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The Mystery of the Cosmos: What Exactly Are We Looking For? – lareviewofbooks

FOR AS LONG as our species can remember, even before Plato and Confucius, we were deploying two pairs of conceptual distinctions to carve up the world and make it understandable: the distinction between parts and wholes, and the distinction between particulars and universals.

A Honda engine is a part that along with other parts, like the steering wheel, the gears, and the fan belt composes the whole known as a Honda car. That very same engine, meanwhile, is also along with Toyota engines, General Motors engines, and Ford engines a particular that embodies or instantiates the universal idea of engine-ness.

What happens, then, when we take these two conceptual screens, so helpful for making sense of the perceivable world, and forge out into the heavens and down into the quantum?

Many of the greatest physicists tell us that any fundamental resolution of cosmological mystery will have to be conceptually mathematically beautiful. And in terms of theory, as far as we in the early 21st century can tell, any such beautiful resolution will center on a reconciliation of quantum mechanics, which focuses on the universe at a micro level, and the theory of relativity, which describes the universe at a macro level. As Einstein said, speaking of human psychology and not the cosmos, the only physical theories that we are willing to accept are the beautiful ones.

Think of a fern, we are told, with branches sprouting from its main stem. Sprouting from each of those branches there appear yet smaller ones that resemble it, and then sprouting from each of them there are even smaller ones that resemble it and so on, theoretically, ad infinitum. The branches, then, all vary the same pattern. But they do so at ever tinier scales and shifting positions. Varying the same pattern at ever decreasing magnitudes and altering orientations is, in a basic sense, what a fractal does. For this reason, fractals often are analogized to linguistic dialects, which preserve a languages structure while varying it across size and location.

Fractals get generated by a recursive algorithm, and each new execution is generated by applying the algorithm in question to the result of the previous one, creating as these iterations build up and depending on the algorithms features fantastic geometrical figures. And, as the Harvard physicist Nicole Yunger Halpern says, fractals are beginning to provide an exciting way of conceptualizing whats going on at the frontiers of physics. Cosmological systems, scientists are discovering, can exhibit fractal-like behavior, Yunger Halpern explains, meaning that they look very much the same at different spatial and temporal scales.

In the most exotic specimens, where fabulous spirals, tongues, and brocades begin to appear, the fractal is too smoothly continuous to divide into parts in any meaningful way. Its much more apt to divide a fractal into components based on each new iteration of the algorithm: first iteration, second iteration, third iteration, and so on. But that means that the whole we see is composed not of parts but of particulars: particulars that each instantiate the same universal that universal, of course, being the algorithm itself. A fractals beauty, then, emerges from a crossover of the two ur-distinctions. It emerges from the gorgeous ways in which particulars, not parts, compose a whole.

Physicists find a second source of beauty in the symmetries revealed by and in their calculations. Symmetry varies the same pattern over and over. But not at different scales and orientations, as fractals do. Instead, symmetries vary a pattern through different rotations and reflections.

The physicist Sabine Hossenfelder deploys the analogy of a mandala to give a sense of such reflections and rotations. A mandala takes a pattern and then reflects it so that right becomes left and left becomes right, or rotates it so that up becomes down and down becomes up, over and over again. Both reflective and rotational symmetry form the backbone of some of the most influential theories of modern physics. Paul Diracs equations display a form of reflective symmetry, Hossenfelder says, by incorporating particles of antimatter with the same mass as corresponding particles [] with the opposite charge. Contemporary string theory embodies a rotational symmetry by which, as Steven Weinberg writes, when you rotate an object from an ordinary dimension to a quantum dimension [] a particle of force becomes a particle of matter and vice versa.

Think of a Persian carpet. When you marvel at its symmetry the same pattern but rotated and reflected in multiple ways what exactly, in terms of those fundamental concepts, parts and wholes or particulars and universals, are you savoring? Certainly, the parts of the carpet, each containing the exact same pattern, however rotated or reflected, are what, summed together, compose the whole. But they dont do so in the way a cars parts an engine, a fuel tank, a fan belt, and so forth compose the whole of a car. Unlike the parts of my car, the parts of the carpet are identical, as if my car contained 80 engines, reflected and rotated in relation to each other.

So if the parts of the carpet dont compose a whole in the typical fashion, maybe its more apt to say that the carpet is made up of particulars that each instantiate the same universal, which of course is what a pattern is. But that doesnt quite work either. For a particular to instantiate a universal, it must embody it in a particular way. A Hondas engine instantiates the universal engine through the particularities of the Hondas design, while a Toyotas engine instantiates the universal engine through the particularities of a Toyotas design. But theres nothing particular, at least in this way, in the particulars of the carpet. Each instantiates the universal the pattern in exactly the same way, merely rotating or reflecting it. Each part universally, not particularly, embodies the pattern.

Maybe, then, the carpet can best be described as possessing identifiable parts, each of which instantiates the same pure universal, simply rotated and reflected as the case may be. Perhaps the beauty of symmetry, in other words, rests not in the ways in which its parts compose a whole, since they dont do so the way a cars parts compose a whole. Nor does it lie in the ways in which it arrays particulars that instantiate a universal since, again, nothing in the carpet particularizes a universal in the way my cars engine does. Instead, symmetrys beauty lies in the way it accomplishes a kind of crossover. The beauty of a symmetrical design emerges, it would seem, from the ways its rotationally and reflectively arranged parts each instantiate the same unalloyed universal.

