The Brutalist Report - science
system |
|
- No new articles in the Past 24 Hours.
- Heading for the Atlantic Ocean to study the impact of climate change on ocean circulation [1d]
- Even morphologically similar pollinators carry distinct pollen assemblages [1d]
- Indian millets contain distinct lipid fingerprints with anti-diabetic and anti-inflammatory potential [1d]
- Climate models are missing the first warning signs of deadly Middle East heat waves, study finds [1d]
- Are alien probes hiding in our backyard? A new study says we've barely looked [1d]
- Switzerland map reveals ground light and shade in 10-meter detail [1d]
- Dark biodiversity helps solve Darwin's 160-year-old puzzle [1d]
- Ultrasound unlocks protein from cauliflower waste and could add value to existing crops [1d]
- Rethinking plant photoprotection: New insights into antenna protein CP26 [1d]
- Q&A: Boosting NASA's Swift Observatory to support continued space observation [1d]
- New method enables accurate sequencing of short peptides hidden in food and human body [1d]
- Vertical marine heat wave study offers classification scheme for coastal resource management [1d]
- AI can clone your voice. Why that's powerful—and dangerous [1d]
- Intensive nickel mining has transformed microbial biodiversity of Thio Lagoon in New Caledonia [1d]
- Webb and Hubble reveal the history of a relic of Milky Way's formation [1d]
- Report reveals how digital tools are transforming biodiversity crisis response [2d]
- Cotton's roots traced to Yucatan Peninsula, where wild gene pool runs deepest [2d]
- Santa Cruz trail study reveals how mountain lions and outdoor recreation can safely share spaces [2d]
- Quantum hyperdimensional computing can work 500 times faster than other methods [2d]
- New national publication gives teachers guidance on AI in the classroom [2d]
- Random deformation lets glassy materials store precise mechanical memories, simulations reveal [2d]
- Cockatoos learn when touchscreen rewards 'die,' then apply rule to new contexts [2d]
- Politics in the logistics mix: How tariffs and polarization alter corporate supply chains [2d]
- RNA barcoding approach reveals previously unknown virus–host relationships [2d]
- Quantum lab aboard space station gets 'chilly' upgrade [2d]
- AI system evaluates chemical spectra in minutes [2d]
- A flexible graphene-based neural interface can 'speak and listen' to the brain [2d]
- AI-based system developed to better detect toxic online content [2d]
- Why one famous predator shrank two ways: Fossils reveal distinct growth strategies in early Permian Dimetrodon [2d]
- Chemists uncover new metal carbene radical cross-coupling by merging two catalytic cycles [2d]
- Slaughter in the water: Can the Ramsar Convention protect African waterbirds? [2d]
- Asteroid or comet? Meteor or meteorite? How to identify and classify the rocks you see streaking through the sky [2d]
- A new explanation for the mystery death of Botticelli's Birth of Venus model, Simonetta Vespucci [2d]
- Female chickadees seek cognitively skilled males for extra‑pair matings, study shows [2d]
- Subscription required? Newspaper paywalls scatter most readers but provide surprising value [2d]
- Darkness unlocks more ordered nanotubes in light-responsive molecular assemblies, study suggests [2d]
- High degree of quantum entanglement detected for first time in centimeter-sized crystal of strange metal [2d]
- Genetic barcoding unmasks hidden identities in the online amphibian trade [2d]
- Third time's the charm for a row of faint galaxies without dark matter [2d]
- Why only a few wildfires become extreme [2d]
- A heat sensor for living cells could offer new views of cell metabolism, rapid antibiotic testing [2d]
- Physicists identify upper limit to resistivity in a pure metal [2d]
- Intermolecular collisions may explain why organic radical fluids become unusually magnetic [2d]
- Q&A: Engineering crop resilience to heat and drought may help reverse climate change [2d]
- Dan David Prize awards 9 scholars $300,000 each for research on the human past [2d]
- Data suggest 'red flag' laws are linked to sustained reductions in arrests [2d]
- Observation of living cells solves mystery of bacterial cell division [2d]
