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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.

A Common Habit May Give Babies an Early Developmental Edge
BlogMar 19, 2026

A Common Habit May Give Babies an Early Developmental Edge

A large Japanese birth cohort of 38,219 mother‑child pairs found that mothers who were physically active before and during pregnancy had infants who scored higher on early developmental screenings, especially in gross motor, fine motor, and problem‑solving domains between six...

By Dr. Gator - Between a Shot and Hard Place
How We Protected the UK and Space in February 2026
NewsMar 19, 2026

How We Protected the UK and Space in February 2026

In February 2026 the UK National Space Operations Centre (NSpOC) logged 66 re‑entries, most of which were satellites, while collision alerts for UK‑licensed assets dropped to 2,117, the lowest figure of the year. The in‑orbit population rose to 33,165 objects,...

By UK Ministry of Defence (GOV.UK)
Scientists May Have Just Discovered a More Effective Hair Loss Treatment
NewsMar 19, 2026

Scientists May Have Just Discovered a More Effective Hair Loss Treatment

Scientists introduced TH07, a topical blend of finasteride, minoxidil, and latanoprost, aimed at treating androgenetic alopecia. In a pilot trial of 34 men, the 23 participants receiving TH07 reported 52% dense hair growth and higher satisfaction versus groups using each...

By Womens Health
Space Dolphins, Virginia Woolf, and More
BlogMar 19, 2026

Space Dolphins, Virginia Woolf, and More

Robert Trivers, a leading evolutionary psychologist, died this week, prompting reflections on his provocative personality and scholarly impact. The post also raises a speculative astrobiology question about the existence of “space dolphins” beyond Alpha Centauri. It revisits Virginia Woolf’s early‑century feminist...

By Arts & Letters Daily
Researchers Develop AI Framework Combining Expert Knowledge and Data to Accelerate Alloy Discovery
NewsMar 19, 2026

Researchers Develop AI Framework Combining Expert Knowledge and Data to Accelerate Alloy Discovery

Researchers at Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology unveiled an AI‑for‑Science framework that merges experimental alloy data, computational models, and expert knowledge extracted from scientific literature using large language models. The system fuses these evidence streams with Dempster‑Shafer theory,...

By EnterpriseAI
Sarepta Plans FDA Run for Duchenne Exon Skippers Despite Confirmatory Trial Failure
NewsMar 19, 2026

Sarepta Plans FDA Run for Duchenne Exon Skippers Despite Confirmatory Trial Failure

Sarepta Therapeutics will submit a supplemental NDA to the FDA seeking to convert the accelerated approvals of its Duchenne exon‑skippers Amondys 45 and Vyondys 53 into traditional approvals, despite the confirmatory ESSENCE trial failing to improve motor function. The company bolsters its...

By BioSpace
Measles 97% Preventable; Vaccine Safer Than Supplements
SocialMar 19, 2026

Measles 97% Preventable; Vaccine Safer Than Supplements

I read from an influencer nurse that measles is “going around”. She is selling vitamin A supplements. Having measles is not inevitable. Especially if a population is vaccinated. And that has been proven in the US for the past 30...

By Dr. Leslie Treece, MD
We Are EMBL: Aleena Mushtaq on Ensembl
NewsMar 19, 2026

We Are EMBL: Aleena Mushtaq on Ensembl

Senior Ensembl Outreach Officer Aleña Mushtaq leverages her molecular biology background to deliver global training on the Ensembl genome browser. Ensembl, a free 26‑year‑old platform, integrates gene, variation and regulatory data, supporting projects like the Darwin Tree of Life. Mushtaq’s...

By EMBL News
Fauna Bio Announces Target Designation Milestone in Obesity Discovery Collaboration
BlogMar 19, 2026

Fauna Bio Announces Target Designation Milestone in Obesity Discovery Collaboration

Fauna Bio announced that its Convergence™ AI platform has achieved a target designation milestone in its obesity discovery partnership with Eli Lilly, triggering a contractual payment. The designated target stems from comparative genomics of over 450 mammal species, especially hibernators,...

By HealthTech HotSpot
The Disease That Looks Different Every Time
BlogMar 19, 2026

The Disease That Looks Different Every Time

Multiple sclerosis (MS) impacts roughly 2.9 million people worldwide, with about one‑million cases in the United States. The disease presents in three clinical patterns—relapsing‑remitting, primary progressive, and secondary progressive—making each patient’s experience unique. Updated 2024 McDonald diagnostic criteria now allow earlier...

