The Brutalist Report - science
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- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- EU's impending accession to rights convention resembles a 3D puzzle, says research [98d]
- Can philanthropy fast-track a flagship telescope? [98d]
- The orbiting factories of the future [98d]
- How startups can communicate to win over silent audiences online [98d]
- Taming heat: Novel solution enables unprecedented control of heat conduction [98d]
- Indoor air pollution is a global health issue, not just a domestic heating one [98d]
- Albania's waste-choked rivers worsen deadly floods [98d]
- It's been one year since wildfires devastated Los Angeles. What have we learned? [98d]
- Small businesses say they aren't planning to hire many recent graduates for entry-level jobs—here's why [98d]
- Towards recycling of fiber composites: More sustainable epoxy thanks to phosphorus [98d]
- When 'no-effect' isn't safe: Safe chemicals turn toxic in combination across generations [98d]
- Uncovering a hidden mechanism in Met receptor activation [98d]
- Left in the cold: Study finds most renters shut out of energy-saving upgrades [98d]
- Avian flu death count rises to 32 birds at Orlando's Lake Eola, including 26 swans [98d]
- Lion conservation in Kenya: Why one approach does not fit all [98d]
- Magnetic fields slow carbon migration in iron by altering energy barriers, study shows [98d]
- Birding enthusiasts can help songbirds avoid Salmonella epidemics [98d]
- Starch sachets release fertilizer in a controlled manner and can replace petroleum-derived polymers [98d]
- Signs of ancient life turn up in an unexpected place [98d]
- Portable device enables rapid pathogen detection in diverse field environments [98d]
- Deformable lens enables real-time correction of image aberrations in single-pixel microscopy [98d]
- Scientists demonstrate low-cost, high-quality lenses for super-resolution microscopy [98d]
- Meta-analysis challenges the link between economic inequality and mental health [98d]
- Cyanobacteria can utilize toxic guanidine as a nitrogen source [98d]
- Urban soils get new life by mixing excavated dirt with organic waste [98d]
- How a soft coral moves its tentacles in perfect synchronization without a brain [98d]
- First standalone spin-wave chip operates without external magnets for future telecom [98d]
- New tool lets anyone audit a country's methane claims [98d]
- New global standard set for testing graphene's single-atom thickness [98d]
- Western populations endorse support for Ukraine despite nuclear escalation fears, finds study [98d]
- A dry surface thanks to fluid physics: Contact-free method gently remove liquids from delicate microstructures [98d]
- Sparse tongue hair explains why queen bees stop foraging when workers emerge [98d]
- Microbial genes could improve our understanding of water pollution [98d]
- A tiny mouse hints at why some mammal mothers may benefit from choosing more than one father [98d]
- Melting glaciers may mix up waters more than we thought [98d]
- Enthusiasts used their home computers to search for ET—scientists are homing in on 100 signals they found [98d]
- Hubble nets menagerie of young stellar objects [98d]
- Myth of Native Hawaiians causing bird extinctions debunked by study [98d]
- Phages and bacteria accumulate distinctive mutations aboard the International Space Station [98d]
- How family ownership shapes merger and acquisition decisions in emerging markets [98d]
- The academic study of politics is failing disabled people, with real-world consequences [98d]
- Ancient Rome meets modern technology as tourists visit restored, frescoed home via livestream tours [98d]
- Research institutions tout scholarship that crosses disciplines but academia pushes interdisciplinary researchers out [98d]
- Rural areas have darker skies but fewer resources for students interested in astronomy. Telescopes in schools can help [98d]
- Slanguage: How '6-7' makes sense even though it means nothing [98d]
- Martin Luther King Jr. was ahead of his time in pushing for universal basic income [98d]
- How hands-on textile work inspires creativity and growth [98d]
- Asexual yam species employs mimicry to trick birds and spread farther [98d]
