Daily Snapshot

Science headlines for Monday, March 23, 2026

Science headlines for 2026-03-23 focused on 3 major developments: 1) NASA Data Hackathon Inspires Community Action (NASA Breaking News) 2) Science Through Shadows: How Astronomical Alignments Reveal the Universe (NASA Breaking News) 3) Carbon Capture Technology Is Helping This Pub Make Beer (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 2026-03-23, 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. NASA Data Hackathon Inspires Community Action

    Sources: #1 NASA Breaking News
  2. Science Through Shadows: How Astronomical Alignments Reveal the Universe

    Sources: #2 NASA Breaking News
  3. Carbon Capture Technology Is Helping This Pub Make Beer

    Sources: #3 NYT Science

Top 10 Stories

Ranked by daily score
  1. NASA Data Hackathon Inspires Community Action
    #1 Score 73
    NASA Data Hackathon Inspires Community Action

    On Jan. 31, students, library staff, researchers, and community members gathered at the University of Florida’s (UF) Marston Science Library for the Environmental Monitoring through Education, Research, and Geospatial Engagement (EMERGE) NASA Data Hackathon. This initiative empowers libraries, educators, and individuals to engage in public health and environmental science using real-world data tools and citizen […]

    NASA Breaking News 4 hours ago
  2. Science Through Shadows: How Astronomical Alignments Reveal the Universe
    #2 Score 61
    Science Through Shadows: How Astronomical Alignments Reveal the Universe

    When one celestial object passes in front of another, it can cast a shadow that travels across space – and sometimes across Earth. These moments of alignment, known as eclipses, occultations, and transits, allow scientists to study distant objects in remarkable ways. By observing how light changes when an object briefly blocks another, astronomers can measure sizes and shapes, detect atmospheres, and refine the orbits of asteroids and planets.

    NASA Breaking News 6 hours ago
  3. Carbon Capture Technology Is Helping This Pub Make Beer
    #3 Score 55
    Carbon Capture Technology Is Helping This Pub Make Beer

    A pub in California is pulling carbon dioxide from the air to carbonate pints. If the business model works, it could give the broader carbon-capture industry a boost.

    NYT Science 10 hours ago
  4. See NASA’s GUARDIAN Catch a Tsunami
    #4 Score 49
    See NASA’s GUARDIAN Catch a Tsunami

    A new data visualization illustrates how an experimental NASA technology can provide extra lead time to communities in the path of a tsunami. Called GUARDIAN (GNSS Upper Atmospheric Real-time Disaster Information and Alert Network), the software detects slight distortions in satellite navigation signals to spot hazards on the move.. The animation breaks down a real-life […]

    NASA Breaking News 7 hours ago
  5. The Weather Is Getting Wilder, and Some See a Dire Signal in the Data
    #5 Score 48
    The Weather Is Getting Wilder, and Some See a Dire Signal in the Data

    Several of the Earth’s systems are changing faster than predicted as global temperatures rise, scientists say.

    NYT Science 10 hours ago
  6. SWOT Mission Unlocks a New View of Our Waterways
    #6 Score 45
    SWOT Mission Unlocks a New View of Our Waterways

    Explore how rivers move, change, and sustain life across the planet with SWOT data.

    NASA Breaking News 8 hours ago
  7. NASA’s Hubble, Webb Telescopes Survey Pinwheel Galaxy
    #7 Score 40
    NASA’s Hubble, Webb Telescopes Survey Pinwheel Galaxy

    This March 16, 2026, image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope takes a closer look at the core of Messier 101, also known as the Pinwheel Galaxy. At 25 million light-years away, M101 is one of the closest “face-on” spiral galaxies to us. With that in mind, Hubble’s ultraviolet, visible, […]

    NASA Breaking News 9 hours ago
  8. Most people get food’s environmental impact completely wrong, study finds
    #8 Score 36
    Most people get food’s environmental impact completely wrong, study finds

    People often get the environmental impact of food wrong, according to new research. While many assume processed foods are the worst, they tend to overlook the surprisingly high impact of items like nuts and underestimate how damaging beef really is. These misunderstandings come from relying on simple categories like “animal vs. plant” rather than the full picture.

    ScienceDaily 17 hours ago
  9. #9 Score 13
    World’s first quantum battery could enable ultra fast charging

    Scientists in Australia have demonstrated a prototype quantum battery that could revolutionize energy storage. By harnessing quantum effects, it can absorb energy in a rapid “super absorption” event, enabling much faster charging than conventional batteries. Even more surprisingly, the system becomes more efficient as it scales up. The research opens the door to ultra-fast, next-generation energy technologies.

    ScienceDaily 22 hours ago
  10. #10 Score 4
    Scientists twisted a mysterious superconductor and got a shocking result

    A decades-old superconducting mystery just took a surprising turn. Strontium ruthenate, a material that conducts electricity with zero resistance at low temperatures, has long puzzled scientists with hints of an exotic, complex superconducting state. But by carefully twisting and distorting ultra-thin crystals, researchers found something unexpected: the material barely reacted at all. This challenges years of assumptions and suggests its behavior may be far simpler—or far stranger—than previously thought.

    ScienceDaily 23 hours ago