Science News and Headlines

The ‘Wickedness’ of Climate Action
NewsMar 25, 2026

The ‘Wickedness’ of Climate Action

The article frames climate change as a classic "wicked" problem—one that resists clear definition, definitive solutions, and repeatable experiments. Drawing on Rittel and Webber’s theory and Donella Meadows’ leverage‑point hierarchy, it argues that most policy tools (targets, carbon pricing, treaties)...

By GreenBiz
How Chemists Turned Bourbon Waste Into Supercapacitors
NewsMar 25, 2026

How Chemists Turned Bourbon Waste Into Supercapacitors

Chemists at the University of Kentucky have devised a hydrothermal carbonization process that converts bourbon distillery stillage—a waste stream six to ten times larger than the final product—into hard and activated carbon powders. These carbon materials serve as electrodes for...

By Ars Technica – Science (incl. Energy/Climate)
The Sky Today on Wednesday, March 25: Uranus Stands South of 14 Tau
NewsMar 25, 2026

The Sky Today on Wednesday, March 25: Uranus Stands South of 14 Tau

On the evening of March 25, 2026, Uranus will appear just five arcminutes south of the 6th‑magnitude star 14 Tauri in the constellation Taurus. The planet’s magnitude of 5.8 makes it slightly brighter than its neighboring star, offering a rare chance...

By Astronomy Magazine
A Pond in Auriga
NewsMar 25, 2026

A Pond in Auriga

An image of the emission nebula IC 410 in Auriga, captured by amateur astronomer Mark Germani, showcases the embedded open cluster NGC 1893 and the striking Tadpole pillars. The photograph was taken with a modest 3.6‑inch f/5.6 refractor and a one‑shot color...

By Astronomy Magazine
NASA Revives Next-Generation Flagship Earth-Observing Missions
NewsMar 25, 2026

NASA Revives Next-Generation Flagship Earth-Observing Missions

NASA has revived its next‑generation flagship Earth‑observing program, renaming the Atmosphere Observing System to Falcon and the Surface Biology and Geology study to Eagle. The two‑satellite Eagle mission will include a high‑resolution spectrometer costing up to $310 million and a thermal...

By Science (AAAS)  News
Trace Unites ALS Teams Behind a Target That Could Broaden Treatment Access
NewsMar 25, 2026

Trace Unites ALS Teams Behind a Target That Could Broaden Treatment Access

Trace Neuroscience, launched Nov 2024, is developing an antisense drug, TRCN‑1023, to restore UNC13A protein function in ALS patients. The target emerged from parallel discoveries at UCL and Stanford, and the company plans intrathecal delivery and biomarker‑guided trials. Leveraging lessons...

By BioSpace
Juan Gallego Discusses How Manifolds Are Transforming Our Understanding of the Coordination of Neuronal Population Activity
NewsMar 25, 2026

Juan Gallego Discusses How Manifolds Are Transforming Our Understanding of the Coordination of Neuronal Population Activity

Juan Gallego, principal investigator at the Be.Neural Lab, discussed how neural manifolds are reshaping our understanding of coordinated activity across large neuronal populations. He highlighted evidence that population firing patterns collapse onto low‑dimensional manifolds, especially in motor control and learning...

By The Transmitter (Spectrum)
How Does Microgravity Affect Water Absorption and Drying of Towels in Space?
NewsMar 25, 2026

How Does Microgravity Affect Water Absorption and Drying of Towels in Space?

On the International Space Station, towels are essential for hygiene and moisture control, but microgravity alters how they absorb and release water. Without gravity, water clings to fibers via surface tension, making absorption slower and requiring astronauts to press or...

By New Space Economy
First Ever Atomic Movie Reveals Hidden Driver of Radiation Damage
NewsMar 25, 2026

First Ever Atomic Movie Reveals Hidden Driver of Radiation Damage

Researchers have produced the first real‑time atomic movie of electron‑transfer‑mediated decay (ETMD), tracking a neon‑krypton trimer for up to a picosecond before it fragments. Using a COLTRIMS reaction microscope at BESSY II and PETRA III, they captured atoms roaming and reshaping the...

