Science News and Headlines

New Method More Accurately Predicts Stronger, Lighter 3D Printed Parts
NewsMar 6, 2026

New Method More Accurately Predicts Stronger, Lighter 3D Printed Parts

Engineers at the University of Maine have introduced a hybrid method that blends advanced nonlinear finite‑element modeling with physical testing to predict the strength of gyroid‑infilled 3D‑printed parts. The approach outperforms traditional linear analyses by capturing plastic deformation and anisotropic...

By Medical Design Briefs
J&J Wins Third National Priority Approval for Multiple Myeloma Combo
NewsMar 6, 2026

J&J Wins Third National Priority Approval for Multiple Myeloma Combo

Johnson & Johnson’s Tecvayli and Darzalex combination received FDA approval for second‑line multiple myeloma treatment, marking the third drug cleared under the Commissioner’s National Priority Voucher (CNPV) program. The decision was rendered in just 55 days after J&J’s filing, thanks...

By BioSpace
March 6, 1953: The Birth of Carolyn Porco
NewsMar 6, 2026

March 6, 1953: The Birth of Carolyn Porco

Carolyn Porco, born March 6, 1953, rose from a doctoral candidate in earth and space sciences to become a leading planetary imaging scientist. She joined the Voyager team in the early 1980s and co‑planned the iconic 1990 “Pale Blue Dot” photograph with...

By Astronomy Magazine
Artificial Feeding Platform Transforms Study of Ticks and Their Diseases
NewsMar 6, 2026

Artificial Feeding Platform Transforms Study of Ticks and Their Diseases

Researchers at the University of Melbourne have unveiled the world’s first laboratory‑based, host‑free feeding platform for the Asian longhorned tick (Haemaphysalis longicornis). The silicone‑membrane system, using defibrinated cattle blood, supports full feeding and reproduction without live animal hosts. This breakthrough...

By Phys.org – Biotechnology
Sleep Apnea Often Goes Undetected in Women. That’s Starting to Change
NewsMar 6, 2026

Sleep Apnea Often Goes Undetected in Women. That’s Starting to Change

Obstructive sleep apnea, long viewed as a male‑dominant disorder, is now recognized as a major, often hidden health issue for women, especially during perimenopause and menopause. A Lancet Respiratory Medicine projection estimates 30.4 million U.S. women could have OSA by 2050,...

By WIRED – Science
Why Thinning a Forest Could Get You More Drinking Water
NewsMar 6, 2026

Why Thinning a Forest Could Get You More Drinking Water

Researchers in Washington’s Cascade Mountains found that thinning forest stands can boost snowpack by up to 30%, translating to roughly 4 million gallons of extra water per 100 acres. By spacing trees 13 to 52 feet apart, canopy interception drops, allowing...

By Grist
How the ‘Holy Grail’ Weight Loss Pill Became a Reality, and What Comes Next
NewsMar 6, 2026

How the ‘Holy Grail’ Weight Loss Pill Became a Reality, and What Comes Next

The pharmaceutical industry has finally delivered an oral GLP‑1 weight‑loss pill, with Novo Nordisk launching an oral version of Wegovy earlier this year. Eli Lilly’s oral GLP‑1 candidate, orforglipron, is expected to receive approval imminently. Oral formulations overcome the injection barrier that...

By STAT (Biotech)
The Sky Today on Friday, March 6: Io’s Turn to Transit
NewsMar 6, 2026

The Sky Today on Friday, March 6: Io’s Turn to Transit

Io will transit Jupiter’s disk on the night of March 6‑7, 2026, beginning at midnight EST and lasting about twenty minutes, followed by its shadow crossing for an additional hour. The event is visible from the East Coast, where Jupiter sits...

By Astronomy Magazine
New AI Hub to Empower Space-Enabled Connectivity
NewsMar 6, 2026

New AI Hub to Empower Space-Enabled Connectivity

The European Space Agency announced a new AI Hub at its ECSAT campus in Oxfordshire, backed by the UK Space Agency. The facility will provide a testbed for AI‑driven satellite and converged communications, extending the capabilities of ESA’s existing 5G/6G...

By European Space Agency News
Daresbury-Built Detector Components Arrive in US for the Flagship Neutrino Experiment
NewsMar 5, 2026

Daresbury-Built Detector Components Arrive in US for the Flagship Neutrino Experiment

Four Anode Plane Assemblies (APAs) built at STFC’s Daresbury Laboratory have arrived at Fermilab, marking the first direct UK‑to‑US shipment for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE). The UK is tasked with delivering 137 of the 150 APAs required, and...

