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What if the direction of a magnet could shape the building blocks of life?

In a new discovery, researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Weizmann Institute of Science have found that something in the direction of a magnetic field can influence how molecules of life behave at the most fundamental level and how early chemical processes linked to life may have unfolded.

The study, published in Chem and led by Prof. Yossi Paltiel (Hebrew University) and Prof. Michal Sharon (Weizmann Institute), shows that tiny differences between atoms (different isotopes) can lead to measurable changes in molecular behavior when combined with an invisible quantum property known as electron spin. Separation of the different isotopes can be achieved by magnetic surfaces.

At the center of the story is L-methionine, an amino acid, a basic building block of life. Like other biological molecules, methionine has a specific “handedness,” meaning it exists in a form that is not identical to its mirror image. This property, called chirality, is a mystery: why did nature choose one “hand” over the other?

The complete evolution of spin glass from order to chaos

How come our universe is full of disorder, when all elementary particles appear to follow strictly ordered laws of physics? And are there organizing principles behind disorder and apparent chaos?

One avenue of studying these fundamental questions is through an assembly of spins: the quantum property that makes electrons behave like tiny bar magnets, with a preferred orientation of either up or down. Neighboring spins align either in parallel (up-up) or antiparallel (up-down-up-down), as in ferromagnets and antiferromagnets, respectively. This simple ruleset makes spin systems very attractive for studying the emergence of order.

However, while the theory of spin is well-established, creating the material conditions for observing spin disorder has proven notoriously elusive. While physicists have been able to create exotic materials that exhibit spin disorder, tracing the evolution from order to disorder within materials has been challenged by the lack of a clean starting point.

The quantum key to seeing through chaos

Researchers from the Institut des NanoSciences de Paris, the Kastler Brossel Laboratory and the University of Glasgow have developed an innovative method that renders a scattering medium transparent solely for information carried by entangled photon pairs, while the same medium remains completely opaque to classical light.

Their works are published in the journals Optica (optimization) and Nature Physics (selective image transmission).

Faithfully transmitting spatial information, such as the image of an object, is a major challenge in modern optics. However, this task becomes complex as soon as light travels through disordered media, such as biological tissues, atmospheric turbulence, or multimode optical fibers. In these environments, scattering scrambles the information, making the final image completely unreadable.

Quantum sensors use atoms, electrons and light as ultra‑steady rulers

Quantum computers get a lot of attention, even though they are not ready for prime time, but quantum sensors are already doing useful work. These sensors measure fields, forces and motion so small that ordinary background noise can drown them out. Some sensors are already in daily use, while others are moving from research labs into flight tests, hospitals and field instruments.

For example, a human brain produces magnetic signals in the femtotesla-to-picotesla range—billions of times weaker than a refrigerator magnet—far weaker than the magnetic noise in an ordinary room. That is why brain scanners that measure these signals need ultrasensitive detectors and strong magnetic shielding. In some hospitals, these detectors use quantum technology to help map brain activity before epilepsy surgery, without touching the brain.

Quantum sensors are showing up in other fields as well, including in navigation when GPS signals are jammed or spoofed, mapping gravity to reveal what’s underground, and boosting astronomers’ ability to measure gravitational waves. I am a photonics and quantum technologies researcher. My lab applies physics to develop a range of devices, including quantum sensors.

Is materialism holding science back? | Adam Frank, Lisa Feldman Barrett, Michael Levin

Lisa Feldman Barrett, Michael Levin and Adam Frank discuss whether science should abandon its materialist framework.

Could a different metaphysics help science to progress further?

