The Brutalist Report - science
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- National report supports measurement innovation to aid commercial fusion energy and enable new plasma technologies [97d]
- Chemists create iridium compounds for the synthesis of 'smart' antitumor drugs [97d]
- A computer simulation is helping to prepare Australia for H5 bird flu [97d]
- Closing bank branches opens opportunities for scammers, research finds [97d]
- Europe's answer to Starship [97d]
- Temporal dynamics of predatory nematodes in Guam reveal effective biological control of root knot [97d]
- Physicists discover long-predicted 'clock magnetism' in an atomically thin crystal [97d]
- Quantum dynamics show 'memory' depends on whether states or observables evolve [97d]
- Chemists rapidly assemble fusicoccadiene, a complex fungal molecule tied to cancer research [97d]
- Thousands of dead puffins are washing up on Europe's beaches—why it's been such a dangerous winter for seabirds [97d]
- Color shortcut reveals bumblebees are efficient decision-makers [97d]
- Limiting global warming can reduce US wildfire smoke-related deaths by thousands annually [97d]
- How to train your catalyst, one atom at a time [97d]
- Chemists create complex DNA structures without hydrogen bonds [97d]
- Good samaritan or bad: Research supports a more nuanced view of international monetary fund reforms [97d]
- Are these killer whales cannibals? They probably don't think so themselves [97d]
- Porpoises can 'turn down the volume' to withstand ship noise [97d]
- Low fertility may not be an economic threat, researchers argue [97d]
- Oman ophiolite study suggests subduction zones can lock away CO₂ [97d]
- Greenhouse gas fluxes in Everglades provide path for maximizing carbon capture via water management [97d]
- Research reveals cosmic tug-of-war behind the Crab Pulsar's zebra stripes [97d]
- Feral horses and cattle create more resilient nature, rewilding study reveals [97d]
- Isolating vesicle-cloaked viruses in city and hospital wastewater [97d]
- Large land predators were hunting big plant-eaters more than 280 million years ago, study finds [97d]
- Young adults often see online hate speech as 'normal,' study finds [97d]
- Soil saturation data sharpens atmospheric river flood warnings, study of 71,000 storms finds [97d]
- Built to withstand, or built to worry? Housing and disaster risk perception [97d]
- Agrivoltaics can increase or reduce yields and profits, depending on the crop and where the systems are deployed [97d]
- New 2D membrane reactor improves photocatalytic synthesis [97d]
- How flatworms keep their regeneration powers on track [97d]
- A crystal that 'comes alive': Heat-driven bubbles push it forward while it changes fluorescence color [97d]
- Scientists rescue lost song of the critically endangered regent honeyeater [97d]
- Time to retrain? How to future‑proof your career in the AI age [97d]
- Ultrasound-activated 'nanoagents' kill superbugs hiding in biofilms [97d]
- How to weigh a killer asteroid at 22 kilometers per second [97d]
- On-demand pay access spurs savings for low-wage workers [97d]
- Mott and Kondo insulators—how external stimuli can modify electronic energy bands [97d]
- Low-smoke solid fuels pose hidden public health risks via elevated ultrafine particle emissions [97d]
- Dense, dark forests in Europe are a modern phenomenon [97d]
- Workers who love 'synergizing paradigms' might be bad at their jobs [97d]
- Catching light in air: Programmable Mie voids boost light matter interaction [97d]
- Scientists unveil universal aging mechanism in glassy materials [97d]
- Dissolvable hydrogel could enable personalized bone implants [97d]
- Smart fluorescent molecules provide cheaper path to sharper microscopy images [97d]
- 3D-printed 'plug' links fiber optics to photonic chips with low loss [97d]
- Identifying potential drug candidates with deep learning virtual screening [97d]
- First 3D reconstruction of the face of 'Little Foot' completed [97d]
- Tech upgrade reveals even finer transcription detail inside cells [97d]
