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.
Also developing:
By the numbers: Foundation Alloy raises $22M Series A

Cosmological Paradoxes
The article surveys the most pressing cosmological paradoxes, from the resolved Olbers’ Paradox to the still‑open Hubble tension, Fermi Paradox, and vacuum‑energy discrepancy. It shows how multiple observational‑theoretical mismatches are straining the Lambda‑CDM framework that has dominated cosmology since the 1990s. Inflation offers partial fixes for the horizon and flatness problems but leaves its own fine‑tuning questions unanswered. New data from JWST and the Rubin Observatory are sharpening these tensions, hinting at a possible paradigm shift.
Why Use Living Cells? Researchers Are Making Chemicals with Enzymes Alone
Researchers at the National Laboratory of the Rockies (NLR) are advancing "cell‑free" biomanufacturing, using curated enzyme cocktails instead of living microbes to convert biomass into chemicals. By pairing high‑throughput robotics with machine‑learning analytics, they can evaluate thousands of enzyme variants...
Saskatchewan Allocates $1.1 M USD for Child Trauma and Maternal Health Research
Saskatchewan's provincial government has committed $1.5 million CAD (about $1.1 million USD) to a joint research initiative between Jim Pattison Children’s Hospital and the University of Regina. The funding targets child trauma, maternal health and evidence‑based parenting support across the province, marking...
Metformin Found to Act in Brain, Opening Low‑Cost Path to Cognitive Health
Scientists have identified a direct brain pathway—via the ventromedial hypothalamus and the Rap1 protein—through which metformin improves glucose regulation. The discovery reframes the 60‑year‑old diabetes drug as a potential low‑cost biohack for brain health and lifespan extension.
U.S. DOE Highlights Megawatt-Scale Small Reactors as Next‑Gen Power Solution
U.S. Energy Department officials announced that megawatt‑scale small modular reactors (SMRs) can deliver 10% of a traditional plant’s output in just 1% of the footprint, powering roughly 650 homes per megawatt. The shift promises a flexible, lower‑cost nuclear option for...