But how is it for the cosmos? Physicists often use the term symmetry in an exceedingly broad sense. Symmetry exists whenever some components of a system remain the same as the rest changes, just as the pattern of a carpet remains the same through its various rotations and reflections. An example of such symmetry, for physicists, arises from the basic fact that the laws of physics remain unaltered no matter how much we vary our location in space-time.

As awe-inspiring as that reality might be, its not beautiful in the more specific sense of the carpet in the sense of parts mirroring each other by instantiating the same universal through rotation and reflection. For that, we have to turn to the content of the laws of physics themselves, to the symmetry of Diracs equations, for example, or those of string theory. We also find the beauty of parts instantiating the same universal, the same pattern, in Murray Gell-Manns discovery that all the particles could be classified by symmetric patterns known as multiplets, or Steven Weinbergs revelation that certain internal symmetries between electrons and neutrinos necessitate the existence of the several fields, such as the electromagnetic field, in the Standard Model.

Symmetrical beauty lies not in how various parts compose a whole, nor in how various particulars instantiate a universal. Rather, it lies in how various parts instantiate a universal while rotating or reflecting it. Such features of the cosmos are, for physicists, profoundly beautiful. And they feel profoundly explanatory. Why? Because of the way they ultimately correspond to our understanding of the symmetrical beauty of a snowflake, how the parts of a system instantiate the same universal in mirror images. And the rest of us can, even if from afar, see why.

Beyond fractals and symmetries and of course, many fractals also display symmetry physicists find beauty as well in the way in which different aspects of the physical world mathematically map each other. The discovery that vastly disparate facets of reality share a common structure or display the same network of relationships that you can map them onto each other gives the sense of profound explanatory insight.

Consider, to use a common example, the structural parallels between Joe, John, and Bobby Kennedy and Archie, Peyton, and Eli Manning. The fatherelder son younger son relationships in each family map onto each other exactly, even though the individual elements on either side differ. This kind of sameness between structures is often called isomorphism, iso being Greek for same, and morph for shape or form. Because the Kennedys and the Mannings are different individuals, the structures, while isomorphic, are not identical.

When it comes to physics, finding isomorphisms or mutual mappings between otherwise non-identical entities yields deep understanding. If one has really technically penetrated a subject, as John von Neumann once said, things that previously seemed in complete contrast might reveal themselves as purely mathematical transformations of each other. Such aesthetic beauty and hence explanatory satisfaction can, for example, be found, as the Nobel laureate Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar says, in the way in which the theory of colliding waves and the theory of black holes map onto each other.

But why is mapping beautiful? And, for those who find beauty explanatorily satisfying, why is isomorphism so satisfyingly explanatory?

Return for a moment to the Kennedys and the Mannings. Each family particularizes a common structure: the structure of father, elder son, and younger son. But though each family might be its own particular, the isomorphism the common structure that each instantiates is a kind of whole, not a universal. After all, when it comes to universals, the Kennedys and the Mannings instantiate very different ones. The Kennedys embody the universals of politics, and the Mannings the universals of sports. They are, to use von Neumanns words, in complete contrast. Instead, its more apt to say that each of the two particulars instantiates the same whole, if a whole is something greater than the sum of its parts if it is whatever it is that structures and connects those parts.

Physicists find beauty, as a last example, in equations. Think of E = mc2. Energy equals mass times the speed of light squared. Both m and c2 are parts, as the philosopher of science Robert Crease says, of one side of the equation. E, the other side of the equation, is a universal, a property that is instantiated in particles across the cosmos. A useful term for this relationship, in which parts on one side of an equation compose universals on the other side is translation. Physicists often employ this term in referring to equations. The metaphor of languages and their translations pervades the philosophical analysis of equations, and it helps explain their beauty. It could end up being, as Rodolfo Gambini and Jorge Pullin say, that string theory and loop quantum gravity both provide quantum theories of gravity cast in different languages. And the required equations, A. R. P. Rau writes, would then be like dictionaries allowing us to go from one to another.

The metaphor of translation, when applied to equations, proves to be an apt one. When a given sentence translates from one language into another, the words in the first do not map onto the words in the second one-to-one. Instead, the words in one language which are parts of speech together compose a meaning, a universal, in the other. Thats what it means for them to be translated. For example, a string of English words, such as the moment when a meal is concluded but the people around the table continue to chat, are all needed, together, to compose the meaning captured by sobremesa in Spanish. Those words are parts of English. The Spanish sobremesa to which they translate is a universal, one we have all experienced in our own particular ways.

The Harvard mathematician Barry Mazur neatly illustrates this translational aspect of equations. He analogizes it to poetry and in so doing highlights its capacity for beauty. Consider, Mazur says, these lines of Yeats: Like a long-legged fly upon the stream / His mind moves upon silence.

Here, Mazur observes, [T]he equation is between something that is concrete/sensual and external (the long-legged fly upon the stream) and something that might actually be even [] much harder to catch and hold still: a curious interior state.

In other words, in Yeatss equation, the stream and the long-legged fly on the one side are parts that together compose the universal, the property of a curious inner state a mind moving upon silence on the other.

The quest for beauty and, if beauty is what gives us a sense that we have understood, then the quest for understanding too ultimately requires us to burst through the ur-categories, the categories through which we see the world as consisting of particulars that instantiate universals and parts that compose wholes. Here, at the precipice of our understanding, we need the ur-categories to switch dance partners. Here, its particulars that must pair up with wholes, either composing them as with fractals or instantiating them as with isomorphisms. And its parts that must mate with universals again, either instantiating them as in symmetry or composing them as in equations.

