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Today's Science Pulse

Hidden Star Clusters Discovered Deep Inside Nearby Galaxies

A UK‑led study using VLA and ALMA data uncovered previously hidden giant star clusters deep within nearby galaxies, describing them as “ring factories.” The findings highlight how young stellar activity shapes galactic evolution across the universe.

Researchers Develop 3D-Printed Graphene Oxide Electrodes for High-Density Energy Storage
NewsMay 7, 2026

Researchers Develop 3D-Printed Graphene Oxide Electrodes for High-Density Energy Storage

Researchers at the University of California, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have created a graphene‑enabled 3D‑printing platform that overcomes the classic trade‑off between electrode thickness and ion transport. By infusing an acrylate resin with graphene oxide...

By Graphene-Info
William Stanley Jevons as Polymath
BlogMay 7, 2026

William Stanley Jevons as Polymath

William Stanley Jevons, famed 19th‑century economist, also built the Logical Abacus in the 1860s, an early mechanical computer that executed Boolean operations. He explicitly connected his invention to Charles Babbage’s ideas, suggesting machines could rival top mathematicians. Jevons also explored...

By Mostly Economics
Endangered Eel Population Boost Hopes
NewsMay 7, 2026

Endangered Eel Population Boost Hopes

The Natural England‑funded “Eels of Steel” scheme is launching in the Tees catchment to accelerate recovery of the endangered European eel. Volunteers from the Tees Rivers Trust will improve habitat quality and raise public awareness of the species’ unique life...

By BBC News – Science & Environment
Oncology Care Ignores Patient Survival vs QoL Preferences
SocialMay 7, 2026

Oncology Care Ignores Patient Survival vs QoL Preferences

"Patient preference for extending survival or maintaining QoL was not associated with up-front treatment modifications or downstream outcomes, suggesting a possible lack of responsiveness of the current oncology care delivery system to patient preference." https://t.co/0RXf4h2dr3 In: Outcomes of Older Adults With Advanced...

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
NSW DPIRD Scientists Lead Work Tackling Soil-Borne Diseases
NewsMay 7, 2026

NSW DPIRD Scientists Lead Work Tackling Soil-Borne Diseases

Scientists from NSW's Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) are spearheading a $34.6 million (≈$22.8 million USD) five‑year GRDC Soilborne Disease Initiative aimed at curbing soil‑borne pathogens that cost Australian grain producers about $1.71 billion (≈$1.13 billion USD) each year. The program,...

By Grain Central
Immortal Dragons: The Quest to ‘Make Death Optional’
BlogMay 7, 2026

Immortal Dragons: The Quest to ‘Make Death Optional’

Immortal Dragons, a Singapore‑based longevity fund founded by 34‑year‑old CEO Boyang Wang, secured $40 million—$4 million from friends and family and $36 million of Wang’s own money—to back moonshot biotech projects. The fund’s portfolio includes Frontier Bio, which is developing 3D bio‑fabrication techniques...

By Genetic Literacy Project
‘Slightly Unhinged’ Federal Autism Meeting Portends Unclear Research Priorities
NewsMay 7, 2026

‘Slightly Unhinged’ Federal Autism Meeting Portends Unclear Research Priorities

Scientists criticized the April 28 Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee (IACC) meeting for sidestepping its legal mandate to develop a strategic autism‑research plan. Instead, the panel pushed three policy proposals on profound autism, medical comorbidities, and wandering, which critics say may breach...

By The Transmitter (Spectrum)
Handle with Care: Chinese Study Finds Aquatic Virus Can Infect Human Eyes
NewsMay 7, 2026

Handle with Care: Chinese Study Finds Aquatic Virus Can Infect Human Eyes

Chinese researchers have identified the covert mortality nodavirus (CMNV), a pathogen long known in shrimp, as the cause of a newly described eye disease, persistent ocular hypertensive viral anterior uveitis (POH‑VAU), in humans. The study, published in Nature Microbiology, linked...

By South China Morning Post — Economy
How ISS Reboosts Raise Orbit and Affect Station Structure
NewsMay 7, 2026

How ISS Reboosts Raise Orbit and Affect Station Structure

The International Space Station performed a five‑minute Progress 93 burn on April 16 2026, raising its orbit to maintain altitude and phase for upcoming arrivals. Reboosts counteract daily orbital decay caused by thin atmospheric drag in low Earth orbit, adding forward velocity rather...