By Unbiased Science
Quantum Fluctuations During Inflation Shape Cosmic Patterns
SocialMar 19, 2026

Quantum Fluctuations During Inflation Shape Cosmic Patterns

This was a very good question from Ryan - why does the Universe on the largest scales resemble the Universe on the smallest scales? The answer, for the case of the distribution of galaxies on the sky, is that the...

By Brian Cox
GLP‑1 Drugs May Protect Heart, Vessels, Kidneys in Type 1 Diabetes
SocialMar 19, 2026

GLP‑1 Drugs May Protect Heart, Vessels, Kidneys in Type 1 Diabetes

GLP-1 drugs have established benefit for Type 2 diabetes. New data suggests that extends to Type 1 diabetes, with heart, vascular, and kidney protection https://t.co/nZDKHoFIRm https://t.co/lTHIgoj4ir

By Eric Topol
Scientists Are Using Tiny Pockets of Gas to Reveal the History of the Earth
NewsMar 19, 2026

Scientists Are Using Tiny Pockets of Gas to Reveal the History of the Earth

Scientists have introduced a novel geochronology method that measures krypton gas trapped in zircon crystals to determine how long those minerals remained exposed at Earth’s surface before burial. The krypton forms when cosmic rays strike surface‑lying zircons, providing a “cosmic...

By Popular Mechanics
Testing Leeches for Boosting Testosterone and Sexual Function
SocialMar 19, 2026

Testing Leeches for Boosting Testosterone and Sexual Function

Leeches to improve testosterone and sexual function. Will look into this and see if worth doing an experiment.

By Bryan Johnson
Consciousness Is a Full-Body Phenomenon, Says Damasio
SocialMar 19, 2026

Consciousness Is a Full-Body Phenomenon, Says Damasio

I Feel, Therefore I Am – neuroscientist Antonio Damasio on consciousness as a full-body phenomenon https://t.co/F7gTEhWLHS

By Maria Popova
Generative AI Improves a Wireless Vision System that Sees Through Obstructions
NewsMar 19, 2026

Generative AI Improves a Wireless Vision System that Sees Through Obstructions

MIT researchers have combined generative AI with millimeter‑wave (mmWave) radar to reconstruct hidden 3D objects and entire indoor scenes. The new Wave‑Former system fills gaps in partial reconstructions, boosting shape‑accuracy by roughly 20 % over prior methods. An expanded system called...

By Tech Xplore Robotics
Human Bio‑Electricity and Fusion Deliver Unlimited Power
SocialMar 19, 2026

Human Bio‑Electricity and Fusion Deliver Unlimited Power

"The human body generates more bio-electricity than a 120-volt battery and coupled with a form of fusion, the machines had found all the energy source they would ever need."

By Michael E. Mann
April's Above‑Average Rain May Delay Corn Planting
SocialMar 19, 2026

April's Above‑Average Rain May Delay Corn Planting

🌧️A wetter start to U.S. spring planting? The Climate Prediction Center favors an above-average precipitation scenario across the U.S. Corn Belt for April. Planting delays could result pending the timing/intensity. Typically, about 25-30% of U.S. corn is planted by April 30. https://t.co/96Z1EtnnTx

By Karen Braun
March 19, 1799: The Birth of William Rutter Dawes
NewsMar 19, 2026

March 19, 1799: The Birth of William Rutter Dawes

William Rutter Dawes, born March 19, 1799 in London, transitioned from medicine and the clergy to become a leading 19th‑century amateur astronomer. From a private Lancashire observatory he catalogued over 200 double stars, later moving to George Bishop’s Observatory where...

By Astronomy Magazine
Escalating Weather Extremes Signal Alarming Climate Trends
SocialMar 19, 2026

Escalating Weather Extremes Signal Alarming Climate Trends

"The Weather Is Getting Wilder, and Some See a Dire Signal in the Data" by @dgelles for the @nytimes: https://t.co/vACrMvG2Tf

By Michael E. Mann
Most Papers Misinterpret P-Values; Here's a Clear Guide
SocialMar 19, 2026

Most Papers Misinterpret P-Values; Here's a Clear Guide

1/ You probably don't understand p-values. And that's fine, because most published papers misinterpret them too. Here's what a p-value actually is, explained with a coin flip. https://t.co/jhTRVpP01k

By Ming Tang
Launch of Map to Report Asian Hornet Sightings
NewsMar 19, 2026

Launch of Map to Report Asian Hornet Sightings

Jersey has launched an online map that allows residents to report Asian hornet sightings and nest locations. The platform includes a form, photo upload, and a live view of existing reports, helping the Biosecurity team verify and act quickly. Last...

