Science News and Headlines

Why the Ideal Magnet Remains Out of Reach
NewsApr 29, 2026

Why the Ideal Magnet Remains Out of Reach

Researchers worldwide seek a cost‑effective permanent magnet that avoids rare earths, a goal that would break China’s near‑monopoly and reshape supply chains. After a decade of classical computing attempts, a Franco‑American team led by Alice & Bob, backed by a $3.9 million...

By IEEE Spectrum – Energy
What Is Quantum Gravity? Scientists Think It Could Explain the Beginning of Our Universe
NewsApr 29, 2026

What Is Quantum Gravity? Scientists Think It Could Explain the Beginning of Our Universe

Physicists have proposed a quantum‑gravity framework that extends Einstein’s general relativity to ultra‑high energies, potentially eliminating the Big Bang singularity. The theory naturally generates an inflation‑like expansion, fitting current cosmological measurements better than many standard inflation models. Researchers plan to...

By Space.com
An Uncomfortable Truth: Healthcare Is Both a Protector of Health and a Contributor to One of Its Greatest Threats
NewsApr 29, 2026

An Uncomfortable Truth: Healthcare Is Both a Protector of Health and a Contributor to One of Its Greatest Threats

Healthcare contributes roughly 5% of global greenhouse‑gas emissions, placing the sector among the world’s top five emitters. Up to 70% of that footprint originates from the supply chain—pharmaceuticals, devices, and single‑use items—while hospitals themselves account for about 30% of emissions...

By The Conversation – Fashion (global)
China Convenes Future Food Leaders at the 2026 Global Forum on Cultured Meat
NewsApr 29, 2026

China Convenes Future Food Leaders at the 2026 Global Forum on Cultured Meat

China’s Nanjing Agricultural University and startup Joes Future Food hosted the 2026 Global Forum on Cultured Meat, gathering researchers, industry pioneers, and regulators. The forum tackled technology innovation, safety standards, and cost barriers while outlining a roadmap for scaling cultivated...

By Green Queen
Scientists Invented a Chewing Gum That Might Help Fight Cancer Some Day
NewsApr 29, 2026

Scientists Invented a Chewing Gum That Might Help Fight Cancer Some Day

Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania have engineered an antimicrobial chewing gum from lablab bean protein FRIL that dramatically reduces oral cancer‑associated microbes. Ex vivo tests showed a 93 percent drop in HPV levels and near‑zero counts of Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium...

By Womens Health
‘Modern European Family’ Predates Fall of Rome, DNA Reveals
NewsApr 29, 2026

‘Modern European Family’ Predates Fall of Rome, DNA Reveals

A new study published in *Nature* analyzed DNA from 258 burials in southern Germany, spanning 400‑750 CE, to reconstruct family trees up to six generations. The genetic data show that northern migrants trickled into the Roman frontier provinces and intermarried with...

By Science (AAAS)  News
Hybrid Bees May Hold Key to Fighting Colony Collapse
NewsApr 29, 2026

Hybrid Bees May Hold Key to Fighting Colony Collapse

Researchers at UC Riverside identified a hybrid feral honeybee population in Southern California that naturally suppresses Varroa mite infestations. Monitoring 236 colonies from 2019‑2022, they found these bees carried roughly 68% fewer mites than typical commercial hives. The hybrid’s diverse...

By Agri-Pulse
Battle over DNA Within Fertilized Eggs May Explain Why some IVF Procedures Fail
NewsApr 29, 2026

Battle over DNA Within Fertilized Eggs May Explain Why some IVF Procedures Fail

A new mouse study published in Nature reveals that keeping maternal and paternal pronuclei separate in fertilized eggs promotes normal development. Up to 8% of IVF‑derived zygotes fuse these pronuclei prematurely, creating a single oversized pronucleus with altered DNA methylation....

By Science (AAAS)  News
Breakthrough in Experimental Light-Powered Quantum Computers Could Mean Scaling Them up Is Now Far More Viable
NewsApr 29, 2026

Breakthrough in Experimental Light-Powered Quantum Computers Could Mean Scaling Them up Is Now Far More Viable

Researchers at QuiX Quantum have unveiled photon distillation, a technique that pre‑emptively filters out rogue photons, achieving below‑threshold error mitigation in photonic quantum computers. By reducing errors before photons become qubits, the method cuts the qubit overhead required for fault‑tolerant...

