Daily Snapshot

Science headlines for Friday, March 13, 2026

Science headlines for 2026-03-13 focused on 3 major developments: 1) Volunteers Find Oddly High Solar Flare Rates (NASA Breaking News) 2) Extra Extra! Extra Data Stream Added to the Daily Minor Planet! (NASA Breaking News) 3) Flowers Are Blooming in California’s Death Valley (NYT Science) Across these stories, coverage emphasized high-impact updates, policy shifts, and events with broad audience relevance. Together they provide a representative view of the day in science news before diving into each full report.

Why it matters: This snapshot shows where science attention concentrated on 2026-03-13, highlighting the themes, entities, and geographies that dominated publisher coverage. Because ranking blends freshness, engagement, and source diversity, it helps separate signal from noise. Use it as a quick daily briefing and then open the top stories for fuller context.

Key Points

3 highlights
  1. Volunteers Find Oddly High Solar Flare Rates

    Sources: #1 NASA Breaking News
  2. Extra Extra! Extra Data Stream Added to the Daily Minor Planet!

    Sources: #2 NASA Breaking News
  3. Flowers Are Blooming in California’s Death Valley

    Sources: #3 NYT Science

Top 10 Stories

Ranked by daily score
  1. Volunteers Find Oddly High Solar Flare Rates
    #1 Score 75
    Volunteers Find Oddly High Solar Flare Rates

    Patches of the Sun’s surface often show strong magnetic fields. These fields can emerge within a matter of hours, and can decay slowly or quickly, sometimes over days, weeks, or even months. Thanks to a new study about these long-lived active regions, we now know much more about the patches where these strong magnetic fields […]

    NASA Breaking News 5 hours ago
  2. Extra Extra! Extra Data Stream Added to the Daily Minor Planet!
    #2 Score 66
    Extra Extra! Extra Data Stream Added to the Daily Minor Planet!

    The Daily Minor Planet citizen science project is expanding! In addition to data received nightly from the Catalina Sky Survey’s Mt. Lemmon telescope in Arizona, the project’s science team is now processing images from the Bok 2.3-meter telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory. The Bok is a mighty telescope run by the University of Arizona’s […]

    NASA Breaking News 5 hours ago
  3. Flowers Are Blooming in California’s Death Valley
    #3 Score 59
    Flowers Are Blooming in California’s Death Valley

    Visitors are flocking to see a bonanza of wildflowers that has transformed this barren desert.

    NYT Science 11 hours ago
  4. NASA Selects Finalists in Student Aircraft Maintenance Competition
    #4 Score 52
    NASA Selects Finalists in Student Aircraft Maintenance Competition

    NASA has selected eight student teams as finalists in the 2026 Gateways to Blue Skies Competition, giving them the resources to help address a critical challenge for U.S. aviation: maintenance. Challenges facing the commercial aviation industry include a shortage of qualified maintenance workers and increasing demands to keep complicated aircraft running for longer. With Gateways to Blue Skies, NASA taps into student innovation to address some of the biggest […]

    NASA Breaking News 8 hours ago
  5. Trump Administration Readies Plans to Dismantle NCAR Research Lab
    #5 Score 47
    Trump Administration Readies Plans to Dismantle NCAR Research Lab

    Proposals include transferring a supercomputer to the University of Wyoming and shifting a space weather lab to a private company.

    NYT Science 12 hours ago
  6. NASA Armstrong to Host Partnership Days April 15-16
    #6 Score 45
    NASA Armstrong to Host Partnership Days April 15-16

    NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California, invites innovative companies, government agencies, and organizations to attend Partnership Days, scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, April 15 and 16, at the center. The event offers a unique opportunity to explore collaboration with NASA on cutting-edge research and development in areas such as aerospace, autonomy, sustainability, and […]

    NASA Breaking News 10 hours ago
  7. USBR Crack the Case Challenge
    #7 Score 42
    USBR Crack the Case Challenge

    NASA’s Center of Excellence for Collaborative Innovation (CoECI) assists in the use of crowdsourcing across the federal government. CoECI’s NASA Tournament Lab offers the contract capability to run external crowdsourced challenges on behalf of NASA and other agencies. This three-phase challenge invites geophysicists, sensing specialists, nondestructive testing experts, and creative problem-solvers (including AI/ML practitioners) from […]

    NASA Breaking News 10 hours ago
  8. Scientists crack a 20-year nuclear mystery behind the creation of gold
    #8 Score 30
    Scientists crack a 20-year nuclear mystery behind the creation of gold

    Gold and other heavy elements are born in some of the universe’s most violent events—but scientists still struggle to understand the nuclear steps that create them. Now, nuclear physicists have uncovered three key discoveries about how unstable atomic nuclei decay during the rapid neutron-capture process, the chain reaction responsible for forging elements like gold and platinum.

    ScienceDaily 21 hours ago
  9. Palisades Fire Recovery Tests L.A.’s Ability to Invest in Resilience
    #9 Score 23
    Palisades Fire Recovery Tests L.A.’s Ability to Invest in Resilience

    Palisades fire victims want to raise money for disaster hardening. Their idea could be a model — if it can get past L.A.’s most vexing housing problems.

    NYT Science 18 hours ago
  10. The surprising new ways bacteria spread without propellers
    #10 Score 19
    The surprising new ways bacteria spread without propellers

    Scientists at Arizona State University have uncovered surprising new ways bacteria move, even without their usual whip-like propellers called flagella. In one study, E. coli and salmonella were found to spread across moist surfaces by fermenting sugars and creating tiny fluid currents that carry them forward — a newly identified behavior researchers call “swashing.” In another study, a different group of bacteria was shown to control its movement using a microscopic molecular “gearbox” that can reverse direction like a biological snowmobile.

    ScienceDaily 22 hours ago