By BBC News – Science & Environment
ESA Restores Contact with Proba-3 Coronagraph After Month‑Long Silence
SocialMar 19, 2026

ESA Restores Contact with Proba-3 Coronagraph After Month‑Long Silence

ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher says at a press briefing that controllers have just managed to restore contact with the Proba-3 coronagraph spacecraft, which had been out of contact since last month. Recovery efforts underway.

By Jeff Foust
Higher Body Fat and Inflammation Raise Mortality Risk
SocialMar 19, 2026

Higher Body Fat and Inflammation Raise Mortality Risk

Linking adiposity and inflammation with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality https://t.co/JXj1WDWHHx via @medical_xpress #health #lifestylemedicine #CardioTwitter #MedTwitter #hearthealth

By Beth Frates, MD
Modern Medicine Has Dementia and Is Impotent Against Neurological Diseases
BlogMar 19, 2026

Modern Medicine Has Dementia and Is Impotent Against Neurological Diseases

The essay argues that modern medicine, despite advanced technology, remains largely ineffective against neurodegenerative diseases such as dementia, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. It highlights a soaring prevalence—Alzheimer’s projected to affect over 150 million people worldwide by mid‑century—and a 55 percent rise in U.S....

By Dr.Sircus
A Fifth Force May Exist, Yet Detection Remains Elusive
SocialMar 19, 2026

A Fifth Force May Exist, Yet Detection Remains Elusive

The case for and against a 5th fundamental force of nature Looking for a fifth fundamental force of nature? It might be out there. But finding one is a much bigger challenge than any experiment or observation is up to, at least, so...

By Ethan Siegel
The Memory Circuit: How Your Brain Stores Your Entire Life
BlogMar 19, 2026

The Memory Circuit: How Your Brain Stores Your Entire Life

Human memory operates through distributed neural networks rather than a single storage file. Neuroscientists define memory traces as engrams—strengthened synaptic patterns that enable reconstruction of experiences. The hippocampus plays a central role by binding visual, auditory, spatial, and emotional inputs...

By Neuroscience & Wellness
Gossamer Nearly Halves Workforce in Savings Push After Late-Stage Hypertension Fail
NewsMar 19, 2026

Gossamer Nearly Halves Workforce in Savings Push After Late-Stage Hypertension Fail

Gossamer Bio announced a near‑half workforce reduction after its Phase 3 seralutinib trial failed to meet statistical significance in pulmonary arterial hypertension. The company will lay off 77 employees, about 48 % of staff, aiming to preserve cash while its future path...

By BioSpace
Floating Wetlands Boost Water Quality, Slash Greenhouse Emissions
NewsMar 19, 2026

Floating Wetlands Boost Water Quality, Slash Greenhouse Emissions

Researchers in Victoria, Australia installed a two‑tennis‑court‑sized floating wetland platform at the Westernport Water treatment lagoon. Over two years the plant‑covered platform lowered nitrogen concentrations by 12% and reduced total greenhouse‑gas emissions by 22%, with methane dropping after just four...

By Science (AAAS)  News
UN Climate Chief Discusses Research Future Post‑US Funding Cut
SocialMar 19, 2026

UN Climate Chief Discusses Research Future Post‑US Funding Cut

Jim Skea, chair of the UN’s climate science body, talks to Zero about the future of its crucial research after the US pulled its support https://t.co/oOxMOJw7jx

By Vox – Climate
Gerd Faltings of Germany Wins 2026 Abel Prize in Mathematics
NewsMar 19, 2026

Gerd Faltings of Germany Wins 2026 Abel Prize in Mathematics

German mathematician Gerd Faltings has been awarded the 2026 Abel Prize for his landmark proof of the Mordell conjecture, now known as Faltings’ theorem. The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters announced the honor, which carries a cash award of...

By New York Times – Science
Comment | Climate Change Is Forcing Tough Choices—How Much Heritage Can We Save Before It Is Too Late?
NewsMar 19, 2026

Comment | Climate Change Is Forcing Tough Choices—How Much Heritage Can We Save Before It Is Too Late?

