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Today's Science Pulse

UK-led study reveals hidden massive star clusters deep within nearby galaxies

Astronomers using the VLA and ALMA uncovered previously unseen giant star clusters embedded deep inside nearby galaxies. The findings show that young stellar activity drives the evolution of these galaxies, reshaping their interstellar environments. Multiple observations confirm the clusters act as hidden “ring factories” of star formation.

From Bras to Space: Seamstresses Redesign NASA Suit
SocialApr 14, 2026

From Bras to Space: Seamstresses Redesign NASA Suit

When a bra maker got the job of making the first NASA spacesuit In 1966, when seamstresses at the International Latex Corporation arrived at its new Apollo Suit shopfloor in Frederica, Delaware, they were essentially “taught to sew again from scratch.”...

By Mathew Ingram
Age Spots Linked to Epigenetic Drift, Potentially Reversible
SocialApr 14, 2026

Age Spots Linked to Epigenetic Drift, Potentially Reversible

Could age spots be due to a suspected cause of aging? New paper says: "Consistent with the Information Theory of Aging, we found a global disruption of tight epigenetic regulation of methylation states." If so, they are reversible. Can't wait to...

By David Sinclair
Japan Finds a Way to Recover 90% of Lithium From Old EV Batteries
NewsApr 14, 2026

Japan Finds a Way to Recover 90% of Lithium From Old EV Batteries

Japan’s JX Metals Circular Solutions has demonstrated a new recycling line that pulls roughly 90% of lithium from end‑of‑life electric‑vehicle batteries, about twice the recovery rate of earlier methods. The plant in Tsuruga uses a revised hydrometallurgical treatment that substitutes...

By TechSpot
Lilly Wants to Bridge Cancer Care Gap with $300M ADC Biotech Buy
NewsApr 14, 2026

Lilly Wants to Bridge Cancer Care Gap with $300M ADC Biotech Buy

Eli Lilly announced an acquisition of Houston‑based CrossBridge Bio, offering up to $300 million in cash and performance‑based biobucks. The early‑stage biotech is developing a dual‑payload antibody‑drug conjugate, CBB‑120, that targets the TROP2 protein found in many solid tumors. CrossBridge plans to...

By BioSpace
Early Stress Linked to Lifelong Digestive Issues via Gut‑Brain Disruption
NewsApr 14, 2026

Early Stress Linked to Lifelong Digestive Issues via Gut‑Brain Disruption

Scientists report that early‑life psychological stress can permanently alter the gut‑brain connection, leading to chronic digestive disorders such as abdominal pain, constipation and irritable bowel syndrome. The findings, based on mouse models and data from thousands of children, underscore the...

By Pulse
Combined Methods Pin Hubble Constant at 73.5 Km/S/Mpc, Heightening Cosmic Tension
NewsApr 14, 2026

Combined Methods Pin Hubble Constant at 73.5 Km/S/Mpc, Heightening Cosmic Tension

An international collaboration of astronomers announced a new measurement of the local expansion rate of the Universe—73.50 ± 0.81 km s⁻¹ Mpc⁻¹—by merging multiple distance‑ladder techniques. The result, released on April 14 2026, sharpens the long‑standing Hubble tension between early‑universe and late‑universe estimates and fuels speculation about...

By Pulse
In‑vivo Base Editing Rescues Zellweger Disorder in Mice
SocialApr 14, 2026

In‑vivo Base Editing Rescues Zellweger Disorder in Mice

Today in @natBME we report an in vivo base editing strategy that corrects a common disease-causing mutation and rescues pathology in a mouse model of Zellweger spectrum disorder (ZSD) and restore peroxisomal function in patient derived cells. This work highlights...

By David Liu
This Dangerous Spider Is Spreading Across London – and It’s Been Found at One of the City’s Most Iconic Attractions
NewsApr 14, 2026

This Dangerous Spider Is Spreading Across London – and It’s Been Found at One of the City’s Most Iconic Attractions

A surge in false widow spiders—venomous arachnids often mistaken for black widows—has been documented across London and the southeast of England. Hospital admissions for spider bites in the UK have risen from 47 in 2015 to 100 in 2025, according...

By Time Out
Study Finds Immune‑Metabolic Signature Links Depression to Breast Cancer Risk
NewsApr 14, 2026

Study Finds Immune‑Metabolic Signature Links Depression to Breast Cancer Risk

A team of scientists has identified a specific immune‑metabolic biosignature that connects depressive symptoms with breast cancer, revealing shared inflammatory and metabolic pathways. The discovery, published in Translational Psychiatry, could reshape how clinicians assess risk and integrate stress‑reduction practices such...