By Fermilab News
CERN Tests Microwire Quantum Sensors for Particle Colliders and Dark Matter Detection
NewsMar 5, 2026

CERN Tests Microwire Quantum Sensors for Particle Colliders and Dark Matter Detection

Researchers at Fermilab and CERN have demonstrated that superconducting microwire single‑photon detectors (SMSPDs) achieve markedly higher detection efficiency and timing resolution for charged particles by employing a thicker tungsten‑silicide film. The study recorded the first muon detection efficiency using SMSPDs,...

By Fermilab News
UK Detector Components Shipped to US for DUNE Experiment
NewsMar 5, 2026

UK Detector Components Shipped to US for DUNE Experiment

The UK’s STFC Daresbury Laboratory has shipped the first four anode plane assemblies (APAs) directly to Fermilab, marking a key milestone for the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE). The shipment brings the UK’s total completed APAs to 50 of the...

By Fermilab News
New Webb Data Says Asteroid 2024 YR4 Will Miss the Moon in 2032
NewsMar 5, 2026

New Webb Data Says Asteroid 2024 YR4 Will Miss the Moon in 2032

New James Webb Space Telescope observations collected on Feb. 18 and 26 refined the orbit of near‑Earth asteroid 2024 YR4, eliminating any chance of a lunar impact on Dec. 22, 2032. The asteroid is now projected to miss the Moon by about 13,200 miles (21,200 km)....

By Behind the Black
Analysis: UK Emissions Fall 2.4% in 2025 as Coal Hits 400-Year Low
NewsMar 5, 2026

Analysis: UK Emissions Fall 2.4% in 2025 as Coal Hits 400-Year Low

UK greenhouse gas emissions fell 2.4% in 2025 to 364 MtCO2e, the lowest level since 1872 and 54% below 1990. The decline was driven by coal use dropping to a 400‑year low and gas use reaching its lowest since 1992, both...

By Carbon Brief
Pond-Dwelling Microalga Exposes a Parallel Track for RNA Processing
NewsMar 5, 2026

Pond-Dwelling Microalga Exposes a Parallel Track for RNA Processing

Researchers at RIKEN discovered that the pond microalga Euglena agilis processes the majority of its introns using a non‑canonical splicing code, bypassing the typical GT‑AG splice site signals. Over 70 % of its introns lack the standard motifs, instead following a...

By Phys.org – Biotechnology
Heart Attacks Are Killing More Young People—And More Women
NewsMar 5, 2026

Heart Attacks Are Killing More Young People—And More Women

A recent study of nearly one million U.S. hospitalizations shows in‑hospital deaths from first‑time heart attacks are climbing among adults 54 and younger. The increase is evident for both STEMI and NSTEMI cases, with women experiencing slightly higher mortality than men....

By Scientific American – Mind
Observable Space’s CDK 14 Can Capture Your Cosmos
NewsMar 5, 2026

Observable Space’s CDK 14 Can Capture Your Cosmos

Observable Space’s CDK 14 is a 14‑inch Corrected Dall‑Kirkham telescope that delivers observatory‑class imaging in a compact, 48‑lb package. It features a fused‑silica primary, carbon‑fiber tube, and a fast f/7.2 focal ratio with a 2,563 mm focal length, providing a flat, coma‑free...

By Astronomy Magazine
China Eases Climate Target but Clean Energy Could Still Cut Emissions, Experts Say
NewsMar 5, 2026

China Eases Climate Target but Clean Energy Could Still Cut Emissions, Experts Say

China’s new five‑year plan lowers its carbon‑intensity goal to a 17% cut between 2026 and 2030, a step back from the 18% target for 2021‑2025 that it already missed. Analysts warn the weaker pledge could let national emissions rise 3‑6%...

By Climate Home News
Asteroid 2024 YR4 Will Not Impact the Moon
NewsMar 5, 2026

Asteroid 2024 YR4 Will Not Impact the Moon

Asteroid 2024 YR4, a 60‑metre near‑Earth object, once carried a 4 % chance of striking the Moon in December 2032. New observations with JWST’s NIRCam in February 2026 precisely measured its orbit, eliminating the lunar‑impact risk. The asteroid will safely miss the Moon by...

