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PředevčíremQuanta Magazine
  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • He Seeks Mystery Magnetic Fields With His Quantum CompassCharlie Wood
    Atomic physicists “are jacks of all trades,” according to Alex Sushkov. “You have to have the idea, design the experiment, build the experiment, run the experiment, fix everything, take data, analyze data, write up the paper. You do everything,” and that “suits my personality.” In his lab at Boston University, the Russian-born Australian is supercharging a 50-year-old tool for new purposes. Source
     

He Seeks Mystery Magnetic Fields With His Quantum Compass

17. Květen 2024 v 16:03

Atomic physicists “are jacks of all trades,” according to Alex Sushkov. “You have to have the idea, design the experiment, build the experiment, run the experiment, fix everything, take data, analyze data, write up the paper. You do everything,” and that “suits my personality.” In his lab at Boston University, the Russian-born Australian is supercharging a 50-year-old tool for new purposes.

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • Computer Scientists Invent an Efficient New Way to CountSteve Nadis
    Imagine that you’re sent to a pristine rainforest to carry out a wildlife census. Every time you see an animal, you snap a photo. Your digital camera will track the total number of shots, but you’re only interested in the number of unique animals — all the ones that you haven’t counted already. What’s the best way to get that number? “The obvious solution requires remembering every animal you’ve... Source
     

Computer Scientists Invent an Efficient New Way to Count

16. Květen 2024 v 16:07

Imagine that you’re sent to a pristine rainforest to carry out a wildlife census. Every time you see an animal, you snap a photo. Your digital camera will track the total number of shots, but you’re only interested in the number of unique animals — all the ones that you haven’t counted already. What’s the best way to get that number? “The obvious solution requires remembering every animal you’ve...

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • Strangely Curved Shapes Break 50-Year-Old Geometry ConjectureJordana Cepelewicz
    In an old Indian parable, six blind men each touch a different part of an elephant. They disagree about what the elephant must look like: Is it smooth or rough? Is it like a snake (so thinks the man touching the trunk) or a fan (as the man touching the ear proposes)? If the blind men had combined their insights, they might have been able to give a correct account of the nature of the elephant. Source
     

Strangely Curved Shapes Break 50-Year-Old Geometry Conjecture

14. Květen 2024 v 16:12

In an old Indian parable, six blind men each touch a different part of an elephant. They disagree about what the elephant must look like: Is it smooth or rough? Is it like a snake (so thinks the man touching the trunk) or a fan (as the man touching the ear proposes)? If the blind men had combined their insights, they might have been able to give a correct account of the nature of the elephant.

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • How ‘Idle’ Egg Cells Defend Their DNA From DamageMeghan Willcoxon
    Out of all the cells in the body, oocytes are the most patient. The immature egg cells form inside a female’s body when she’s still a fetus in her mother’s womb, and then they wait in a quiescent state for years, if not decades. Cocooned inside ovaries, they pause, neither dividing nor replicating their DNA, so that one day they may pass along pristinely preserved genetic information to the next... Source
     

How ‘Idle’ Egg Cells Defend Their DNA From Damage

13. Květen 2024 v 16:35

Out of all the cells in the body, oocytes are the most patient. The immature egg cells form inside a female’s body when she’s still a fetus in her mother’s womb, and then they wait in a quiescent state for years, if not decades. Cocooned inside ovaries, they pause, neither dividing nor replicating their DNA, so that one day they may pass along pristinely preserved genetic information to the next...

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • Game Theory Can Make AI More Correct and EfficientSteve Nadis
    Imagine you had a friend who gave different answers to the same question, depending on how you asked it. “What’s the capital of Peru?” would get one answer, and “Is Lima the capital of Peru?” would get another. You’d probably be a little worried about your friend’s mental faculties, and you’d almost certainly find it hard to trust any answer they gave. That’s exactly what’s happening with many... Source
     

Game Theory Can Make AI More Correct and Efficient

9. Květen 2024 v 15:55

Imagine you had a friend who gave different answers to the same question, depending on how you asked it. “What’s the capital of Peru?” would get one answer, and “Is Lima the capital of Peru?” would get another. You’d probably be a little worried about your friend’s mental faculties, and you’d almost certainly find it hard to trust any answer they gave. That’s exactly what’s happening with many...

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • Will Better Superconductors Transform the World?Janna Levin
    If superconductors — materials that conduct electricity without any resistance — worked at temperatures and pressures close to what we would consider normal, they would be world-changing. They could dramatically amplify power grids, levitate high-speed trains and enable more affordable medical technologies. For more than a century, physicists have tinkered with different compounds and... Source
     

Will Better Superconductors Transform the World?

9. Květen 2024 v 15:03

If superconductors — materials that conduct electricity without any resistance — worked at temperatures and pressures close to what we would consider normal, they would be world-changing. They could dramatically amplify power grids, levitate high-speed trains and enable more affordable medical technologies. For more than a century, physicists have tinkered with different compounds and...

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • New AI Tools Predict How Life’s Building Blocks AssembleYasemin Saplakoglu
    Proteins are the molecular machines that sustain every cell and organism, and knowing what they look like will be critical to untangling how they function normally and malfunction in disease. Now researchers have taken a huge stride toward that goal with the development of new machine learning algorithms that can predict the folded shapes of not only proteins but other biomolecules with... Source
     

New AI Tools Predict How Life’s Building Blocks Assemble

8. Květen 2024 v 17:00

Proteins are the molecular machines that sustain every cell and organism, and knowing what they look like will be critical to untangling how they function normally and malfunction in disease. Now researchers have taken a huge stride toward that goal with the development of new machine learning algorithms that can predict the folded shapes of not only proteins but other biomolecules with...

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • Dogged Dark Matter Hunters Find New Hiding Places to CheckLyndie Chiou
    The end is brutal for electrons hurtling at 99.9999999% of the speed of light through SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory’s two-mile-long beam pipe: a final slam into End Station A. In the late 1960s and early ’70s, such collisions broke apart protons and neutrons to reveal the elementary particles that make them up. The discovery won the experiment’s leader a Nobel Prize. “End Station A is this... Source
     

Dogged Dark Matter Hunters Find New Hiding Places to Check

7. Květen 2024 v 16:37

The end is brutal for electrons hurtling at 99.9999999% of the speed of light through SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory’s two-mile-long beam pipe: a final slam into End Station A. In the late 1960s and early ’70s, such collisions broke apart protons and neutrons to reveal the elementary particles that make them up. The discovery won the experiment’s leader a Nobel Prize. “End Station A is this...

Source

  • ✇Quanta Magazine
  • A Rosetta Stone for MathematicsKevin Hartnett
    In 1940, from a jailhouse in Rouen, France, André Weil wrote one of the most consequential letters of 20th-century mathematics. He was serving time for refusing to join the French army, and he filled his days in part by writing letters to his sister, Simone, an accomplished philosopher living in London. In a previous letter, Simone had asked André to tell her about his work. With war all around... Source
     

A Rosetta Stone for Mathematics

6. Květen 2024 v 16:23

In 1940, from a jailhouse in Rouen, France, André Weil wrote one of the most consequential letters of 20th-century mathematics. He was serving time for refusing to join the French army, and he filled his days in part by writing letters to his sister, Simone, an accomplished philosopher living in London. In a previous letter, Simone had asked André to tell her about his work. With war all around...

Source

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