The Brutalist Report - science
- Scientists see anti-aging potential in an invasive weed [898d]
- Light-bending gravity reveals one of the biggest black holes ever found [898d]
- New insights into how cells respond to altered gravity experienced in space [898d]
- New insights into an old drug: Scientists discover why aspirin works so well [898d]
- The cure for winter flooding might be in this swamp—if California actually funds it [898d]
- Modeling agriculture matters for carbon cycling [898d]
- Researchers develop technology to protect food's bioactive compounds during digestion [898d]
- Scientists develop model for more efficient simulations of protein interactions linked to cancer [898d]
- A wise tool for modifying microbes [898d]
- Some coastal salt marshes are keeping up with sea level rise—for now [898d]
- An epigenetic fingerprint as proof of origin for chicken, shrimp and salmon [898d]
- Highly charged ions melt nano gold nuggets [898d]
- New method for fast, efficient and scalable cloud tomography [898d]
- Preschoolers prefer to learn from a competent robot than an incompetent human, study shows [898d]
- Natural-waste pads developed to keep packaged meat fresh [898d]
- Improved chip-scale color conversion lasers could enable many next-generation quantum devices [898d]
- Fluorescent visualization and evaluation of NPC1L1-mediated cholesterol absorption at the levels of endocytic vesicles [898d]
- New EU project will standardise access to biodiversity data to empower policymakers [898d]
- 'Nature gave us a lifeline:' Southern California refills largest reservoir after wet winter [898d]
- Exploring the atomic flow of nanojoints in Ag nanowire interconnect networks for flexible electronics [898d]
- A covalent organic framework for photosynthesis of hydrogen peroxide with high quantum efficiency [898d]
- Insight-HXMT and GECAM-C observations of the brightest-of-all-time GRB 221009A [898d]
- Brightest gamma-ray burst ever observed reveals new mysteries of cosmic explosions [898d]
- Sydney astronomers provide rapid radio-wave follow-up observation for gamma ray burst GRB 221009A [898d]
- Rural educators find solutions to support multilingual learners [898d]
- Study finds fish assess misinformation to avoid overreaction [898d]
- Tiny yet hazardous: New study shows aerosols produced by contaminated bubble bursting are far smaller than predicted [898d]
- Advancing drug discovery through multitask learning techniques [898d]
- Ghost rodents: Get ready to fall in love with Australia's albino rats and mice [898d]
- Researchers: A shortage of native seeds is slowing land restoration across the US [898d]
- Elephant in the dining room: Startup makes mammoth meatball [898d]
- Simplified screening of individual bacterial species in biosamples [898d]
- Their stories were lost to slavery. Now DNA is writing them [898d]
- An archaeological rediscovery offers clues about distant human past [898d]
- Report: The impact of lockdown on domestic abuse service providers [898d]
- Study finds paying corporate accountants more removes incentives for financial misreporting [898d]
- Queensland women, children and families bear brunt of homelessness, say briefing papers [898d]
- La Niña provides a boost for Australia's environment, but report card still mixed [898d]
- Don't let financial shame be your ruin: Open conversations can help ease the burden of personal debt [898d]
- ChatGPT: Student insights are necessary to help universities plan for the future [898d]
- 'The media normalizes war-mongering': How Chinese Australians respond to talk of war in mainstream media [898d]
- How trees cope with late spring frosts [898d]
- Report: Mitigation of seal-fishery conflict requires cooperation in the Baltic Sea region [898d]
- Mighty oceans and humble ponds play key roles in biodiversity [898d]
- Third pole darkening affects local and remote climates, finds study [898d]
- Global analysis shows soil ecosystems under stress [898d]
- For the first time, astronomers have linked a mysterious fast radio burst with gravitational waves [898d]
- Nanowires in carbon nanotubes have huge solar energy applications [898d]
- How is AI changing the way we write and create? [898d]
- Can AI predict how you'll vote in the next election? New study says yes [898d]
- The role of our parks in the fight against climate change [898d]
- Redness of Neptunian asteroids sheds light on early solar system [898d]
- Students' mental health is a big issue for schools—but teachers should only be part of the solution, say researchers [898d]
- Developing drugs against drought [898d]
- Extinction of steam locomotives derails assumptions about biological evolution, claims researcher [898d]
- Discovery of drug candidate that neutralizes SARS-CoV-2 could reduce length of infection upon exposure [898d]
- Study shows that people are more likely to be eco-friendly if others around them are [898d]
- Climate change threatens lemurs on Madagascar [898d]
- Finding the right twist in nanophysics [898d]
- What should we call evolution driven by genetic engineering? Genetic welding, says researcher [898d]
- Temperature-dependent adaptations of whale shark vision [898d]
- The powerhouse of the future: Artificial cells [898d]
- Using bacteria to convert CO2 in the air into a polyester [898d]
- Team successfully tests, validates new method for measuring the precise dimensions and comparability of biomolecules [898d]
- How dogs are used impacts how they are treated, finds cross-cultural database study [898d]
- How to protect the integrity of survey research: 12 recommendations [898d]
- Sulfur may be partly responsible for reddish feathers in barn owls on remote islands [898d]
- Mathematician uncovers methods to shrink sampling errors in large-dimensional data sets [898d]
- Indonesia's Anak Krakatoa volcano erupts, belches huge ash tower [898d]
- Uncrewed Russian spacecraft that leaked coolant lands safely [898d]
- Bangladesh bans plastics in world's largest mangrove forest [898d]
- Could changes in Fed's interest rates affect pollution and the environment? [898d]
- Genome of Australian fly defeats killer bacteria by evolving to co-exist with it [898d]
- Supergenes power invasive species' success, study finds [898d]
- New study finds toxic PFAS 'forever chemicals' in Canadian fast-food packaging [898d]
- Constraint of satellite CO2 retrieval on the global carbon cycle from a Chinese atmospheric inversion system [898d]
- Labeling macrophages associated with cancer progression using a selective dye [898d]
- New neutrino detection method using water [898d]
- Nano-structured, reusable substrate for ultra-sensitive detection of pollutants [898d]
- Skin-on-a-chip: Modeling an innervated epidermal-like layer on a microfluidic chip [898d]
- Young white dwarf orbits millisecond pulsar PSR J1835−3259B, study finds [898d]
- What is glass and how is it shaping our world? [898d]
- Preserving the stars: Light pollution and what you can do about it [898d]
- Proba-3 complete: Formation-flying satellites fully integrated and ready for testing [898d]
- Real-time early warning system could protect communities at risk from flooding [898d]
- A framework to evaluate preparedness for ocean acidification [898d]
- Turtles and crocodiles with unique characteristics are more likely to go extinct, says new study [898d]
- Magnetic fields in multiple star systems with at least one giant, hot blue star are more common than previously thought [898d]
- Solving the problem of distinguishing between single and multiple light excitations in laser spectroscopy [898d]
- Sepsis study to power new antibiotic discoveries [898d]
- Conserving wildlife can help mitigate climate change by supercharging ecosystem carbon sinks [898d]
- Even Sonoran Desert plants aren't immune to climate change [899d]
- A final present from birds killed in window collisions: poop that reveals their microbiomes [899d]
- Pulsing ultrasound waves could someday remove microplastics from waterways [899d]
- Modern origami method creates glass shapes by folding [899d]
- Is it COVID-19 or the flu? New sensor could tell you in 10 seconds [899d]
- Study says warming-fueled supercells to hit South more often [899d]
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