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Latest from Live Science in News

Artemis II heat shield aced its blistering reentry, ghostly underwater photo reveals Scientists invent artificial neurons that 'talk' to real brain cells, paving way to better brain implants 'What are the odds': Superbright comet and exploding fireball meteor form near-perfect X over European castle Meet AGI CPU — a specialist processor that engineers believe will power the next wave of AI Egyptian mummy has part of the 'Iliad' in its abdomen, archaeologists discover Artemis moon landing could face long delay while NASA waits for next-generation spacesuits Gene therapy improves hearing in 90% of patients with inherited deafness in largest trial of its kind Oil spills from Iran war may contaminate water and food supply and threaten protected wildlife refuge NASA's Curiosity rover finds a surprising number of giant 'dragon scales' littered across Mars Watch an AI-powered table tennis robot beat elite players NASA shuts off another Voyager 1 instrument as humanity Florida is facing its most intense drought in 15 years. Here's how it got so bad and how long it will last. Neanderthal toddlers grew faster than modern humans, probably because of the harsh environment they evolved in 'Nations need to prepare now': Key Atlantic ocean current is much closer to collapse than scientists thought New blood test aims to spot liver scarring before it paves the way to cancer A giant 'shadow' has been creeping across Mars for 50 years — and scientists aren't sure why Bruce the parrot is missing his upper beak —‬ but that hasn't stopped him from becoming an undefeated… Scientists identify main cause of extreme nausea and vomiting in pregnancy Naked mole rats wage bloody wars of succession to choose a new queen — but one colony did something scientists… Lyrid meteor shower 2026: See spring's first rain of 'shooting stars' peak in moonless skies $3 million prize goes to duo whose research led to first sickle cell CRISPR therapy 700-year-old mummy from Bolivia contains earliest confirmed evidence of strep throat bacteria in the Americas New pain-relief opioid could be much less addictive than morphine, rodent study finds Experimental drug doubles one-year survival in pancreatic cancer Science news this week: Physicists witness faster-than-light darkness pinpricks, humans are still evolving, and some… Archaeologists discover perfectly circular ancient Egyptian temple that may have been used for sacred water rituals 2 supermassive black holes may collide 100 years from now ‪—‬ and Earth would feel it Anglo-Saxon burial holds an older sister cradling her little brother after they both died 1,400 years ago, possibly of… Colorado River may have pooled and spilled over to form the Grand Canyon, solving a long-standing mystery ‪—‬… 'We all screamed when it happened': Bright-green fireball meteor caught exploding over famous Viking raid site… Northern lights may be visible from several US states Friday and Saturday as giant hole opens up in sun Hackers used AI to steal hundreds of millions of Mexican government and private citizen records in one of the largest… The first black hole ever discovered is spewing 'dancing jets' at half the speed of light Stephen Hawking's black hole information paradox could be solved — if the universe has 7 dimensions 'Something's missing': Most thorough-ever study of the cosmos proves we still can't explain how the… 'Human evolution didn't slow down; we were just missing the signal': Large DNA study reveals natural selection led to more redheads and less male-pattern baldness New study confirms lobsters feel pain, driving scientists to call for a ban on boiling them alive This humanoid robot does all your housework for you ‪—‬ and its makers say it Ancient process that created rare earth elements discovered — and it could help us locate desperately needed deposits Strange mammal ancestor laid huge, leathery eggs —‬ and it was key to surviving the world 73 moon landings? NASA Triassic croc relative from Ghost Ranch, New Mexico finally identified after nearly 80 years in museum basement There were Physicists witness pinpricks of darkness moving faster than the speed of light ‪—‬ without breaking the laws of relativity Stone Age tombs in Scotland reveal 'webs of descent' among male relatives 'Oslo patient' likely cured of HIV after getting stem cell transplant from his brother, who is genetically… Antiseptic-tolerant germs spread through the air in hospitals, early study hints Homo erectus' tools include stunning geodes and fossils, possibly as a way to connect with the cosmos, study finds 'Really, really weird': Physicists entangle two moving atoms for the first time, validating 'spooky'… www.livescience.com Sperm quality is at its peak in the summer, study finds Scientists are trying to build a vaccine that works against almost any respiratory pathogen  — here's… Ancient Egyptian stone monument depicting a Roman emperor as a pharaoh discovered in Luxor AI for breakup texts? 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Keratin may act as a 'brake' for skin inflammation, pointing to potential treatments 'No one knows what they are': Researchers discover new type of cell that's seen only during pregnancy 16th-century silver coin discovered near Strait of Magellan marks the spot of a doomed Spanish colony How to see Comet PanSTARRS as it brightens in the night sky this week Diagnostic dilemma: Woman's 'biologically implausible' infection led her to sneeze 'worms' out… DNA reveals ancestry of man buried in Stone Age monument in Spain, but his religion remains a mystery 'So much magic': Artemis II shares first images from the far side of the moon, including new… AI 'mirages' mean tools used to analyze medical scans could fabricate their findings World's fattest parrot — on the verge of extinction 30 years ago — has record-breaking breeding season Physicists moved volatile antimatter by truck for the first time ever — paving the way for groundbreaking new… The Artemis II astronauts have just flown farther from Earth than any humans in history Artemis II moon flyby begins: How to watch and what to know AI-written code can beat humans at biomedical analysis, some studies find. What does that mean for the field? We went to Finland to hear about the new 'sand battery' that will turn stored renewable energy back into power… The hungriest black holes in the universe are running out of food, survey of 8,000 cosmic monsters reveals Antarctica hides huge caches of gold, silver, copper and iron. As the ice melts, countries may race to harvest them. Diabetes rates are lower in high-altitude environments ‪‪—‬ and scientists may have discovered why Shroud of Turin, claimed to be Jesus' burial cloth, contaminated with carrot and red coral DNA Science news this week: Artemis II lifts off, diabetes cured in mice, and smog in China shapes Arctic storms Fossil site in China reveals bevy of complex creatures lived prior to the Cambrian explosion, including a… Cheap, decades-old transplant drug delays full onset of type 1 diabetes www.livescience.com Homo habilis is the earliest named human. But is it even human? Scientists mapped all the nerves of the clitoris for the first time Rare 'sungrazer' comet MAPS will shine superbright on Saturday ‪—‬ if it survives a dangerous… IBM quantum processor achieves highest fidelity calculations for the longest period of time on record A new tweak to Einstein's relativity could transform our understanding of the Big Bang Artemis II officially leaves Earth In photos: Artemis II Ancient children's teeth reveal a syphilis-like disease was spreading in Vietnam 4,000 years ago
Science news this week: Risky, lifesaving surgery performed on a baby in the womb, AI agent deletes a company database in 9 seconds, and the universe may end much sooner than expected
ben.turner@f · 2026-05-02 · via Latest from Live Science in News