By ScienceDaily – Nanotechnology
As Antibiotics Fail, a New Treatment Targets the Host, Not the Bacteria
NewsMar 25, 2026

As Antibiotics Fail, a New Treatment Targets the Host, Not the Bacteria

Researchers at Trinity College Dublin have demonstrated that a single dose of interferon‑gamma can “train” human macrophages to more effectively kill drug‑resistant bacteria such as MRSA and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The IFN‑γ‑trained cells undergo epigenetic reprogramming, rely on glutamine metabolism, and...

By Medical Xpress
It’s Go Time: Historic Moon Mission Set for Lift-Off
NewsMar 25, 2026

It’s Go Time: Historic Moon Mission Set for Lift-Off

Artemis II is set to launch around April 1, 2026, using NASA’s new Space Launch System for a ten‑day lunar flyby. The crew—Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canadian Jeremy Hansen—will be the first woman, person of colour and non‑American to...

By The Straits Times – Technology (Singapore)
This Tiny Implant, Smaller than a Grain of Salt, Can Read Your Brain
NewsMar 25, 2026

This Tiny Implant, Smaller than a Grain of Salt, Can Read Your Brain

Cornell researchers have unveiled the microscale optoelectronic tetherless electrode (MOTE), a neural implant barely larger than a grain of salt. The 300 µm‑by‑70 µm device wirelessly transmits brain‑wave data via infrared light and has demonstrated chronic operation in awake mice for more...

By ScienceDaily – Neuroscience
Cancer Drug Can Treat Drug-Resistant Herpes, Too
NewsMar 25, 2026

Cancer Drug Can Treat Drug-Resistant Herpes, Too

Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have repurposed the FDA‑approved cancer drug doxorubicin to combat drug‑resistant herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV‑1). Using their AI‑driven platform HerpDock, they identified doxorubicin’s ability to block the PI3K‑AKT‑mTOR pathway that the virus exploits,...

By Medical Xpress
‘Denial Machine’: Climate Misinformation Is Fuelling Conflict in Australian Communities, Inquiry Finds
NewsMar 25, 2026

‘Denial Machine’: Climate Misinformation Is Fuelling Conflict in Australian Communities, Inquiry Finds

A cross‑party Senate inquiry concluded that a coordinated climate‑denial network is fuelling community conflict and delaying renewable energy projects across Australia. The final report blames misinformation and disinformation for eroding public trust and recommends making tech platforms liable for psychosocial...

By The Guardian – Markets
Scientists Just Solved a Major Mystery About How Your Brain Stores Memories
NewsMar 25, 2026

Scientists Just Solved a Major Mystery About How Your Brain Stores Memories

Researchers at the University of Bonn discovered that the human brain stores memory content and context in two distinct neuron populations. By recording activity from more than 3,000 neurons in epilepsy patients, they identified content neurons responding to specific images...

By ScienceDaily – Neuroscience
Short-Lived Fish Offer New Insights Into the Aging Immune System
NewsMar 25, 2026

Short-Lived Fish Offer New Insights Into the Aging Immune System

Researchers used the short‑lived turquoise killifish to map immune aging, publishing a Nature Aging cover article. Multi‑omics analyses revealed systemic inflammaging, kidney‑marrow fibrosis, and accumulation of DNA‑damaged stem‑like immune cells, mirroring changes seen in mammals. Functional assays showed older fish...

By Medical Xpress
AL-S Pharma Tests How Far SOD1 Biology Extends Into Sporadic ALS
NewsMar 25, 2026

AL-S Pharma Tests How Far SOD1 Biology Extends Into Sporadic ALS

The article outlines BioCentury’s cookie policy, detailing the categories of cookies used on its website—strictly necessary, functional, marketing, advertising, and analytics. Each type is described in terms of purpose, activation status, and impact on user experience. The policy emphasizes that...

By BioCentury
More Frequent Ejaculations May Boost Men’s Fertility, Research Suggests
NewsMar 25, 2026

More Frequent Ejaculations May Boost Men’s Fertility, Research Suggests

A meta‑analysis of 115 studies involving nearly 55,000 men found that sperm quality deteriorates the longer men abstain, showing increased DNA damage and oxidative stress. The World Health Organization’s 2‑to‑7‑day abstinence rule was designed for higher sperm counts, not optimal...

By The Guardian – Medical research
Towards Intelligent and Miniaturized Drug Delivery Devices
NewsMar 25, 2026

Towards Intelligent and Miniaturized Drug Delivery Devices

Intelligent and miniaturized drug delivery devices (IMDDDs) combine biotechnology, AI, electronics, and novel materials to provide precise, programmable drug release inside the body. These platforms integrate real-time sensing with adaptive control, enabling dose adjustments based on biomarkers such as glucose...

