Month: March 2026
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Science News
72/ 1dEditor in chief Nancy Shute discusses how science and armed conflict have been intertwined throughout history, from the Greeks in 400 B.C. to the use of tear gas in the protests across the United States as recently as a few months ago./ 2dA court ruling that blocks Trump administration vaccine policy is a win for science. But much work remains to rebuild trust in vaccines.Ryan Gosling is on a mission to save the sun — and Earth — from star-killing microbes. Science News dissects the science behind the sci-fi movie./ 2dThis spring, these six orchids will lure pollinators with mimicry, scent or other unusual strategies.Mosquitoes stop feeding because signals from rectal cells tell them they’re full, offering a target for preventing human bites.Experimenters hope to harness the powerful effects of medications such as Ozempic and Wegovy at doses smaller than those studied most./ 2dSolve the math puzzle from our April 2026 issue, where we plant floras to celebrate an upcoming nuptial./ 3dMagnetic crystals provide the earliest evidence yet of the plate tectonics that likely made Earth habitable, pushing its start back by 140 million years./ 3dData suggest people lived at Chile’s Monte Verde site thousands of years later than thought, challenging key “pre-Clovis” evidence. Not all agree./ 3dClimate change is affecting microbes, and that has implications for all life on Earth./ 4dSeemingly random charging of identical materials depends on the carbonaceous molecules stuck to their surfaces/ 4dThe Day After Tomorrow, Snowpiercer, Snowball Earth: Such end-of-days visions of a frozen Earth are fantastical … but can contain a snowflake of truth./ 4dNearly one third of sharks studied near the Bahamas’ Eleuthera Island were found to have caffeine, painkillers and other drugs in their bloodstreams./ 5dPlatypuses are the first mammals known to have hollow melanosomes, pigment-bearing structures found in the hair of many animals./ 5dSatellite data show that U.S. cities have more nighttime cloud cover than nearby countryside, and building height and density help explain why./ 5dEach year, thousands of people in the U.S. die waiting for donated organs. A new book shares how organs from other species could change that./ 6dWhen combined with clinical markers, smartwatch data was able to help detect insulin resistance with nearly 90 percent accuracy.Heat and humidity now severely limit light physical activity for millions of people around the world, with older adults facing the greatest burden./ 6dA colony of African vervets in Dania Beach raises big questions about how humans can and should manage nonnative species./ 9dA genetic mutation tied to keeping the brain healthy at high altitudes may point to a way to repair nerve damage, experiments in mice show./ 9dLevels of six RNA molecules in the blood ID’d older adults likely to survive two more years. Whether it will work for other people is a big question./ 9dPeople quickly normalize extreme weather. Simple visuals highlighting abrupt change could help climate change break through our mental blind spots./ 10dA new analysis of a large fossil shinbone suggests T. rex ancestors came from North America instead of Asia. Not everyone agrees./ 10dEnvironmental cues can flip a molecular switch in the brain, turning males from caregivers to killers./ 10dAI-generated meal plans for fictional teens cut an entire meal’s worth of calories and carbs while overemphasizing protein and fats, a new study reports./ 11dPeople are increasingly using AI auto-complete features when writing. Unbeknownst to them, that feature may change how they think./ 11dAn experiment mimicking conditions on the Saturn moon suggests that cell-like bubbles don’t form in methane lakes, puncturing hopes for alien life./ 11dSuperluminous supernovas are the brightest stellar explosions in the universe. Astronomers may have found a mechanism that can trigger these events./ 11dThe Amazon molly reproduces without sex. A genomic copy-and-paste trick called gene conversion may explain how it avoids evolutionary meltdown. -
Smithsonian Magazine
“This diver stumbled upon a centuries-old sword beneath the Mediterranean Sea”
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The three-foot-long iron sword is covered in sediment and shells. (Yoav Bornstein / University of Haifa) This Diver Stumbled Upon a Centuries-Old Sword Beneath the Mediterranean Sea. Years Later, He Found Another One Nearby
Shlomi Katzin, who unearthed a 900-year-old sword in 2021, recently discovered a similar artifact jutting out of the seabed off the coast of Israel Sarah Kuta 
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Ars Technica-All Content
“We keep finding the raw material of DNA in asteroids-what’s it telling us?”
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Accessed on 22 March 2026, 0325 UTC.
