.

And by a prudent flight and cunning save A life which valour could not, from the grave. A better buckler I can soon regain, But who can get another life again? Archilochus

Monday, June 1, 2026

The Higgs Boson

from Google AI:
When a Higgs boson decays, its energy is transferred into the quantum fields of the Standard Model particles it couples with.

Because the Higgs boson interacts with almost all particles that possess mass, it has multiple decay pathways (called branching ratios). When it collapses, its energy creates ripples in several specific fields:

1. The Quark Fields (Matter)

Roughly 65% to 70% of all Higgs bosons transfer their energy directly into quark fields. Because the Higgs boson couples most strongly to heavier particles, it prefers the heaviest quarks it can kinematically produce:
  • The Bottom Quark Field (b): This is the single most common destination. About 58% of the Higgs boson's energy ripples into the bottom-quark field, creating a bottom and anti-bottom quark pair.
  • The Charm Quark Field (c): About 3% of its energy enters the charm-quark field. 
  • The Strange Quark Field (s): The Higgs boson decays into the strange quark field very rarely. According to the Standard Model of Particle Physics, the inclusive branching ratio for the Higgs boson to decay directly into a strange/anti-strange (s\overline s) quark pair is approximately \(0.021\%\). [1] This fraction represents just a tiny fraction of the total energy, well below the per-mille level. Because the Higgs boson's decay rate into quarks is roughly proportional to the square of the quark's mass, the heavier bottom (\(b\)) and charm (\(c\)) quarks take up the vast majority of quark-field decays: [1, 2, 3, 4].
  • Bottom quarks: \(\approx 60\%\)
  • Charm quarks: \(\approx 2.5\%\) [1] 

Due to the extremely low branching fraction, finding direct evidence of the Higgs-to-strange decay remains a massive experimental challenge at facilities like the Large Hadron Collider. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

 

2. The Weak Force Fields (Force Carriers)

Around 25% of the time, the Higgs boson transfers its energy back into the fields responsible for the weak nuclear force—the force behind radioactive decay.
  • The W Boson Field: About 21% of Higgs bosons decay into ripples of the (W^+) and (W^-) fields.
  • The Z Boson Field: About 2.6% of its energy enters the neutral (Z) boson field.
3. The Lepton Fields (Matter)

Leptons are light particles like electrons and neutrinos. The Higgs boson preferentially targets the heaviest lepton:
  • The Tau Lepton Field (tau): About 6% of the time, the energy creates ripples in the tau field (the electron's much heavier cousin).
  • The Muon Field (mu): A tiny fraction (0.02%) enters the muon field.
4. The Photon and Gluon Fields (Massless Forces)

Paradoxically, the Higgs boson can also transfer energy into fields of particles that have zero mass. It cannot do this directly. Instead, it creates a temporary "loop" of heavy virtual particles (like top quarks) that instantly collapse into force fields:
  • The Gluon Field: About 8% of the energy shakes the gluon field, which carries the strong nuclear force holding atomic nuclei together.
  • The Electromagnetic Field (Photons): About 0.2% of the time, it decays into two pure particles of light, sending ripples through the electromagnetic field.

Electro-Magnetic Waves and the Speed of Light

from Google AI:
Does the speed of light emerge from electromagnetic waves? 
Yes. In fact, they are the exact same phenomenon. "Light" is simply the small, visible portion of the broader electromagnetic spectrum. The concept of the "speed of light" essentially describes the speed at which all electromagnetic waves travel through a vacuum. [1, 2, 3] 
This speed naturally "emerges" from the fundamental laws of electricity and magnetism. [1]

