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Apr 4, 2024

Can Data be Stored in DNA?

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, health

This post is also available in: he עברית (Hebrew)

Analyzing and storing large amounts of data requires a lot of energy, so the future of technology might hold a different approach to data storage. At least, that is what Professor Søren Brunak from the University of Copenhagen thinks.

Brunak states that while Denmark is one of the best in the world at health data, analyzing and storing huge amounts of health data comes at a climate cost. “We have begun to consider the carbon footprint of bioinformatics and CO2 emissions resulting from data analysis,” he adds.

Apr 4, 2024

Time to sound the alarm about the hidden epidemic of kidney disease

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

With rates rising around the world, public-health leaders must prioritize prevention, treatment, funding and data.

Apr 4, 2024

AI can take over key management roles in scientific research, shows study

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

AI can replace management roles in scientific research.


New research from ESMT Berlin shows how AI can manage human participants in large-scale research projects, taking over functions such as task allocation, coordination, and motivation.

Apr 3, 2024

Transmitting entanglement between light and matter in the metropolitan network of Barcelona

Posted by in categories: computing, internet, quantum physics

As the efforts towards the realization of powerful quantum computers and quantum simulators continue, there is a parallel program aimed at attaining the quantum analog to the classical internet.

Apr 3, 2024

Easy compression, easy flow: Research team designs new granular materials

Posted by in category: materials

When we take a stroll on the beach, we walk on the sand without any trouble. The sand appears solid and is difficult to compress. When we put the same sand grains in an hourglass, they behave very differently: the sand flows like a liquid.

Apr 3, 2024

Researchers visualize quantum effects in electron waves

Posted by in category: quantum physics

One of the most fundamental interactions in physics is that of electrons and light. In an experiment at Goethe University Frankfurt, scientists have now managed to observe what is known as the Kapitza-Dirac effect for the first time in full temporal resolution. This effect was first postulated more than 90 years ago, but only now are its finest details coming to light.

Apr 3, 2024

Intelligent liquid: Researchers develop metafluid with programmable response

Posted by in category: futurism

By Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have developed a programmable metafluid with tunable springiness, optical properties, viscosity and even the ability to transition between a Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluid.

Apr 3, 2024

Reimagining quantum dot single-photon sources: A breakthrough in monolithic Fabry-Perot microcavities

Posted by in categories: nanotechnology, particle physics, quantum physics

Self-assembled semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) represent a three-dimensional confined nanostructure with discrete energy levels, which are similar to atoms. They are capable of producing highly efficient and indistinguishable single photons on demand and are important for exploring fundamental quantum physics and various applications in quantum information technologies. Leveraging traditional semiconductor processes, this material system also offers a natural integration-compatible and scalable platform.

Apr 3, 2024

A return to roots: Lab builds its first stellarator in 50 years and opens the door for research into new plasma physics

Posted by in categories: energy, physics

For the first time, scientists have built a fusion experiment using permanent magnets, a technique that could show a simple way to build future devices for less cost and allow researchers to test new concepts for future fusion power plants.

Apr 3, 2024

Student cleans up archival data and uncovers two stellar cocoons

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, robotics/AI, space

Machine learning revolutionizes secure quantum communication, pushing its boundaries to unprecedented frontiers.

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