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309Today
On Monday, a paper announcing that all four DNA bases had been found on an asteroid sparked a lot of headlines. But many of the headlines omitted a key word needed to put the discovery in context: “again.” The paper itself cited similar results dating back to 2011, and the ensuing years have seen various confirmations and more rigorous studies. The new work was less notable for showing that we haLast summer, a group of officials from the Department of Energy gathered at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling 890-square-mile complex in the eastern desert of Idaho where the US government built its first rudimentary nuclear power plant in 1951 and continues to test cutting-edge technology. On the agenda that day: the future of nuclear energy in the Trump era. The meeting was convened byYesterday
On Friday, a jury in California determined that Elon Musk had misled investors in Twitter via public statements that depressed the price of the company’s stock ahead of Musk’s purchase of the service. Because this was a class action lawsuit, Musk is likely to owe damages to a huge range of investors—payments that may ultimately reach billions of dollars. In the lead-up to Musk’s ultimate purchase/ 1dThere’s a virus you may have never heard of before that is estimated to infect up to 90 percent of people and lurks quietly in your cells for life—but if it becomes activated, it will destroy your brain. If that’s not startling enough, researchers reported this week that there may be a new way for this virus to activate—one that affects up to 10 percent of adults worldwide. The virus is the humanFor the fourth time in a little more than a year, the US Space Force needs to send up a new satellite to replenish the military’s GPS navigation network. And once again, the company the Pentagon is paying to launch it can’t answer the call. United Launch Alliance, a 50-50 joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin, was supposed to launch the final satellite for the Space Force’s GPS Block IIf you were eating in a restaurant and the head chef came out from the back multiple times to loudly proclaim that the kitchen was deeply committed to the quality of the food, would you find that reassuring? Or would you start wondering why the chef felt the need to keep saying it? That’s the conundrum facing the Windows team at Microsoft right now. Windows VP Pavan Davuluri has gone on the recorShy Girl , a horror novel by Mia Ballard, was one of those buzzy books that leapt from self-published prominence into full-on trade publication. Until yesterday, that is, when publisher Hachette pulled the book from the UK market and canceled plans to bring it to the US. The move came after a New York Times investigation suggested that AI had been used in significant parts of the work. “If it isnHackers have compromised virtually all versions of Aqua Security’s widely used Trivy vulnerability scanner in an ongoing supply chain attack that could have wide-ranging consequences for developers and the organizations that use them. Trivy maintainer Itay Shakury confirmed the compromise on Friday, following rumors and a thread , since deleted by the attackers, discussing the incident. The attac/ 1dNASA has taken a step forward to moving an undetermined spacecraft of a various size on an indefinite date to a yet-to-be-decided location. Or to put it another way: NASA is seeking to learn more about what it would take to remove the space shuttle Discovery from the Smithsonian in Virginia and relocate it to Houston, as compared to transporting a smaller space capsule from anywhere in the countrThe Federal Communications Commission yesterday approved Nexstar Media Group’s $6.2 billion purchase of Tegna, granting a waiver that lets the broadcast giant go way past the national limit on station ownership. Nexstar said it closed the acquisition late in the day yesterday, immediately after receiving the FCC approval. The deal was also approved by the US Department of Justice, but a group ofA member of an influential federal vaccine advisory panel made a dramatic claim Thursday afternoon that the panel had been disbanded following a temporary block by a federal judge and would be entirely reconstituted—again. But, just hours later, he retracted the claim, saying that it was merely a possibility. The claim immediately caused a stir online. Public health experts began to cheer the newWhen NASA’s Perseverance rover landed in Jezero Crater in 2021, its primary mission was to scour the remnants of a dried-up Martian lakebed for signs of ancient life. Scientists have been focused on the crater’s spectacular Western Delta, a fan-shaped geologic feature deposited by a river flowing into the basin billions of years ago. But now Perseverance’s ground-penetrating radar (called RIMFAX)/ 1dFor more than 60 years, nearly every large rocket used some combination of the same liquid and solid propellants. Refined kerosene was favored for its easy handling and non-toxicity, hydrazine for its storability and simplicity, hydrogen for its efficiency, and solid fuels for their long shelf life and rapid launch capability. About 15 years ago, rocket companies started serious development of la/ 1dAmazon is developing a new smartphone over a decade after discontinuing the Fire Phone, Reuters reported today, citing four anonymous “people familiar with the matter.” Reuters said the phone is codenamed Transformer but couldn’t confirm what it might cost, how much Amazon has invested into development thus far, or how much Amazon expects to make off the device. Like any product reportedly underValve’s Steam Machine desktop is currently in a state of involuntary limbo , driven by historically awful pricing and availability for memory and storage chips. AI data centers are absorbing much of what memory manufacturers can produce, leaving much less for enthusiast and hobbyist hardware like the Steam Machine and the Steam Frame VR headset. Even the