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U-M forms collaboration to advance quantum science and technology – University of Michigan News

The University of Michigan has formed a collaboration with Michigan State University and Purdue University to study quantum science and technology, drawing together expertise and resources to advance the field.

The three universities are partnering to form the Midwest Quantum Collaboratory, or MQC, to find grand new challenges we can work on jointly, based on the increased breadth and diversity of scientists in the collaboration, said Mack Kira, professor of electrical engineering and computer science at Michigan Engineering and inaugural director of the collaboration.

U-M researchers call quantum effects the DNA of so many phenomena people encounter in their everyday lives, ranging from electronics to chemical reactions to the study of light wavesand everything they collectively produce.

We scientists are now in a position to start combining these quantum building blocks to quantum applications that have never existed, said Kira, also a professor of physics at U-Ms College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. It is absolutely clear that any such breakthrough will happen only through a broad, diverse and interdisciplinary research effort. MQC has been formed also to build scientific diversity and critical mass needed to address the next steps in quantum science and technology.

Collaborators at U-M include Steven Cundiff, professor of physics and of electrical engineering and computer science. Cundiffs research group uses ultrafast optics to study semiconductors, semiconductor nanostructures and atomic vapors.

The main goal of the MQC is to create synergy between the research programs at these three universities, to foster interactions and collaborations between researchers in quantum science, he said.

Each university will bring unique expertise in quantum science to the collaboration. Researchers at U-M will lead research about the quantum efforts of complex quantum systems, such as photonics, or the study of light, in different semiconductors. This kind of study could inform how to make semiconductor-based computing, lighting, radar or communications millions of times faster and billions of times more energy efficient, Kira says.

Similar breakthrough potential resides in developing algorithms, chemical reactions, solar-power, magnetism, conductivity or atomic metrology to run on emergent quantum phenomena, he said.

The MQC will be a virtual institute, with in-person activities such as seminars and workshops split equally between the three universities, according to Cundiff. In the first year, MQC will launch a seminar series, virtual mini-workshops focused on specific research topics, and will hold a larger in-person workshop. The collaboration hopes fostering connections between scientists will lead to new capabilities, positioning the MQC to be competitive for large center-level funding opportunities.

We know collaboration is key to driving innovation, especially for quantum, said David Stewart, managing director of the Purdue Quantum Science and Engineering Institute. The MQC will not only provide students with scientific training, but also develop their interpersonal skills so they will be ready to contribute to a currently shorthanded quantum workforce.

The MQC will also promote development of the quantum workforce by starting a seminar series and/or journal club for only students and postdocs, and encouraging research interaction across the three universities.

MQC also provides companies with interest in quantum computing with great opportunities for collaboration with faculty and students across broad spectrums of quantum computing with the collaborative expertise spanning the three institutions, said Angela Wilson, director of the MSU Center for Quantum Computing, Science and Engineering.

Additionally, bringing together three of our nations largest universities and three of the largest quantum computing efforts provides potential employers with a great source of interns and potential employees encompassing a broad range of quantum computing.

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Meet Valery Vermeulen, the scientist and producer turning black holes into music – MusicRadar

Scientific pursuits have often acted as the inspiration for electronic music, from Kraftwerks The Man-Machine through to Bjorks Biophilia and the techno-futurist aesthetic of acts like Autechre and Aphex Twin.

Scientist, researcher, musician and producer Valery Vermeulen is taking this one step further with his multi-album project Mikromedas, which transforms scientific data gathered from deep space and astrophysical models into cosmic ambient compositions.

The first album from this project, Mikromedas AdS/CFT 001, runs data generated by simulation models of astrophysical black holes and extreme gravitational fields through custom-made Max/MSP instruments, resulting in a unique kind of aleatoric music thats not just inspired by scientific discovery, but literally built from it.

Could you tell us a little about your background in both science and music?

I started playing piano when I was six or seven years old. The science part came when I was like, 15 or 16, I think in my teenage years, I got to the library, and I stumbled upon a book, which had a part on quantum physics. I was very curious. And I think this is how the two got started.

During my career path I always had the impression that I had to choose one or the other: music or mathematics, music or physics, theoretical physics. So in the beginning, I did a PhD in the mathematical part of superstring theory with the idea of doing research in theoretical physics. And I was really interested in the problem of quantum gravity - that's finding a theory that unifies quantum physics and general relativity theory.

But at the same time, I was always making music, I started busking on the street, then I started playing in bands. Then, after my PhD, I switched, because I wanted to pursue more music. So I started at IPEM, that is the Institute for Psychoacoustics and Electronic Music in Belgium.

What kind of work were you doing there?

At IPEM I did research on music, artificial intelligence, and biofeedback. Out of that came the first project which combined the two and that is called EMO-Synth. With that project, with a small team, we try to build a system that can automatically generate personalised soundtracks that adapt themselves to emotional reaction.