Symmetries get analogized to mirrors, and isomorphisms to maps. And that makes sense; symmetries have to do with one thing repeating itself over and over, while isomorphisms have to do with one thing relating to another. In the same vein, fractals get likened to dialects, and equations to translations. And this, too, makes sense: fractals deal with one thing varying itself over and over, while equations deal with one thing relating to another. Mirrors are to maps what dialects are to translations. Each metaphor contributes to capturing what it is in symmetries, isomorphisms, fractals, and equations that endows them with the potential for transcendent beauty.

Consider the holographic theory that Juan Maldacena, a theoretical physicist at the Institute for Advanced Study, offers to reconcile quantum field theory and relativity. In his principal illustration, Maldacena depicts a disk with various symmetries in its interior, each part instantiating the same universal rotated and reflected. These correspond to the gravitational universe as relativity understands it. But at its edges, the disk turns into fractals, the whole of its circumference being composed of endless particulars of the same algorithm, in various sizes and counter-positions. These represent the quantum. And whats more, the interior symmetries and the edge fractals can be shown to relate to each other through equations i.e., translations insofar as the parts in each compose universals that abide in the other. They also relate as isomorphisms mutual mappings in that each, the interior and the edge, is a particular that instantiates the same whole, the same structure. Its quite magical.

For millennia, we have understood the world through particulars that instantiate universals and parts that compose wholes. Now the mystery of the universe asks that we the we that Einstein referred to, the human community at large go even further. It beckons us to transcend the limits of our understanding by seeing the cosmos in terms of particulars that instantiate or compose wholes and parts that compose or instantiate universals. Thats what scientific beauty is, as physicists describe it to us. And if the truth must be beautiful, its also where the path to ultimate explanation lies.

Andrew Stark, a professor of strategic management at the University of Toronto, is the author of The Consolations of Mortality (Yale University Press, 2016). His essays and reviews have appeared in The New York Review of Books, Times Literary Supplement, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, and other publications.

Featured image: A 3D version of the Mandelbrot set plot Map 44 from the book The Beauty of Fractals by Duncan Champney is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Image has been cropped.

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October: Bristol physicist lands prestigious award | News and features – University of Bristol

Associate Professor Jonathan Matthews has been awarded the 2021 Philip Leverhulme Prize for physics.

The awards, announced today, are for researchers whose work has had international impact and whose future research career is exceptionally promising.

Prof Matthewsis Co-Director of the University of BristolsQuantum Engineering Technology Labsand a member ofBristol Quantum Information Institute. His research includes seminal contributions to the field of integrated quantum photonics these are optical microchips that generate and control quantum states of light for applications in technologies enabled and enhanced by quantum physics.

I am delighted and honoured to be awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize. It recognises work I am extremely proud of and that Ive been able to undertake thanks to my institutions support, the UK and EU investments in quantum technologies and the hard work and brilliance of my team in QET Labs, past and present. Bristol has an exciting ecosystem around quantum information science and technology training, research and commercialisation. I am thrilled by what we can do next.

The Leverhulme Trust has announced the winners of the 2021 Philip Leverhulme Prizes today. Chosen from over 400 nominations, the Trust offered five prizes in each of the following subject areas: Classics, Earth Sciences, Physics, Politics and International Relations, Psychology; Visual and Performing Arts.

Now in its twentieth year, this scheme commemorates the contribution to the work of the Trust made by Philip, Third Viscount Leverhulme and grandson of William Lever, the founder of theLeverhulme Trust. The prizes recognise and celebrate the achievement of exceptional researchers whose work has already attracted international recognition and whose future careers are exceptionally promising.

Anna Vignoles, Director of the Leverhulme Trust, said: I am delighted that we have been able to award these prestigious prizes to such a stunningly talented group of academics. This round was more competitive than ever and the judges had an incredibly difficult task. This is evident from the achievements of the winners, who are working on a very diverse set of topics, from the physics of dark matter to climate science, from research into policing and inequality through to participatory art.

Each prize is now worth 100,000 and thirty are awarded annually. They may be used for any purpose that advances the prize winners research. Detailed citations on each of the winners will be published in due course.

TheQuantum Engineering Technology Labs (QET Labs)was launched in 2015, with the mission to to take quantum science discoveries out of the lab and engineer them into technologies for the benefit of society. This includes novel routes to quantum computing hardware, quantum communications, enhanced sensing & imaging and new platforms to investigate fundamental quantum physics. QET Labs brings together over 28 million worth of activity andcomprises over 100 academics, staff and students in the Schools of Physics and Electrical and Electronic Engineering. Read more here.

Bristol Quantum Information Institute

Quantum information and its translation into technologies is one of the most exciting research activities in science and technology today. Long at the forefront of the growing worldwide activity in this area, the Bristol Quantum Information Institute crystallises our research across the entire spectrum, from theory to technology. With our expert cross-disciplinary team, including founders of the field, we have expertise in all major areas of theoretical quantum information science and in experiment. We foster partnerships with the private sector and provide superb teaching and training for the future generation of quantum scientists and engineers and the prototypes of tomorrow. Read more here.

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Purdue professors recognized with highest honor in their fields – Journal & Courier

News Reports| Lafayette Journal & Courier

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. Three Purdue professors have been selected to receive the highest honors in their respective fields:humanities and social sciences andquantum sciences, according to a Purdue press release.

