Science News and Headlines

Leveraging the Full Potential of Regenerative Medicine Requires a Proactive Approach
NewsMar 25, 2026

Leveraging the Full Potential of Regenerative Medicine Requires a Proactive Approach

Regenerative medicine promises to shift healthcare from a reactive model to proactive disease modification by targeting early biological drivers of chronic degeneration. Cell‑based therapies such as mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) can modulate inflammation, immune signaling, and tissue repair, showing benefits...

By GEN (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
Parasites Prompt Gut-Brain Communication to Trigger Appetite Loss
NewsMar 25, 2026

Parasites Prompt Gut-Brain Communication to Trigger Appetite Loss

UCSF researchers have mapped a gut‑brain signaling cascade that explains why parasitic worm infections cause loss of appetite. They discovered that tuft cells detect parasite‑derived succinate and release acetylcholine, which prompts nearby enterochromaffin cells to secrete serotonin. The serotonin then...

By GEN (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
Bactery Named to Fast Company’s List of Most Innovative Companies of 2026
NewsMar 25, 2026

Bactery Named to Fast Company’s List of Most Innovative Companies of 2026

Bactery, a UK‑based spin‑out, was named to Fast Company’s Most Innovative Companies of 2026 for its soil‑powered microbial fuel cell that replaces disposable batteries in precision‑ag sensors. A single unit harvests electrons from bacteria breaking down organic matter, delivering the...

By SOSV
Mexico Bets on Supercomputer to Combat Extreme Weather Events
NewsMar 25, 2026

Mexico Bets on Supercomputer to Combat Extreme Weather Events

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum announced a plan to build a public supercomputer dedicated to climate modeling, aiming to improve forecasts and early warnings for extreme weather. The initiative will partner with Barcelona’s Supercomputing Center to standardize Mexico’s weather data, leveraging...

By Bloomberg – Technology
Surprisingly Simple, Sustainable Lithium Extraction
NewsMar 25, 2026

Surprisingly Simple, Sustainable Lithium Extraction

Researchers at Princeton unveiled two low‑impact lithium extraction techniques that could dramatically accelerate supply growth. The porous‑string method uses capillary‑wicking cotton fibers to concentrate lithium chloride up to 6% in a process up to twenty times faster than conventional evaporation,...

By Chemical & Engineering News (ACS)
GlycoNet – Sugar-Based Vaccine Against Bacterial Diarrhea Shows Promise in Phase 1 Trial
NewsMar 25, 2026

GlycoNet – Sugar-Based Vaccine Against Bacterial Diarrhea Shows Promise in Phase 1 Trial

Researchers at the University of Guelph announced that their sugar‑based vaccine candidate against Campylobacter jejuni demonstrated safety and immunogenicity in a small Phase 1 human trial. Participants experienced only mild side effects, and the formulation generated measurable antibody responses even at...

By BIOTECanada
Low-Light Difficulties Based on Severity of Visual Field Loss
NewsMar 25, 2026

Low-Light Difficulties Based on Severity of Visual Field Loss

A recent Australian study uncovered a two‑phase relationship between integrated visual‑field loss and low‑light difficulties in glaucoma patients. Below an IVF total‑deviation of –6.3 dB (or sensitivity‑based IVF of 21.7 dB), LLQ scores drop sharply, indicating functional impairment. Inferior field defects were...

By Healio
Your Consciousness Shifts to a Parallel Universe When You Die, Bold Theory Suggests
NewsMar 25, 2026

Your Consciousness Shifts to a Parallel Universe When You Die, Bold Theory Suggests

A bold hypothesis called quantum immortality suggests consciousness persists by jumping to parallel universes after death. The idea derives from the many‑worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, which posits that each quantum observation creates branching universes. Critics such as Dartmouth philosopher...

By Popular Mechanics
Long-Term Neuropathy Common in Breast Cancer After Chemotherapy
NewsMar 25, 2026

Long-Term Neuropathy Common in Breast Cancer After Chemotherapy

New research of 1,493 breast‑cancer survivors aged 65 and older shows that more than 60 % of those who received chemotherapy report moderate to severe neuropathy five years after treatment, compared with 36 % of non‑chemo patients. The risk is driven largely...

By Healio
Sewer Line Workers Stumble on Viking Ship Timber
NewsMar 25, 2026

Sewer Line Workers Stumble on Viking Ship Timber

Work on a sewer line southeast of Amsterdam was halted after crews uncovered a timber slab over 10 feet long, likely belonging to a Viking‑era ship from the 9th century. The find could become Wijk bij Duurstede’s first archaeological ship‑timber discovery, linking...