By New Space Economy
Magic Mushrooms Make Mean Fish Lazier and More Chill
NewsMay 7, 2026

Magic Mushrooms Make Mean Fish Lazier and More Chill

Researchers at Acadia University and the University of British Columbia found that a single dose of psilocybin markedly reduces aggressive, high‑energy bursts in the mangrove rivulus, a notoriously territorial fish, while leaving low‑energy social displays intact. The dosed fish also...

By Popular Science
Map: The Spread of Extreme Drought
NewsMay 7, 2026

Map: The Spread of Extreme Drought

More than 44 million Americans now live in areas classified as extreme drought, a condition that historically occurs only 5‑10 % of the time. At present, roughly 20 % of the contiguous United States is under extreme drought and about 2 % faces exceptional...

By Governing — Finance
Humid Heat May Increase the Risk of Premature Birth. But Aspirin Could Help
NewsMay 7, 2026

Humid Heat May Increase the Risk of Premature Birth. But Aspirin Could Help

New research published in JAMA Network Open finds that pregnant women exposed to humid heat have a higher likelihood of preterm birth, with each 1 °C increase in temperature raising risk by about 5%. In a randomized trial of over 11,500...

By The Conversation – Fashion (global)
May 6, 2026 Zimmerman/Batchelor Podcast
NewsMay 7, 2026

May 6, 2026 Zimmerman/Batchelor Podcast

Robert Zimmerman’s new book *Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8* chronicles the historic 1968 mission that first took humans to another world. The title is now available in hardback, paperback, ebook and audiobook formats, with a foreword by Valerie Anders and...

By Behind the Black
Thailand Research Partnership Explores CO2 Separation From Biogas for Closed-Farm Agriculture
NewsMay 7, 2026

Thailand Research Partnership Explores CO2 Separation From Biogas for Closed-Farm Agriculture

Thailand’s Thailand Institute of Scientific and Technological Research (TISTR) and Bio Bloom Co Ltd have launched a 12‑month pilot to separate CO₂ from biogas and reuse it in closed‑farm systems. The project, running May 2026‑May 2027, will install a pressure‑swing adsorption unit,...

By OpenGov Asia
Dietary Fat Ratios Impact the Strength of Immune Cells and Ability to Fight Disease
BlogMay 7, 2026

Dietary Fat Ratios Impact the Strength of Immune Cells and Ability to Fight Disease

A March 2026 study in Nature showed that polyunsaturated fats from seed oils embed in T‑cell membranes, making them prone to iron‑driven ferroptosis and shortening their lifespan. The same research demonstrated that stabilizing membranes with monounsaturated or animal‑derived fats improves T‑cell...

By Dr. Mercola's Censored Library (Private Membership)
WA Biotech Duo Takes Aim at Diabetes Beyond Ozempic
NewsMay 7, 2026

WA Biotech Duo Takes Aim at Diabetes Beyond Ozempic

Australian biotech duo ProGenis Pharmaceuticals and Syngenis Labs are developing RNA‑based antisense therapies that target insulin resistance, a root cause of type‑2 diabetes, to complement GLP‑1 drugs. Syngenis is building Australia’s first GMP‑grade synthetic DNA/RNA manufacturing facility, expected to be...

By The Age – Books (Australia)
New Open-Source Tool Uses Gradient Descent to Determine QSP Phase Angles
NewsMay 7, 2026

New Open-Source Tool Uses Gradient Descent to Determine QSP Phase Angles

Independent researcher Ross Peili released an open‑source demo that trains Quantum Signal Processing (QSP) phase angles using gradient descent. By leveraging PennyLane and JAX, the approach reformulates phase‑angle determination as a variational optimization problem, sidestepping unstable analytic solvers. The demo reproduces...

By Quantum Computing Report
Beta-Glucan Oligosaccharides Could Lower Cholesterol Levels - Thai Study
NewsMay 7, 2026

Beta-Glucan Oligosaccharides Could Lower Cholesterol Levels - Thai Study

A Thai‑led, randomised, placebo‑controlled trial of 96 healthy adults examined daily 2 g supplementation of β‑glucan oligosaccharides versus polysaccharides over 12 weeks. Both forms lowered total cholesterol, but only the oligosaccharide group maintained a significant reduction two weeks after stopping the supplement...

By NutraIngredients (EU)
Schumann Resonance: Earth’s Natural Electromagnetic Ringing
NewsMay 7, 2026

Schumann Resonance: Earth’s Natural Electromagnetic Ringing

Schumann resonance is a global electromagnetic standing wave generated by lightning within the Earth‑ionosphere cavity. The fundamental mode centers around 7.83 Hz, with higher harmonics near 14, 20, 26 and 33 Hz that shift with ionospheric conditions and storm distribution. Researchers monitor...

