Crispr Pioneer Launches Startup to Make Tailored Gene-Editing Treatments
A new microscope that can simultaneously measure both forward- and backward-scattered light from a sample could allow researchers to image both micro- and nanoscale objects at the same time. The device could be used to observe structures as small as individual proteins, as well as the environment in which they move, say the researchers at the University of Tokyo who developed it.
“Our technique could help us link cell structures with the motion of tiny particles inside and outside cells,” explains Kohki Horie of the University of Tokyo’s department of physics, who led this research effort. “Because it is label-free, it is gentler on cells and better for long observations. In the future, it could help quantify cell states, holding potential for drug testing and quality checks in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries.”
The new device combines two powerful imaging techniques routinely employed in biomedical applications: quantitative phase microscopy (QPM) and interferometric scattering (iSCAT).
QPM measures forward-scattered (FS) light – that is, light waves that travel in the same direction as before they were scattered. This technique is excellent at imaging structures in the Mie scattering region (greater than 100 nm, referred to as microscale in this study). This makes it ideal for visualizing complex structures such as biological cells. It falls short, however, when it comes to imaging structures in the Rayleigh scattering region (smaller than 100 nm, referred to as nanoscale in this study).
The second technique, iSCAT, detects backward-scattered (BS) light. This is light that’s reflected back towards the direction from which it came and which predominantly contains Rayleigh scattering. As such, iSCAT exhibits high sensitivity for detecting nanoscale objects. Indeed, the technique has recently been used to image single proteins, intracellular vesicles and viruses. It cannot, however, image microscale structures because of its limited ability to detect in the Mie scattering region.
The team’s new bidirectional quantitative scattering microscope (BiQSM) is able to detect both FS and BS light at the same time, thereby overcoming these previous limitations.
The BiQSM system illuminates a sample through an objective lens from two opposite directions and detects both the FS and BS light using a single image sensor. The researchers use the spatial-frequency multiplexing method of off-axis digital holography to capture both images simultaneously. The biggest challenge, says Horie, was to cleanly separate the signals from FS and BS light in the images while keeping noise low and avoiding mixing between them.
Horie and colleagues, Keiichiro Toda, Takuma Nakamura and team leader Takuro Ideguchi, tested their technique by imaging live cells. They were able to visualize micron-sized cell structures, including the nucleus, nucleoli and lipid droplets, as well as nanoscale particles. They compared the FS and BS results using the scattering-field amplitude (SA), defined as the amplitude ratios between the scattered wave and the incident illumination wave.
“SA characterizes the light scattered in both the forward and backward directions within a unified framework,” says Horie, “so allowing for a direct comparison between FS and BS light images.”
Spurred on by their findings, which are detailed in Nature Communications, the researchers say they now plan to study even smaller particles such as exosomes and viruses.
The post Bidirectional scattering microscope detects micro- and nanoscale structures simultaneously appeared first on Physics World.

NASA has decided to bring home early four members of the International Space Station crew because of a medical issue with one of them, a first for NASA.
The post Medical issue prompts early return of Crew-11 from ISS appeared first on SpaceNews.





Catalyst Campus is proud to announce they are now accepting applications for Cohort 4 of the SDA TAP Lab – Catalyst Campus Mini Accelerator, a high-impact accelerator program designed to […]
The post APPLICATIONS OPEN FOR COHORT 4 OF SDA TAP LAB – CATALYST CAMPUS MINI ACCELERATOR appeared first on SpaceNews.


NASA expects to launch the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope as soon as September, seeing it as evidence the agency can do flagships on cost and schedule.
The post Roman Space Telescope on track for September launch appeared first on SpaceNews.



A billionaire-backed philanthropic organization is funding the development of a series of new observatories, including a space telescope larger than Hubble.
The post Private group unveils plans for large space telescope appeared first on SpaceNews.

Launchers Isar Aerospace is expected to attempt its second two-stage Spectrum vehicle test flight, a key step after its first, partially successful liftoff in 2025. In parallel, Spain’s PLD Space and its Miura-5 remain the second contender — after Isar — for the European Launcher Challenge, a competition that increasingly looks like Europe’s closest analogue […]
The post 2026 will clarify Europe’s new priorities for space appeared first on SpaceNews.