ProfessorEllen Ernst Kossek is a distinguished professor ofManagement in the Krannert School of Management. She was nominated by her peers andchosen by university president Mitch Daniels to be giventhe2021 Lu Ann Aday Award.

TheLu Ann Aday Awardwas first established in 2017 by Purdue alumna Lu Ann Aday, a distinguished professor in Public Health and Medicine at the University of Texas School of Public Health-Houston, according to the release. This award annually recognizes a member of Purdue faculty who has achieved major impacts in the field of humanities and social sciences.

Kossek is a social scientist who researches how the functions of the workplace - employees, managers and overall organizations - can improve workplace cultures and the "effectiveness of work-family policies," according to the Purdue release.

Along with her research, Kossek also continuously organizes the"Dismantling Biases: Bridging Research to Practice"conference. Research from this conference has been published as books and referred articles, as stated in the release. The next conference is set for March 22-24, 2022.

Kossek will givethe Lu Ann Aday Distinguished Lecture at 2 p.m. on Nov. 1. The virtual lecture will be made available to the public.

Michael J. Manfra was nominated by his colleagues and selected by president Daniels to receive theArden L. Bement Jr. Award. This award was first established in 2015 by Purdue professor Emeritus Arden Bement and his wife, Louise Bement, to "annually recognize a Purdue faculty member for recent outstanding accomplishments in pure and applied sciences and engineering," according to the release.

Manfra is receiving this honor for his work in quantum physics. He and his team at Purdue reporter a landmark experiment in 2020 that found evidence of "anyons,"fractional statistics of quasiparticles. This was the first time direct evidence of such a substance's existence sincequasiparticles were first proposed in the early 1980s.

Manfra serves as thescientific director of Microsoft Quantum Lab West Lafayette andcontributesto the Quantum Science Center. He will give theArden L. Bement Jr. Distinguished Lecture at 3 p.m.on Nov. 12. This will be a virtual lecture and will be made available to the public, according to the release.

Yong Chen, a professor of physics and astronomy, electrical and computer engineering and thedirector of Purdue Quantum Science and Engineering Institute, willreceive the 2021 Herbert Newby McCoy Award. This prestigious award is given to those who have show outstanding work in the field of natural sciences.

Chen has successfully implemented a program at Purdue that focuses on "timely problems in nanoscience," according to the release. He continues to lead a large research group that works on quantum matter and devices.

Chen was one of the first in the world to "synthesize and study large-scale graphene and graphene single crystals," as stated in the release. As such, he is considered to be a global leader ingraphene-based materials.

In addition to his research, Chen serves on theGovernance Advisory Board forQuantum Science Center.

The 2021 recipients of these distinguished awardwill receive a cash prize along with a small grant for their university scholarly activities.

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Scientists decode mysteries of the brain with dark matter and the multiverse – CNET

American physicists Richard Feynman and Yang Chen Ning, circa 1950s.

Quantum particles exist and don't exist. Space is likely a moldable fabric. Dark matter is invisible, yet it binds the entire universe. And our universe, created from an explosion 13.8 billion years ago, is infinitely expanding into something. Or, maybe nothing.

Unless you're a trained physicist, at least one of those statements probably hurts your brain.

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We experience a sort of cognitive dissonance when attempting to comprehend the vastness of such unimaginable, complex concepts. But theoretical physicists think about, and even conjure, these ideas all day, every day.

How do they do it?

According to new research, published Oct. 11 in the journal NPJ Science of Learning, physicists' brains grapple with counterintuitive theories by automatically categorizing things as either "measurable" or "immeasurable."

"Most of the things we encounter every day, like a rock, a lake, a flower, you can say, 'Well it's about the size of my fist... but the concepts that physicists think about don't have that property," said Marcel Just, a psychologist at Carnegie Mellon University and first author of the study.

To study exactly how physicists' brains work, Just and fellow researchers gave 10 Carnegie Mellon physics faculty members -- with differing specialties and language backgrounds -- a ledger of physics concepts. Then, they used fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) scans to examine the subjects' brain activity as the individuals went down the list.

In contrast to normal MRIs, which help with anatomical studies, functional MRIs can detect brain activity based on fluctuations in blood flow, glucose and oxygen.

Turns out, each physicist's brain organizes concepts within the field into two groups. The researchers were just left to figure out how to label each group.

"I looked at the list, and said well, 'What do concepts like potential energy, torque, acceleration, wavelength, frequency ... have in common? At the other end of the same scale, there are things like dark matter; duality; cosmology; multiverse," explained co-author Reinhard A. Schumacher, a particle physicist at Carnegie Mellon University.

The average person might lump Schumacher's descriptions on the latter end of the spectrum as mind-bending and inexplicable, but the most important connecting factor, he realized, is that they're immeasurable.

In the brain scans, these concepts didn't indicate activity of what he calls "extent," loosely referring to placing tangible restrictions on something.

Physicists' brains, the team concluded, automatically discern between abstract items, like quantum physics, and comprehensible, measurable items like velocity and frequency.

Basically, the stuff that provokes a sense of perplexity in us non-physicists doesn't elicit thoughts of "extent" for them. That's probably why they can think about those things with relative ease, whereas we begin worrying about scale.

Speaking from experience, Schumacher says considering abstract physics ideas as a student can be very different from conceiving them as a longtime physicist.

"I think there's a sense that as physicists grow older, the concepts kind of crystallize in the mind, and you end up using them in a more efficient way," Schumacher said.

