Daily Snapshot

Science headlines for Thursday, May 28, 2026

Science headlines for 2026-05-28 focused on 3 major developments: 1) NASA’s X-59 Prepares for First Supersonic Flight (NASA Breaking News) 2) I Am Artemis: Daniel Stubbs (NASA Breaking News) 3) Greenpeace’s Long War With a Pipeline Titan Enters a Strange New Phase (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 2026-05-28, 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’s X-59 Prepares for First Supersonic Flight

    Sources: #1 NASA Breaking News
  2. I Am Artemis: Daniel Stubbs

    Sources: #2 NASA Breaking News
  3. Greenpeace’s Long War With a Pipeline Titan Enters a Strange New Phase

    Sources: #3 NYT Science

Top 10 Stories

Ranked by daily score
  1. NASA’s X-59 Prepares for First Supersonic Flight
    #1 Score 76
    NASA’s X-59 Prepares for First Supersonic Flight

    NASA’s X-59 quiet supersonic research aircraft is preparing for some of its most significant flights yet. The X-plane is about to begin a new block of test flights that will include its first time flying faster than the speed of sound and other mission-critical objectives. “What comes next is the first time this one-of-a-kind aircraft […]

    NASA Breaking News 18 hours ago
  2. I Am Artemis: Daniel Stubbs
    #2 Score 67
    I Am Artemis: Daniel Stubbs

    Listen to this audio excerpt from Daniel Stubbs, NASA aerospace engineer: If you’ve driven through a cloud of dust and dirt that temporarily obscured your view, you’ve gotten a partial picture of a potential problem that NASA’s human landing systems for Artemis will face when they land on the Moon. Daniel Stubbs, an aerospace engineer […]

    NASA Breaking News 18 hours ago
  3. Greenpeace’s Long War With a Pipeline Titan Enters a Strange New Phase
    #3 Score 60
    Greenpeace’s Long War With a Pipeline Titan Enters a Strange New Phase

    This month, a North Dakota court barred Greenpeace from saying what it wanted in a European court, an unusual move. The environmental group says it is forging ahead.

    NYT Science 23 hours ago
  4. New Landsat Science Team Holds First In-Person Meeting
    #4 Score 57
    New Landsat Science Team Holds First In-Person Meeting

    From May 5 to 7, the Landsat Science Team meeting convened at the Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center in Sioux Falls, SD. Co-moderated by Landsat 8, 9, and 10 Project Scientist Chris Neigh, the three-day event officially introduced the new 2026–2030 Science Team members.

    NASA Breaking News 19 hours ago
  5. Happy, Bronx Zoo Elephant at Center of Animal Rights Case, Is Dead at 55
    #5 Score 53
    Happy, Bronx Zoo Elephant at Center of Animal Rights Case, Is Dead at 55

    Activists had sued in a bid to secure her the fundamental human right to bodily liberty. Zoo officials said she was well cared for and called the lawsuit frivolous.

    NYT Science 23 hours ago
  6. DNA solves 250-year-old mystery of the Seychelles’ lost crocodiles
    #6 Score 52
    DNA solves 250-year-old mystery of the Seychelles’ lost crocodiles

    Scientists have solved the mystery of the Seychelles’ vanished crocodiles using DNA from historic museum specimens. The reptiles were not a unique species after all, but an isolated population of saltwater crocodiles that likely drifted thousands of kilometers across the Indian Ocean.

    ScienceDaily 1 day ago
  7. Curiosity Blog, Sols 4900-4907: Pasadena, We Have a Drill Sample!
    #7 Score 51
    Curiosity Blog, Sols 4900-4907: Pasadena, We Have a Drill Sample!

    Written by Abigail Fraeman, Deputy Project Scientist at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Earth planning date: Friday, May 22, 2026 I spent this past weekend eagerly awaiting the downlink from Mars that would show us the results of Curiosity’s drill attempt at “Campo Marte.” A few weeks ago, when Curiosity drilled the “Atacama” […]

    NASA Breaking News 21 hours ago
  8. NASA Uses Mineralogical Marker to Understand Ancient Martian Climate
    #8 Score 46
    NASA Uses Mineralogical Marker to Understand Ancient Martian Climate

    Scientists analyzed 20 Martian samples collected by NASA’s Curiosity Rover and found that differences in hematite crystallite size at varying elevations could serve as a new mineralogical marker for understanding Mars’ ancient climate.

    NASA Breaking News 22 hours ago
  9. #9 Score 41
    Scottish wrens may be evolving into new species through island gigantism

    Tiny birds on remote Scottish islands are undergoing a dramatic evolutionary transformation. Scientists studying four isolated populations of British Wrens discovered that some island birds have grown astonishingly large — with the biggest St Kilda Wrens weighing more than twice as much as the smallest mainland birds. The research suggests these wrens are evolving independently, developing unique songs, appearances, and genetics that may eventually turn them into entirely new species.

    ScienceDaily 1 day ago
  10. #10 Score 32
    Forget LASIK: Safer, cheaper vision correction without lasers or surgery

    Researchers are developing a futuristic alternative to LASIK that reshapes the eye without lasers or incisions. Using mild electrical pulses and platinum contact lenses, they temporarily soften the cornea so it can be molded into a new shape. Early tests on rabbit eyes successfully corrected nearsightedness in about a minute while preserving the eye’s structure.

    ScienceDaily 1 day ago