Arctic permafrost thaw is accelerating the degradation of cultural sites, exemplified by South Aulatsivik 6 in Canada’s Nain archipelago. Researchers led by Rachel Labrie employed ground‑penetrating radar to identify the most vulnerable areas, offering a rapid, non‑invasive method for prioritizing excavations....

By The Art Newspaper
STAT+: Eli Lilly’s ‘Triple-G’ Drug Leads to Significant Blood Sugar, Weight Reductions in Diabetes Trial
NewsMar 19, 2026

STAT+: Eli Lilly’s ‘Triple-G’ Drug Leads to Significant Blood Sugar, Weight Reductions in Diabetes Trial

Eli Lilly’s investigational injectable retatrutide achieved a 1.9‑point HbA1c reduction versus 0.8 points for placebo after 40 weeks, while participants on the highest dose shed 15.3% of body weight compared with 2.6% on placebo. The weight loss was still progressing at...

By STAT (Biotech)
Will the EU Finally Make Waste Pay for Its Growing Carbon Footprint?
NewsMar 19, 2026

Will the EU Finally Make Waste Pay for Its Growing Carbon Footprint?

The European Commission must decide by the end of July whether to bring municipal waste incineration into the EU Emissions Trading System. Emissions from waste‑to‑energy plants have roughly doubled since 1990, releasing tens of millions of tonnes of CO₂ each...

By Climate Home News
Neutrophils Exhibit Senescence-Like Behavior in Older Individuals
BlogMar 19, 2026

Neutrophils Exhibit Senescence-Like Behavior in Older Individuals

Researchers discovered that neutrophils from older individuals adopt a senescence‑like phenotype, marked by elevated SASP factors and reduced antimicrobial metabolism. RNA‑seq of lung neutrophils after Streptococcus pneumoniae infection revealed diminished glycolysis and ROS production, impairing bacterial clearance. Aged neutrophils also...

By Fight Aging!
Argentina Exits WHO, Joining U.S. in Historic Health Sovereignty Move
NewsMar 19, 2026

Argentina Exits WHO, Joining U.S. in Historic Health Sovereignty Move

Argentina's government confirmed its withdrawal from the World Health Organization, effective March 17, 2026, a year after a formal notice. The move aligns Buenos Aires with the United States and sparks debate over the future of global disease surveillance and...

By Pulse
A Model of the Evolution of Aging that Accounts for Immortal Species
BlogMar 19, 2026

A Model of the Evolution of Aging that Accounts for Immortal Species

Researchers propose a new evolutionary model of aging that incorporates continuous gene effects on mortality, allowing for a runaway feedback loop that can produce immortal or negligibly senescent species. The model expands Hamilton’s classic framework by integrating external mortality, internal...

By Fight Aging!
Molecule in Python Blood Could Pave Way for New Obesity Drugs, Scientists Say
NewsMar 19, 2026

Molecule in Python Blood Could Pave Way for New Obesity Drugs, Scientists Say

Scientists have isolated a gut‑bacterial metabolite, pTOS, that spikes in Burmese python blood after feeding and dramatically reduces appetite in obese mice. When administered to mice, pTOS caused a 9% body‑weight loss over 28 days without affecting energy expenditure. The...

By The Guardian – Medical research
Switching From Milk to Solid Food in Early Life Helps Reprogram the Gut's Immune Defenses, Researchers Find
NewsMar 19, 2026

Switching From Milk to Solid Food in Early Life Helps Reprogram the Gut's Immune Defenses, Researchers Find

Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and Tongji University discovered that early weaning reshapes the gut microbiome, triggering epigenetic changes in intestinal stem cells that enhance immune defenses. The study, published in Nature Microbiology, shows loss of DNA methylation at...

By Medical Xpress
Master CNS Fatigue to Optimize Training Variables
SocialMar 19, 2026

Master CNS Fatigue to Optimize Training Variables

Understanding how supaspinal and spinal CNS fatigue mechanisms work during exercise allows us to program training variables optimally . See more in this week's free Patreon article. https://t.co/6i4w1tPtdL

By Chris Beardsley
Wondering How to Talk About Climate Change? Take a Lesson From Bad Bunny
NewsMar 19, 2026

Wondering How to Talk About Climate Change? Take a Lesson From Bad Bunny

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime stunt spotlighted Puerto Rico’s fragile, climate‑stressed power grid, showing how pop culture can convey climate urgency without a lecture. The performance reached over 100 million U.S. viewers, turning a visual spectacle into a de‑facto climate message....

