Quanta Magazine > 0; if (typeof predicate !== ‘function’) { throw new TypeError(‘predicate must be a function’); } var thisArg = arguments[1]; var k = 0; while (k We care about your data, and we’d like to use cookies to give you a smooth browsing experience. Please agree and read more about our privacy policy.Agree… Continue reading A Biochemist’s View of Life’s Origin Reframes Cancer and Aging
Tag: Quantum Stuff
NASA’s Artemis I Moon Mission Is ‘Go’ for Launch
After more than a decade of development, NASA’s new moon rocket will finally attempt to shed the shackles of Earth’s gravity and soar into space. The space agency has officially set August 29 as the launch date for its Artemis I mission. This flight will be the beginning of an intricate series of spaceflights that… Continue reading NASA’s Artemis I Moon Mission Is ‘Go’ for Launch
Dogs Actually Tear Up When Their Owners Come Home
Karen Hopkin: This is Scientific American’s 60-Second Science. I’m Karen Hopkin. After an exhausting day at the office, it’s hard not to smile when you’re greeted by a delirious display of uncontrolled canine joy. [Dog greeting] But it’s not just the happy yapping and wriggling tail wagging that tug at our heartstrings. [Dog greeting] Because… Continue reading Dogs Actually Tear Up When Their Owners Come Home
How the Physics of Nothing Underlies Everything
“We’re learning there’s a lot more to learn about nothing than we thought,” said Isabel Garcia Garcia, a particle physicist at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics in California. “How much more are we missing?” So far, such studies have led to a dramatic conclusion: Our universe may sit on a platform of shoddy construction, a… Continue reading How the Physics of Nothing Underlies Everything
Ancient Equations Offer New Look at Number Groups
In the third century BCE, Archimedes posed a riddle about herding cattle that, he claimed, only a truly wise person could solve. His problem ultimately boiled down to an equation that involves the difference between two squared terms, which can be written as x2 – dy2 = 1. Here, d is an integer — a… Continue reading Ancient Equations Offer New Look at Number Groups
What Is Quantum Field Theory and Why Is It Incomplete?
(09:20) And then we have a bunch of matter fields, they come in three groups of four. The most familiar ones are an electron field, two quark fields associated to the up and the down quark. The proton contains — oh man, I hope we get this right — two up and down and the… Continue reading What Is Quantum Field Theory and Why Is It Incomplete?
Psychologists Urge Peers to Take Climate Action
The field of psychology must bolster its ability to address the health effects of climate change, according to a new report from the nation’s largest professional organization of psychologists. The American Psychological Association says its more than 133,000 members can do more to address climate change by broadening their impact on everything from mental health care to… Continue reading Psychologists Urge Peers to Take Climate Action
Self-Taught AI Shows Similarities to How the Brain Works
For a decade now, many of the most impressive artificial intelligence systems have been taught using a huge inventory of labeled data. An image might be labeled “tabby cat” or “tiger cat,” for example, to “train” an artificial neural network to correctly distinguish a tabby from a tiger. The strategy has been both spectacularly successful… Continue reading Self-Taught AI Shows Similarities to How the Brain Works
When Should COVID School Restrictions Lift? Intense Debates Persist
Last Friday the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced a pivot in its guidelines for indoor mask wearing that suggests that more than two thirds of Americans no longer need to wear masks—including children in schools. “We want to give people a break from things like mask wearing when our levels are low and… Continue reading When Should COVID School Restrictions Lift? Intense Debates Persist
Seeking Mathematical Truth in Counterfeit Coin Puzzles
Our recent suite of puzzles featured the humble double-pan balance scale, historically a symbol of commerce and government, art and science. Balance scales are also popular in recreational mathematics. Balance puzzles require clear, logical reasoning and lend themselves well to mathematical generalization. Let’s see how Quanta readers balanced these qualities in the puzzles below. Puzzle… Continue reading Seeking Mathematical Truth in Counterfeit Coin Puzzles