years-old Steam Deck is currently out of s/ 1dA landmark site in the peopling of the Americas is several thousand years younger than we thought. While that means very different things about the site itself, it doesn’t change the big picture as much as the researchers who generated the new date are claiming. University of Wyoming archaeologist Todd Surovell and his colleagues recently took a second look at the age of a site called Monte VerdeA little more than a month ago, SpaceX founder Elon Musk put down a marker of his intent to saturate low-Earth orbit with up to 1 million satellites. Its purpose? Provide always-on data center services around the planet. Now, Amazon and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos has done something similar with a filing to the Federal Communications Commission of his own, proposing a constellation of up to 51/ 1dDespite being declared the third-hottest year on record, 2025 was a relatively quiet year for climate disasters in the US. No major hurricanes made landfall, while the total number of acres burned in wildfires last year—a way of measuring the intensity of wildfire season —fell below the 10-year average. But starting this week, the West is experiencing what looks to be a record-breaking heat wave,One-pedal driving is not causing Tesla electric vehicles to suddenly accelerate when parked, according to federal regulators. For almost as long as Tesla has been selling cars, it has been hit with sporadic accusations of parked cars accelerating when they shouldn’t. Known to the industry as “sudden unintended acceleration,” the question for regulators is whether the problem is a human one or an/ 1dWelcome to Edition 8.34 of the Rocket Report! The most important significant news this week, I believe, is the decision by Canada to make a serious investment in launch infrastructure at a spaceport in Nova Scotia. Tensions have risen between the United States and Canada of late (for reasons which are baffling to this author, who has always had an affinity for the nation to our north), and as a rThe film adaptation of Andy Weir’s novel Project Hail Mary hits general release today, March 20, and it’s great —go see it! Though a little light on the science, the movie goes hard on the relationship between schoolteacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) and an extraterrestrial named Rocky, and it’s a ride well worth taking. But as good as it is, the movie shares a small flaw with the book: DespiteMar 19, 2026
In his role as health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.—a long-time anti-vaccine activist with no background in science, medicine, or public health—has made headlines for his thorough perversion of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine advisory panel. In June, Kennedy fired all 17 independent experts who made up the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP. ThA trade association of cloud service providers (CSPs) filed an antitrust complaint today with the European Union’s European Commission (EC) over Broadcom’s shuttering of VMware’s CSP partner program this year. Since Broadcom bought VMware, it has drastically cut the number of channel partners VMware works with, a shift that began with the elimination of VMware’s partner program . Broadcom replaceiPhone hacking techniques have sometimes been described almost like rare and elusive animals: Hackers have used them so stealthily and carefully against such a small number of hand-picked targets that they’re only rarely seen in the wild. Now a recent spate of espionage and cybercriminal campaigns has instead deployed those same phone-takeover tools, embedded in infected websites, to indiscriminaThree years after saying it had stopped buying location data of Americans without a warrant, the FBI acknowledged it has restarted the purchases. During questioning at a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing yesterday, FBI Director Kash Patel said the location data purchases have produced valuable information, and he did not commit to stopping the practice. In March 2023, then-FBI Direc/ 2dIf a battle is fought in space, it will look nothing like those depicted in the Star Wars franchise, with sleek TIE fighters blasting enemy ships with laser cannons and mag-pulses. Instead, these battles will be cerebral and unhurried, somewhat like the 1973 film The Day of the Jackal , a slow-burning political thriller with a plot that somehow mixes tension with clinical precision. In that film,OpenAI announced Thursday that it has entered into an agreement to acquire Astral, the company behind popular open source Python development tools such as uv , Ruff , and ty , and integrate the company into its Codex team. The deal, whose financial terms were not publicly disclosed, will help OpenAI “accelerate our work on Codex and expand what AI can do across the software development lifecycle,The dream of the metaverse may have died for now, but Meta has decided it’s not completely giving up on the VR experience in Horizon Worlds, the virtual worlds service that it originally envisioned as the first step toward said metaverse. The news was announced via the Instagram account of Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth. “We have decided, just today in fact, that we will keep Horizon Worlds working inOn Wednesday, Afroman won a widely watched defamation lawsuit that seven cops filed after the rapper made music videos mocking them for conducting a 2022 raid of his home that resulted in no charges and no marijuana found. Videos for songs like “Lemon Pound Cake,” “Why You Disconnecting My Video Camera,” and “Will You Help Me Repair My Door” used real footage from the raid, pulling from securityGoogle is planning big changes for Android in 2026 aimed at combating malware across the entire device ecosystem. Starting in September, Google will begin restricting application sideloading with its developer verification program, but not everyone is on board. Android Ecosystem President Sameer Samat