By Pulse
Gender‑Specific Obesity Risks Prompt New Index to Replace BMI for Heart Disease Prediction
NewsApr 14, 2026

Gender‑Specific Obesity Risks Prompt New Index to Replace BMI for Heart Disease Prediction

Researchers at Dokuz Eylul University presented gender‑specific obesity findings at the European Congress on Obesity and unveiled a waist‑to‑height ratio index that predicts heart failure better than BMI. The data show men are prone to visceral fat and liver stress,...

By Pulse
Scientists Discover Why Bread Can Cause Weight Gain without Extra Calories
NewsApr 14, 2026

Scientists Discover Why Bread Can Cause Weight Gain without Extra Calories

A new study from Osaka Metropolitan University shows that mice will abandon standard chow for carbohydrate‑rich foods like bread, wheat and rice flour, gaining weight without increasing total calories. The weight gain was linked to a reduction in energy expenditure...

By ScienceDaily – Nutrition
Study Finds Zero‑Calorie Sweeteners Alter Gut Microbiome and Metabolism Across Generations
NewsApr 14, 2026

Study Finds Zero‑Calorie Sweeteners Alter Gut Microbiome and Metabolism Across Generations

Researchers published in Frontiers in Nutrition report that common artificial sweeteners sucralose and stevia change gut microbiota and influence metabolism‑related genes in mice, with effects persisting into the next two generations. The findings intensify debate over the safety of zero‑calorie...

By Pulse
Bimetallic MOF Electrode Sterilizes Airborne Bacteria in Milliseconds
BlogApr 14, 2026

Bimetallic MOF Electrode Sterilizes Airborne Bacteria in Milliseconds

Researchers at Ocean University of China have created a 3D bimetallic MOF electrode on copper mesh that inactivates over 99% of airborne E. coli within 0.0026 seconds at 24 V AC. The 0.3Co‑MOF/Cu@Cu design leverages electroporation and reactive‑oxygen‑species generation through a...

By Nanowerk
A Modular, Synthetic Origin of Replication
BlogApr 14, 2026

A Modular, Synthetic Origin of Replication

Researchers at Rice University have engineered a synthetic origin of replication, SynORI, that replaces the native ColE1 feedback loop with programmable RNA regulators. The modular design yields six orthogonal plasmid compatibility groups that can coexist in E. coli for at least...

By Addgene Blog
Arizona Deploys Ultrasonic Devices to Combat Golden Algae in Canyon Lake
NewsApr 14, 2026

Arizona Deploys Ultrasonic Devices to Combat Golden Algae in Canyon Lake

The Arizona Game and Fish Department installed three ultrasonic “boxes” in Canyon Lake in February, launching the first U.S. field test of acoustic algae control. The devices aim to create a toxin‑free refuge for fish during golden‑algae spikes, a problem...

By Pulse
Observational Astronomer William Balmer Awarded 51 Pegasi B Fellowship
NewsApr 14, 2026

Observational Astronomer William Balmer Awarded 51 Pegasi B Fellowship

Observational astronomer William Balmer, a Johns Hopkins PhD candidate, has been awarded the Heising‑Simons Foundation 51 Pegasi b Fellowship, providing up to $450,000 over three years to pursue direct imaging of exoplanets at Northwestern University. Balmer’s work, highlighted by the first direct...

By Johns Hopkins Hub (Health)
Tokyo Researchers Generate Circularly Polarized Light From Gold Nanorods
NewsApr 14, 2026

Tokyo Researchers Generate Circularly Polarized Light From Gold Nanorods

Researchers from Tokyo University of Science and Japan's Institute for Molecular Science have shown that off‑center electron‑beam excitation of 150‑nanometer gold nanorods produces circularly polarized (spinning) light. The discovery offers a simple, tunable route to control optical spin at the...

By Pulse
D‑Wave CEO Alan Baratz Puts Commercial Quantum Computing on World Economy Stage
NewsApr 14, 2026

D‑Wave CEO Alan Baratz Puts Commercial Quantum Computing on World Economy Stage

D‑Wave’s chief executive, Dr. Alan Baratz, will address the Semafor World Economy conference on April 14 and the QED‑C Quantum Summit on April 15, positioning commercial quantum computing at the heart of global economic policy discussions. The appearances signal a...

By Pulse
Lockheed Martin Self‑Funds Vanguard and Sentinel Satellites to Demonstrate Orbital Warfare
NewsApr 14, 2026

Lockheed Martin Self‑Funds Vanguard and Sentinel Satellites to Demonstrate Orbital Warfare

Lockheed Martin announced it will self‑fund the development of two satellite platforms, Vanguard and Sentinel, to demonstrate next‑generation orbital warfare capabilities for the U.S. Space Force. The smaller Vanguard is targeted for launch in late 2028, followed by the larger...