By Nature – Health Policy
Genomic History of Early Dogs in Europe
NewsMar 25, 2026

Genomic History of Early Dogs in Europe

Researchers analyzed 216 ancient canid remains using a genome‑wide capture method, confirming dog ancestry in 141 specimens and identifying the oldest genetically verified European dog at 14,200 years old from Switzerland. The study shows this early dog shares ancestry with later...

By Nature – Health Policy
Practical Design Guidelines for Atom-Thin Oxide Transistors Enable Reliable 3D Chip Integration
NewsMar 24, 2026

Practical Design Guidelines for Atom-Thin Oxide Transistors Enable Reliable 3D Chip Integration

Researchers at National Taiwan University introduced a unified analytical framework that captures how channel thickness, trap states, interface quality, and surface roughness jointly dictate the performance of atom‑thin indium‑oxide and tungsten‑doped indium‑oxide transistors. The model accurately reproduces I‑V characteristics for...

By Tech Xplore – Semiconductors
Cornwall Space Station to Support NASA’s First Crewed Lunar Mission Since Apollo
NewsMar 24, 2026

Cornwall Space Station to Support NASA’s First Crewed Lunar Mission Since Apollo

Goonhilly Earth Station in Cornwall will track NASA’s Artemis II crewed lunar flyby using its 32‑metre GHY‑6 antenna, marking the first human deep‑space mission since Apollo 17. The commercial facility previously supported the uncrewed Artemis I flight and historically relayed the 1969 Apollo 11...

By Orbital Today
A Historic Heat Dome Is Creeping Across the US. Here's How to Prepare
NewsMar 24, 2026

A Historic Heat Dome Is Creeping Across the US. Here's How to Prepare

A massive heat dome is sweeping across the United States, pushing temperatures to a record 112 °F in Arizona, California and Texas and breaking heat records in 14 states. The high‑pressure system traps hot air, and the National Weather Service expects...

By CNET (All)
Lead-Rich Ash and Dust Traveled Far Afield of 2025 Los Angeles Fires
NewsMar 24, 2026

Lead-Rich Ash and Dust Traveled Far Afield of 2025 Los Angeles Fires

Researchers from Caltech analyzed ash and dust after the 2025 Eaton fire in Los Angeles, discovering unexpectedly high lead levels inside homes up to 11 km from the blaze. Indoor windowsills and uncleaned surfaces, such as a garage bench, recorded lead...

By Chemical & Engineering News (ACS)
Brain Volume in Bipolar Disorder Increases During Depression and Shrinks During Remission
NewsMar 24, 2026

Brain Volume in Bipolar Disorder Increases During Depression and Shrinks During Remission

A two‑year longitudinal MRI study of 62 bipolar disorder patients and 62 healthy controls tracked gray matter volume in the right exterior cerebellum. Patients who did not experience new manic or depressive episodes showed significant cerebellar volume loss, while those...

By PsyPost
These Families Help Scientists Find Alzheimer's Treatments. Their Network Is at Risk
NewsMar 24, 2026

These Families Help Scientists Find Alzheimer's Treatments. Their Network Is at Risk

An international consortium of more than 200 families carrying dominantly inherited Alzheimer’s mutations, the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer’s Network (DIAN), has been pivotal in uncovering the disease’s pre‑clinical brain changes and accelerating amyloid‑targeting drug trials. Researchers leveraged the certainty of genetic...

By NPR (Health)
Epicardial Fat Shows Promise as a Clinical Risk Factor for CAD
NewsMar 24, 2026

Epicardial Fat Shows Promise as a Clinical Risk Factor for CAD

Researchers analyzing 773 patients in the PARADIGM registry found that larger epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) volumes measured by coronary CT angiography were strongly associated with both any plaque progression and rapid plaque progression over an eight‑year follow‑up. While high EAT...

By TCTMD
When Wireless Networks Falter, Drones Can Provide Backup Connectivity, According to Stevens Researchers
PodcastMar 24, 2026

When Wireless Networks Falter, Drones Can Provide Backup Connectivity, According to Stevens Researchers

Stevens Institute of Technology researchers unveiled AURA‑GreeN, a coordinated drone swarm that functions as temporary aerial cell towers. The system plugs into an Open‑RAN controller as an xApp, dynamically allocating spectrum, routing data, and managing power in real time. Field...