"So the idea of the system is to have an AI assistant that can automatically generate a personalised soundtrack for a movie, specialised and made for you using genetic programming. That's a technique from AI.

Could you tell us about the Mikromedas project?

After EmoSynth, I wanted to do some more artistic stuff. That is how I stumbled upon Mikromedas, the project with which Ive recorded the album. There's two series for the moment, and every series has a different topic. The first series started in 2014, as a commissioned work for The Dutch Electronic Arts Festival in Rotterdam.

"They wanted me to do something with space and sound. The question was: could I represent a possible hypothetical voyage from earth to an exoplanet near the centre of the Milky Way? Is it possible to evoke this using only sound, no visuals, that was the question. And this is how I stumbled upon data sonification for the first time.

The question was: could I represent a possible hypothetical voyage from earth to an exoplanet near the centre of the Milky Way?

Basically, that's the scientific domain in which scientists are figuring out ways to use sound to convey data. Normally, you would look at data - as a data scientist, you look at your screen, you present the data on your screen, and you try to figure out structures in the data. But you can also do that using sound. Its called multimodal representations. So if you both use your ears and your eyes, you can have a better understanding of data.

With Mikromedas I got into that field, a very interesting scientific domain. Of course, artists have also started using it for creative purposes. It was a one-time concert that I made the whole show for, but it turned out that I played more and more concerts with that. And this is how the Mikromedas project got started.

After the first series, I wanted to dive even deeper into my fascination for mathematics and theoretical physics. I still had the idea of quantum gravity, this fascinating problem, in the back of my head. And black holes are a very hot topic - they are one of the classical examples where we can combine general relativity and quantum physics.

The next step was, I needed to find ways to get data. I could program some stuff myself, but I also lacked a lot of very deep scientific knowledge and expertise. A venue here in Belgium put me in contact with Thomas Hertog, a physicist who worked with Stephen Hawking, and we did work on sonifications of gravitational waves, and I made a whole concert with that.

"From there, we made the whole album. Its a bit of a circle, I think - at first the music and physics were apart from each other, these longtime fascinations that were split apart, and now theyve come together again.

What kinds of data are you collecting to transform into sound and music?

If were talking from a musical perspective, I think the most fascinating data and the most close to music are gravitational wave data. Gravitational waves are waves that occur whenever you have two black holes, and they're too close to each other, they will swirl around each other, and they will merge to a bigger black hole. This is a super cataclysmic event. And because of this event, it will emit gravitational waves. If you encounter a gravitational wave, you become larger, smaller, thicker, or thinner. So it's sort of an oscillation that you would undergo.

What I discovered via the work with Thomas is that there's some simulations of gravitational waves that are emitted by certain scenarios, because you have different types of black holes, you can have different masses, etc. To calculate and to programme it, you need something which we call spherical harmonics. And those are three dimensional generalisations of sine wave functions.

I wear two hats. So one hat is the hat of the scientist, the physicist, and the other hat is the hat of a music producer

And if you're into sound synthesis, I mean, if you're studying sounds, this is what we all learn about - the square wave is just a sum of all the overtones of a fundamental frequency, the sawtooth wave has all the overtones linearly decaying. And it's the same principle that holds with those generalisations of sine waves, those spherical harmonics. Using those, you can calculate gravitational waves in three dimensions, which is really super beautiful to watch. And this is what I did for one of the datasets.

They say everything is waves. And it is, in a way - I mean, I don't like this New Age expression so much, saying everything is connected - but in some sort of way, vibrations are, of course, essential to music, but also to physics.

How are you transforming that data into sounds we can hear?

First I made 3D models. So these are STL files, 3D object files. And then, together with Jaromir Mulders, hes a visual artist that I collaborate with, he could make a sort of a movie player. And so you can watch them in 3D, evolving. But then I thought, how on earth am I going to use this for music?

The solution was to make two-dimensional intersections with two-dimensional planes. And then you have two-dimensional evolving structures. And those you can transform into one-dimensional evolutions and one dimensional number streams. Then you can start working with this data - thats how I did it. Once you have those, it's a sort of a CV signal.

I'm working in Ableton Live, using Max/MSP and Max for Live, and can easily connect those number streams to any parameter in Ableton Live, using the API in Max for Live, you can quite easily connect it to all the knobs you want. Another thing that I was using was quite a lot of wavetable synthesis. Different wave tables: Serum, Pigments, and the Wavetable synth from Ableton.

How much of what were hearing on the album is determined by the data alone, and how much comes from your own aesthetic decision-making?

I wear two hats. So one hat is the hat of the scientist, the physicist, and the other hat is the hat of a music producer, because I also studied music composition here at the Conservatory in Ghent. And I'm also teaching at the music production department there. Its all about creativity. That's the common denominator, you know, because I always think it's difficult to say this is the science part, this is the musical part.