tells Ars that the company has been listening to feedback, and the result is the newly unveiledApple’s MacBook Neo is impressive for its $600 price, but its A18 Pro processor is one of its biggest compromises compared to a modern MacBook Air— in our review , we found it was more than up to basic computing tasks, but for demanding workloads that benefit from more CPU and GPU cores and RAM, the Air is a better choice. But those limited computing resources are still enough to run Windows on yFor decades now, Counter-Strike players have gotten used to tapping the reload button whenever they have a spare, safe moment. Yesterday evening, though, Valve announced that it had decided this system needed “higher stakes,” overhauling Counter-Strike 2 ‘s reload mechanic in a way that could disrupt years of muscle memory for millions of players. Until now, reloading in CS2 has meant dumping thePeople in North America adopted the bow and arrow as replacement weapons for the dart and atlatl about 1,400 years ago, according to a new paper published in the journal PNAS Nexus. But the adoption was almost immediate in southern regions, while people living farther north initially adopted the bow and arrow as a complement to their existing toolkit, gradually phasing out the atlatl and dart ove/ 2dGermany recently banned TCL from marketing some of its TVs as QLED (quantum dot light-emitting diode), with a Munich court ruling that the TVs lack the quantum dot (QD) structure and performance associated with QLED TVs. The decision increases pressure on TV companies to be more honest with their marketing . Samsung has actively campaigned against TCL’s use of the term QLED. A year ago, Samsung sMar 18, 2026
If you’ve been using the Internet for any length of time, you’ve probably used a tool like Google Translate to convert webpages or snippets of text to and from languages ranging from Uzbek to Esperanto. But what if you want to translate into more esoteric “languages” like “LinkedIn Speak,” “Gen Z slang,” or “horny Margaret Thatcher” ? This week, many people across the Internet have been bemused tThe European Union may soon ban nudify apps after Elon Musk’s chatbot Grok emerged as a prime example of the dangers of an AI platform failing to block outputs that sexualized images of real people, including children . In a joint press release , the European Parliament’s Internal Market and Civil Liberties committees confirmed that lawmakers voted 101–9 (with 8 abstentions) to simplify the Artif/ 3dIn the US, the economics of coal power generation are marginal at best, and a large number of coal plants have shut down as cheaper renewables and natural gas have surged. The Trump administration has used a number of methods to swim against this economic tide, the simplest of which has been to order plants scheduled for closure to remain operational . The Department of Energy has used the FederaNeanderthals may have used birch tar as more than just glue; it could have helped them ward off infection and even insect bites. People from several modern Indigenous cultures, including the Mi’kmaq of eastern Canada, use tar from birch bark to treat skin infections and keep wounds from festering. We know from several archaeological sites that Neanderthals also knew how to extract birch tar and tCloudflare said it has appealed a fine issued by Italy over the company’s refusal to block access to websites on its 1.1.1.1 DNS service. The appeal is the latest step in Cloudflare’s fight against Italy’s Piracy Shield law. Piracy Shield is “a misguided Italian regulatory scheme designed to protect large rightsholder interests at the expense of the broader Internet,” Cloudflare said in a blog poIt may sound fanciful, but a Los Angeles-based company says it has conceived of a plan to fly out to a smallish, near-Earth asteroid, throw a large bag around it, and bring the body back to a “safe” gathering point near our planet. The company, TransAstra, said Wednesday that an unnamed customer has agreed to fund a study of its proposed “New Moon” mission to capture and relocate an asteroid apprIn late 2024, the federal government’s cybersecurity evaluators rendered a troubling verdict on one of Microsoft’s biggest cloud computing offerings. The tech giant’s “lack of proper detailed security documentation” left reviewers with a “lack of confidence in assessing the system’s overall security posture,” according to an internal government report reviewed by ProPublica. Or, as one member of/ 3dIt is a strange quirk of fate that the station wagon has morphed from mass-market family transport into something far more esoteric (at least here in the US, a market that once embraced the form factor like no other). Now, wagons come in two flavors. There’s the “slightly lifted with some extra protective cladding” kind, designed with forest roads in mind but equally useful if you’re surrounded bWe’ve got an official trailer for Spider-Man: Brand New Day , the follow-up to 2021’s No Way Home that is purportedly intended to launch a fresh trilogy of films with Tom Holland in the title role. Sony Pictures opted for a unique approach to building anticipation for the trailer, releasing snippets of footage throughout the day yesterday via the social media accounts of influencers and fans arou/ 3dLast month, Discord quickly backpedaled after it announced that an age-verification system would roll out globally. Discord’s reversal followed a widespread user backlash, which also intensified scrutiny of the platform’s age-check partners . Suddenly, these often-overlooked players in the “age-assurance” ecosystem had to defend their tech or risk losing major contracts. The whole saga shined a hBMW provided flights from Washington, DC, to Malaga, Spain, and accommodation so Ars could drive the iX3 and be briefed on the i3. Ars does not accept paid editorial content. MALAGA, Spain—Late last year, we got our first chance to driv -
Science | The Guardian
“‘I’ve seen the devil’: Brazil’s UFO capital marks 30 years since ‘alien encounter.’”