- Early intervention may improve academic outcomes by third grade for children with developmental disabilities [97d]
- Survival training in a safe space—how staged risk helps young predators learn dangerous prey [97d]
- Microplastics and nanoplastics in urban air originate mainly from tire abrasion, research reveals [97d]
- Water interactions reveal how surface coatings reshape nanoparticle drug delivery [97d]
- Antarctica has lost 10 times the size of Greater Los Angeles in ice over 30 years, satellite data reveal [97d]
- Scared of spiders? The real horror story is a world without them [97d]
- Trees cover rock, eventually: Study maps how bare Georgia bedrock turns into forest [97d]
- Operational framework can help countries assess national contributions to protecting 30% of land and sea by 2030 [97d]
- Biodiversity at risk in Colombia's tropical dry forests [97d]
- Eye-tracking study explores fear of spiders [97d]
- Sun sets on the Sunlight glacier: Researchers document melting of Wyoming glacier [97d]
- 'Plug-and-play'—how plants steal genetic shortcuts to survive [97d]
- Ancient DNA reveals life and death of Late Bronze Age in Central Europe [97d]
- Bird flu rampant among black vultures: Study points to year-round H5N1 circulation [97d]
- Study shows 20-year decline in nitrate pollution across portions of the Mississippi River Basin [97d]
- ISS photo captures Atlantic sunglint 263 miles up, showing mirror-like ocean glare [97d]
- Study suggests fire ant baiting in Queensland may help invaders spread faster [97d]
- NASA's MAVEN detects first evidence of lightning-like activity on Mars [97d]
- Get ready for the Rubin Observatory's deluge of discoveries [97d]
- Laser-within-a-laser delivers MeV X-ray radiography in picoseconds [97d]
- Paleontologists investigate how life entered and adapted to the deep sea [97d]
- The nation is missing millions of voters due to lack of rights for former felons [97d]
- How invasive house sparrows are helping scientists detect dangerous contaminants [97d]
- Wildfire smoke silences grassland birds in New York state [97d]
- Satellite images show how Antarctica's vanishing sea ice is changing the food chain [97d]
- Rare Type Icn supernova SN 2024abvb is among the most luminous known [97d]
- Nanoparticles and AI can help researchers detect pollutants in water, soil and blood [97d]
- Tiny recording backpacks reveal bats' surprising hunting strategy [97d]
- Ancient Greek priestesses may have turned ergot fungus into a psychedelic brew during the Eleusinian Mysteries [97d]
- NASA adds mission to Artemis lunar program, updates architecture [97d]
- New York survey suggests solar leases could fund farm investments, not shutdowns [97d]
- Gag grouper are overfished in the Gulf: This new tool could help [97d]
- Newfound third cell type enables fully functional hair follicles in the lab [97d]
- The stars that lit up the early Milky Way [97d]
- Self-propelling microbes switch up swimming strategy to optimize light intake [97d]
- Why a Swiss population cap baffles experts [97d]
- Use of buy-now-pay-later loans rising most rapidly among middle-aged households, UK survey finds [97d]
- Vancouver built up fast—but now its older towers face an earthquake reckoning [97d]
- Current climate pledges may miss Paris targets [97d]
- MeerKAT discovers record-breaking cosmic laser halfway across the universe [97d]
- Researchers create world's largest dog and cat tumor database [97d]
- Study challenges beliefs on 'libido gap' between men and women [97d]
- 'Old Mother Goose' challenges a 14-million-year lineage story in New Zealand [97d]
- How long do civilizations last? [97d]
- Superfluids emerge in 2D moiré crystal formed from time, study predicts [97d]
- From high‑tech greenhouses to fruit netting: How protected cropping can shield crops from climate extremes [97d]
- Would Earth still be habitable without us? [97d]
- Deterrence or self-control? Study links speeding to morality and driving environment [97d]
- El Nino may return in 2026 and make planet even hotter [97d]
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