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Jun 14, 2019
Why Nuclear Fusion Really is Coming Soon
Posted by Joseph Barney in category: space travel
Jun 14, 2019
Boston Dynamics: New Robots Now Fight Back
Posted by Joseph Barney in category: robotics/AI
Turns out that last one was a CGI joke but this one isn’t. Facebook wouldn’t let me delete the post.
Recently, I picked up Kai-Fu Lee’s newest book, AI Superpowers.
Kai-Fu Lee is one of the most plugged-in AI investors on the planet, heading management of over $2 billion AUM between six funds, and over 300 portfolio companies in the U.S. and China.
Jun 14, 2019
Next Month’s Total Solar Eclipse Will Pass Right Over a Space Observatory
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: physics, space
Next month, a total solar eclipse will pass over a slice of the South Pacific, Chile, and Argentina—and directly over an observatory in the Andes run by the National Science Foundation.
Astronomers and physicists are now preparing the experiments they plan to run during the eclipse. As with past eclipses, these experiments will focus on observing the Sun, as well as the effects of eclipses on Earth.
Jun 14, 2019
Electron (or ‘hole’) pairs may survive effort to kill superconductivity
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: energy, materials
Scientists seeking to understand the mechanism underlying superconductivity in “stripe-ordered” cuprates—copper-oxide materials with alternating areas of electric charge and magnetism—discovered an unusual metallic state when attempting to turn superconductivity off. They found that under the conditions of their experiment, even after the material loses its ability to carry electrical current with no energy loss, it retains some conductivity—and possibly the electron (or hole) pairs required for its superconducting superpower.
“This work provides circumstantial evidence that the stripe-ordered arrangement of charges and magnetism is good for forming the charge-carrier pairs required for superconductivity to emerge,” said John Tranquada, a physicist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Tranquada and his co-authors from Brookhaven Lab and the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at Florida State University, where some of the work was done, describe their findings in a paper just published in Science Advances. A related paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by co-author Alexei Tsvelik, a theorist at Brookhaven Lab, provides insight into the theoretical underpinnings for the observations.
Continue reading “Electron (or ‘hole’) pairs may survive effort to kill superconductivity” »
Jun 14, 2019
A new rubber source could save water, preserve rain forests and even prevent allergic reactions
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: futurism
Jun 14, 2019
Quantum physics experiment shows Heisenberg was right about uncertainty, in a certain sense
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: quantum physics
Heisenberg’s famous Uncertainty Principle is put to the test to see if things really are uncertain in the quantum world.
Jun 14, 2019
Bioinformation Within the Biofield: Beyond Bioelectromagnetics
Posted by Richard Christophr Saragoza in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience, quantum physics
This review article extends previous scientific definitions of the biofield (endogenous energy fields of the body) to include nonclassical and quantum energy fields. The biofield is defined further in terms of its functional property to act as a resonance target for external forms of energy used as treatment modalities in energy medicine. The functional role of the biofield in the body’s innate self-healing mechanisms is hypothesized, based on the concept of bioinformation which, mediated by consciousness, functions globally at the quantum level to supply coherence, phase, spin, and pattern information to regulate and heal all physiologic processes. This model is used to explain a wide variety of anomalies reported in the scientific literature, which can not be explained by traditional biophysics and bioelectromagnetics.