By Popular Science
Untitled
NewsMar 25, 2026

Untitled

NASA’s GRACE twin‑satellite mission, operating from 2002 to 2017, produced a high‑resolution gravity map of Earth that reveals subtle variations in the planet’s pull. The visualization shows a relatively weak gravity zone off India’s coast and a stronger field over...

By Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD)
Silent Waves Launches Zephyr, a Traveling Wave Parametric Amplifier for Scaling Quantum Architectures
NewsMar 25, 2026

Silent Waves Launches Zephyr, a Traveling Wave Parametric Amplifier for Scaling Quantum Architectures

Silent Waves introduced Zephyr, a traveling‑wave parametric amplifier that integrates the microwave pump coupler onto the chip, eliminating bulky external directional couplers in dilution refrigerators. The design targets the spatial constraints of scaling quantum processors, enabling higher multiplexing—potentially up to...

By Quantum Computing Report
Atom Computing and Cisco Establish Collaboration for Distributed Quantum Architectures
NewsMar 25, 2026

Atom Computing and Cisco Establish Collaboration for Distributed Quantum Architectures

Atom Computing and Cisco have signed an MOU to explore integrating neutral‑atom quantum processors into distributed quantum architectures. The partnership will combine Cisco’s quantum networking protocols and a network‑aware compiler with Atom’s 1,000‑qubit neutral‑atom platform, aiming to create a fault‑tolerant,...

By Quantum Computing Report
Triton: Neptune’s Largest Moon
NewsMar 25, 2026

Triton: Neptune’s Largest Moon

Voyager 2’s 1989 flyby captured the closest-ever images of Triton, Neptune’s largest moon, passing within roughly 25,000 miles (40 km). The high‑resolution shot shows dozens of dark plumes up to 100 miles (160 km) long erupting from several‑mile‑wide vents, while a wider view taken from...

By Behind the Black
New Drug Candidates Debut in Atlanta
NewsMar 25, 2026

New Drug Candidates Debut in Atlanta

At the ACS Spring 2026 meeting in Atlanta, the Medicinal Chemistry division unveiled six new drug candidates transitioning from discovery to clinical testing. The molecules, presented by researchers from Biohaven, Bristol Myers Squibb, Regor Therapeutics, Olema Oncology, FoRx Therapeutics, and Iambic Therapeutics,...

By Chemical & Engineering News (ACS)
Terran Orbital Introduces New Star Tracker Product Line at SATSHOW 2026
NewsMar 25, 2026

Terran Orbital Introduces New Star Tracker Product Line at SATSHOW 2026

Terran Orbital, a Lockheed Martin company, unveiled a new star tracker product line—M10, H6, and F4—at SATSHOW 2026. The three models are engineered to balance cost, mass, and performance while leveraging the firm’s extensive flight heritage. Each unit features robust...

By SpaceNews
QpiAI Implements High-Speed Hardware Decoder for 64-Qubit Kaveri Processor
NewsMar 25, 2026

QpiAI Implements High-Speed Hardware Decoder for 64-Qubit Kaveri Processor

QpiAI unveiled a custom hardware quantum error correction decoder for its 64‑qubit Kaveri superconducting processor. The decoder employs a union‑find algorithm to implement a distance‑5 rotated surface code, requiring 49 physical qubits to encode a single logical qubit. It achieves...

By Quantum Computing Report
How Seaport Is Hedging Against Failure in Phase 2b Depression Study
NewsMar 25, 2026

How Seaport Is Hedging Against Failure in Phase 2b Depression Study

Seaport Therapeutics is embedding a fail‑safe mechanism into its Phase 2b trial of SPT‑300, an experimental therapy for major depressive disorder. The study will enroll roughly 300 patients at multiple U.S. sites and uses an adaptive design that can halt...

By Endpoints News
30 Years Ago, Robots Learned to Walk Without Falling
NewsMar 25, 2026

30 Years Ago, Robots Learned to Walk Without Falling

In 1996 Honda unveiled Prototype 2 (P2), the first self‑contained bipedal robot that could walk dynamically without falling, standing 183 cm tall and weighing 210 kg. The robot’s real‑time posture control, multi‑joint coordination, and stair‑climbing capability earned it IEEE Milestone status, with a...

By IEEE Spectrum — All
Webb & Hubble Capture New Views of Saturn
NewsMar 25, 2026

Webb & Hubble Capture New Views of Saturn

NASA, ESA, and CSA combined the James Webb Space Telescope’s infrared power with Hubble’s visible‑light imaging to deliver the most detailed, layered view of Saturn to date. The paired observations captured a long‑lived jet stream, remnants of the 2011‑12 Great...