"The more you use these ideas, the more they become like old friends."

The brain scans also support that assertion. Not only did the team test faculty brain activity, they also looked at physics students' brains.

"In the old physicists who have been doing it for years," Schumacher said, "it's like the brain is more efficient. It doesn't have to light up as much, because you're going right for the thing right away."

Additionally, Just noted the professors "had more right hemisphere activation, suggesting that they had a greater number of sort of distantly associated concepts."

While a physics student might relate velocity to acceleration, it seems the professors were relating velocity to much more niche subjects activated by remote locations of the brain. Velocity of the universe's expansion, perhaps?

Just emphasizes how evolution of the brain to accommodate new, abstract ideas happens to all of us. Perhaps only theoretical physicists can easily comprehend duality or a multiverse, but people working in other fields, of course, ponder complex ideas of their own.

Chemists, for instance, have to visualize unseen orbital structures of atoms and bond configurations only drawn in textbooks. And the general public, over time, has adapted to inventions like iPhones and the cloud. Think about it. We can comprehend the cloud, which is pretty bizarre.

Imagine traveling back in time to the 1700s and explaining to someone the workings of an invisible data storage mine. They'd probably feel the way we do when we picture the quantum domain -- we'd be the "physicists" to them.

"We have this understanding now," explained Schumacher. "Even if you develop some new scientific concept, we can more or less predict what the brain is going to do with it."

For instance, during the exercise, when asked to think about oscillations, Just said some subject's brains activated sections relating to rhythmic activity. The organ had basically repurposed areas used in ancient times for general rhythms, like maybe music, to allow for modern physics concepts.

"The idea of sine waves is just a couple hundred years old," Just said. "But people have been looking at ripples on a pond forever."

Just also suggests it could become possible to actively help the brain repurpose itself, harnessing its ability to adapt. If we allow children to expand their minds through education by introducing abstract concepts sooner and more rigorously, he says, maybe one day they can readily imagine things the way scientists do.

Even further down the road, he says the findings could inform studies of mental health -- how does the brain's organizational and adaptation capabilities operate while in distress?

"I think it's the most fascinating question in the world," Just remarked. "'What is the essence of human brains? How can we make them healthier; think better?"

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Physics Experiment Reveals Formation of a New State of Matter Breaks Time-Reversal Symmetry – SciTechDaily

The central principle of superconductivity is that electrons form pairs. But can they also condense into foursomes? Recent findings have suggested they can, and a physicist at KTH Royal Institute of Technology today published the first experimental evidence of this quadrupling effect and the mechanism by which this state of matter occurs.

Reporting in Nature Physics, Professor Egor Babaev and collaborators presented evidence of fermion quadrupling in a series of experimental measurements on the iron-based material, Ba1xKxFe2As2. The results follow nearly 20 years after Babaev first predicted this kind of phenomenon, and eight years after he published a paper predicting that it could occur in the material.

The pairing of electrons enables the quantum state of superconductivity, a zero-resistance state of conductivity which is used in MRI scanners and quantum computing. It occurs within a material as a result of two electrons bonding rather than repelling each other, as they would in a vacuum. The phenomenon was first described in a theory by, Leon Cooper, John Bardeen and John Schrieffer, whose work was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1972.

The iron-based superconductor material, Ba1xKxFe2As2, is mounted for experimental measurements. Credit: Vadim Grinenko, Federico Caglieris

So-called Cooper pairs are basically opposites that attract. Normally two electrons, which are negatively-charged subatomic particles, would strongly repel each other. But at low temperatures in a crystal they become loosely bound in pairs, giving rise to a robust long-range order. Currents of electron pairs no longer scatter from defects and obstacles and a conductor can lose all electrical resistance, becoming a new state of matter: a superconductor.

Only in recent years has the theoretical idea of four-fermion condensates become broadly accepted.

For a fermion quadrupling state to occur there has to be something that prevents condensation of pairs and prevents their flow without resistance, while allowing condensation of four-electron composites, Babaev says.

The Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer theory didnt allow for such behavior, so when Babaevs experimental collaborator at Technische Universtt Dresden, Vadim Grinenko, found in 2018 the first signs of a fermion quadrupling condensate, it challenged years of prevalent scientific agreement.

What followed was three years of experimentation and investigation at labs at multiple institutions in order to validate the finding.

Babaev says that key among the observations made is that fermionic quadruple condensates spontaneously break time-reversal symmetry. In physics time-reversal symmetry is a mathematical operation of replacing the expression for time with its negative in formulas or equations so that they describe an event in which time runs backward or all the motions are reversed.

If one inverts time direction, the fundamental laws of physics still hold. That also holds for typical superconductors: if the arrow of time is reversed, a typical superconductor would still be the same superconducting state.

However, in the case of a four-fermion condensate that we report, the time reversal puts it in a different state, he says.

It will probably take many years of research to fully understand this state, he says. The experiments open up a number of new questions, revealing a number of other unusual properties associated with its reaction to thermal gradients, magnetic fields and ultrasound that still have to be better understood.

