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Today's Science Pulse

Twisting 2D hBN layers unlocks unprecedented control of quantum light

Researchers demonstrated that rotating ultra‑thin hexagonal boron nitride sheets can reversibly shift the color and wavelength of embedded quantum emitters far beyond what traditional solid‑state hosts allow. By picking up, stacking, and twisting the layers, they achieved spectral tuning orders of magnitude larger, a breakthrough reported in Science Advances.

Nobel Laureate Harold Urey's Letter Reveals Early Fusion Interest
SocialMay 8, 2026

Nobel Laureate Harold Urey's Letter Reveals Early Fusion Interest

Curious letter from the Nobel Prize winner physicist Harold Urey and his mention of fusion. https://t.co/U1qSfdxfM2

By Jude Gomila
Robot Probes 16th Century Italian Shipwreck 1.5 Miles Below the Mediterranean
NewsMay 8, 2026

Robot Probes 16th Century Italian Shipwreck 1.5 Miles Below the Mediterranean

A French‑navy remotely operated vehicle descended 1.5 miles (8,202 ft) into the Mediterranean to investigate Camarat 4, a 16th‑century Italian merchant shipwreck. The ROV captured 66,974 high‑resolution images, revealing six cannons, an anchor, 12 cauldrons and hundreds of vividly painted ceramics, and...

By Popular Science
The Growth of Graphene and Revolutionary CNTs with IDTechEx
NewsMay 8, 2026

The Growth of Graphene and Revolutionary CNTs with IDTechEx

IDTechEx forecasts the graphene market to hit $1 billion by 2032, while highlighting the material’s diverse forms and the standardization challenges that hinder rapid adoption. Multi‑wall carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are experiencing commercial growth, driven by demand for conductive additives in lithium‑ion...

By Electric Vehicles Research
Trees Don’t Benefit Health for Everyone
NewsMay 8, 2026

Trees Don’t Benefit Health for Everyone

A new Lancet Regional Health–Americas study links residential tree canopy to lower allostatic load, a marker of chronic stress, but only for higher‑income, educated and employed adults. The analysis of CDC health data for 40,307 U.S. adults matched with satellite...

By Futurity
If Wings Came Before Flight, What Were They For?
NewsMay 8, 2026

If Wings Came Before Flight, What Were They For?

Zoologist Piotr Jablonski proposes that the first wings on feathered dinosaurs functioned as visual displays rather than for flight. To test this, his team built a robot modeled on the turkey‑sized Caudipteryx and conducted field trials in Seoul, showing that...

By Science News
New Kind of Liver Cell May Protect Against Common Liver Disease
NewsMay 8, 2026

New Kind of Liver Cell May Protect Against Common Liver Disease

Researchers at the University of Michigan identified a previously unknown hepatocyte subpopulation that emerges only in metabolic dysfunction‑associated steatohepatitis (MASH) livers. The new cells exhibit high expression of the immune‑related gene THEMIS, which regulates cellular senescence. Mouse experiments showed that...

By Futurity
Paraguay Expanded a Reserve in the Gran Chaco. Why Is Deforestation Still Rising There?
NewsMay 8, 2026

Paraguay Expanded a Reserve in the Gran Chaco. Why Is Deforestation Still Rising There?

In 2011 Paraguay added 2.78 million ha to the Gran Chaco Biosphere Reserve, expanding it to roughly 7.5 million ha, yet satellite data shows the area remains one of the country’s fastest‑losing forests, with about 5.2 million ha cleared between 2000 and 2020. The loss is driven...

By Mongabay
Primary Cilium Shapes the Developing Brain
NewsMay 8, 2026

Primary Cilium Shapes the Developing Brain

A new study published in Cell Reports shows the primary cilium in neural progenitor cells contains over 1,000 proteins, including ribosomal machinery, indicating on‑site protein synthesis. Regional specialization was observed, with more than 40 proteins varying by brain region. Loss...

By Neuroscience News
Being Overweight May Lead to Faster Cognitive Decline
NewsMay 8, 2026

Being Overweight May Lead to Faster Cognitive Decline

A 24‑year longitudinal study of more than 8,200 U.S. adults over 50 found that higher body‑mass index (BMI) accelerates cognitive decline, affecting memory, executive function and emotional regulation. Each unit increase in BMI was associated with a faster deterioration of...

By Futurity
Some Gene Therapies No Longer Require Clinical Trials, Thanks to New FDA Rule. Is This Safe, and Who Will It...
NewsMay 8, 2026

Some Gene Therapies No Longer Require Clinical Trials, Thanks to New FDA Rule. Is This Safe, and Who Will It...

