Science News and Headlines

Deforestation and Warming Could Push Amazon to Tipping Point by 2040s: Study
NewsMay 7, 2026

Deforestation and Warming Could Push Amazon to Tipping Point by 2040s: Study

A new Nature study warns that deforestation of 22‑28% of the Amazon combined with 1.5‑1.9 °C of global warming could push the forest past a tipping point as early as the 2040s. The threshold would affect more than 70% of the...

By Mongabay
3D-MIND: A Flexible Device that Can Be Integrated with Living Brain Cells
NewsMay 7, 2026

3D-MIND: A Flexible Device that Can Be Integrated with Living Brain Cells

Researchers at Princeton have unveiled 3D-MIND, a flexible electronic mesh that can be embedded inside three‑dimensional cultures of living brain cells. The device integrates sensors and micro‑stimulators within the neural tissue, enabling stable recording and stimulation for up to six...

By Tech Xplore – Semiconductors
ESA’s Space Rider Passes Critical Hurdles on Path to Spaceflight
NewsMay 7, 2026

ESA’s Space Rider Passes Critical Hurdles on Path to Spaceflight

European Space Agency’s Space Rider, its first reusable spacecraft, has cleared two pivotal milestones: a high‑temperature reentry test and a precision autonomous landing demonstration. The tests validate the vehicle’s thermal protection system and guidance, navigation and control software, bringing the...

By AIAA – Industry News (Aerospace)
The Sky Today on Thursday, May 7: Io Crosses Jupiter
NewsMay 7, 2026

The Sky Today on Thursday, May 7: Io Crosses Jupiter

On the night of May 7, 2026 Io – the most volcanic moon in the solar system – will transit Jupiter, followed by its shadow crossing the planet’s disk. The transit starts at 11:48 PM EDT, but the shadow becomes visible only after 11:56 PM CDT,...

By Astronomy Magazine
Entrada Crashes as Duchenne Therapy Comes in ‘Below Expectations’ in Early Study
NewsMay 7, 2026

Entrada Crashes as Duchenne Therapy Comes in ‘Below Expectations’ in Early Study

Entrada Therapeutics reported that its investigational oligonucleotide ENTR‑601‑44 raised dystrophin levels by 2.36% in the first cohort of its Phase 1/2 ELEVATE‑44‑201 trial, far below the company’s double‑digit target. The modest protein increase triggered a 50% plunge in the Boston‑based biotech’s...

By BioSpace
Podcast: Autonomous Labs Redefine the Role of Biopharma Researchers
NewsMay 7, 2026

Podcast: Autonomous Labs Redefine the Role of Biopharma Researchers

Autonomous laboratories, integrating robotic hardware with AI-driven decision making, are emerging as a transformative force in biopharma R&D. In a GlobalData Media podcast, Frankie Fattorini interviewed Jason Kelly, CEO of Ginkgo Bioworks, who described how these labs can conduct experiments with unprecedented precision...

By Pharmaceutical Technology (GlobalData)
Studying These Young Alzheimer's Patients Led to Breakthroughs. Trump Cut the Funding
NewsMay 7, 2026

Studying These Young Alzheimer's Patients Led to Breakthroughs. Trump Cut the Funding

The Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network (DIAN) has leveraged over 200 families with rare early‑onset Alzheimer’s gene mutations to uncover how the disease begins and to test amyloid‑targeting drugs that later reached the market. Its international registry, funded by the NIH...

By NPR (Health)
Next Gen Leadership Awards Presented at the AGBT Agricultural Meeting
NewsMay 7, 2026

Next Gen Leadership Awards Presented at the AGBT Agricultural Meeting

At the AGBT Agricultural Meeting in Phoenix, the organization announced the 2026 Next Gen Leadership Awards, recognizing nine early‑career scientists and graduate students in agricultural genomics. Recipients receive travel grants and speaking opportunities, connecting them with senior researchers and industry...

By GEN (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
STAT+: FDA Revisits a Rare Cancer Treatment It Rejected a Few Months Ago
NewsMay 7, 2026

STAT+: FDA Revisits a Rare Cancer Treatment It Rejected a Few Months Ago

The FDA has announced it will re‑evaluate a rare‑cancer therapy it dismissed just months earlier, citing new data submitted by the drug’s sponsor. The treatment, aimed at a subtype of metastatic sarcoma, originally failed to meet the agency’s efficacy benchmarks...