By Pulse
BCI Implants Grant Freedom, yet Reveal Real Limits
SocialApr 14, 2026

BCI Implants Grant Freedom, yet Reveal Real Limits

For people with paralysis, brain implants offer new independence—but also real limits. Early BCI users explain what the technology gives and what it takes. https://spectrum.ieee.org/bci-user-experience?share_id=9362216

By IEEE Spectrum Threads
IQT The Quantum Dragon Podcast Episode 83 – This Podcast Has an Open Architecture.
PodcastApr 14, 202620 min

IQT The Quantum Dragon Podcast Episode 83 – This Podcast Has an Open Architecture.

In this episode, host Brian Siegelwax talks with Matt Rylarsdom, CEO and co‑founder of Quantware, about the company’s mission to become the "Intel of quantum" by delivering standardized, mass‑produced quantum processors. Rylarsdom explains Quantware’s Vertical I/O (VIO) architecture, which routes...

By Inside Quantum Technology
Spyre Therapeutics Jumps 25% on Positive Phase 2 SKYLINE Data
NewsApr 14, 2026

Spyre Therapeutics Jumps 25% on Positive Phase 2 SKYLINE Data

Spyre Therapeutics (SYRE) surged 25.07% to $64.15 after reporting encouraging 12‑week induction data from Part A of its Phase 2 SKYLINE trial for ulcerative colitis. The move lifted the stock from $51.29 the prior close and triggered a surge in trading...

By Pulse
Base Editing Repairs Mutation and Liver Function in Mouse Model of Zellweger Spectrum Disorder
NewsApr 14, 2026

Base Editing Repairs Mutation and Liver Function in Mouse Model of Zellweger Spectrum Disorder

Scientists at the Broad Institute and collaborators used a refined base‑editing system to correct a disease‑causing mutation in the PEX1 gene of mice that model Zellweger spectrum disorder. The edit restored peroxisome function and normalized liver biomarkers, demonstrating functional rescue...

By Broad Institute News
April 14, 1629: The Birth of Christaan Huygens
NewsApr 14, 2026

April 14, 1629: The Birth of Christaan Huygens

The article commemorates the April 14, 1629 birth of Dutch polymath Christiaan Huygens, highlighting his groundbreaking work in astronomy and physics. He correctly described Saturn’s rings, discovered its largest moon Titan, and was the first to spot a surface feature on another...

By Astronomy Magazine
Can Phage Therapy Answer the Booming Antibiotic Resistance Problem?
NewsApr 14, 2026

Can Phage Therapy Answer the Booming Antibiotic Resistance Problem?

Antibiotic‑resistant infections cause nearly 5 million deaths annually, prompting renewed interest in bacteriophage therapy. Companies such as Armata Pharmaceuticals, TechnoPhage, and Locus Biosciences have reported positive clinical milestones, including Armata’s QIDP‑designated AP‑SA02 moving toward a phase 3 trial and TechnoPhage’s phase 2b study...

By Labiotech.eu
We’re Advancing Wetland Restoration and Carbon Removal Science in Google’s Backyard.
NewsApr 14, 2026

We’re Advancing Wetland Restoration and Carbon Removal Science in Google’s Backyard.

Google announced a wetland restoration and research initiative to revive Pond A1, a degraded salt pond adjacent to its Mountain View campus. The effort partners with the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project, Ducks Unlimited, and California academic researchers to rebuild...

By Google Analytics Blog
Synopsys Solutions Support NASA's Artemis Program with Spacesuit Analysis and Communication System Development
NewsApr 14, 2026

Synopsys Solutions Support NASA's Artemis Program with Spacesuit Analysis and Communication System Development

Synopsys, together with Electro Magnetic Applications (EMA) and Cesium, is providing NASA with advanced electromagnetic simulations to evaluate Artemis spacesuit charging and to model lunar cellular network performance. The partnership leverages Ansys Charge Plus for 3‑D electrostatic discharge analysis and integrates...

By Synopsys – Newsroom
Tang Dynasty Timber Survives 1,400 Years in Tomb — Keeps Inner Core Intact
NewsApr 14, 2026

Tang Dynasty Timber Survives 1,400 Years in Tomb — Keeps Inner Core Intact

Archaeologists recovered a 1,400‑year‑old Potanin’s larch beam from the Tang‑Dynasty tomb of Murong Zhi in Gansu, China. While the outer shell has lost two‑thirds of its original density and absorbed over 500% moisture, the inner core remains structurally sound with...