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/ 8hSightings in Varginha in 1996 have been dismissed as hoax, but saga continues to draw people from around world The skies over this far-flung coffee-growing hub went charcoal black, the heavens opened and one of Brazil’s greatest mysteries was born. “It really was something unique,” recalls Marco Antônio Reis, a zoo director, who was at his ranch outside Varginha one stormy day in January 1996 wheYesterday
This frightening outbreak is not yet over, and serves as a reminder of why plans to manage infectious diseases exist The public health measures taken in response to this month’s meningitis outbreak in Kent so far appear to be working . Two young people have tragically died – one a sixth-former in Faversham, the other a student at the University of Kent. In the Canterbury area, where cases have be/ 1dMoon orbit program, preceding planned landing in 2028, has been delayed due to fuel leaks and clogged helium lines For the second time this year, Nasa moved its moon rocket from the hangar out toward the launchpad on Friday in hopes of sending four astronauts on a lunar fly-around next month. If the latest repairs work and everything else goes Nasa’s way, the Space Launch System could blast off aExperts continue to analyse strain of MenB to understand whether it has become more likely to spread or cause disease The Kent meningitis outbreak may have reached its peak after only two new cases were reported by officials on Friday. The UK Health and Security Agency said that as of 12.30pm on Thursday, there were 18 confirmed and 11 probable cases of meningitis linked to the Kent outbreak , taCauses of meningitis, what the public health response has been, and how the situation differs from Covid The deadly outbreak of meningitis in Kent has fuelled concerns about how far the disease will spread and seen the return of people wearing masks and queueing for vaccines. The scenes are reminiscent of the Covid crisis, but meningitis is very different. Here we look at how the outbreak has unfMar 19, 2026
After series of delays, US space agency hopes to carry out first crewed flyby of the moon in more than half a century Nasa has begun returning its towering SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft to its Florida launch pad before a planned flyby of the moon, after completing necessary repairs. Artemis engineers began the manoeuvre, which can take up to 12 hours, at 8pm local time. The US space agency willDiscovery at Monte Verde puts north-to-south expansion theory back at centre of heated debate on continent’s human history A groundbreaking new study may have once again upended our understanding of human prehistory in the Americas. For years, the predominant theory of how humans arrived in the western hemisphere centred around the Clovis culture, which crossed the Beringia land bridge from Asia/ 2dResearchers find snake metabolite that suppresses appetite of obese mice ‘without some of side-effects’ of GLP-1 drugs Pythons follow the ultimate crash diet, swallowing an antelope in a single sitting and then going for months without eating. Now scientists have identified a molecule that appears to be crucial for this metabolic feat, and which they say could pave the way for a new class of obesMar 18, 2026
/ 2dResearch finds cockapoo, cavapoo and labradoodle dogs display more undesirable behaviours than breeds they derive from The UK has oodles of doodles but a study might offer paws for thought: researchers have found some of these designer crossbreed dogs show more behavioural problems than the pure breeds from which they derive. Crosses between poodles and other dog breeds have become increasingly pDrugs such as semaglutide may be useful for mental health conditions associated with diabetes, authors say Diabetes drugs could prevent anxiety and depression from worsening, according to research . Type 2 diabetes affects more than 800 million people globally and research shows that those with the condition are about twice as likely to have depression as the wider population. Continue reading…/ 3dGlasses use verbal cues and floating text to assist wearers and are expected to be available in early 2027 AI software that can be embedded into smart glasses has won a £1m prize for technology to help people with dementia. Built into chunky, black-rimmed frames that have a camera, microphone and speakers, the tech – known as CrossSense – guides wearers through everyday life by means of a chatty/ 3dScientists trying to work out why Gauls chose to bury some of their dead in seated position facing west Children at a primary school in eastern France found a strange attraction next to their playground this week: a skeleton sitting upright, peeking out of a circular pit. It is the latest in a series of bodies discovered in the city of Dijon that were buried in a seated position facing west. Cont/ 3dTrillions of insects embark, largely unnoticed, on epic journeys every year across mountain ranges, deserts and seas, and it is only now, as their numbers suffer huge declines, that scientists are tracking their movements On a cloudless sunny day in October 1950, ornithologists Elizabeth and David Lack stood on a mountain pass in the Pyrenees and observed a once-in-a-lifetime spectacle – clouds oMar 17, 2026