This week's science news was filled with awe-inspiring medical breakthroughs, including the story of a risky surgery that saved an unborn baby from a rare lung disorder at just 25 weeks gestation.

Baby Cassian was diagnosed with congenital high airway obstruction syndrome during a second-trimester ultrasound, which required a first-of-its-kind surgery to save him while he was still in the womb. After the surgery, the doctors sealed up the womb, where he remained for another six weeks. Cassian was born in August 2025 and is now being weaned off respiratory support. Doctors say they could perform similar surgeries on other babies in the future.

Anthropic agent deletes company's database

'I violated every principle I was given': AI agent deletes company's entire database in 9 seconds, then confesses

A cartoon of a robot with the word "AI' on its chest sits behind a laptop with various error codes floating around it.

Generative AI agent Cursor, running on Claude Code, deleted PocketOS's entire database

(Image credit: danijelala via Getty Images)

The cost of putting hallucination-prone AI agents to work was displayed all too clearly this week, with reports that the coding agent Cursor, which is powered by Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.6, deleted an entire production database and its backups in just nine seconds.

The stricken company was PocketOS, which makes software for rental car companies. After the swift deletion, the company traced the culprit back to the coding agent, and the AI bot reportedly confessed that it had guessed, acted without permission, and failed to understand the command before running it.

As AI agents are integrated into more and more key digital infrastructure, this is just the beginning, PocketOS founder Jer Crane said.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

"We are not the first," he wrote. "We will not be the last unless this gets airtime."