By New Space Economy
PYC Therapeutics Advances PKD Program with Phase 1b Multiple Ascending Dose Study Initiation
NewsMay 7, 2026

PYC Therapeutics Advances PKD Program with Phase 1b Multiple Ascending Dose Study Initiation

PYC Therapeutics has dosed the first patient in a Phase 1b multiple‑ascending‑dose (MAD) study of its PKD candidate PYC‑003, targeting safety, tolerability and early efficacy signals such as urinary PC1 protein, total kidney volume and eGFR. Results from the earlier Phase 1a...

By Small Caps Mining
Stereotypes of Autism in TV and Film May Be Linked to Delayed Diagnosis, Study Finds
NewsMay 7, 2026

Stereotypes of Autism in TV and Film May Be Linked to Delayed Diagnosis, Study Finds

A University of Stirling study finds that stereotypical autism portrayals—white, socially awkward, mathematically gifted males—contribute to delayed diagnosis for autistic women and non‑binary people. Researchers used focus groups and participatory zine‑making to capture participants' experiences, revealing that narrow media images...

By Medical Xpress
Unfunded $24B Could Have Delivered 100‑Day Prototype Vaccines
SocialMay 7, 2026

Unfunded $24B Could Have Delivered 100‑Day Prototype Vaccines

Every so often I think about how, in 2022, for $24B we could had "prototype vaccines ready for each of the 26 known viral families that cause human disease" so they can be deployed in 100 days if there was...

By Ethan Mollick
Andes Hantavirus Sparks Complex Public‑Health Challenge
SocialMay 7, 2026

Andes Hantavirus Sparks Complex Public‑Health Challenge

Hantavirus outbreaks rarely happen. This Andes strain is ‘a complicated public-health situation.’ @jaimy_lee reports https://t.co/Tqqt7pODWB via @MarketWatch

By Barbara Kollmeyer
Marine Low Clouds Boost Climate Cooling Effect, Study Finds
NewsMay 7, 2026

Marine Low Clouds Boost Climate Cooling Effect, Study Finds

A team of scientists led by Ge, Li and Peng has shown that marine low clouds retain much of their reflective power as the planet warms, strengthening the negative cloud albedo feedback. The finding narrows the range of projected global...

By Pulse
Tiny BCI Chip Delivers High‑Bandwidth Wireless Neural Links
SocialMay 7, 2026

Tiny BCI Chip Delivers High‑Bandwidth Wireless Neural Links

Ultra-Compact Brain–Computer Interface Chip Enables High-Bandwidth Wireless Neural Communication by @CUSEAS #MedTech #Healthcare #HealthTech #Tech #Technology https://t.co/nWSUX4xCRz

By Ron van Loon
Global Temperatures Set to Break Records Next Week
SocialMay 7, 2026

Global Temperatures Set to Break Records Next Week

The next week is looking like it might be toasty for global temperatures in the latest model runs. If this holds it would put us well into record territory for this time of year: https://t.co/FdGqR3FlU3 https://t.co/doCUvDKqKU

By Zeke Hausfather
Emerging Research Prompts Rethink of Creatine Dosage for Athletes and Seniors
NewsMay 7, 2026

Emerging Research Prompts Rethink of Creatine Dosage for Athletes and Seniors

A wave of recent studies is challenging the long‑standing 5‑gram daily creatine recommendation, suggesting higher intakes could support brain health and recovery. The shift is drawing attention from sports trainers, geriatric nutritionists, and wellness influencers alike.

By Pulse
Early Adversity Predicts Later Functional Decline and Multimorbidity
SocialMay 7, 2026

Early Adversity Predicts Later Functional Decline and Multimorbidity

Adverse childhood and adult experiences, intrinsic capacity decline, and subsequent physical-psychological-cognitive multimorbidity: a prospective cohort study from China "Childhood adversity is associated with reduced intrinsic capacity in later life, reflecting early functional vulnerability, while both childhood and adulthood adversities contribute to...

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
Cruise Ships Amplify COVID: R0 Jumped to 14.8
SocialMay 7, 2026

Cruise Ships Amplify COVID: R0 Jumped to 14.8

Don’t forget, on the Diamond Princess Cruise early in the COVID pandemic the Ro reproductive number for the original lineage went from around 2 to 14.8, cruise ships can be a crucible for respiratory viruses https://t.co/uTxKalftA7

By Peter Hotez
Decade-Long Whale Shark Study Triggers New Marine Protected Area in Indonesia
NewsMay 7, 2026

Decade-Long Whale Shark Study Triggers New Marine Protected Area in Indonesia

Marine biologists from Konservasi International and the Elasmobranch Institute Indonesia completed a ten‑year satellite tagging project of more than 70 whale sharks, revealing critical feeding grounds and a nursery. The findings spurred the Indonesian government to designate a new marine...

