ZME Science on MSN
Computer chips designed like biological brains can finally handle massive math problems without guzzling energy like a normal supercomputer
When you swing a tennis racket or catch a set of keys, you aren’t thinking about wind resistance or gravity. Yet, to perform that motion, your brain is solving a massive physics problem in ...
Henry Yuen is developing a new mathematical language to describe problems whose inputs and outputs aren’t ordinary numbers.
Morning Overview on MSN
Are we in a simulation? New AI and physics clues raise fresh doubt
A physicist has mounted one of the most detailed technical challenges yet against the idea that our universe is a computer ...
Using the Frontier supercomputer at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology have performed the largest direct numerical ...
Abstract: Quantum computing holds immense promise for solving complex problems beyond the reach of classical computers. However, the realization of practical quantum ...
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