JWST is designed to observe the early universe, looking back to less than a billion years after the Big Bang, approximately 13 billion years ago, to study the first galaxies and objects formed during that era.
The galaxies were brighter and larger than expected, suggesting they evolved faster than current theories of galaxy formation predict, which challenges existing models of early universe evolution.
The nitroplast is a new organelle found in marine algae that fixes nitrogen, converting nitrogen gas into usable forms like ammonia. Its discovery is significant because it is the first nitrogen-fixing organelle found in eukaryotes, potentially offering insights into reducing the need for nitrogen fertilizers in agriculture.
The discovery could lead to the development of crops that can fix their own nitrogen, reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers, which have significant environmental impacts.
Researchers discovered that the mantle waves generated during rifting zones spread laterally, affecting continental plates far beyond the rift zones, which could explain the formation of high plateaus and the distribution of diamonds.
The technique compares the frequency and length of identical DNA sequences in ancient individuals to determine their degree of relatedness, providing insights into social structures and inheritance patterns in ancient societies.
Lenacapavir, an injectable drug given every six months, showed 100% efficacy in preventing HIV infections in a trial involving 5,000 adolescent girls and young women in Africa, and 99.9% efficacy in a more diverse population trial.
Lenacapavir offers a long-acting, six-month injection that simplifies HIV prevention, overcoming the challenges of daily oral pills, such as adherence issues and stigma, making it a promising tool in the fight against HIV.
The trials faced issues with blinding participants, data collection, and concerns about patient safety, including allegations of trial participants being pressured to underreport negative outcomes and incidents of abuse during therapy sessions.
El Niño contributed to the record temperatures by boosting global temperatures, but the rapid onset and lingering effects were unusual, suggesting a complex interplay between natural climate patterns and human-driven warming.
ITER, originally scheduled to be completed in 2025, is now expected to be finished in 2034, with initial power-producing experiments planned for 2039. The delay is partly due to challenges in securing the necessary fuel, tritium.
The UK is pursuing a more ambitious timeline by building a prototype power-producing reactor that could connect to the grid by the 2040s, skipping the experimental phase seen in other projects like ITER.
First up this week, Breakthroughs Editor Greg Miller joins producer Meagan Cantwell to discuss Science’s 2024 Breakthrough of the Year). They also discuss some of the other scientific achievements that turned heads this year, from ancient DNA and autoimmune therapy, to precision pesticides, and the discovery of a new organelle.
Next, host Sarah Crespi is joined by news staffers to catch up on threads they’ve been following all year. First a bumpy road for certain medicines. Editor Kelly Servick discusses the regulatory hurdles for psychedelic drugs and immunotherapy treatments for Alzheimer’s disease. Then we hear from Staff Writer Paul Voosen about why scientists think this will be the hottest year on record. Finally, what happened with fusion power this year? Staff Writer Daniel Clery brings updates.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy).
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Greg Miller; Meagan Cantwell; Kelly Servick; Daniel Clery; Paul Voosen