Mathematicians Attempt to Glimpse Past the Big Bang
Quanta Magazine
by Steve Nadis
2d ago
About 13.8 billion years ago, the entire cosmos consisted of a tiny, hot, dense ball of energy that suddenly exploded. That’s how everything began, according to the standard scientific story of the Big Bang, a theory that first took shape in the 1920s. The story has been refined over the decades, most notably in the 1980s, when many cosmologists came to believe that in its first moments... Source ..read more
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Physicists Puzzle Over Emergence of Strange Electron Aggregates
Quanta Magazine
by Daniel Garisto
4d ago
In the 127 years since the electron was discovered, it has undergone more scrutiny than perhaps any other particle. As a result, its properties are not just well known, but rote, textbook material: Electrons have a smidgen of mass and negative electric charge. In a conductor, they swim relatively unimpeded as a current; in an insulator, they barely move. Over time, caveats have cropped up. Source ..read more
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Simple Equation Predicts the Shapes of Carbon-Capturing Wetlands
Quanta Magazine
by Gabriel Popkin
5d ago
A visit to a peat bog will make you rethink everything you know about the surface of our planet. A bog is land, sort of, but not in the solid-ground sense you’re used to. If you try walking across one’s surface, you may feel the soft organic muck known as peat undulate beneath you — or you may sink into it yourself. From the surface, it’s hard to know whether the waterlogged peat extends 3 feet... Source ..read more
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The S-Matrix Is the Oracle Physicists Turn To in Times of Crisis
Quanta Magazine
by Matt von Hippel
1w ago
In 1943, the German physicist Werner Heisenberg distracted himself from World War II by pondering a crisis in quantum theory. Predictions about how particles should behave were occasionally giving nonsensical, infinite results. These infinities led Heisenberg to distrust the way quantum physics was depicting reality, and to expect that a revolutionary new theory would eventually overthrow particle... Source ..read more
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What Happens in the Brain to Cause Depression?
Quanta Magazine
by Steven Strogatz
1w ago
For decades, the best drug therapies for treating depression, like SSRIs, have been based on the idea that depressed brains don’t have enough of the neurotransmitter serotonin. Yet for almost as long, it’s been clear that simplistic theory is wrong. Recent research into the true causes of depression is finding clues in other neurotransmitters and the realization that the brain is much more... Source ..read more
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How Failure Has Made Mathematics Stronger
Quanta Magazine
by Jordana Cepelewicz
1w ago
Reading a math paper is a bit like having dinner at a nice restaurant. The entrée might taste delicious, but it doesn’t tell the full story of how it was made. Clever recipes that end up tasting funky don’t make the menu; undercooked dishes are (usually) not served to customers. But missteps in both conception and execution are important parts of the process. Danny Calegari, a topologist at the... Source ..read more
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AI Needs Enormous Computing Power. Could Light-Based Chips Help?
Quanta Magazine
by Amos Zeeberg
1w ago
Moore’s law is already pretty fast. It holds that computer chips pack in twice as many transistors every two years or so, producing major jumps in speed and efficiency. But the computing demands of the deep learning era are growing even faster than that — at a pace that is likely not sustainable. The International Energy Agency predicts that artificial intelligence will consume 10 times as much... Source ..read more
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He Seeks Mystery Magnetic Fields With His Quantum Compass
Quanta Magazine
by Charlie Wood
2w ago
Atomic physicists “are jacks of all trades,” according to Alex Sushkov. “You have to have the idea, design the experiment, build the experiment, run the experiment, fix everything, take data, analyze data, write up the paper. You do everything,” and that “suits my personality.” In his lab at Boston University, the Russian-born Australian is supercharging a 50-year-old tool for new purposes. Source ..read more
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Computer Scientists Invent an Efficient New Way to Count
Quanta Magazine
by Steve Nadis
2w ago
Imagine that you’re sent to a pristine rainforest to carry out a wildlife census. Every time you see an animal, you snap a photo. Your digital camera will track the total number of shots, but you’re only interested in the number of unique animals — all the ones that you haven’t counted already. What’s the best way to get that number? “The obvious solution requires remembering every animal you’ve... Source ..read more
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Game Theory Can Make AI More Correct and Efficient
Quanta Magazine
by Steve Nadis
3w ago
Imagine you had a friend who gave different answers to the same question, depending on how you asked it. “What’s the capital of Peru?” would get one answer, and “Is Lima the capital of Peru?” would get another. You’d probably be a little worried about your friend’s mental faculties, and you’d almost certainly find it hard to trust any answer they gave. That’s exactly what’s happening with many... Source ..read more
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