By European Space Agency News
Can Home-Cooked Meals Help Stave Off Dementia?
NewsMar 25, 2026

Can Home-Cooked Meals Help Stave Off Dementia?

Researchers at the Tokyo Institute of Science tracked nearly 11,000 Japanese adults aged 65+ for six years and found that frequent home cooking was linked to up to a 30% lower risk of developing dementia. Even cooking once a week...

By Nautilus
Iowa’s Cancer Crisis Linked to Pesticides, PFAS, Fertilizer and Radon, Report Says
NewsMar 25, 2026

Iowa’s Cancer Crisis Linked to Pesticides, PFAS, Fertilizer and Radon, Report Says

A new report by the Harkin Institute and the Iowa Environmental Council links Iowa's soaring cancer rates to four major environmental exposures—pesticides, PFAS, nitrate‑laden fertilizer runoff, and radon. The analysis cites heavy pesticide use (over 60 million pounds annually), widespread PFAS...

By Inside Climate News
Earth’s Magnetic Field May Be More Powerful than We Thought
NewsMar 25, 2026

Earth’s Magnetic Field May Be More Powerful than We Thought

Scientists analyzing data from China’s Chang’e 4 lunar lander discovered a magnetic "cavity" extending from Earth to the Moon, where galactic cosmic rays are deflected by the planet’s magnetosphere. The study, published in Science Advances, shows Earth’s magnetic influence reaches farther...

By Scientific American – Mind
13 New Projects at CERN Funded by Europe in 2026
NewsMar 25, 2026

13 New Projects at CERN Funded by Europe in 2026

CERN has secured European Union Horizon Europe funding for 13 new projects slated to start in 2026, with the laboratory leading coordination of five flagship initiatives: ATTRACT EXPAND, EPITA, iRIS, PRISMAP+ and RADNEXT 2030. ATTRACT EXPAND will channel support to 30 high‑potential technologies...

By CERN – News/Feeds
NASA-JAXA’s XRISM Telescope Clocks Hot Wind of Galaxy M82
NewsMar 25, 2026

NASA-JAXA’s XRISM Telescope Clocks Hot Wind of Galaxy M82

NASA and Japan’s space agency JAXA have used the XRISM X‑ray telescope to capture the first high‑resolution view of a scorching galactic wind blowing out of the starburst galaxy M82. The Resolve spectrometer measured gas heated to roughly 10 million kelvin...

By American Astronomical Society – Press
India Sets Achievable Green Electricity and Emissions Intensity Targets
NewsMar 25, 2026

India Sets Achievable Green Electricity and Emissions Intensity Targets

India has officially approved its next climate NDC, setting a 47% reduction in greenhouse‑gas emissions intensity by 2035 relative to 2005 levels. The plan also targets non‑fossil electricity capacity of 60% and a carbon‑sink increase of up to 4 billion tonnes...

By Climate Home News
QpiAI and Alliance University Establish AU QUASAR Experience Center in Bengaluru
NewsMar 25, 2026

QpiAI and Alliance University Establish AU QUASAR Experience Center in Bengaluru

QpiAI and Alliance University have launched the AU QUASAR Experience Center at Alliance’s Electronic City campus in Bengaluru. The center houses QpiAI’s 8‑qubit superconducting QVidya quantum processor and the Explorer software, delivering on‑site quantum computing as a service. It aims to...

By Quantum Computing Report
The Influence of Leptin, Adiponectin and Insulin in Human Milk on the Growth of Children Exposed to Adverse Intrauterine Environments:...
NewsMar 25, 2026

The Influence of Leptin, Adiponectin and Insulin in Human Milk on the Growth of Children Exposed to Adverse Intrauterine Environments:...

Human milk delivers leptin, adiponectin and insulin, hormones that influence infant appetite and growth. A Brazilian cohort examined how these hormones vary across five intrauterine environments and relate to child BMI‑for‑age Z‑scores from birth to preschool. Significant differences emerged: adiponectin...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Cellulose Acetate Fibers With Infiltrated ZnO Nanocrystals: Activation of Antibacterial Properties Against Acne Vulgaris by Oxygen Plasma Treatment
NewsMar 25, 2026

Cellulose Acetate Fibers With Infiltrated ZnO Nanocrystals: Activation of Antibacterial Properties Against Acne Vulgaris by Oxygen Plasma Treatment

Researchers created biodegradable cellulose acetate fibers infiltrated with up to 8 wt % zinc‑oxide nanocrystals using vapor‑phase infiltration and centrifugal spinning. A short oxygen plasma treatment converted the fibers from hydrophobic to hydrophilic, enabling Zn²⁺ release. Plasma‑modified fibers showed clear antibacterial activity,...

