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Archive for the ‘physics’ category: Page 148

Mar 28, 2022

Printing circuits on rare nanomagnets puts a new spin on computing

Posted by in categories: information science, nanotechnology, physics, robotics/AI

New research artificially creating a rare form of matter known as spin glass could spark a new paradigm in artificial intelligence by allowing algorithms to be directly printed as physical hardware. The unusual properties of spin glass enable a form of AI that can recognize objects from partial images much like the brain does and show promise for low-power computing, among other intriguing capabilities.

“Our work accomplished the first experimental realization of an artificial spin glass consisting of nanomagnets arranged to replicate a neural network,” said Michael Saccone, a post-doctoral researcher in at Los Alamos National Laboratory and lead author of the new paper in Nature Physics. “Our paper lays the groundwork we need to use these practically.”

Spin glasses are a way to think about material structure mathematically. Being free, for the first time, to tweak the interaction within these systems using electron-beam lithography makes it possible to represent a variety of computing problems in spin-glass networks, Saccone said.

Mar 27, 2022

Italian scientists hacked pizza physics to make dough without yeast

Posted by in categories: chemistry, cybercrime/malcode, food, physics

Ernesto Di Maio is severely allergic to the yeast in leavened foods. “I have to go somewhere and hide because I will be fully covered with bumps and bubbles on the whole body,” he says. “It’s really brutal.”

Di Maio is a materials scientist at the University of Naples Federico II where he studies the formation of bubbles in polymers like polyurethane. He’s had to swear off bread and pizza, which can make outings in Italy a touch awkward. “It’s quite hard in Naples not to eat pizza,” he explains. “People would say, ‘Don’t you like pizza? Why are you having pasta? That’s strange.’”

So Di Maio put Iaccarino and another graduate student, Pietro Avallone, to work on a project to make pizza dough without yeast. The results of this scientific and culinary experiment are published in Tuesday’s edition of Physics of Fluids. Di Maio pulled in another colleague: chemical engineer Rossana Pasquino who studies the flow of materials, everything from toothpaste to ketchup to plastics. “Pizza [dough] is a funny material,” she explains, “because it flows, but it has to be also like rubber. It has to be elastic enough [when it’s cooked] to be perfect when you eat it.” — I had to post this because I love Pizza.

Continue reading “Italian scientists hacked pizza physics to make dough without yeast” »

Mar 26, 2022

Black holes found to exert a pressure on their environment

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Physicists at the University of Sussex have discovered that black holes exert a pressure on their environment, in a scientific first.

In 1974 Stephen Hawking made the seminal discovery that emit thermal radiation. Previous to that, black holes were believed to be inert, the final stages of a dying heavy star.

The University of Sussex scientists have shown that they are in fact even more complex thermodynamic systems, with not only a temperature but also a .

Mar 24, 2022

Star’s Mysterious Orbit Around Black Hole Proves Einstein Was Right— Again

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Star’s mysterious orbit around black hole proves einstein was right all along—again.


The star, known as S2, has a 16-year elliptical orbit. It came near 20 billion kilometers of our black hole, Sagittarius A*, last year. If Isaac Newton’s traditional definition of gravity is correct, S2 should then continue on its previous orbit’s course through space. But it didn’t work.

Continue reading “Star’s Mysterious Orbit Around Black Hole Proves Einstein Was Right— Again” »

Mar 23, 2022

A new experiment could confirm the fifth form of matter

Posted by in category: physics

It could change physics as we know it.

Mar 22, 2022

Elon Musk Thinks Destinus Technology Will Soon End The War Against Russia, Know How

Posted by in categories: business, drones, Elon Musk, physics, robotics/AI, space travel

https://youtube.com/watch?v=vhiYHdMnK44

Mikhail Kokorich is the founder of Destinus. This serial entrepreneur has been dubbed Russia’s Elon Musk by his public relations team. The Russian businessman says his business, Destinus, is developing a hydrogen-powered, zero-emissions transcontinental delivery drone that can travel at speeds up to Mach 15.

Destinus plans to combine the technological advancements from a spaceplane with the ordinary and straightforward physics from a glider to create a hyperplane that will meet the many demands of a hyper-connected world.

Continue reading “Elon Musk Thinks Destinus Technology Will Soon End The War Against Russia, Know How” »

Mar 22, 2022

Study claims an ‘anti-universe’ where time is backwards may exist next to ours

Posted by in categories: physics, space

An “anti-universe” where time runs backwards could exist next to ours, according to a new study.

The theory involves the fact nature has fundamental symmetries and researchers think this could apply to the universe as a whole.

The theory has been explained in the journal Annals of Physics.

Mar 22, 2022

Researcher documents what happened during the first attempt at a gravitational-wave observatory in Europe

Posted by in category: physics

First predicted in Einstein’s theory of general relativity, gravitational waves are tiny ripples in spacetime generated by titanic and powerful cosmic events. The great physicist believed that no equipment would ever be sensitive to detect these faint cosmic ripples. Fortunately, Einstein was wrong, but that doesn’t mean that the detection of gravitational waves has been easy.

The history of a planned array to be built in Europe during the late 1980s, the reasons this failed, and the parallels with current detectors, are documented in a new paper published in The European Physical Journal H, authored by Adele La Rana, University of Verona, and INFN Section of Sapienza University, Italy.

La Rana explains that following the announcement of the first detections of by the LIGO/Virgo collaboration in 2016 and 2017, questions arose regarding “the missed opportunity” of having an array of two or more long-based GW interferometers in Europe.

Mar 22, 2022

Scientists unveiled the largest number of gravitational waves ever detected

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Universe has an abundance of gravitational wave sources. Recently, an international team of scientists unveiled a tsunami of gravitational waves. This discovery is the most significant number of gravitational waves ever detected.

Scientists detected 35 new gravitational waves. These waves were formed by merging black holes or neutron stars and black holes smashing together. The observation was made by the LIGO and Virgo observatories between November 2019 and March 2020.

This brings the total number of detections to 90 after three observing runs between 2015 and 2020.

Mar 21, 2022

Optimality in natural physics: Revisiting Classic dynamics from Optimal control

Posted by in category: physics

A Dynamic Programming approach.


We also point out an observation that will be the topic of this post. Classic dynamics system is a solution of an optimal control problem.