MIT’s new spacecraft engine could send tiny satellites to Mars

MIT engineers are developing a new spacecraft propulsion system that combines the strengths of traditional chemical rockets with the efficiency and precision of electric thrusters.

The technology could give small satellites far greater flexibility in space. Instead of relying on separate fuel systems for different types of maneuvers, future spacecraft could use a single propellant to perform both rapid movements and slow, highly controlled adjustments.

At the center of the approach is a specialized fuel that works with both chemical and electric propulsion systems. Until now, these technologies have typically required separate propellants and hardware, adding weight and complexity.

“If you can have chemical and electrical propulsion in one small package, it’s the best of both worlds,” says Amelia Bruno, a former postdoc in MIT’s Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AeroAstro). “This opens the door for small satellites to do even more science, more observations, and more interesting missions, all on a smaller and cheaper platform.”

Bruno is the lead author of a new study published in the Journal of Propulsion and Power. The research demonstrates that a “green monopropellant” originally developed by the U.S. Air Force for chemical propulsion can also successfully power miniature electric thrusters known as electrospray thrusters.

Combining Chemical and Electric Space Propulsion

Electrospray thrusters are tiny rocket engines, roughly the size of a dime. They use electric fields to charge particles in a liquid propellant and then eject those particles into space, creating thrust.

These thrusters are extremely fuel-efficient and are well suited for gradual, precise maneuvers. For example, they can slowly push a spacecraft through long interplanetary journeys while consuming very little fuel.

Chemical thrusters serve a different purpose. They deliver powerful bursts of thrust that allow spacecraft to quickly accelerate, decelerate, climb, descend, or change position.

By identifying a propellant capable of powering both systems, MIT researchers believe they can significantly expand the capabilities of small satellites.

The team is currently working with NASA on the Green Propulsion Dual Mode mission, a briefcase-sized CubeSat equipped with one chemical thruster and four electrospray thrusters. All of them will draw fuel from a single tank. The mission will be the first attempt to test this type of dual-mode propulsion system on a small spacecraft.

If successful, the technology could help small satellites venture far beyond Earth orbit.

“We could send CubeSats to Mars, or the asteroid belt, where they could make the journey slowly, using electrospray thrusters,” says study co-author Paulo Lozano, the Miguel Alemán Velasco Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT. “You could then use your chemical thrusters to quickly move to look at interesting features. You could have a lot more flexibility to do a lot more things.”

Why Ionic Liquid Propellants Matter

Lozano’s laboratory develops, manufactures, and tests electrospray propulsion systems for satellites ranging in size from a lunchbox to a small carry-on suitcase.

Compared with larger spacecraft, these compact satellites are much less expensive to launch. Their smaller size, however, requires equally compact propulsion systems.

Electrospray thrusters fit that requirement well. The devices created in Lozano’s lab are about the size of a thumbnail. Each thruster sits above a reservoir containing an ionic liquid propellant. When connected to a battery, an electric charge is applied to ions within the liquid. Those charged particles are then expelled through tiny openings in the thruster, producing thrust.

Over the past decade, Lozano’s group has tested numerous designs under different operating conditions and with a variety of ionic liquid fuels.

“Ionic liquids are very stable and can even remain a liquid in space, which not a lot of materials can do,” Bruno says. “And it’s basically a sea of ions, which is why we base our technology around it, so we can pull those ions out into an electrospray.”

MIT researchers have also collaborated with the U.S. Air Force, which developed a new ionic liquid fuel known as the Advanced SpaceCraft Energetic Non-Toxic propellant (ASCENT). The propellant was originally designed for chemical propulsion systems.

ASCENT was created as a safer alternative to hydrazine, the highly toxic fuel traditionally used in many spacecraft propulsion systems.

“ASCENT happens to be an ionic liquid mixture,” Bruno says. “And we said, hey, that’s the stuff we typically use. Theoretically, this should work. Let’s go figure out how.”

Testing ASCENT in Electrospray Thrusters

To evaluate the fuel, Bruno, Lozano, and former MIT graduate student Matthew Corrado conducted a series of experiments using electrospray thrusters powered by ASCENT.

Each thruster was attached to a small cube-shaped reservoir approximately the size of a LEGO brick. Researchers filled each reservoir with one gram of ASCENT, a liquid with a viscosity similar to baby oil.