Reference: State with spontaneously broken time-reversal symmetry above the superconducting phase transition by Vadim Grinenko, Daniel Weston, Federico Caglieris, Christoph Wuttke, Christian Hess, Tino Gottschall, Ilaria Maccari, Denis Gorbunov, Sergei Zherlitsyn, Jochen Wosnitza, Andreas Rydh, Kunihiro Kihou, Chul-Ho Lee, Rajib Sarkar, Shanu Dengre, Julien Garaud, Aliaksei Charnukha, Ruben Hhne, Kornelius Nielsch, Bernd Bchner, Hans-Henning Klauss and Egor Babaev, 18 October 2021, Nature Physics.DOI: 10.1038/s41567-021-01350-9

Contributing to the research were scientists from the following institutions: Institute for Solid State and Materials Physics, TU Dresden, Germany; Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research, Dresden; Stockhom University; Bergische Universtt at Wuppertal, Germany; Dresden High Magnetic Field Laboratory (HLD-EMFL); Wurzburg-Dresden Cluster of Excellence ct.qmat, Germany; Helmholtz-Zentrum, Germany; National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Japan; Institut Denis Poisson, France.

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Harvard Astrophysicist Shares Wild Theory That Our Universe Was Created In A Lab By Aliens – BroBible

Avi Loeb, the former chairman of the astronomy department at Harvard University, is very well known in the scientific community for his outside-the-box (to put it lightly) thinking.

The decorated astronomer and theoretical physicist has in the past stated, among many things, that alien tech visited Earth in 2017, that there could be as many as a quadrillion alien spacecrafts traveling in our solar system, and that artificial intelligence will be the key to communicating with aliens, is now suggesting that our universe may have been created in a lab by aliens.

In an op-ed published in Scientific American this week, Avi Loeb posits, Now there are a variety of conjectures in the scientific literature for our cosmic origins A less explored possibility is that our universe was created in the laboratory of an advanced technological civilization. Since our universe has a flat geometry with a zero net energy, an advanced civilization could have developed a technology that created a baby universe out of nothing through quantum tunneling.

This possible origin story unifies the religious notion of a creator with the secular notion of quantum gravity. We do not possess a predictive theory that combines the two pillars of modern physics: quantum mechanics and gravity. But a more advanced civilization might have accomplished this feat and mastered the technology of creating baby universes. If that happened, then not only could it account for the origin of our universe but it would also suggest that a universe like our own which in this picture hosts an advanced technological civilization that gives birth to a new flat universe is like a biological system that maintains the longevity of its genetic material through multiple generations.

Related: TikTokers Immortality Theory Video On Life After Death Is Blowing Millions Of Minds

Got all that? Buckle in, theres more.

Avi Loeb also suggests that because we do not have the ability to reproduce the astrophysical conditions that led to our existence we are a low-level technological civilization, graded class C on the cosmic scale.

We would be higher on the scale, says Loeb, if we possessed the ability to recreate the habitable conditions on our planet for when the sun will die.

In fact, because of our deficiencies, he says we may be labeled class D since we are carelessly destroying the natural habitat on Earth through climate change, driven by our technologies.

A class B civilization could adjust the conditions in its immediate environment to be independent of its host star. A civilization ranked class A could recreate the cosmic conditions that gave rise to its existence, namely produce a baby universe in a laboratory.

Loeb concludes, The possibility that our civilization is not a particularly smart one should not take us by surprise. When I tell students at Harvard University that half of them are below the median of their class, they get upset. The stubborn reality might well be that we are statistically at the center of the bell-shaped probability distribution of our class of intelligent life-forms in the cosmos, even when taking into account our celebrated discovery of the Higgs boson by the Large Hadron Collider.

We must allow ourselves to look humbly through new telescopes, as envisioned by the recently announced Galileo Project, and search for smarter kids on our cosmic block. Otherwise, our ego trip may not end well, similarly to the experience of the dinosaurs, which dominated Earth until an object from space tarnished their illusion.

Related: Two New Dinosaur Species Discovered, Including The Nightmarish Horned Crocodile-Faced Hell Heron

If hes right and our universe was created in a lab by aliens then there are numerous other questions that need to be answered, such as, are our creators able to manipulate us and/or control our destinies? Or are we just part of some high-tech simulation as multiple scientists have hypothesized?

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Trailblazing Women Who Broke into Engineering in the 1970s Reflect on What’s Changed and What Hasn’t – Nextgov

Engineering in the U.S. has long been and continues to be a male-dominated profession. Fifty years ago, it looked like that might change.

In 1970, the percentage of women majoring in engineering was less than 1%. In 1979, that number was 9%. Many hoped women would continue to enter the field at the same rate. But thats not what happened. Today, only 21% of engineering majors are women, a number largely unchanged since 2000.

I am a historian who, along with my colleagues, Nicole Conroy and William Barr II, surveyed 251 women engineers who graduated from college in the 1970s. These trailblazing women reflected on the adversity they faced and had advice for women entering the field today.

Never quite one of the group

We asked about the greatest challenges our survey takers faced as women in a male-dominated field. The three obstacles they cited most frequently were not getting respect, not fitting in and struggling to achieve work/family balance.

One survey taker, a biomechanical engineer who now works in web engineering, explained, The greatest challenge for me was continuing to believe in myself, when all the messages I was getting were that I would never be taken seriously or promoted or given raises or even hired at the same rate as men, who were clearly less qualified and not as smart as I was.

A chemical engineer who worked in manufacturing concurred, You have to prove yourself just because you are female. And you have to work twice as hard!

A civil engineer said, We are women engineers. People dont refer to a man as a man engineer hes an engineer. We are constantly reminded that we dont truly belong. Another civil engineer stated, On many levels, youre never quite one of the group.

