Friday, December 5, 2025

To Brain is Human


It's a great time in the history of humanity to still have a brain. 

Chimeric brain models can help bridge the gap between animal studies and human neurological disorders
May 2025, phys.org

Scientists create models by transplanting human brain cells culled from stem cells into the brains of animals such as mice, thereby creating a mix of human and animal brain cells in the same brain. This environment is closer to the complexity of a living human brain than what can be simulated in a petri dish study.

via Rutgers University: Ava V. Papetti et al, Chimeric brain models: Unlocking insights into human neural development, aging, diseases, and cell therapies, Neuron (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2025.03.036



Biological Computer: Human Brain Cells on a Chip
Jun 2025, IEEE Spectrum

In a development straight out of science fiction, Australian startup Cortical Labs has released what it calls the world’s first code-deployable biological computer. The CL1, which debuted in March, fuses human brain cells on a silicon chip to process information via sub-millisecond electrical feedback loops.



Scientists detect light passing through entire human head, opening new doors for brain imaging
Jun 2025, phys.org

In case you didn't catch that - light passing through entire human head

The press article doesn't mention the method so I just copy from the main:
A pulsed laser is projected against the side of the head above the ear. Diametrically opposite the source, a demagnifying tapered fiber bundle is placed in close proximity to the scalp and redirects light to a photomultiplier tube. The PMT operates in photon counting mode, such that the detection of a photon produces an electrical pulse that can be synchronized with the laser emission to produce a photon ToF distribution using a time-correlated single-photon counting module.

University of Glasgow: Jack Radford et al, Photon transport through the entire adult human head, Neurophotonics (2025). DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.12.2.025014


Brain-computer interface shows promise for decoding inner speech in real time
Aug 2025, phys.org

It's so good that it picks up the stuff you didn't mean to say out loud ...

The BCI was also able to pick up what some inner speech participants were never instructed to say, such as numbers when the participants were asked to tally the pink circles on the screen.

The team also demonstrated a password-controlled mechanism that would prevent the BCI from decoding inner speech unless temporarily unlocked with a chosen keyword.

via Stanford University: Inner speech in motor cortex and implications for speech neuroprostheses, Cell (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.06.015.
 

Thursday, December 4, 2025

How to Be a Scientist


If you're a scientist, and you're thinking 'how can I get funding for my project', maybe you should take a look at some of these studies, get some ideas. 

Chimpanzees can catch yawns from androids
Jun 2025, phys.org

My god look at these robot heads.

via Fundació Mona Primate Sanctuary in Spain: Ramiro Joly-Mascheroni, Chimpanzees yawn when observing an android yawn, Scientific Reports (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-98639-z



Plastic trash in bird nests documents the Anthropocene epoch
Mar 2025, phys.org

Plastic waste in bird nests can serve as a time capsule. Researchers of this study collected abandoned common coot nests from central Amsterdam on September 22, 2021, after the breeding season ended, and deconstructed the contents into piles of twigs and near-complete packaging materials. Each artificial item was then carefully examined for manufacturing dates, expiration dates, or any other markings that could reveal its age. The recovered packaging ranged from items like milk and avocados to chocolate packets and fast food wrappers dating back to 1996.

via Leiden University: Auke‐Florian Hiemstra et al, Birds documenting the Anthropocene: Stratigraphy of plastic in urban bird nests, Ecology (2025). DOI: 10.1002/ecy.70010


Innovative boot sock sampling reveals E. coli levels in surface soils of informal settlements
Mar 2025, phys.org

The boot socks collect dirt from outdoor areas, creating a sample that paints a more comprehensive picture of pathogen levels in soil environments. 

via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Monash: Lamiya Bata et al, Assessing E. coli levels in surface soils of informal settlements using boot sock and standard grab methods, Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adq9869


Study shows pizza is eaten faster than chopstick-based meals
May 2025, phys.org

via Fujita Health University: Kanako Deguchi et al, The Meal Type Rather than the Meal Sequence Affects the Meal Duration, Number of Chews, and Chewing Tempo, Nutrients (2025). DOI: 10.3390/nu17091576