The FDA has introduced a "plausible mechanism pathway" that lets developers market experimental gene‑editing therapies for rare, monogenic disorders without completing traditional large‑scale clinical trials. The rule relies on prior safety data for the delivery platform and permits customization of...

By Live Science
Endometriosis Has a Metabolism Problem, and Targeting It Could Transform Treatment
NewsMay 8, 2026

Endometriosis Has a Metabolism Problem, and Targeting It Could Transform Treatment

A new review in the Journal of Advanced Research argues that endometriosis is driven by metabolic reprogramming across glucose, lipid and amino‑acid pathways, enabling lesion survival, immune evasion and infertility. It details how aerobic glycolysis, altered sphingolipid/cholesterol balance, and tryptophan‑kynurenine...

By AJMC (The American Journal of Managed Care)
Up to Half the Bird Species Using the African-Eurasian Flyway Are Declining
NewsMay 8, 2026

Up to Half the Bird Species Using the African-Eurasian Flyway Are Declining

BirdLife Africa reports that 40‑50% of species using the African‑Eurasian flyway are in decline, with long‑distance Palearctic migrants falling over 30% in the past three decades. Habitat loss, accelerating climate change, and collisions with power lines and wind turbines are...

By Mongabay
Can Existing Flu Shots Help Protect Against Bird Flu?
NewsMay 8, 2026

Can Existing Flu Shots Help Protect Against Bird Flu?

Researchers from National Taiwan University and the University of South Florida analyzed 35 ferret studies spanning two decades and found that seasonal influenza vaccines containing the neuraminidase N1 protein reduced H5N1‑related mortality by roughly 73%. By contrast, vaccines without N1...

By Futurity
Volcanic Plume Cuts Methane by 900 Mg Daily, Study Shows Natural Climate Feedback
NewsMay 8, 2026

Volcanic Plume Cuts Methane by 900 Mg Daily, Study Shows Natural Climate Feedback

Scientists led by Dr. Maarten van Herpen reported that the 2022 Hunga Tonga‑Hunga Ha'apai eruption removed roughly 900 megagrams of methane each day, a rate comparable to emissions from two million cows. Satellite data showed a persistent formaldehyde cloud, evidence of...

By Pulse
New Review Finds Most Brain‑Boosting Supplements Lack Strong Evidence, Creatine Leads the Pack
NewsMay 8, 2026

New Review Finds Most Brain‑Boosting Supplements Lack Strong Evidence, Creatine Leads the Pack

A September 2025 narrative review and a February 2026 systematic review conclude that the majority of brain‑boosting supplements have limited scientific support, with creatine emerging as the only compound with consistent cognitive benefits. The findings reinforce the superiority of whole‑food...

By Pulse
Karolinska Study Finds Daily Peanut Exposure Safely Treats 82% of Toddler Allergies
NewsMay 8, 2026

Karolinska Study Finds Daily Peanut Exposure Safely Treats 82% of Toddler Allergies

Researchers at Karolinska Institutet reported that 82% of toddlers who received daily oral peanut immunotherapy could safely eat three and a half peanuts after three years, compared with just 12% in a control group. The three‑year study of 75 children...

By Pulse
Creatine Boosts Exercise Performance by Up to 10%, Study Finds
NewsMay 8, 2026

Creatine Boosts Exercise Performance by Up to 10%, Study Finds

A peer‑reviewed study in the journal *Nutrients* confirms that creatine monohydrate can increase strength, power and high‑intensity exercise performance by 5‑10%. The findings reinforce creatine’s status as a cornerstone supplement while highlighting safety considerations for certain users.

By Pulse
Safety Debate Heats Up Over Stem Cell Longevity Treatments
NewsMay 8, 2026

Safety Debate Heats Up Over Stem Cell Longevity Treatments

Leading researchers and clinic founders are confronting the safety of stem‑cell therapies marketed for longevity, with experts warning that not all products are genuine stem cells and that regulatory oversight remains limited. The debate underscores a booming market driven by...

By Pulse
From Rule of Thumb to Mechanistic Formula: An AI-Assisted Model for Shuttle Run Distance Correction in HIIT
BlogMay 8, 2026

From Rule of Thumb to Mechanistic Formula: An AI-Assisted Model for Shuttle Run Distance Correction in HIIT

Researchers led by Martin Buchheit have unveiled an AI‑assisted, mechanistic formula that corrects shuttle‑run distances in high‑intensity interval training (HIIT). The model replaces traditional rule‑of‑thumb adjustments with a data‑driven approach that accounts for biomechanics, fatigue dynamics, and environmental variables. Validation...

