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Space-Filling Aether Theory Makes Comeback

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In the 19th century, scientists came up with the idea of the “aether,” a medium that filled all of space and allowed forces to travel from one place to another. While this was famously proved wrong by the Michelson-Morley experiment, the idea of the aether made a comeback. The new aether is compatible with Einstein’s theories and could explain dark energy and maybe even dark matter. Let’s take a look.

Paper: https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract… video comes with a quiz which you can take here: https://quizwithit.com/start_thequiz/.… 🤓 Check out my new quiz app ➜ http://quizwithit.com/ 💌 Support me on Donorbox ➜ https://donorbox.org/swtg 📝 Transcripts and written news on Substack ➜ https://sciencewtg.substack.com/ 👉 Transcript with links to references on Patreon ➜ / sabine 📩 Free weekly science newsletter ➜ https://sabinehossenfelder.com/newsle… 👂 Audio only podcast ➜ https://open.spotify.com/show/0MkNfXl… 🔗 Join this channel to get access to perks ➜ / @sabinehossenfelder 🖼️ On instagram ➜ / sciencewtg #science #sciencenews #physics.

This video comes with a quiz which you can take here: https://quizwithit.com/start_thequiz/.

🤓 Check out my new quiz app ➜ http://quizwithit.com/
💌 Support me on Donorbox ➜ https://donorbox.org/swtg.
📝 Transcripts and written news on Substack ➜ https://sciencewtg.substack.com/
👉 Transcript with links to references on Patreon ➜ / sabine.
📩 Free weekly science newsletter ➜ https://sabinehossenfelder.com/newsle
👂 Audio only podcast ➜ https://open.spotify.com/show/0MkNfXl
🔗 Join this channel to get access to perks ➜
/ @sabinehossenfelder.
🖼️ On instagram ➜ / sciencewtg.

#science #sciencenews #physics

Intelligence Without Brains: A Radical New Idea

What if intelligence doesn’t require a brain? Biologist Michael Levin argues that intelligence is not confined to neurons, but exists on a continuum of goal-directed behavior and problem-solving across a wide range of species and systems. Using a framework he calls the “cognitive light cone,” Levin explores diverse forms of intelligence extending all the way down to the cellular level. His research suggests that cells communicate through electrical networks, enabling them to make collective decisions and adapt to unexpected challenges, evidenced by engineered tadpoles capable of seeing through eyes located on their tails. Levin radically challenges the conventional wisdom even further, proposing that forms of intelligence may extend beyond biology to molecular systems and maybe even the weather.

00:00 What is intelligence?
01:03 The field of diverse intelligence.
01:33 Intelligence at the cellular level.
02:08 The cognitive light cone.
03:01 The intelligence of groups of cells.
03:52 The bioelectric language of cells.
04:20 The mind of the body.
04:23 Cells that solve problems.
05:17 The tadpole experiment.
06:25 The cognitive spectrum.
06:48 Can you train a hurricane?
07:03 A new science of intelligence.
07:28 Beyond human biases.

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Under the Hood of Vibe Coding: A Deep Dive Into the Holographic Mathematic Miracle

If you’ve been in tech circles lately, you’ve probably heard of “Vibecoding.” Most people treat it like an industry joke—lazy developers throwing sloppy prompts at a screen until an app magically pops out. To traditional gatekeepers, it looks like dangerous, uncompilable chaos.

The “vibe” isn’t a loose, careless emotion. It’s data. Specifically, it is the human-facing interface for what advanced computer science calls Intent Orchestration.

I just published a definitive deep dive into the actual math, physics, and mechanics under the hood of this movement. We break down exactly why the traditional “Filing Cabinet” architecture of multi-agent AI is fundamentally broken, and how Holographic AI Frameworks are the solution.

We are stepping into an era of Decentralized Coherence that liberates creators from traditional development bottlenecks, transforming your role from a low-level syntax translator into a High-Dimensional Intent Architect.

The era of manual syntax is drawing to a close. The computer has finally spent enough time engineering its systems to understand our language.

But make no mistake—if your structural thinking is sloppy, your application will still fail.

The quality of your thinking is the new syntax.

Google Just Released What Comes After AGI — A Million Times More Powerful Than AGI!