In the more numerical part, what I would do is collect the data sets. You have all the different datasets, then you have to devise different strategies to sonify it, to turn all those numbers into sound clips, sound samples, you could say. These are sort of my field recordings, I always compare it to field recordings, but they are field recordings that come from abstract structures that give out data. I collect a whole bank of all these kinds of sounds.

Next you design your own instruments, in something like Reaktor or Max/MSP, that are fed by the data streams. Once I have those two, I'm using those two elements to make dramatic compositions, abstract compositions. One theme of the album was to try to evoke the impression of falling into a black hole, something that is normally not possible, because you break all laws of physics, because we don't know what the physics looks like inside of a black hole, the region inside the event horizon.

Sometimes people ask me, why on earth make it so difficult? I mean, just make a techno track and release it. But no, I mean, everyone is different! And this is who I am

Then I wear a hat as a music producer, because I want to make this into a composition. I was working before for a short time as a producer for dance music. So I want to have a kind of an evolution in the track. So how am I going to do that? I'm working with the sounds, I'm editing the sounds a lot with tools in Ableton, in Reaktor, and I also have some analogue synths here.

"So I have a Juno-106, a Korg MS-20. Sometimes I would just take my Juno, I put it into unison, you know, use the low pass filter, and then get a gritty, beautiful low analogue sound to it, mix it underneath to give an impression of this abstract theme.

After that, once the arrangement is done, then theres the mixing process. I did quite a lot of mixing, I think over a year, because I wanted the sound quality to be really very good. And I also started using new plugins, new software. And the whole idea was to make it sound rather analogue. I hope I managed to do the job with a record that did not make it sound too digital.

Which plugins were you using to mix the material?

Slate, of course. SoundToys, Ohmforce, I love Ohmforce plugins. Waves, we use a lot of Waves plugins. I also use the native plugins of Ableton. I started to appreciate them because before that I didn't know how to use them properly. I also have some hardware here. So I have a Soundcraft mixing table that I love a lot.

The record was released on an international label, Ash International. It's a subsidiary of Touch. And Mike Harding, he let me know, the record is going to be mastered by Simon Scott. He's the drummer of Slowdive, the band Slowdive. So I was a little bit nervous to send a record to Simon, but he liked it a lot. So it's like, okay, I managed to do a mix that's okay. I was really happy about it.

Aside from the scientific inspiration, what were the musical influences behind the project?

Because the music is quite ambient, quite slow, Alva Noto is a big inspiration. Loscil, I was listening to a lot at the time. Biosphere, Tim Hecker. Also, at the same time, to get my head away a little bit, I tend to listen to other kinds of music when Im doing this stuff. I was at the same time studying a lot of jazz, Im studying jazz piano. I was listening to a lot of Miles Davis, Coltrane, Bill Evans, McCoy Tyner. Im a big Bill Evans fan because of his crazy beautiful arrangements. Grimes is a big influence, and Lil Peep, actually - his voice is like, whoa.

Do you have any plans to play the material live? How would you approach translating the project to a live performance?

There are plans to play live. We're gonna play it as an audiovisual show. The visuals are produced by Jeremy Miller, this amazing, talented visual artist from the Netherlands. Live, of course, I'm using Ableton Live. I have a lot of tracks, and basically splitting them out into a couple of different frequency ranges. So high, high-mid, low-mid, low and sub frequency ranges.

Then I try to get them in different clips, loops, that make sense. And then I can remix the tracks in a live situation, I also add some effects. And I also add some new drones underneath. There's no keys or musical elements going into it. It's a very different setup than I was used to when I was still doing more melodic and rhythmic music.

Whats in store for the next series of the project?

Theres two routes, I think. Mikromedas is experimental, and I want it to remain experimental, because its just play. Ive discovered something new, I think - it's finding a way to make a connection between the real hardcore mathematical theoretical physics, the formulas, and the sound synthesis and the electronic music composition. But with one stream that I'm looking at, I already have a new album ready. And that's to combine it with some more musical elements, just because I'm very curious.

I think the Mikromedas project gave me a new way to approach making electronic music. Sometimes people ask me, why on earth make it so difficult? I mean, just make a techno track and release it. But no, I mean, everyone is different! And this is who I am. But going back a little bit towards the musical side, that's something that's really fascinating me.

The other stream that I want to follow is to connect it even more with abstract mathematics. So my PhD was in the classification of infinite dimensional geometrical structures, which are important for superstring theory. The problem was always how can you visualise something that is infinitely dimensional. So you have to take an intersection with a finite dimensional structure to make sense out of it. But now I'm thinking that maybe I can try to make a connection with that and with sound, that's even more abstract than black holes. Making a connection with geometry, 3D, and sound using sonification.