By Live Science
Scientists Scanned 26K Brains & Found This Metric Predicted Cognitive Decline
NewsApr 29, 2026

Scientists Scanned 26K Brains & Found This Metric Predicted Cognitive Decline

A new MRI study of nearly 26,000 UK Biobank participants identified six distinct fat‑distribution profiles and linked two of them—pancreatic‑predominant fat and a “skinny‑fat” pattern—to accelerated brain aging and cognitive decline. The research shows that where fat accumulates, not just...

By Mindbodygreen
It’s Time to Move Quantum From Science to Industry
NewsApr 29, 2026

It’s Time to Move Quantum From Science to Industry

Britain has pledged up to £2bn (≈ $2.5 billion) to accelerate quantum computing from research to commercial scale. The government warns there is a 12‑18‑month window to lock in sovereign capability before global supply chains solidify. While the UK boasts world‑class universities...

By UKTN – People
‘Suicidal’ Model of Capitalism Leading to War and Fascism, Climate Summit Told
NewsApr 29, 2026

‘Suicidal’ Model of Capitalism Leading to War and Fascism, Climate Summit Told

Colombian President Gustavo Petro opened the first global conference on phasing out fossil fuels in Santa Marta, warning that the current “suicidal” model of capitalism fuels war, fascism and climate catastrophe. The summit gathered ministers from 57 nations, with France unveiling a...

By The Guardian – Environment
Hopfions at the Breaking Point
NewsApr 29, 2026

Hopfions at the Breaking Point

Physicists have demonstrated that knot‑like magnetic quasiparticles called hopfions can be deliberately split using spin‑orbit torque. In simulations, a current‑induced torque in a two‑layer magnetic/heavy‑metal stack overcame the topological protection of an H=4 hopfion, tearing it into lower‑H hopfions. The...

By APS Physics (Physics Magazine)
Is Tatooine the Norm? Planets May Prefer Living with Two Suns Instead of One
NewsApr 29, 2026

Is Tatooine the Norm? Planets May Prefer Living with Two Suns Instead of One

New computer simulations from the University of Lancashire show that protoplanetary disks around binary stars can more readily form planets once they lie beyond a turbulent “forbidden zone.” In these outer regions, gravitational instability fragments the disk, spawning multiple gas‑giant...

By Space.com
The MIT-IBM Computing Research Lab Launches to Shape the Future of AI and Quantum Computing
NewsApr 29, 2026

The MIT-IBM Computing Research Lab Launches to Shape the Future of AI and Quantum Computing

MIT and IBM have launched the MIT‑IBM Computing Research Lab, expanding the former Watson AI Lab to include quantum computing. The new three‑focus‑area lab—AI, algorithms, and quantum—will develop hybrid AI‑quantum systems, advance foundational mathematics, and train the next generation of...

By MIT News (Quantum Computing)
When the Environment Writes the Rules of Quantum Dynamics
NewsApr 29, 2026

When the Environment Writes the Rules of Quantum Dynamics

Researchers at the University of Maryland demonstrated that the crystal environment dictates which nuclear‑spin transitions hydrogen molecules can undergo. By embedding H₂ in CO₂, N₂O and NO₂ crystals, they showed that quadrupolar symmetry allows only magnetic‑quantum‑number‑conserving transitions, while dipolar and...

By APS Physics (Physics Magazine)
Verifying Entanglement with Limited Data
NewsApr 29, 2026

Verifying Entanglement with Limited Data

Researchers at KAIST have unveiled a practical method for confirming quantum entanglement using only a handful of measurement settings. By converting incomplete data into a suite of entanglement witnesses—some generated through a mirroring operation and others via numerical optimization—the team...

