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Scientists Just Took A Major Step Towards One Of Sci-Fi’s Biggest Tropes

Major milestone in the viability of cryonic suspension in the form of revival of cells after vitrification. Vitrification is basically the use of chemical fixation at ultra cold temperatures, kinda like antifreeze. It prevents ice crystals forming in your cells, preventing them from being torn apart.

It’s INSANELY toxic, so solving that problem would mean we can really revive people in suspension who underwent vitrification (which is standard practice at ALCOR for a long time now).

That said, we still will need ways to repair whatever disease or injury that the patient actually died from. 😁👍


Researchers in Germany have developed a technique to vitrify mouse brain tissue and then thaw it out, all without significant loss of function.

Implantable islet cells could control diabetes without insulin injections

Most diabetes patients must carefully monitor their blood sugar levels and inject insulin multiple times per day, to help keep their blood sugar from getting too high. As a possible alternative to those injections, MIT researchers are developing an implantable device that contains insulin-producing cells. The device encapsulates the cells, protecting them from immune rejection, and it also carries an onboard oxygen generator to keep the cells healthy.

This device, the researchers hope, could offer a way to achieve long-term control of type 1 diabetes. In a new study, they showed that these encapsulated pancreatic islet cells could survive in the body for at least 90 days. In mice that received the implants, the cells remained functional and produced enough insulin to control the animals’ blood sugar levels.

“Islet cell therapy can be a transformative treatment for patients. However, current methods also require immune suppression, which for some people can be really debilitating,” says Daniel Anderson, a professor in MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering and a member of MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and Institute for Medical Engineering and Science. “Our goal is to find a way to give patients the benefit of cell therapy without the need for immune suppression.”

From stillage to storage: Turning bourbon byproducts into supercapacitors

The state of Kentucky produces 95% of the world’s bourbon, and all that bourbon leaves behind an enormous amount of waste grain, called stillage. Now, researchers at the University of Kentucky have developed a process to transform that stillage into electrodes. With the bourbon byproduct electrodes, they created supercapacitors that could store more nergy than similarly sized commercial devices. The researchers will present their results at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society (ACS Spring 2026), held in Atlanta from March 22 to 26.

Turning bourbon stillage into carbon Josiel Barrios Cossio, a graduate student who will be presenting the work, first learned about the scale of American whiskey’s waste problem while working on a research traineeship to examine food, energy and water issues in Kentucky. “From the final volume of bourbon produced, you get 6 to 10 times that amount of stillage as waste,” says Barrios Cossio, “so it’s a big deal.”

This stillage is a sloppy mash that’s typically sold to farmers as livestock feed or a soil additive. But it is difficult to transport while wet, and it is expensive to dry.

Subaru telescope captures comet 3I/ATLAS composition change

The Subaru Telescope observed the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS on January 7, 2026, after it made its closest approach to the sun. By observing colors in the coma around the comet, astronomers could estimate the ratio of carbon dioxide to water. This ratio is much lower than that inferred from earlier observations by space telescopes. These findings suggest that the chemistry of the coma is evolving over time and offers clues to the structure of comet 3I/ATLAS. The work appears in The Astronomical Journal.

Comet 3I/ATLAS (C/2025 N1) has garnered much attention as a comet which originated outside of the solar system. A research group led by Yoshiharu Shinnaka of the Koyama Space Science Institute, Kyoto Sangyo University, used the Subaru Telescope to observe comet 3I/ATLAS after perihelion, the comet’s closest approach to the sun. The team applied analytical methods and expertise accumulated through investigations of solar system comets to the data.

From this analysis, the team was able to estimate the ratio of carbon dioxide (CO2) to water (H2O) in the coma, the cloud of gas around the nucleus of the comet. Because the gas in the coma comes from the nucleus, the coma composition provides hints to the composition of the nucleus.

Copper’s ‘gatekeeper’ could unlock cleaner energy future

A common mineral hiding in plain sight could hold the key to making copper production cleaner, faster and more efficient, just as global demand for the metal surges to power the energy transition. In an article published in Nature Geoscience, researchers from Monash University’s School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment describe why chalcopyrite, the source of around 70% of the world’s copper, has remained so difficult to process, and how its hidden chemistry could be harnessed to unlock more sustainable extraction.