By Inside Climate News
ATLAS Sets Strong Limits on Supersymmetry
NewsMar 19, 2026

ATLAS Sets Strong Limits on Supersymmetry

The ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider used advanced machine‑learning algorithms to probe supersymmetric particles in two new Run 2 analyses. One search focused on disappearing‑track signatures from chargino decays, while the other targeted low‑momentum leptons from neutralino cascades. Neither...

By CERN – News/Feeds
Thermochromic Bifacial PV Glazing System for Reducing Building Cooling Loads
NewsMar 19, 2026

Thermochromic Bifacial PV Glazing System for Reducing Building Cooling Loads

Researchers at City University of Hong Kong have created a thermochromic bifacial photovoltaic (TC‑BiPV) glazing system that combines a hydrogel‑based thermochromic layer with bifacial solar cells. The hydrogel switches from transparent to translucent as temperature rises, reflecting light toward the...

By pv magazine
CANCER RESEARCH - TOCOTRIENOLS - 2025 Review - Therapeutic Potential of Tocotrienols as Chemosensitizers in Cancer Therapy (Why They Are...
BlogMar 19, 2026

CANCER RESEARCH - TOCOTRIENOLS - 2025 Review - Therapeutic Potential of Tocotrienols as Chemosensitizers in Cancer Therapy (Why They Are...

The 2025 review examines tocotrienols, a subset of vitamin E, as chemosensitizers that boost the effectiveness of conventional cancer drugs. Pre‑clinical studies show that combining tocotrienols with antiparasitic agents such as fenbendazole or mebendazole markedly increases tumor cell death. The analysis...

By COVID Intel - by William Makis (McGill Medicine)
Nihon University's Tenkoh
SocialMar 19, 2026

Nihon University's Tenkoh

Nihon University's Tenkoh-2 cubesat, deployed from the HTV-X1 cargo ship on Mar 11, has been cataloged as object 68261, in a 495 x 501 km x 51.6 deg orbit.

By Jonathan McDowell
You Don’t Need to Lose Weight to Reverse Prediabetes, Study Finds
NewsMar 19, 2026

You Don’t Need to Lose Weight to Reverse Prediabetes, Study Finds

A new Nature Medicine study shows that prediabetes can remit without any weight loss, challenging the long‑standing emphasis on shedding pounds to prevent diabetes. About 25% of participants in lifestyle programs normalized blood glucose despite stable weight, achieving protection comparable...

By ScienceDaily – Nutrition
Possibility of Heightened Risk of Resistant TB Following Drug Treatment of Latent TB Owing to Lack of Confirmatory Tests to...
NewsMar 19, 2026

Possibility of Heightened Risk of Resistant TB Following Drug Treatment of Latent TB Owing to Lack of Confirmatory Tests to...

Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) affects millions, yet treatment relies on regimens without a gold‑standard test to confirm cure. Current diagnostics—tuberculin skin test and interferon‑gamma release assay— suffer false results and cannot differentiate active disease, leaving clinicians unable to monitor drug...

By BMJ (Latest)
Metformin Reduces Weight Gain in Young People Taking Antipsychotics
NewsMar 19, 2026

Metformin Reduces Weight Gain in Young People Taking Antipsychotics

A large pragmatic trial involving 1,565 overweight or obese youths with bipolar spectrum disorders found that adding metformin to a brief lifestyle program significantly blunted weight gain associated with second‑generation antipsychotics. Over six months, the metformin group’s BMI rose only...

By The National Elf Service (Mental Elf)
Dawn’s Suborbital Spaceplane Completes Radar Tracking Experiment with Defence Science and Technology
PodcastMar 19, 2026

Dawn’s Suborbital Spaceplane Completes Radar Tracking Experiment with Defence Science and Technology

New Zealand’s Defence Science and Technology agency and the Royal Navy teamed with Dawn Aerospace to conduct the DARTE radar‑tracking experiment, using the Aurora suborbital spaceplane off the Canterbury coast. The trial demonstrated that the frigate HMNZS Te Kaha’s surveillance radar can...

By sUAS News