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What Happens When Quantum-AI Knows TOO MUCH?

Let’s unravel what happens when AI merges with quantum, and starts knowing EVERYTHING ♾️ Go to https://piavpn.com/beeyondideas to get 83% off from our sponsor Private Internet Access with 4 months free!

Want to support our production? Feel free to join our membership at https://youtu.be/_Z4W6sWDo_4?si=Q8eRZoNFUv7sAd9y Special thanks to our beloved YouTube members this month: Powlin Manuel, Saïd Kadi, Chenxi, Lord, Sudhir Paranjape, Nate Lachae, Alison Rewell, Thomas Lapins, Ahmad Salahudin, Antonio Ferriol Colombram, Anton Nicolas Burger 🚀🚀🚀 Experts featured in this video include Demis Hassabis, Tristan Harris, Aza Raskin, Elon Musk, David Deutsch, Michio Kaku, Brian Greene and Nick Bostrom. Chapter: 0:00 A dangerous truth? 1:29 AI advancement 3:46 AI pretending not to know 7:29 Interactive tutoring 9:37 That’s it from our sponsor! 10:21 The merging of QC and AI 12:03 IBM 100,000 qubits 14:34 AI wipes out humanity? 16:05 Google Willow 17:06 The misuse of AI and QC 18:22 Singularity and Turing test 22:51 Reverse Turing test 29:39 Quantum-AI consequences 32:25 The double slit experiment 36:15 Quantum multiverse 41:05 Computing history 46:49 AGI timeline 51:45 Philosophical consequence #AI #quantumcomputing #singularity.

Special thanks to our beloved YouTube members this month: Powlin Manuel, Saïd Kadi, Chenxi, Lord, Sudhir Paranjape, Nate Lachae, Alison Rewell, Thomas Lapins, Ahmad Salahudin, Antonio Ferriol Colombram, Anton Nicolas Burger 🚀🚀🚀

Experts featured in this video include Demis Hassabis, Tristan Harris, Aza Raskin, Elon Musk, David Deutsch, Michio Kaku, Brian Greene and Nick Bostrom.

Chapter:
0:00 A dangerous truth?
1:29 AI advancement.
3:46 AI pretending not to know.
7:29 Interactive tutoring.
9:37 That’s it from our sponsor!
10:21 The merging of QC and AI
12:03 IBM 100,000 qubits.
14:34 AI wipes out humanity?
16:05 Google Willow.
17:06 The misuse of AI and QC
18:22 Singularity and Turing test.
22:51 Reverse Turing test.
29:39 Quantum-AI consequences.
32:25 The double slit experiment.
36:15 Quantum multiverse.
41:05 Computing history.
46:49 AGI timeline.
51:45 Philosophical consequence.

#AI #quantumcomputing #singularity

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What if void creates matter? this is no longer a philosophical question but an experimental reality. A landmark study published in Nature by the STAR collaboration at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider of Brookhaven National Laboratory has, for the first time in history, directly observed virtual particles emerging from the quantum vacuum and becoming real matter. By colliding protons at 99% of the speed of light, scientists excited the quantum vacuum and tracked the precise moment transient quark-antiquark pairs materialized into measurable physical entities.
The experiment revealed something even more profound: particle pairs born from the void carry a measurable spin alignment, a direct signature of quantum entanglement inherited from the vacuum’s chiral condensate. This correlation had no other conceivable explanation than the particles having truly emerged from nothing. The implications extend far beyond particle physics: nearly 99% of the mass of everything that exists, including our own bodies, derives not from the Higgs mechanism, but from the incessant interaction between real quarks and the swarm of virtual particles that populate the quantum vacuum.
what if void creates matter reframes our understanding of reality at its deepest level. The boundary between being and non-being dissolves, revealing that “nothing” is an extraordinarily dense and generative condition. Quantum mechanics remains our most precise but still incomplete map of the universe, yet discoveries like this bring us closer to grasping a cosmos that, starting from the vacuum, generates the infinite.

#quantumvacuum #vacum #science #quantumphysics #entanglement #quantumentanglement #quantumgravity #gravity #generalrelativity #quantummechanics #quantumconsciousness #quantum #quantumweirdness #materialism #awareness #consciuosness #hardproblem #einstein #time #timeisanillusion #retrocausality #doubleslitexperiment #penrose #rogerpenrose #multiverse #manyworlds #paralleluniverse.

TIMESTAMPS
00:00 Introduction: What If Void Creates Matter.
01:16 Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle and Quantum Vacuum Fluctuations.
02:12 Virtual Particles and the Casimir Effect.
02:52 The STAR Collaboration Study Published in Nature.
03:27 The Brookhaven Experiment: Exciting the Quantum Vacuum.
04:16 Quantum Entanglement Born Directly from the Void.
05:03 Lambda Hyperons and the Proof of Materialization.
06:10 What It Means That Matter Emerges from Nothing.
06:22 What If Void Creates Matter: The True Origin of Mass.
07:33 Philosophical Implications: Reality, Time, and the Nature of Existence.

