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Nov 11, 2024

Who’s afraid of Artificial Intelligence?

Posted by in categories: robotics/AI, transportation, virtual reality

Artificial Intelligence is everywhere in Europe.

While some are worried about its long-term impact, a team of researchers at the University of Technology in Vienna is working on responsible ways to use AI.

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Nov 11, 2024

Polariton condensates allow controlling the frequency of change in the rotation direction of quantized vortices

Posted by in category: particle physics

A group of scientists from Skoltech, led by Skoltech Vice President for Photonics Pavlos Lagoudakis, a laureate of the Vyzov (Challenge) prize, shared new results of the polariton condensate research. The team demonstrated that under optical excitation a polariton condensate can simultaneously occupy two closely spaced energy levels, which results in the formation of quantized vortex clusters. The outcomes of the study are prominent for optical tweezers, increasing the width of the data transmission channel in optical communication lines, and in other research areas. The paper was published in the Applied Physics Letters journal. It was featured on the cover of the weekly issue.

The new study is based on the previous work on optical vortices — optical beams that have their phase twisted in a spiral around the propagation axis. In 2022, Skoltech researchers, together with their colleagues from the University of Iceland and the University of Southampton, were the first to show how a cluster of quantized vortices with periodically flipping charges is formed in polariton condensates. The authors experimentally observed a cluster of four vortices and detected periodic flips of the signs of their charges with an interval of one fifth of a nanosecond.

“Polaritons are quasi-particles consisting of light and matter. They can form a macroscopic coherent state — Bose-Einstein condensate. This state behaves, roughly speaking, like one particle and is described by a single wave function. But the condensation of polaritons in inorganic microresonators is achieved not at room temperature, but at extremely low ones, therefore, to observe the condensation of polaritons, we place the sample in which they appear in a cryostat, where it is cooled to four degrees Kelvin,” says Kirill Sitnik, the first author of the study, a junior research scientist at the Skoltech Photonics Center’s Laboratory of Hybrid Photonics.

Nov 11, 2024

Assessing ways to gauge aging status

Posted by in category: life extension

To learn more, a research team led by Drs. Asghar Rezaei and Kenton Kaufman of the Mayo Clinic set out to assess gait, balance, and strength in healthy people over age 50. Their study enrolled 40 participants. Half were between ages 50 and 64. The rest were ages 65 or older. In each group, half of the participants were female, and half were male.

Each participant underwent a series of tests in a motion analysis lab. Reflective markers were attached to specific locations on each participant’s feet, thighs, pelvis, head, and more. To assess gait, a 14-camera motion capture system recorded marker movements as people walked back and forth on an eight-meter-long walkway. Force plates on the floor measured ground reaction forces to detect changes in the center of pressure. Balance tests similarly used force plates to record movements and center of pressure data. The balance tests assessed the body’s sway as people stood on one leg with eyes open and on both legs with eyes open and closed. Grip strength and knee strength were measured by using specialized devices. Results were reported on October 23, 2024, in PLOS ONE.

The researchers found that gait characteristics—including walking speed and stride length—were not significantly affected by age. In contrast, several measures of balance and strength showed significant age-related reductions.

Nov 11, 2024

‘Hawking radiation’ may be erasing black holes. Watching it happen could reveal new physics

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Primordial black holes may be exploding throughout the universe. If we can catch them in the act, it could pave the way to new physics, a study suggests.

Nov 11, 2024

Scientists just got 1 step closer to creating a ‘superheavy’ element that is so big, it will add a new row to the periodic table

Posted by in categories: chemistry, particle physics

Scientists have discovered a new way of creating superheavy elements by firing supercharged ion beams at dense atoms. The team believes this method could potentially help synthesize the hypothetical “element 120,” which would be heavier than any known element.

Nov 11, 2024

‘Crumb trails’ of meteoroids could reveal potential ’planet-killer‘ comets years before they reach Earth

Posted by in category: space

Potentially deadly comets could be spotted many years in advance by following the meteoroid trails they leave near Earth, new research shows.

Nov 11, 2024

Claude AI Gets Bored During Coding Demonstration, Starts Perusing Photos of National Parks Instead

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Anthropic’s Claude AI is purportedly capable of using computers like a human. And apparently, that includes procrastinating.

Nov 11, 2024

Transparent semiconductor material could make electronics faster

Posted by in categories: energy, materials

Minnesota researchers boost semiconductor transparency and speed for high-power devices.


A team of researchers at the University of Minnesota has developed a next-generation transparent and efficient semiconductor material. This breakthrough could have enormous ramifications for improving the efficiency of high-power electronics, especially those that need transparency, like lasers.

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Nov 11, 2024

NIH study demonstrates long-term benefits of weight-loss surgery in young people

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Adolescents see a greater remission of type 2 diabetes compared to adults.

What

Young people with severe obesity who underwent weight-loss surgery at age 19 or younger continued to see sustained weight loss and resolution of common obesity-related comorbidities 10 years later, according to results from a large clinical study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Nov 11, 2024

Ultrafast imaging technique reveals how ozone-damaging molecule reacts to light

Posted by in category: particle physics

For the first time, researchers have observed how bromoform rearranges its atoms in less than a trillionth of a second after it gets hit by an ultraviolet (UV) pulse. The imaging technique captured a long-predicted pathway by which the ozone-layer-damaging molecule transforms its structure upon interaction with light.

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