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Sep 6, 2024

From Shale Gas to Sustainable Water: New Methods for Recovering High-Demand Metals

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability, transportation

Dr. Wencai Zhang: “Our goal is to contribute to the supply chain of these critical materials while also making a positive environmental impact. We specifically aim to reduce the environmental consequences that can be associated with produced water.”


How can lithium, one of the most demanded minerals for clean energy products like electric vehicles, be harvested without harming the environment? This is | Technology.

Sep 6, 2024

Quantum Computing for High-Energy Physics: State of the Art and Challenges

Posted by in categories: information science, particle physics, quantum physics, robotics/AI

Roadmap: Quantum algorithms and quantum machine learning could assist high-energy physics, ranging from studying neutrino oscillations to reconstructing particle trajectories in colliders.

Sep 6, 2024

Psychologists reveals the morbid reason we take so many selfies

Posted by in category: mobile phones

Why do we take so many selfies? Because we are afraid of dying, say psychologists.


Many of us have phones filled with selfies documenting everything from holidays to duvet days.

But what’s behind the modern fascination with taking photos of ourselves?

Continue reading “Psychologists reveals the morbid reason we take so many selfies” »

Sep 6, 2024

A New Breakthrough in Fusion Reactors Could Solve a Major Problem Scientists Have Faced

Posted by in categories: nuclear energy, physics

Building a nuclear fusion reactor capable of providing green energy for homes and industry is the goal of many physicists around the world, but many roadblocks stand between our present and this green energy future. While some of those hurdles have been overcome, building robust materials capable of surviving the hellish conditions inside tokamaks is the next frontier.

As engineers construct next-generation fusion reactors, like the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) in southern France, labs around the world are working on creating exotic materials capable of containing super-hot plasma while also generating electricity. One of those labs is MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI), which is dedicated to finding ways to make future reactors more robust and reliable.

Sep 6, 2024

Aastha Jain Simes & I interview Mustafa Djamgoz, foundational contributor to cancer bioelectricity

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

This is another episode in our series on the great figures in developmental bioelectricity. We interview (~1 hour) Mustafa Djamgoz, who has made pivotal discoveries about the role of bioelectricity in the problem of cancer and its eventual solution.

Mustafa’s book: / beat-cancer.

Sep 6, 2024

Google DeepMind’s AI BRAIN — Shocking Discoveries About Human Minds

Posted by in categories: media & arts, robotics/AI

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

Sep 6, 2024

Could Fusion Reactors Use Lithium Vapour Caves As Chamber Coolants?

Posted by in category: nuclear energy

Lithium metal exposed to the heat of a fusion reaction chamber’s hot plasma can serve as a coolant to protect the reactor vessel.

Sep 6, 2024

Researchers Create “Biohybrid” Robots Using Fungal Mycelia

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Researchers have developed biohybrid robots controlled by fungal mycelia, leveraging the mycelia’s electrical signals to enhance environmental responsiveness. This novel system allows robots to react to stimuli like light.

Sep 6, 2024

Our entire solar system might be moved by a stellar engine, allows us to wander space

Posted by in category: alien life

Imagine aliens finding the golden record only to search earth and find a floating sign in space saying “301 moved permanently”.

TL;DR

Continue reading “Our entire solar system might be moved by a stellar engine, allows us to wander space” »

Sep 6, 2024

How Subjective is Entropy Really?

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics

Physics stack exchange has recently been debating the question of the subjectivity of entropy.

I recommend Andrew Steane answer.


I’m a computer scientist doing some research that touches on basic concepts in statistical mechanics: macrostate, microstate and entropy. The way I’m currently conceiving of it is that the microstate includes all the information to perfectly the describe the state of a system, the macrostate provides some of the information, allowing you to narrow down the possibilities to a subset of states and a distribution over them, and the entropy roughly says how much information is still missing after you specify the macrostate.

Continue reading “How Subjective is Entropy Really?” »

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