By APS Physics (Physics Magazine)
Chanda Prescod-Weinstein Connects Physics, Poetry and Pop Culture
NewsApr 29, 2026

Chanda Prescod-Weinstein Connects Physics, Poetry and Pop Culture

Theoretical physicist Chanda Prescod‑Weinstein’s new book, *The Edge of Space‑Time*, intertwines cosmology, quantum mechanics, queer theory, and pop culture to present physics as a poetic, philosophical pursuit. She draws connections from ancient Chinese thinker Mozi to modern dark‑matter research, using...

By Scientific American – Mind
How Surfaces Steer Electrons Could Shape Better Batteries and Sensors
NewsApr 29, 2026

How Surfaces Steer Electrons Could Shape Better Batteries and Sensors

Researchers published a Nature paper showing that an electrode’s electronic density of states (DOS) directly controls the reorganization energy that governs interfacial electron transfer. By engineering graphene‑based van der Waals heterostructures with tunable hBN spacers, they demonstrated that higher DOS strengthens Thomas‑Fermi...

By AZoNano
Arcera and Fosun Sign MoU for Neuroscience Innovation
NewsApr 29, 2026

Arcera and Fosun Sign MoU for Neuroscience Innovation

Arcera Life Sciences and Fosun Pharma have signed a memorandum of understanding to create a long‑term strategic partnership focused on licensing, technology sharing, and neuroscience innovation. The deal taps Fosun’s research and manufacturing capabilities and Arcera’s access to international markets,...

By Pharmaceutical Technology (GlobalData)
Endangered Antelopes Flown to Kenya From Czech Zoo in 'Historic Homecoming'
NewsApr 29, 2026

Endangered Antelopes Flown to Kenya From Czech Zoo in 'Historic Homecoming'

Four male mountain bongos were flown from Prague Zoo to Nairobi, marking a historic homecoming for the critically endangered antelope. The animals were transferred to the Mount Kenya Wildlife Conservancy, where they will join a captive‑breeding program aimed at expanding...

By BBC News – Science & Environment
Is There A ‘Best’ Time For Women To Build Muscle? What A New Study Reveals
NewsApr 29, 2026

Is There A ‘Best’ Time For Women To Build Muscle? What A New Study Reveals

New research examined whether aligning strength training with menstrual phases influences muscle protein synthesis. Twelve healthy women completed follicular and luteal phase testing, with muscle biopsies measuring protein synthesis and breakdown. The study found no significant differences, indicating that hormonal...

By Mindbodygreen
If AI Can Model Cells, Science Can Deliver Cures
NewsApr 29, 2026

If AI Can Model Cells, Science Can Deliver Cures

The Biohub Institute announced the Virtual Biology Initiative, a $100 million pledge to generate open‑source cellular data for AI training. Partnering with the Allen Institute, Broad Institute, NVIDIA, Wellcome Sanger and others, the effort aims to build massive, public datasets that...

By TIME
NOAA Defends Cuts to Research and Climate Monitoring at Budget Hearing
NewsApr 29, 2026

NOAA Defends Cuts to Research and Climate Monitoring at Budget Hearing

During a House Science subcommittee hearing, a Republican lawmaker joined Democrats in opposing the Trump administration’s FY2027 budget request that would cut NOAA’s research and climate monitoring by 26%, eliminating 35 projects and over $1 billion in funding. The proposal would...

By Inside Climate News
Indigenous Peoples Bear the Brunt of Climate Change — and Get Almost None of the Money to Fight It
NewsApr 29, 2026

Indigenous Peoples Bear the Brunt of Climate Change — and Get Almost None of the Money to Fight It

Indigenous peoples, hailed as frontline climate guardians, received less than 1% of global climate mitigation and adaptation funding between 2011 and 2020. Despite the Green Climate Fund’s $20 billion portfolio and the Global Environment Facility’s $27 billion disbursements, direct access for Indigenous...

By Grist
CAR-T Cell Therapies Going in Vivo
NewsApr 29, 2026

CAR-T Cell Therapies Going in Vivo

Ex‑vivo CAR‑T therapies have saved tens of thousands of patients, but the industry is now pivoting to in‑vivo approaches that can be administered off‑the‑shelf. Over the past year, major pharma players have poured billions into in‑vivo CAR‑T platforms, highlighted by...

