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Jan 8, 2025
The Universe expands within itself, then what is it expanding into?
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: cosmology
This idea stems from General Relativity, which shows that space and time are not fixed but dynamic and interwoven. Two key discoveries in the early 20th century solidified this understanding. First, Vesto Slipher observed that light from many nebulae was redshifted, indicating they were moving away. Second, Edwin Hubble measured distances to these galaxies and found that the farther they were, the faster they receded. This correlation, now known as Hubble’s Law, confirmed that the Universe is expanding.
Scientists often use analogies to explain this phenomenon. The “balloon analogy” imagines galaxies as coins on a balloon’s surface, moving apart as the balloon inflates. Another analogy is a loaf of raisin bread dough, where the raisins (galaxies) move apart as the dough (space) expands. However, these analogies fall short in some respects. Unlike the dough or balloon, the Universe doesn’t expand into anything; it’s all there is.
Observations suggest the observable Universe is only a fraction of a potentially infinite cosmos. While light from unseen regions will eventually reach us, expanding spacetime itself ensures galaxies continue moving farther apart. The theory of cosmic inflation suggests that our Universe is one “bubble” in a vast multiverse, though these regions remain isolated from one another.
Jan 8, 2025
Quantum computers that are actually useful 1 step closer thanks to new silicon processor that could pack millions of qubits
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: computing, quantum physics
We’ve just hit a ‘critical inflection point’ on the road to scalable quantum computers. Here’s why.
Jan 8, 2025
Chinese ‘robot dog’ that moves like a cat could revolutionize space exploration and asteroid mining
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, space
Using AI training, researchers designed a “robot dog” that moves like a cat, and has no trouble navigating low-gravity environments.
Jan 8, 2025
Origins of black holes are revealed in their spin, gravitational wave data analysis finds
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: cosmology, physics
The size and spin of black holes can reveal important information about how and where they formed, according to new research.
The study, led by scientists at Cardiff University, tests the idea that many of the black holes observed by astronomers have merged multiple times within densely populated environments containing millions of stars.
The work is published in the journal Physical Review Letters.
Jan 8, 2025
Sunken worlds under the Pacific? High-res models reveal workings of Earth’s mantle
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: biotech/medical
Geophysicists at ETH Zurich are using models of the lower mantle to identify areas where earthquake waves behave differently than previously assumed. This indicates the presence of zones of rocks that are colder, or have a different composition, than the surrounding rocks. This finding challenges our current understanding of the Earth’s plate tectonics—and presents the researchers with a major mystery.
No one can see inside the Earth. Nor can anyone drill deep enough to take rock samples from the mantle, the layer between the Earth’s core and outermost, rigid layer, the lithosphere, or measure temperature and pressure there. That’s why geophysicists use indirect methods to see what’s going on deep beneath our feet.
For example, they use seismograms, or earthquake recordings, to determine the speed at which earthquake waves propagate. They then use this information to calculate the internal structure of the Earth. This is very similar to how doctors use ultrasound to image organs, muscles or veins inside the body without opening them up.
Jan 8, 2025
Earth’s air war: Explaining the delayed rise of plants and animals on land
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: evolution, sustainability
Evolution of the iodine cycle and the late stabilization of the Earth’s ozone layer https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.
If you like the smell of spring roses, the sounds of summer bird song, and the colors of fall foliage, you have the stabilization of the ozone layer to thank for it. Located in the stratosphere, where it shields Earth from harmful ultraviolet radiation, the ozone layer plays a key role in preserving the planet’s biodiversity.
Continue reading “Earth’s air war: Explaining the delayed rise of plants and animals on land” »
Jan 8, 2025
Reexamining the Prisoner’s Dilemma: Study finds diversity and context play a larger role than thought
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biological, economics
In a new study published in PLOS Computational Biology, an international research team from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Cardiff University, and Google has reexamined Robert Axelrod’s groundbreaking work.
By simulating more than 195 strategies in thousands of tournaments, the study revealed that success in the Iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma depends heavily on adaptation to diverse environments. Strategies that excelled in Axelrod’s controlled scenarios often failed when faced with a wider variety of opponents. Winning strategies are not only nice and reciprocal but also clever, slightly envious, and adaptable to the surrounding conditions.
The Prisoner’s Dilemma, a classic game in game theory, presents players with the choice to cooperate or defect. Mutual cooperation results in moderate rewards for both players, while unilateral defection yields a high reward for the defector and a significant loss for the cooperator. If both players defect, they receive less than they would through mutual cooperation. This tension between individual and collective benefit has made the game a model for decision-making in economics, politics, and biology.
Jan 8, 2025
Ring-shaped polymers solidify into glass, offering sustainable material potential
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biological, sustainability
When a spider is spinning its web, its silk starts out as liquid and quickly turns into a solid that is, pound for pound, sturdier than steel. They manage to create these impressive materials at room temperature with biodegradable and environmentally friendly polymers. Materials scientists at Carnegie Mellon are studying these processes to better understand the ways biological systems manipulate polymers, and how we can borrow their techniques to improve industrial plastic processing.
One unique quality of polymers is that their molecules can have different shapes or “architectures,” and these shapes can have a big impact on their material properties and recyclability. Polymer chains can form molecular strings, mesh-like networks, or even closed rings.
Jan 8, 2025
Engineers create photonic switch that overcomes routing size–speed tradeoffs
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
A recent study from the McGovern Institute for Brain Research shows how interests can modulate language processing in children’s brains and paves the way for personalized brain research.
The paper, which appears in Imaging Neuroscience, was conducted in the lab of MIT professor and McGovern Institute investigator John Gabrieli, and led by senior author Anila D’Mello, a recent McGovern postdoc who is now an assistant professor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and the University of Texas at Dallas.
“Traditional studies give subjects identical stimuli to avoid confounding the results,” says Gabrieli, who is the Grover Hermann Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and a professor of brain and cognitive sciences at MIT. “However, our research tailored stimuli to each child’s interest, eliciting stronger—and more consistent—activity patterns in the brain’s language regions across individuals.”