By Sport Performance & Science Reports
Mesoscale Carbon Fiber Lattice Development Attains Aluminum-Level Performance at 1/100 the Weight
NewsMay 8, 2026

Mesoscale Carbon Fiber Lattice Development Attains Aluminum-Level Performance at 1/100 the Weight

Seoul National University researchers unveiled a mesoscale carbon‑fiber lattice that delivers aluminum‑level strength‑to‑weight performance while weighing just 1 % of aluminum. Using a 3D node‑winding technique, the continuous‑fiber lattice eliminates traditional layer interfaces, achieving compressive strengths of 10‑30 MPa. A drone prototype...

By CompositesWorld
New Electrolyte Tech Enables Stable Operation of High-Voltage Sodium-Ion Batteries
NewsMay 8, 2026

New Electrolyte Tech Enables Stable Operation of High-Voltage Sodium-Ion Batteries

U.S. researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have engineered a meta‑weakly solvating electrolyte that stabilizes high‑voltage sodium‑ion batteries. By weakening the sodium‑solvent interaction, the electrolyte speeds ion transport and suppresses harmful side reactions at the electrode interface. Full cells using...

By PV Magazine USA
New Model Shows El Niño Matching 1998
SocialMay 8, 2026

New Model Shows El Niño Matching 1998

With the new NMME model update, even the more conservative relative Oceanic Nino Index metric now has us roughly tied with 1998 and 2026 El Nino events: https://t.co/DqXtEIMsQ8 https://t.co/FZYRTW74iw

By Zeke Hausfather
How a Volcanic Eruption Helped Unleash the Black Death in Europe in 1347
NewsMay 8, 2026

How a Volcanic Eruption Helped Unleash the Black Death in Europe in 1347

Researchers from Cambridge and the Leibniz Institute link a series of volcanic eruptions around 1345 to a three‑year cooling episode that devastated Mediterranean harvests. The resulting grain shortages pushed Italian city‑states to import wheat from the Black Sea, unintentionally moving...

By Open Culture (Education/Online Courses)
FDA Sets 2027 PDUFA Date for Taletrectinib in ROS1‑Positive Lung Cancer
NewsMay 8, 2026

FDA Sets 2027 PDUFA Date for Taletrectinib in ROS1‑Positive Lung Cancer

The FDA has accepted Nuvation Bio’s supplemental new drug application for taletrectinib in ROS1‑positive non‑small cell lung cancer and scheduled a PDUFA decision for Jan. 4, 2027. The filing adds 10 months of phase‑2 data showing high response rates and durable disease...

By Pulse
Illegal Gold Rush Drives Amazon Deforestation and Mercury Crisis in Brazil
NewsMay 8, 2026

Illegal Gold Rush Drives Amazon Deforestation and Mercury Crisis in Brazil

A spike in gold prices has sparked a wave of illegal mining across Brazil's Amazon, adding roughly 17,000 hectares of deforestation in 2025 and driving mercury levels to hazardous levels. The expansion hits protected reserves and Indigenous territories, prompting a...

By Pulse
Fiber-Optic Sensor Reads Strain Through Electrical Signals, Skipping Optical Analyzers
NewsMay 8, 2026

Fiber-Optic Sensor Reads Strain Through Electrical Signals, Skipping Optical Analyzers

Researchers at Yokohama National University unveiled a fiber‑optic sensor that reads strain and displacement directly from the electrical spectrum of a photodetected signal, bypassing traditional optical spectrum analyzers. The technique employs a polymer optical‑fiber single‑mode‑multimode‑single‑mode (SMS) structure, where modal beating...

By Tech Xplore – Semiconductors
Space Is Never Truly Empty, Even in Deep Vacuum
SocialMay 8, 2026

Space Is Never Truly Empty, Even in Deep Vacuum

Ask Ethan: How empty are the depths of space? We often talk about "the vacuum of space" as being a place where pressures and particle densities drop to zero. But outer space is never truly empty, even in the emptiest places. https://t.co/7TeWcEiT7Q

By Ethan Siegel
Hurricane Season 2026 Looms as Insurers Brace for Flood Claims Amid Texas Legislative Gaps
NewsMay 8, 2026

Hurricane Season 2026 Looms as Insurers Brace for Flood Claims Amid Texas Legislative Gaps

AccuWeather predicts 11‑16 named storms and up to four major hurricanes for the 2026 Atlantic season, prompting insurers to urge policy reviews. In Texas, decades of rejected flood‑safety bills have left 650,000 structures exposed, driving the state’s flood‑insurance payouts to...