Physicists determine how to cut onions with fewer tears
May 2025, phsy.org

via Cornell University: Zixuan Wu et al, Droplet Outbursts from Onion Cutting, arXiv (2025). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2505.06016


Collective behavior study explores whether pigeons track others' eye movements
Jul 2025, phys.org

via University of Konstanz: Mathilde Delacoux et al, Gaze following in pigeons increases with the number of demonstrators, iScience (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2025.112857


World's first known butt-drag fossil trace was left by a rock hyrax in South Africa 126,000 years ago
Oct 2025, phys.org

It is called a "butt-drag impression", and it was discovered by "an ardent tracker", like a person who finds escaped fugitives.

via African Centre for Coastal Palaeoscience at Nelson Mandela University: Charles W. Helm et al, The unusual, unique ichnology of the rock hyrax (Procavia capensis) and possible Pleistocene tracks and traces from South Africa, Ichnos (2025). DOI: 10.1080/10420940.2025.2546373

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Colors Keep Coming


This is where all the colors come from. 

Color-changing sensor offers new way to track motion and stress
Dec 2024, phys.org

Yeah go ahead and read that and get back to me.

It's a mechanochromic strain sensor that changes color in response to mechanical stress, using magnetoplasmonic nanoparticles (MagPlas NPs) which form a uniform layer called an amorphous photonic array producing bright, consistent colors that remain stable when viewed from different angles, and which are transferred onto a flexible, stretchable material called polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) enabling the sensor to change color under mechanical stress.

via Chungnam National University in Korea: Huu-Quang Nguyen et al, Mechanochromic strain sensor by magnetoplasmonic amorphous photonic arrays, Chemical Engineering Journal (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2024.155297



Squid are some of nature's best camouflagers. Researchers have a new explanation for why
Mar 2025, phys.org

Chromatophores are pigmented organs that sit all over the squid's skin. They have muscle fibers on the outside that are filled with neurons, allowing the animal to neuromuscularly open and control these pigment sacks based on what's in their environment.

Together with iridophores, which act as a kind of photo filter, adding greens and blues to the chromatophores' reds, yellows and browns, they give squid the ability to change color within hundreds of milliseconds, distributing the color all over their body.

"To have something sense the colors around it and distribute [them] within hundreds of milliseconds is really insane," Deravi says. "It's not something that's easy to do, especially in a living system that's under water."

And then they made an artificial squid skin circuit.

via Northeastern University: Taehwan Kim et al, Cephalopod chromatophores contain photosensitizing nanostructures that may facilitate light sensing and signaling in the skin, Journal of Materials Chemistry C (2025). DOI: 10.1039/D4TC04333B


The first genetic editing in spiders with CRISPR‐Cas yields colorful silk
May 2025, phys.org

They developed an injection solution that included the components of the gene-editing system as well as a gene sequence for a red fluorescent protein. This solution was injected into the eggs of unfertilized female spiders, which were then mated with males of the same species. As a result, the offspring of the gene-edited spiders showed red fluorescence in their dragline silk — clear evidence of the successful knock-in of the gene sequence into a silk protein.

via University of Bayreuth's Biomaterials research group: Edgardo Santiago‐Rivera et al, Spider Eye Development Editing and Silk Fiber Engineering Using CRISPR‐Cas, Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2025). DOI: 10.1002/anie.202502068

Fire retardant dropped on California after wildfires 2 - via Getty - Jan 2025

Long-used red pigment carmine has a surprisingly complex porous structure
Jun 2025, phys.org

Every artist knows about carmine red, or at least they know it comes from an insect and not a chemistry lab, and they know it's hard to get and it's expensive. In case you're not an artist - Carmine is a natural red coloring agent produced from an extract of the cochineal insect, rich in carminic acid, and which is combined with aluminum (Al) and calcium (Ca) to produce carmine. 

