If you could take an apple and break it into smaller and smaller parts, you would find molecules, then atoms, followed by subatomic particles like protons and the quarks and gluons that make them up.
Fifty-eight years after it first appeared, string theory remains the most popular candidate for the “theory of everything,” the unified mathematical framework for all matter and forces in the universe ...
Abstract: The state-of-the-art YOLO detection algorithms still suffer from the issue of redundant extraction of similar features during feature propagation, and the simplistic stacking approach of ...
Isn't it ionic: An artist's representation of Quantinuum's 56-qubit trapped-ion quantum computer. Researchers used this computer to demonstrate a way of generating random numbers, then using a ...
Released December 11, the eighth edition of JetBrains’ annual State of the Developer Ecosystem Report is based on responses from 23,262 developers worldwide, surveyed between May and June 2024. To ...
String theory captured the hearts and minds of many physicists decades ago because of a beautiful simplicity. Zoom in far enough on a patch of space, the theory says, and you won’t see a menagerie of ...
Abstract: Time series widely exist in the real world, and a large part of them are long time series, such as weather information records and industrial production information records. The inherent ...