By Pulse
Rapamycin's 50-Year Odyssey: From Easter Island to Medicine
SocialMay 8, 2026

Rapamycin's 50-Year Odyssey: From Easter Island to Medicine

The rapamycin sTORy: 50-year journey from Easter Island to the frontiers of biology and medicine https://t.co/Jn67QrGVi6 https://t.co/dwGPgUVB83

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
East African Countries Plan Regional Satellite Launch
NewsMay 8, 2026

East African Countries Plan Regional Satellite Launch

Ministers from Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan and Uganda have agreed to move forward with the Northern Corridor Regional Communication and Broadcasting Satellite Initiative (NCRCBSI), a joint effort to launch a satellite that will broaden communication and broadcasting services across East...

By African Business
Junyue Cao on How the Body Ages, Cell by Cell
NewsMay 8, 2026

Junyue Cao on How the Body Ages, Cell by Cell

Dr. Junyue Cao’s lab at Rockefeller University released the most extensive single‑cell epigenomic atlas of mammalian aging, profiling chromatin accessibility in roughly seven million cells from 21 mouse tissues at three life stages. The study identified about 1,800 distinct cell...

By Lifespan.io
Astranis Secures $450 Million to Accelerate High‑Orbit Satellite Production
NewsMay 8, 2026

Astranis Secures $450 Million to Accelerate High‑Orbit Satellite Production

Astranis raised $450 million in new capital, including a $300 million Series E round and a $155 million credit facility, to scale production of geostationary and other high‑orbit satellites. The funding positions the company to serve a surge in commercial demand and multiple U.S....

By Pulse
Korean Researchers Unveil Ultra‑Thin Nanotech Shield Blocking 99.999% of Radiation
NewsMay 8, 2026

Korean Researchers Unveil Ultra‑Thin Nanotech Shield Blocking 99.999% of Radiation

Scientists at Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) have introduced a nanotechnology‑based radiation shield that blocks up to 99.999% of electromagnetic waves and about 72% of neutron radiation. The ultra‑thin, stretchable material could reshape safety standards in aerospace, medical...

By Pulse
Indigenous Groups Warn Amazon Oil Expansion Tests Fossil Fuel Phase-Out Coalition
NewsMay 8, 2026

Indigenous Groups Warn Amazon Oil Expansion Tests Fossil Fuel Phase-Out Coalition

Indigenous leaders at the Santa Marta conference warned that expanding oil drilling in the Amazon threatens the credibility of the emerging fossil‑fuel phase‑out coalition. They called for permanent exclusion zones—dubbed “Life Zones”—to protect Indigenous territories and biodiverse areas, but the final...

By Climate Home News
Baylor Study Shows Brain Processes Words Under General Anesthesia
NewsMay 8, 2026

Baylor Study Shows Brain Processes Words Under General Anesthesia

Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine discovered that patients under general anesthesia continue to process spoken words, a finding published in Nature that could reshape anesthesia monitoring and consciousness research.

By Pulse
Remembering J. Craig Venter, PhD
NewsMay 8, 2026

Remembering J. Craig Venter, PhD

J. Craig Venter, the pioneering genome scientist and biotech entrepreneur, died at 79 after a cancer diagnosis. He co‑led the private effort that rivaled the Human Genome Project, delivering a draft human genome in the late 1990s. Venter’s later work on...

By GEN (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
Men Objectify Women More when Sexually Aroused, Regardless of Their Underlying Personality Traits
NewsMay 8, 2026

Men Objectify Women More when Sexually Aroused, Regardless of Their Underlying Personality Traits

A new study published in The Journal of Sex Research shows that temporary sexual arousal causes men to objectify women, shifting attention toward physical traits and away from psychological characteristics. Across four experiments with 675 heterosexual men, the effect persisted...

By PsyPost
Where Does Novelty Come From?
NewsMay 8, 2026

Where Does Novelty Come From?

Paleobiologist Douglas Erwin’s new book, The Origins of the New, argues that evolutionary novelty and economic innovation are fundamentally different concepts. He shows how grasses first appeared 55 million years ago as a novel trait, yet only became dominant after a...

By Nautilus
Shenyang Institute of Automation Proposes Carbon Fiber/PEEK 3D Printing and Welding for On-Orbit Structures
NewsMay 8, 2026

Shenyang Institute of Automation Proposes Carbon Fiber/PEEK 3D Printing and Welding for On-Orbit Structures

China’s Shenyang Institute of Automation (SIA CAS) announced a new on‑orbit manufacturing method that merges pultrusion molding with laser transmission welding of carbon‑fiber reinforced PEEK composites. The technique produces high‑strength, lightweight tubular units and 3D‑printed PEEK joints that can be...