Now they're using better microscopy, and find that it's actually a metal complex built from two calcium ions, two aluminum ions, and four organic ligand molecules of carminic acid. It makes a porous metal structure (that sounds to me like the MOFs you keep hearing about).

via Stockholm University: Erik Svensson Grape et al, Brilliantly Red: The Structure of Carmine, Crystal Growth & Design (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acs.cgd.5c00185


Pigment researchers create vivid yellows, oranges, reds that are durable, non-toxic
Jul 2025, phys.org

Brought to you by Mas Subramanian, who made color history in 2009 with the discovery of a vivid blue pigment now known commercially as YInMn Blue.

The work centers around the crystal structure of a rare mineral found in Norway called thortveitite, a silicate containing scandium and yttrium. Thortveitite isn't known for vibrant colors, but by introducing the abundant elements nickel, zinc and vanadium into a thortveitite-like crystal lattice, scientists have produced a collection of intense yellow, orange and reddish pigments.

Chromophores - the parts of a molecule that determine color by reflecting some wavelengths of light while absorbing others.

"Although divalent nickel is known to produce yellow and green colors in inorganic compounds, it rarely produces oranges and/or reds. The discovered pigments are stable under high temperatures and in acidic environments with no change in the structure or color properties, and they can be made in air at relatively low temperatures, around 750°C, which makes large-scale production feasible."

via Oregon State University: Yi-Chia Lin et al, Intense Yellow/Orange/Red Pigments Based on a Thortveitite-like Structure without Toxic Elements: Zn2-xNixV2O7, Chemistry of Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.5c00324


True blue: Researchers create better blue food dye from algae
Aug 2025, phys.org

Phyco Blue (?) - natural blue food dye made of an algae protein called Phycocyanin

via Cornell University: Qike Li et al, Elucidating structure-functionality relationships of phycocyanin through size-exclusion chromatography coupled with in-line small-angle X-ray scattering, Food Hydrocolloids (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2025.111798

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Clash of the Titans Continues


More additions to the collection; this is what happens when all the companies in the world get so good at what they do that they stop exploiting their customers and start eating each other. In the end, there can be only one. 

Mondelez sues Aldi alleging it copies packaging to confuse customers
May 2025, AP News

Newsmax sues Fox News for allegedly abusing monopoly power
Sep 2025, CNBC News

Amazon Sues to Stop Perplexity Using AI Tool to Buy Stuff
Nov 2025, Bloomberg [paywall]

This story is nowhere near as interesting as this piece of history:

Robot with $100 bitcoin buys drugs, gets arrested
Apr 2015, CNBC

Monday, December 1, 2025

Headlines From the Future


Six months worth of science headlines that are so good you don't even need the article. 

Lab-grown teeth might become an alternative to fillings
Apr 2025, phys.org

via King's College London: Xuechen Zhang et al, Generating Tooth Organoids Using Defined Bioorthogonally Cross-Linked Hydrogels, ACS Macro Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.4c00520


Engineers turn toxic ancient tomb fungus into anti-cancer drug
Jun 2025, phys.org

via University of Pennsylvania: A class of benzofuranoindoline-bearing heptacyclic fungal RiPPs with anticancer activities, Nature Chemical Biology (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41589-025-01946-9

Edible microlasers made from food-safe materials can serve as barcodes and biosensors
Jul 2025, phys.org

Yo what the f*** are you talking about
Researchers have encoded an expiration date into a peach compote using microlaser barcodes embedded inside the food.

Still not getting it
It's composed of droplets of oil or water–glycerol mixtures doped with natural optical gain substances, such as chlorophyll or riboflavin, to create microlasers for optical barcodes or sensors.

via Jožef Stefan Institute in Ljubljana Slovenia: Abdur Rehman Anwar et al, Microlasers Made Entirely from Edible Substances, Advanced Optical Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1002/adom.202500497

Muscle-inspired sheet-like robot navigates the tightest spaces
Aug 2025, phys.org

via Pohang University of Science and Technology: Hyung Gon Shin et al, Soft and flexible robot skin actuator using multilayer 3D pneumatic network, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-60496-9

'Ghost sharks' grow forehead teeth to help them have sex, study suggests
Sep 2025, phys.org

via University of Florida: Karly E. Cohen et al, Teeth outside the jaw: Evolution and development of the toothed head clasper in chimaeras, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2508054122