By sUAS News
‘How Metrology Is Used in Climate Control’
NewsMar 24, 2026

‘How Metrology Is Used in Climate Control’

Metrology Parts of Baxter, Minnesota, launched a new guide titled “How Metrology Is Used in Climate Control.” The resource outlines how precise measurement standards support climate data infrastructure, from satellite altimetry and ocean level monitoring to gravimetric glacier studies and...

By Quality Digest
Geoscience Australia Launches 10-Year Strategy
NewsMar 24, 2026

Geoscience Australia Launches 10-Year Strategy

Geoscience Australia unveiled a 10‑year strategy, “Shaping Our Future 2026‑2036,” targeting net‑zero transition, economic security and climate resilience. The plan leverages scientific capability, national datasets and advanced technology to guide government, industry and communities. Applied geoscience supports roughly 124 billion Australian...

By The Mandarin (Australia)
Endangered Butterfly Count Key to Peat Bog Health
NewsMar 24, 2026

Endangered Butterfly Count Key to Peat Bog Health

Conservationist Georgina Paul is leading a two‑year study to determine whether the endangered large heath butterfly can serve as an indicator of peatland health across Wales. The project, funded with £249,000 (about $316,000) from the Welsh government and lottery sources,...

By BBC News – Science & Environment
Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc. (KPTI) Discusses Top Line Results From Phase III SENTRY Trial in Myelofibrosis Transcript
NewsMar 24, 2026

Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc. (KPTI) Discusses Top Line Results From Phase III SENTRY Trial in Myelofibrosis Transcript

Karyopharm Therapeutics announced top‑line data from its Phase III SENTRY trial, which evaluated selinexor combined with ruxolitinib in patients with myelofibrosis. The company reported that the regimen met its primary efficacy endpoints and demonstrated a manageable safety profile. Alongside the clinical...

By Seeking Alpha — Site feed
New Off-the-Shelf Conduit for CABG Shows Promise in First-in-Human Study
NewsMar 24, 2026

New Off-the-Shelf Conduit for CABG Shows Promise in First-in-Human Study

Vascudyne’s acellular tissue‑engineered vessel with external support (ATEV‑ESS) demonstrated early promise as an off‑the‑shelf conduit in a first‑in‑human study. Three patients with multivessel coronary disease received the device; two implants remained patent at 12 months with no thrombus or major...

By Cardiovascular Business
Boron Arsenide Semiconductor Sets Record in Quantum Vibrations
NewsMar 24, 2026

Boron Arsenide Semiconductor Sets Record in Quantum Vibrations

Researchers at Rice University and collaborators have demonstrated unprecedented optical phonon coherence in cubic boron arsenide semiconductor. Using isotopically enriched B-11 crystals, they observed phonon vibrations persisting for nearly a thousand cycles at low temperatures, far exceeding typical materials. The...

By Phys.org (Quantum Physics News)
Earth May Have Formed From Two Separate Rings Around the Sun
NewsMar 24, 2026

Earth May Have Formed From Two Separate Rings Around the Sun

New computer simulations suggest Earth and its neighboring rocky planets formed from two separate rings of material around the young Sun, rather than a single disc. The dual‑ring model better reproduces Earth’s mixed rock composition, corrects size discrepancies for Mercury...

By New Scientist – Robots
Cystitis or Tooth Decay Could Trigger Dementia Just a Few Years Later
NewsMar 24, 2026

Cystitis or Tooth Decay Could Trigger Dementia Just a Few Years Later

Researchers in Finland analyzed health records of over 375,000 older adults and found that severe infections such as cystitis, pneumonia, and tooth decay significantly raise the risk of developing dementia within six years. The study identified 29 conditions linked to...

By New Scientist – Robots
Why Vivid Dreams Make for Better Sleep
NewsMar 24, 2026

Why Vivid Dreams Make for Better Sleep

A new study published in PLOS Biology reveals that vivid, immersive REM dreams make sleepers feel deeper rest, even when objective sleep metrics remain unchanged. Researchers at Italy’s IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca monitored 44 adults with high‑density EEG,...