Google DeepMind just revealed what could come after AGI, and it may be far more powerful than most people realize. In its new paper “From AGI to ASI,” DeepMind explains why human-level AI may not be the finish line, but the starting point for artificial superintelligence. In this video, we break down what AGI and ASI really mean, why Shane Legg and Marcus Hutter’s involvement matters, and how DeepMind defines superintelligence as something that can outperform massive organizations of top human experts across nearly every domain. We also explore the four possible roads from AGI to ASI: scaling, new AI architectures, recursive self-improvement, and multi-agent AI collectives. One of the most shocking ideas is that you may not need an AI smarter than a human. 100 million human-level AI agents working together could already become something far beyond us. But even superintelligence has limits. Physics, computation, mathematics, uncertainty, data, energy, and regulation could all shape what happens next. Is AGI really the end goal, or just the beginning?

#GoogleDeepMind #AGI #ASI #ArtificialIntelligence #Superintelligence #AI

Astrochemical model digs into the universe’s missing sulfur

Sulfur is one of the most abundant elements in the universe. If you peer into a diffuse interstellar cloud, you find loads of it—about the amount expected based on fusion patterns in the stars it was born in. However, if you look at a dense, cold molecular cloud—the kind where those stars actually form—it seems like 99% of the sulfur expected to be there is missing. Scientists have puzzled over this “missing sulfur problem” for decades, though a leading theory is that the element hides in icy dust grains, making it hard to detect.

A new paper published in Astronomy & Astrophysics from the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics and the Centro de Astrobiologia describes a new computer simulation model aimed at supporting the interpretation of laboratory results and testing our current understanding of sulfur evolution in interstellar ices.

The simulation was written in pyRate—a Python-based application that calculates how chemicals interact, especially between ice and gas phases. The paper marks the first successful model of the chemistry of a multicomponent interstellar ice analog with a rate-equation simulation. Scientists love “firsts,” but what does that actually mean in practice in this case?

Classical mechanics — Problem 15 — lagrangian

Here I described constraint — Holonomic, noholonomic, least squares principal.
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Room-temperature laser hits record stability with 68-cm optical cavity

Scientists at NPL have demonstrated the best-reported laser frequency stability achieved with an optical reference cavity operating at room temperature, marking a major advance in ultrastable laser technology. The team’s results have been published in Optica.

Ultrastable lasers produce light of exceptional spectral purity and are a critical enabling technology for optical atomic clocks. These are the next generation of atomic clocks based on atomic transitions in the optical domain. These clocks underpin the most precise timekeeping ever achieved and are central to future technologies ranging from advanced navigation to fundamental physics.

The NPL team measured a fractional frequency instability of 4 × 10⁻¹⁷, achieved for the first time using a room-temperature optical reference cavity. Until now, comparable performance had only been realized internationally using complex cryogenic systems.

‘Collapsible scissored surfaces’ complete trilogy of metamaterial design principles

Over the past decade, Professor L. Mahadevan’s Soft Math Lab at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) has helped establish how the ancient Japanese paper arts of folding or cutting can be used to inversely design structures that transform dramatically in shape and function. Now, the researchers have created a new class of shape-changing matter, based not on folds or cuts, but linkages—networks of interconnected scissor mechanisms that collapse into lines and deploy into curved surfaces.

The study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, led by physics graduate student Noah Toyonaga, establishes a mathematical and physical framework for what the authors call collapsible scissored surfaces—deployable lattices of two-bar linkages that can transform from a one-dimensional collapsed state into two-dimensional structures with prescribed geometry.

“Origami showed how folds can encode shape,” said senior author Mahadevan, the Lola England de Valpine Professor of Applied Mathematics, of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and of Physics. “Kirigami showed how cuts can unlock motion and functionality. This work asks a complementary question: What can be achieved when the basic building block is not a fold or a cut, but a linkage?”

Geometric anti-spring works near absolute zero, suppressing vibrations below 0.185 hertz

Physicists and instrument makers in Leiden have succeeded in optimizing a spring that almost completely filters out vibrations at temperatures near absolute zero. This breakthrough opens the door to a new generation of highly sensitive experiments. The research is published in the journal Measurement Science and Technology.

“Our new special spring reduces the disruptive vibrations down to 0.185 hertz, which is a major improvement,” says Ph.D. candidate Louw Feenstra. Instrument makers Kees van Oosten and Hugo van Bohemen designed and built the new instrument in their workshop and tested it in the lab together with Feenstra.

Today, many—if not all—modern physics experiments are based on extremely precise measurements. Such measurements are often carried out inside a cryostat, a device that cools materials to temperatures as close as possible to absolute zero (0 Kelvin equals −273.15°C). Until now, cryostats had one major drawback: Their cooling systems generate strong vibrations, particularly around 1 hertz—roughly one vibration per second. For sensitive experiments, this can seriously affect the results.

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