'Wetware': Scientists use human mini-brains to power computers
Oct 2025, phys.org

via Swiss start-up FinalSpark: https://finalspark.com/

Bioelectronic-integrated artificial colon eliminates need for animal testing
Oct 2025, phys.org

via University of California Irvine: Jorge Alfonso Tavares‐Negrete et al, Development of a 3D Human Colon Model Along with Bioelectronics for the Induction and Monitoring of Diseases, Advanced Science (2025). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202506377

Post Script - Sometimes science is a foreign language:
Quantum state lifetimes extended by laser-triggered electron tunneling in cuprate ladders
Jun 2025, phys.org

via Emory University and the Paul Scherrer Institute: Hari Padma et al, Symmetry-protected electronic metastability in an optically driven cuprate ladder, Nature Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-025-02254-2

Friday, November 28, 2025

Terran Here We Come


Planet Earth is just not what it used to be. That's probably because managing a planet at the planetary level is a new concept, and it's pretty hard.

The major theme over the past few years has been the Big Oops, somewhat predicted, that reducing air pollution would actually make the greenhouse effect of said pollution even worse. Air pollution is not one thing, it's a bunch, including tiny particles of soot, as well as the hydrocarbon gasses that cause the greenhouse effect. We thought removing the tiny particles would be a good idea, which it probably is, but all those particles were reflecting back sun's rays, making the whole global warming thing less severe, and so it appears that fixing the problem is only making the problem worse, and faster. Maybe. The years 2023 and 2024 were the hottest on record, but they were so hot they broke the record for breaking the record (got that?) Then again, we're really not sure what's happening. 

Another theme is terraforming, but not the aerosol injection kind that puts little particles (less harmful than the ones from pollution) into the air to reflect back the sun's rays. The newer kind of terraforming is about crushing rocks on the surface of the earth, because the interaction of air with certain rocks makes the rocks absorb the carbon from the air and store it in the rocks. More below.

And don't forget the AMOC collapse. Is it? Is it not? Still can't tell. 

One thing is for sure, this is no longer your grandparents' planet.


From boiling hot to freezing cold: Sudden flips in temperature set to increase with climate change
Apr 2025, phys.org

(Some people call this Planet Menopause)

Although there is growing literature on independent extreme warm or extreme cold climate events, little is known about the wider effects of rapid shifts between the two.

via School of Geography and Planning at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou: Sijia Wu et al, Rapid flips between warm and cold extremes in a warming world, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-58544-5



Geoengineering technique could cool planet using existing aircraft
Apr 2025, phys.org

Scientists ran simulations of different aerosol injection strategies and concluded that adding particles 13km above the polar regions could meaningfully cool the planet, albeit much less effectively than at higher altitudes closer to the equator. Commercial jets such as the Boeing 777F could reach this altitude.

via University College London: Earth's Future (2025). agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.co


Scientists reveal what drove 2023's record-smashing North Atlantic marine heat wave
Jun 2025, phys.org

Sounds like this is it:  "record-breaking weak winds combined with increased solar radiation, and climate change ..."

The rate of warming depends on the thickness of the ocean's upper layer. A thin layer will warm faster. The thickness of the layer in summer is set by the winds that churn up the surface waters and mix heat throughout it. In June and July of 2023, the North Atlantic winds were weaker than ever recorded, so the upper layer of the ocean was thinner than ever recorded. This meant that the sun heated the ocean's surface more rapidly than normal, which is what led to those record-breaking temperatures.

Ah yes, and here: "There was possibly also a further unexpected, localized factor that summer."

