
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 to scale back. Despite the milestone, rising electricity demand and new natural‑gas generators at data centers are extending the operating lives of several coal plants. Overall, renewables and nuclear supplied over half of the nation’s power.

"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...
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...

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...

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...

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...

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...

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,...
UKAEA Timeline to Realise ‘Limitless’ Energy to Power UK Grid
The UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) unveiled a 2024‑2030 strategy aimed at delivering a commercially viable fusion power plant, STEP, with a March 2029 deadline for the development consent order. The government has earmarked over £10 bn (≈$12.5 bn) for the project and...

The Real Science of Pokémon
The Pokémon franchise is weaving real‑world ecology and climate science into its games and media. Ahead of the launch of Pokémon Champions, The Pokémon Company announced a hiring drive for Ph.D. talent in science, engineering, agriculture and ecology. New titles...

CEA-Leti and Fraunhofer IPMS Validate Wafer Exchange for Ferroelectric Memory Materials
A five‑year EU pilot line led by CEA‑Leti has successfully demonstrated wafer exchange between its cleanroom and Fraunhofer IPMS, proving that complex HZO ferroelectric stacks can be processed across multiple 300 mm CMOS fabs. The collaboration validated contamination‑control protocols using VPD‑ICP‑MS...

The Endless Wonder and Beautiful Uncertainty of Interstellar Comets
On Dec 19 2025, interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS skimmed Earth at 270 million km, prompting NASA, ESA and CNSA to retask spacecraft for close‑up imaging. The comet’s odd tail orientation and high nickel content sparked intense media buzz, with celebrities and alien‑technology theories flooding social...

What’s in Store for Canada’s 2026 Wildfire Season?
Canada’s 2026 wildfire season begins quietly, but lingering drought, a warm summer and an El Niño onset raise concerns of another severe year. Experts note historic dry conditions in British Columbia, Manitoba and the Northwest Territories, while a deep snowpack in...

The Challenges of Scaling a Technology for Social Good
The Harvard Business School case study on the Single User Reinvented Toilet (SURT) examines how a breakthrough off‑grid sanitation technology, funded by the Gates Foundation, struggles to move from prototype to market. Engineers and academics debate three commercialization routes—independent pilots, licensing to appliance...

Fortified Milk Drink Shows Promise for Preschool Brain Development
A nine‑month cluster‑randomized trial gave 120 preschoolers a multi‑nutrient fortified milk versus standard milk. The fortified formula, containing DHA, ARA, probiotics, prebiotics, vitamins and minerals, did not raise full‑scale IQ but boosted the Processing Speed Index. Participants also showed increased...

Your Bottle of Korean Skincare May Have an Unintended Life-Saving Benefit
Researchers published in RSC Medicinal Chemistry report that madecassic acid, a Centella asiatica extract popular in Korean skincare, exhibits antibacterial activity against antibiotic‑resistant E. coli. The compound binds to the bacterial respiratory protein cytochrome bd, halting energy production and killing the...

New Evidence Links Heart Disease to Inflammation—And Drugs Can Stop It
New research confirms chronic inflammation as a major, often hidden driver of heart disease, accounting for roughly a quarter of heart attacks in patients without traditional risk factors. Landmark trials such as JUPITER, CANTOS, and a 2020 colchicine study demonstrated...
Reducing Wires in Quantum Computers
A new theoretical study shows that time‑multiplexing control wires across multiple superconducting qubits can dramatically cut wiring density while adding only a modest speed penalty. By scheduling fast single‑qubit operations during the longer two‑qubit gate windows, the researchers found that...
How Contact Electrification Depends on Particle Size
Researchers led by Nicolás Mujica used a free‑falling camera to track uniformly sized zirconium‑silica particles as they collided and acquired charge. By measuring sideways acceleration in a static electric field, they derived each particle’s charge and converted it to surface...

Chilean Authorities Meet with Salmon Sector to Coordinate Algal Bloom Response
Heterosigma akashiwo, a harmful algal species, has surfaced in Chile's southern waters, affecting 11 salmon farms in the Reloncaví Sound. The National Fisheries and Aquaculture Service (Sernapesca) convened meetings with industry players, the navy, and Subpesca to coordinate a response...
Beyond Aero Selects Luxaviation as Launch Operator for Hydrogen-Electric Aircraft
Beyond Aero, a French hydrogen‑electric aircraft developer, has named Luxaviation Group as the launch operator for its six‑passenger business jet. The partnership will shape mission profiles, assess airport hydrogen infrastructure, and develop safety procedures as the aircraft moves toward certification....
Vir Biotechnology Doses First Patient in Phase I VIR-5500 Trial
Vir Biotechnology has dosed the first patient in the expansion cohort of its Phase I trial of VIR‑5500, a PSMA‑targeted, dual‑masked T‑cell engager, for late‑line metastatic castration‑resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). The cohort uses a step‑up regimen of 800/2000/3500 µg/kg every three weeks...

