Albert Einstein
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Superintelligent machines may well need us after all
In 1915, Albert Einstein stood before the Prussian Academy of Science and revealed the now-famous equations of his general theory of relativity. Einstein and relativity are synonymous today with genius, but these revelations were initially met with indifference, in part because the maths was too radical for his peers to fully digest. Today, tech firms would have us believe we are on the brink of “superintelligent” artificial intelligence capable of outperforming experts in most domains,...
Tabletop experiment helps reconcile fundamental physics
Tabletop experiment helps reconcile fundamental physics Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Assistant Professor Haocun Yu is something of a scientific diplomat. In a recent Physical Review Letters publication, she and her colleagues show how a tabletop experiment can bring together two bedrock physics theories that have never been fully reconciled. More than a century ago, Albert Einstein gave us the theory of general relativity, describing gravity in relation to space and...
Neil deGrasse Tyson narrates new trailer for upcoming Broadway musical, 'Galileo'
Neil deGrasse Tyson narrates new trailer for upcoming Broadway musical, 'Galileo' Things are looking up on Broadway as the nexus of American live theater is preparing for a cosmic new musical based on the life of pioneering 16th and 17th century Italian scientist and astronomer, Galileo Galilei, a pivotal figure of the Scientific Revolution who Albert Einstein referred to as the "father of modern science." Produced by Amanda Lipitz, Henry Tisch and Jordan Roth, "Galileo" is due on the Great...
Why Henry Nowak's fatal stabbing by a Sikh man could become British Right's 'Black Lives Matter'
Albert Einstein proved that time is relative and can be bent by the force of gravity or by moving at extremely high speeds approaching light. The same goes for truth, which is often bent by numerous variables. Not the material truth, but the larger Hegelian picture of truth that filters out to the world, what Jug Suraiya once labelled the “real nature of the perceived universe”.
Comment on "Specific heat of an ideal Bose gas above the Bose condensation temperature," [Am. J. Phys. 72(9), 1193--1194 (2004)]
Physics > History and Philosophy of Physics [Submitted on 20 Apr 2026 (v1), last revised 8 Jun 2026 (this version, v3)] Title:Comment on "Specific heat of an ideal Bose gas above the Bose condensation temperature," [Am. J. Phys. 72(9), 1193--1194 (2004)]
Entanglement Builds Space-Time. Now "Magic" Gives It Gravity
Entanglement Builds Space-Time. Now “Magic” Gives It Gravity. In 1973, John Archibald Wheeler described the relationship between space and matter in two sentences: “Space acts on matter, telling it how to move.
Paraguay bank on Alfaro's psychology-driven approach at World Cup
Paraguay bank on Alfaro's psychology-driven approach at World Cup ASUNCION, June 1 : Gustavo Alfaro is being hailed in Paraguay as the key figure behind the rapid turnaround of a team who had struggled in South American qualifying and are now World Cup-bound, with many crediting a strategy rooted in psychology. Since taking over in August 2024, the 63-year-old Argentine manager has won over both players and fans with results and a motivational style, often drawing on authors and historical...
Astronomers discover a 'lost world' of black hole mergers: 'It's the astronomical equivalent of uncovering an ancient civilization'
Astronomers discover a 'lost world' of black hole mergers: 'It's the astronomical equivalent of uncovering an ancient civilization' "Now, we have growing evidence that there are ways that the universe creates merging black holes in addition to those that come from massive binary stars." Astronomers have struck "black gold" — a treasure trove of black hole mergers. And the discovery was made by analyzing ripples in the very fabric of space and time, or spacetime, called gravitational waves.
Is the peptide craze backed by science? The promise behind the hype
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James Webb Space Telescope weighs 'sleeping giant' black hole from 10 billion light-years away — and it's 6 billion times our sun's mass
James Webb Space Telescope weighs 'sleeping giant' black hole from 10 billion light-years away — and it's 6 billion times our sun's mass "We can now undertake a more complete census of how black holes develop over time and infer their role in shaping galaxy evolution." Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), astronomers have "weighed" a sleeping giant — a dormant supermassive black hole located a staggering 10 billion light-years away. That makes this black hole the most distant...