By STAT (Biotech)
Atara, Pierre Fabre's Cell Therapy to Get Another Shot at FDA Approval
NewsMay 7, 2026

Atara, Pierre Fabre's Cell Therapy to Get Another Shot at FDA Approval

Atara Biotherapeutics and Pierre Fabre Pharmaceuticals are reviving a T‑cell therapy that was rejected twice by the FDA. Regulators have signaled willingness to base a new approval decision on data from a Phase 3 trial, a departure from the earlier requirement...

By Endpoints News
IonQ Details “Walking Cat” Blueprint for Fault-Tolerant Trapped-Ion Systems
NewsMay 7, 2026

IonQ Details “Walking Cat” Blueprint for Fault-Tolerant Trapped-Ion Systems

IonQ unveiled the “Walking Cat” blueprint, a full-stack specification for a fault‑tolerant trapped‑ion quantum computer. The design couples >99.99% two‑qubit gate fidelity with a Quantum Charge‑Coupled Device that shuttles ions, delivering any‑to‑any connectivity without fixed wiring. It targets a scalable...

By Quantum Computing Report
Green Blocks Are up to 4 Degrees Cooler than Treeless Streets
NewsMay 7, 2026

Green Blocks Are up to 4 Degrees Cooler than Treeless Streets

A new analysis by the Healthy Green Spaces Coalition links tree canopy coverage to cooler street temperatures across 65 U.S. cities. The study finds that the greenest census tracts are roughly 1 °F cooler than the least vegetated, translating to about...

By Planetizen
Going to Space? Always, Always Pack a Camera
NewsMay 7, 2026

Going to Space? Always, Always Pack a Camera

Artemis II astronauts captured striking lunar and Earth‑from‑space photos, reviving the awe of the Apollo 8 “Earthrise.” The piece honors planetary scientist Candice Hansen‑Koharcheck, whose five‑decade career shaped imaging on Voyager, Juno, and HiRISE missions. Her work turned raw spacecraft data into...

By Science News
Does Sexual Attraction Cloud Our Rejection Detection?
NewsMay 7, 2026

Does Sexual Attraction Cloud Our Rejection Detection?

Researchers at Reichman University examined how sexual arousal influences courtship perception by showing college participants either a risqué or neutral video before an online chat with an attractive confederate. The chat partner delivered ambiguous cues, and in some cases a...

By Nautilus
May 7, 1925: The First Projection Planetarium
NewsMay 7, 2026

May 7, 1925: The First Projection Planetarium

On May 7, 1925 the Carl Zeiss Company unveiled the world’s first modern projection planetarium at Munich’s Deutsches Museum. The Zeiss Model I projector displayed 4,500 stars, the Milky Way, the Sun, Moon and five planets using gear‑driven motors controlled by the presenter. Its...

By Astronomy Magazine
Uzbekistan And China Explore Possible Space Cooperation
NewsMay 7, 2026

Uzbekistan And China Explore Possible Space Cooperation

Uzbekistan’s space agency, Uzcosmos, met with Chinese Ambassador Yu Jun to explore cooperation on space technology. The talks highlighted China’s civil‑space expertise as a catalyst for integrating space tools into Uzbekistan’s agriculture, water management, and infrastructure planning. Both parties discussed joint...

By Orbital Today
South Korea Pushes to Commercialize Quantum Research
NewsMay 7, 2026

South Korea Pushes to Commercialize Quantum Research

South Korea unveiled the Open Quantum Testbed Advancement and Expansion Project, a government‑backed initiative to move quantum communication technologies such as Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) from laboratory prototypes to commercial products. The program invites industry consortia to submit proposals across...

By Payload
The Rise of Trispecific Antibodies: Biopharma’s Next Big Bet After Bispecifics
NewsMay 7, 2026

The Rise of Trispecific Antibodies: Biopharma’s Next Big Bet After Bispecifics

Trispecific antibodies are emerging as the next wave of multispecific therapeutics, extending the success of bispecifics by simultaneously engaging three targets. More than 100 candidates are now in clinical trials, with major players such as Pfizer, Sanofi, AbbVie and Johnson...

By Labiotech.eu
Treatment-Resistant IBD May Benefit From New Combo Antibody Therapy
NewsMay 7, 2026

Treatment-Resistant IBD May Benefit From New Combo Antibody Therapy

Phase 2b DUET‑Crohn’s and DUET‑UC trials, funded by Johnson & Johnson, tested the fixed‑dose co‑antibody JNJ‑4804 (guselkumab + golimumab) in patients whose IBD had failed prior advanced therapies. In ulcerative colitis, JNJ‑4804 matched guselkumab’s efficacy and outperformed golimumab, while in Crohn’s disease the highest dose...

