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Kavli IPMU Professor John Silverman said, “Vera Rubin provided the first evidence for dark matter using the rotation curves of nearby local galaxies. We’re using the same technique but now in the early Universe.”

Blue-shifted (towards researchers) and redshifted (away) gas show velocity changes in the galaxy. Unlike past studies, which showed less dark matter in the galaxy’s outskirts, their data shows a flat rotation curve, indicating that more dark matter is needed for high velocities.

These findings shed light on the relationship between dark matter and supermassive black holes, helping us understand galaxy evolution from the early Universe to today.

Which future technology is your favorite?
⬇️ Services I Use & Recommend:
Descript: https://geni.us/OECB
(AI-powered video/audio editing—perfect for creating content)

HeyGen: https://bit.ly/4ahOfxQ
(AI video platform for creating lifelike avatars—ideal for multilingual, futuristic content)

OpusClip: https://bit.ly/4gS7ZKq.
(AI tool for repurposing videos into short-form clips)

1of10 Finder for YouTube: https://bit.ly/3NHnpVp.

And how can we even begin to conceptualize this?
In this video, Michio Kaku & Carl Sagan explains the idea of the 4’th dimension, and the dimensions that goes beyond four.

If you would like to support my work financially, you can donate here:
/ twt_pc.
All contributions are greatly appreciated!

Sources:
1. Michio Kaku — Are there Extra Dimensions?
• Michio Kaku — Are There Extra Dimensi…
2. Cosmos — Carl Sagan — 4th Dimension.
• Cosmos — Carl Sagan — 4th Dimension.

Background music: ambient meditation number 5 — natureseye.

Environmental Gerontology & Vulnerability Science For Health And Well-Being — Dr. Amir Baniassadi, Ph.D. — Marcus Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew SeniorLife / Harvard Medical School.


Dr. Amir Baniassadi, Ph.D. is an Instructor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and an Assistant Scientist in Marcus Institute for Aging Research (https://www.marcusinstituteforaging.o… where he works on environmental impacts on health and well-being of older populations.

Dr. Baniassadi works on the impacts of ambient air temperature and air quality (both indoors and outdoors) on outcomes related to the health and well-being of physiologically and socioeconomically vulnerable populations. His research applies novel environmental modeling and measurement techniques along with remote and long-term physiological and functional monitoring of individuals to establish relationships between exposure and outcome variables of interest outside clinical lab settings. The ultimate goal of his research is to develop environmental interventions that optimize the environment for health and longevity of older adults.

An AI system developed by Google DeepMind, Google’s leading AI research lab, appears to have surpassed the average gold medalist in solving geometry problems in an international mathematics competition.

The system, called AlphaGeometry2, is an improved version of a system, AlphaGeometry, that DeepMind released last January. In a newly published study, the DeepMind researchers behind AlphaGeometry2 claim their AI can solve 84% of all geometry problems over the last 25 years in the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO), a math contest for high school students.

Why does DeepMind care about a high-school-level math competition? Well, the lab thinks the key to more capable AI might lie in discovering new ways to solve challenging geometry problems — specifically Euclidean geometry problems.