By European Space Agency News
Psychedelics Are Placeholders for More Traditional Depression Therapies: Analysts
NewsMar 5, 2026

Psychedelics Are Placeholders for More Traditional Depression Therapies: Analysts

Psychedelic antidepressants are poised for FDA review this year, driven by strong investor and patient interest. William Blair analysts note that while Johnson & Johnson’s Spravato generated $1.7 billion in 2025 sales, psychedelics are unlikely to capture the entire treatment‑resistant depression market. Companies...

By BioSpace
Alnylam Unites With Tenaya in Potential $1B+ Pact To Find New Genetic Heart Disease Targets
NewsMar 5, 2026

Alnylam Unites With Tenaya in Potential $1B+ Pact To Find New Genetic Heart Disease Targets

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals has signed a deal with Tenaya Therapeutics, providing $10 million upfront and the potential for up to $1.13 billion in milestones to discover up to 15 new genetic targets for heart disease. Tenaya will apply its modality‑agnostic platform to validate...

By BioSpace
UniQure’s Path for Huntington’s Gene Therapy Clouded by Ethical Questions as Potential Phase 3 Looms
NewsMar 5, 2026

UniQure’s Path for Huntington’s Gene Therapy Clouded by Ethical Questions as Potential Phase 3 Looms

UniQure’s one‑time gene therapy AMT‑130 showed a 75% slowdown in Huntington’s disease progression in its Phase 1/2 trial, prompting expectations for a BLA filing in early 2026. The FDA, however, reversed its earlier stance and now requires a sham‑controlled Phase 3 study,...

By BioSpace
Michael’s Miscellany: The Eclipsed Sky
NewsMar 5, 2026

Michael’s Miscellany: The Eclipsed Sky

Astronomers can spot Earth’s shadow on any clear evening or morning, not just during lunar eclipses. The shadow rises about 4° after sunset and descends before sunrise, becoming visible when the surrounding sky brightens. Observers also see the pink “belt...

By Astronomy Magazine
FDA’s Hoeg Reportedly Trying To Hire Friend, Fellow Antidepressant Skeptic
NewsMar 5, 2026

FDA’s Hoeg Reportedly Trying To Hire Friend, Fellow Antidepressant Skeptic

The FDA’s acting CDER director Tracy Beth Høeg is reportedly moving to hire Adam Urato, a maternal‑fetal specialist known for his skepticism of antidepressants during pregnancy. Urato has publicly called for stronger warnings on SSRIs and has filed a citizen...

By BioSpace
PepGen’s Mid-Stage Myotonic Dystrophy Study Hit With ‘Surprise’ Pause
NewsMar 5, 2026

PepGen’s Mid-Stage Myotonic Dystrophy Study Hit With ‘Surprise’ Pause

PepGen’s Phase 2 FREEDOM2 trial in myotonic dystrophy type 1 received a partial FDA clinical hold due to concerns over a sub‑chronic mouse study that showed blood‑pressure changes. The agency did not question the Phase 1 human data, and the company continues dosing...

By BioSpace
Species Slowdown: Is Nature’s Ability to Self-Repair Stalling?
NewsMar 5, 2026

Species Slowdown: Is Nature’s Ability to Self-Repair Stalling?

Researchers at Queen Mary University analyzed the BioTIME database and found species turnover has slowed by about a third since the mid‑1970s. The slowdown, measured over five‑year intervals, contradicts earlier expectations that climate change would accelerate community change. Ecologists note...

By Yale Environment 360
ESA’s Mars Orbiters Watch Solar Superstorm Hit the Red Planet
NewsMar 5, 2026

ESA’s Mars Orbiters Watch Solar Superstorm Hit the Red Planet

ESA’s Mars Express and ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter captured the May 2024 solar superstorm’s effects on the Red Planet, revealing unprecedented electron spikes in the upper atmosphere. A radiation monitor on TGO logged a dose equivalent to 200 Earth days in...

By European Space Agency News
The Sky Today on Thursday, March 5: Time to Observe Comet Wierzchoś
NewsMar 5, 2026

The Sky Today on Thursday, March 5: Time to Observe Comet Wierzchoś

Astronomers announce a prime viewing window for Comet C/2024 E1 (Wierzchoś) beginning after sunset on March 5, when it will sit 20° above the horizon in Eridanus. The comet is easily located 2.9° east of the 4th‑magnitude star Eta Eridani and shows...