By Medical News Today
Bayer Reports P-III (REVEAL) Trial Data on Iodine 124 Evuzamitide to Diagnose Cardiac Amyloidosis
NewsMay 7, 2026

Bayer Reports P-III (REVEAL) Trial Data on Iodine 124 Evuzamitide to Diagnose Cardiac Amyloidosis

Bayer announced that its investigational PET/CT radiotracer I‑124 evuzamitide met the primary sensitivity and specificity endpoints in the Phase III REVEAL trial of 170 adults with suspected cardiac amyloidosis. The study compared the tracer to standard clinical diagnosis and achieved the...

By PharmaShots
US Proposes Endangered Species Protections for an Imperiled Jamaican Butterfly
NewsMay 7, 2026

US Proposes Endangered Species Protections for an Imperiled Jamaican Butterfly

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed listing Jamaica’s endemic kite swallowtail butterfly as endangered under the Endangered Species Act. Recent surveys estimate fewer than 250 adults remain, a dramatic drop from the 750,000 recorded in the 1960s. Habitat...

By Mongabay
Unlocking Lithium’s Hidden Effects on Alzheimer’s Disease at the Cellular Level
NewsMay 7, 2026

Unlocking Lithium’s Hidden Effects on Alzheimer’s Disease at the Cellular Level

A University of Eastern Finland team mapped lithium chloride’s cellular actions in Alzheimer’s models, showing it reduces Tau hyperphosphorylation at several key sites and reshapes kinase and Rho GTPase signaling. Phosphoproteomic analysis revealed lithium’s impact extends beyond the primary GSK‑3β...

By PsyPost
AI Is Starting to Build Better AI
NewsMay 7, 2026

AI Is Starting to Build Better AI

Artificial intelligence is increasingly being used to design and improve its own systems, a process known as recursive self‑improvement (RSI). Recent milestones include OpenAI’s GPT‑5.3‑Codex assisting in its own development, DeepMind’s AlphaEvolve optimizing algorithms and chip designs, and startups like...

By IEEE Spectrum AI
The Hidden Toll of COVID-19 on India’s Infants
NewsMay 7, 2026

The Hidden Toll of COVID-19 on India’s Infants

A new study using nationally representative survey data shows infant mortality in India spiked during the April‑September 2020 lockdown. Deaths rose by roughly nine per 1,000 live births in the first month, 13 per 1,000 by three months, and 16...

By VoxDev
Six-Month Trial Confirms Safety of Previously Uncharacterized Probiotic Strain
NewsMay 7, 2026

Six-Month Trial Confirms Safety of Previously Uncharacterized Probiotic Strain

A six‑month, double‑blind trial involving 152 healthy adults found that daily consumption of Lactiplantibacillus plantarum K014 (≥1 × 10⁹ CFU) was safe, with blood counts, glucose, lipid, liver and kidney markers remaining within normal ranges. No adverse events were reported, and exploratory analyses suggested...

By NutraIngredients (EU)
Ancient Ice Core Could Help Explain Mysterious Shift in Earth’s Ice Ages
NewsMay 7, 2026

Ancient Ice Core Could Help Explain Mysterious Shift in Earth’s Ice Ages

Scientists from the European Beyond EPICA project drilled a 2.8 km ice core in Antarctica that reaches back 1.2 million years, revealing sharp carbon‑dioxide swings during the Mid‑Pleistocene Transition. Around 950,000 years ago the record shows a rapid 50 ppm CO₂ spike followed by...

By Science (AAAS)  News
NIH-Funded Study Suggests that Testosterone Suppresses Brain Tumor Growth in Males
NewsMay 7, 2026

NIH-Funded Study Suggests that Testosterone Suppresses Brain Tumor Growth in Males

A NIH‑funded study by Cleveland Clinic researchers found that loss of male hormones, especially testosterone, accelerates glioblastoma growth in mouse models by triggering inflammation and the hypothalamus‑pituitary‑adrenal (HPA) stress axis. Supplemental testosterone was associated with a 38% lower risk of...

By NIH – News Releases
Magic Mushroom Compound Shows Promise Against Cocaine Addiction
NewsMay 7, 2026

Magic Mushroom Compound Shows Promise Against Cocaine Addiction

A randomized, double‑blind trial of psilocybin in 40 cocaine‑dependent adults, published in JAMA Network Open, found that 30% of participants receiving a single dose were completely abstinent after 180 days, compared with none in the placebo arm, and remaining users...

By Science (AAAS)  News
STAT+: Next-Gen Duchenne Drug From Entrada Disappoints
NewsMay 7, 2026

STAT+: Next-Gen Duchenne Drug From Entrada Disappoints

Entrada Therapeutics reported that its next‑generation exon‑skipping drug for Duchenne muscular dystrophy failed to achieve its primary efficacy endpoints in an early‑stage trial. The study showed only a modest rise in dystrophin levels, far below the thresholds set by the...

