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Oct 24, 2022

What physical materials can learn from AI neural networks

Posted by in categories: materials, robotics/AI

A new type of material can learn and improve its ability to deal with unexpected forces thanks to a unique lattice structure with connections of variable stiffness, as described in a new paper by my colleagues and me.

Oct 24, 2022

Disney: The Metaverse, Digital Transformation, And The Future Of Storytelling

Posted by in categories: entertainment, futurism

The Walt Disney Company encompasses theme parks and some of the world’s best-loved entertainment brands. All of this makes it a perfect fit for the much-hyped metaverse, which promises to blend the real and the virtual to create cutting-edge entertainment experiences.

Oct 24, 2022

Britain locked in two-horse race to crack nuclear fusion, says Japanese start-up

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

UK or US will be first to develop reactors capable of generating vast amounts of clean power, says executive at Kyoto Fusioneering.

Oct 24, 2022

A Huge Gamma-Ray Burst Hit Earth So We May All Be Hulks Now

Posted by in category: cosmology

A massive burst of gamma radiation hit Earth, likely from a new black hole. There’s no threat, but we can’t rule out more Hulks.

Oct 24, 2022

Toward Flawless Atom Optics

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering, particle physics, quantum physics, space

The engineering of so-called Floquet states leads to almost-perfect atom-optics elements for matter-wave interferometers—which could boost these devices’ ability to probe new physics.

Since Michelson and Morley’s famous experiment to detect the “luminiferous aether,” optical interferometry has offered valuable tools for studying fundamental physics. Nowadays, cutting-edge applications of the technique include its use as a high-precision ruler for detecting gravitational waves (see Focus: The Moon as a Gravitational-Wave Detector) and as a platform for quantum computing (see Viewpoint: Quantum Leap for Quantum Primacy). But as methods for cooling and controlling atoms have advanced, a new kind of interferometer has become available, in which light waves are replaced by matter waves [1]. Such devices can measure inertial forces with a sensitivity even greater than that of optical interferometers [2] and could reveal new physics beyond the standard model.

Oct 24, 2022

Frequency Comb Measures Quantum Interference

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

A multiwavelength laser source known as a frequency comb provides a new technique for atom interferometry, potentially leading to new tests of fundamental physics.

In atom interferometry, researchers use the interference of quantum waves of matter, often for high-precision experiments testing fundamental physics principles. A research team has now demonstrated a new way to produce matter-wave interference by using a frequency-comb laser—a comb-like set of spectral lines at regularly spaced frequencies [1]. The comb allowed the team to generate interference in a cloud of cold atoms. The method might ultimately be used to investigate differences between matter and antimatter.

According to the weak equivalence principle, gravity must cause both matter and antimatter to fall at the same rate (see the graphical explanation, The Equivalence Principle under a MICROSCOPE). Deviations from this principle could point to explanations for the hitherto mysterious imbalance in the amounts of matter and antimatter in the Universe. Atom interferometry could provide a test of weak equivalence through precise measurements of the free fall of antihydrogen. So far, light-based control of atom interferometry has used continuous-wave (cw) lasers [2], which can’t easily be extended to the short wavelengths in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV) that are needed for such studies of antihydrogen.

Oct 24, 2022

This is how Artificial Intelligence will Control Humans

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

NVIDIA’s Megatron Turing AI Model can now have conversations with itself to perpetually improve itself in the hopes of understanding how to best control and influence other people in debates. This sparked a lot of discussions in the AI Community because ever-improving Artificial Intelligences pose real dangers to humanity.

TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 The biggest Black Box.
01:54 Nvidia’s GPT-3 Competitor.
03:23 How these AI’s work.
04:50 The Ethical issues of Black Box AI’s.
08:19 Last Words.

#ai #agi #nvidia

Oct 24, 2022

FebriDX point-of-care immunoassay can rapidly determine if an infection is bacterial or viral

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

Researchers explore whether FebriDx could differentiate between bacteria-and virus-induced immune responses during acute respiratory infection.

Oct 24, 2022

Carbon dioxide can revolutionize rooftop farming, here is the proof

Posted by in categories: food, sustainability

A new way to boost the growth of plants in rooftop farms.

Humans constantly breathe out large amounts of CO2 and when we are inside a building for a period of time, it creates high concentrations of carbon dioxide inside the building. This CO2 is removed through a building’s exhaust system.

Continue reading “Carbon dioxide can revolutionize rooftop farming, here is the proof” »

Oct 24, 2022

Scientists develop “smart plastic” that changes its form from soft to hard in sunlight

Posted by in categories: materials, robotics/AI

Researchers say they were inspired by living things from trees to shellfish.

They were inspired by living things, from trees to shellfish. Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin set their collective advanced minds on creating a plastic that would mimic real life. It would be like many life forms that are soft and stretchy in some places and hard and rigid in others.

Their success, a first ever, using only light and a catalyst to change the properties such as hardness and elasticity in molecules of the same type. The resulting material is ten times stronger than natural rubber and could very well change flexibility of electronics and robotics.

Continue reading “Scientists develop ‘smart plastic’ that changes its form from soft to hard in sunlight” »