For years, physicists were stuck in trying to explain an important mathematical problem in physics. The right approach ended ...
An amazing, almost paradoxical picture is unfolding in the stock market. Outwardly, the indices are doing perfectly fine. But ...
As a result, researchers are exploring ways to embed better logic into AI. The goal isn’t so much to make LLMs smarter; it’s ...
Time has always seemed like the one thing physics could count on. Matter changes, stars die, particles flicker in and out, ...
Fault-tolerant quantum simulation just got 250 times cheaper to run. QuEra Computing and Los Alamos published an architecture ...
A new critique in the scientific journal Nature is raising fresh questions about Microsoft's claimed quantum computing ...
Over the past decade, Professor L. Mahadevan's Soft Math Lab at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) has helped establish how the ancient Japanese paper arts ...
Microsoft's 2029 quantum supercomputer ambitions may have hit a roadblock, as critics claim the company's 2025 quantum ...
Dr Jin Cheng (Jess Hong) pulls a Sir Isaac Newton move in the VR game in "3 Body Problem." Credit: Netflix If you're the type of person who yells "wey-oh!" if someone in a TV show says the name of the ...
Physicists may have uncovered a surprising new clue that string theory—the idea that the universe is built from unimaginably tiny vibrating strings—could be more than just a mathematical fantasy.
If you could take an apple and break it into smaller and smaller parts, you would find molecules, then atoms, followed by subatomic particles like protons and the quarks and gluons that make them up.
Project Hail Mary, the Ryan Gosling-starrer film based on the book by Andy Weir, feels like a natural successor to The Martian, but with the dial turned up. Where The Martian was about survival on a ...