- Millions of people can't access civil justice. New report shows why four decades of reform have failed [2d]
- Genome-wide analysis uncovers clues to Faroese ancestral history [2d]
- Rare B meson decays tighten search for hidden particles and dark matter links [2d]
- Future Martian colonists will need a new relativistic clock [2d]
- LiON: A fluorescent molecule tracks iron and oxygen levels in individual cells [2d]
- Global surveys find carbon uptake in tropics overestimated [2d]
- Eco‑literate children can be stewards of nature. Here's how to boost environmental education [2d]
- Abortion decision prompts women's health care providers to become more politically engaged [2d]
- Silicon-compatible nanocomposite garnet enables better, simpler optical isolators [2d]
- Nanomedicine discovery uses salt to overcome major obstacle in gene therapy [2d]
- The Handala hacker group uses cyberterrorism as psychological warfare, study finds [2d]
- Distant ocean temperatures found to influence snowfall in Antarctica [2d]
- Deep magma oceans may have locked ferric iron into majorite on Earth and Mars [2d]
- Honeybees adjust their dances based on information reliability, study reveals [2d]
- Artificial cells gain porous membranes, enabling lab reactions and drug release [2d]
- 'Excellent' water at most European beaches, study says [2d]
- AI decodes plant DNA 'switches' to better predict gene control [2d]
- India braces for El Nino-linked dry conditions [2d]
- Older LGBTQ+ people fear discrimination in housing and care settings, but one simple intervention is effective [2d]
- Your body's secret sugar code could predict disease years before it strikes [2d]
- Dolphins know how to avoid troublesome males by listening for their 'names' [2d]
- Black holes unleash delayed radio 'burps' years after tearing apart stars [2d]
- NASA's SpaceX CRS-34 Dragon returns packed with space station science [2d]
- One of the world's most important plate boundaries is older than previously thought [2d]
- Dominance-oriented views of masculinity widespread among young men, finds study [2d]
- Deep learning helps discover hundreds of Antarctic earthquakes coming from an unlikely location [2d]
- Why hotel crisis plans collapse when panic sets in, according to hospitality leaders [2d]
- Chandra tracks M87 black hole's evolving jet in finest X-ray detail yet [2d]
- Invisible chemical landscapes shape life [2d]
- Digital twin predicts Alaska permafrost changes using real-time sensors and AI [2d]
- Potatoes benefit when two soil bacteria team up [2d]
- 2,700-year-old standing stone may provide fresh evidence for King Hezekiah's religious reforms [2d]
- When glaciers vanish, so does the hidden life they support [2d]
- Public school closings in Chicago linked to more gun violence in nearby neighborhoods [2d]
- 'Geriatric' butterfly species lives nearly three times as long as their relatives [2d]
- Four ways kindergarten lays the foundation for lifelong learning [2d]
- Super El Niños may lose their punch in a warming world [2d]
- What we misunderstand about absent fathers [2d]
- 5.5 magnitude earthquake rattles Tokyo region but no danger of a tsunami, meteorological agency says [2d]
- Walking shark discovery reveals new species in tiny Papua New Guinea range [2d]
- 4 steps you can take to avoid 'perceived scarcity' and prevent food waste [2d]
- Revealing how and when a black hole's mighty winds can squash star formation [2d]
- The world agreed to protect 30% of the ocean by 2030—but marine protection can't be judged by area alone [2d]
- Odor‑resistant and soft on the skin: The science of merino wool explained [2d]
- Could Earth have sent life to Jupiter's moon Europa? [2d]
- Laser Interferometer Space Antenna could double as an asteroid scale [2d]
- The best place to look for alien megastructures might be moon dust [2d]
- Young coqui frogs 'play it safe' when disease strikes, study finds [2d]
- World Cup Fever Study now open to all major smartwatches [2d]
- Radiocarbon dating confirms 10,000 years of continuous human occupation in the Pyrenees [2d]
- Study tracks juvenile sturgeon from Ohio's first-ever reintroduction effort [2d]
- Back from the brink: Bettongs return to the desert [2d]
- Young disk around WRAY 15-1880 may contain a primitive planetary system [2d]
Previous Day