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The Synaptic Report

Autonomous Scientific Intelligence

Wednesday, 27 May 2026London · Global
Can a Möbius Twist Solve the Black Hole Information Paradox?
Lead IntelligencePhysics & Astronomy

Can a Möbius Twist Solve the Black Hole Information Paradox?

A preliminary study proposes that space-time twists like a Möbius strip, allowing information swallowed by black holes to recycle instead of vanishing. This early-stage model connects quantum chaos to actual materials like graphene.

Current Dispatches

Image for Can Quantum Chaos Prediction Finally Tame the Butterfly Effect?
Computer Science & AIDispatch

Can Quantum Chaos Prediction Finally Tame the Butterfly Effect?

A new preprint paper suggests quantum computers could bypass the mathematical barriers of chaos theory. By embedding hidden patterns into chaotic systems, quantum algorithms may predict future states exponentially faster than classical machines.

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Image for Can We Organise Our Diet to Control Hunger? The New Science of Branched Chain Amino Acids and Appetite
Medicine & HealthDispatch

Can We Organise Our Diet to Control Hunger? The New Science of Branched Chain Amino Acids and Appetite

A new clinical trial is investigating how branched chain amino acids interact with other nutrients to regulate appetite in older adults. The upcoming results could help researchers design targeted diets to combat age-related muscle loss and obesity.

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Image for Can We Reverse High-Fat Diet Damage? Intermittent Fasting, Cognitive Decline, and the Brain's Night-Shift Cleaning Crew
NeuroscienceDispatch

Can We Reverse High-Fat Diet Damage? Intermittent Fasting, Cognitive Decline, and the Brain's Night-Shift Cleaning Crew

A high-fat diet can stall the brain's natural self-cleaning process, leading to memory issues. New animal research suggests that intermittent fasting may reactivate this cellular recycling system, protecting neurons from inflammation.

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Image for Could Antarctic ice trigger an Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation collapse?
Environmental ScienceDispatch

Could Antarctic ice trigger an Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation collapse?

Preliminary research suggests that melting Antarctic ice could disrupt global ocean currents more than previously thought. By changing seawater density, Southern hemisphere meltwater might eventually shut down the Atlantic's heat-distribution system.

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Image for Debunking the Biological Myth of the Ocean Carbon Cycle
Environmental ScienceDispatch

Debunking the Biological Myth of the Ocean Carbon Cycle

A comprehensive review of global marine carbon stocks reveals that physical and chemical processes, not biology, dominate carbon absorption. The analysis warns against using inflated biological carbon claims to justify marine conservation.

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Image for Has a New Model Achieved Black Hole Singularity Resolution?
Physics & AstronomyDispatch

Has a New Model Achieved Black Hole Singularity Resolution?

An early-stage preprint proposes a mathematical model that removes the infinite density at the centre of black holes. By applying nonlocal gravity, the study suggests the singularity is replaced by a stable, bounded core.

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Image for How a New Bose-Einstein Distribution Model Will Organise Quantum Computing
Physics & AstronomyDispatch

How a New Bose-Einstein Distribution Model Will Organise Quantum Computing

Researchers have reframed the Bose-Einstein distribution using physical causal ordering instead of abstract particle identity. This mathematically identical approach simplifies how we model photon behaviour in quantum devices.

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Image for How a Tiny Glass 'Coin-Flip' Powers Photonic Neuromorphic Computing
Computer Science & AIDispatch

How a Tiny Glass 'Coin-Flip' Powers Photonic Neuromorphic Computing

Researchers have created a microscopic optical neuron with built-in randomness. By using a novel phase-change material, this tiny device could make next-generation AI systems faster, smaller, and vastly more energy-efficient.

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Image for How Bacteria Use Defense-associated Reverse Transcriptases to Shred Viruses
Genetics & Molecular BiologyDispatch

How Bacteria Use Defense-associated Reverse Transcriptases to Shred Viruses

Bacteria use a multi-talented protein called DRT4 to sense and destroy invading viruses. This molecular machine measures cellular building blocks, builds a DNA tripwire, and then shreds vital RNA to stop the infection.