In 2020, new international rules were introduced to reduce the sulfur pollution emitted by ships. The aim was to improve air quality around the world's major shipping lanes. But clearer skies can have an unintended side effect: less aerosol pollution means fewer 'seeds' for clouds. Less cloud cover means more sunlight can reach the sea surface—especially in the North Atlantic, which is a high-traffic shipping area. However, Prof. England says this effect was secondary...

via University of New South Wales: Matthew England, Drivers of the extreme North Atlantic marine heatwave during 2023, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08903-5

Rapid cloud loss is contributing to record-breaking temperatures, new study shows
Jun 2025, phys.org

Trying to keep up here: 

  • 1.5% and 3% of the world's storm cloud zones have been contracting in the past 24 years.
  • The trend has been linked to changing wind patterns, the expansion of the tropics and storm systems shifting toward the North and South poles.
  • Fewer clouds reflecting sunlight back into space amplifies global temps.

via Monash University Australian Research Council Center of Excellence for 21st Century Weather and NASA: George Tselioudis et al, Contraction of the World's Storm‐Cloud Zones the Primary Contributor to the 21st Century Increase in the Earth's Sunlight Absorption, Geophysical Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2025GL114882


Heat waves, droughts and fires may soon hit together as 'new normal,' study finds
Jun 2025, phys.org

"What surprised us is that the increase is so large that we see a clear paradigm shift with multiple coinciding extreme events becoming the new normal"

via Uppsala University: Gabriele Messori et al. Global Mapping of Concurrent Hazards and Impacts Associated With Climate Extremes Under Climate Change, Earth's Future (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2025EF006325


Decline in aerosols could lead to more heat waves in populated areas
Jul 2025, phys.org

Aerosols are up to 2.5 times more influential than greenhouse gases at driving changes in heat wave occurrence in populated areas.

The researchers found that from 1920 to the present, higher aerosol levels helped suppress the occurrence of heat waves in populated areas by about half.

Populated areas, which release the most aerosols, are particularly at risk of accelerating heat waves driven by aerosol decline in the near future.

BTW - What is a "heat wave" - In this study, a heat wave is defined as three or more consecutive days during a region's warm season that exceed a 90th percentile temperature threshold. (So it depends where you live; in New Jersey, that's 90 degrees F.)

via University of Texas at Austin: Geeta G Persad et al, Anthropogenic aerosol changes disproportionately impact the evolution of global heatwave hazard and exposure, Environmental Research Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/addee0


Air pollution cuts in East Asia likely accelerated global warming
Jul 2025, phys.org

"We have been able to single out the climate effects of air quality policies in East Asia over the last 15 years. Our main result is that the East Asian aerosol cleanup has likely driven much of the recent global warming acceleration, and also warming trends in the Pacific."

via National Center for Atmospheric Science at University of Reading and CICERO Center for International Climate Research: East Asian aerosol cleanup has likely contributed to the recent acceleration in global warming, Communications Earth & Environment (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-025-02527-3

Record marine heat waves in 2023 covered 96% of oceans, lasted four times longer than average
Jul 2025, phys.org

They found that 96% of the world's ocean surfaces experienced heat wave conditions, compared with a historical (1982–2022) average of 73.7%. The mean marine temperature was 1.3°C above normal in 2023, compared to the average of 0.98°C above normal. They also found that the average duration of heat waves had gone up to 120 days, quadrupling the historical average.

However, some regional areas experienced even more extreme temperatures and durations. The North Atlantic Ocean endured a heat wave lasting 525 days in total with temperatures sometimes reaching 3°C above normal. But they don't point to the aerosol reduction; it's a different mechanism about surface winds.

via Key Laboratory of Industrial Intelligence and Digital Twin, Eastern Institute of Technology, Ningbo, Zhejiang, China: Tianyun Dong et al, Record-breaking 2023 marine heatwaves, Science (2025). DOI: 10.1126/science.adr0910


Arctic winter reaches melting point: Scientists witness dramatic thaw in Svalbard
Jul 2025, phys.org

Svalbard, warming at six to seven times the global average rate, ...

via Queen Mary, University of London: Svalbard winter warming is reaching melting point, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-60926-8


Two wildfires in US west spur ‘fire clouds’ with erratic weather systems 
Aug 2025, The Guardian

Two wildfires burning in the western United States – including one that has become a “mega-fire” on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon – are so hot that they are spurring the formation of “fire clouds” that can create their own erratic weather systems.