By Small (Wiley)
Overlooked and Undertreated: National Shortfalls in Anorectal Evaluation for Gastroparesis-Associated Constipation and Defecation Disorder
NewsMar 25, 2026

Overlooked and Undertreated: National Shortfalls in Anorectal Evaluation for Gastroparesis-Associated Constipation and Defecation Disorder

A large U.S. retrospective study of 295,016 gastroparesis patients found that 29.9% also suffered constipation, yet only 1.4% were diagnosed with a defecatory disorder. Among those diagnosed, just one‑third underwent anorectal manometry (ARM) and fewer than 4% received biofeedback therapy....

By Research Square – News/Updates
Scan Finds Presence of Nuclear Fuel in 3I/ATLAS
NewsMar 25, 2026

Scan Finds Presence of Nuclear Fuel in 3I/ATLAS

Recent JWST spectroscopy of interstellar object 3I/ATLAS revealed an unexpectedly high deuterium‑to‑hydrogen ratio in its methane and water emissions. Two pre‑print papers, one submitted to Nature Astronomy and another to Nature, attribute the enrichment to formation in an ultra‑cold, metal‑poor...

By Futurism Space
Bipolar Disorder in Tuberous Sclerosis Complex: A Case Report
NewsMar 25, 2026

Bipolar Disorder in Tuberous Sclerosis Complex: A Case Report

Researchers present a case linking bipolar disorder with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), a rare neurocutaneous condition. The patient exhibited seizures, manic symptoms, characteristic skin lesions, and MRI‑identified cortical tubers and subependymal nodules. Diagnosis combined neuropsychiatric assessment with detailed neuroimaging, leading...

By Research Square – News/Updates
Hemodynamic and Biochemical Effects of Intravenous versus Oral Fluids in Healthy Volunteers – A Protocol for a Randomized Crossover Trial
NewsMar 25, 2026

Hemodynamic and Biochemical Effects of Intravenous versus Oral Fluids in Healthy Volunteers – A Protocol for a Randomized Crossover Trial

A Phase 1 randomized crossover trial will compare the hemodynamic impact of 1 liter oral tap water versus 1 liter intravenous Ringer’s lactate in 20 healthy volunteers. The primary endpoint is the change in mean arterial pressure 30 minutes after fluid administration, with secondary...

By Research Square – News/Updates
The Prediction of Estimated Cerebral Perfusion Pressure with End Diastolic Velocity in Newborns
NewsMar 25, 2026

The Prediction of Estimated Cerebral Perfusion Pressure with End Diastolic Velocity in Newborns

Researchers examined the link between estimated cerebral perfusion pressure (CPPe) and Doppler ultrasound measurements in newborns. Analyzing 446 daily samples from 137 preterm infants across multiple NICUs, they found end‑diastolic velocity (EDV) had the strongest correlation with CPPe (β = 0.571, p < 0.001)....

By Research Square – News/Updates
The Brain's Cleaning System Can Be Boosted to Rid Alzheimer's Proteins
NewsMar 25, 2026

The Brain's Cleaning System Can Be Boosted to Rid Alzheimer's Proteins

Researchers identified a drug combination that enhances the brain's glymphatic system, improving clearance of Alzheimer‑related proteins. The regimen pairs a widely used sedative with a medication that prevents dangerously low blood pressure, showing safe and effective removal of amyloid and...

By New Scientist (Health)
Why Small Built Parks Matter: Evidence that Small Urban Vegetation Improves Thermal Comfort in Hyper-Arid Cities
NewsMar 25, 2026

Why Small Built Parks Matter: Evidence that Small Urban Vegetation Improves Thermal Comfort in Hyper-Arid Cities

A field study in Muscat, Oman examined how small built parks affect outdoor thermal comfort in a hyper‑arid climate. Researchers measured Physiological Equivalent Temperature (PET) between 23.6 °C and 30.8 °C and found a strong correlation (R = 0.7) with occupants' thermal sensation votes...

By Research Square – News/Updates
When Heart Patients Can’t Wait: Urgent TAVR with Self-Expanding Vs. Balloon-Expandable Valves
NewsMar 25, 2026

When Heart Patients Can’t Wait: Urgent TAVR with Self-Expanding Vs. Balloon-Expandable Valves

A retrospective analysis of nearly 600 urgent or emergent transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedures performed between 2012 and 2024 compared Medtronic self‑expanding valves (SEVs) with Edwards balloon‑expandable valves (BEVs). Adjusted Cox regression showed no significant difference in long‑term mortality...