Researchers say their prototype is a big step towards fully functioning batteries with rapid charging times Australian scientists have developed what they say is the world’s first proof-of-concept quantum battery. Quantum batteries, first proposed as a theoretical concept in 2013, use the principles of quantum mechanics to store energy, and have the potential to be more efficient than conventiona/ 3dPerhaps the biggest surprise is that it tricks ants into moving its seeds with a scent that mimics their larvae Plants are superb at enticing animals to pollinate their flowers or carry off their seeds. But one plant co-opts an astonishing combination of fire, bees and ants to mastermind its reproduction. The South African Natal crocus, Apodolirion buchananii , has a gloriously bright white floweOver the weekend, news emerged of an outbreak of meningitis among university and school students in Kent in south-east England. The outbreak has killed two young people and left several others seriously ill. Health officials confirmed that the meningitis B strain has been identified in some of the cases. To find out what we know about the outbreak, who is most at risk and why questions are being/ 3dStudy highlights the movements in people’s gait that give away most about their emotional state A long face is not the only sign that someone is down in the dumps. How people walk is revealing too, particularly the swing of the arms and legs, researchers say. Scientists asked volunteers to guess people’s emotions from video clips of them walking and found that bigger swings portrayed more aggressA meteor that fell over the Cleveland area on Tuesday shook homes and startled residents, who heard a sonic boom that some compared to an explosion. The American Meteor Society said it received reports from Wisconsin to Maryland Meteor over Ohio causes large boom heard as far away as Pennsylvania Continue reading…Nasa spokesperson says meteor was traveling at 45,000mph but no reports of debris found A meteor over Ohio caused a large boom that jolted people as far away as Pennsylvania on Tuesday morning, Nasa has confirmed. The meteor entered the atmosphere at about 9am local time on Tuesday, producing a sonic boom felt across a wide swath of northern Ohio and beyond. Reports poured in from Cleveland and o/ 4dPhysicist who won a Nobel prize for his work on superfluids and superconductors at Sussex University in the 1970s The launch in the 1950s of Sputnik, the world’s first artificial satellite, played an unexpected but important role in propelling Anthony Leggett towards his 2003 Nobel prize for physics. Leggett, who was to become a world-leading researcher in the field of low-temperature physics, haHuge rise in demand since outbreak in Kent, which killed two people and left 13 seriously ill, means supplies becoming unobtainable Worried parents are contacting pharmacies in an “increasingly desperate” effort to get their children vaccinated against meningitis after the outbreak in Kent that killed two young people and left 13 others seriously ill. The surge in demand has led to stocks of theMar 16, 2026
/ 4dSnappily named Xi-cc-plus, Cern physicists spotted the particle in shower of debris that lit up Large Hadron Collider Scientists at the Cern nuclear physics laboratory near Geneva have discovered a heavier version of the proton, the subatomic particle that sits at the heart of every known atom in the universe. They spotted the particle in a shower of debris that lit up a detector at the Large Had/ 4dGrey-market injectable peptides – a category of substances with obscure, alphanumeric names such as BPC-157, GHK-Cu, or TB-500 – have developed a devoted following among biohackers and health optimisers. To understand how these unregulated substances have become mainstream and what they could be doing in our bodies, Madeleine Finlay hears from journalist Adrienne Matei and from Dr Anna Barnard, a/ 5dThe answers to today’s problems Earlier today I posed four puzzles from the Hyde Park Math Zine, a maths fanzine from Austin, Texas. Here they are again with solutions. 1. Ring it Continue reading…/ 5dScientists in the US have uploaded a fruit fly to a computer simulation, while an Australian lab has taught neurons on a glass chip to play a 90s video game. How long before we are all living in a sci-fi movie? It sounds like the opening of a sci-fi film, but US scientists recently uploaded a copy of the brain of a living fly into a simulation. In San Francisco, biotechnology company Eon SystemsRecording of humpback whale from 1949 could also provide new understanding of how the huge animals communicate A haunting whale song discovered on decades-old audio equipment could open up a new understanding of how the huge animals communicate, according to researchers who say it is the oldest such recording known. The song is that of a humpback whale, a marine giant beloved by whale watchers fo/ 5dUS based Covid vaccine guidance for children and pregnant people on ideology instead of evidence, critics say Sign up for the Breaking News US email to get newsletter alerts in your inbox There was scant data behind ending the Covid vaccine recommendation for pregnant people and children, according to internal memos made public because of a lawsuit against the US Department of Health and Human Se/ 5dLatest observations of L98-59d, about 35 light years from Earth, suggest it could be different to anything seen before Astronomers have identified a planet composed of molten lava, suggesting the existence of an entirely new category of liquid planet. The distant world, known as L98-59d, is about 1.6 times the size of Earth and orbits a small red star 35 light years away. Astronomers initially thMar 15, 2026
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News from Science (AAAS)
“Weekly Headlines: Hormone linked to morning sickness may help reduce alcohol intake.”