Towering convection clouds known as pyrocumulus clouds have been spotted over Arizona’s blaze for seven consecutive days, fueling the fire with dry, powerful winds. They form when air over the fire becomes superheated and rises in a large smoke column. The giant billowing clouds can be seen for hundreds of miles.

Their more treacherous big brother, a fire-fueled thunderstorm known as the pyrocumulonimbus cloud, sent rapid winds shooting in all directions this week as a smoke column formed from the Utah fire then collapsed on itself.


Adding limestone to farmland boosts carbon capture and crop yields, study finds
Aug 2025, phys.org

Terraforming 2.0; not solar related:

When bicarbonate formed from limestone's interaction with soils washes from fields into rivers and oceans, it has the potential to store carbon for millennia. ... Applying multiple tons of limestone per acre could potentially remove billions of tons of carbon dioxide before the end of the century. ... Lime, which can react with nitrogen fertilizer and release carbon, has been listed as a carbon source by the IPCC. However, the researchers said that the acid from nitrogen fertilizer is the actual problem and, in most cases, adding enough limestone to improve soil levels will lead to CO2 removal over time.

via Yale University Center for Natural Carbon Capture: Peter Raymond et al, Using carbonates for carbon removal, Nature Water (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s44221-025-00473-0

Physics-based indicator predicts tipping point for collapse of Atlantic current system in next 50 years
Sep 2025, phys.org

Boy is this hard, can't seem to decide on this one. As of now, "collapse of the AMOC is likely and that it might begin sooner rather than later" 

via Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research at Utrecht University and Community Earth System Model: René M. van Westen et al, Physics‐Based Indicators for the Onset of an AMOC Collapse Under Climate Change, Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans (2025). DOI: 10.1029/2025JC022651


Four central climate components are losing stability, says study
Oct 2025, phys.org

"We now have convincing observational evidence that several interconnected parts of the Earth system are destabilizing" 
 
via Technical University Munich and the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research: Niklas Boers et al, Destabilization of Earth system tipping elements, Nature Geoscience (2025). doi.org/10.1038/s41561-025-01787-0


Tiny ocean organisms missing from climate models may hold the key to Earth's carbon future
Oct 2025, phys.org

Coccolithophores, the main producers of CaCO₃, are especially sensitive to acidification, as they lack specialized pumps to remove acidity from their cells. Foraminifers and pteropods do, but they face different pressures, from oxygen loss to warming waters. Together, these groups shape the fate of carbon in the ocean. Ignoring their diversity risks oversimplifying how the ocean responds to climate stressors.

via Autonomous University of Barcelona: Patrizia Ziveri, Calcifying plankton: From biomineralization to global change, Science (2025). DOI: 10.1126/science.adq8520. 


Cleaner air may be accelerating warming by making clouds less reflective
Nov 2025, phys.org

Between 2003 and 2022, clouds over the Northeastern Pacific and Atlantic oceans, both sites of rapid surface warming, became nearly 3% less reflective per decade. Researchers attribute approximately 70% of this change to aerosols—fine particles that float through the atmosphere and influence both cloud cover and cloud composition. "When you cut pollution, you're losing reflectivity and warming the system by allowing more solar radiation, or sunlight, to reach Earth."

The drop:
"We may be underestimating warming trends because this connection is stronger than we knew," von Salzen said. "I think this increases the pressure on everyone to rethink climate mitigation and adaptation because warming is progressing faster than expected."

What to expect:
"You could think of it as replacing unhealthy pollutant particles with another type of particle that is not a pollutant—but that still provides a beneficial cooling effect."

via University of Washington Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean and Ecosystem Studies: Reduced aerosol pollution diminished cloud reflectivity over the North Atlantic and Northeast Pacific, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-65127-x

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Time Crystals For Sale


Maybe I should stop posting about time crystals. 
(I will never understand time crystals)

Physicists investigate dynamic phenomena of a time crystal
Apr 2025, phys.org

The crystal, made of indium gallium arsenide, was continuously illuminated with a laser during the initial experiment. This interaction caused a nuclear spin polarization, which in turn spontaneously generated oscillations, embodying the essence of a time crystal through periodic behavior under constant excitation. Then they illuminated the semiconductor periodically instead of continuously, while also varying the frequency of the periodic drive. The observed behavior of the time crystal, its frequency response, ranged from perfect synchronization to chaotic dynamics.

