal m6A epigenetic modification controls arbovirus infection and transmission [13d]
- Roll-call votes may understate polarization in Congress, study finds [13d]
- Prolonged exposure to microplastics disrupts the metabolism of Mediterranean octocorals, finds study [13d]
- Astronomers discover 87 stellar stream candidates in the Milky Way [13d]
- Astrophysicists resolve 'negative superhump' conundrum of deep-space binary star systems [13d]
- One step closer to deciphering TOR, the molecular machinery that makes humans and yeast grow [13d]
- Shorebird science and conservation collective shows big data can protect birds [13d]
- Image: NASA's Hubble and Webb Telescopes survey the Pinwheel Galaxy [13d]
- Genome-hopping 'Starships' may explain why some pest-killing fungi stop working [13d]
- Stealth superstorms reveal lightning on Jupiter: Beyond the superbolt [13d]
- Superconducting chip generates tunable terahertz waves for compact imaging [13d]
- LLMs stereotype non-Western moral values in predictable ways, research finds [13d]
- Hubble revisits Crab Nebula to track 25 years of expansion [13d]
- Jamming bacterial communications, instead of killing the microbes, might provide long-lasting treatment [13d]
- Frustrated Lewis pair chemistry enables dual atom insertion to build bioactive molecules [13d]
- Diamonds are not a geoengineer's best friend: Carbon impurities provide a reality check [13d]
- Climate change may complicate avalanche risk across the Pacific Northwest [13d]
- Wildflower folk remedy shows modern potential for tackling antibiotic resistance [13d]
- Unlocking longevity insights from ancient bristlecone pine [13d]
- Precision of the food-directional 'waggle dance' fluctuates with audience size and who's in attendance, study reveals [13d]
- Nanoplastics become more harmful after being outdoors, study finds [13d]
- Green clay courts serve up environmental solutions by absorbing carbon dioxide [13d]
- The 'silent takeover': Invasive bees are reshaping Chile's unique pollination networks [13d]
- Study explores 'antifragility' in nature, where some species benefit from extreme swings [13d]
- Discovery of genetic switch could help turn rice into a perennial crop [13d]
- The 'private solution trap': Why richer countries may favor adaptation over public solutions, and who pays [13d]
- A safer, nonflammable battery electrolyte exists, but self-assembly flaw is holding it back [13d]
- Python scales host microstructures that block bacterial biofilms—revealing potential for antimicrobial materials [13d]
- Tracking Arctic freshwater flow from space [13d]
- Urban blue tits use discarded cigarette butts to protect their nests, study suggests [13d]
- The evolutionary secret of the California poppy's alkaloids [13d]
- How dolphins communicate: New discoveries from a long‑term study in Sarasota, Florida [13d]
- Decoding sugars one bond at a time—without labels [13d]
- Striped mice survive harsh drought by slowing down and not getting stressed [13d]
- Mining a methane-degrading bioreactor for protein rubies [14d]
- Moby Dick 'ship sinking' sperm whales caught headbutting on camera [14d]
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