⚠️ This video is entirely written, edited, and produced by me in an original way. For practical reasons, I used a synthetic voice, but nothing is automated: every concept comes from my dedication, my research, and a profound passion for science.

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What existed before the Big Bang? Was it nothing… or something far more disturbing?

In this video, we explore seven of the most profound and unsettling theories in modern cosmology. From Conformal Cyclic Cosmology, where the death of a previous universe becomes our beginning, to the idea that our entire cosmos emerged from a quantum fluctuation out of “nothing.” We dive into Loop Quantum Cosmology and the Big Bounce, brane collisions in higher dimensions, eternal inflation creating infinite bubble universes, a CPT-symmetric mirror anti-universe flowing backward in time, and finally the terrifying scale of the String Landscape and the multiverse.

These theories challenge everything we think we know about reality, time, and existence itself. If even one of them is correct, the Big Bang wasn’t the beginning — it was just one event in something far larger, stranger, and possibly eternal.

The universe may not have started. It may have restarted.

Subscribe for more deep space explorations.

#BigBang #Cosmology #Multiverse

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Gravitational waves reveal hidden structure of galactic centers

A new study published in Nature Astronomy indicates that the dense, star-and dark-matter–rich environments around supermassive black hole binaries pack on the order of a million solar masses into each cubic parsec. The team used gravitational-wave data from pulsar timing arrays to probe galactic centers that are otherwise impossible to observe directly.

Pulsar timing arrays (PTAs) use precise measurements of timing residuals from millisecond pulsars to detect gravitational waves at nanohertz frequencies. These arrays revealed a stochastic gravitational-wave background, an incoherent hum from countless supermassive black hole binaries spiraling together across the universe.

However, the signal carries a twist. At the lowest frequencies, the spectrum appears to turn over, deviating from predictions for binaries evolving purely under gravitational-wave emission. That bend suggests that something in the environment, or highly eccentric orbits, is reshaping how these massive binaries lose energy and tighten over time.

Astronomers may have just found one of the missing links in galaxy evolution

A team of 48 astronomers from 14 countries, led by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, has discovered a population of dusty, star-forming galaxies at the far edges of the universe that formed only a billion years after the Big Bang, believed to have occurred 13.7 billion years ago. The galaxies may represent a snapshot in the galactic life cycle, linking recently discovered ultradistant bright galaxies formed 13.3 billion years ago with early “quiescent” (dead) galaxies that stopped forming stars about two billion years after the Big Bang.

Challenging what we know about cosmos The new discovery challenges current models of the universe, making the findings, published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, a step toward revising cosmic history.

“My research involves trying to identify and understand a population of rare, dusty star-forming galaxies that were only discovered at the end of the 1990s,” says Jorge Zavala, assistant professor of astronomy at UMass Amherst and the paper’s lead author.

What’s inside neutron stars? New model could sharpen gravitational-wave ‘tide’ clues

Neutron stars harbor some of the most extreme environments in the universe: their densities soar to several times those of atomic nuclei, and they possess some of the strongest gravitational fields of any known objects, surpassed only by black holes. First observed in the 1960s, much of the internal composition of neutron stars is still unknown. Scientists are beginning to look to gravitational waves emitted by binary neutron‐star inspirals—pairs of mutually orbiting neutron stars—as possible sources of information about their interiors.

Physicists at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, together with colleagues at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Montana State University, and the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in India have made a major theoretical breakthrough in understanding how inspiraling binary neutron stars respond to tidal forces, a key step in elucidating neutron stars’ makeup. The team has proven that the time‐dependent tidal responses of such stars can be described in terms of their oscillatory behavior, or modes, extending an analogous result from Newtonian gravity to the relativistic setting.

This research was published as an Editors’ Suggestion in the journal Physical Review Letters on February 18, 2026, and paves the way to probing the internal structure of neutron stars and some of nature’s most extreme types of matter using gravitational waves.

Study outlines how JWST and Ariel could team up on exoplanet atmospheres

Astronomers want to collect as much data as possible using as many systems as possible. Sometimes that requires coordination between instruments. The teams that run the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and the upcoming Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey (Ariel) missions will have plenty of opportunity for that once both telescopes are online in the early 2030s. A new paper, available in pre-print on arXiv, from the Ariel-JWST Synergy Working Group details just how exactly the two systems can work together to better analyze exoplanets.

JWST has already been at the center of media attention since even before its launch in late 2021. It is currently the most capable of our space-based observatories, but it is a multi-purpose tool that has a long line of scientists waiting to get time on it.

Capable of observing everything from far-away black holes to interstellar comets passing through our own solar system, JWST has absurdly high resolution but lacks the sheer amount of time it takes to observe some exoplanets fully. In addition, in some cases it’s too sensitive, as exceptionally bright stars, which are great for observing exoplanet atmospheres, are powerful enough to saturate the detectors on JWST, making it useless to track exoplanets orbiting those types of stars.

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