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Fermilab physicists really care about the mass of the W boson. They spent nearly a decade recording collisions in the Tevatron collider and another decade analysing the data. This culminated in the April 7 announcement that this obscure particle’s mass seems to be heavier than expected. So why do we care? Because understanding why this particle even has mass was one of the most important breakthroughs in our understanding of the subatomic world. And because measuring its precise mass either doubles down on our current understanding or reveals a path to an even deeper knowledge. The FermiLab discrepancy is a tantalizing hint of the latter.

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Why Information Cannot Be Destroyed — Leonard Susskind

🚨 THE UNIVERSE NEVER FORGETS. NOT A SINGLE MOMENT. You burned a book. The words are gone. The pages are ash. But physics says every letter still exists — scattered across trillions of particles, encoded in the quantum state of reality. And it’s not just books. Every breath you’ve ever taken. Every word you’ve ever spoken. Every person you’ve ever lost. The information is still here. Right now. Permanently.
🔴 WHAT YOU’LL DISCOVER:
🔴 Why burning something doesn’t destroy its information.
🔴 How Stephen Hawking lost the biggest bet in physics history.
🔴 The black hole war that nearly broke quantum mechanics.
🔴 Why spacetime itself is made of information.
🔴 What this means about death — and why nothing truly disappears.
⚠️ WARNING: After this video, you will never look at destruction the same way again.
Like and subscribe for more reality-breaking physics.
physics, quantum mechanics, information paradox, black holes, Hawking radiation, holographic principle, entropy, universe, science, reality, quantum information, spacetime, Leonard Susskind, Stephen Hawking, ER EPR.

We’ve misunderstood the physics of our universe | Sabine Hossenfelder, Ivette Fuentes, James Ladyman

Sabine Hossenfelder, Ivette Fuentes and James Ladyman discuss the scaling laws of the universe and the fundamental nature of reality.

Is the universe one thing, or many things?

With a free trial, you can watch the full debate NOW at https://iai.tv/video/the-one-and-the–… central question in ancient Greek philosophy was the problem of the One and the Many. It is a question that has echoed across Western culture and is still with us today. Should we see the world as a coherent whole or a multitude of separate parts? The puzzle is that we need both the whole and the parts, but an explanation of the relationship between them has proved problematic and perhaps unknowable. In contemporary physics, the parts are the teeming world of particle physics, and these should make up the cosmological world of the universe as a whole and the overall framework of Einsteinian space-time. But as yet we have not been able to combine the two coherently. Is looking at the universe from the small scale and the large always going to be incompatible? Does it mean a theory of everything is an illusion and the attempt to combine quantum mechanics and Einstein’s general relativity a forlorn project? Or is the parallel with the ancient Greek puzzle accidental and the current challenge one that might be overcome? #quantumphysics #universe #philosophy #fundamentalunits #theoryofeverything Sabine Hossenfelder is a theoretical physicist and acclaimed science communicator, known for her sharp critiques of the scientific mainstream. She is also a best-selling author and YouTuber. Ivette Fuentes is a theoretical quantum physicist at the University of Southampton and Emmy Fellow at the University of Oxford. James Ladyman is a philosopher of science at the University of Bristol. He is best known for his book Every Thing Must Go, calling for a metaphysics grounded in physics and complexity science. Hosted by Jack Symes. 00:40 James Ladyman on the different notions of scale 02:39 Sabine Hossenfelder on energy in the universe 05:19 Ivette Fuentes on unifying quantum mechanics and general relativity 09:00 Is the universe “One” or “Many”? 17:15 Particles are not fundamental 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… For debates and talks: https://iai.tv For articles: https://iai.tv/articles For courses: https://iai.tv/iai-academy/courses.

A central question in ancient Greek philosophy was the problem of the One and the Many. It is a question that has echoed across Western culture and is still with us today. Should we see the world as a coherent whole or a multitude of separate parts? The puzzle is that we need both the whole and the parts, but an explanation of the relationship between them has proved problematic and perhaps unknowable. In contemporary physics, the parts are the teeming world of particle physics, and these should make up the cosmological world of the universe as a whole and the overall framework of Einsteinian space-time. But as yet we have not been able to combine the two coherently.

Is looking at the universe from the small scale and the large always going to be incompatible? Does it mean a theory of everything is an illusion and the attempt to combine quantum mechanics and Einstein’s general relativity a forlorn project? Or is the parallel with the ancient Greek puzzle accidental and the current challenge one that might be overcome?

#quantumphysics #universe #philosophy #fundamentalunits #theoryofeverything.

A new entanglement-enhanced quantum sensing scheme

Over the past decades, quantum scientists have introduced various technologies that operate leveraging quantum mechanical effects, including quantum sensors, computers and memory devices. Most of these technologies leverage entanglement, a quantum phenomenon via which two or more particles become intrinsically linked and share a unified quantum state, irrespective of the distance between them.

