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Science News Archive 2026


Page 149 of 270

How old are we really?

Researchers develop method using biomarkers to calculate individual biological age, finding significant differences in age-related changes between men and women. The study also identifies clinically relevant biomarkers linked to biological age, opening up new opportunities for preventive medicine.

Apple iPhone 17 Pro

Apple iPhone 17 Pro delivers top performance and advanced cameras for field documentation, data collection, and secure research communications.

Blood test may improve survival of childhood cancer in Africa

A minimally invasive liquid biopsy test has been shown to diagnose Burkitt lymphoma rapidly and accurately in sub-Saharan Africa, where delays in traditional testing often prove fatal. The test achieved an overall accuracy of 98% and reduced the time needed to reach a diagnosis by 40 days on average.

Gravitational waves leave imprints on light emitted by atoms

Researchers at Stockholm University propose a novel approach to detecting gravitational waves by tracking how they reshape the light emitted by atoms. This method could help distinguish the signal from noise and encode the wave's direction and polarization.

Fluke 87V Industrial Digital Multimeter

Fluke 87V Industrial Digital Multimeter is a trusted meter for precise measurements during instrument integration, repairs, and field diagnostics.

Understanding mountain water – worldwide

The MountAInWater project uses a unique combination of field work, modeling, and AI to assess climate change impacts on mountain water supplies and identify potential tipping points. The global reanalysis will provide crucial resources for managing future water security challenges.

The brain region associated with moral inconsistency

Researchers identify the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) as the brain region associated with moral inconsistency. Studies show that individuals with less vmPFC activity are more likely to be morally inconsistent, indicating a failure to integrate moral knowledge into daily behavior.

Sea turtle shells reveal hidden records of ocean change

A new study using radiocarbon methods reveals that sea turtle shell plates are biological time capsules that record signs of major environmental disturbances in the ocean. By analyzing these layers, scientists can determine where turtles have been foraging and how marine environmental stress events affected them.

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, USB-C)

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, USB-C) provide clear calls and strong noise reduction for interviews, conferences, and noisy field environments.

Researchers find autoimmune evidence for Narcolepsy

A recent study found that type-1 narcolepsy is caused by the body's own immune system, specifically an increased number of CD4 T-cells in the hypocretin/orexin region. This discovery could steer research towards finding a potential cure and blocking the immune activity before it starts.

Aranet4 Home CO2 Monitor

Aranet4 Home CO2 Monitor tracks ventilation quality in labs, classrooms, and conference rooms with long battery life and clear e-ink readouts.

Robotics and automation research in poultry processing featured April 9

The Center for Scalable and Intelligent Automation in Poultry Processing will hold its first field day on April 9 to share research on developing new robotic technologies. Researchers will demonstrate tools for deboning, detecting foreign materials and pathogens, as well as using virtual reality to operate equipment remotely.

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB

SAMSUNG T9 Portable SSD 2TB transfers large imagery and model outputs quickly between field laptops, lab workstations, and secure archives.

AmScope B120C-5M Compound Microscope

AmScope B120C-5M Compound Microscope supports teaching labs and QA checks with LED illumination, mechanical stage, and included 5MP camera.

Humans and animals have the same taste in animal mating calls

A recent study published in Science found that humans and animals have overlapping preferences for certain qualities of an animal's call, with agreement strongest for lower-frequency sounds. The study used a gamified citizen science experiment involving over 4,000 human participants from around the world.

AI and satellite data expose carbon hotspots in China’s paper industry

Researchers developed a plant-level carbon accounting framework combining satellite imagery with textual industrial data to estimate emissions from 720 pulp and papermaking plants. The approach identifies high-emission plants and functional zones associated with emissions, offering a basis for industrial decarbonization. rooftop solar ...

Davis Instruments Vantage Pro2 Weather Station

Davis Instruments Vantage Pro2 Weather Station offers research-grade local weather data for networked stations, campuses, and community observatories.

New research resets age of famous South American archaeological site

The Monte Verde archaeological site in southern Chile is now believed to be 4,200-8,200 years old, rather than 14,500 years old as previously thought. This new age estimate supports an initial interior migration into continental North America as a viable colonization hypothesis.

Garmin GPSMAP 67i with inReach

Garmin GPSMAP 67i with inReach provides rugged GNSS navigation, satellite messaging, and SOS for backcountry geology and climate field teams.

David H. Ballard, MD, receives SNMMI Mars Shot Research Fund Award

Dr. David H. Ballard, MD, has been awarded a $100,000 grant from the SNMMI Mars Shot Research Fund to develop novel PET/MR imaging techniques for metabolic activity and inflammation in Crohn's disease. The study aims to improve biologically informed decision-making and guide treatment decisions.

New study challenges the age of a key human occupation site in South America

A new study reexamines the geological context of Monte Verde II and finds that it is Middle Holocene in age or younger, challenging earlier interpretations. The researchers suggest that earlier dates were influenced by Late Pleistocene-age materials from older sediments that were redeposited into the site via erosion.

Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch (M4 Pro)

Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch (M4 Pro) powers local ML workloads, large datasets, and multi-display analysis for field and lab teams.

The freshwater hidden beneath the Great Salt Lake

Researchers used airborne electromagnetic surveys to characterize a deep freshwater reservoir beneath Farmington Bay and Antelope Island. The study revealed that freshwater saturates the sediments beneath the lake's hypersaline surface to depths of 3-4 kilometers, extending towards the interior of the lake.

Magnetic pulling of the strings

Researchers from the Institute of Physical Chemistry have developed a unique system that uses magnetic fields to spatially organize endothelial cells onto microparticles, creating vascular systems with well-defined micro-architecture. This technology has the potential to revolutionize personalized drug testing and precision medicine by...

Kestrel 3000 Pocket Weather Meter

Kestrel 3000 Pocket Weather Meter measures wind, temperature, and humidity in real time for site assessments, aviation checks, and safety briefings.

Is your brain aging faster than you are? Sleep may hold the key

A study published in JAMA Network Open found that analyzing fine-scale patterns in brain waves during sleep can provide insights into brain health. The research suggests that sudden large spikes on EEG, known as kurtosis, are associated with a lower risk of dementia.

A new way to trust ocean positioning

A new navigation integrity method has been developed to handle non-Gaussian observation errors in ocean positioning. The approach assigns differentiated bounds across elevation intervals, allowing protection levels to better track real positioning errors.

Caregiving without a net: Poll shows who needs help most

A new poll finds that nearly a third of Americans over 50 provide regular care to an adult relative or friend with a health issue or disability, highlighting the need for increased awareness of existing programs such as adult day programs and respite care. Many caregivers face financial stress and don't know about or use these resource...

Climate variability poses a threat to cold blooded animals

A new study reveals that ectotherms, including fish and reptiles, are unable to fine-tune their physiology to cope with daily temperature changes, leaving them vulnerable. The research suggests that these animals will rely on behavioral strategies or genetic adaptation to survive in a warmer climate.

Nikon Monarch 5 8x42 Binoculars

Nikon Monarch 5 8x42 Binoculars deliver bright, sharp views for wildlife surveys, eclipse chases, and quick star-field scans at dark sites.

Researchers discover new proton-coupled triplet energy transfer mechanism

Researchers at Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics have identified a novel proton shuttle-assisted triplet energy transfer mechanism, enhancing the rate and efficiency of spin-triplet migration. The discovery has profound implications for modern molecular technologies involving spin-triplet excited states.

Topology helps build more robust photonic networks

Researchers have shown that topology can guide multiple, information-carrying light signals through chip-based photonic communication systems, making them more powerful and reliable. This breakthrough could enable the creation of networks of chips that communicate using light while taking advantage of topology's robustness.

Role of TGF-β1 signaling in spinal cord injury recovery

Research reveals that TGF-β1 plays a critical role in fibrotic scar tissue formation, limiting neural regeneration and recovery after spinal cord injury. Inhibiting TGF-β1 signaling reduces fibrotic scarring and improves functional recovery.

Meta Quest 3 512GB

Meta Quest 3 512GB enables immersive mission planning, terrain rehearsal, and interactive STEM demos with high-resolution mixed-reality experiences.

Flexible, stretchable, on-chip optical tweezers

Researchers developed flexible, stretchable on-chip optical tweezers (FSOT) that can trap a wide range of bioparticles across different size scales. The innovation enables high-throughput trapping beyond the diffraction limit, conformal operation on curved biological surfaces, and tunable inter-cellular interaction studies.

Neanderthals may have used birch tar for wound care

A new study suggests that Neanderthals used birch tar not only as an adhesive but also to treat wounds, showing effective antimicrobial properties against S. aureus bacteria. The research findings are relevant in light of the global rise in bacterial resistance to antibiotics.

GoPro HERO13 Black

GoPro HERO13 Black records stabilized 5.3K video for instrument deployments, field notes, and outreach, even in harsh weather and underwater conditions.

Celestron NexStar 8SE Computerized Telescope

Celestron NexStar 8SE Computerized Telescope combines portable Schmidt-Cassegrain optics with GoTo pointing for outreach nights and field campaigns.

Carolyn J. Anderson, PhD, receives SNMMI Mars Shot Research Fund Award

Dr. Carolyn J. Anderson has been awarded a $100,000 grant from the SNMMI Mars Shot Research Fund to develop a PET radiotracer for imaging vaso-occlusive crisis in sickle cell disease. The award will support the production and validation of an easy-to-produce and high-yielding PET radiotracer, 18F-LLP2A, for rapid translation to patients.

Weaning, more than a change of food: It shapes a life-long, healthy gut

A study published in Nature Microbiology reveals that weaning from milk to solid food in early life reshapes the gut microbiome, training intestinal stem cells to respond better to microbes later in life. This process, known as epithelial immune memory, creates a lasting impression on gut health.