SIRT6 Loss Triggers Nucleolar Dysfunction and Proteostasis Collapse
SIRT6 Regulates Protein Synthesis and Folding Through Nucleolar Remodeling "Our data suggest that SIRT6 deficiency results in proteostasis loss through nucleolar dysfunction." https://t.co/w1SfUiUxg4 https://t.co/5bqVFfS0lg
NASA Confirms First Ever Comet Spin Reversal, 41P Flips Direction
NASA researchers analyzing archival Hubble and Swift observations have documented that comet 41P/Tuttle‑Giacobini‑Kresák reversed its spin in 2017, the first such event ever recorded. The reversal was driven by uneven outgassing jets that acted like thrusters, forcing the tiny nucleus...
Stanford Maps Gut‑Brain ‘Remote Control’ Linking Microbes to Memory Loss
Stanford University scientists have mapped a neural‑immune pathway by which the age‑associated bacterium Parabacteroides goldsteinii provokes gut inflammation, disrupts vagus‑nerve signaling and degrades hippocampal memory function in mice. The finding suggests dietary or microbiome‑based interventions could become a lever for...
Your Voice Reveals Decades‑Ahead Disease Risk
Latent space data helps us understand the geometry of disease (and health). One simple example is our voice. It can predict future risk for cognitive diseases and other health issues, years and decades before you have clinical presentation.
Geology and Depositional Characteristics of Early-Middle Miocene Fossil Woods (Central Türkiye)
The study maps Early‑Middle Miocene silicified wood fossils within the Galatian Volcanic Complex (GVC) of central Turkey, pinpointing seven localities where the woods occur in stratified, scattered, or tightly packed horizons. These fossils are embedded in fine‑grained pyroclastic and sedimentary...
Researchers Unveil Low‑Cost Acoustic Tweezers Using Standing Scholte Waves
A team led by Junjun Lei has demonstrated a low‑cost acoustic tweezer that uses standing Scholte waves to move microparticles with micrometer precision. The device, built from a single piezoelectric transducer and a glass microchannel, can be fabricated in a...
CUVAE: Strengthening Latent Representations in Skip-Connection VAEs for High-Fidelity Medical Image Reconstruction
The paper introduces CUVAE, a Constrained Unfolding Variational Autoencoder that adds weighted skip‑connections and batch‑normalized latent constraints to traditional VAEs. By addressing posterior collapse, CUVAE preserves a structured latent space while maintaining high‑fidelity image reconstruction. Experiments on Chest X‑ray (Pneumonia)...
Meta Launches TRIBE V2, AI Model that Predicts Brain Activity with 70‑fold Higher Resolution
Meta introduced TRIBE v2, a trimodal AI model that predicts brain activity across visual, auditory and linguistic stimuli. Trained on functional MRI data from more than 700 volunteers, the system claims a 70‑fold resolution increase and zero‑shot prediction capability, opening...
Will This ‘Miracle’ Battery Finally Change Your Mind About EVs?
A Finnish startup claims it has created a commercially viable solid‑state battery delivering over 500 Wh/kg energy density and a full charge in roughly ten minutes, promising a 400‑mile driving range. The company says the pack can be produced at costs...
Red Cell Distribution Width-to-Albumin Ratio as a Potential Biomarker for Short-Term Mortality Risk in Critically Ill Patients with Cerebral Hemorrhage:...
The study identified the red cell distribution width‑to‑albumin ratio (RAR) as an independent predictor of 28‑day ICU and in‑hospital mortality in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Analyzing 2,327 ICH cases from the MIMIC‑IV database and 428 external patients, higher RAR...
From Diet to Brain Repair: Natural Bioactive Compounds in Post-Ischemic Stroke Recovery
Ischemic stroke remains a leading cause of disability, and existing acute treatments are limited by narrow time windows and side effects. A new review highlights food‑derived bioactive compounds—such as curcumin, resveratrol, omega‑3 fatty acids, ginsenosides and berberine—as promising adjuncts for...
The Role and Application Prospects of Plant-Derived Bioactive Peptides in Exercise Fatigue Recovery
Plant-derived bioactive peptides (PBPs) are emerging as natural, sustainable supplements that mitigate exercise‑induced fatigue. They act on multiple fronts—scavenging reactive oxygen species, suppressing pro‑inflammatory cytokines, and activating AMPK pathways to accelerate glycogen replenishment. These mechanisms collectively improve muscle recovery and...
Editorial: Investigating the Roles of Nutritional Determinants, Genetic Predispositions, and Environmental Risk Factors in the Development of Obesity and Associated...
A new Frontiers in Nutrition Research Topic compiles ten studies that deepen understanding of obesity’s nutritional, genetic, and environmental drivers. The work highlights ethnicity‑specific adiposity indices, such as the Chinese Visceral Adiposity Index, that outperform traditional BMI in predicting metabolic...
Integrative Phytochemical Profiling and in Silico Nutrigenomic Predictions of Chinese Tea–Saudi Mentha Longifolia Blend Formulations
Researchers from Saudi Arabia and China evaluated blends of green tea (Camellia sinensis) and wild mint (Mentha longifolia) at three ratios using GC‑MS. The 1:2 tea‑to‑mint formulation (replicate 2) showed the highest proportion of bioactive volatiles (50.77%), dominated by eucalyptol, (+)-2‑bornanone,...
Efficacy and Potential Pharmacological Mechanisms of Total Glucosides of Paeony in Treating Ankylosing Spondylitis in Asian Populations: A Meta-Analysis, Network...
A meta‑analysis of 28 randomized trials involving 2,130 Asian patients shows that total glucosides of paeony (TGP) combined with conventional therapy significantly improves spinal function, reduces inflammatory markers such as ESR and CRP, and enhances quality‑of‑life scores in ankylosing spondylitis...
The Therapeutic Potential of Vitamins as Nutrients in Food for Anti-Inflammatory and Anti-Oxidative Stress in Liver Fibrosis Diseases
The review highlights vitamins as natural, food‑based antioxidants that can mitigate inflammation and oxidative stress—the twin drivers of liver fibrosis. Patients with chronic liver disease often exhibit multiple vitamin deficiencies, which may accelerate disease progression. Compared with conventional antioxidants such...
Did Scientists Just Detect an Exploding Black Hole?
The KM3NeT underwater observatory detected a 220 peta‑electron‑volt neutrino, an energy level over 100,000 times greater than any particle produced in Earth‑based colliders. The event, recorded on Feb. 13, 2023, has sparked speculation that it may originate from an exploding primordial black...
High Cardiovascular Risk Predicts Major Fractures in Postmenopause
A new analysis shows that postmenopausal women with higher cardiovascular risk, as measured by the PREVENT score, are significantly more likely to experience major bone fractures, highlighting a close link between heart and bone health. womenshealth