Inertia Moves to Commercialize One of the World’s Most Elaborate Science Experiments
Inertia Enterprises, a fusion‑power startup that raised a $450 million Series A, announced three new agreements with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The deals include two strategic partnership projects, a cooperative R&D agreement, and a license for roughly 200 LLNL patents. Together they...
This AI Prediction Model Could Help Shield Future Lunar Habitats Against Micrometeorites
NASA’s Artemis II crew observed six micrometeorite impact flashes during a 30‑minute window of its lunar flyby, indicating a higher‑than‑expected particle flux. In response, researchers from UT San Antonio and Purdue have created a deep‑learning artificial neural network that predicts penetration depths...

UK Government Report Shows Mixed Outlook for Ocean Ecosystem, Health of Commercial Fisheries
The UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs released the first phase of its Marine Strategy, revealing that only two of fifteen environmental metrics meet Good Environmental Status (GES). While commercial fisheries and some species show modest gains—42% of...

Opinion: My Brother Can’t Access a Just-Approved Breakthrough Drug for His Rare Disease
A newly FDA‑approved breakthrough drug promises to address the neurological degeneration that has long plagued patients with Hunter syndrome, a rare lysosomal disorder. While the approval marks a scientific milestone, patients like the author’s 28‑year‑old twin brother still face barriers...

For Ben Sasse, Revolution Medicines’ Pancreatic Cancer Trial Felt Like His Best, only Option
Former U.S. senator Ben Sasse was diagnosed with metastatic pancreatic cancer in December and promptly enrolled in an early‑phase trial of Revolution Medicines' targeted drug daraxonrasib. The therapy, positioned as a first‑line option, aims to extend both the quantity and...

Weekly Genetics Review: The C Word We Shouldn’t Avoid
Australian beef producers are urged to embed consistency in both management and genetics to ensure superior cattle appear each generation. The article stresses defining measurable breeding objectives—pregnancy within four months, a calf per cow annually, and average weaner weight—as the...
The Sky Today on Tuesday, April 14: An Io Transit
On the night of April 14‑15, Io and its shadow transit Jupiter’s disk, moving from east to west across the planet’s face. The transit begins at 11:25 PM EDT and lasts about an hour, with the shadow appearing shortly after midnight and...

‘Suddenly, Boom, It’s Completely Warm’: Summers Are Getting Longer – Especially in Sydney, Study Finds
A new study in Environmental Research Letters shows summer periods are lengthening worldwide, adding an average of six days per decade. The expansion is most pronounced in Sydney, where summers are growing by about 15 days each decade—roughly two‑and‑a‑half times...
Cheeky Caterpillars Trick Ants Into Treating Them as Queens
Researchers have shown that certain butterfly caterpillars can fool ant colonies by mimicking both the queen ant’s chemical scent and her precise vibrational rhythm. The study recorded vibro‑acoustic signals from nine butterfly species and found that only highly myrmecophilous caterpillars...

Research Bits: Apr. 14
Researchers from Hong Kong, Tsinghua and Southern University of Science and Technology unveiled CLAP, a memristor‑based platform that fuses physically unclonable function authentication with compute‑in‑memory, achieving 99.46% AUC on ECG data while shrinking area and power use. A separate team...
Epigenetic Constraints and Enhancer Innovation Link Neuronal Plasticity to Evolutionary Adaptation
Researchers used Caenorhabditis nematodes to show that epigenetic silencing of the serotonin‑reuptake gene *mod‑5* keeps VC4/VC5 neurons non‑serotonergic in *C. elegans*. In the *Angaria* clade, a newly evolved enhancer rewires this locus, producing a permanent serotonergic phenotype that alters egg‑laying...

Mini Lake Meets Snowy Rim of Canada's Oldest Ice Mass — Earth From Space
A 2010 NASA EO‑1 satellite image captures Gee Lake, a 3.2 km wide water body, bisecting the snowy rim of the Barnes Ice Cap on Baffin Island. The glacier, up to 500 m thick, preserves ice dating back 20,000 years, making it Canada’s oldest...
A Plasma-Based DNA Test for Quantification of Disease Burden in Acute Myeloid Leukemia Patients Undergoing Bone Marrow Transplantation
Researchers at Johns Hopkins introduced a plasma‑based DNA assay, v96, that monitors up to 96 AML‑specific mutations in patients undergoing allogeneic bone‑marrow transplantation. In a cohort of 30 AML patients, the test detected molecular evidence of residual leukemia in 100%...
SpaceX Launches 1,000th Starlink Satellite of 2026 on Falcon 9 Rocket From Cape Canaveral
SpaceX lifted off its 1,000th Starlink satellite of 2026 from Cape Canaveral, sending 29 broadband‑internet units into low‑Earth orbit. The launch, designated Starlink 10‑24, was the company’s 37th dedicated Starlink mission this year, bringing the year‑to‑date total to 1,002 satellites. The...