By Nautilus
Ministers Confirm Heat Pump Targets as Climate Plan Unveiled
NewsMar 24, 2026

Ministers Confirm Heat Pump Targets as Climate Plan Unveiled

Scotland’s new 15‑year climate change plan sets a 10‑year horizon before a major heat‑pump rollout, aiming to replace gas and oil boilers by 2045. The plan projects roughly $54 billion in financial benefits and cost savings through 2040, but campaigners argue...

By BBC News – Science & Environment
Concussions Predict Depression, Anxiety in Athletes
NewsMar 24, 2026

Concussions Predict Depression, Anxiety in Athletes

A Neurology study of 3,910 former college athletes found that those with three or more lifetime concussions exhibited significantly higher anxiety, depression, and related symptom scores five years after graduation. About 36% of participants reported at least one concussion, and...

By Healio
CSA Announces $3.6M Opportunity for Life Sciences Research on the ISS
NewsMar 24, 2026

CSA Announces $3.6M Opportunity for Life Sciences Research on the ISS

The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) has launched a $3.6 million CAD (≈ $2.6 million USD) Announcement of Opportunity to fund health and life‑sciences research on the International Space Station. Up to $900,000 CAD (≈ $660,000 USD) per project will be awarded to Canadian teams...

By SpaceQ
Safety Similar Across Advanced Crohn’s Disease Therapies
NewsMar 24, 2026

Safety Similar Across Advanced Crohn’s Disease Therapies

Researchers analyzed real‑world claims data from 12,245 Crohn’s disease patients treated between 2016 and 2022 to compare safety outcomes across five advanced therapies, including TNF antagonists, vedolizumab, ustekinumab, risankizumab, and upadacitinib. Incidence rates for serious infections, major adverse cardiovascular events,...

By Healio
Pinot Noir’s Popularity Has Medieval Roots
NewsMar 24, 2026

Pinot Noir’s Popularity Has Medieval Roots

Scientists analyzing DNA from nearly 50 ancient grape seeds across France have uncovered evidence that winemakers began cloning vines as early as 500 BCE, shifting from wild domestication to deliberate propagation. A medieval seed, dated to the 15th century, was genetically identical...

By Scientific American – Mind
The Shocking Fossils that Show T. Rex Wasn't the King of the Dinosaurs
NewsMar 24, 2026

The Shocking Fossils that Show T. Rex Wasn't the King of the Dinosaurs

Recent analysis of newly discovered tyrannosaur fossils shows that T. rex shared its habitat with at least two other large tyrannosaurids, overturning its long‑standing status as the sole apex predator of the Late Cretaceous. The study, led by a team of...

By New Scientist – Robots
Antibiotics Selectively Supercharged Against MRSA
NewsMar 24, 2026

Antibiotics Selectively Supercharged Against MRSA

Yale and Cornell chemists have devised a metal‑free aminoxyl catalyst that oxidizes a single secondary alcohol in the macrolide antibiotic erythromycin A. The catalyst, paired with mCPBA, proved highly selective, but analogous macrolides clarithromycin and azithromycin required different reagents to achieve...

By Chemical & Engineering News (ACS)
Russia Launches the First 16 Satellites in Its Own Internet Satellite Constellation
NewsMar 24, 2026

Russia Launches the First 16 Satellites in Its Own Internet Satellite Constellation

Russia quietly placed the first 16 satellites of its Rassvet broadband constellation into a polar orbit using a Soyuz‑2 launch from the Plesetsk spaceport. The satellites, built by the state‑linked Bureau‑1440, are the initial step toward a planned 700‑plus satellite...

By Behind the Black
Ocugen Heads to Phase 3 with Gene Therapy for Geographic Atrophy
NewsMar 24, 2026

Ocugen Heads to Phase 3 with Gene Therapy for Geographic Atrophy

Ocugen announced that its investigational gene therapy for geographic atrophy, a leading cause of vision loss in age‑related macular degeneration, will move into a Phase 3 clinical trial. The company reported mixed Phase 2 results, showing a favorable safety profile but inconsistent...

By Endpoints News
Fusion Enzyme Boosts Polyester Textile Recycling – Study
NewsMar 24, 2026

Fusion Enzyme Boosts Polyester Textile Recycling – Study

Researchers at the University of Portsmouth and the University of Manchester have engineered a “plastic‑eating” enzyme that dramatically speeds the depolymerisation of PET, the polymer used in polyester clothing. The enzyme remains highly active even at the high substrate concentrations...

By Ecotextile News