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Scientific American
“The Week in Science: This theory could eliminate a paradox of quantum mechanics.”
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
March 20—This 100-year-old theory might eliminate a paradox of quantum mechanics. Also, how new drugs and treatments are transforming kidney care and maybe the kids are all right after all.
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Top StoriesA 100-year-old theory might explain what’s wrong with quantum mechanicsOne physicist is on a mission to get scientists to look into Louis de Broglie’s pilot wave theory
Mathematicians find one pi formula to rule them allA mixture of AI and algorithms uncovered a hidden structure spanning 2,000 years of equations for pi
Get a deal on a subscription to Scientific American. Supporting our work means amplifying science!New ways to save kidneysA series of novel treatments and medical insights is helping chronic kidney disease patients
An asteroid just exploded above Ohio with the force of 250 tons of TNTEyewitness accounts and videos taken from across the Midwest reveal the streak of a large fireball across the daytime sky
Galaxies without dark matter mystify astronomersBizarre objects that seem to lack all dark matter present a cosmic mystery
Identical twins on trial: can DNA testing tell them apart?In a French criminal trial, conventional DNA analysis couldn’t distinguish between twin brothers, but emerging scientific methods could help in such cases
The real reason there are no snakes in IrelandIt wasn’t Saint Patrick but a long history of chilly weather and geographic isolation that kept the Emerald Isle snake-free
This overlooked organ may be more vital for longevity than scientists realizedThe role of the thymus in our long-term immunity and health is poorly understood. Two new studies suggest we need to pay attention
Why pristine mountain lakes are suddenly turning greenHigh in the Rockies, researchers are discovering that wind-borne pollution and rising heat are fueling unprecedented algal blooms
COVID probably killed 150,000 more people in its first two years than official U.S. tolls showWe have severely undercounted the number of COVID deaths, scientists say
The kids are all rightSurprising studies show young people are doing better than previous generations in many ways
Experimental GLP-3 weight-loss drug retatrutide shows promising results in clinical trialRetatrutide is among a new class of weight-loss drugs that are being tested for effectiveness
Scientists revive activity in frozen mouse brains for the first time“Cryosleep” remains the preserve of science fiction, but researchers are getting closer to restoring brain function after deep freezing
Here’s what the autism spectrum really looks likeThe autism spectrum is big, vibrant and complicated, a new graphic of 39 traits shows
As AI keeps improving, mathematicians struggle to foretell their own futureFirst Proof is an effort to see whether LLMs can contribute meaningfully to pure mathematics research. The dust has settled on round one, and the results are surprising
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Nature Briefing
“Static electricity is still a mystery-here’s what we know.”
Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.
Accessed on 19 March 2026, 2048 UTC.
Content and Source: “Nature Briefing.”
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Russ Roberts (https://hawaiisciencejournal.com).
View this email in your browser Thursday 19 March 2026 
Hello Nature readers,
Today we investigate why head knocks from contact sports might cause cognitive decline, learn that the CRISPR–Cas9 gene-editing tool has been used to engineer cancer-fighting immune cells inside a mouse and explore what little we know about static electricity.If you enjoy this newsletter, please consider recommending it to a friend or colleague. Click here to forward it by e-mail. Thank you!

For decades, scientists have struggled to understand exactly how repeatedly taking hits to the head while playing contact sports can translate into neurodegenerative conditions years down the line. (Blake Little/Getty) Contact sports make brain barrier leaky
Repeated blows to the head from playing a contact sport can cause damage to the blood–brain barrier — a dense layer of cells that keeps harmful substances out of the brain — that can be observed decades after an athlete retires. The damage makes the barrier leaky, which seems to trigger a long-lasting immune response that is closely tied to cognitive decline. The findings could explain why athletes who play sports such as rugby often experience severe memory loss and dementia later in life.