Gravitational waves leave imprints on light emitted by atoms, theoretical study predicts

Gravitational waves are ripples in spacetime produced by violent cosmic events, such as the merging of black holes. So far, direct detections have relied on measuring tiny distance changes over kilometer-scale instruments. In a new theoretical study published in Physical Review Letters, researchers at Stockholm University, Nordita, and the University of Tübingen propose an unconventional approach: tracking how gravitational waves reshape the light emitted by atoms. The work describes a possible detection route, but an experimental demonstration remains for the future.

When atoms are excited, they naturally relax by emitting light at a characteristic frequency—a quantum process known as spontaneous emission. This happens through their interaction with the quantum electromagnetic field.

Gravitational waves modulate the quantum field, which in turn affects spontaneous emission,” said Jerzy Paczos, a Ph.D. student at Stockholm University. “This modulation can shift the frequencies of emitted photons compared with the no-wave case.”

Fluorescent dye that works in superacidic conditions expands possibilities for imaging in extreme environments

Since the 1960s, boron–dipyrromethene dyes, commonly called BODIPY dyes, have been widely used for their strong fluorescence, especially in bioimaging, molecular and ion sensing, and as photosensitizers. Researchers especially like how, with simple modifications to BODIPY molecules, their emission color can be tuned—an indispensable quality for multicolor imaging applications.

However, conventional BODIPY dyes are unstable in acidic environments. Strong acids can disrupt their structure by removing the boron atom and causing the dye to lose its fluorescence. This has limited their use in highly acidic conditions.

In a new breakthrough, researchers from Hokkaido University have developed a superacid-resistant BODIPY dye. The research team, led by Professor Yasuhide Inokuma at the Institute for Chemical Reaction Design and Discovery (WPI-ICReDD), reports the findings in Nature Communications.

No exotic physics needed: A new formation mechanism of skyrmions inside magnets

Skyrmions, in which electron spins inside a magnet are arranged like vortices, are a key structure in next-generation spintronics technology. KAIST researchers have shown that skyrmions can form using only the fundamental physical interactions within magnets, without requiring special physical conditions.

This finding, published in the journal Physical Review Letters, expands the possibility of realizing skyrmions in a wide range of magnetic materials and suggests new potential for developing next-generation ultra-low-power information devices with data storage densities tens to hundreds of times higher than current technologies.

A research team led by Professor Se Kwon Kim from the Department of Physics has proposed a new theoretical framework showing that vortex-like magnetic structures can naturally emerge solely through magnetoelastic coupling —the interaction between magnetism and lattice structure.

Double the doublet, shake well, break one, and keep the other intact: welcome, dark scalars!

The search isn’t over—future runs of the High-Luminosity LHC and the proposed Future Circular Collider (FCC) will continue to hunt for these “inert” twins to see if they are hiding at even higher energy levels.


For the first time ever, the CMS experiment has designed a dedicated analysis using parametrised machine learning to look for new dark particles that don’t socialize with Standard Model fermions, one of them being a favourite candidate in the search for dark matter.

Using proton-proton collisions delivered by the LHC in 2016–2018 and 2022, CMS collaborators have been looking for new scalar particles in a theoretical framework that had never before been tested with a dedicated analysis, leading to the widest excluded mass range to date for this model.

Are there more Higgs-boson-like particles?

Having found a Higgs boson (a scalar particle), theorists naturally ask themselves: could there be more than one? In fact, rather than a single Higgs boson, which is the only observable particle, the Standard Model predicts a so-called Higgs doublet. While we’re at it, let’s add a second electroweak doublet; why not? The effect is the conception of 4 new scalar particles: two neutral ones, labeled H and A (with H the lightest of the two), and two charged ones, H+ and H-. The search for such extra scalar particles has already spanned several decades, but only when they actually interact with our Standard Model particles. With an extra ingredient, called the ℤ2 symmetry, the new scalars become allergic to our matter particles, the fermions, and only prefer to talk to bosons like themselves: the Higgs boson, but also the W and Z bosons. They become so-called inert, or dark, scalars and the model inherits this name — the Inert Doublet Model.

Terahertz spin waves can be converted into computer signals, study shows

What will the computers of tomorrow look like? Chances are good that spintronics will play a decisive role in the next generation of computers. In spintronics, the intrinsic angular momentum of an electron (the spin) is used to store, process and transmit data. This technology is already in use today, for example in hard drives. However, the scope of what is possible extends much further: More recent approaches aim at using not just individual spins, but entire spin waves made up of partly hundreds of trillions of spins. Such collective spin excitations are known as magnons. They could enable extremely energy-efficient data transmission—even in the terahertz range.

So far, so good. But how can these spin waves be coupled to today’s technology? “If we develop a concept to perform computer calculations with magnons, it must be compatible with the technology we currently use,” says physicist Davide Bossini from the University of Konstanz. “To reach this goal, you have to convert the spin wave into an electrical charge signal.” This spin-to-charge conversion is one of the major challenges of spintronics.

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