By Pulse
Obesity Requires More Than Lifestyle Changes, Biology Matters
SocialMay 7, 2026

Obesity Requires More Than Lifestyle Changes, Biology Matters

Why Lifestyle Alone Is Insufficient in Obesity: Biological Evidence, Conceptual Analogies and a Legacy of Missed Opportunities in Patient Care https://t.co/MOXZrDVWZD

By David Barzilai, MD PhD
Disorder Enables High Efficiency in Lead‑Halide Perovskites
SocialMay 7, 2026

Disorder Enables High Efficiency in Lead‑Halide Perovskites

Scientists discover why lead-halide solar perovskites work efficiently despite being structurally ‘messy’ #energysky -- via pv magazine global: https://t.co/NTeLaiE7Uw

By Tor “SolarFred” Valenza
Hoth Therapeutics Gains First European Clearance for HT-001 Oncology Trial in Spain
NewsMay 7, 2026

Hoth Therapeutics Gains First European Clearance for HT-001 Oncology Trial in Spain

Hoth Therapeutics announced that Spain’s health authority has granted authorization for its Phase 2a CLEER trial of HT-001, a therapy aimed at reducing EGFR‑inhibitor skin toxicities. Interim results show meaningful efficacy and safety, paving the way for broader European patient enrollment.

By Pulse
Hummingbirds Defy Physics: The Science Behind Their Hover
SocialMay 7, 2026

Hummingbirds Defy Physics: The Science Behind Their Hover

Between science and magic – how hummingbirds hover at the edge of the possible https://t.co/8YHI3TgsBb

By Maria Popova
Shell Readies $1.17 B Holland Hydrogen 1 Plant in Rotterdam to Fuel Europe’s Clean‑fuel Push
NewsMay 7, 2026

Shell Readies $1.17 B Holland Hydrogen 1 Plant in Rotterdam to Fuel Europe’s Clean‑fuel Push

Shell is preparing to commission Holland Hydrogen 1, a $1.17 billion, 200‑MW green hydrogen facility on the Maasvlakte 2 zone of the Port of Rotterdam. The plant, engineered by Worley and recently tied into a 32‑km Gasunie pipeline, is designed to supply...

By Pulse
Roscosmos Launches Soyuz‑5, New Heavy‑Lift Rocket Targeting Falcon 9 Market
NewsMay 7, 2026

Roscosmos Launches Soyuz‑5, New Heavy‑Lift Rocket Targeting Falcon 9 Market

Roscosmos successfully flew the Soyuz‑5 launch vehicle from Baikonur on April 30, demonstrating a 17‑tonne low‑Earth‑orbit payload capacity and a launch price of $55‑56 million. The new rocket is positioned as a direct competitor to SpaceX's Falcon 9, marking Russia's first heavy‑lift...

By Pulse
25‑nm Ferroelectric Memory Chip Beats Power‑Loss Limits, Paving Way for Cooler AI Devices
NewsMay 7, 2026

25‑nm Ferroelectric Memory Chip Beats Power‑Loss Limits, Paving Way for Cooler AI Devices

Scientists at the Institute of Science Tokyo have demonstrated a 25‑nanometer ferroelectric tunnel junction memory cell that consumes less power as it gets smaller. The breakthrough overturns a long‑standing belief that miniaturization inevitably raises energy cost, opening a path to...

By Pulse
Quantum Art Unveils Algorithm to Model 10¹⁸‑Point Electromagnetic Waves on 60 Qubits
NewsMay 7, 2026

Quantum Art Unveils Algorithm to Model 10¹⁸‑Point Electromagnetic Waves on 60 Qubits

Quantum Art, an Israeli trapped‑ion quantum computing firm, announced a new algorithm that can simulate electromagnetic wave propagation over volumes of tens of cubic kilometres at centimeter‑level resolution using roughly 60 qubits. The press release cites a 100‑fold performance gain...

By Pulse
Voyager Technologies Signals Optimism for Starlab as NASA Reviews Space‑Station Policy
NewsMay 7, 2026

Voyager Technologies Signals Optimism for Starlab as NASA Reviews Space‑Station Policy

Voyager Technologies told investors it remains "very, very optimistic" about the Starlab commercial space‑station project despite NASA’s pending decision on its Commercial Low‑Earth‑Orbit Destinations program. The company highlighted 130% of commercial demand already booked and a $24 million NASA Space Act...

