The Brutalist Report - science
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- New guidance on violence and aggression in retail [1d]
- NASA develops sensor to improve firefighter safety [1d]
- Settling down vs. settling: New study proves being single beats a bad relationship [1d]
- Established farm-business ties may steer agri-start-up ideas toward smaller gains [1d]
- Training, not silence: With support, teachers can address racism, xenophobia in any classroom [1d]
- Mineral clues in Gale Crater track ancient Mars climate change [1d]
- How bacteria survive with almost no oxygen— and why blocking one enzyme could aid new antibiotics [1d]
- Taller structures produce more blaze-spreading embers, research suggests [1d]
- New ammonia-making method could upend one of industry's dirtiest processes [1d]
- Longer droughts and changes in rainfall are already occurring in the Amazon, research finds [1d]
- Red dwarf stars detected 'eating' Earth-like planets [1d]
- Heron-like, fish-eating dinosaur from 70 million years ago discovered in Argentina [1d]
- Ultrafast holographic imaging reveals electron and magnetic dynamics inside next-generation materials [1d]
- AI and drones can help improve early warning systems for Vibrio bacteria in the Baltic Sea [1d]
- Quantum entanglement provides a new framework for understanding chemical bonding [1d]
- Shock waves show how baby stars' cradles get their radial shape in 3D simulations [1d]
- Ammonia levels in urine could serve as marker for chronic kidney disease in dogs [1d]
- Nitrogen-fixing genes moved into new bacterial strains, opening path beyond fertilizer [1d]
- Genetically engineering cyanobacteria for the production of sulfated polysaccharide [1d]
- How do you know a bowhead whale is feeding? It's all in the way it moves, shows study [1d]
- Plants exhibit remarkable tolerance to protein translation errors [1d]
- Human-linked foraging reshapes dolphin social networks in Florida over decades [1d]
- No single path makes youth champions, review of 60 sports analyses shows [1d]
- 'Diversifying' social feeds can cut exposure to toxic content and preserve enjoyment [1d]
- Peering into the Milky Way's far side, Roman could unveil 100,000 worlds [1d]
- Electrical 'knob' can switch light on, off and tune intensity at the nanoscale [1d]
- Oceanic regime shifts affect subarctic moth communities—impacts divide species into winners and losers [1d]
- Italians and Dutch share the same gestural instinct for teaching, research reveals [1d]
- Silver nanoparticles enable assembly of a theorized, previously unobserved crystal metallic structure [1d]
- Something just passed between us and a distant star [1d]
- MIZ-ing in action: How much of Antarctic sea ice is affected by waves? [1d]
- The human gaze speaks to children, who remain insensitive to the gaze of humanoid robots [1d]
- A 'Balrog' in the tunnels: Scientists discover a new cave cricket species on the tiny island of Kastellorizo, Greece [1d]
- Why the most massive galaxies in the early universe stopped forming stars prematurely [1d]
- New Gulf Coast plan uses ocean technology to trap carbon dioxide [1d]
- Turtles finally have a place in the tree of life thanks to an X‑ray study of South African fossils [1d]
- Dutch universities still lack firm rules on tobacco ties, raising wider questions [1d]
- Crops predictably select growth boosting microbes regardless of soil type, study finds [1d]
- New MRI sensors detect target molecules in the brain and body with high sensitivity [2d]
- Leaving gravity behind: Experiment from ISS reveals how particles alter turbulent flow behavior [2d]
- Global food shock model reveals self-sufficiency alone may not prevent crises [2d]
- The solar wind's secret hammerheads and what they tell us about heat in space [2d]
- How farmers respond to climate-related risk [2d]
- Spin wave signals used in computing boosted more than 5,000 times in Z-shaped path approach [2d]
- Improved embryo freezing technique could preserve endangered species [2d]
- Why is economic inequality the status quo? [2d]
- AI can mass-produce finance research papers indistinguishable from human work, reports study [2d]
- Sensitivity of Antarctic ice to climate change sharply increased after ice age shift, study shows [2d]
- Q&A: Multinational firms drive growth but can come with steep environmental costs, study finds [2d]
- Nanotube-coated catheter could detect bladder cancer biomarker 50,000 times more sensitively [2d]
- Quantum vibronics research points to future energy and computing technologies [2d]
- Impact of regional airline exits on travelers measured [2d]
- Biologists improve biomass mapping tools to better track carbon storage [2d]
- Electrical pulses reverse aging in sea squirts, offering clues for extending human longevity [2d]
- Smartphones dominate 400 minutes daily, but young adults spend just seven on news [2d]
- Electromagnetic noise can send migrating bats off course, with effects lasting hours [2d]
- Pigeons navigate using magnetic sensors in their livers, say researchers [2d]
- Is my brain wired to never see a ghost? A psychologist on three factors that make a paranormal experience more likely [2d]
- Hailstorms could grow more dangerous and damaging with climate change [2d]
- Unearthing Namibia's forgotten genocide through forensic archaeology [2d]
- Italy on red alert as France, Portugal beat hottest May day record [2d]
- Taking dark energy out of the equation: Mathematicians challenge the standard cosmological model of the universe [2d]
- Heat waves: Older people less likely to follow safety advice [2d]
- Mitochondria reveal built-in speed control for protein production [2d]
- Framework could deliver fairer insurance deals for customers [2d]
- One in six kids could be experiencing online sexual exploitation and abuse [2d]
- From the seabed to Mars: Why geological maps matter [2d]
- Quantum pendulum clock overcomes classical accuracy limits and sheds light on quantum to classical transitions [2d]
- Deep beneath Utah, rare mantle earthquakes reshape seismic hazard questions [2d]
- An AI solution to an 80‑year‑old problem has shocked mathematicians [2d]
- Some experts now say psychopathy doesn't exist—here's why we may be looking at it all wrong [2d]
- How bean plants call on wasps for help when hungry caterpillars attack [2d]
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