With a free trial, you can watch the full debate NOW at https://iai.tv/video/science-beyond-t… centuries, we’ve assumed that science has banished the transcendent and established that reality is entirely physical. But critics argue there are signs that a rigorous materialism might be holding science back. Increasingly, “emergence” is used to account for everything from consciousness to spacetime – a convenient placeholder for what materialist science may be unable to explain. Physicists like Heisenberg and Hawking concluded that science gives us models of reality, rather than final descriptions of its true nature, while there are scientists working in everything from biology to computer science who suggest that dualism is a productive metaphysical framework for their research. Materialism may have enabled science to reach beyond the dogmas of religion, but there are now those who are restlessly probing the limits of materialism itself. Does science need to assume a materialist account of the world or might this have fundamental limitations? Could a different metaphysics help science make progress on key questions, from the origin of life to the mysteries of quantum gravity? Or would abandoning materialism risk returning us to the myths of superstition and religion? #science #materialism #metaphysics Lisa Feldman Barrett is among the most cited scientists in the world for her research on the psychology and neuroscience of emotions. Adam Frank is an astrophysicist who explores the origins of stars, civilizations and consciousness, and is a leading figure in astrobiology and the search for alien life. Michael Levin is a synthetic biologist whose pioneering work in regenerative biology involves building biological robots to probe the nature of life, intelligence and evolution. Güneş Taylor hosts. The Institute of Art and Ideas features videos and articles from cutting edge thinkers discussing the ideas that are shaping the world, from metaphysics to string theory, technology to democracy, aesthetics to genetics. Subscribe today! https://iai.tv/subscribe?utm_source=Y… 0:00 Intro 1:34 Science cannot reveal objective reality 5:28 — History shows that materialism is one of many philosophies of science 8:59 There are some mathematical facts which are discovered, not chosen 12:14 Does materialism prevent mythical and superstitious views of reality? 14:56 There is no 3rd person view of the universe 18:05 Is science truly reproducible? For debates and talks: https://iai.tv For articles: https://iai.tv/articles For courses: https://iai.tv/iai-academy/courses.

For centuries, we’ve assumed that science has banished the transcendent and established that reality is entirely physical. But critics argue there are signs that a rigorous materialism might be holding science back. Increasingly, “emergence” is used to account for everything from consciousness to spacetime – a convenient placeholder for what materialist science may be unable to explain. Physicists like Heisenberg and Hawking concluded that science gives us models of reality, rather than final descriptions of its true nature, while there are scientists working in everything from biology to computer science who suggest that dualism is a productive metaphysical framework for their research. Materialism may have enabled science to reach beyond the dogmas of religion, but there are now those who are restlessly probing the limits of materialism itself.

Does science need to assume a materialist account of the world or might this have fundamental limitations? Could a different metaphysics help science make progress on key questions, from the origin of life to the mysteries of quantum gravity? Or would abandoning materialism risk returning us to the myths of superstition and religion?

#science #materialism #metaphysics.

Say Goodbye to the Generative AI Buffet Line

Remember the early days of AI when a single monthly fee seemed like the ultimate golden ticket? It felt like having a limitless digital brain at our fingertips—until the dreaded usage limit pop-up appeared right in the middle of a critical project. Suddenly, that all-access pass felt more like a restrictive tether, leaving many of us frustrated by hidden caps and invisible throttles just when we needed peak performance the most.

It turns out, we were looking at AI pricing all wrong. Instead of a standard software subscription, artificial intelligence is much more like a utility—a highly measurable resource that actually makes more sense on a pay-as-you-go basis. Imagine a single, centralized workspace where you can seamlessly switch between the biggest powerhouse models on the market for your heavy-duty coding or reasoning, and then route simple summaries to lightning-fast, budget-friendly models.

No more juggling five different logins, and no more getting cut off; just total transparency and control over exactly what you spend.

We are finally entering an era where users hold the reins, and the chaotic days of unpredictable quotas are fading fast. I just published a new piece diving deep into how this shift toward unified, ledger-based AI platforms is completely changing the game for creators, developers, and everyday users alike.

Check out the full article at the link below to explore how this new approach works and why it is exactly the upgrade we have all been waiting for!


Remember late 2022 and early 2023? In tech years, it feels like a lifetime ago. That was when generative AI first exploded onto the scene, and the pricing was brilliantly, beautifully simple. You signed up for a basic flat subscription—usually around $20 a month—and you had the magic of the universe at your fingertips. If you were an enterprise team, maybe you stepped up to a specialized tier. But overall, the premise was the same.

Adverse impact of acute Toxoplasma gondii infection on human spermatozoa

Ultimately, QIML proves that we don’t need a fully fault-tolerant quantum computer to see results. By using quantum processors to learn the complex “rules” of chaos, we can give classical computers the boost they need to make reliable, long-term predictions about the most turbulent environments in the natural world.


