Primordial mini-moons may explain meteorite composition

A new Southwest Research Institute-led study proposes a solution to a longstanding puzzle in planetary science: What caused the concentration, assembly, and preservation of millimeter-sized, spherical mineral grains within the parent bodies of the most common meteorites? The work is published in the journal Science Advances.

Chondritic asteroids are ancient bodies that orbit the sun, while a chondrite meteorite is a rocky fragment that falls to Earth. Both contain primitive materials. Chondrite meteorites are largely made of chondrules—tiny, once-molten droplets of rock—embedded in a fine-grained matrix.

“While several mechanisms may have created the chondrules themselves, I have always been surprised by how homogeneous the chondritic asteroids seem to be,” said SwRI’s Hal L...

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This spray-on powder can stop life-threatening bleeding in 1 second

Fabrication and characterization of AGCL powder-type hemostatic material.

Excessive blood loss is the leading cause of death from combat injuries, making rapid bleeding control one of the biggest challenges in battlefield medicine. Researchers at KAIST, including an Army Major, have developed a next generation spray-on powder that can stop severe bleeding in about one second. The innovation could significantly improve survival for wounded soldiers while also offering broad potential for civilian emergency care.

The research team, led by Professor Steve Park of KAIST’s Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Professor Sangyong Jon of the Department of Biological Sciences, created a powder type hemostatic agent that quickly transforms into a strong hydrogel barrier whe...

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New AI add-on helps developers automate everyday programming tasks

New AI add-on helps developers automate everyday programming tasks
Overview of the Program-as-Weights paradigm. Credit: arXiv (2026). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2607.02512

Developers are increasingly relying on large language models (LLMs) for everyday computing tasks such as fixing bugs, explaining code and automating text-processing tasks like filtering logs.

However, it’s not as simple as entering or submitting a question and relying on the model to give you the answer. While humans easily understand these tasks and know exactly what they want, it is difficult to translate them into rigid computer code.

The cloud dilemma
As standard programming is often not up to the task, developers often use AI to handle jobs that are difficult to express as traditional rules...

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Astronomers spot an extremely rare galaxy mega-merger

JWST Image of Stephan's Quintet of galaxies, the left of which (NGC 7320) is much closer to Earth than the other four galaxies in the image. Credit - NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI
JWST Image of Stephan’s Quintet of galaxies, the left of which (NGC 7320) is much closer to Earth than the other four galaxies in the image. Credit – NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

Scale in the universe is hard to understand from a purely human perspective. Many times, the math just doesn’t sit well with our brains, which evolved to capture and process data about the world around us rather than grok the complexities of stellar dynamics and galaxy mergers. But every once in a while, astronomers find something that, if we can wrap our heads around the numbers, gives a sense of just how big the universe is.

That is precisely what a new paper, available on the arXiv preprint server from a group of astronomers led by Z.L...

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