Friday, June 5, 2026

Week in Science: What's the biggest galaxy in the universe?

Deep surveys of the sky have turned up galaxies vastly larger than our own.                    

June 5—This week in science, powerful new weight-loss drugs come with their own health risks. Plus, mathematicians devise guardrails for using AI in their discipline, and archeologists discover the oldest cave art in the U.K. in Wales. All that and more below.

Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor

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Top Stories
What’s the biggest galaxy in the universe?

Deep surveys of the sky have turned up galaxies vastly larger than our own. Are there even bigger ones yet to be seen?

New powerful GLP-1 drugs drop a lot of weight fast. How does that affect health?

New-generation GLP-1 drugs, such as retatrutide, are achieving higher rates of weight loss. How much weight is too much and too fast to lose?

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Mathematicians sign declaration to rein in AI use

A group of researchers have proposed rules to prevent artificial intelligence from overpowering humans in math

Microsoft’s new quantum computer chip has a fundamental problem

Microsoft’s announcement of a new quantum computing breakthrough with its Majorana 2 chip continues a trend of bold claims followed by scant evidence

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For 100 years, scientists thought these red markings were natural—now researchers say they’re ancient human art

A new analysis of red lines inside a cave in Wales suggests they were made deliberately by ancient humans some 17,000 years ago

NASA’s Hubble captures gorgeous new photo of a spiral galaxy as it wanders through the Virgo Cluster

Messier 88 is an active galaxy with a central supermassive black hole that is gobbling up gas and dust

New protein-folding AI predicts the structures of 1 billion proteins

The new open-source atlas, generated by an AI tool called ESMFold2, vastly increases the known protein universe

China launches rival rocket to SpaceX Falcon 9 for the first time

China apparently didn’t issue any airspace or maritime notices ahead of the maiden launch of this rocket on Monday

How Gödel numbers let you do math with math itself

By encoding mathematical statements into numbers, mathematician Kurt Gödel used ordinary arithmetic to check whether a statement can be proved

Trump administration takes aim at crucial ocean monitoring network

The Ocean Observatories Initiative has been collecting data on physical, chemical, geological and biological conditions in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans for the past decade

Top U.S. science funder slows research grants to universities

It's not clear why the National Science Foundation may be limiting funding to certain U.S. universities

A new Ebola outbreak has killed hundreds—and the U.S. response is alarming experts

A deadly Ebola outbreak is spreading fast—and U.S. cuts to foreign aid are making it worse

Are memories transferable — or edible?

Math and Science News from Quanta Magazine
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QUALIAALL TOPICS
 

Are Memories Transferable — or Edible?

By CLAIRE L. EVANS

In the 1960s, worm-training experiments and their strange implications captivated the nation. Our columnist follows the neuroscientists who have attempted to recapture the magic.

Read the article

THE JOY OF WHY
 

Season Five Preview of ‘The Joy of Why’

STEVEN STROGATZ and JANNA LEVIN

The podcast is returning with 12 all-new episodes that will explore the biggest questions in basic science and mathematics.


Read the article

ORIGINS OF LIFE
 

The Dirt That Refused
To Die

By SIDDHANT PUSDEKAR

Lifelike biochemistry continued to unfold in sterilized soil for six years, pointing to a metabolic theory for how biology began.

Read the article

QUANTUM GRAVITY
 

Entanglement Builds Space-Time. Now “Magic” Gives It Gravity.

By CHARLIE WOOD

In holographic theories, physicists may have traced the pliability of space-time to its quantum roots: a measure of quantumness known as “magic.”

Read the article

THE QUANTA PODCAST
 

What Actually Causes Lightning?

Podcast hosted by HANNAH WATERS
with CHARLIE WOOD

Chains of high-energy electron avalanches may very likely be what makes clouds glow, flicker, and flash with gamma rays. But are they the elusive cause of lightning?

Listen (Apple) | Listen (Spotify)

Read the article

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Scientist Pankaj

Week in Science: What's the biggest galaxy in the universe?

Deep surveys of the sky have turned up galaxies vastly larger than our own.                     ...