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Sep 9, 2024
Atoms on the edge
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Typically, electrons are free agents that can move through most metals in any direction. When they encounter an obstacle, the charged particles experience friction and scatter randomly like colliding billiard balls.
But in certain exotic materials, electrons can appear to flow with single-minded purpose. In these materials, electrons may become locked to the material’s edge and flow in one direction, like ants marching single-file along a blanket’s boundary. In this rare “edge state,” electrons can flow without friction, gliding effortlessly around obstacles as they stick to their perimeter-focused flow. Unlike in a superconductor, where all electrons in a material flow without resistance, the current carried by edge modes occurs only at a material’s boundary.
Now MIT physicists have directly observed edge states in a cloud of ultracold atoms. For the first time, the team has captured images of atoms flowing along a boundary without resistance, even as obstacles are placed in their path. The results, which appear in Nature Physics (“Observation of chiral edge transport in a rapidly rotating quantum gas”), could help physicists manipulate electrons to flow without friction in materials that could enable super-efficient, lossless transmission of energy and data.
Sep 9, 2024
NASA Discovers a Long-Sought Global Electric Field on Earth
Posted by Liliana Alfair in categories: particle physics, space
Discovering Earth’s third global energy Field. 🌀
A NASA-led rocket team has finally discovered the long-sought electric field driving particles from Earth’s atmosphere into space ‼️
Continue reading “NASA Discovers a Long-Sought Global Electric Field on Earth” »
Sep 9, 2024
How the brain’s inner chamber governs our state of consciousness
Posted by The Neuro-Network in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience
In hospital operating rooms and intensive care units, propofol is a drug of choice, widely used to sedate patients for their comfort or render them fully unconscious for invasive…
Propofol works quickly and is tolerated well by most patients when administered by an anesthesiologist.
But what’s happening inside the brain when patients are put under and what does this reveal about consciousness itself?
Continue reading “How the brain’s inner chamber governs our state of consciousness” »
Sep 9, 2024
T cells can be reprogrammed to slow down aging, researchers say
Posted by Arthur Brown in category: life extension
Researchers have discovered that T cells in the body can be reprogrammed to slow down and even reverse aging. Using a mouse model, scientists found T cells can be used to fight off another type of cell that contributes to the aging process.
Sep 9, 2024
Interview with Dr. Gabriele Scheler on Neuro AI
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: media & arts, robotics/AI
Will it be the future in AI and overcome the LLM limitations?
Sep 9, 2024
A New Theory of Everything Just Dropped!
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: open access, quantum physics
Learn maths and science on Brilliant! If you use my link, the first 30 days are free, plus you get 20% off the annual premium subscription ➜ https://brilliant.org/sabine.
I got a bunch of requests to comment on a new attempt at a theory of everything that supposedly combines quantum physics with general relativity. I had a look, and this is a quick comment. First reaction, basically. Didn’t get far in the paper, as you will see. I am sorry in case I appear unkind, but this kind of stuff really pisses me off.
Continue reading “A New Theory of Everything Just Dropped!” »
A brief explanation of how superfluid dark matter can combine fluid dark matter and modified gravity.
For galaxy clusters and for the cosmic microwave background, dark matter matter is the better explanation. But to explain galactic rotation curves and other properties of galaxies, modified gravity is the better explanation.
Sep 9, 2024
Deciphering the impact of genomic variation on function
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: biotech/medical
The Impact of Genomic Variation on Function Consortium is combining single-cell mapping, genomic perturbations and predictive modelling to investigate relationships between human genomic variation, genome function and phenotypes and will provide an open resource to the community.
Sep 9, 2024
Detecting single gravitons with quantum sensing
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: energy, quantum physics
While it has been suggested that low-energy experiments might allow to find evidence for quantization of gravity, direct detection of single gravitons has normally been considered a hopeless task. Here, the authors suggest that a massive body cooled to the ground state in a gravitational wave background should display detectable stimulated single gravitonions.