Modeling high-dimensional dynamical systems remains one of the most persistent challenges in computational science. Partial differential equations (PDEs) provide the mathematical backbone for describing a wide range of nonlinear, spatiotemporal processes across scientific and engineering domains (13). However, high-dimensional systems are notoriously sensitive to initial conditions and the floating-point numbers used to compute them (47), making it highly challenging to extract stable, predictive models from data. Modern machine learning (ML) techniques often struggle in this regime: While they may fit short-term trajectories, they fail to learn the invariant statistical properties that govern long-term system behavior. These challenges are compounded in high-dimensional settings, where data are highly nonlinear and contain complex multiscale spatiotemporal correlations.

ML has seen transformative success in domains such as large language models (8, 9), computer vision (10, 11), and weather forecasting (1215), and it is increasingly being adopted in scientific disciplines under the umbrella of scientific ML (16). In fluid mechanics, in particular, ML has been used to model complex flow phenomena, including wall modeling (17, 18), subgrid-scale turbulence (19, 20), and direct flow field generation (21, 22). Physics-informed neural networks (23, 24) attempt to inject domain knowledge into the learning process, yet even these models struggle with the long-term stability and generalization issues that high-dimensional dynamical systems demand. To address this, generative models such as generative adversarial networks (25) and operator-learning architectures such as DeepONet (26) and Fourier neural operators (FNO) (27) have been proposed. While neural operators offer discretization invariance and strong representational power for PDE-based systems, they still suffer from error accumulation and prediction divergence over long horizons, particularly in turbulent and other chaotic regimes (28, 29). Recent work, such as DySLIM (30), enhances stability by leveraging invariant statistical measures. However, these methods depend on estimating such measures from trajectory samples, which can be computationally intensive and inaccurate in all forms of chaotic systems, especially in high-dimensional cases. These limitations have prompted exploration into alternative computational paradigms. Quantum machine learning (QML) has emerged as a possible candidate due to its ability to represent and manipulate high-dimensional probability distributions in Hilbert space (31). Quantum circuits can exploit entanglement and interference to express rich, nonlocal statistical dependencies using fewer parameters than their promising counterparts, which makes them well suited for capturing invariant measures in high-dimensional dynamical systems, where long-range correlations and multimodal distributions frequently arise (32). QML and quantum-inspired ML have already demonstrated potential in fields such as quantum chemistry (33, 34), combinatorial optimization (35, 36), and generative modeling (37, 38). However, the field is constrained on two fronts: Fully quantum approaches are limited by noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) hardware noise and scalability (39), while quantum-inspired algorithms, being classical simulations, cannot natively leverage crucial quantum effects such as entanglement to efficiently represent the complex, nonlocal correlations found in such systems. These challenges limit the standalone utility of QML in scientific applications today. Instead, hybrid quantum-classical models provide a promising compromise, where quantum submodules work together with classical learning pipelines to improve expressivity, data efficiency, and physical fidelity. In quantum chemistry, this hybrid paradigm has proven feasible, notably through quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical coupling (40, 41), where classical force fields are augmented with quantum corrections. Within such frameworks, techniques such as quantum-selected configuration interaction (42) have been used to enhance accuracy while keeping the quantum resource requirements tractable. In the broader landscape of quantum computational fluid dynamics, progress has been made toward developing full quantum solvers for nonlinear PDEs. Recent works by Liu et al. (43) and Sanavio et al. (44, 45) have successfully applied Carleman linearization to the lattice Boltzmann equation, offering a promising pathway for simulating fluid flows at moderate Reynolds numbers. These approaches, typically using algorithms such as Harrow-Hassidim-Lloyd (HHL) (46), promise exponential speedups but generally necessitate deep circuits and fault-tolerant hardware.

Quantum-enhanced machine learning (QEML) combines the representational richness of quantum models with the scalability of classical learning. By leveraging uniquely quantum properties such as superposition and entanglement, QEML can explore richer feature spaces and capture complex correlations that are challenging for purely classical models. Recent successes in quantum-enhanced drug discovery (37), where hybrid quantum-classical generative models have produced experimentally validated candidates rivaling state-of-the-art classical methods, demonstrate the practical potential of QEML even before full quantum advantage is achieved. Despite these strengths, practical barriers remain. QEML pipelines require repeated quantum-classical communication during training and rely on costly quantum data-embedding and measurement steps, which slow computation and limit accessibility across research institutions.

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