Mikromedas AdS/CFT 001 is out now on Ash International.

You can find out more about Valery's work by visiting his website or Instagram page.

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Emotion Isn’t the Enemy of Reason – The Atlantic

Paul Dirac was one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century. A pioneer in quantum theory, which shaped our modern world, Dirac was a genius when it came to analytical thinking. But when his colleagues asked him for advice, his secret to success had nothing to do with the traditional scientific method: Be guided, Dirac told them, by your emotions.

Why would the cold logic of theoretical physics benefit from emotion? Physics theories are expressed in mathematics, which is governed by a set of rules. But physicists dont just study existing theoriesthey invent new ones. In order to make discoveries, they have to pursue roads that feel exciting and avoid those that they fear will lead nowhere. They have to be brave enough to question assumptions and confident enough to present their conclusions to their skeptical colleagues. Dirac recognized that the best physicists are comfortable letting emotion guide their decisions.

Diracs advicelike his physicsran against the common assumption of psychology in his day: that rational thought primarily drives our behavior, and that when emotions play a role, they are likely to deflect us from our best judgment.

Today researchers have gained a deeper understanding of emotion and how it can positively influence logical choices. Consider a study led by Mark Fenton-OCreevy, a professor at the Open University Business School, in England. Fenton-OCreevy and his colleagues conducted interviews with 118 professional traders and 10 senior managers at four investment banks. The experimenters found that even among the most-experienced traders, the lower-performing ones seemed less likely to effectively engage with the emotions guiding their choiceswhether to buy or sell a set of securities, for example, with millions of dollars at stake. The most-successful traders, however, were particularly likely to acknowledge their emotions, and followed their intuitive feelings about stock options when they had limited information to draw on. They also understood that when emotions become too intense, toning them down can be necessary. The issue for the successful traders was not how to avoid emotion but how to harness it.

One way emotions aid decision making is by steering attention to both threats and opportunities. Consider the role that disgust plays in encoding your experience of foods that could sicken you. If youre about to slurp down an oyster and you notice worms crawling all over it, you dont stop and consciously analyze the details of that situation; you just gag and throw it down. The traders, similarly, have to know what to prioritize and when to actand they have to do it quickly. People think if you have a Ph.D. you will be very good, because you have an understanding of options theory, but this is not always the case, said one of the investment-bank managers the researchers interviewed. You have to also have good gut instincts, and those gut instincts are largely rooted in emotion.

Read: The best headspace for making decisions

In the past decade, scientists have begun to understand precisely how emotions and rationality act together. The key insight is that before your rational mind processes any information, the information must be selected and evaluated. Thats where emotion plays a dominant role. Each emotionfear, disgust, angercauses certain sensory data, memories, knowledge, and beliefs to be emphasized, and others downplayed, in your thought processes.

Imagine youre walking up a dark street in a relaxed state, looking forward to dinner and a concert later that evening. You may be aware of being hungry and may not register small movements in the shadows ahead, or the sound of footsteps behind you. Most of the time, ignoring those things is fine; the footsteps behind you are probably other pedestrians traveling to their own evening plans, and the movements in the shadows could just be leaves blowing in the wind. But if something triggers your fear, those sights and sounds will dominate your thinking; your sense of hunger will vanish, and the concert will suddenly seem unimportant. Thats because when you are in a fear mode of processing, you focus on sensory input; your planning shifts to the present, and your goals and priorities change. You might adjust your route to one that takes longer but is better lit, sacrificing time for safety.

In one illustrative study, researchers induced fear in their subjects by sharing a grisly account of a fatal stabbing. They then asked these participants to estimate the probability of various calamities, including other violent acts and natural disasters. Compared with subjects whose fear had not been activated, these subjects had an inflated sense of the probability of those misfortunesnot only related incidents, such as murder, but also the unrelated, such as tornadoes and floods. The gruesome stories affected the subjects mental calculus on a fundamental level, making them generally warier of environmental threats. In the world outside the laboratory, that wariness pushes you to avoid dangerous situations.

The ways in which our emotions influence our judgment arent always clear to us. In a study on disgust, for instance, scientists showed volunteers either a neutral film clip or a scene from Trainspotting in which a character reaches into the bowl of a filthy toilet. One of the characteristics of disgust is a tendency toward disposal, whether of food or other items. After playing the clips, the researchers gave the subjects the opportunity to trade away one box of unidentified office supplies for anotherand found that 51 percent of those who had seen the Trainspotting clip exchanged their box, compared with 32 percent of participants whod watched the neutral clip. But when quizzed about their decision afterward, the disgusted participants tended to justify their actions with rational reasons.