New Research Says That Loneliness Impacts Memory. Therapists Share the Best Ways to Socialize More.
A seven‑year European study of more than 10,000 adults aged 65‑94 found that high levels of loneliness are linked to a lower baseline memory performance, though loneliness does not accelerate memory decline over time. Participants recalled fewer words from a...
PARTAGE Method Reveals Genome Regulation in Single Approach
Researchers at the University of Minnesota Medical School introduced PARTAGE, a multi‑omics workflow that simultaneously captures DNA replication timing, copy‑number variations, and transcriptome activity from a single DNA sample. The protocol uses BrdU labeling, FACS sorting, and co‑purification of DNA...

The End of Programming? Natural Language Interfaces in Industrial Robotics
Researchers from Huawei Noah’s Ark Lab, Technical University of Darmstadt, and ETH Zurich have introduced a framework that integrates large language models with the Robot Operating System, enabling robots to understand and act on natural‑language commands. The system translates spoken...

Colorado State Forecasters See Below-Average Hurricane Season
Colorado State University’s seasonal outlook projects a below‑average 2026 Atlantic hurricane season, driven by a moderate‑to‑strong El Nino expected to peak from August to October. The forecast calls for 13 named storms, six hurricanes and only two major hurricanes, compared with...
Fog Is a Vital Water Resource. Could It Disappear in a Warming World?
Scientists have launched a $3.65 million, five‑year Pacific Coastal Fog Research project to systematically measure California's fog chemistry, water contribution, and climate response. The initiative will deploy mesh fog collectors at 15 sites from San Diego to Mendocino and use a novel...
An Interspecies Grooming Ritual May Have Been Spotted in Desert Ants
Entomologists have documented a cleaning mutualism between the large red harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) and much smaller Dorymyrmex ants in Arizona desert habitats. Researchers observed Dorymyrmex workers climbing onto harvester ants for about a minute, licking and nibbling the hosts’...
Mpox Can Infect and Replicate in the Brain, US Health Researchers Say in Fatal HIV Case
U.S. researchers reported that mpox virus replicated in the brain of a 38‑year‑old man with advanced HIV, marking the first documented neuroinvasion of the pathogen. Autopsy findings revealed drug‑resistant viral strains, including mutations linked to reduced efficacy of tecovirimat. The...
Pohang City Launches Governance Body to Drive Graphene Innovation
Pohang City in South Korea has created a dedicated governance committee to spearhead the development of a graphene industry cluster. Chaired by Acting Mayor Jang Sang‑kil, the body brings together leaders from industry, academia and research, including Graphene Square CEO...

Autism-Linked Genes Alter Sleep Behavior, and More
Two recent Drosophila studies demonstrate that autism‑linked gene variants directly disrupt sleep. Flies carrying FOXP mutations exhibit severely fragmented and reduced sleep along with circadian rhythm disturbances. Separate work on NLGN3 variants shows altered sleep patterns, driven by either synaptic...
Rollout of Powerful New HIV Prevention Tool in Lower Income Countries Gets a Boost
The U.S. State Department and the Global Fund announced a major scale‑up of Gilead’s long‑acting HIV prevention drug lenacapavir, targeting 3 million people in low‑income countries over the next three years—a 50 % increase from the original 2 million commitment. Lenacapavir, which showed...
IonQ and University of Maryland Expand QLab Partnership to Advance Quantum Networking
IonQ and the University of Maryland have expanded their QLab partnership with a $7.5 million multi‑year agreement. The deal adds IonQ’s first silicon‑vacancy quantum memory node, more compute time on trapped‑ion systems, and joint research on quantum machine learning and error‑correcting...
Telecom News: CESNET, Ribbon Communications, Telit Cinterion, Lenovo, NVIDIA, Lidl, 1GLOBAL
CESNET and Ribbon Communications demonstrated a quantum‑secured optical network using Quantum Key Distribution, proving near‑zero latency encryption can be integrated into live fiber links. Telit Cinterion showcased its deviceWISE Industrial Active Intelligence platform at Hannover Messe 2026, leveraging Lenovo edge...

Brain Fog Affects Two-Thirds Going Through Menopause
A new Lancet review finds that more than two‑thirds of women experience memory lapses and reduced concentration during the menopause transition, a condition often labeled “brain fog.” The study notes that while these cognitive symptoms remain within normal performance ranges...
Losing Teeth May Lead to Weight Gain, Researchers Report
A longitudinal study of over 900 older adults in Pittsburgh and Memphis, published in the Journal of Periodontology, found a clear link between tooth loss and weight gain over four years. Participants with fewer teeth or poorer gum health were...