The thrusters were mounted on opposite sides of a CubeSat positioned on a custom magnetic levitation test platform known as the MagLev. The setup is located inside a large vacuum chamber that can recreate conditions similar to those found in space.

During testing, the researchers remotely varied the voltage supplied to the thrusters. The resulting electrospray generated enough force to spin the CubeSat like a floating top.

By measuring the generated thrust and operating the thrusters continuously for periods of up to 100 hours, the team was able to assess the fuel’s performance and efficiency.

The results showed that ASCENT successfully powered the electrospray thrusters. The fuel performed on par with conventional ionic liquid propellants typically used in electric propulsion systems.

“Compared to our normal electrospray propellants, ASCENT can provide similar performance in terms of thrust,” Bruno says. “Now that we know our thrusters work with ASCENT, we can start thinking of all the ways we can make them even better.”

NASA Mission Will Test Shared Fuel Tank in Space

With ASCENT now proven capable of supporting both chemical and electric propulsion, researchers envision future spacecraft carrying a single fuel tank to power both systems.

That concept will soon face its first real-world test through NASA’s Green Propulsion Dual Mode mission, which is scheduled for launch in November.

“This will be the first time that a satellite will have a shared propellant tank,” says Lozano.

Beyond deep-space exploration, the technology could also improve missions closer to Earth. Lozano points to weather and climate monitoring as one potential application.

“Say there’s a storm coming, and you’d want to deploy your constellation of small satellites to observe over one location,” he says. “You could choose to send them quickly or slowly depending on the nature of the observation. And the only way to do that is if you have two propulsion systems, which is now possible.”

This research was supported in part by NASA.

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Obsession Director Admits He’s Spotted A Major ‘Plot Hole’ In The Hit Film

The hit film has broken box office records, and got the whole world talking about Bear, Nikki and the mysterious One Wish Willow.

Obsession follows Bear, who comes across a One Wish Willow that is supposed to grant his heart’s desire. However, when he wishes for his crush, Nikki, to fall deeply in love with him, things don’t quite work out as he intended, with deadly consequences for himself and those close to him.

If you’ve been picking apart the film and its meaning over the last few weeks, you may have spotted one part of it that doesn’t quite make sense – and so, apparently, has its director, Curry Barker.

During an interview with Total Film, it was pointed out that other One Wish Willow users had been complaining about how things had turned out for them, with the YouTuber-turned-director then being asked what he thought other people had been wishing for.

“I mean, it’s kind of a plot hole,” he admitted. “It’s something I don’t like to think about too much, because it totally doesn’t make sense that there’s a world of people just making wishes.”

Obsession director Curry Barker has admitted he's spotted a "plot hole" in his hit film
Obsession director Curry Barker has admitted he’s spotted a “plot hole” in his hit film

He added: “It really doesn’t make any sense at all. If the One Wish Willow actually works – which it does in this lore – and people are just making wishes left and right, there would be some crazy [things going on]. Like, dragons would exist.”

As Curry put it, the world in Obsession seems too “normal” for everyone to have access to these wish-granting sticks.

The writer-director went on to try and put forward a theory to explain this plot discrepancy, claiming: “Here’s my take – every time someone makes a wish, they enter into an alternate reality where their wish comes true, so you’re not experiencing everybody’s wish at the same time.”

However, he quickly realised that this theory presented its own issue, brought about when Ian’s billion-dollar wish comes true towards the end of the movie.

“That doesn’t make sense because the money falls from the ceiling,” he joked. “Yeah, it’s broken.”

Meanwhile, Curry has revealed to CinemaBlend that he is brainstorming ways of returning to the Obsession universe and expanding the One Wish Willow lore even further.

“I obviously have a couple more things that I’m excited about next, but I do see Obsession 2, maybe. Or even what really is exciting to me is maybe an anthology, like a one-hour episode,” he said, although we probably shouldn’t expect Nikki to return after that gruesome ending.

“Each episode is a different wish that goes completely off the rails. Maybe I’ll direct the pilot with the same DP, and you could invite other filmmakers to kind of give their spin at it. That would be really cool.”

Obsession is currently in cinemas.

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Reform Accused Of ‘Dragging Politics Into Gutter’ After Councillor Posts Fake Makerfield Poll

Reform UK have been accused of “dragging politics into the gutter” after one of the party’s councillors posted a fake opinion poll about the Makerfield by-election.

Sarah Mason claimed Reform and Labour are neck-and-neck on 44% each just over a week out from polling day on June 18.