By Labiotech.eu
“Our Nanofibre Coating Represents a Fundamental Shift”
NewsApr 29, 2026

“Our Nanofibre Coating Represents a Fundamental Shift”

Soarce, a 2021‑born materials‑innovation startup, won the Grand prize at JEC World 2026’s Startup Booster, highlighting its bio‑based nanofibre coating for composites. Backed by roughly $3.5 million in pre‑seed capital, the company converts biomass into high‑performance nanofibre additives that integrate into existing...

By JEC Composites
Tumor/Lymph Node Dual‐Targeting Ultrasonic Nanoconverter Orchestrates Spatiotemporal ROS Regulation for Dual‐Zone Programmed Sono‐STING Immunotherapy
NewsApr 29, 2026

Tumor/Lymph Node Dual‐Targeting Ultrasonic Nanoconverter Orchestrates Spatiotemporal ROS Regulation for Dual‐Zone Programmed Sono‐STING Immunotherapy

Researchers have engineered a dual‑targeting ultrasonic nanoconverter (OPD@PSF) that co‑delivers the sonosensitizer protoporphyrin IX and the STING agonist Vadimezan to breast tumors and their draining lymph nodes. High‑power ultrasound at the tumor site generates abundant reactive oxygen species, inducing immunogenic...

By Small (Wiley)
Identifying the Synergistic Role of Graphitic Nitrogen and Cobalt Nanoparticle in Electron Transfer Pathway Toward Fenton‐Like Catalysis
NewsApr 29, 2026

Identifying the Synergistic Role of Graphitic Nitrogen and Cobalt Nanoparticle in Electron Transfer Pathway Toward Fenton‐Like Catalysis

Researchers synthesized a carbon‑nanotube catalyst (CoN/C‑8) that integrates graphitic nitrogen and beads‑on‑string cobalt nanoparticles to activate peroxymonosulfate (PMS) for water decontamination. Electrochemical tests, COMSOL simulations, and density functional theory reveal that graphitic nitrogen forms an electron‑transfer highway, shifting the primary...

By Small (Wiley)
Global Quantitative Analysis of Ligation Reactions in Self‐Assembled DNA Nanostructures at the Single‐Nick Level
NewsApr 29, 2026

Global Quantitative Analysis of Ligation Reactions in Self‐Assembled DNA Nanostructures at the Single‐Nick Level

Researchers have mapped ligation efficiency at 64 individual nick sites on DNA origami using quantitative PCR, revealing that ligase activity is higher at trapezoid edges than interior positions. Docking simulations closely match experimental yields, indicating that variations in enzyme docking...

By Small (Wiley)
Local Electronic Environment Regulation of Crystalline/Amorphous NiSe/NiFe(OH)x Heterostructure Enhancing Catalytic Activity of Alkaline Oxygen Evolution Reaction
NewsApr 29, 2026

Local Electronic Environment Regulation of Crystalline/Amorphous NiSe/NiFe(OH)x Heterostructure Enhancing Catalytic Activity of Alkaline Oxygen Evolution Reaction

Researchers have engineered a crystalline NiSe/amorphous NiFe(OH)x heterostructure that dramatically improves alkaline oxygen evolution reaction (OER) performance. The catalyst achieves an ultralow overpotential of 233 mV at a current density of 100 mA cm⁻², and retains 93.7% of its activity after 250 hours at...

By Small (Wiley)
Interfacial Topology Engineering of Self‐Derived TiO2 Shells for Nucleation‐Controlled Fast Kinetics in MgH2
NewsApr 29, 2026

Interfacial Topology Engineering of Self‐Derived TiO2 Shells for Nucleation‐Controlled Fast Kinetics in MgH2

Researchers have developed a solvent‑free mechanochemical method that forms a high‑coverage TiO₂ nanolayer directly on magnesium hydride particles. The TiO₂ shell creates favorable band alignment, polarizing electrons and weakening Mg‑H bonds, which lowers the dehydrogenation activation barrier to 81 kJ mol⁻¹. This...