By Wood Central
Irregular, Short Sleep Boosts Major Heart Event Risk
SocialApr 14, 2026

Irregular, Short Sleep Boosts Major Heart Event Risk

One bedtime habit may significantly reduce heart risks https://t.co/D8A1qEMmri "A new study examined the association between sleep habits and heart disease. After getting 7 days of sleep data from the participants, the researchers used the following 10 years of health data...

By Beth Frates, MD
Modern Humans Outlive Pre‑modern Peers by ~15 Years
SocialApr 14, 2026

Modern Humans Outlive Pre‑modern Peers by ~15 Years

Among hunter-gatherers who reach the age of 45, the most common age of death is 68-72. However, only 64% of those who live until age 15 reach the age of 45. The most common age of death for Americans who lived until...

By Siim Land
Sustainable Fertilizer Practice Causes Increased Cadmium in Rice, Study Shows
NewsApr 14, 2026

Sustainable Fertilizer Practice Causes Increased Cadmium in Rice, Study Shows

A study by Wageningen University published in Nature Food shows that large‑scale recycling of manure in Chinese paddy fields raises soil cadmium, which eventually accumulates in rice. While manure reduces soil acidification and cuts mineral phosphorus fertilizer use, it also...

By Food Safety Magazine
AWS Powered the Moon Mission: Lunar Landing Next in Line
NewsApr 14, 2026

AWS Powered the Moon Mission: Lunar Landing Next in Line

NASA’s Artemis II mission returned safely to the Pacific on April 10, marking the first crewed flight beyond low Earth orbit in five decades. Behind the splashdown, Amazon Web Services supplied the cloud backbone that processed telemetry, stored terabytes of video, and...

By PaySpace Magazine
For the First Time in the U.S., Renewables Generate More Power Than Natural Gas
NewsApr 14, 2026

For the First Time in the U.S., Renewables Generate More Power Than Natural Gas

In March, U.S. renewables—including solar, wind, hydro and bioenergy—generated more electricity than natural gas for the first time, according to Ember data. The shift reflects rapid wind and solar deployment and a seasonal dip in demand that forced fossil‑fuel plants...

By Yale Environment 360
Artemis 2 Is Not a European Triumph
BlogApr 14, 2026

Artemis 2 Is Not a European Triumph

Artemis 2 marked the first crewed Moon‑orbit mission in over 50 years, but Europe’s role remained largely invisible. ESA supplied three Orion Service Modules—totaling roughly $1.6 billion—and key Gateway hardware, yet no European astronaut flew; Canada’s Jeremy Hansen took the sole non‑U.S. seat....

By Europe in Space (Substack)
AI‑designed Sensors Promise Earlier Cancer Detection
SocialApr 14, 2026

AI‑designed Sensors Promise Earlier Cancer Detection

As a medical school professor, I can tell you: we catch most cancers too late. MIT and Microsoft may have just changed that forever. They built an AI system called CleaveNet that designs molecular sensors detecting cancer enzymes called proteases --...

By Robert Lufkin, MD
"Working with Industry Leaders Enables Us to Accelerate the Path From Research to the Field"
NewsApr 14, 2026

"Working with Industry Leaders Enables Us to Accelerate the Path From Research to the Field"

Biotalys announced its first research milestone in a partnership with Syngenta to develop a novel bio‑insecticide. Laboratory tests using Biotalys’ Agrobody protein platform delivered promising in‑vitro activity against key insect molecular targets. The collaboration now moves to in‑vivo testing on...

By HortiDaily
Low HRV Significantly Increases Heart Attack and Death Risk
SocialApr 14, 2026

Low HRV Significantly Increases Heart Attack and Death Risk

1/2) Heart rate variability (HRV). You’ve probably heard of it—but do you actually understand it? It’s incredibly important metric. Low HRV is associated with ~50% higher risk of heart attack, even after accounting for common confounders. And... In people who’ve already had...

By Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Flags in the Ground: SGO26 and the Danger of Competitive Urgency
BlogApr 14, 2026

Flags in the Ground: SGO26 and the Danger of Competitive Urgency

The Society of Gynecologic Oncology’s 2024 meeting in San Juan showcased a wave of early‑stage data on ovarian and endometrial cancers. While press releases painted an optimistic picture, a deeper dive reveals modest response rates and limited patient cohorts. The...