The councillor's now-deleted tweet.
The councillor’s now-deleted tweet.

She later posted on X: “I thought I’d join in with the made-up polls.”

Mason admitted she had made up the poll.
Mason admitted she had made up the poll.

Mason, who is a councillor in Scarborough, has now deleted her original post after an online backlash.

According to the most recent poll in the seat, Labour’s Andy Burnham is 10 points ahead of Reform’s Robert Kenyon.

Reform’s campaign has been dogged by revelations about Kenyon’s social media history.

It emerged he had shared a series of sexist, anti-vaccine, anti-abortion and pro-Russia comments online over the years – including lewd remarks about presenter Carol Vorderman and confusing statements about whether he even voted for Brexit himself.

A Labour spokesperson said: “Reform are dragging politics into the gutter.

“They’re stooping to new lows online because they know Robert Kenyon isn’t fit to be an MP – yet they won’t admit it.

“Instead of spreading misinformation online they should be forcing their candidate to apologise to the public for the vile comments he’s made about women and disgusting false narratives he’s peddled over the Manchester Arena bombing.

“While Reform continues to be mired in scandal and they reach for desperate underhand tactics, Labour’s Andy Burnham is determined to deliver the investment and fairer future all communities across Makerfield deserve.”

Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

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A classic brain test exposed AI’s biggest weakness

Artificial intelligence systems can write essays, answer questions, and solve complex problems. But new research suggests they may struggle with something humans do every day: staying focused on the task at hand when distractions get in the way.

Researchers led by Suketu Patel put several leading AI models through a well-known psychology experiment called the Stroop task. The results revealed a significant difference between how AI systems process information and how the human brain manages attention.

What Is the Stroop Task?

The Stroop task is a classic psychological test that has been used for decades to study attention, concentration, and self-control.

In the test, color words such as “red,” “blue,” or “green” are displayed in colored ink. Sometimes the word and the ink color match. For example, the word “red” might appear in red ink. Other times they conflict, such as the word “red” printed in blue ink.

Participants are asked to name the color of the ink rather than read the word itself.

That sounds simple, but it creates a challenge because reading words is an automatic habit for most people. The brain must suppress the urge to read the word and instead focus on identifying the ink color.

Psychologists often use the task to measure what is known as executive control, a set of mental processes that helps people regulate attention, resist distractions, and stay focused on goals.

Testing AI Attention

The researchers wanted to see whether modern large language models (LLMs) handle this challenge in the same way humans do.

LLMs are the AI systems behind tools such as ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. They are trained on enormous amounts of text and learn patterns in language, allowing them to generate responses that often appear remarkably human.

When given short lists containing five color words, the AI systems generally performed well, even when the words and colors did not match.

However, the picture changed dramatically as the lists became longer.

GPT-4o achieved 91% accuracy when working with five words. At ten words, its accuracy fell to 57%. When the list expanded to forty words, accuracy dropped to just 15%.

Claude 3.5 Sonnet maintained stable performance through lists of twenty words but then experienced a sharp decline, falling to 24% accuracy with forty-word lists.

The researchers observed similar patterns in GPT-5, Claude Opus 4.1, and Gemini 2.5.

When AI Loses Focus

The challenge became even more difficult when matching and mismatched color words appeared together in the same list.

Under those conditions, performance deteriorated further. Accuracy for the mismatched items dropped to nearly zero in some cases.

According to the researchers, the AI models had trouble maintaining the instruction to identify ink colors. Instead, they increasingly defaulted to reading the words themselves.

In other words, the systems appeared unable to consistently suppress the response they had been most heavily trained to produce.

This finding is particularly interesting because humans face a similar conflict. People are generally much better at reading words than naming ink colors. Yet despite this bias, most individuals can maintain high accuracy and stable performance even when confronted with long lists of conflicting words and colors.

Human Attention vs. Machine Attention

The study highlights an important distinction between human and artificial intelligence.

Although modern AI systems can produce impressive language and reasoning capabilities, their underlying mechanisms differ from the attention processes found in biological brains.

Humans can often sustain focus on a specific goal while filtering out competing information. The results suggest that current AI models may struggle with this type of cognitive control when tasks become increasingly demanding.

The researchers argue that the performance collapse seen in these experiments points to fundamental limitations in today’s large language models. While AI can sometimes mimic human behavior, its ability to maintain attention appears to operate very differently from the way people do.

