The Brutalist Report - science
system |
|
- College students are noticing their AI‑smoothed writing sounds strong—and not like them [53d]
- Magnetic 'super lenses' open new window on high-temperature superconductors [53d]
- Hourglass nanographenes unlock strong, robust multi-spin entanglement [53d]
- Antimalarial drug hunt uncovers enzyme target with potent new inhibitors [53d]
- Sound waves create mist that can act like 'plant sunscreen' [53d]
- Researchers discover a new pathway to building energy-efficient computing chips [53d]
- Rare footage of elusive sea-floor creatures and backward-swimming fish captured by compact video-acoustic system [53d]
- Clean energy's nickel rush is heading straight for some of Earth's richest ecosystems [53d]
- Selling yourself short: New research shows how sexualized dating profiles can undermine long-term appeal [53d]
- Cold-triggered ion channel in bacteria may point to broader temperature-sensing mechanism [53d]
- How higher temperatures can benefit (or devastate) bumble bee populations [53d]
- A study on intergenerational coexistence at a university helps dismantle stereotypes associated with ageism [53d]
- Gut bacteria reveal hidden evolutionary lineages tied to aging and disease [53d]
- An experiment shows that yellow trout can grow larger than the wild strain [53d]
- Dynamic catalyst interfaces offer a smarter route for converting CO₂ into formic acid [53d]
- How the rise of continents may have set the stage for life on Earth [53d]
- Genetic 'bonus material' boosts gut bacterium's oxygen tolerance up to 1,000-fold [53d]
- Membrane complex aids rock-eating microbes in converting carbon dioxide to biomass [53d]
- Cool beans, smart roots: Special cell helps seedlings survive drought battered and nutrient poor soils [53d]
- Hybrid vein networks in tree leaves reveal a new model of biological design [53d]
- Nature draws more tourists to the Canary Islands than previously believed [53d]
- Roman Space Telescope poised to transform hunt for elusive neutron stars [53d]
- 'Atomic snapshots' of proofreading enzyme could lead to better COVID-19 drugs [53d]
- Nitrogen pollution identified as major driver of biodiversity loss in UK coastal waters [53d]
- Twisting atom-thin materials reveals new way to save computing energy [53d]
- Indigenous lands can outperform protected areas on conservation, researchers find [53d]
- New long-necked dinosaur found in Northeast Brazil was a close relative of a European species [53d]
- Love hormone enters battle mode, exposing rivalry and group lines in Amazon study [53d]
- Why twisted bilayer graphene stops superconducting near high-dielectric substrates [53d]
- From atoms to reactors, new modeling approach could sharpen catalyst design [53d]
- How quasars shut down star formation in the early universe [53d]
- Death-defying protein found in tardigrades preserves synthetic cells [53d]
- Green and yellow light guide newborn whitefish to safety—but warming waters cause issues [53d]
- A new way to read the universe could sharpen understanding of cosmic expansion and dark energy [53d]
- Data fusion provides a high-definition look at Mars' temperature maps [53d]
- Quantum geometry applied to light-based systems expands toolkit for topological photonics [53d]
- Carbon-free ferrocene alternative opens up new possibilities for future materials [53d]
- Casimir forces in twisted anisotropic gratings: A path to self-tuning nanophotonic systems [53d]
- DNA matches identify four more sailors from Franklin expedition [53d]
- Aircraft measurements reveal surprisingly strong Southern Ocean biological productivity [53d]
- DNA-guided CRISPR flips gene editing script, opening a new path for precise diagnosis and antivirals [53d]
- Research manipulation mapped in new forensic scientometrics report [53d]
- J1152 is an unusual long-period dwarf nova with recurring eclipses, observations find [53d]
- Room-temperature nanoscale measurements could accelerate molecular electronics research [53d]
- Even the most remote ocean is contaminated with zinc from human sources, research reveals [53d]
- Study says trees counter half the world's urban heating, but not in the places that need it most [53d]
- Online echo chambers can arise even without algorithmic nudges or seeking like-minded people [53d]
- Light without electricity? Glowing algae could make it possible [53d]
- In mafias, marriages are strategic tools, analysis suggests [53d]
- Human language shows deep safety bias, challenging 70-year scientific consensus [53d]
- Introducing ecotech, nature's innovation accelerator [53d]
- Bacterial protein map could open new path against drug-resistant infections [53d]
- How trees in urban areas are key to cooling down a warmer world [53d]
- Portable sensor detects PFAS in water on-site, cutting need for costly lab tests [53d]
- AI matches human teachers: Brief pre-lecture chat boosts students' brain synchrony and learning outcomes [53d]
- Why we need to treat Earth like a spaceship [53d]
- Buried in Arnhem Land, an ancient fire trick may rewrite early stone technology's timeline [53d]
- 'What do you want to be?' The spark that helps Indigenous people go to university [53d]
- Heat‑resistant corals could help reefs adapt to climate change [53d]
- Federal grant terminations disproportionately impact minority scientists, study finds [53d]
- 'Not just hot water': Marine heat waves can create toxic relationship between seagrasses and microbes [53d]
- 'Much‑needed fresh air': 5 outcomes from the world's first summit on ending fossil fuels [53d]
- Fewer insects, fewer nutritious crops: Pollinator decline puts human health at risk [53d]
- School cell phone bans deliver benefits—but not right away [53d]
- Diaspora distress: When geopolitical conflict follows immigrant workers into the office [53d]
- Webb and Hubble find massive star clusters emerge faster [53d]
- What can singing mice say about human speech? [53d]
- Deforestation may push Amazon degradation threshold below 2°C warming [53d]
- Dark proteome yields 1,785 new microproteins that could reshape disease research [53d]
- A new kind of CRISPR could treat viral infection and cancer by shredding sick cells' DNA [53d]
- How to build cities for wildlife, not just people [53d]
- Hunters' appreciation of a targeted deer-management program transcends harvest [53d]
- The lost koala: New fossil species was hiding in plain sight for 100 years [53d]
- What working‑class boys need to succeed at school: Respect and open conversations [53d]
- Landsat 9 captures Russia's restless Shiveluch volcano mid-eruption [53d]
- A tale as old as time: Young, attractive femme fatale lore appears in nearly every culture [53d]
- Over 60% of developing countries face overlapping socioeconomic and water security challenges, scientists warn [53d]
- Feeling underqualified can help drive performance or toxic behavior—depending on one psychological factor [53d]
- Hologram technology where 'light becomes the key' enables hard-to-copy security [53d]
- Freshwater mussel protein offers new source of inspiration for medical-grade glues [53d]
- A persistent quantum computing error finally explained [53d]
- OpenBind's first data and model release marks a milestone for AI enabled drug discovery [53d]
- When strength in numbers stops working: Climate extremes rewrite monkey society in Costa Rica [53d]
- Radical shifts to sustainability call for a new kind of legal thinking, researchers argue [53d]
- 'Indian Niño' drove record heat in 2023 and 2024, new study finds [53d]
- With large DNA fragment assembly, scientists can design microbes that produce countless complex products [54d]
- Megafires may drive the prairie grouse into sub-optimal habitats [54d]
- PEG400 reveals parasite-only pocket that could sharpen malaria treatment [54d]
- On the ground or in the atmosphere? Swarm satellites help characterize and pinpoint destructive events [54d]
- Space junk falls to Earth faster when sunspots peak, reshaping satellite collision forecasts [54d]
Previous Day