Synchronization occurs only at specific fractions of the system's natural frequency. These fractions, in order of appearance with increasing drive frequency, correspond to the "Farey tree sequence," a well-known hierarchical structure implemented in a crystal for the first time.

If the driving frequency is varied further, the end of the synchronization range is reached. Here, each frequency component splits into at least two branches that are symmetrical to the synchronization frequency. These frequency branches connect the synchronization plateaus and together form a kind of staircase, known in the literature as "the devil's staircase," indicating a path either upwards or downwards.

Note: The Devil's Staircase is ... sorry, can't figure that out either. The internet is broken, sure, but this is one of those things that's referred to by everyone, but never actually described by anyone. So basically the people who need to know what it is, already know what it is. Something to do with phase transitions of different materials put together.

via TU Dortmund University: Alex Greilich et al, Exploring nonlinear dynamics in periodically driven time crystal from synchronization to chaotic motion, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-58400-6


Physicists create a new kind of time crystal that humans can actually see
Sep 2025, phys.org

via University of Colorado at Boulder Renewable and Sustainable Energy Institute, and WPI-SKCM2 International Institute for Sustainability with Knotted Chiral Meta Matter at Hiroshima University: Hanqing Zhao et al, Space-time crystals from particle-like topological solitons, Nature Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-025-02344-1


Quantum clocks deliver navigation accuracy far beyond current GPS systems in naval tests
Jul 2025, phys.org

"Outperforms GPS navigation systems by many orders of magnitude"

The clocks designed by the team rely on sealed cells containing a low-pressure gas of atoms (rubidium). These cells are then interrogated with lasers at specific colors, and the information extracted is used to steer the laser wavelength to the atom—providing stability.

Both clocks are optical atomic clocks, using sealed cells containing a low-pressure gas of the elements rubidium and ytterbium.

via University of Adelaide Institute of Photonics and Advanced Sensing, (Austrialian) Defense Science and Technology Group, Quantx Labs: A. P. Hilton et al, Demonstration of a mobile optical clock ensemble at sea, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-61140-2


New theory proposes time has three dimensions, with space as a secondary effect
Jun 2025, phys.org

This is not exactly related to the "Kletetschka's 3-D Time Theory"

If you could step onto that sideways path and remain in the same moment of "regular time," you might find that things could be slightly different—perhaps a different version of the same day. Moving along this perpendicular second path could let you explore different outcomes of that day without going backward or forward in time as we know it.

The existence of those different outcomes is the second dimension of time. The means to transition from one outcome to another is the third dimension.

Oh but wait, wow - we get a revised editor's note, something I do not see often while perusing phys.org (actually I've never seen this before)

Publishing in Reports in Advances of Physical Sciences (World Scientific Publishing), while a legitimate step, is not sufficient for a theory making such bold claims. This journal is relatively low-impact and niche, and its peer review does not match the rigorous scrutiny applied by top-tier journals like Physical Review Letters or Nature Physics. For a paradigm-shifting idea to gain acceptance, it must withstand critical evaluation by the wider physics community, be published in highly regarded journals, and provide reproducible predictions that align with existing evidence—standards this work has not yet met. (Andrew Zinn, editor at ScienceX which contains phys.org)

via University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute: Gunther Kletetschka, Three-Dimensional Time: A Mathematical Framework for Fundamental Physics, Reports in Advances of Physical Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1142/S2424942425500045


World's most precise clock achieves 19-decimal accuracy with aluminum ion technology
Jul 2025, phys.org

The most accurate clock ever. For now!

via National Institute of Standards and Technology: Mason C. Marshall et al, High-Stability Single-Ion Clock with 5.5×10−19 Systematic Uncertainty, Physical Review Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1103/hb3c-dk28