Scientific American
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[:es]Extra Hard Space Diamonds May Have Formed in an Ancient Cosmic Collision[:]
[:es]A new formation method for rare “lonsdaleite” diamonds may illuminate a better way to produce them on Earth[:]
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[:es]How Squishy Math Is Revealing Doughnuts in the Brain[:]
[:es]Topology, sometimes called rubber sheet geometry, is finding patterns in the brain, drugs and evolution[:]
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[:es]How Squishy Math Is Revealing Doughnuts in the Brain[:]
[:es]Topology, sometimes called rubber sheet geometry, is finding patterns in the brain, drugs and evolution[:]
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[:es]Quantum Tunneling Makes DNA More Unstable[:]
[:es]The freaky physics phenomenon of quantum tunneling may mutate genes[:]
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[:es]JWST’s First Glimpses of Early Galaxies Could Break Cosmology[:]
[:es]The James Webb Space Telescope’s first images of the distant universe shocked astronomers. Is the discovery of unimaginably distant galaxies a mirage, or a revolution?[:]
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[:es]Black Hole Discovery Helps to Explain Quantum Nature of the Cosmos[:]
[:es]New insights from black hole research may elucidate the cosmological event horizon[:]
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[:es]Black Hole Discovery Helps to Explain Quantum Nature of the Cosmos[:]
[:es]New insights from black hole research may elucidate the cosmological event horizon[:]
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[:es]How to Fix Quantum Computing Bugs[:]
[:es]The same physics that makes quantum computers powerful also makes them finicky. New techniques aim to correct errors faster than they can build up[:]