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Mar 19, 2017

Let’s Use Schrödinger’s Cat To Learn About Quantum Entanglement

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Support me on Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/minutephysics

Previous video on No Cloning: https://youtu.be/owPC60Ue0BE

How to teleport Schrödinger’s cat: this video presents the full quantum teleportation procedure, in which an arbitrary qubit (spin, etc) is teleported from Alice to Bob by way of a pair of particles entangled in a bell (EPR) state and the transmission of information via a classical channel.

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Mar 19, 2017

ESight makes high-tech glasses that let blind people see

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

These high-tech glasses let blind people see, without surgery.

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Mar 19, 2017

Why String Theory Could Be the Key to Uncovering the ‘Theory of Everything’

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

A central goal that modern physicists share is finding a single theory that can explain the entire Universe and unite the forces of nature.

The standard model, for example, leaves dark matter, dark energy, and even gravity out of the picture — meaning that it really only accounts for a very small percentage of what makes up the Universe.

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Mar 19, 2017

Studies: One Dose of “Psilocybin” from Magic Mushrooms Relieves Depression and Anxiety in 80% of Cancer Patients

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, neuroscience

New studies from NYU and John Hopkins University show the effectiveness of psilocybin in treating depression and anxiety of cancer patients.

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Mar 19, 2017

Scientists Just Found an Unexpected Property in a Solid Metal: It ‘Remembers’ Its Liquid State

Posted by in category: materials

Researchers have probed samples of metal bismuth, and found a completely unexpected property — under certain conditions, the solid metal can retain a type of ‘structural memory’ of its liquid state.

The fact that scientists have found a new property of metals is exciting enough. But this also means solid bismuth can go from being repelled by a magnetic field (diamagnetic) to being attracted to a magnetic field (ferromagnetic), which could lead to a whole new way of creating materials with unique properties.

The phases of matter we learn about in high school, such as liquid, gas, and solid, are all defined by the way molecules in matter are arranged depending on external conditions. For example, liquid water freezes and contracts together, expanding into ice, or relaxes and boils into steam.

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Mar 19, 2017

Mark Cuban Says This Is Where The World’s First Trillionaires Will Emerge

Posted by in category: futurism

And as the world heads to that direction, he “would rather be a philosophy major,” the billionaire said at SXSW.

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Mar 19, 2017

Visa Is Developing Sunglasses That You Can Use to Pay For Things

Posted by in category: futurism

The prototype was showcased at SXSW in Austin.

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Mar 19, 2017

Dreams do come true…

Posted by in category: food

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Mar 19, 2017

If We Can See the Future We Want, We Can Shape It Too

Posted by in categories: business, futurism

Alida Draudt and Julia Rose West are not only co-authors, business partners, and best of friends, but most importantly, they have differing points of view—which is ideal for two budding Silicon Valley futurists.

Alida currently works as a futurist and design strategist at Capital One, and Julia is a design strategist and user experience manager at Ancestry.com.

In their recently published book, What the Foresight, they describe the mindset, practices and tools leaders need to explore multiple futures, identify their preferred future, and then take steps to create it. In their view, the future’s complexity requires looking at it from multiple viewpoints and angles.

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Mar 19, 2017

Nanoscale logic machines go beyond binary computing

Posted by in categories: computing, information science, nanotechnology, particle physics

(Phys.org)—Scientists have built tiny logic machines out of single atoms that operate completely differently than conventional logic devices do. Instead of relying on the binary switching paradigm like that used by transistors in today’s computers, the new nanoscale logic machines physically simulate the problems and take advantage of the inherent randomness that governs the behavior of physical systems at the nanoscale—randomness that is usually considered a drawback.

The team of researchers, Barbara Fresch et al., from universities in Belgium, Italy, Australia, Israel, and the US, have published a paper on the new nanoscale logic machines in a recent issue of Nano Letters.

“Our approach shows the possibility of a new class of tiny analog computers that can solve computationally difficult problems by simple statistical algorithms running in nanoscale solid-state physical devices,” coauthor Francoise Remacle at the University of Liege told Phys.org.

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