- Fluid gears rotate without teeth, offering new mechanical flexibility [98d]
- Catastrophic heat wave wiped out 2 endangered corals in the Florida Keys... now what? [98d]
- Bacterial energy model reveals how antimicrobial resistance spreads in the environment [98d]
- Marine sediments suggest glaciers retreated in sync across both hemispheres [98d]
- AI uncovers risks in chemical safety tests for aquatic life [98d]
- Deforestation and economic traps created by flue-cured tobacco in Zimbabwe revealed [98d]
- Researchers urge unified approach to sustainable agriculture innovation and policy reform [98d]
- Circular economy startups can create new opportunities in resistant markets [98d]
- Organisms in the Atacama Desert soil are remarkably diverse, study shows [98d]
- Mothering in a time of crisis and anxiety is a society-wide job, new research shows [99d]
- Sailboat measurements improve estimates of ocean CO₂ uptake [99d]
- This crystal sings back: Study sheds light on magnetochiral instability [99d]
- Tiny RNA molecules in sperm can have big impact on health of babies [99d]
- Commercial-grade wakame cultivated in subtropical Fujian via clonal seedlings [99d]
- Rethinking restroom equity: How mixed-gender designs improve access in public venues [99d]
- How the Tibetan Plateau-Himalayan uplift shaped Asian summer monsoons [99d]
- Possible Black Death mass grave discovered near Erfurt, Germany [99d]
- Harnessing the medicinal benefits of thyme extract via nanodosing [99d]
- France climate goals off track as emissions cuts slow again [99d]
- Massive impact could be the cause of our lopsided moon [99d]
- Quantum-dot device can generate multiple frequency-entangled photons [99d]
- 'Nu' citation index may bridge gap between productivity and impact metrics [99d]
- Open-source robotic system cuts manual cell culture time by 61% while boosting seeding consistency [99d]
- Kleptocratic networks should be treated as transnational enterprises and national security threats, new report warns [99d]
- A quarter-century in orbit: Science shaping life on Earth and beyond [99d]
- The path to solar weather forecasts is paved with drops in cosmic rays [99d]
- Cold winter and AI boom pushed US emissions increase in 2025 [99d]
- Massive supernova from Wolf-Rayet star could be precursor to black hole binary [99d]
- Impact of darkwaves on marine ecosystems revealed [99d]
- New study reveals strategic logic behind global patent litigation venue selection [99d]
- Global firms can counter geopolitical turmoil through sustainable local investment [99d]
- A protein found in the GI tract can neutralize many bacteria [99d]
- Webb delivers unprecedented look into heart of Circinus galaxy [99d]
- Hygienic conditions in Pompeii's early baths were poor, according to isotope analysis [99d]
- A centuries-old debate on how reptiles keep evolving skin bones is finally settled [99d]
- Scientists realize a three-qubit quantum register in a silicon photonic chip [99d]
- Enhancing customer satisfaction through personal profiles of social media customer service agents [99d]
- Spaceflight causes astronauts' brains to shift, stretch and compress in microgravity [99d]
- New massive hot subdwarf binary discovered [99d]
- Investigating a plume of bright blue in the wake of Hurricane Melissa [99d]
- How global laws can give workers real power [99d]
- Board games boost young kids' math skills, research review shows [99d]
- Why do educated people fall for conspiracy theories? It could be narcissism [99d]
- Glazed sherds in remote Gobi Desert reveal ancient Persian trade connections [99d]
- Microbubbles can release microplastics into our water [99d]
- What is the global water cycle and how is it amplifying climate disasters? [99d]
- SpaceX knocks 3rd Space Coast launch of 2026: Readies for Crew-11 return [99d]
- Conservation planning 'good for biodiversity and business' [99d]
- Hawaii's Kilauea volcano puts on spectacular lava display [99d]
- Disaster losses drop in 2025, picture still 'alarming': Munich Re [99d]
- Recovering tropical forests grow back nearly twice as fast with nitrogen [99d]
[ai]
- Open-sourcing the future of food: New cell bank makes cultivated-meat tech public [99d]
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