By Biotech Strategy Blog
Psychedelic Therapy and Traditional Antidepressants Show Similar Results Under Open-Label Conditions
NewsApr 14, 2026

Psychedelic Therapy and Traditional Antidepressants Show Similar Results Under Open-Label Conditions

A meta‑analysis of 24 trials found that psychedelic therapy and open‑label antidepressants produce statistically indistinguishable reductions in depressive symptoms. The study compared 8 psychedelic trials (249 patients) with 16 antidepressant trials (7,921 patients) under equal unblinding conditions, revealing only a...

By PsyPost
The Pennsylvania State University: Borrowing From Biology to Power Next-Gen Data Storage
BlogApr 14, 2026

The Pennsylvania State University: Borrowing From Biology to Power Next-Gen Data Storage

Penn State researchers have engineered a bio‑hybrid memristor that couples synthetic DNA doped with silver nanoparticles to quasi‑2D perovskite semiconductors. The device operates at ultra‑low voltage (<0.1 V) and a record‑low power density of 0.01 W cm⁻², while maintaining an ON/OFF ratio above...

By StorageNewsletter
From Autism to Migraines, Birth Order May Have Wide-Reaching Effects
NewsApr 14, 2026

From Autism to Migraines, Birth Order May Have Wide-Reaching Effects

A new epidemiological study of more than 10 million siblings links birth order to a wide range of health outcomes. Firstborn children are statistically more likely to be diagnosed with autism, anxiety and allergic conditions, while their younger siblings face higher...

By New Scientist – Robots
Tick Bites Can Trigger Red Meat Allergy (Alpha‑gal)
SocialApr 14, 2026

Tick Bites Can Trigger Red Meat Allergy (Alpha‑gal)

I now have two friends that are dealing with this. It is no joke, and pray I never have to deal with this as much as I love red meat. This is going to become a bigger story soon....

By Jason Britt
Low P‑tau217 Indicates Minimal Alzheimer’s Risk in Seniors
SocialApr 14, 2026

Low P‑tau217 Indicates Minimal Alzheimer’s Risk in Seniors

Another study indicative of predictive power of p-tau217 for Alzheimer's disease in cognitively unimpaired older adults (mean age 71 at baseline) A very low p-tau217 denoted minimal risk https://t.co/6RPJcCloWI https://t.co/XikzsvJjhM

By Eric Topol
Harnessing the Fundamental Rules of the Universe
NewsApr 14, 2026

Harnessing the Fundamental Rules of the Universe

World Quantum Day on April 14 spotlights Waterloo’s emergence as a global quantum hub. The Institute for Quantum Computing, founded in 2002 by Mike and Ophelia Lazaridis, anchors Canada’s full‑stack quantum ecosystem. Over 400 researchers collaborate with partners such as...

By Institute for Quantum Computing (UW)
Choosing the Right Color Map Transforms Heatmap Insight
SocialApr 14, 2026

Choosing the Right Color Map Transforms Heatmap Insight

🧵 Heatmaps are everywhere in bioinformatics. But most people get one critical thing wrong: the color map. Understanding this can make or break your visualizations. Let’s dig into how to choose the right color map for your heatmap. https://t.co/TgYRmaVC4b

By Ming Tang
EU Bans China From Research, but Europe Pays the Price
SocialApr 14, 2026

EU Bans China From Research, but Europe Pays the Price

Commentary: EU Shuts China Out of Science Projects, but Europe Will Pay the Price https://t.co/nVLtwgVav5

By Paul Triolo
It’s Galaxy Season: Here Are 4 Night Sky Events To Spot This Spring
NewsApr 14, 2026

It’s Galaxy Season: Here Are 4 Night Sky Events To Spot This Spring

Spring in the Northern Hemisphere, dubbed “Galaxy Season,” offers the clearest views of distant galaxies from March through early June. The article highlights four night‑sky events: the Lyrid meteor shower (peak 22 April), the Eta Aquariids (up to 40 meteors per...

By Country & Town House
Temperatures May Trend up over North-West, Central India Until Weekend
NewsApr 14, 2026

Temperatures May Trend up over North-West, Central India Until Weekend

The India Meteorological Department warned of a four‑to‑five‑day spell of rising temperatures across north‑west and central India as an anticyclone‑driven heat engine returns. Meanwhile, pre‑monsoon showers are forecast for the north‑east and hill regions, with isolated activity over Gujarat and...

By The Hindu BusinessLine – Economy
Parker Institute Doubles Down on Cancer Vaccines as Part of Ongoing Reboot
NewsApr 14, 2026

Parker Institute Doubles Down on Cancer Vaccines as Part of Ongoing Reboot

The Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy announced a renewed focus on mRNA‑based cancer vaccines, launching a multi‑year program that will fund clinical trials and partner with biotech firms. The initiative includes a $200 million investment pool aimed at accelerating vaccine design,...

By Endpoints News