How the Speed Emerges
Maxwell's Equations: In the 1860s, physicist James Clerk Maxwell unified electricity and magnetism into a single theoretical framework known as electromagnetism. 
The Wave Equation: When Maxwell combined these laws, the resulting mathematics naturally formed a classic wave equation. This proved that oscillating electric and magnetic fields sustain each other and ripple outward as a self-propagating wave. [1] 
The Mathematical Constant: The equations calculated the precise velocity (\(c\)) of these waves using two fundamental constants of the vacuum: the electric constant (\(\epsilon _{0}\)) and the magnetic constant (\(\mu _{0}\)).The speed is defined by this formula:
\(c = \frac{1}{\sqrt{\epsilon_0 \mu_0}}\) [1, 2, 3]
When you plug the known values for the permittivity and permeability of free space into this equation, it yields precisely \(299,792,458 \text{ m/s}\) (the universally accepted speed of light). [1, 2, 3]

Why it Matters
The term "speed of light" is actually a historical misnomer. It is more accurately described as the speed of electromagnetism. It dictates the speed of all electromagnetic radiation—including radio waves, microwaves, infrared, visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays, and gamma rays—all of which travel at this exact same speed in a vacuum. [1, 2, 3, 4]
To dive deeper into Maxwell's equations and how electric and magnetic constants define space, you can explore the NASA Science Electromagnetic Spectrum guide.

More Google AI:

The entanglement of magnons (quanta of magnetic spin waves) and excitons (electron-hole pairs) forms magnon-exciton entanglement. This represents a powerful quantum-mechanical linkage between electronic, optical, and magnetic states in materials like magnetic semiconductors or antiferromagnetic Mott insulators. [1, 2, 3, 4]

How it Works 
When a material is hit with electromagnetic (EM) radiation (such as light), it can create a localized exciton. If this happens in a magnetic semiconductor, the creation or recombination of the exciton strongly couples to the local magnetic spins, generating or interacting with magnons. [1, 2, 3
If you meant polaritons—hybrid quasiparticles of light (photons) and matter (excitons/magnons)—the EM field acts as the fundamental glue. When the electromagnetic field couples simultaneously to an exciton and a magnon, it results in a tripartite entangled state (Photon-Exciton-Magnon). [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Why it Matters 
  • Opto-Spintronics: It allows you to use light (lasers, photons) to remotely write, read, or control magnetic qubits and spin states.
  • Quantum Networks: Distributing quantum information becomes easier if you can convert the stationary, long-lived spin information (magnons) into optical information (excitons/photons) that can travel long distances. [1, 2, 3] 

Recent research demonstrates that spin-entangled optical transitions can emerge naturally from these combined states, opening new avenues for quantum computing, optoelectronics, and long-range entanglement distribution. You can explore the foundational physics behind these interactions through research detailed in Caltech News or ACS Physical Chemistry Au. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

Sunday, May 31, 2026

How to Speak 'Protein'

 


What are Proteins? (from Google AI):
Proteins are the workhorse molecules of life, essential for building, maintaining, and regulating almost every tissue and process in your body. Composed of amino acid chains, they control everything from your muscles to your metabolism.

Proteins carry out several vital, specialized functions in the body:
  • Structure: They provide rigid or flexible support for your body, cells, and tissues. Examples include collagen (in skin, bones, and tendons) and keratin (in hair and nails).
  • Enzymes: They act as biological catalysts, speeding up millions of essential chemical reactions, such as digestion and energy production.
  • Immunity: They protect the body from foreign invaders. Antibodies are proteins that identify and clear out bacteria and viruses.
  • Signaling: They act as chemical messengers. Many hormones (like insulin) are proteins that regulate metabolism and physiological processes.
  • Transport: They carry vital materials throughout the body. Hemoglobin, for example, is a protein in red blood cells that transports oxygen to all your tissues.
  • Movement: Motor and structural proteins (like actin and myosin) facilitate muscle contractions and enable cells to move internally.
To explore how proteins factor into your daily diet and overall wellness, you can visit the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health for evidence-based nutritional guidelines.
Speaking Protein (from Google AI):
Proteins communicate by passing chemical and physical messages to one another. They "speak" using a sophisticated molecular language based on shape, charge, and structural movement, working together in relay races to control everything your body does.