Despite being known for more than 300 years, chalcopyrite continues to frustrate scientists and industry alike, resisting low-temperature leaching and slowing efforts to extract copper from lower-grade ores. This inefficiency is a major bottleneck at a time when copper is critical for renewable energy systems, electric vehicles and modern infrastructure.

“Chalcopyrite is the world’s primary copper mineral, but it behaves in surprisingly complex ways that have limited how efficiently we can extract copper from it,” said study lead Professor Joël Brugger from the School of Earth, Atmosphere and Environment.

How multiple sclerosis kills neurons

MS is typically diagnosed when clinicians see lesions in the myelin-rich white matter of the brain on MRI scans. White matter is made of the nerves that link brain cells and it looks white on a brain scan.

The brain’s grey matter, which houses the “bodies” of the brain cells, can also have MS lesions, especially in its outer layers. These lesions are less common — and harder to see on a brain scan — but they are a sign of chronic and disabling MS.

The scientists wanted to learn more about the neurons that died in these grey-matter lesions, which express a gene called CUX2. In the first study, they looked at developing mouse brains to see how CUX2 neurons are born. This occurs early in life, when the brain is growing quickly, putting cells under tremendous stress.

The cells relied on a mechanism to repair their DNA as they rapidly multiplied, fanned out into the far reaches of the brain and wired up with one another. The mechanism depends on a stress-response gene called ATF4 to keep chromosomes intact. When the team removed ATF4, the growing neurons were rife with DNA damage, and this prevented the frontal part of the brain from forming.

In the second study, the team found DNA damage in grey matter lesions from people with MS involving the same neurons.

In mouse models of MS, the researchers saw that inflammation sparked chemical reactions that damaged DNA in CUX2 neurons. The repair systems that protect these neurons from the stresses of development could no longer keep up; and this led to brain damage.

Together, the two studies outline the natural way the brain’s outer layer neurons cope with DNA damage — and how that system breaks down in MS. ScienceMission sciencenewshighlights.

Phase-changing VO₂ turns methane into propane and hydrogen more efficiently

Converting methane, the primary component of natural gas, into higher alkanes and hydrogen, could be highly advantageous. Alkanes, such as propane and butane, are easier to transport than methane and are used in a wider range of industries. Hydrogen, on the other hand, is a promising clean fuel used to power electrochemical devices that can generate continuous power, known as fuel cells.

Over the past decades, some energy engineers have been exploring the possibility of converting methane into hydrogen or complex hydrocarbons using photocatalysts. These are materials activated by sunlight or other types of light and that can drive chemical reactions.

Researchers at Université de Lille—CNRS, Sorbonne Université and other institutes in France recently introduced a new strategy for the photocatalytic conversion of methane into propane, which is widely used for heating, cooking, and transportation.

Low-frequency wireless sensor tracks artery stiffening in real time with less interference

Wireless sensors used in wearable smart devices and medical equipment must be capable of detecting minute changes while maintaining high operational stability. However, existing technologies often utilize excessively high frequencies, leading to electromagnetic interference (EMI) or potential health risks to the human body. To address these fundamental issues, a Korean research team has developed a low-frequency-based wireless sensor technology.

A joint research team, led by Professor Seungyoung Ahn from the KAIST Cho Chun Shik Graduate School of Mobility and Professor Do Hwan Kim from the Department of Chemical Engineering at Hanyang University, has developed the “WiLECS” (Wireless Ionic-Electronic Coupling System), a low-frequency wireless electrochemical sensing platform that combines ion-based materials with wireless power transfer technology. The research is published in the journal Nature Communications.

Conventional wireless sensors suffer from low capacitance (the ability to store electrical charge), requiring high frequencies in the megahertz (MHz) range to compensate. However, these high-frequency methods can cause tissue heating or signal instability, limiting their practical application in clinical medical settings.

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