Welcoming emotion into the decision-making process can help us be more clear-eyed about where our choices come from. Dirac knew that emotion helped him look beyond the beliefs of his contemporaries. Again and again, his controversial ideas proved correct. He invented a mathematical function that seemed to violate the basic rules of the subjectbut that was eventually embraced and developed by later mathematicians. He predicted a new type of matter, called antimatteranother idea that was revolutionary at the time but is widely embraced today. And his appreciation for the role of emotion was prescient in itself. Dirac died in 1984, a couple of decades before the revolution in emotion theory began, but hed no doubt have been happy to see that hed been right again.

This article was adapted from Leonard Mlodinows forthcoming book, Emotional: How Feelings Shape Our Thinking.

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Superdeterminism and Free Will – Discovery Institute

Photo credit: Vladislav Babienko via Unsplash.

The conventional view of nature held by materialists, who deny free will, is that all acts of nature, including our human acts and beliefs, are wholly determined by the laws of nature, understood as the laws of physics. We cannot be free, they assert, because all aspects of human nature are matter, and the behavior of matter is wholly determined by physical laws. There is no room for free will

Its noteworthy that physicists who have studied determinism in nature (specifically, in quantum mechanics) have for the most part rejected this deterministic view of free will and implicitly (if not explicitly) endorsed the reality of free will. There are two reasons for this.

First, experiments that have followed from the research done by Irish physicistJohn Bell(19281990) in the 1970s have shown that determinism on a local level is not true. The theory and the experiments are subtle, but suffice to say, detailed and quite rigorous experiments have shown that the outcomes of quantum processes are not determined locally. That is, theres nothing baked in inanimate matter that determines the outcome of the quantum measurement. Nature is not locally deterministic.

The second reason that physicists have rejected determinism relates to the theory ofSuperdeterminism.Superdeterminism posits that, while inanimate matter is not locally determined, the entire universe including the thoughts and actions of the experimenters who are investigating nature is determined as a whole. The experiments based on Bells theorem have disproven local determinism but they do not disprove Superdeterminism.

The problem with Superdeterminism from the perspective of most physicists is that it seems to invalidate the process of science itself. That is, if the scientists own thoughts, ideas, and judgments are just as determined as the behavior of inanimate matter, then science itself has no claim to seek or find the truth. In other words, the laws of physics are not propositions and they have no truth value. If all of nature is an enormous robot, then it makes no sense to claim that tiny parts of the robot are seeking or have found the truth. Because Superdeterminism seems to obviate the very scientific method used to investigate it, physicists have generally rejected Superdeterminism.

Recently, however, several physicists have suggested that Superdeterminism is a quite plausible way of solving the measurement problem in quantum physics so it seems to be having a bit of a resurgence. PhysicistSabine Hossenfelderoffers aninteresting videoon the topic:

A detailed discussion of her views is beyond this post, but I note a few things:

1) I think Hossenfelder is right that Superdeterminism has been inappropriately dismissed by the physics community. It offers a rigorous and elegant way of understanding quantum mechanics and of beginning a path toward uniting quantum theory with general relativity.

2) Hossenfelder is wrong to deny the reality of free will. I think her critique of physicists who deny Superdeterminism because it denies free will has salience, but the denial of free will is self-refuting regardless of the issues in theoretical physics. Free will is a precondition for all science, all reasoning, and all claims to know the truth. As noted above, if free will is not real and all of our actions, including our investigations of reality, are determined by the laws of nature which in themselves are not propositions and have no truth value. Thus, if free will is not real, human thought has no access to truth. To deny free will is to assert it, and any denial of free will on any basis whatsoever is nonsensical. If we lack free will, we have no justification whatsoever to believe that we lack free will.

3) I do believe, however, that Superdeterminism is a viable and even attractive way of understanding nature, and that genuine free will is true and is quite compatible with Superdeterminism.

How so? Superdeterminism is the view that the outcomes of all possibilities both inanimate nature and the human mind are baked in to nature itself. There are two ways of understanding what that means. The first way is to see nature as a mindless machine running like clockwork without free will. As Ive said, such a view is incompatible with human reason.

However there is another way to understand how the outcomes of all possibilities in nature are baked into nature itself. This involves the concept of a block universe and the Augustinian understanding of nature as a thought in Gods mind.

Read the rest at Mind Matters News, published by Discovery Institutes Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence.

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Space mission hopes to solve the riddle of ‘missing’ matter – The Irish Times

The stuff astronomers can see when they look out at the universe stars, planets, and galaxies, makes up a paltry 4 per cent of whats actually out there. The rest, a staggering 96 per cent, is made of something invisible, the nature of which scientists can only guess at.

The Euclid mission of the European Space Agency (ESA) will set out to search for the universes elusive missing matter.

Scientists have known that most of the universes mass was missing since the 1930s. That was when Fritz Zwicky, a Swiss-American astronomer, made the startling discovery that the observed mass of all the stars in a cluster of galaxies called Coma made up only 1 per cent of the mass that he calculated was required to generate enough gravitational pull to hold the cluster together.