Nature | 4 min read
Reference: Science Translational Medicine paper
CRISPR makes CAR T cells inside mice
Using the CRISPR–Cas9 gene-editing tool, researchers have developed a method to safely engineer cancer-fighting immune cells — called chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells — inside a mouse’s body. The method uses a combination of virus-like particles to carry RNA and CRISPR–Cas9 machinery to T cells, and an engineered virus to deliver DNA that contains the CAR-encoding gene. A T cell had to receive both payloads to become a CAR T cell, lowering the risk of off-target effects. Reprogramming T cells inside the body would be quicker than removing and re-injecting them, which is how CAR-T-cell therapies are currently made.
Nature | 5 min read
Reference: Nature paper
Abel Prize for algebraic equations proof
Number theorist Gerd Faltings has won the 2026 Abel Prize, one of the most prestigious awards in mathematics. Faltings was awarded the prize for work that proved central results in the theory of algebraic equations that link whole numbers together. His proof confirmed a 1922 conjecture that states that equations called Diophantine equations can have at most a finite set of solutions, except in special cases. “It’s a nice sign of appreciation to get this prize,” Faltings says. “In mathematics, it’s clear what’s true and what is wrong. And I like this.”
New species rewrites the history of ‘shrooms
A newly described species of ‘magic mushroom’ could upend a popular theory of when psychedelic fungi popped up around the world. Researchers had thought that the magic mushrooms that grow in southern Africa were Psilocybe cubensis, the same species that grows in the Americas. However, closer inspection revealed that the African mushrooms are a separate species, now named Psilocybe ochraceocentrata, and last shared a common ancestor with P. cubensis approximately 1.5 million years ago. These findings scupper the hypothesis that P. cubensis was inadvertently introduced to the Americas by 16th-century settlers, but the research offers no clues as to its origins across the Atlantic.
Popular Science | 6 min read
Reference: Proceedings of the Royal Society B paper
Drug-makers chase weight-loss pills
Pill versions of GLP-1 obesity drugs such as semaglutide (sold as Wegovy) are showing promise in clinical trials. But they don’t seem to have quite the same impact on body weight as do injectables. And it’s difficult to get the relatively large drug molecules through the digestive system intact. Some pharma companies are working on small-molecule alternatives, but it’s tempting to stick to what’s now a tried-and-tested treatment. For many, a weight-loss percentage in the double digits from a pill will be good enough.
Features & opinion
Zap! What even is static electricity?
Static electricity is the scourge of the laundry room and the enemy of electronics — and might have played a part in zapping the first life on Earth into action. But much of how it happens is still a mystery. Now, researchers are turning to carefully controlled experiments to find the answers. A team has shown that materials ‘remember’ past contacts with each other — in which they get smoothed on the nanometre scale — and this determines how electric charge is transferred in future contacts. And carbon-carrying surface molecules seem to play a role in guiding which way charge is exchanged. “I’m not sure we’re making things simpler,” says experimental physicist Scott Waitukaitis. “But we’re doing what is necessary to make sense of this.”
Nature | 10 min read
Reference: Nature paper 1 & paper 2
Slow down on AI climate modelling
A 14-day global weather forecast can be produced by an AI-powered system two hours faster than by a physics-based one. But there’s a catch: as yet, scientists do not know how reliable AI-based predictions are when it comes to rare, extreme weather events such as heatwaves or major storms. Because AI systems are trained on historical data, they could falter when confronted with events that differ radically from anything they have seen previously. Before adopting AI in meteorology, there first need to be clear standards and agreed datasets for testing how well these models handle out-of-sample extreme events, argue physicists Shruti Nath and Tim Palmer.
Quote of the day
“Get them in with the rage baiting, then give them biology.”Evolutionary biologist Juliet Turner shares the advice she received from one of her supervisors after she faced a deluge of misogynistic abuse on a social-media post announcing that she’d completed her PhD. With so many new eyes on her profile — for better or for worse — she took the opportunity to share more about her field and the papers she’d co-authored. (Nature | 7 min read)
Today I’ve been tickled pink by this colourful cricket (Arota festae). Scientists once thought that this hot pink hue was the result of a genetic abnormality, but new research suggests that it’s just a natural phase of their development. The colour fades to a paler pink after some time, and eventually to green. The team suggest that this pattern mimics the ‘red flushing’ of the leaves of some plant species in the crickets’ native home, helping them to camouflage. Why not paint our inbox red (or pink) with your feedback on this newsletter? Please send any thoughts you have to briefing@nature.com.
Thanks for reading,
Jacob Smith, associate editor, Nature Briefing
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News from Science (AAAS)
“ArXiv, the pioneering preprint server, declares independence from Cornell.”
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Accessed on 19 March 2026, 1234 UTC.
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