Neutron Stars at the Edge of Spin and Energy

The universe keeps a few stubborn secrets in its pocket: the densest matter, the fastest spins, and the kind of energy that can light up entire galaxies for a moment in time. Neutron stars sit right at the crossroads of all three. They’re city-sized bundles of neutrons packed so tightly that a sugar-cube amount would…

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Edge AI Learns to Sense and Decide in Real Time

In a world racing toward smarter devices, the challenge isn’t just collecting data but turning it into quick, trustworthy decisions where they matter most. Imagine autonomous vehicles, delivery drones, or factory robots that must both feel their surroundings and decide what to do in the blink of an eye. A new study from a team…

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A New Way to See Quantum Echoes Without Orthogonality

Quantum excited states are the hidden chapters of nature’s story, the spectral fingerprints that light up when molecules vibrate, electrons hop, or spins flip. They’re essential to understanding chemistry, materials, and even how we design quantum devices. Yet for all the fuss around quantum computing and advanced simulations, predicting those excited states remains stubbornly hard….

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Robust NMF finds order in noisy image chaos

The art of sorting images into meaningful groups is not just a nerdy puzzle for data scientists. It’s the backbone of modern photo apps, medical imaging archives, and the ever-growing catalogs of surveillance and social platforms. Yet real-world image collections come with a foe that isn’t easily tamed: noise. Tiny distortions, lighting quirks, or partial…

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A Hidden Rule Links Four Points to Perfect Data Codes

The world of mathematics isn’t just chalk on a board; it’s a treasure map for how we store, share, and understand information. In a new line of thought, a researcher named Stanislav Semenov sketches a simple, almost shy rule—a four-point invariant—that binds four consecutive evaluations of a sequence into a single, unchanging truth. It’s the…

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A Tiny Aluminum Wire Unleashes a Quantum Leap in JJs

The team behind this work hails from CNRS and a constellation of French and Spanish institutions. At the Laboratoire de Physique de la Matière Condensée (LPMC) within École Polytechnique and the Institut Polytechnique de Paris, researchers led by Loïc Bretheau and Jean-Damien Pillet have devised a fresh, all aluminum route to Josephson junctions that host…

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