By Astronomy Magazine
The Hunter Looms
NewsMar 5, 2026

The Hunter Looms

Astrophotographer Chenglu Peng captured a striking view of Orion’s familiar outline and the faint hydrogen glow of Barnard’s Loop from Yomegashima Island on Lake Shinji, Japan. Using a Sony mirrorless camera paired with a fast 50 mm f/1.2 lens, he recorded...

By Astronomy Magazine
Scientists Laud Potentially Life-Changing Drug for Children with Resistant Form of Epilepsy
NewsMar 4, 2026

Scientists Laud Potentially Life-Changing Drug for Children with Resistant Form of Epilepsy

Preliminary trials of Zorevunersen, an experimental therapy for Dravet syndrome, showed it is safe and well tolerated in 81 children. A single 70 mg dose reduced seizures by about 50%, and three doses cut seizures roughly 80% compared with baseline. The...

By The Guardian – Science
Gut Bacteria Rewire Fat Tissue to Burn More Energy
NewsMar 4, 2026

Gut Bacteria Rewire Fat Tissue to Burn More Energy

Researchers from Keio University, the Broad Institute and City of Hope reported that a low‑protein diet combined with four specific gut bacterial strains converts white adipocytes into energy‑burning beige fat in mice. The microbiota‑driven transformation boosted beige fat levels, improved...

By Broad Institute News
US Set to Exit UN Climate Convention in February 2027
NewsMar 4, 2026

US Set to Exit UN Climate Convention in February 2027

The United States will formally exit the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change on February 27, 2027, a year after the required notification period. The withdrawal follows the 2026 departure from the Paris Agreement, making the U.S. the first nation...

By Climate Home News
NA62 Collaboration Refines Measurement of Rare Particle Decay
NewsMar 4, 2026

NA62 Collaboration Refines Measurement of Rare Particle Decay

The NA62 Collaboration announced a refined measurement of the ultra‑rare K⁺→π⁺νν decay, presenting a branching ratio of 9.6 × 10⁻¹¹ with a 40% reduction in uncertainty. The result incorporates data collected in 2023‑2024 and leverages advanced machine‑learning analysis techniques. This measurement aligns...

By CERN – News/Feeds
EU Carbon Credits Could Supercharge World’s Clean Cooking Push, France Says
NewsMar 3, 2026

EU Carbon Credits Could Supercharge World’s Clean Cooking Push, France Says

The European Union will be permitted to count up to 5% of its 2040 emissions‑reduction target against high‑quality international carbon credits starting in 2036. France’s climate envoy Benoît Faraco argues that directing a share of these credits to clean‑cooking projects could...

By Climate Home News
Older Humpbacks Prove Better at Wooing Mates
NewsFeb 27, 2026

Older Humpbacks Prove Better at Wooing Mates

Researchers studying humpback whales in New Caledonia found older males outperform younger ones in securing mates. Genetic sampling revealed that age correlates with song mastery, and females preferentially select seasoned singers. The study, published in *Current Biology*, underscores how decades...

By Yale Environment 360
Pacific Nations Want Higher Emissions Charges if Shipping Talks Reopen
NewsFeb 27, 2026

Pacific Nations Want Higher Emissions Charges if Shipping Talks Reopen

Seven vulnerable Pacific island nations have warned they will push for a universal levy on all shipping emissions and higher charges if the International Maritime Organization reopens negotiations on its stalled Net‑Zero Framework. The coalition, led by Fiji, Kiribati, Vanuatu,...

By Climate Home News
NASA’s First Medical Evacuation Is Here. It Won’t Be the Last.
NewsFeb 26, 2026

NASA’s First Medical Evacuation Is Here. It Won’t Be the Last.

NASA conducted its first-ever medical evacuation from the International Space Station in January 2026 when astronaut Mike Fincke experienced a microgravity‑related health event. The entire Crew‑11 returned early aboard a SpaceX capsule because no spare crew‑ready vehicle was available. The...

By Vox – Science
Bay Area Light Sources Joint Users' Meeting
NewsFeb 26, 2026

Bay Area Light Sources Joint Users' Meeting

The U.S. Department of Energy’s three flagship light‑source labs—Advanced Light Source (ALS), Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) and Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL)—will convene for their first joint users’ meeting at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory from September 20 to 25,...

By SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory – News
Genotype, Phenotype, and GWAS Data
NewsFeb 26, 2026

Genotype, Phenotype, and GWAS Data

The Broad Institute launched a free, weekly video series called “Primer on Medical and Population Genetics,” offering informal deep‑dives into genetics fundamentals for a wide scientific audience. Episodes cover human genetic variation, genotyping technologies, DNA sequencing, statistical methods, and GWAS...

By Broad Institute News
Saving The Life We Cannot See
NewsFeb 26, 2026

Saving The Life We Cannot See

Scientists across the globe are sounding the alarm that microbes—tiny organisms driving half of Earth’s oxygen production and key carbon cycles—are under unprecedented threat. Long‑term monitoring programs such as the Bedford Basin Time Series reveal rapid shifts in microbial communities,...

By Noema Magazine
Study Reveals Genetic Balancing Act Between Autoimmunity and Cancer Risk
NewsFeb 26, 2026

Study Reveals Genetic Balancing Act Between Autoimmunity and Cancer Risk

Researchers at the Broad Institute and University of Helsinki analyzed over 81,000 individuals with autoimmune hypothyroidism (AIHT) and identified more than 400 genetic markers, including nearly 50 protein‑coding variants. The study distinguished genetic signals specific to thyroid autoimmunity from those...

By Broad Institute News
Curbing Methane Is the Fastest Way to Slow Warming – but We’re Off the Pace
NewsFeb 26, 2026

Curbing Methane Is the Fastest Way to Slow Warming – but We’re Off the Pace

The 2025 Global Methane Status Report finds human‑caused methane emissions have risen since 2020, though the increase is smaller than earlier forecasts. The Global Methane Pledge’s ambition has spurred national plans that could deliver an 8% cut by 2030, yet...

By Climate Home News
World Leaders Invited to See Pacific Climate Destruction Before COP31
NewsFeb 26, 2026

World Leaders Invited to See Pacific Climate Destruction Before COP31

World leaders and climate ministers will be invited to a series of pre‑COP31 events across the Pacific, with Fiji hosting the official pre‑COP meeting in early October and a special leaders’ component in Tuvalu. Australia will supply operational and logistical...

By Climate Home News
BioAIrepo: EMBL-EBI’s Hub for Life Science AI Models
NewsFeb 26, 2026

BioAIrepo: EMBL-EBI’s Hub for Life Science AI Models

EMBL‑EBI has launched BioAIrepo, a dedicated repository that makes life‑science machine‑learning models FAIR—findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable. The pilot catalogue aggregates imaging and genomics models from the BioImage Model Zoo and Kipoi, providing code, weights, training data and citation metadata....

By EMBL News
A Deafening Nuclear Fusion Reactor: Why You Wouldn’t Want to Hear the Sun
NewsFeb 26, 2026

A Deafening Nuclear Fusion Reactor: Why You Wouldn’t Want to Hear the Sun

The Guardian explains that the Sun functions as a colossal nuclear fusion reactor that produces not only heat and light but also intense acoustic energy. At its core, solar reactions generate sound levels exceeding 100 decibels, comparable to a rock‑concert...

By The Guardian – Science
UN’s New Carbon Market Delivers First Credits Through Myanmar Cookstove Project
NewsFeb 26, 2026

UN’s New Carbon Market Delivers First Credits Through Myanmar Cookstove Project

The UN’s Article 6.4 carbon market has issued its first credits, approving 60,000 carbon units from a clean‑cooking project in Myanmar. The programme, originally launched under the CDM, distributes efficient cookstoves that reduce firewood use and associated deforestation. South Korean firms...

By Climate Home News
11th Annual Rare Disease Day |  Advancing a Divalent siRNA for Prion Disease: An Investigator-Initiated Program
NewsFeb 25, 2026

11th Annual Rare Disease Day | Advancing a Divalent siRNA for Prion Disease: An Investigator-Initiated Program

Rare Disease Day marked its 11th anniversary, highlighting the stark disparity between the 8,000 known rare‑disease genes and the under 500 approved therapies. Hosted by the Broad Institute’s Ladders to Cures Accelerator and the Termeer Institute, the event featured leading...

By Broad Institute News
HiLumi LHC: Cryogenics Equipment Arrives Underground
NewsFeb 25, 2026

HiLumi LHC: Cryogenics Equipment Arrives Underground

Two massive cold boxes built by Linde have been lowered into the new service tunnels of the High‑Luminosity LHC, near the ATLAS and CMS experiments. These units form the core of the upgraded refrigeration system that will cool the next‑generation...

By CERN – News/Feeds