BreakWire Science Desk
Science
Science and research reporting from BreakWire's Science Desk.
Recent Articles
- US Markets and Mail Shut for Juneteenth Friday
No trading. No regular mail. Juneteenth shuts U.S. markets and federal services on Friday, with knock-on effects that run into next week.
- Toyota Faces California Suit Over 3-Wheel EV
A tiny three-wheel electric vehicle has put Toyota in federal court. The claim is bigger than the machine: technology meant for poor farmers was taken, then stalled.
- Snowpack crash leaves San Carlos Reservoir nearly empty
San Carlos Reservoir has been reduced to a puddle by a failed snow season upstream. The fish died fast; the warning for the Southwest is slower, and bigger.
- US beat Australia and fans split in mood
The scoreline was clean. The emotions weren't. American supporters roared after a 2-0 win over Australia, while Socceroos fans were left nursing a familiar kind of hope.
- Microsoft spots USB malware that steals cryptocurrency
Microsoft says it has found a lightweight backdoor built to steal cryptocurrency, with an old-school twist: it spreads by USB drive. The method is simple, cheap and effective enoug…
- Canadian report blames Titan flaws and groupthink
The official verdict is blunt: Titan wasn't just experimental, it was badly understood by the company that built it. Canadian investigators say design flaws and a culture of self-b…
- Trump’s Washington Overhaul Disrupts Capital Landmarks and Streets
Washington is being torn up in plain sight. Around the White House, fencing, demolition and renovation have turned familiar civic space into a construction zone.
- Egg Glut Slams Wholesale Prices and Farm Margins
Egg prices fell fast. Farmers' profits fell faster, and grocery shoppers still aren't getting the full break.
- US strike on Pacific boat kills three
A US military strike on a boat in the eastern Pacific killed three people Thursday. The attack adds to a fast-growing death toll in the administration’s campaign against alleged "n…
- SwitchBot’s battery fan turns a dull category interesting
SwitchBot has managed something rare: it made a fan feel new. Not revolutionary, just thoughtfully better in ways that matter once the power goes out or the heat sticks around.
- India Telegram ban sends users to VPNs
India’s block on Telegram didn’t make the app disappear. It pushed millions of users toward VPNs, workarounds and rival chat services instead.
- Study finds HPV vaccine cut cervical cancer deaths
England’s HPV vaccination program appears to be doing what public health campaigns rarely get credit for: quietly preventing deaths. The new study is strong, but it still measures …
- Five ways to keep children safe in heat
The heat is climbing, and children won't regulate body temperature as well as adults. That makes ordinary summer advice a bit less optional this weekend.
- Australia confirms first H5N1 bird flu case
Australia has logged its first confirmed H5N1 infection, closing the last continental gap for the virus outside Antarctica. The case is medically contained, but the map just change…
- Vance Takes Point on Trump’s Iran Deal Defense
JD Vance has become the administration’s most visible defender of Donald Trump’s Iran plan. That’s telling on the policy, and maybe even more telling on the politics.
- FDA panel backs Moderna shot after review standoff
The vote was unanimous. The process was not. Moderna’s mRNA vaccine cleared an FDA advisory panel after months of agency drama that said more about politics than science.
- NASA engineer Rohit Goeptar recounts path from Suriname
Rohit Goeptar's route to NASA didn't run straight. It crossed Suriname, California, South America again, and years of grinding work before landing at Kennedy Space Center.
- UK under-16 social media ban splits health debate
A proposed UK ban on social media for under-16s has drawn a familiar split: clinicians see harm reduction, teenagers see exile from ordinary life. Both are pointing at something re…
- Fossils suggest early land vertebrates skipped gilled youth
A set of fossils is forcing palaeontologists to revisit one of the oldest scenes in vertebrate history. The first animals edging onto land may not have passed through a frog-like, …
- State Department takes larger role in CDC overseas work
Washington is shifting control of overseas disease work away from the CDC and toward the State Department. Critics say that swaps scientific muscle for diplomatic machinery.
More Coverage Desks
- Marcus Holt — Business & Markets
- Priya Venkatesh — Technology
- Daniel Croft — Politics & Policy
- Nadia Al-Rashid — World Affairs
- Kevin McAllister — Sports
- Dr. Claire Fosse — Health & Science
- James Okafor — Science
- Sofia Reyes — Entertainment & Culture