In a world where technology is constantly pushing the boundaries of exploration, one 59-year-old engineer has taken a bold leap into the unknown. For 120
Category: futurism
Main epiosode with Avshalom Elitzur: https://youtu.be/pWRAaimQT1E
As a listener of TOE you can get a special 20% off discount to The Economist and all it has to offer! Visit https://www.economist.com/toe.
Join My New Substack (Personal Writings): https://curtjaimungal.substack.com.
Listen on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/SpotifyTOE
Become a YouTube Member (Early Access Videos):
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdWIQh9DGG6uhJk8eyIFl1w/join.
Support TOE on Patreon: https://patreon.com/curtjaimungal.
Researchers have discovered a way to protect quantum information from environmental disruptions, offering hope for more reliable future technologies.
In their study published in Nature Communications, the scientists have shown how certain quantum states can maintain their critical information even when disturbed by environmental noise. The team includes researchers from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa (Wits University) in collaboration with Huzhou University in China.
“What we’ve found is that topology is a powerful resource for information encoding in the presence of noise,” says Professor Andrew Forbes from the Wits School of Physics.
In a crowded room, we naturally move slower than in an empty space. Surprisingly, worms can show the exact opposite behavior: In an environment with randomly scattered obstacles, they tend to move faster when there are more obstructions. Viewing the worms as “active, polymerlike matter,” researchers at the University of Amsterdam have now explained this surprising fact.
The research was published in Physical Review Letters this week, and was selected by the editors of that journal as an Editors’ Suggestion.
One way in which worms differ from humans is, of course, their shape: a worm’s length is much larger than its width (i.e., it is spaghetti-like), and moreover it is wiggly—or in more scientific terms: It behaves like an active polymer. The researchers suspected that this active, polymer-like behavior is what makes the worms behave in their counterintuitive way.
Scientists at RIKEN CEMS have discovered that twisting atomically thin layers in a device can precisely control superconductivity.
Video shows Mount Kilauea, Hawaii’s most active volcano, launching fountains of molten lava up to 180 metres high.
FamousSparrow deployed two enhanced SparrowDoor variants and ShadowPad in July 2024 attacks, signaling active tool development.
Trojan npm package downloaded 73 times modifies ‘ethers’ locally, enabling persistent reverse shell access
What can a NASA Mars rover teach us about the future development of astronaut spacesuits to Mars? This is what NASA’s Perseverance rover, which is cu | Space