The primary ways proteins transmit and receive information include:

1. Shape and Fit (The Lock-and-Key Mechanism)

Proteins don't talk with words; they interact through physical touch.
  • The "Word": A signaling molecule (such as a hormone, neurotransmitter, or another protein) acts as the ligand (the message).
  • The "Listener": A receptor protein on the cell surface or inside the cell has a highly specific 3D shape tailored to that molecule.
  • The Interaction: When the signal protein fits into the receptor, it locks together, triggering the "conversation".
2. Shape-Shifting (Conformational Change)

When a message "touches" or binds to a protein, it changes the protein's shape (known as a conformational change). This structural shift acts like flipping a light switch—it activates or deactivates the protein.

3. Molecular Relays (Signal Transduction)

Once a protein is activated, it rarely does the final job itself. Instead, it passes the message to the next protein in a sequence called a signaling pathway.

Phosphorylation: A protein kinase (a specialized protein enzyme) will "speak" to the next protein by attaching a tiny phosphate group to it. This tag changes the target's shape and instructs it to start the next task.

Chain Reactions: This passes the message down the line like a molecular relay team. By the time the message reaches its final destination, the signal has been amplified, producing a massive cellular response.

4. Direct Physical Contact

Some proteins act like telegraph cables. Transmembrane proteins sit directly in the cell membrane and touch proteins on neighboring cells to pass instructions.

You can explore the fascinating world of Cellular Communication on the Khan Academy.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

William Thurston's Geometry of Everything

from Google AI:
Hilbert spaces are the mathematical foundation of standard quantum mechanics and quantum field theory. In contrast, Cannon-Thurston maps are highly specialized topological tools from geometric group theory. While Hilbert spaces model quantum states and probability, Cannon-Thurston maps relate boundaries of hyperbolic spaces, finding niche applications in quantum gravity and string theory. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
Hilbert Spaces
  • Core Concept: Complete complex inner product spaces used to represent state vectors and operators in quantum systems. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Advantages:
    • Allows the use of functional analysis (e.g., Fourier transforms, calculus) to model wave mechanics and continuous time evolution.
    • Provides an elegant probabilistic framework (Born rule) for measurement outcomes. [1, 2, 3]
  • Disadvantages:
    • Introduces "unphysical" mathematical redundancies, like requiring the inclusion of states with infinite expectations.
    • By enforcing completeness and \(L^{2}\) normalizability, it excludes important continuous, non-normalizable states (e.g., plane waves), requiring extensions like rigged Hilbert spaces. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Cannon-Thurston Maps
  • Core Concept: Continuous, surjective maps between the boundaries of hyperbolic spaces (often acting like space-filling curves). [1, 2]
  • Advantages:
  • Disadvantages:
    • Highly abstract; not directly applicable to standard everyday quantum or classical mechanical predictions.
    • Mathematically pathological in some regimes (e.g., they can be non-Hölder continuous), making them difficult to compute or analyze for dynamical models. [1, 2]
To explore the mathematical underpinnings of wave mechanics, you can study the standard Hilbert Space framework. For geometric boundary theories, explore further into Cannon-Thurston Maps. [1]

Being Cellular - From Optical-Symbolic Learning to Electrical Pattern Learning to Learning Chemically by Diffusion & Osmosis

Lessons in Intelligence Environments from Cellular-Biological  MorphoSpaces

from Google AI:
"Learning by osmosis" refers to an informal, passive absorption of knowledge, habits, or culture. In science and biology, chemical and electrical refer to the fundamental driving forces behind cellular transport. 

Chemical forces rely on concentration gradients (particles moving from high to low). Electrical forces rely on membrane potentials (charged particles moving toward opposite charges). Together, they form an electrochemical gradient. 