By Pulse
Spinogenix Secures FDA Fast Track for ALS Drug Tazbentetol
NewsMay 7, 2026

Spinogenix Secures FDA Fast Track for ALS Drug Tazbentetol

Spinogenix announced that the U.S. FDA granted Fast Track designation to its oral ALS candidate tazbentetol, accelerating development after Phase 2a data showed 82% of patients stabilized or improved and a 76% slower decline versus historical controls.

By Pulse
The Human Brain Appears to Rely Heavily on the Thighs to Accurately Judge Female Body Size
NewsMay 7, 2026

The Human Brain Appears to Rely Heavily on the Thighs to Accurately Judge Female Body Size

A University of Western Australia study found that humans judge female body size primarily from the lower body, especially the thighs and hips. In experiments with 99 and 116 female participants, viewing only the bottom half of a body produced...

By PsyPost
There Is No Vaccine for Deadly Hantavirus: What that Means for Future Outbreaks
NewsMay 7, 2026

There Is No Vaccine for Deadly Hantavirus: What that Means for Future Outbreaks

An outbreak of Andes hantavirus on the cruise ship MV Hondius left three confirmed cases and three deaths, highlighting the deadly potential of the rodent‑borne virus. The World Health Organization confirmed the strain has no approved treatments or vaccines. Virologist...

By Nature – Health Policy
Understand Greenhouse Gas Emissions Vs. Carbon Emissions
NewsMay 7, 2026

Understand Greenhouse Gas Emissions Vs. Carbon Emissions

Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions encompass all heat‑trapping gases released into the atmosphere, while carbon emissions refer specifically to carbon dioxide output. Carbon dioxide is the primary driver of climate change, so the term is often used as shorthand for total...

By TechTarget SearchERP
Stable Depression Subtypes Identified Using Functional Connectome Normative Deviation Models and Their Response to rTMS
NewsMay 7, 2026

Stable Depression Subtypes Identified Using Functional Connectome Normative Deviation Models and Their Response to rTMS

Researchers applied functional connectome normative deviation models to a large cohort of patients with major depressive disorder, uncovering three stable neurobiological subtypes. Each subtype displayed distinct patterns of network hyper‑ or hypoconnectivity, particularly within the default mode and frontoparietal circuits....

By Nature (Biotechnology)
Self-Adhesive High-Entropy Oxide Sub-Nanowire Monolithic Electrocatalysts
NewsMay 7, 2026

Self-Adhesive High-Entropy Oxide Sub-Nanowire Monolithic Electrocatalysts

Researchers at Tsinghua University have unveiled a self‑adhesive high‑entropy oxide (HEO) catalyst composed of 14 metal elements arranged into ~1.2 nm sub‑nanowires. The binder‑free monolithic structure adheres directly to conductive substrates, delivering overpotentials as low as 129 mV in 1 M KOH and...

By Nature Nanotechnology
Manufacturing Breakthrough Uses Sound Waves to Create ‘Plant Sunscreen’
NewsMay 6, 2026

Manufacturing Breakthrough Uses Sound Waves to Create ‘Plant Sunscreen’

RMIT University researchers have created an ultrasonic manufacturing technique that forms UV‑blocking coatings on delicate surfaces, including living plant leaves, using high‑frequency sound waves to atomise a covalent organic framework (COF) liquid into a fine mist. The mist self‑assembles into...

By Australian Manufacturing
Dr. Katharine Wilkinson Guides Our Climate Crisis Navigation
SocialMay 6, 2026

Dr. Katharine Wilkinson Guides Our Climate Crisis Navigation

This week's edition of Talking Climate features guest editor and fellow climate Katharine, Dr. Katharine Wilkinson, as she helps us navigate our way through the climate crisis.

By Katharine Hayhoe
Hourglass Nanographenes Unlock Strong, Robust Multi-Spin Entanglement
NewsMay 6, 2026

Hourglass Nanographenes Unlock Strong, Robust Multi-Spin Entanglement

Researchers at the National University of Singapore have engineered hourglass‑shaped nanographene molecules that host four interacting electron spins. By extending the classic Clar’s goblet structure, they synthesized two variants—C₆₂H₂₂ and C₇₆H₂₆—using atomically precise on‑surface chemistry. One design generates spins purely...

By Phys.org – Nanotechnology
Cut Ultraprocessed Foods to Lower Heart Disease Risk
SocialMay 6, 2026

Cut Ultraprocessed Foods to Lower Heart Disease Risk

A consensus statement from @escardio today to limit intake of ultraprocessed foods for reduced risk of heart disease https://t.co/5spHDVmkb3 https://t.co/GvTvcVzzjD

By Eric Topol