The missing mass question simmered for decades until its presence was further confirmed in a similar fashion in the 1970s when Vera Rubin and W Kent Ford, two American astronomers, observed the mass of the stars that were visible within a typical galaxy was only about 10 per cent of what was needed to keep these stars orbiting around the galaxys centre. The missing matter was nowhere to be seen, so it was called dark matter.

Theoretical astrophysicist at Maynooth University Prof Peter Coles, who has worked as a cosmologist since 1985, says the idea of what constituted dark matter formulated back then, remains largely in place. It was a kind of neutral particle that didnt do anything fancy like interacting with other matter. It just assisted the process of gravitational instability. For that reason, it was called cold dark matter, he adds.

The 1990s saw the discovery of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) the radiation left over from the Big Bang which permeates the universe. Then, in 1998, a cosmological bombshell landed when American astrophysicist Saul Perlmutter, who set out to find by how much the expansion of the universe was slowing since the Big Bang, found this expansion was accelerating.

The accelerated expansion of the universe appeared counterintuitive: a bit like asking scientists to accept the speed of a tennis ball would endlessly accelerate after being hit by a racquet. To deal with it, scientists theorised that an invisible energy was driving this process. They called it dark energy.

The new need to accommodate dark energy meant that estimates for the amount of dark matter had to be revised downwards significantly. The new estimate, which still holds, is that the universe is made of 70 per cent dark energy, 25 per cent dark matter, and about 5 per cent normal baryonic matter that we can see.

The ESAs Euclid mission has the ambitious goal of better understanding dark energy and dark matter. It is a colossal scientific effort, involving a consortium of some 1,000 people based mainly in Europe but also worldwide. There have been delays due to Covid-19; it is now set to launch in 2023.

Euclid will use its telescope to look back through the last 10 billion years of the universes history, beginning when dark energy is thought to have started pushing the universes expansion. The light from distant, ancient galaxies takes several billion years to reach our Solar System, which means astronomers see these galaxies as they were billions of years ago.

Coles is the only Ireland-based researcher in Euclid. He is interested in why galaxies cluster in groups rather than spread randomly in space and how some kind of cosmic glue referred to as dark energy holds the clusters together. He admits no-one has any idea what this glue is, or how to find it. If you ask, what is dark energy, the correct scientific answer is that nobody knows, he says.

Euclid, at its most basic, is a satellite with a space telescope with a diameter of 1.2 metres. Thats not particularly big given the Hubble Space Telescope, has a width of 2.4 metres while the James Web Telescope launched on Christmas Day is even bigger.

Yet what Euclid does have is an impressive camera attached to its telescope, which can take high resolution images across a big field of sky.

These images will enable scientists to look back in time, deep into the early universe, to trace the evolution and formation of galaxies, galaxy clusters and much else. There is a lot that Euclid can discover, says Coles, but the big-ticket item, the one driving the mission, is the hunt for dark energy, and whether that energy, once found, is determined to be constant, or varying.

If dark energy is found to be constant, that will fit in with existing ideas of the universe, as described by Einstein. This result would disappoint all those astrophysicists hoping that dark energy, once its discovered and measured, will represent something new, exciting, and outside of existing physical laws.

The dark forces of the universe remain hidden, but physicists infer their presence from how visible matter behaves. Invisible gravitational effects are thought, for example, to hold solar systems, galaxies, galaxy clusters, even superclusters of galaxies together that would otherwise fall apart.

Invisible forces of gravity are also thought to bend light around visible matter, in a process called weak lensing. This results in the distortion, stretching or magnification of the shape of galaxies, and the resulting patterns can be used to calculate the distribution of dark matter.

Measuring redshift can provide further clues. This term dates back to 1929 when Edwin Hubble discovered that the universe is expanding, and that galaxies are mostly moving away from us. Hubble found that the wavelengths of light emitted from galaxies shifts from shorter wavelengths to longer wavelengths as galaxies move away from us. The light, Hubble said, was redshifted from shorter UV wavelengths to the longer red wavelengths.

Calculating the redshift of galaxies today enables scientists to produce a 3D map of the universe. Scientists use redshift to measure the distance each galaxy is from us, the rate of accelerated expansion of the Universe, and how galaxies have moved with respect to one another. The nature of dark energy, which is thought to drive all of this, can, be inferred as a result.

Scientists get excited when they think about what exactly dark energy might be. There are some that believe dark energy represents a completely new physics, outside of the known physical laws, but until such theories can be tested with data from Euclid, it will remain nothing more than a name given to something that scientists dont understand. Any new theory of how the universe works will have to fit with observational data from Euclid.

If Euclid finds, measures and quantify dark energy and dark matter, it will be one of historys greatest scientific achievements. It will open the door for something Einstein tried but failed to achieve: a theory of everything that explains and links the physics of big stuff like stars, planets, and galaxies with the weird quantum physics of tiny atoms and sub-atomic particles.