Women also talked about family caregiving responsibilities. A retired vice president from a major chemical company stated, Young women engineers are on equal footing until they have children, then they struggle to balance work and family and compete with men who dont have the same time constraints or busy family life. Another woman who worked as a chemist warned that bosses assume you will leave as soon as you start having babies.

Remember, the women we surveyed are all now in their 60s and 70s. We asked them if they thought the challenges they faced had changed over time. A retired chemical and environmental engineer said, Progress is slow a view echoed by many survey takers. A nuclear engineer added, There still remains an old boys club It isnt as blatant or as crass as when I started, but it still exists.

Some noted that subtle forms of discrimination and bias can be really damaging. An engineer with a long career in the auto industry said, Bias can be quite subtle, which really hurts young women, because it can take them years to recognize it, by which time they may have lost a lot of ground.

About one-quarter of survey respondents said that gender problems no longer exist. A senior project engineer said, Today, young women engineers are more accepted mostly because there are just more of them. Its easier to get their foot in the door. Younger male engineers are also used to working with women because they went to school with them.

Advice to young women entering engineering

Despite identifying challenges, the majority of survey takers said they would tell a young woman thinking about pursuing a career in engineering to Go for it!

Many of the women extolled the benefits of their chosen career. A program manager in manufacturing stated that hands down engineering is the best degree. A mechanical engineer who owned her own consulting company said, It will give you the flexibility to do almost anything. It is almost impossible to point out anything tangible an engineer didnt touch or influence in some way. It is also satisfying to see the effects of what you have done.

Some survey takers suggested younger women might need to ignore obstacles. A retired aerospace engineer advised, You can do the job. However it takes strength and perseverance to do so while ignoring the naysayers.

Respondents also had practical advice for younger women starting off in the profession. They emphasized using some approaches that worked for them. These included speaking up for yourself, exiting unsupportive workplaces, seeking professional organizations that can help you, finding mentors of all genders and reaching out to other women engineers.

A retired nuclear engineer said, Use the Old Girls Network it does exist Dont isolate yourself. You are not the only one with your issue.

Part of a larger struggle

Indeed, the problems our survey takers faced were and are structural.

Engineering remains male-dominated due to many factors common in other STEM fields. They include gender bias and stereotypes, male-dominated educational settings and workplaces, and sexual harassment.

The challenges for women from underrepresented groups, such as people of color, people with disabilities and people with LGBTQ identities, are even greater.

As a chemical engineering professor put it, Laws and attitudes have changed significantly However, these changes are not without backlash or pushback. Learning to cope with this is ongoing, not only for women, but for all strangers in this profession.

Laura Ettinger is an associate professor of history at Clarkson University.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Electoral Engineering and the Freedom to Vote – Scientific American

Opinion

Securing basic voting rights should take priority over more elaborate reforms

Securing basic voting rights should take priority over more elaborate reforms

Michael Latner is a professor of political science at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, and a senior fellow of voting rights at the Union of Concerned Scientists' Center for Science and Democracy. He is co-author of Gerrymandering the States: Partisanship, Race, and the Transformation of American Federalism (Cambridge University Press, 2021) and Gerrymandering in America: The House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, and the Future of Popular Sovereignty (Cambridge University Press, 2016).

Charles "Tony" Smith is a professor of political science and law at the University of California, Irvine. His research is grounded in the American judiciary but includes comparative and international frameworks; its unifying theme is how democratic institutions and the strategic interaction of political actors fulfill or inhibit rights. He received a Ph.D. in political science from the University of California, San Diego, and a J.D. from the University of Florida.

Alex Keena is an assistant professor of political science at Virginia Commonwealth University whose research focuses on political representation. He is co-author of Gerrymandering the States: Partisanship, Race, and the Transformation of American Federalism (Cambridge University Press, 2021) and Gerrymandering in America: The House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, and the Future of Popular Sovereignty (Cambridge University Press, 2016). He received a Ph.D. in political science from the University of California, Irvine.

Anthony McGann is a professor of government and public policy at the University of Strathclyde in Scotland. He is co-author of Gerrymandering the States: Partisanship, Race, and the Transformation of American Federalism (Cambridge University Press, 2021), Gerrymandering in America: The House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, and the Future of Popular Sovereignty (Cambridge University Press, 2016) and The Logic of Democracy (University of Michigan Press, 2006).

Discover world-changing science. Explore our digital archive back to 1845, including articles by more than 150 Nobel Prize winners.

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Geophysical/Climate Application Computer Aided Engineering 2021: Market Size and Growth Forecasts and Position for Each of the Top 5 Vendors -…

DUBLIN, October 22, 2021--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Geophysical/Climate Application - Computer Aided Engineering (CAE) 2021 Market Report: Market Size and Growth; 4-Year Forecast; Market Size, Growth and Position for Each of the Top 5 Vendors" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The CAE Observatory was built in conjunction with industry specialists to help plan and develop the dataset, as well as contribute research and validation. The data is based upon multiple sources and viewpoints of the market, the most important being primary research of vendors. The model feeds additional information and industry knowledge from other stakeholders and Market Observatories.

Data in this Computer Aided Engineering Market report is provided in Software Revenue and Total Revenue terms. Software Revenue includes CAE-related software licences, maintenance, and subscription revenues. Total Revenue includes CAE-related provider services in addition to CAE-related software revenue.

Data is provided in U.S. Dollars (USD) and relate to Provider Revenues. Reseller margin and sales tax are excluded. All data is for the Worldwide market in 2021, unless otherwise stated. The data used in this snapshot is from the 2021 CAE Observatory. Forecasts and other data in this workbook are based on economic data from various sources published during early 2021

The CAE software industry is constantly evolving. Due to mergers, acquisitions and ongoing research, the list of included providers and products will change over time. This is a continual process.

