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'Harder, better, faster, stronger'-tethered soft exosuit reduces metabolic cost of running - 1 views

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    "What if running the 26.2 miles of a marathon only felt like running 24.9 miles, or if you could improve your average running pace from 9:14 minutes/mile to 8:49 minutes/mile without weeks of training?"
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    I thought the point of running a marathon was to make the effort :)
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Chemists create molecular 'leaf' that collects and stores solar power without solar panels - 2 views

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    An international team of scientists led by Liang-shi Li at Indiana University has achieved a new milestone in the quest to recycle carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere into carbon-neutral fuels and others materials.
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Gravity hidden aspects of electrodynamics - 0 views

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    "Gravity spoils the symmetry regardless of whether magnetic monopoles exist or not. This is shocking. The bottom line is that the symmetry cannot exist in our universe at the fundamental level because gravity is everywhere"
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Entanglement is Necessary for Emergent Classicality in All Physical Theories - 0 views

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    "...We show that any theory with a classical limit must contain entangled states, thus establishing entanglement as an inevitable feature of any theory superseding classical theory. "
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A Brain Built From Atomic Switches Can Learn - 0 views

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    A tiny self-organized mesh full of artificial synapses recalls its experiences and can solve simple problems. Its inventors hope it points the way to devices that match the brain's energy-efficient computing prowess.
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[1107.0167] Nonlinear transformation optics and engineering of the Kerr effect - 9 views

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    The best paper on transformation optics written ever :-)
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    Finally something worth to read in the MM field!. The idea is excellent, congratullations. However, I think there is a typo or mistake in the definition of l=3x10-13 m, the "waist" of the laser beam. Seems clear that 0.3 pm is too small for being a waist of any laser beam.
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    Thanks for your commendation. Of course, the problem with nonlinear transformation optics is the same as with linear: it's very easy to come up with theoretical descriptions of devices that have the most absurd properties, but it will be extremely hard to fabricate them. But if you have any good suggestion, please shoot! About the laser beam: Pekka made the simulations, since I am not a "Comsolist", but still I think the numbers are correct. You are right that we should not call this a laser beam. Our problem was the following: we need to have a very simple model that can be simulated exactly (full Maxwell equations) but naturally exhibits self focusing. The Gaussian beam was the simplest solution. Since our model is purely classical and moreover we do not take into account diffraction effects, the parameter "l" is of minor importance. Taking "l" much larger gives almost the same picture but requires much more computer power to simulate. I guess that's why Pekka chose an unnaturally small number.
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    Concerning the fabrication... as usual, no idea. I agree that this is the main drawback of MM, and certainly difficult to overcome. I would double check that number, because its value is related with the beam shape of Fig. 1 A. I believe that the simulations are correct, it's just a detail.
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    wow ... still publishing despite babysitting and new job!!
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A practical polariton laser - Nature Photonics - 2 views

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    One overview about a recent publication (10/06/2014 http://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.236802) showing room temperature operation of a new type of laser 'discovered' in 2013, the polariton laser. This new type of laser shows extremely low threshold current density - 2 orders of magnitude below Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers (VCSEL) - and it is believed to become one important component of nanophotonic integrated components.
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Europe Unveils Its Vision for a Quantum Future - 0 views

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    "...the European Commission announced in 2016 that it was investing one billion euros in a research effort known as the Quantum Technology Flagship. The goal for this project is to develop four technologies: quantum communication, quantum simulation, quantum computing, and quantum sensing. After almost two years, how is it going?" arxiv link to the actual report: http://arxiv.org/abs/1712.03773
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Microsoft makes play for next wave of computing with quantum computing toolkit - 1 views

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    At its Ignite conference today, Microsoft announced its moves to embrace the next big thing in computing: quantum computing. Later this year, Microsoft will release a new quantum computing programming language, with full Visual Studio integration, along with a quantum computing simulator. With these, developers will be able to both develop and debug quantum programs implementing quantum algorithms.
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Bacteria Use Brainlike Bursts of Electricity to Communicate - 1 views

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    With electrical signals, cells can organize themselves into complex societies and negotiate with other colonies.
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SpaceML.org: A new resource to accelerate AI application in space science and exploration - 0 views

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    Might have some interesting datasets.
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Hubble detects smallest known dark matter clumps - 1 views

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    More info on dark matter ...
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paperswithcode.com added Astronomy (and other fields) - 0 views

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    Also Physics, Math, Statistics, CS , see https://portal.paperswithcode.com/
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[2109.05237] Physics-based Deep Learning - 0 views

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    Also a repo here: https://github.com/thunil/Physics-Based-Deep-Learning definitely looks interesting
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Quanta Magazine - 0 views

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    Can some of our quantum experts elaborate a bit on implications etc.? :) I'm not sure I follow.
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