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Ben Stokes injury adds to England woes on wicketless second morning in Sydney – newsconcerns

Englands hopes of forging ahead in the fourth Ashes Test fell foul of a wicketless second morning in Sydney with a dropped catch and an injury to Ben Stokes adding to their woes.

The tourists have already surrendered the urn after sustaining an irretrievable 3-0 deficit in the series but were in a promising position after restricting their opponents to 126 for three on a rain-affected first day.

But they were unable to add to their tally as 51 not out from Steve Smith and an unbeaten 39 from the returning Usman Khawaja took the score to 209 for three at lunch.

Jack Leach, right, was let down by the catching efforts of Jos Buttler and captain Joe Root (Jason OBrien/PA)

(PA Wire)

Spinner Jack Leach should have dismissed Khawaja for 29, but wicketkeeper Jos Buttler and slip Joe Root were both guilty of sloppy handiwork as they combined to fluff the chance. As if that was not bad enough, England had to endure the sight of all-rounder Stokes leaving the field in pain during the very next over.

He had been bowling a barrage of bouncers in a bid to unsettle the fourth-wicket pair but the effort took its toll as he clasped his side in his follow through and immediately left the field seeking treatment.

With hopes high after a late double strike the previous evening, England walked off the field looking browbeaten once again.

After just 46.5 overs were possible on day one, play was brought forward half-an-hour to try and make up lost time. But instead, the New South Wales weather continued to frustrate as there were three separate rain breaks for passing showers.

Steve Smith celebrated a half-century just before lunch (Jason OBrien/PA)

(PA Wire)

The first short passage of play saw England use all four of their specialist bowlers inside eight overs as the Australia duo settled in. The second saw the batting pair move on to the front foot, Smith pumping James Andersons first ball back down the ground as he over-pitched and Khawaja striking Leach through the infield.

Smith appeared keener than most to get off when the weather changed again, despite looking perfectly settled, and his eagerness to indulge the interruptions appeared to irk England, who declined to even leave the field during the third, and shortest, delay.

Australia were making steady progress, Khawaja cutting Leach aerially for four to bring up the 50 partnership and Smith always able to manipulate a scoring shot.

When Leach finally coaxed out an error, Buttler was not sharp enough to take the outside edge and Root spilled the ricochet as it arrived at gentle speed and perfect height. England has faced told a story of abject frustration, but that turned to anxiety as Stokes short-ball stint saw him injure his left side trying in vain to force the issue.

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Best Cryptocurrency to Invest in 2022 for Long-term Investments – Marca English

Cryptocurrency continues its global rise to prominence, with growing numbers of investors viewing it as a worthwhile part of their portfolios.

After the failure of ICO's (Initial cryptocurrency offerings) in 2017 and 2018 which spooked early adopters, there has been an upturn in momentum in recent times through two new instruments - NFTs and DeFi.

And as we look ahead to 2022, there are a variety of products that may harvest a good return.

Bitcoin is possibly the best-known cryptocurrency, and is now into its 13th year having launched in 2009.

It is the world's largest cryptocurrency by market capitalisation, and it is traded using software based on blockchain technology, a decentralized database that runs on more than 15,000 computers (nodes) around the world and records transactions and account balances.

That durability and time-tested status ensures Bitcoin should continue to be a popular hold in 2022.

Historically just behind Bitcoin in the cryptocurrency stakes, 2022 could be the year that Ethereum starts a rise to the top.

It dominates financial transactions and payments across all sectors, as well as providing the infrastructure for much of the DeFi protocols, and as such has an actual function as well as simply holding value.

It accounts for around 20 percent of the overall market.

In terms of 'altcoins', Solana which recently fell 12%, presents itself as the best option for investment as it seeks to establish a new smart contract network to compete with Ethereum.

Launched in 2020 it is still relatively new, however it is already starting to acquire an increasing share of the market.

Polkadot is very similar to Ethereum in allowing developers to create smart contracts and applications. From a functionality standpoint, it may grow a lot over the next year.

The cryptocurrency of the world's largest exchange can have a great growth during 2022, as long as it is easier and cheaper to transact with Binance crypto, there will be more movement in the market, which would influence the trading price.

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One company is offering dividends in bitcoinbut experts say it may be better to just buy the cryptocurrency directly – CNBC

BTCS Inc., a blockchain infrastructure and technology company, announced on Wednesday that it will offer the "first-ever dividend payable in bitcoin by a Nasdaq-listed company."

Dubbed the "Bividend" by BTCS, the company said it will pay a dividend of five cents per share in bitcoin to its investors based on the price of bitcoin on the ex-dividend date of March 16.Shareholders would be paid on March 17. If preferred, they have the option to receive the dividend in cash instead.