Scope covering the CAE Market

2D and 3D physics based, simulation/analysis software, and related services using discretisation methods (e.g., Finite Element, Finite Volume, Finite Difference, Discrete Element, Meshless Methods).

Model Based Systems Engineering. From an overall system perspective, numerical models of components and systems behaviour (e.g. Modelica, AmeSim) are excluded. This might include 0d & 1D controls; physics simulation/analysis software and related services.

Key Topics Covered:

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CAE Market Observatory

Sources

Definition of the Geophysical/Climate Application

Market Size

Size & Growth of the Geophysical/Climate Application

Position of "Geophysical/Climate" Application within CAE Market

For each of the Top 5 vendors:

Companies Mentioned

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/e9d7kt

About ResearchAndMarkets.com

ResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211022005227/en/

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.comLaura Wood, Senior Press Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

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Assistant/Associate Professor in Civil & Environmental Engineering job with Washington State University Department of Civil & Environmental…

The Department of Civil and EnvironmentalEngineering, within the Voiland College of Engineering andArchitecture, at Washington State University in Pullman, WA as partof its strategic initiative onSustainable and ResilientInfrastructure Systemsseeks applicants for threetenure-track faculty positions as Assistant or Associate Professorsin the areas of Structures, Materials, Sustainability, andTransportation Engineering.

NOTICE OF VACANCY

Faculty Positions in Structural Engineering, SustainableDesign & Engineering, and TransportationEngineering

The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE),within the Voiland College of Engineering and Architecture, atWashington State University (WSU) is seeking highly motivatedcandidates for three (3) permanent, full-time academic year,tenure-track faculty positions at the level of Assistant orAssociate Professor, depending on qualifications. It is anticipatedthat the successful candidate(s) will begin the appointment onAugust 16, 2022.

Candidates must have expertise in structural design andengineering (two positions), and in transportation engineering (oneposition), with an emphasis on sustainability, infrastructureresiliency, or AI / ML. All positions are located at WSU Pullman,WA campus. Candidates should be able to work at a granular level,as well as a systems level. Candidates with the ability to workwithin their discipline and across multiple disciplinescollaboratively will be preferred. The ability to collaborate inteaching and on projects in soil-structure interaction, sustainablepractices in construction, or big data applications in civilengineering will be given preference. AI, VR, and automatedoff-site construction interests will facilitate productive linkageswith WSUs School of Design and Construction, and therefore areconsidered favourably.

GENERAL DESCRIPTION

The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering,within the Voiland College of Engineering and Architecture, atWashington State University in Pullman, WA as part of its strategicinitiative on Sustainable and Resilient InfrastructureSystems seeks applicants for three tenure-track facultypositions as Assistant or Associate Professors in the areas ofStructures, Materials, Sustainability, and TransportationEngineering. A successful candidate for the TransportationEngineering faculty position must have expertise in one or more ofthe following areas:

A successful candidate for the Structural Engineering facultypositions must have expertise in one or more of the followingareas:

The ideal candidate should demonstrate high-quality research andhave a commitment to teaching excellence. Individuals withdemonstrated abilities to collaborate in large projects, especiallyacross disciplines, are highly encouraged to apply. Abilities toteach and mentor a diverse student body, supervise graduatestudents, and enhance the curriculum in the areas of structural,material, and transportation engineering are desired. An ability toteach core undergraduate fundamental courses in structures,structural analysis, structural design and modeling, or intelligenttransportation is desired. A culture of interdisciplinary researchwith a diverse group of faculty and students is valued, and thecandidate will be encouraged to contribute to existing researchstrengths within the program and across the university insynergistic areas, such as within the Composite Materials &Engineering Center (www.cmec.wsu.edu), the School ofDesign + Construction (https://sdc.wsu.edu/) and the NationalUTC TriDurLE (https://TriDurLE.wsu.edu/).

QUALIFICATIONS & EXPERIENCE

Suitable candidates must have:

The following are preferred qualifications:

APPLICATION PROCESS

Applications must include a cover letter describing relevantexperiences and interest in the position; curriculum vitae;statements of research and teaching philosophy and interests thatreflects the candidates commitment to diversity, inclusion, andequity; up to 3 academic publications; and names of up to fivereferences with titles, addresses, business telephone numbers, ande-mail addresses. References will not be contacted without theconsent from applicants. The application must be submitted onlineat http://www.wsujobs.com. Positionscan be found with the following identifications - Structures(R-3040) and Transportation (R-3039). Screening of applicants willbegin October 31, 2021 and continue until the positions arefilled.

Washington State University is an equal opportunity/affirmativeaction educator and employer. Members of ethnic minorities, women,special disabled veterans, veterans of the Vietnam-era, recentlyseparated veterans, and other protected veterans, persons ofdisability and/or persons age 40 and over are encouraged to apply.The Voiland College of Engineering and Architecture seeks qualifiedcandidates who can make contributions to the diversity andexcellence of the university community through their teaching,research, and/or service. WSU is committed to excellence throughdiversity, has faculty policies including a partner accommodationprogram, and a NSF ADVANCE Institutional Transformation grant(https://advance.wsu.edu/).

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Assistant/Associate Professor in Civil & Environmental Engineering job with Washington State University Department of Civil & Environmental...

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