By Cardiovascular Business
STAT+: FDA Approves Denali Therapeutics Drug for Hunter Syndrome
NewsMar 25, 2026

STAT+: FDA Approves Denali Therapeutics Drug for Hunter Syndrome

On March 27, 2026, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted approval to Denali Therapeutics’ drug Avlayah for the treatment of Hunter syndrome, a rare lysosomal storage disorder. The decision arrives amid a recent wave of stricter FDA scrutiny of...

By STAT (Biotech)
‘I Want Everybody to Have Enough Food’: The Scientist Who Made Your Packaged Food Safer Just Won the World’s Most...
NewsMar 25, 2026

‘I Want Everybody to Have Enough Food’: The Scientist Who Made Your Packaged Food Safer Just Won the World’s Most...

Dutch scientist Huub Lelieveld received the 2026 World Food Prize for pioneering modern food‑processing safety standards that dramatically cut foodborne illness and waste. His work at Unilever introduced hygienic production methods that reduced reliance on heavy preservatives, salt, sugar and...

By Fortune – All Content
A New View Into Viruses in the Body
NewsMar 25, 2026

A New View Into Viruses in the Body

Researchers at the Broad Institute and partner institutions examined the human DNA virome in over 900,000 individuals, tracking viral loads of common DNA viruses in blood and saliva. The analysis revealed that viral load fluctuates with age, sex, season and...

By Broad Institute News
US Has Caused $10tn Worth of Climate Damage Since 1990, Research Finds
NewsMar 25, 2026

US Has Caused $10tn Worth of Climate Damage Since 1990, Research Finds

A new study published in *Nature* estimates that the United States has caused roughly $10 trillion in global GDP loss from climate damage since 1990, with about a quarter of that loss occurring domestically. China ranks second, responsible for $9 trillion of...

By The Guardian » Business
Scout-Triggered Proteomics Sharpens HCP Control
NewsMar 25, 2026

Scout-Triggered Proteomics Sharpens HCP Control

Host-cell proteins (HCPs) remain a persistent impurity risk in biomanufacturing, with regulators demanding levels below 100 ppm in final drug products. Traditional ELISAs measure total HCPs but cannot identify individual proteins, while conventional multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) suffers from retention‑time shifts...

By GEN (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
When Were Dogs Domesticated? The Oldest Known Dog DNA Offers Clues
NewsMar 25, 2026

When Were Dogs Domesticated? The Oldest Known Dog DNA Offers Clues

Two new studies published in Nature reveal that dogs were domesticated in Europe by at least 14,200 years ago, pushing the confirmed split from wolves back over 3,000 years. Researchers analyzed ancient DNA from more than 200 dog and wolf...

By Science News
How Inflammation May Prime the Gut for Cancer
NewsMar 25, 2026

How Inflammation May Prime the Gut for Cancer

Researchers at the Broad Institute and Harvard uncovered that chronic intestinal inflammation imprints lasting epigenetic scars on gut cells, even after tissue appears healed. In mouse models, these epigenetic memories persist through many cell divisions and, when paired with a...

By Broad Institute News
That Minty-Fresh Feeling? Scientists Now Know How Our Bodies Feel Cold
NewsMar 25, 2026

That Minty-Fresh Feeling? Scientists Now Know How Our Bodies Feel Cold

Scientists led by Nobel laureate David Julius have mapped the cold‑sensing protein TRPM8 at atomic resolution, revealing how it flips from a closed to an open state as temperatures drop. Using high‑frequency ultrasound extraction, cryogenic electron microscopy, and hydrogen‑deuterium exchange...

By Scientific American – Mind
New Medical Case Study Suggests Promising Fertility Outcomes For Women Over 45
NewsMar 25, 2026

New Medical Case Study Suggests Promising Fertility Outcomes For Women Over 45

A recent case study in the American Journal of Stem Cells reports two healthy live births—one at age 45 and another at 47—using the women’s own eggs after an experimental ovarian rejuvenation protocol. The treatment blends autologous adipose‑derived stem cells...

By Forbes – Healthcare
Intuitive Machines Wins $180.4 Million New NASA Lunar Lander Contract
NewsMar 25, 2026

Intuitive Machines Wins $180.4 Million New NASA Lunar Lander Contract

Intuitive Machines secured its fifth NASA contract, a $180.4 million award to launch the upgraded Nova‑D lunar lander near the Moon’s south pole. The mission, designated IM‑5, will target Mons Malapert, a ridge offering continuous Earth visibility and stable illumination, making...

By Behind the Black