Following the announcement, shares of BTCS jumped on Wednesday. The stock was up nearly 44% by close.

However, financial experts warn not to buy a stock based on the hype surrounding it or its dividend.

"If you want to own that company, then own that company," Ivory Johnson, certified financial planner, chartered financial consultant and founder of Delancey Wealth Management, tells CNBC Make It. "But if you want to buy bitcoin, then buy bitcoin. Don't buy this to get bitcoin."

When buying any stock, your decision should be based on the fundamentals of the company itself, he says.

Though Douglas Boneparth, certified financial planner and president of Bone Fide Wealth, thinks the bitcoin dividend is "cool," he agrees with Johnson that it isn't a reason to buy the stock.

"Learn more because you're primarily investing in the company and its future cash flows," Boneparth, who has invested in bitcoin since 2014, tellsCNBC Make It.

Though he thinks the "Bividend" is a "really neat bridge" to direct ownership of bitcoin, "jumping in there just because this is happening is jumping in on a feature, not necessarily the product," he says. "You'd still approach this as you would any other any investment."

If shareholders decide to opt into the "Bividend," they'd be responsible for providing their own bitcoin wallet and securing that wallet, which isn't an easy feat.

In addition, shareholders would need to complete a few more steps, including filling out a form with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which would require disclosure of their name, Social Security number and bitcoin wallet address.

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IC15, India’s First Cryptocurrency Index: Key Things To Know – NDTV Profit

IC15 will monitor the performance of the 15 most-traded crypto coins in the world.

As India is witnessing a booming crypto industry, several players are showing interest in investing and offering services for investors in the country. In that effort, cryptocurrency app CryptoWire has launched a dedicated index for Indian investors. Named IC15, the first such index in the country will monitor the performance of the 15 most-traded crypto coins in the world. The company says it intends to create awareness about crypto and its underlying blockchain technology among investors. The launch has come at a time when there are some efforts from authorities to set rules to regulate the new industry as it unfolds.

The crypto bill, called the Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021, was expected to get Parliament's approval this winter session but it could not be done. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which is not excited about the private crypto coins, has said it is working to launch its own cryptocurrency.

Here are the key things that you should know about the IC15 index:

* CryptoWire, the Mumbai-headquartered company behind IC15, is a unit of crypto statistics provider TickerPlant. The index enables crypto enthusiasts and investors to monitor the performance of cryptocurrencies in global markets.

* The index will monitor the top 15 crypto coins listed on major exchanges around the world. These coins are - Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, Bitcoin Cash, Cardano, Litecoin, Binance Coin, Chainlink, Polkadot, Uniswap, Dogecoin, Solana, Terra, Avalanche, and Shiba Inu.

* A governance committee will oversee the functioning of the index. This committee will have domain experts, industry practitioners and academicians. They will administer and rebalance the index every quarter.

* The company says the index has been designed to offer insights into crypto mining and help investors make informed decisions to mitigate risks.

* For a crypto coin to be listed on IC15, it needs to trade on at least 90 per cent of the trading days during the review period. Its market capitalisation during the preceding month should also remain in the top 50.

* The base value is set at 10,000 and April 1, 2018, is the base date.

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The number 3 cryptocurrency, with 1,300% rally this year, outshines rivals Bitcoin and Ether – Mint

Bitcoin and Ether's rival, which is the three largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, Binance Coin (BNB) has significantly outperformed the two most popular digital tokens. Binance coin has skyrocketed nearly 1,300% this year (year-to-date).

BNB is used widely on Binance, the worlds biggest crypto exchange by volume. It is also the native currency of Binance Smart Chain, a blockchain platform that supports smart contracts for use in decentralized finance (DeFi) and other applications.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin is up 62% in 2021 whereas the second largest cryptocurrency, Ether has surged more than 400% during the said period. Tuesday. Bitcoin, famed for its volatility, has shed more than $21,000 since hitting a record in early November.

On the other hand, Ether, the token of the Ethereum network, has outperformed Bitcoin from the adoption of blockchain technology by financial technology companies, and perhaps more notably the popularity of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in the art and gaming worlds.

As a blockbuster year for cryptocurrencies ticks to a close, other alternative coins, or altcoins, also saw major gains in 2021. Many coins other than the largest few have posted spectacular runs this year. Coins such as Dogecoin, Cardano and Shiba Inu, previously relegated to the most speculative corners of the market, have turned into household names this year. Solana and Fantom, coins connected with other blockchain platforms that support smart contracts, outpaced Binance Coins returns, for instance.

Cryptocurrency prices went on another roller coaster this past year, surging, plunging and then cycling again. El Salvador became the first country to make Bitcoin legal tender this year whereas the first exchange-traded fund tied to Bitcoin futures also began to trade.

(With inputs from Bloomberg)

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