Singapore: NUS Harnesses Nanosensors for Smart Farming
Assistant Professor Tedrick Lew at the National University of Singapore is pioneering the integration of fluorescent nanosensors and nanoparticle delivery systems to create smart farming solutions. The sensors embed in plant tissue, detecting stress, infection or nutrient deficiencies at the...
Taming the Acid Clouds with a New Blueprint for Making Fuel on Venus
The Chinese Academy of Sciences team unveiled a modular instrument designed to survive Venus’s corrosive, high‑pressure atmosphere while filtering acid aerosols, enriching trace gases, and performing laser‑based spectroscopy. The three‑stage filtration unit achieves over 99.99% removal of sulfuric‑acid droplets as...
Researchers Reveal Why Hydrogen Metal Testing Methods Produce Unreliable Results
Researchers at IIT Bombay and the Max Planck Institute uncovered why the electrochemical permeation technique often yields unreliable hydrogen‑diffusion data in steel. They showed that high charging currents induce surface rust, dislocations and hydrogen bubbles, which artificially lower measured flux. Switching...
All-Optical Neuron Breaks the Nanosecond Barrier Using Tellurium Phase Transition
Researchers have demonstrated an all‑optical neuron built from a thin tellurium film that melts in under 260 picoseconds, breaking the nanosecond barrier for photonic activation. The device operates with threshold energies as low as 0.4 picojoules and occupies less than 5 µm², enabling...

Psychedelics Reveal a Truer Version of Reality, Research Suggests
Researchers at Imperial College London and the New School have linked psilocybin‑induced "entropic brain" activity to a temporary loosening of rigid beliefs, a concept dubbed REBUS (Relaxed Beliefs Under Psychedelics). A 2025 study found that a 25 mg dose of psilocybin...

Across South America, Canopy Bridges Evolve as a Lifeline for Tree-Dwelling Wildlife
Researchers in the Peruvian Amazon installed a network of artificial canopy bridges and camera traps, documenting sloths, saki monkeys and porcupines using the structures over a 21‑day period. The study, published in Neotropical Biology and Conservation, shows that suspended corridors...
Surface Quasi‑Liquid Layer Boosts Clathrate Growth, Enhances CO₂ Mobility
A quasi-liquid layer at the surface of clathrate hydrates accelerates their growth by enhancing CO2 mobility, offering new insights for applications in gas storage, desalination, and carbon containment. materialsengineering
This Year’s US Wildfires Have Already Set Records That Could Foreshadow a Smoky, Fiery Summer
The 2026 U.S. wildfire season has already broken records, with over 15,000 ignitions and more than 1.5 million acres burned by March 27—127 percent above the ten‑year average. Early March fire activity tops any year in the past decade, driven by an intensifying...
A Precision Epigenetic Approach to Non-Invasive Lung Cancer Screening Using Gene- Specific cfDNA Methylation
A recent study demonstrates that promoter methylation of four genes—MAX, MTURN, HLA‑B and CAV1—can be detected in plasma circulating cell‑free DNA and used as a non‑invasive biomarker for lung cancer. In tumor tissue, MAX, MTURN and HLA‑B showed hypermethylation rates...
SELLAS Life Sciences (SLS) to Present SLS009 Data at AACR 2026
SELLAS Life Sciences announced it will present preclinical data on its CDK9 inhibitor SLS009 (tambiciclib) at the AACR 2026 meeting in San Diego. The poster highlights the drug’s ability to induce apoptosis and lower MCL‑1 levels in acute myeloid leukemia...
Multi-Objective AI-Driven Optimization Guides the Discovery of High-Performance Organic Photovoltaics
Researchers unveiled a closed‑loop, multi‑objective Bayesian optimization workflow that streamlines the discovery of high‑performance organic photovoltaics. By navigating an eight‑dimensional space of composition and fabrication variables—covering roughly 2.2 × 10¹⁴ possible formulations—the system identified a power conversion efficiency above 20% in just...