By Small (Wiley)
All‐Solid‐State Electrochemical Artificial Muscles Enabled by Magnetically Aligned Ionic Liquid Crystal Elastomers
NewsApr 29, 2026

All‐Solid‐State Electrochemical Artificial Muscles Enabled by Magnetically Aligned Ionic Liquid Crystal Elastomers

Researchers have created an all‑solid‑state electrochemical artificial muscle by embedding carbon‑nanotube (CNT) coiled fibers in a magnetically aligned ionic liquid crystal elastomer (LCE). Magnetic field orientation produces ion‑transport channels that boost ionic conductivity to 47.5 mS m⁻¹, a three‑fold increase over polydomain...

By Small (Wiley)
Laser‐Induced Graphene for Pressure and Strain Sensors: Fabrication, Performance Optimization, and Applications
NewsApr 29, 2026

Laser‐Induced Graphene for Pressure and Strain Sensors: Fabrication, Performance Optimization, and Applications

Laser‑induced graphene (LIG) has become a cornerstone for flexible pressure and strain sensors since its 2014 debut, thanks to its superior electrical conductivity and mechanical resilience. The reviewed paper dissects sensing mechanisms, outlines fabrication routes—including precursor selection and laser‑parameter tuning—and...

By Small (Wiley)
Older than the Dinosaurs: Scientists Finally Unlock Secret of the Mayfly’s Dance
NewsApr 29, 2026

Older than the Dinosaurs: Scientists Finally Unlock Secret of the Mayfly’s Dance

Scientists from Oxford and Imperial College have decoded the enigmatic vertical dance of male mayflies, showing it helps them pinpoint females in swarms. Using 3‑D video reconstruction of London swarms, researchers found the up‑and‑down flight minimizes mistaken mating with non‑female...

By The Guardian – Environment
Black Swift Technologies & NOAA Validate Multi-UAS Hurricane Sensing
NewsApr 29, 2026

Black Swift Technologies & NOAA Validate Multi-UAS Hurricane Sensing

Black Swift Technologies, in partnership with NOAA, completed the first simultaneous multi‑UAS sampling from a crewed hurricane aircraft, deploying two S0 drones from a WP‑3D Orion. The operator controlled both platforms through a mission‑level interface, allowing the drones to hover...

By Unmanned Systems Technology – News
New Genetic Test More Accurate for Poll Selection in Brahmans
NewsApr 29, 2026

New Genetic Test More Accurate for Poll Selection in Brahmans

Neogen, licensed from UniQuest, launched the Guarani Poll genetic test for Bos Indicus cattle, targeting a poll variant common in Australian Brahman herds. Based on University of Queensland research, the assay detects the presence or absence of the Guarani poll allele,...

By Beef Central
MIT Study Finds Children More Vulnerable to Cancer-Causing Chemical in Water
NewsApr 29, 2026

MIT Study Finds Children More Vulnerable to Cancer-Causing Chemical in Water

MIT researchers published a study in Nature Communications showing that the carcinogen N‑nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) causes dramatically more DNA damage and liver tumors in juvenile mice than in adult mice, even at low exposure levels. Both age groups formed similar initial...

By ScienceDaily – Nutrition
This 15ft Invasive Plant that Produces Toxic Sap Continues to Appear in British Gardens – and It's Coming Into Season...
NewsApr 29, 2026

This 15ft Invasive Plant that Produces Toxic Sap Continues to Appear in British Gardens – and It's Coming Into Season...

Giant hogweed, a 15‑foot invasive plant with toxic sap, is re‑emerging across the UK as spring garden work begins. The plant sprouts from underground roots in early April and can rapidly reach full height by May, often being confused with...

By Homebuilding & Renovating (UK)
Global Deforestation Slows, W.R.I. Report Finds. But Wildfires Are Taking a Toll.
NewsApr 29, 2026

Global Deforestation Slows, W.R.I. Report Finds. But Wildfires Are Taking a Toll.

The World Resources Institute reported that global tree loss dropped 14% in 2025, falling to roughly 63 million acres, driven mainly by gains in tropical forest protection. However, wildfires burned about 26 million acres—nearly the size of Cuba—erasing much of the progress....

