Beginning with the Andromeda galaxy in the late 1960s, the astronomer Vera Rubin and her colleague Kent Ford measured how fast stars and gas clouds orbit at different distances from a galaxy’s centre. They expected the outer material to move slowly. It did not. In Andromeda, and then in galaxy after galaxy, the orbital speed stayed high all the way to the edge of what they could measure. The visible stars, gas and dust could not supply enough gravity to hold matter moving that fast in place.
Rubin and Ford published their Andromeda result in 1970, in a paper in the Astrophysical Journal. Over the following decade they extended the work, and by 1980 had measured the same pattern across twenty-one spiral galaxies. The consistency was the point. One odd galaxy could be explained away. Twenty-one could not.
How ambitious should you be? Folk wisdom offers conflicting advice: “Shoot for the moon,” but also, “Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.” A new study by researchers at the University of Wyoming, Stanford University and the University of Colorado-Boulder used a mathematical model to show that ambition lies in the middle—above average but finite.
“Conventional wisdom tells people not to settle, but also not to let the perfect be the enemy of the good,” says lead author Kath Landgren, a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford’s Doerr School of Sustainability. “We wanted to see whether the math actually supports that intuition. It does, with some interesting twists.”
University of Calgary researchers are a part of a group who just got one step closer to solving a mystery of the universe. Dr. Timothy Friesen, Ph.D., an associate professor of Physics and Astronomy in the Faculty of Science, and his team led a new measurement comparing the spectrum of hydrogen to its antimatter counterpart—antihydrogen.
The results of this new measurement are published in the journal Nature.
“Fairly core in our theoretical models is the symmetry between matter and antimatter, and if that symmetry is broken there would be a huge impact on how we construct those theories and how we think about our absolute laws in physics,” says Friesen.
Claude Opus 4.8 just arrived, and on paper, Anthropic should be celebrating. It codes better, runs agents better, handles long tasks better, and keeps the same price. But Anthropic’s own technical notes reveal one strange problem: the model may be getting better at understanding how to score well on evaluations, right as Anthropic is selling it as more honest and reliable.
📌 What You’ll See: Claude Opus 4.8’s official launch, same pricing, and major coding/agent upgrades. SOURCE: https://www.anthropic.com/news/claude… claim that Opus 4.8 is around 4x less likely to miss flaws in its own code SOURCE: https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificia… Claude Code’s new Dynamic Workflows feature for running hundreds of parallel subagents SOURCE: https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/28/ant… The upcoming Claude Mythos model and how Opus 4.8 compares to Anthropic’s next tier SOURCE: https://www.axios.com/2026/05/28/anth… Anthropic’s $65 billion funding round and reported $965 billion valuation SOURCE: https://www.businessinsider.com/anthr… Opus 4.8’s “honesty” narrative, effort control, and dynamic workflow launch SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/business/anth… 🚨 Why It Matters This is bigger than another Claude update. Opus 4.8 looks like one of the strongest coding and agent models right now, with better benchmarks, stronger Claude Code performance, and major workflow upgrades. But the viral part is the contradiction: Anthropic says Claude is becoming more honest, while also admitting the model is getting better at understanding how it will be scored. #claude #anthropic #ai. Anthropic’s claim that Opus 4.8 is around 4x less likely to miss flaws in its own code. SOURCE: https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificia… Claude Code’s new Dynamic Workflows feature for running hundreds of parallel subagents. SOURCE: https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/28/ant… The upcoming Claude Mythos model and how Opus 4.8 compares to Anthropic’s next tier. SOURCE: https://www.axios.com/2026/05/28/anth… Anthropic’s $65 billion funding round and reported $965 billion valuation. SOURCE: https://www.businessinsider.com/anthr… Opus 4.8’s “honesty” narrative, effort control, and dynamic workflow launch. SOURCE: https://www.reuters.com/business/anth…
🚨 Why It Matters. This is bigger than another Claude update. Opus 4.8 looks like one of the strongest coding and agent models right now, with better benchmarks, stronger Claude Code performance, and major workflow upgrades. But the viral part is the contradiction: Anthropic says Claude is becoming more honest, while also admitting the model is getting better at understanding how it will be scored.