The findings offer a reminder that even the most advanced AI systems still have weaknesses, particularly when tasks require them to resist distractions and stay focused over extended sequences of information.

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BBC Cancels Doctor Who Christmas Special After Weeks Of Speculation

The BBC has confirmed that plans for a new Doctor Who special this Christmas will no longer be moving forward.

Earlier this month, Russell teased that an announcement about the special was due imminently, following reports in The Sun suggesting the one-off special could be “scrapped”, due to bosses struggling to find an actor to take over from Ncuti Gatwa as the next Time Lord.

The BBC declined to comment when contacted by HuffPost UK at the time, but announced on Wednesday morning that they were not moving forward with this special after all.

“After careful consideration, the BBC, Russell T Davies and [production company] Bad Wolf have collectively decided not to go ahead with the previously announced Doctor Who Christmas episode,” a press release read.

“This decision was not taken lightly, and we know it will be disappointing for fans, but in order to set the show up for future series, it was decided that rather than bridge the gap with a one off special, we are choosing to push forward to invest in the long-term future of the show which ensures that when the Tardis lands once more, it does so in all its glory.”

Russell T Davies pictured at Comic-Con in 2024
Russell T Davies pictured at Comic-Con in 2024

via Associated Press

Elsewhere in their statement, they said that “the BBC will put Doctor Who out to competitive tender this year”.

“Doctor Who remains an important part of the BBC and this tender underpins the BBC’s continued commitment to Doctor Who ensuring audiences will enjoy the show for years to come,” they insisted, adding that “details of the tender will be announced in due course”.

Following the latest announcement, Russell confirmed he was stepping down as showrunner effective immediately.

“And so GOODBYE from me to Doctor Who but HELLO to a big new future for the show, as the BBC announces it’s putting the show out to tender,” he told his Instagram followers.

He continued: “As a result, there won’t be a Christmas special – we only cooked that up to guarantee a future when no one knew what would happen, but now we do know, there’s no need for it.

“You’ll have to wait a bit longer for new Doctor Who… but you’ll be waiting for MORE Doctor Who than a one-off. So it’s worth it!”

“For the record: there was no script, I never wrote it, and no actor was ever approached to play the next Doctor,” he added. “You may disagree; fine, sit in that chair and wait to be proved right. You’ll wait a lonnng time.

“Now I’m as excited as anyone to see what comes next!”

Russell returned to Doctor Who for its 60th anniversary specials, which featured the return of David Tennant and Catherine Tate to the franchise.

After that, he oversaw two series with Ncuti at the helm.

The most recent season of Doctor Who ended with a divisive episode in which Ncuti’s Time Lord regenerated into a seemingly new character, played by former cast member Billie Piper.

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Scientists mapped every neural connection in a fruit fly and found a surprise

A large international research team led by groups at Harvard Medical School and Princeton University has reached a major neuroscience milestone by publishing a complete map of every connection between neurons in the central nervous system of an adult fruit fly.

The achievement gives scientists a new way to examine how the brain and body work together to produce complex actions, including walking and flying. It also opens the door to broader studies of the core rules that govern nervous systems.

“We can see all of the neurons and their connections as a complete unit for the first time and ask, ‘What do we learn from that?'” said study co-senior author Rachel Wilson, the Joseph B. Martin Professor of Basic Research in the Field of Neurobiology in the Blavatnik Institute at HMS.

First Complete Fruit Fly Brain and Body Wiring Map

The new map of neural connections, known as a connectome, extends a previously published fruit fly brain connectome by adding the fly’s spinal cord equivalent, called the nerve cord.

“It is really important to have a central nervous system connectome that is as complete as possible so we can link up the brain and body and start thinking about behavior holistically,” said study co-senior author Wei-Chung Allen Lee, associate professor of neurobiology at HMS and HMS professor of neurology at Boston Children’s Hospital.

When the team studied the connectome, they discovered that many fruit fly behaviors appear to be directed by local neural circuits in the relevant body parts, rather than by one central command area in the brain.

The full connectome is now freely available online, giving researchers around the world a powerful new resource for neuroscience studies. The work, published June 8 in Nature, received support in part from U.S. federal funding, including the BRAIN Initiative (Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies), National Institutes of Health, and National Science Foundation.