By The New York Times – Climate
‘Kissing Bugs’ Bite Can Cause Heart Disease. Here’s What Hikers Need to Know.
NewsApr 29, 2026

‘Kissing Bugs’ Bite Can Cause Heart Disease. Here’s What Hikers Need to Know.

Kissing (triatomine) bugs, now documented in 29 U.S. states, carry the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi that causes Chagas disease. Roughly half of the bugs collected in the United States are infected, and their painless bites can transmit the parasite via feces...

By Backpacker
What Are Peptides And Why Is Everyone Talking About Them?
NewsApr 29, 2026

What Are Peptides And Why Is Everyone Talking About Them?

Peptide therapies, short chains of amino acids that act like hormones, have surged in popularity as wellness supplements promising vitality and longevity. The most clinically vetted peptide, GLP‑1, is now used by roughly 10 million Americans for obesity and appetite control,...

By Forbes – Healthcare
Swept-Source Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography May Predict Diabetic Nephropathy
NewsApr 29, 2026

Swept-Source Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography May Predict Diabetic Nephropathy

A Harvard‑based study published in the July issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology shows that swept‑source optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) can serve as a non‑invasive biomarker for diabetic nephropathy. Researchers analyzed 375 eyes from 234 diabetic patients and...

By Medical Xpress
A Novel Gene-Therapy Approach to ‘Functionally Cure’ HIV Succeeds in some Monkeys
NewsApr 29, 2026

A Novel Gene-Therapy Approach to ‘Functionally Cure’ HIV Succeeds in some Monkeys

Researchers used an adeno‑associated virus to deliver a gene that produces a CCR5‑blocking antibody in rhesus macaques. Six of the 19 treated monkeys maintained undetectable SHIV levels for over a year after a single low‑dose injection, showing a functional cure....

By Science (AAAS)  News
Independent, Academic Cancer Trials Are Vital to Improve Patient Outcomes Worldwide
NewsApr 29, 2026

Independent, Academic Cancer Trials Are Vital to Improve Patient Outcomes Worldwide

A Lancet Oncology Commission has been launched to evaluate the role of independent, academic cancer trials worldwide. The initiative stems from a coalition of 35 investigators and patient advocates spanning six continents, coordinated by the European Organisation for Research and...

By Medical Xpress
Patients Treated for Common Cancers in Community Settings Live Longer, COA Study Finds
NewsApr 29, 2026

Patients Treated for Common Cancers in Community Settings Live Longer, COA Study Finds

A COA‑commissioned study using Flatiron Health and SEER data shows patients with metastatic breast cancer and metastatic NSCLC treated in community oncology practices have longer overall survival than national benchmarks. Median survival for metastatic breast cancer was 48 months versus...

By AJMC (The American Journal of Managed Care)
As Foot-and-Mouth Disease Explodes in South Africa, Experts Warn of Threats in Other Countries
NewsApr 29, 2026

As Foot-and-Mouth Disease Explodes in South Africa, Experts Warn of Threats in Other Countries

South Africa’s cattle industry is reeling from a foot‑and‑mouth disease (FMD) outbreak that originated in Kruger National Park’s buffalo, costing an estimated $360 million this year. The government has declared a national disaster, imported millions of vaccine doses, and aims to...

By Science (AAAS)  News
Key Senators Agree NASA FY2027 Budget Request Inadequate
NewsApr 29, 2026

Key Senators Agree NASA FY2027 Budget Request Inadequate

Senate appropriators from both parties joined House members in rejecting President Trump’s proposed 23% cut to NASA’s FY2027 budget, arguing that the $18.8 billion request – unchanged from FY2026 – is far too low to sustain current and newly announced programs....

By SpacePolicyOnline.com
Wingbeat Radar Signatures Let AI Sort Bees, Wasps and Other Insects
NewsApr 29, 2026

Wingbeat Radar Signatures Let AI Sort Bees, Wasps and Other Insects

Researchers at Trinity College Dublin demonstrated that millimeter‑wave radar combined with machine‑learning can identify flying insects by their wing‑beat signatures. By extracting over 70 harmonic, spectral and temporal features from micro‑Doppler reflections, the AI model achieved 96% accuracy distinguishing bees...

By Phys.org – Biotechnology