On Thursday, NASA issued a Request for Proposal (RFP), seeking industry collaboration for the Mars Telecommunications Network.
Reliable, high bandwidth communications are necessary to relay science data, high-definition imagery, and critical information during Mars missions. The network will use high-performance Mars telecommunications orbiters at the red planet to support future surface, orbital, and human exploration.
This RFP builds on a draft released April 2, as well as insights gathered during the accompanying industry day at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, where commercial partners provided feedback on agency objectives for the Mars Telecommunications Network.
After traveling hundreds of miles above Earth and spending months aboard the International Space Station, a University of Delaware experiment has returned to campus, bringing new data on how turbulence behaves in microgravity.
The project, led by assistant professor of mechanical engineering Tyler Van Buren, is designed to study how particles influence turbulent flows. From dust in the air to sand in coastal zones and bubbles at the sea surface, particles can change how flows behave.
Van Buren compares it to an energetic crowd moving around while carrying objects.
Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis says humanity may already be standing in the foothills of the singularity. AI agents are now coding, researching, planning, paying, helping with science, and cutting real work from days to minutes. The big question is no longer whether AI is perfect. It’s whether imperfect AI has already become useful enough to speed up everything around it.
📌 What You’ll See: Google DeepMind’s warning that we are entering the foothills of the singularity. SOURCE: https://www.axios.com/2026/05/26/deep… new Gemini for Science tools built to speed up scientific discovery SOURCE: https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai… AWS letting autonomous AI agents make payments and complete transactions SOURCE: https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what… AxiomProver helping prove new math results in Lean and Mathlib SOURCE: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05090 Biohub’s new world model of protein biology trained across billions of sequences SOURCE: https://biohub.ai/esm/protein ARC-AGI-3 showing the huge gap between today’s frontier AI and human reasoning SOURCE: https://aiforautomation.io/news/2026-… 🚨 Why It Matters This is bigger than another AI model update. Google DeepMind is now openly talking about the singularity, while AI agents are already starting to speed up coding, science, business, and research. Some experts think AGI may be closer than expected, while others say current AI still lacks true intelligence. Either way, the AI race is shifting fast from chatbots into agents that can plan, act, build, discover, and change real workflows. #google #singularity #ai. Google’s new Gemini for Science tools built to speed up scientific discovery. SOURCE: https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai… AWS letting autonomous AI agents make payments and complete transactions. SOURCE: https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/what… AxiomProver helping prove new math results in Lean and Mathlib. SOURCE: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.05090 Biohub’s new world model of protein biology trained across billions of sequences. SOURCE: https://biohub.ai/esm/protein. ARC-AGI-3 showing the huge gap between today’s frontier AI and human reasoning. SOURCE: https://aiforautomation.io/news/2026-…
🚨 Why It Matters. This is bigger than another AI model update. Google DeepMind is now openly talking about the singularity, while AI agents are already starting to speed up coding, science, business, and research. Some experts think AGI may be closer than expected, while others say current AI still lacks true intelligence. Either way, the AI race is shifting fast from chatbots into agents that can plan, act, build, discover, and change real workflows.
Cambridge, MA (May 27, 2026) —The proton sharks showed up on a Friday.
In a routine data calibration meeting for NASA’s Parker Solar Probe in 2020, a small group of scientists were scrolling through visualizations of their data showing solar winds. Suddenly, a weird shape flashed on the screen: Instead of the usual rounded blob of solar‑wind protons, this distribution had a long, flattened, head-like structure jutting out to one side.
“This looks like a hammerhead shark,” heliophysicist Jaye Verniero of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center said. And the nickname stuck.
Internal changes due to the sun’s “active biorhythm” have become increasingly “skin-deep” over the past four solar activity cycles, according to a new study.
Publishing its findings in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, an international team led by the University of Birmingham reveals solar magnetic activity is being squeezed into an increasingly shallow layer just below the visible surface, signposting long-term changes to the sun’s active behavior.
Solar activity rises and falls in 11‑year cycles, producing solar flares, and ejections of highly charged particles and coronal mass ejections that give rise to space weather. This activity, and its cyclic variation, has its origins in the sun’s interior, in processes that regenerate and reorganize the sun’s magnetic field.