Why Fruit Flies Matter in Neuroscience

One of neuroscience’s major unanswered questions is how neurons in the brain and body connect and coordinate to generate behavior. The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster is a valuable model for exploring that problem.

Fruit flies are simple to breed and keep in the lab. Although their nervous system contains only about 160,000 neurons, they can still perform complex behaviors such as navigating, interacting socially, learning, and reacting to sensory signals. They also have what Lee describes as an incredibly sophisticated genetic toolkit, which allows scientists to access, control, and record activity from single neurons or groups of neurons.

In 2024, the FlyWire Consortium, led by Mala Murthy and Sebastian Seung at Princeton, who are also co-authors of the new study, published a complete connectome of a fruit fly brain. At the same time, Lee and his colleagues were building a connectome of the fruit fly nerve cord, which controls the legs, wings, and other appendages while also processing sensory information.

“The brain and nerve cord connectomes are each useful on their own, but until you can bridge the two, it’s hard to understand how information moves between the brain and the body,” said co-first author Helen Yang, a research fellow in neurobiology in the Wilson Lab.

Co-first author Alexander Bates, also a research fellow in neurobiology in the Wilson Lab, noted that the brain holds most of the neurons, but the nerve cord contains neurons that are “some of the most useful” because they are tied to sensation, movement, and functions that are often easier to interpret.

Connecting the Brain to the Nerve Cord

The FlyWire team was eager to shift toward the brain and neural cord, or BANC, dataset imaged in the Lee Lab, said co-senior author Murthy, the Karol and Marnie Marcin ’96 Professor of Neuroscience at Princeton and director of the Princeton Neuroscience Institute (PNI).

“The new connectome represents a major advance for the field, with the ability to understand how circuits in the brain receive feedback from and control the actions of the body,” she said.

“For the first time, we can follow information flow from sensation to action across an entire nervous system,” added co-author Arie Matsliah of the PNI.

How Scientists Built the Connectome

To create the connectome, researchers sliced a single fruit fly into thousands of extremely thin serial sections. They then used electron microscopy to capture millions of images showing neurons and their connections. AI tools helped align those images and assemble them into a unified 3D map.

The finished connectome shows how each neuron connects with other neurons in the brain and nerve cord at the level of individual synapses. The map does not cover the fly’s entire body, but the researchers used identifiable neurons and previous scientific literature to link central nervous system neurons with neurons in many appendages and sensory organs, effectively “embodying” the connectome.

Lee said scientists can use the connectome to develop new hypotheses for lab experiments. He compares it to having detailed Google Maps information while planning a route.

“The connectome has shown us that most of our hypotheses are too simple. Now, we can develop more complex hypotheses and move forward with experiments to test them,” Lee said.

A Surprise About How Movement Is Controlled

The researchers have already used the connectome to study motor control, especially how a fly moves its legs and other body parts.

A long-standing idea in neuroscience holds that the brain acts as a centralized controller that decides which actions an animal will perform. The fruit fly connectome pointed to a different answer.

The team found that motor control in fruit flies mostly occurs locally. For instance, movement of one leg is mainly governed by the neural circuits for that leg. Those circuits then communicate with circuits for the other legs to produce coordinated actions such as walking.

The same pattern appeared in circuits linked to the fly’s wings, mouth, and other body parts. The researchers also found that motor circuits connect with other circuit types, including those in the visual and endocrine systems, which supply extra information that helps shape behavior.

“Our findings suggest that control for actions is highly distributed in local modules that link up and work together in different ways,” Bates said.

What Comes Next for Connectome Research

The researchers say the connectome could support many future lines of investigation. Yang compares it to the Human Genome Project, another large-scale open resource that has been used in many different ways.

Soon, the team plans to add more information to the connectome, including details about neuropeptides, the small, protein-like molecules that neurons use to communicate.

The connectome may also reveal basic principles that apply to nervous systems across species, including humans. Bates said many discoveries from fruit fly neuroscience have carried over from invertebrates to mammals, including findings related to navigation, olfaction, and memory.

Another goal is “to bring full-connectome mapping to much more complex organisms,” said Matsliah. He noted that progress in AI, computing, and open collaborative science is making this kind of research increasingly possible.

A major question now is whether the distributed neural control observed in fruit flies is also found in other animals. Lee is currently investigating that possibility in mice.

“I would be shocked if this is unique to the fly,” Yang said. “We don’t have this level of resolution in other animals, but we know that they have a lot of these local circuits.”