Chemical vs. Electrical in Cellular Transport
  • Chemical Gradient: Driven by a difference in the amount of a substance. Molecules naturally diffuse from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration to achieve balance. 
  • Electrical Gradient: Driven by a difference in charge. Because cell interiors are typically negatively charged, positive ions (Na+, K+) are naturally attracted into the cell. 
  • Osmosis (Special Case): While diffusion moves any particle, osmosis refers exclusively to the movement of water (solvent) across a semipermeable barrier. Water moves toward the area with a higher solute concentration to equalize the concentrations on both sides. 
Chemical vs. Electrical in the Brain (Synapses)

In neuroscience, these concepts describe how neurons communicate: 
  • Chemical Synapses: Information is transferred between cells via the release of neurotransmitters (chemicals). This is the most common form of synaptic communication in the brain. 
  • Electrical Synapses: Cells are physically connected by gap junctions, allowing an electrical current (ions) to pass directly from one neuron to the next without a chemical intermediary. 
"Learning by Osmosis" in Cognitive Psychology

While biological osmosis involves the physical movement of molecules across a membrane (or Markov Blanket), the phrase is used metaphorically in psychology to describe absorbing knowledge: 
  • Mechanism: It involves picking up nuances, office culture, or social behaviors by simply being immersed in a specific environment or observing peers. 
  • Real-World Context: Learning a language through native immersion or picking up technical skills by sitting near experts are classic examples of this.

Friday, May 29, 2026

From Mythos to Logos: Meden Agan!

Within Any Given Set of Facts, Care (Relevance) Organizes the Facts (and builds a Hierarchy) in a Narrative/ Story"

from Google AI:
"Meden agan" (nothing in excess) represents the historical shift from myth to reason (logos) by replacing fear of capricious gods with a rational, self-regulated ethical framework. [1] In early Greek myth, breaking boundaries invited divine retribution (nemesis). [1] In the era of logos, moderation became a conscious, human-driven choice for psychological and social harmony. [1] 
The Mythological Roots: Divine Boundaries
  • The Delphic Maxims: Inscribed at the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. [1]
  • Divine Warning: Served as a literal reminder to humans that they are not gods. [1]
  • Punishing Hubris: Mythical figures like Icarus or Phaethon ignored limits and suffered catastrophic destruction. [1]
  • External Enforcement: Cosmic balance was maintained by the gods punishing human overreach. [1]
The Philosophical Shift: Internalized Logos
  • Self-Regulation: Shifted the responsibility of balance from the gods to human reason. [1]
  • Aristotle’s Golden Mean: Transformed the maxim into a systematic ethical framework where virtue is the middle ground between deficiency and excess. [1]
  • Political Harmony: Applied to the Greek city-state (polis) to prevent the extremes of tyranny and anarchy. [1]
  • Psychological Health: Framed emotional mastery as a rational necessity for living a good life (eudaimonia). [1]
Desert de Retz: Building a Home Within a Crumbling Folly 

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Reality's Quantum Image-Generating Framework

Andrea Oldofredi, "Hume, Rovelli, and why the quantum world contains no objects"
Nothing exists on its own

Physicists have long known that quantum objects behave nothing like the solid, independent things of everyday experience. But the implications run deeper than strange behaviour. Carlo Rovelli's Relational Quantum Mechanics suggests that quantum systems have observer-dependent properties—what they are depends on their interactions with other systems. Drawing on a tradition running from Hume to contemporary metaphysics, philosopher Andrea Oldofredi explores this novel relational perspective on our world, arguing that objects are not the fundamental furniture of reality.

Quantum Mechanics is arguably one of the most successful theories in the history of science, for its predictions are confirmed by countless experiments, making it a cornerstone of contemporary physics. However, a century after its inception, the theory still challenges our classical worldview, offering a counterintuitive description of nature at microscopic scales. Contrary to classical mechanics, where objects are individually distinguishable and possess well-defined attributes at all times, QM speaks about indistinguishable systems with indeterminate properties, superposed states, and non-local interactions. Unsurprisingly, then, questions concerning its ontology, i.e., what fundamentally exists, are still vividly discussed to this day.