By STAT (Biotech)
Sir David Attenborough’s 100th Birthday Present Is… a Parasitic Wasp
NewsMay 7, 2026

Sir David Attenborough’s 100th Birthday Present Is… a Parasitic Wasp

British naturalist Sir David Attenborough turned 100 on May 8, and researchers honored him by describing a new genus of parasitic wasp, Attenboroughnculus tau, from Chile’s Valdivia Province. The 0.14‑inch insect, collected in 1983, was identified as a distinct genus after a...

By Popular Science
Coffee (Even Decaf) Might Be Helping Your Brain More Than You Think
NewsMay 7, 2026

Coffee (Even Decaf) Might Be Helping Your Brain More Than You Think

A small Nature Communications study compared 31 regular coffee drinkers with 31 non‑drinkers and found distinct gut‑microbiome profiles linked to mood, stress and cognition. After a two‑week coffee break, participants resumed either caffeinated or decaf coffee for three weeks, and...

By Womens Health
An Extinct Human Species Made Surprisingly Creative Butchery Tools
NewsMay 7, 2026

An Extinct Human Species Made Surprisingly Creative Butchery Tools

Archaeologists uncovered disc‑shaped stone cores at the Lingjing site in central China, dated to 146,000 years ago during an ice age. The tools were made by the extinct Homo juluensis, a large‑brained cousin of modern humans, and show a sophisticated,...

By Popular Science
A French Perspective on Ageing Well: Systems Biology and the Future of Skin Health
NewsMay 7, 2026

A French Perspective on Ageing Well: Systems Biology and the Future of Skin Health

The 10th Anti‑Ageing Skin Care Conference in London will spotlight systems biology as a new framework for skin health. Dr. Katerina Steventon highlights a French‑inspired, holistic view that treats skin as a read‑out of internal wellbeing rather than a surface...

By Cosmetics Business
Poop, Stomach Oil and Ostrich Eggshells Keep Records of Earth’s Ancient Climate
NewsMay 7, 2026

Poop, Stomach Oil and Ostrich Eggshells Keep Records of Earth’s Ancient Climate

Scientists are turning to unconventional proxies—such as 50,000‑year‑old Antarctic snow petrel stomach oil, fossil leaf wax, and ostrich eggshells—to fill gaps in Earth’s climate record. These materials preserve chemical signatures that reveal past sea‑ice extent, rainfall patterns, and even human‑environment...

By Scientific American – Mind
Researchers Analyzed 234K Women — This Hormonal Pattern Signals Metabolic Risk
NewsMay 7, 2026

Researchers Analyzed 234K Women — This Hormonal Pattern Signals Metabolic Risk

A large‑scale analysis of 234,000 women showed that early natural menopause raises the odds of metabolic syndrome by 27%. Researchers used electronic health records, excluded surgical or therapy‑induced menopause, and adjusted for body weight, race and medication use. The findings...

By Mindbodygreen
Tata and JSW to Spend $1bn Building India’s Way Out of Chinese Battery Dependence
NewsMay 7, 2026

Tata and JSW to Spend $1bn Building India’s Way Out of Chinese Battery Dependence

India’s EV sector, heavily reliant on Chinese battery cells, faces supply‑chain risk after Beijing tightened export controls on graphite, lithium‑processing equipment and cell‑making machinery. In response, Tata Group and JSW Group have pledged just under $1 billion to fund multi‑year R&D...

By The Next Web (TNW)
Scientists Discover Why Ozempic Works Better for some People
NewsMay 7, 2026

Scientists Discover Why Ozempic Works Better for some People

GLP‑1 drugs like Ozempic improve blood sugar and weight loss, but response varies. A Japanese study of 92 type‑2 diabetes patients found that those who overeat in response to external cues (appearance or smell) achieved greater weight loss and glucose...

By ScienceDaily – Nutrition
Nature’s Hardware Store: Building the Future with Biology
NewsMay 7, 2026

Nature’s Hardware Store: Building the Future with Biology

Lynn Rothschild, a leading US astrobiologist, argues that synthetic biology could solve one of space colonization’s toughest problems: sourcing building materials on other worlds. By tapping the “genetic hardware store” of microbes, engineers can grow construction‑grade biopolymers directly on the...

By Aeon
Scientists Show How Common Chord Progressions Unlock Social Bonding in the Brain
NewsMay 7, 2026

Scientists Show How Common Chord Progressions Unlock Social Bonding in the Brain

Researchers at Yale used functional near‑infrared spectroscopy to show that listening to familiar, predictable chord progressions while making eye contact triggers heightened activity in brain regions linked to social cognition. The effect was strongest when participants faced each other and...