Lessons for Artificial Intelligence

The work could also have implications for artificial intelligence. The connectome offers real biological data that may help guide the design of artificial agents that move through virtual worlds, systems that are increasingly used to study intelligence and improve AI training.

“One thing that always amazes me is that this tiny little fly does a hell of a lot; even our best AI agents and robots can’t do everything that a fly does,” Yang said. “There may be lessons for AI in how the nervous system is organized.”

Authorship, funding, disclosures

Jasper S. Phelps and Minsu Kim are also co-first authors of the study. Jan Drugowitsch is co-senior author. Additional authors include Zaki Ajabi, Eric Perlman, Kevin M. Delgado, Mohammed Abdal Monium Osman, Christopher K. Salmon, Jay Gager, Benjamin Silverman, Sophia Renauld, Farzaan Salman, Janki Patel, Matthew F. Collie, Jingxuan Fan, Diego A. Pacheco, Yunzhi Zhao, Wenyi Zhang, Laia Serratosa Capdevila, Ruairí J.V. Roberts, Eva J. Munnelly, Nina Griggs, Helen Langley, Borja Moya-Llamas, Zuoyu Zhang, Ryan T. Maloney, Szi-chieh Yu, Amy R. Sterling, Marissa Sorek, Krzysztof Kruk, Nikitas Serafetinidis, Serene Dhawan, Finja Klemm, Paul Brooks, Ellen Lesser, Jessica M. Jones, Sara E. Pierce-Lundgren, Su-Yee Lee, Yichen Luo, Andrew P. Cook, Theresa H. McKim, Dimitrios Stasi Giakoumas, Benjamin Gorko, Emily C. Kophs, Tjalda Falt, Alexa M. Negron-Morales, Austin Burke, James Hebditch, Kyle P. Willie, Ryan Willie, Sergiy Popovych, Nico Kemnitz, Dodam Ih, Kisuk Lee, Ran Lu, Akhilesh Halageri, J. Alexander Bae, Ben Jourdan, Gregory Schwartzman, Damian D. Demarest, Emily Behnke, Doug Bland, Anne Kristiansen, Jaime Skelton, Tom Stocks, Dustin Garner, Anthony Hernandez, Sandeep Kumar, The BANC-FlyWire Consortium, Kevin C. Daly, Sven Dorkenwald, Forrest Collman, Marie P. Suver, Lisa M. Fenk, Michael J. Pankratz, Zepeng Yao, Stephen J. Huston, Tomke Stürner, Gregory S.X.E. Jefferis, Katharina Eichler, Andrew M. Seeds, Stefanie Hampel, Sweta Agrawal, Tatsuo S. Okubo, Meet Zandawala, Thomas Macrina, Diane-Yayra Adjavon, Jan Funke, John C. Tuthill, Anthony Azevedo, and Benjamin L. de Bivort.

Funding was provided by the National Institutes of Health (grants R01NS121874; RF1MH117808; U19NS118246; U24NS126935; RF1MH117815; K99NS129759; R00NS117657; R01NS102333; RF1NS128785; R01NS140174; UM1NS132253; U24NS13992; RF1MH128840; R01NS121911; T32GM144273; R01DK139131; R25NS080687), a Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellowship (222782/Z/21/Z), a Smith Family Foundation Odyssey Award, a Harvard/MIT Joint Research Grant, an HHMI Life Sciences Research Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship (PJ100000343), a New York Stem Cell Foundation Robertson Neuroscience Investigator Award, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (ZA1296/1-1; EXC2151-390873048; PA787/7-3; PA787/9-3), the Nevada IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (GM103440), the National Science Foundation (2127379; 2014862), the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (KAKENHI 25K00370), the Japan Science and Technology Agency (ASPIRE JPMJAP2302; CRONOS JPMJCS24K2), an HHMI Gilliam Fellowship (GT15790), the Max Planck Society, the Shanahan Family Foundation, a Kempner Graduate Fellowship, the Medical Research Council (MC_EX_MR/T046279/1), the Alice and Joseph Brooks Fund, and the Beijing Natural Science Foundation (IS23084). The authors also acknowledge that the work benefited from the O2 High-Performance Compute Cluster, supported by the Research Computing Group at HMS.

