
How Sweet It Is: Sugar — Building Block of Life — Discovered in Space
Breakthrough detection of erythrulose in interstellar cloud suggests life’s building blocks are manufactured throughout the galaxy. In a discovery that fundamentally challenges our understanding of how life begins, an international team of astronomers has detected erythrulose—the first true sugar ever found floating freely in interstellar space—drifting through a massive cloud of cosmic dust and gas thousands of light-years from Earth. The finding, made in 2026 using powerful radio telescopes trained on a molecular cloud designated G+0.693-0.027, represents far more than a cosmic curiosity. Erythrulose, a four-carbon sugar molecule identical to the compound that flavors red raspberries and bronzes skin in self-tanning lotions, is a direct chemical precursor to the sugar-phosphate backbone that holds together RNA and DNA—the very foundation of genetic life. “This changes everything about how we think life’s ingredients come together,” said Dr. Maria Castellanos, lead astrochemist on the discovery team. “We’re not just finding random organic molecules out there. We’re finding the exact architectural pieces that biology uses to build genetic code, and they’re forming naturally in the freezing darkness of space, long before planets even exist.”
How Sweet It Is: Sugar — Building Block of Life — Discovered in Space
China and Xi Use AI Expo in Shanghai to Claim Global Tech Leadership — and Ownership
Pentagon on a Hiring, Lending Spree to Beef Up U.S. Defense Readiness
Who’s Gonna Elect Our Next President, China or Russia?
Here We Go Again — Dems Set to Abandon Another Ally