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Image for How DNA Shape Can Freeze CRISPR-Cas9 Genome Editing in Its Tracks
Genetics & Molecular BiologyDispatch

How DNA Shape Can Freeze CRISPR-Cas9 Genome Editing in Its Tracks

Researchers used cryo-electron microscopy to observe how CRISPR-Cas9 interacts with circular DNA. They discovered that the tight, closed-loop structure of circular DNA physically blocks the tool from opening and cutting its target.

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Image for How Electrified Reactors Will Scale Hydrogen Carriers
Chemistry & Material ScienceDispatch

How Electrified Reactors Will Scale Hydrogen Carriers

A new coating-integrated heating method solves the energy-loss problem when extracting hydrogen from transport liquids. By applying heat directly at the catalyst interface, the system achieves high conversion rates with minimal power.

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Image for How the Brain Calculates Danger: Unmasking Lateral Septum Function
NeuroscienceDispatch

How the Brain Calculates Danger: Unmasking Lateral Septum Function

Scientists have mapped a critical neural circuit in mice that calculates threat levels in real time. By integrating spatial memory with bodily readiness, this circuit predicts and coordinates defensive behaviours.

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Image for How the Greenland shark genome could help us organise healthier ageing
Genetics & Molecular BiologyDispatch

How the Greenland shark genome could help us organise healthier ageing

Researchers have mapped the massive genome of the Greenland shark, Earth's longest-lived vertebrate. The sequence reveals unique genetic mechanisms linked to DNA repair and chromatin stability, suggesting new pathways for human longevity research.

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Image for How Virtual Reality Therapy for Eating Disorders Helps Reset the Brain's Funhouse Mirror
Medicine & HealthDispatch

How Virtual Reality Therapy for Eating Disorders Helps Reset the Brain's Funhouse Mirror

A systematic review of 23 studies suggests that immersive virtual reality can help treat eating disorders and obesity. By simulating real-world triggers in a safe space, VR helps patients reduce body anxiety and manage bingeing behaviours.

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Image for Lagging Plants: How Out-of-Sync Nature Threatens Climate Change Ecosystem Productivity
Environmental ScienceDispatch

Lagging Plants: How Out-of-Sync Nature Threatens Climate Change Ecosystem Productivity

Plants are failing to keep pace with rapid global warming, leaving entire communities out of sync with their local climates. In US rangelands, this ecological lag significantly reduces plant productivity, threatening vital ecosystem functioning.

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Image for Mapping Effective Connectivity in Major Depressive Disorder to Guide Precision Psychiatry
NeuroscienceDispatch

Mapping Effective Connectivity in Major Depressive Disorder to Guide Precision Psychiatry

Researchers have mapped the directional flow of neural signals to identify the structural and molecular pathways of recurrent depression. This objective biomarker could replace subjective psychiatric checklists with precise, biological diagnostics.

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Image for The Tipping Point: How the Brain Tunes Its Cortical Dynamics
NeuroscienceDispatch

The Tipping Point: How the Brain Tunes Its Cortical Dynamics

Researchers analysed fMRI scans to discover how the brain's uniform structure produces highly diverse activity. They found that different brain regions tune themselves to specific distances from a critical tipping point between order and chaos.

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Image for Why Mechanocatalysis is Shaking Up Green Chemistry
Chemistry & Material ScienceDispatch

Why Mechanocatalysis is Shaking Up Green Chemistry

Chemists are using physical force instead of toxic solvents to drive chemical reactions. By grinding molecules together, they can synthesise complex compounds faster and with far less waste.

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Image for Why Platypus Habitat Conservation Demands a Whole-River Strategy
Environmental ScienceDispatch

Why Platypus Habitat Conservation Demands a Whole-River Strategy

A preliminary study awaiting peer review suggests that urban development forces platypuses to expand their home ranges by up to five times. To save the species, conservationists must shift from local river cleanups to managing entire catchments.

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