Harvard University filed a patent application for GridTape (WO2017184621A1) on behalf of the inventors, including W. Lee, and negotiated licensing agreements with interested partners. Macrina, Popovych, Kemnitz, Ih, K. Lee, Lu, Halageri, Bae, and Seung declare financial interest in Zetta AI. Seung declares financial interest in Memazing, Inc. Capdevila, Roberts, Langley, Munnelly, Griggs, and Moya-Llamas declare financial interest in Aelysia Ltd. Perlman is a principal of Yikes LLC.

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Union Leaders Reject Nigel Farage’s Call For Them To Back Reform UK

Union leaders have slammed Nigel Farage after he called on them to ditch Labour and back Reform UK instead.

In a major policy announcement, he said Reform was now “the party of the workers”.

He urged trade unions to affiliate with Reform UK and for their leaders to attend the party’s annual conference in Birmingham in September.

Farage, who has not held a press conference since it emerged nearly two months ago that he received £5 million donation from a Thailand-based crypto billionaire, made the announcement in a video on X.

But the trade unions themselves immediately rejected his invitation.

They pointed out that Reform – which has seen several former Tory cabinet ministers defect to the party – voted against Labour’s attempts to strengthen rights for workers.

A GMB spokesperson said: “Mr Farage and his Reform MPs say one thing to workers and do another.

“They voted against sick pay and other essential safeguards. They even want to prevent people organising to make work better at places like Amazon.

“Now they want to stop low-paid working women getting access to their pension scheme.

“We see them for what they are – rebadged Tories after union members’ basic rights.”

Maryam Eslamdoust, the general secretary of the TSSA union, said: “The interests of working people are not safe in the hands of Reform UK, a party whose leaders want to protect their own interests at the expense of everyone else.

“A Farage-led government would rip up the Employment Rights Act and launch even worse attacks on workers’ rights than Thatcher.

“Union members will not be conned by this ridiculous and desperate gimmick from Farage.”

Labour MPs also hit out at Farage, with one saying he was “like a fox campaigning for better henhouse security.”

Alex Sobel, the Labour MP for Leeds Central and Headingley, said: “Nigel Farage opposed Labour’s legislation to ban zero hours contracts and outlaw fire and rehire.

“It’s outrageous for him to seek to pose as a champion of workers’ rights, given his consistent hostility to trade unions.

“Reform UK has no interest whatsoever in promoting employment rights or of campaigning for a national living wage.

“This is pure opportunism from Farage, who would go further than Thatcher with anti-union legislation if he ever came to power.”

Posting on X, fellow Labour MP Luke Charters said: “Quite something from a bloke who voted to water down union rights and opposed day-one sick pay, parental leave, bereavement leave and protections from exploitative zero-hours contracts.

“Like a fox campaigning for better henhouse security.”

FBU general secretary Steve Wright said: “Nigel Farage is a Thatcherite who is an enemy of trade unions and has consistently opposed extending employment rights, as well as workers taking strike action in defence of their jobs.

“As a former Tory party member in the 1980s, Farage was a cheerleader for Thatcher’s war on the miners and the biggest onslaught on trade unions since the Second World War. As an MP, Farage opposed the introduction of Employment Rights Act to ban zero hour contracts and outlaw fire and rehire.

“Firefighters and other workers will see this ludicrous stunt for what is by a party led by multi-millionaires that is a threat to the working class.”

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Our Guide To Every Celebrity Cameo Featured In Madonna’s New Confessions II Short Film

Effectively an extended music video made up of short vignettes set to the first six songs on the album, Madonna premiered her Confessions II visuals at New York’s Tribeca Film Festival last week.

The 14-minute video has now been uploaded to YouTube, with the Like A Prayer singer being joined by a host of celebrities that include friends, collaborators and other A-list guests who took part in the shoot.

Here’s a quick guide to all the celebrity guests you might have missed in the Confessions II film…

Madonna

Unsurprisingly, the first face we see in the Confessions II film is Madonna herself.

This marks the first music video she’s appeared in since 2024, when she teamed up with The Weeknd on Popular, taken from his TV show The Idol.

While The Idol may have gone down like a lead balloon with critics and viewers, Popular itself proved much more… well… popular, becoming Madonna’s first top 10 single in the UK in 15 years.

Julia Garner

Confessions II’s first surprise cameo comes at the beginning of the Bring Your Love segment, when Madonna suddenly transitions into Julia Garner, sporting her own take on the Grammy winner’s iconic Jean-Paul Gaultier conical bras.