In this special episode of Space Minds, our show is split into two segments from the recent SpaceNews annual Icon Awards.
The post The moon, AI and the high-stakes decisions shaping space’s future appeared first on SpaceNews.

The launch of USSF-87 comes amid leadership change at United Launch Alliance and pressure to increase launch tempo
The post Vulcan to open 2026 with national security launch appeared first on SpaceNews.

LiDAR costs, compute power and AI training are the “big three” usually associated with the high cost of autonomous vehicles (AVs). We rarely look up. But maybe we should. High above the Earth, the ionosphere, a chaotic, sun-charged layer of our atmosphere, is levying an invisible tax on every self-driving car in development. If you […]
The post The ‘space tax’ on your self-driving car appeared first on SpaceNews.
This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Alex May, whose research explores the intersection of quantum gravity and quantum information theory. Based at Canada’s Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, May explains how ideas being developed in the burgeoning field of quantum information theory could help solve one of the most enduring mysteries in physics – how to reconcile quantum mechanics with Einstein’s general theory of relativity, creating a viable theory of quantum gravity.
This interview was recorded in autumn 2025 when I had the pleasure of visiting the Perimeter Institute and speaking to four physicists about their research. This is the last of those conversations to appear on the podcast.
The first interview in this series from the Perimeter Institute was with Javier Toledo-Marín, “Quantum computing and AI join forces for particle physics”; the second was with Bianca Dittrich, “Quantum gravity: we explore spin foams and other potential solutions to this enduring challenge“; and the third was with Tim Hsieh, “Building a quantum future using topological phases of matter and error correction”.
This episode is supported by the APS Global Physics Summit, which takes place on 15–20 March, 2026, in Denver, Colorado, and online.
The post Quantum information theory sheds light on quantum gravity appeared first on Physics World.
Chess is a seemingly simple game, but one that hides incredible complexity. In the standard game, the starting positions of the pieces are fixed so top players rely on memorizing a plethora of opening moves, which can sometimes result in boring, predictable games. It’s also the case that playing as white, and therefore going first, offers an advantage.
In the 1990s, former chess world champion Bobby Fischer proposed another way to play chess to encourage more creative play.
This form of the game – dubbed Chess960 – keeps the pawns in the same position but randomizes where the pieces at the back of the board – the knights, bishops, rooks, king and queen – are placed at the start while keeping the rest of the rules the same. It is named after the 960 starting positions that result from mixing it up at the back.
It was thought that Chess960 could allow for more permutations that would make the game fairer for both players. Yet research by physicist Marc Barthelemy at Paris-Saclay University suggests it’s not as simple as this.
He used the open-source chess program called Stockfish to analyze each of the 960 starting positions and developed a statistical method to measure decision-making complexity by calculating how much “information” a player needs to identify the best moves.
He found that the standard game can be unfair, as players with black pieces who go second have to keep up with the moves from the player with white.
Yet regardless of starting positions at the back, Barthelemy discovered that white still has an advantage in almost all – 99.6% – of the 960 positions. He also found that the standard set-up – rook, knight, bishop, queen, king, bishop, knight, rook – is nothing special and is presumably an historical accident possibly as the starting positions are easy to remember, being visually symmetrical.
“Standard chess, despite centuries of cultural evolution, does not occupy an exceptional location in this landscape: it exhibits a typical initial advantage and moderate total complexity, while displaying above-average asymmetry in decision difficulty,” writes Barthelemy.
For a more fair and balanced match, Barthelemy suggests playing position #198, which has the starting positions as queen, knight, bishop, rook, king, bishop, knight and rook.
The post Chess960 still results in white having an advantage, finds study appeared first on Physics World.

An unspecified “medical concern” involving one of the astronauts aboard the International Space Station has postponed a spacewalk and could force an unprecedented early return of part of the crew.
The post Medical issue could force early end of Crew-11 ISS mission appeared first on SpaceNews.

We are in an era where planetary science no longer depends on government missions. Commercial capabilities are mature and ready to deliver a higher cadence of planetary exploration that fits within proposed budgets. What’s missing is an operational model that matches ambition. The old way — one in which bespoke, government-run missions with decade-long development […]
The post Interplanetary science needs a commercial backbone appeared first on SpaceNews.