Toggle light / dark theme

Get the latest international news and world events from around the world.

Log in for authorized contributors

Physicists create a strange new quantum state called a fractional fermi sea

Researchers have shown that an unusual class of quantum states known as “fractional Fermi seas” can be deliberately created, according to a new study published in Physical Review Letters. The work was carried out by the Nägerl group together with theoretical physicist Alvise Bastianello of CNRS and Université Paris-Dauphine.

The study demonstrates how a new critical phase of matter can emerge when quantum particles are pushed far from their normal equilibrium conditions. Using ultracold cesium atoms confined to one dimension, the researchers repeatedly altered how strongly the particles interacted with one another. The resulting state goes beyond the behavior predicted by the well-known Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid theory, a cornerstone for understanding one-dimensional quantum systems.

This publication provides the theoretical framework for recent experimental research conducted in the group of Hans-Christoph Nägerl at the Department of Experimental Physics.

This Will Replace Silicon Chips

Buy Anker Prime 160W Charger on US Amazon: https://ankerfast.club/AnkerTech_302069
Visit the official website to learn more about Ask Me Anker-Thing: https://shop.anker.com/AnkerTech_anas
#AnkerTech.

Timestamps:
00:00 — New Semiconductor.
08:44 — Computers of The Future.

My Podcast on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/at/podcast
My Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3drr7A8… Let’s connect on LinkedIn: / anastasiintech Newsletter: https://anastasiintech.substack.com Instagram: / anastasi.in.tech Patreon: / anastasiintech.

Let’s connect on LinkedIn: / anastasiintech.
Newsletter: https://anastasiintech.substack.com.
Instagram: / anastasi.in.tech.
Patreon: / anastasiintech.

Transhumanism 101 with Natasha Vita-More

In 2012, transhumanism was still being called “the most dangerous idea in the world.”

Fourteen years later, we’re casually debating brain-computer interfaces, radical life extension, and what it even means to stay “human” in an age of AI. The fringe became the headline.

So I went back into the Singularity. FM archive and pulled my conversation with Dr. Natasha Vita-More, often called the first female philosopher of transhumanism. We recorded “Transhumanism 101” to cut through the fear and the ideology and get to the actual ideas.

We covered a lot:

Why Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein still shapes how we react to enhancement technology, two centuries later. Where the panic comes from (Bill Joy, Fukuyama) and why most of it misses the point. The real differences between transhuman, posthuman, and cyborg. And critical thinking as a core tenet, not a footnote, of the whole project.

The line that stuck with me, and that lands even harder today: “Get creative about the future.”

Vagus nerve stimulation may quiet pain through newly mapped brainstem pathway

Physical pain is essential for survival, as it allows animals to detect when they are injured or unwell, seek shelter and address their ailments. Yet when it becomes chronic, pain can also become highly distressing and debilitating.

While there are now several therapeutic strategies for managing chronic pain, an emerging one that has been found to be particularly promising is vagus nerve stimulation (VNS). VNS entails the delivery of mild electrical pulses to the nerve that connects the brain to organs throughout the body.

Past studies suggest that VNS-based therapy can reduce the pain associated with various medical conditions, including chronic headaches, fibromyalgia and joint inflammation. The neural processes by which it can ease pain, however, are still poorly understood.

Watch this spider crawl like an ant to avoid being eaten

Unlike some other spiders that camouflage themselves with drab colors and sticklike appendages, the jumping spider Siler collingwoodi disguises itself by the way it moves. The bright blue and orange arachnid—a pea-size animal native to China and Japan—crawls like an ant, according to a new study.

In a side-by-side comparison, researchers found that S. collingwoodi spiders copied the movements of multiple spikey, aggressive species of ants. The spiders walked at a similar pace, bobbed their abdomens like the ants did, and elevated their first pair of legs when they walked, imitating antennae.

New lidar system maps location, speed and material properties in a single measurement

Researchers have developed a new kind of lidar system that simultaneously measures the location, speed and material properties of objects in a scene. This type of information could be useful for applications such as robotics, autonomous driving and remote sensing.

Lidar uses laser pulses to measure distances and create highly detailed 3D maps of objects and terrain. However, most commercial lidar systems, such as those used in autonomous cars, primarily measure distance.

“Although some emerging lidar technologies can also measure velocity, real-world perception often requires understanding an object’s surface as well,” said Dongyu Du from the University of Toronto in Canada. “Our new system uses a single measurement at each scanned point to capture millimeter-accurate distance, velocity and surface material while using eye-safe laser power.”

Linear-time prediction of proteome-scale microbial protein interactions

Protein–protein interactions (PPIs) underpin biological function, yet proteome-scale interaction prediction remains bottlenecked by the quadratic computational complexity of all-vs.-all pairwise comparisons. Here, we present FlashPPI, a contrastive learning framework, grounded in residue-level interactions, that enables linear-time prediction of physical protein interfaces across a microbial proteome. By leveraging a genomic language model that captures cross-protein coevolutionary signals from metagenomic sequences, FlashPPI aligns interacting partners in a shared latent space. We demonstrate a four-fold performance increase over existing sequence-based methods, while reducing proteome-wide screening time from days to minutes. Crucially, FlashPPI achieves comparable screening performance to state-of-the-art structure-folding models at a fraction of the computational cost. Finally, we integrate FlashPPI into an interactive web platform that combines predicted networks with functional annotations and genomic context, making proteome-wide network analysis rapid and accessible for microbial discovery.

Discovery of BIRC3 gene variants in Crohn’s disease yields a druggable pathway

Researchers from The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto have found a previously unknown genetic cause of Crohn’s disease and uncovered how those changes trigger inflammation through a key immune pathway. The findings, published in Gastroenterology and involving teams from eight countries, will guide more precise treatments and improve the ability to match patients to therapies based on their unique biology.

“We’ve brought together genetics, RNA sequencing, proteomics and more to try for the first time to map the complete disease pathway, and it’s turned into a remarkable precision medicine story,” says lead author Dr. Aleixo Muise, senior scientist in the Cell & Systems Biology program, staff gastroenterologist and co-director of the Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Centre at SickKids.

“In our SickKids clinic, we want to find the right drug for each person based on their body’s unique signature. That’s why this paper is so exciting: We have pinpointed a druggable pathway.”

/* */