Madonna and Julia already have a well-established connection, as the Weapons actor was due to play the pop pioneer in a now-cancelled film biopic and, later, a stalled Netflix series inspired by the star’s life.

While this project is seemingly still in development purgatory, the two stars are due to share the screen in the second season of Seth Rogen’s The Studio, which is expected to poke fun at the troubled production.

Sabrina Carpenter

Bring Your Love then introduces Sabrina Carpenter, a featured artist on the track, who sports a matching outfit to Madonna.

Sabrina and Madonna premiered Bring Your Love, Confessions II’s lead single, during the Please Please Please singer’s headlining slot at Coachella in April, after which it was given a full release.

The pop tune gave Madonna her 73rd top 40 single in the UK, having so far peaked at number 29.

João Pedro and Cole Palmer

From Bring Your Love, we head to the club setting of Danceteria, inspired by the 80s New York nightspot of the same name.

Among the first shots in the Danceteria sequence is a string of four men standing at urinals (the scene takes place in a club bathroom, we should stress), two of whom are Chelsea footballers João Pedro and Cole Palmer.

Last year, Madonna made headlines when she and her boyfriend Akeem Morris attended a Chelsea game, where Cole scored no fewer than four goals for the London-based team.

Kate Moss

Another of the A-listers featured in the Danceteria musical number is Kate Moss.

She’s first seen applying lipstick in the bathroom mirror, before dancing shoulder-to-shoulder with Madonna and appearing in a close-up during the lyric “hide the cocaine” in what may have been a playful nod to her colourful past.

Odessa A’zion

Odessa A’zion has the unenviable task of going head-to-head with Madonna when they have a minor scuffle during Danceteria.

The Bafta nominee is a real star on the rise right now thanks to her work in the film Marty Supreme and the TV series I Love LA as well as Stranger Things: Tales From ’85.

Gwendoline Christie

Game Of Thrones star Gwendoline Christie is spotted peeping over a toilet cubicle wall while Madonna and a dancer are seen getting up close and personal.

She and Madonna have crossed paths numerous times over the years.

Shygirl, Arca and Richard E Grant

There’s then a three-for-one when a trio of stars are spotted laughing it up in a toilet cubicle together, with musicians Shygirl and Arca sharing the screen with Richard E Grant.

Notably, Arca co-produced Confessions II’s opening track I Feel So Free, having previously joined Madonna on stage during her Celebration Tour in 2023.

Debi Mazar

Debi Mazar is one of the 80s nightlife fixtures who gets name-checked in the lyrics of Dancerteria, so it makes sense that she should also make a cameo.

She and Madonna are lifelong friends, with the Kaos star previously making appearances in the music videos for her hits Papa Don’t Preach, True Blue, Justify My Love, Deeper And Deeper, and Music.

Archie Madekwe

Richard E Grant’s Saltburn co-star Archie Madekwe also appears in the Danceteria segment of Confessions II’s visual accompaniment.

He appears during a section which mentions Danceteria’s real-life DJ, the late Mark Kamins, accepting a tape from Madonna on which she’d scrawled “Everybody”, in a nod to how she got her debut single played to the masses in New York clubs before its official release.

Honey Dijon

Music producer Honey Dijon is one of the stars who joins in the group dance towards the end of Danceteria.

Honey previously put together the official remix of Madonna’s album track I Don’t Search I Find, before making not one but two cameos on her Celebration Tour.

Benedict Cumberbatch

The last star to make an appearance in Danceteria is arguably the biggest name of them all, Oscar nominee Benedict Cumberbatch.

He gets up close and personal with Madonna, when she grabs him by the head and makes him declare: “Everybody get up and dance.”

Feid

Madonna’s Confessions II film was how she shared with the world that album track Read My Lips would feature an appearance from the Colombian singer Feid.

After he appears in the mirror of Danceteria, he takes centre stage during the Read My Lips portion, surrounded by versions of Madonna performing on screens around him.

Lourdes Leon

Lourdes Leon
Lourdes Leon

Madonna definitely saved the best till last, though.

At the end of Read My Lips, her eldest daughter Lourdes Leon unmasks herself and declares “I wish a motherfucker would”, seemingly in reference to the previous lyric “shut your mouth”.

She also gets the final word of the piece, ending the I Feel So Free reprise with a “cut, bitch”.

Madonna’s new album Confessions II is released on Friday 3 July. Watch Confessions II – The Film for yourself below:

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