The Brutalist Report - science
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- Many students listen to music to focus and stay motivated while they study—but it doesn't always help [9d]
- Feline fleas carry bacteria linked to human disease in South Texas, study finds [9d]
- The center has shifted: Multifunctional facility in Japan reshapes where people linger [9d]
- Hantaviruses may have co-evolved with rodents for ages, helping explain silent spread [9d]
- Airborne AI spots underwater munitions in shallow seas with high precision [9d]
- Postwar research compact fueled U.S. prosperity for eight decades, argues commentary [9d]
- This satellite constellation transformed earth science by creatively tuning in to GPS signals [9d]
- Nanozymes map nanoparticle routes inside live cells without genetic engineering [9d]
- Simulation reveals how glaciers transported rocks across the Alps 24,000 years ago [9d]
- Beyond the 24-hour day: How employee biological clocks and beliefs drive workplace cooperation [9d]
- Coral loss may erase up to $3 billion in Hawaiʻi reef recreation by 2100 [9d]
- Discarded plastic bottles help save dolphins from fishing nets [9d]
- More Canadian than the beaver? Scientists discover a western toad found only in Canada [9d]
- Migration is dropping, but public concern is climbing. Why? [9d]
- Ecological factors, not social behavior, explain brain size in cephalopods [9d]
- Zero-waste plastic and color recycling: The end of colored plastic downgrading could be near [9d]
- Single ion maps 3D electromagnetic fields above chips with record sensitivity [9d]
- Awe and the 'overview effect' may shape how students learn geography [9d]
- Synchronized infrared lasers control molecular shape changes and expose hidden fingerprints [9d]
- Modern life may be outpacing the human mind [9d]
- Could 'Trojan horse'-type microorganisms that exploit symbiotic systems be candidates for new biological pesticides? [9d]
- Purine-heavy DNA sequences protect Bacillus subtilis genes from Rho termination [9d]
- Brown leaves before fall could signal lasting heat damage, researchers warn [9d]
- World Cup data reveals initiative alone doesn't improve team performance [9d]
- Compromise drives shared risky decisions, but biased blame and credit can break teamwork [9d]
- Seaweeds are not plants, and six other surprising facts about aquatic flora [9d]
- Diffractive networks enable optical information transfer through random and unknown diffusers [9d]
- Orbitronics clears key hurdle with direct orbital currents, boosting signals 100-fold [9d]
- How signals in the embryo tell cells what to become: A lab's final discovery [9d]
- How winter conditions shape future jellyfish blooms [9d]
- More gray seals counted in the Wadden Sea [9d]
- Instant digital rewards may make hard thinking feel less worthwhile [9d]
- Most Europeans see economic growth as essential for a sustainable future [9d]
- Prescribed burns may generate over 20% of fine particle pollution in southeastern US [9d]
- How to stop a mouse plague [9d]
- Light flips bacterial signaling enzyme between two shapes, unlocking how signals travel [9d]
- AI analysis of data from multiple sensors can improve earthquake detection [9d]
- The broader a fungus's diet, the better it kills insects and helps plants [9d]
- Spontaneous current loops in a kagome metal point to hidden quantum order [9d]
- Researchers develop a new predictive model for designing 2D perovskites [9d]
- Plant DNA harbors virus 'fossils' that reflect 300 million years of evolution [9d]
- New polymer design could make everyday plastics easier to break down without losing performance [9d]
- Hunting behavior drives the evolution of spider eye arrangements, study finds [9d]
- Why shorter lists win: Researchers study how people misread rankings [9d]
- Microtubules in ovarian cell bridges may be key to fertility [9d]
- Gallium uses visible light to activate aryl iodides in rare bond-breaking reaction [9d]
- Quantum properties of multimode light observed despite extreme losses [9d]
- Metallic effect pigments significantly reduce flow-line visibility on glossy plastic surfaces [9d]
- A WRAP for biology's greasiest problem [9d]
- How giant tropical trees transport water 70 meters to stay as drought-resilient as smaller trees [9d]
- Scientists uncover why Antarctica became engulfed by ice millions of years before the Arctic [9d]
- We can't air-condition our way out of a hotter future, says expert [9d]
- Deliberate slow growth could explain bacteria survival strategies [9d]
- Dynamic black holes may obey Hawking-style thermodynamics with an alternative entropy measure [9d]
- MOF thin films reveal hidden dense packing, challenging decades of porous assumptions [9d]
- Space startup to launch India's first private orbital rocket [9d]
- El Niño is shaping up for a hot summer—could recycled water be part of the solution? [9d]
- Hidden role of garnet reveals how Earth's 660-km seismic boundary forms [9d]
- 'Show some gratitude'—how this rhetoric shapes views on immigration, even for migrants [9d]
- What makes a star a star? A strange 'in‑between' celestial object is testing astronomers' boundaries [9d]
- Workplace depression is common. Managers can make it worse, or better [9d]
- Quantum gravity tests may mistake ordinary spacetime for superposition [9d]
- These glaciers are becoming critical climate havens as America's iconic mountain glaciers and their water diminish [9d]
- Austin neighborhood tap water tests uncover lead and arsenic in homes [9d]
- Comet from another star has a composition unlike anything else in our solar system [9d]
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