Why China’s Space-Based Solar Power Is the Next Frontier of Green Energy
China is advancing its Zhuri space‑based solar power programme, aiming for a megawatt‑level orbital test around 2030 and a gigawatt‑scale station by 2050. The initiative leverages falling launch costs and new wireless‑power technologies to deliver continuous, weather‑independent electricity from geostationary...
DOE Announces $320M Investment in Pioneering Scientific Research
The U.S. Department of Energy announced a $320 million investment to support 217 university and industry projects across physical sciences. Funding will be allocated to research in materials science, plasma and fusion, nuclear and particle physics, chemical and molecular sciences, quantum...
Low Climatic Niche Overlap Among Allopatric Woolly Opossum Species Reflects Phylogenetic and Geographic Influences in the Neotropics
Researchers examined climatic niche overlap among three Neotropical marsupial species of the genus Caluromys using 1,158 cleaned occurrence records and 19 WorldClim bioclimatic variables. Contrary to expectations of high similarity, the analysis revealed generally low niche overlap, with the pair...
Batten Disease with Narcolepsy and Functional Neurological Disorder: A Case Report
Researchers report the first documented case of a 17‑year‑old with juvenile Batten disease (CLN3) who also developed functional neurological disorder and narcolepsy. Video‑EEG confirmed functional seizures, while Multiple Sleep Latency Testing diagnosed narcolepsy, and treatment with armodafinil dramatically reduced seizure...
TKI Outcomes in AML Similar Across Racial, Ethnic Groups
New real‑world analysis of 482 acute myeloid leukemia patients shows tyrosine kinase inhibitors produce comparable overall survival and event‑free survival across racial and ethnic groups. The study, using the Flatiron Health Research Database from 2015‑2023, captured patients treated with FLT3,...

The Science Behind Being One of a Kind
A recent study in Trends in Ecology & Evolution proposes a bidirectional framework linking epigenetic variation and individual behavior, suggesting that organisms and their environments co‑create uniqueness. Researchers argue that epigenetic changes can arise from environmental modifications and persist across...
Health as a Point, Disease as Trajectory in Latent Space
Latent Space as a Physiological Map: All our medical data, genomes, scans, notes are just different shadows of one underlying physiological state. Health = a point in high-dimensional space. Disease = a drifting trajectory Treatment = a vector,...

Repeated Callus Filtering Yields Red Pigment Without
Now THAT is some strong RUBY expression. Filtering transgenic callus a heap of times really pays off. Chasing the red hue without any herbicide or antibiotic pressure. Just hormones to induce callus and careful scalpel work. Some German Chammomile for...
Gut-Immune Link Identified in Multiple Sclerosis-Related Neuroinflammation
Researchers at Keio University discovered that intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) expressing MHC class II trigger the expansion of pathogenic Th17 cells that migrate to the spinal cord and drive neuroinflammation in multiple sclerosis (MS) mouse models. Examination of intestinal biopsies from...
Teach Students to Guide AI, Not Master Physics
If AI can now solve math, discover physics and chemistry breakthroughs faster than human PhDs, why are we still training humans to be physicists? Serious question. Should education shift from 'learn to do X' to 'learn to direct AI doing...
CMS Measurement Bolsters Evidence for Toponium, Heaviest Known Composite Particle
The CMS experiment at CERN presented a new measurement that aligns with the existence of toponium, a fleeting bound state of a top quark and its antiquark. The result reinforces last year’s observation and could complete the family of quark‑antiquark...
Endurance Athletes Undereat Protein, New Study Calls for 2× RDA
A 2025 Springer Sports Medicine study shows endurance athletes need 1.8‑2.0 g of protein per kilogram body weight daily—about twice the sedentary recommendation—but many fall far short. Exercise‑metabolism researcher Dr. Sam Impey warns that the gap is especially wide among recreational...
NASA Reveals Details of Mike Fincke’s ISS Evacuation
NASA released details of the ISS medical evacuation of astronaut Mike Fincke in January 2026 #space #astronomy #science https://t.co/Juis0InB8P
New Therapeutic Triad Accelerates Huntington's Disease Breakthroughs
“Huntington’s Disease and The Triad of Therapeutic Conviction”. Debut blog from Eric Green, CEO of Trace Neuro, explaining why and how advances are happening in HD. Genetics, cellular understanding, and enabling modalities. https://t.co/pAr9EQs5gJ
Light‑Activated Copper Nanoparticles, Magnetic Carriers and Liposomal PDT Transform Nanomedicine
Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum, Houston Methodist and the University of Johannesburg have unveiled three nanomedicine platforms—a light‑activated copper nanoparticle, a magnetically guided superparamagnetic carrier and a liposome‑encapsulated photodynamic therapy—that each claim to dramatically improve precision for cancer or spinal‑cord...
R3 Bio Engineers Whole Organs, Featured in WIRED
This is so awesome. @JohnSchloendorn and Alice Gilman at R3 Bio talk through what they’re doing at R3 Bio: building something that's never existed before. They're designing genetically engineered whole organ systems. See them featured in WIRED. @WIRED full story here: https://t.co/8z5iGXR0uK