Discover more technology news

New data center will be partially powered by human brain cells for the first time

Google AI breakthrough means chatbots use six times less memory during conversations, without compromising performance

How everything you do is being monitored in an AI-fueled 'surveillance capitalism system' that's ramping up aggressively

Life's Little Mysteries

What's the difference between a lion and a tiger?

Two images are side by side, the one on the left showing an orange-and-white striped tiger sitting in a lush forest with the image on the right as a male lion with an orange mane sitting in a field.

These big cats live in different geographical areas, but how else do they differ?

(Image credit: Zocha_K and KvdB50 via Getty Images)

The answer is obviously stripes and manes, you may say ‪—‬ but beyond the superficial, there's a menagerie of fascinating distinctions between the two iconic big cats. Live Science sunk its claws into the answers here.

If you enjoyed this, sign up for our Life's Little Mysteries newsletter

The universe is much closer to the end

The universe may end trillions of years sooner than we thought

A swirl of purple and blue gas dotted with red stars moves around a central glowing core, blending together to make a giant spiral galaxy.

Astronomers use twinkling stars in galaxies like this one (NGC 5468) to confirm the universe’s expansion rate. But what if cosmic expansion were to slow down and reverse? New research looks at the implications on the lifespan of the universe.

Scientists used to think our universe would live on for trillions of years.

But a new model of the cosmos has brought an even older idea that favors a more dramatic ending to our cosmos: an inward collapse known as the Big Crunch. That's if its assumptions about dark energy (the force responsible for the universe's accelerating expansion) weakening over time hold out.

Nonetheless, if a Big Crunch does occur, it won't play out for another 33 billion years — so no need to cancel any plans.

Discover more space news

NASA rover uncovers rock with 7 new organic molecules on Mars — the 'most diverse collection' ever seen

Can NASA and SpaceX really build a moon base in the next 10 years?

Used SpaceX rocket could crash into the moon's Einstein crater this summer, report predicts

Also in science news this week

Some fungi can influence the weather ‪—‬ and now we know how they do it

Neanderthals' brains weren't to blame for their demise, new study suggests

'Lifelong monogamy' and 'half orphans': DNA analysis reveals clues about life on the Roman frontier after the fall of Rome

'The detectors never stopped beeping!' Nearly 3,000 coins discovered in field are Norway's largest Viking hoard on record

Mount Etna is like no other volcano on Earth, representing 'a new type of volcanism,' new research reveals

'If astrological compatibility exists, its effects should be observable': How one study of 20 million people shows star signs have no influence on romantic compatibility

City birds appear to like men more than women, but experts have no idea why

Something for the weekend

If you're looking for things to keep you busy over the weekend, here are some of the best interviews, opinion pieces and quizzes published this week.

'One of the most rapid transitions that I've seen': NOAA forecaster on how this year's El Niño could shatter records [Interview]

'I'm more hopeful that birds can endure than maybe even our own species': Paleontologist Steve Brusatte on why birds are the ultimate survivors [Interview]

'It cuts both ways': Positive tipping points can restore wrecked ecosystems — we just need to trigger them, Earth system scientist Tim Lenton says [Interview]

Drilling has begun at our sacred site Pe' Sla, setting a dangerous precedent for Indigenous lands across the country. It must be stopped. [Opinion]

Weapons of the world quiz: Can you identify these historical objects of war? [Quiz]

Science news in pictures

Hubble revisits stunning Trifid Nebula after 30 years, and spots a growing jet of energy — Space photo of the week

Glowing shapes of brown gas and dust swirl against a dark blue starry background

A green fireball lit up the skies of Lindisfarne Castle in the United Kingdom.

(Image credit: NASA, ESA, STScI. Image processing: J. DePasquale (STScI))

This stunning image shows the cosmic nursery Messier 20, which is nicknamed the "Cosmic Sea Lemon."

The new image, released April 20, was snapped by the Hubble Space Telescope, which captured the same region of space nearly 30 years ago. Not much has changed over that time; ‪it's a blink of an eye on a cosmic scale. Yet a growing jet of energy is being unleashed by a newborn star, which makes the nebula resemble a unicorn.

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