By PsyPost
Surprising Scattering in Stealthy Structures
NewsMay 7, 2026

Surprising Scattering in Stealthy Structures

Physicists led by Mikael Rechtsman at Penn State have experimentally demonstrated that stealthy hyperuniform photonic crystals scatter light within the wavelength band previously predicted to be transparent. By fabricating a millimeter‑scale slab with millions of sub‑micron holes and introducing controlled...

By APS Physics (Physics Magazine)
Should Saturn's Huge Moon Titan Be Humanity's Next Destination, After the Moon and Mars?
NewsMay 7, 2026

Should Saturn's Huge Moon Titan Be Humanity's Next Destination, After the Moon and Mars?

The Humans to Titan Summit, set for June 11‑12, 2026 in Boulder, Colorado, will outline a roadmap for crewed missions to Saturn’s moon after lunar and Martian exploration. It builds on NASA’s upcoming Dragonfly octocopter, slated for a 2028 launch,...

By Space.com
The Origins of Indians
NewsMay 7, 2026

The Origins of Indians

The article traces two centuries of scholarship on South Asia’s peopling, from 19th‑century linguistic Aryan theories to modern DNA research. It highlights how early reformers like Jotirao Phule used Aryan narratives to critique caste oppression, and how 20th‑century archaeology uncovered the...

By Aeon
Skeletons of Four Doomed Franklin Expedition Sailors Identified with DNA
NewsMay 7, 2026

Skeletons of Four Doomed Franklin Expedition Sailors Identified with DNA

Researchers have used DNA analysis to positively identify four previously unknown members of the 1845 Franklin Arctic expedition, bringing the total identified crew to six of the 129 who set out. The identified sailors are William Orren, David Young, John...

By Scientific American – Mind
GaN-on-Silicon HEMTs for Tomorrow's Handsets?
NewsMay 7, 2026

GaN-on-Silicon HEMTs for Tomorrow's Handsets?

A collaborative team from A*STAR, NTU and Soitec has demonstrated GaN‑on‑silicon HEMTs that combine high power‑added efficiency, high power density and low‑noise performance, positioning them as a potential replacement for GaAs HBTs in RF front‑end modules of future smartphones. The...

By Compound Semiconductor
GaN: Boosting Optical Power Converter Efficiency
NewsMay 7, 2026

GaN: Boosting Optical Power Converter Efficiency

Nichia has demonstrated a gallium‑nitride (GaN) optical power converter that exceeds 60 percent power‑conversion efficiency, a leap from the previous 43 percent benchmark. The device uses a high‑power LED‑style epitaxial structure with 60 In₀.₁₂Ga₀.₈₈N/GaN quantum‑well pairs and a flip‑chip design on an...

By Compound Semiconductor
Can This Antioxidant-Rich Food Speed Up Recovery? Here’s What 28 Studies Found
NewsMay 7, 2026

Can This Antioxidant-Rich Food Speed Up Recovery? Here’s What 28 Studies Found

A new scoping review examined 28 randomized controlled trials on tart cherry supplementation, focusing on performance, muscle‑strength recovery, and delayed‑onset muscle soreness. The analysis found the most consistent benefit was faster muscle‑strength recovery, likely due to the anti‑inflammatory anthocyanins in...

By Mindbodygreen
Scientists Find a Way to Stop Dangerous Belly Fat as We Age
NewsMay 7, 2026

Scientists Find a Way to Stop Dangerous Belly Fat as We Age

Scientists discovered that a topical testosterone gel, combined with exercise, can selectively reduce visceral fat in older women recovering from hip fractures. In a six‑month trial of 66 participants aged 65 and above, overall body weight stayed stable while the...

By ScienceDaily – Nutrition
This Heart Health Marker May Explain Why Exercise Improves Mood
NewsMay 7, 2026

This Heart Health Marker May Explain Why Exercise Improves Mood

A new analysis of over 16,000 NHANES participants finds that adults who meet the 150‑minute weekly exercise guideline have a 57% lower prevalence of depression. The study also shows that higher HDL cholesterol levels independently reduce depression odds. Mediation modeling...

By Mindbodygreen
What’s Next for IVF
NewsMay 7, 2026

What’s Next for IVF

Advances in IVF are moving beyond traditional lab techniques toward AI, robotics, and novel embryo‑delivery devices. Researchers at the Carlos Simon Foundation have built a “Transfer Direct” system that injects embryos into the uterine lining, while AI platforms such as...

By MIT Technology Review