entangled dot cloud
MIT engineers develop a magnetic transistor for more energy-efficient electronics
Transistors, the building blocks of modern electronics, are typically made of silicon. Because it’s a semiconductor, this material can control the flow of electricity in a circuit. But silicon has fundamental physical limits that restrict how compact and energy-efficient a transistor can be.MIT researchers have now replaced silicon with a magnetic semiconductor, creating a magnetic transistor that could enable smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient circuits. The material’s magnetism strongly
The Null Pointer Crisis: Running God-Mode Software on Legacy Hardware
We spend a lot of time discussing AI Alignment—how to ensure the machine’s values match ours. But I’d like to open a thread on a parallel issue that seems to be causing a "Kernel Panic" in the current generation (specifically Gen Z and Alpha): The Human Alignment Problem.I approach this not as a psychologist, but from a systems engineering perspective. If we look at the rising rates of anxiety, burnout, and suicide not as "illnesses" but as System Errors, a terrifying archite
Physicists trace particles back to the quantum vacuum
Scientists have found “strange quarks” that originated as virtual particles that sprang from nothing Quantum physics paints a ...
What costs more energy — running a quantum clock or observing it?
The study shows that in quantum devices, reading a clock consumes far more energy than running it. This insight will help ...
Massive Quantum Leap: New Tech Could Enable 100,000-Qubit Computers
They combined optical tweezers with metasurfaces to trap more than 1,000 atoms, with the potential to capture hundreds of ...
Glimpsing the quantum vacuum: Particle spin correlations offer insight into how visible matter emerges from 'nothing'
Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have uncovered experimental evidence that ...
VIP-2 experiment narrows the search for exotic physics beyond the Pauli exclusion principle
The Pauli exclusion principle is a cornerstone of the Standard Model of particle physics and is essential for the structure ...
Thousands of sodium atoms merge into 1 wave, warping quantum reality
A cluster of 7,000 sodium atoms has just been coaxed into behaving as a single, ghostly wave, stretching quantum weirdness ...
Surgery for quantum bits: Bit-flip errors corrected during superconducting qubit operations
Quantum computers hold great promise for exciting applications in the future, but for now they keep presenting physicists and ...
Record Smashed For Largest Object to Be Seen as a Quantum Wave
A microscopic clump of sodium has become the largest object ever to be observed as a wave, improving upon previous records by ...
Show HN: LocalCoder – Tell it your hardware, get the exact local AI model to run
Hey HN — I built this after seeing the Qwen3-Coder threads here. Every thread had the same questions: which quant for my GPU? How much VRAM do I need? Ollama or llama.cpp? What context window can I actually use?LocalCoder answers all of that in one page. Pick your platform (Apple Silicon, NVIDIA, CPU), select your chip and memory, and it gives you:- The best model + quantization for your setup
- Expected speed (tokens/sec) and context window
- Copy-paste Ollama commands to get running in 60
Show HN: DeepBrainz-R1 – Reasoning-First Small Models for Agentic Systems
Hi HN,I’m releasing DeepBrainz-R1 — a family of reasoning-first Small Language Models (SLMs) designed for agentic systems in production.The core idea is simple: agentic systems don’t ask once — they reason repeatedly (tool calls, verification loops, retries, schema-constrained outputs). That changes reliability and cost requirements, where large chat-optimized LLMs often struggle.DeepBrainz-R1 models are post-trained to improve multi-step reasoning behavior, output stability, and robustness unde
Tuning topological superconductors into existence by adjusting the ratio of two elements
Today's most powerful computers hit a wall when tackling certain problems, from designing new drugs to cracking encryption codes. Error-free quantum computers promise to overcome those challenges, but building them requires materials with exotic properties of topological superconductors that are incredibly difficult to produce. Now, researchers at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (UChicago PME) and West Virginia University have found a way to tune these material
A 'crazy' dice proof leads to a new understanding of a fundamental law of physics
Right now, molecules in the air are moving around you in chaotic and unpredictable ways. To make sense of such systems, physicists use a law known as the Boltzmann distribution, which, rather than describe exactly where each particle is, describes the chance of finding the system in any of its possible states. This allows them to make predictions about the whole system even though the individual particle motions are random. It's like rolling a single die: Any one roll is unpredictable, but if yo
Surgery for quantum bits: Bit-flip errors corrected during superconducting qubit operations
Quantum computers hold great promise for exciting applications in the future, but for now they keep presenting physicists and engineers with a series of challenges and conundrums. One of them relates to decoherence and the errors that result from it: bit flips and phase flips. Such errors mean that the logical unit of a quantum computer, the qubit, can suddenly and unpredictably change its state from "0" to "1," or that the relative phase of a superposition state can jump from positive to negati
Signatures of fractional charges via anyon–trions in twisted MoTe<sub>2</sub>
<p>Nature, Published online: 04 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10101-w">doi:10.1038/s41586-026-10101-w</a></p>Fractionally charged excitations at zero magnetic field in twisted MoTe2 bilayers, a recently discovered fractional quantum anomalous Hall system, are observed via anyon-trions, excitonic complexes formed by binding a trion to a fractional charge.
Large-scale analogue quantum simulation using atom dot arrays
<p>Nature, Published online: 04 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-10053-7">doi:10.1038/s41586-025-10053-7</a></p>A new platform comprising large-scale 2D arrays of quantum dots patterned with sub-nanometre precision, with each quantum dot defined by tens of phosphorus atoms doped into silicon, allows for analogue simulation of quantum materials on arbitrary lattices.
How tumours trick the brain into shutting down cancer-fighting cells
<p>Nature, Published online: 04 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00338-w">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00338-w</a></p>Lung cancer in mice hijacks neurons to send a signal that subdues the immune system, study finds.
Immune cells from the gut drive development of Parkinson’s disease in the brain
<p>Nature, Published online: 04 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00284-7">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00284-7</a></p>In ‘body-first’ Parkinson’s disease, misfolded proteins propagate from the gut’s nervous system to the brain. Immune-cell activity seems to play a key part in this spread.
Tumour–brain crosstalk restrains cancer immunity via a sensory–sympathetic axis
<p>Nature, Published online: 04 February 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-10028-8">doi:10.1038/s41586-025-10028-8</a></p>Mouse models demonstrate that vagal sensory neurons transmit signals from lung adenocarcinoma to the brain, increasing sympathetic efferent activity in the tumour microenvironment and thereby creating a immunologically permissive environment for tumour growth.