By CompositesWorld
ZYME ADC
SocialMay 8, 2026

ZYME ADC

Catching up with $ZYME pan-RAS inhibitor payload ADCs from #AACR26. Seems the setting for each one is tumours that are RAS-mutated as well as expressing the target antigen (PTK7, Ly6E or Claudin18.2). https://t.co/hljX5soZQi

By Jacob Plieth
Withings Report Reveals Why Menopause Is a Critical Cardiovascular Window
NewsMay 8, 2026

Withings Report Reveals Why Menopause Is a Critical Cardiovascular Window

Withings' 2026 Menopause Transition report, based on data from 2.5 million women in 11 countries, shows menopause is a pivotal cardiovascular window. Atrial fibrillation prevalence jumps fourfold globally and 3.8 times in the U.S. between early reproductive years and late post‑menopause. Heart‑rate...

By HIT Consultant
U.S. Neutrino Megaproject Takes Shape in Abandoned Gold Mine
NewsMay 8, 2026

U.S. Neutrino Megaproject Takes Shape in Abandoned Gold Mine

Construction has begun on the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) at the Sanford Underground Research Facility in Lead, South Dakota, as the first 10 million‑pound steel vessel (≈$12.7 million) was lowered into the mile‑deep cavern. The $5 billion, DOE‑funded project, backed by 38...

By Scientific American – Mind
Birds of Prey in South Africa Are in Trouble – a Study Analyses Data From 16 Years of Road Counts
NewsMay 8, 2026

Birds of Prey in South Africa Are in Trouble – a Study Analyses Data From 16 Years of Road Counts

Researchers analyzed 16 years of road‑count data collected by a single fieldworker who logged nearly 400,000 km across central South Africa. The study examined trends for 26 raptor and large‑bird species, finding that 13 species declined significantly, with half of...

By The Conversation – Business + Economy (US)
Glowing Views From the Space Station
NewsMay 8, 2026

Glowing Views From the Space Station

NASA astronaut Chris Williams photographed the Milky Way rising above Earth’s atmospheric glow on April 13, 2026, from a SpaceX Dragon docked to the International Space Station. The glow, known as airglow, is produced when upper‑atmosphere atoms and molecules release...

By NASA - News Releases
AI-Generated Hospitalization Summaries Cut Clerk Workload, Boost Physician Well‑being
SocialMay 8, 2026

AI-Generated Hospitalization Summaries Cut Clerk Workload, Boost Physician Well‑being

Agentic AI summaries of hospitalizations were safe and reduced data clerk burden, burnout, and improved sense of well-being for physicians in a prospective study https://t.co/0nXZ0wjugg

By Eric Topol
A Monocyte‐Targeted Nanoplatform for Phagocytosis Activation and Ferroptosis Inhibition in Intracerebral Hemorrhage
NewsMay 8, 2026

A Monocyte‐Targeted Nanoplatform for Phagocytosis Activation and Ferroptosis Inhibition in Intracerebral Hemorrhage

Researchers have engineered a monocyte‑targeted nanoplatform (mPDA@DFO‑CpG‑N1) to accelerate hematoma clearance after intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). The system combines a high‑affinity aptamer for selective monocyte delivery, a TLR9 agonist that overrides CD47‑SIRPα inhibition, and the iron chelator deferoxamine to block ferroptosis....

By Small (Wiley)
Paraguay Becomes the 67th Nation to Sign Artemis Accords
NewsMay 8, 2026

Paraguay Becomes the 67th Nation to Sign Artemis Accords

Paraguay signed the Artemis Accords on July 9, becoming the 67th nation to join the U.S.-led space partnership. The addition follows a recent wave of smaller countries signing after the Artemis‑2 lunar flyby. NASA’s Jared Isaacman highlighted the accords’ focus on...

By Behind the Black
J. Craig Venter: The American Scientist Who Changed Biotech
NewsMay 8, 2026

J. Craig Venter: The American Scientist Who Changed Biotech

J. Craig Venter reshaped biotech by launching Celera Genomics, which used shotgun sequencing to finish the human genome in two years, outpacing the $3 billion public Human Genome Project. His 2000 IPO raised $1 billion, cementing a new era of private‑sector competition...

By MoneyWeek – All
Flowering Plants Transformed Into 'Hopeful Monsters' In 9 Dire Bursts Across Evolutionary Time, Study Finds
NewsMay 8, 2026

Flowering Plants Transformed Into 'Hopeful Monsters' In 9 Dire Bursts Across Evolutionary Time, Study Finds

A new study published in Cell shows that flowering plants have experienced nine separate whole‑genome duplication bursts over the past 150 million years, each aligning with major climate shifts or extinction events. By examining the genomes of 470 angiosperm species, researchers...

By Live Science