Despite its empirical success, however, physicists and philosophers alike enquire whether QM should be considered a true description of the natural world, because this theory is affected by conceptual conundrums and formal difficulties (e.g., the measurement problem). To address such issues, new quantum interpretations emerged from the 1950s. Among the many existing alternatives, here we consider a widely discussed framework that turns thirty this year, Carlo Rovelli’s Relational Quantum Mechanics (RQM).

RQM is motivated by Rovelli’s work in loop quantum gravity, where spacetime is not a substance existing per se, but rather it emerges from a dynamic network of relations, providing a relational perspective of it.

A new ontology for RQM

Now, with MBT in mind, let us introduce a new way to conceive objects in RQM. According to Rovelli, a physical system can be characterized “by a family of yes/no questions that can be meaningfully asked of it”, where such questions are measurements that can be performed on physical observables, i.e., properties, attributable to the system under consideration. An observer O may ask a set of potentially infinite questions Q1, Q2, …, Qn to the system s, obtaining the string

(e1, e2, …, en) (1)

where each ei;represents a specific answer. Nonetheless, RQM postulates that “there is a maximum amount of relevant information that can be extracted from a system”. Hence, Rovelli says, a complete description of a physical system s is given in terms of the string

[e1, e2, …, ek] (2)

with k < n , which is a subset of (1). Because in RQM information about systems is obtained through interactions, and questions are measurements on the system s performed by some observer O, (2) contains O’s knowledge about s. Clearly, this string represents the description of s relative to O; indeed, another observer P may ascribe to s a different list of properties/values.

Since in RQM physical systems are defined via a specific set of observables, it is then reasonable to characterize them as mereological bundles of qualities. In this way, RQM can be provided with a property-oriented ontology in which objects are defined straightforwardly, for in MBT they are reduced to properties. However, given that the values of the properties of quantum systems in Rovelli’s theory are observer-dependent, we can define the objects of RQM as mereological bundles of properties whose values depend on the perspective from which they are observed.

More precisely, one should say that there is a set of inherent properties characterizing a certain species of particles—such as mass, charge, spin, etc.—which are not observer-dependent, so that their value remains constant. On the contrary, the values of extrinsic properties (such as energy, position, momentum, etc.) are observer-dependent and change relative to specific observers. Additionally, in virtue of contextuality and the algebraic structure of QM, not all observables associated with a certain system can have definite values.

To give an example, in RQM, an electron is characterized by inherent properties such as mass, charge, and spin-1/2, and extrinsic properties such as momentum, energy, angular momentum, and position. These latter have relational and contextual values which depend on the specific interactions of the particle under consideration with different observers.

Conclusion

Elaborating on Paul’s MBT, we saw in this piece that RQM is compatible with an ontology of properties. This fact has interesting consequences, since it shows that quantum objects need neither be thought of as bare particulars nor as Aristotelian substances. On the contrary, following Hume’s tradition, we can define them as bundles of qualities, where intrinsic properties characterizing a certain species of particles have constant values, extrinsic qualities take definite values relative to particular observers, and not every observable defining a system can have a definite value in virtue of the quantum formalism. Additionally, from our perspective on RQM, we can properly speak about material objects in motion and interacting in spacetime. Hence, we can enrich and clarify its event ontology, making it a full-fledged realist interpretation of quantum theory.

Let’s step back from the technical details for a moment and consider what this picture is really telling us. We live our lives taking for granted that objects exist. This seems an obvious fact. The chair you are sitting on, the phone in your hand, the body you inhabit, the most solid and unquestionable features of reality. But what Rovelli’s quantum mechanics suggests is that this intuition, while practically indispensable, is not the deepest truth about our world. Underneath the solid, stable objects of everyday experience, there is no hidden substance giving things their identity and independence. There are only properties, interactions, and the relational facts that such interactions generate. What we call an object is not a “thing in itself,” but a bundle of properties that holds together reliably enough at the scales we inhabit to function as a thing. But zoom in far enough, and the thing dissolves into its relationships and qualities.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

From NEETS to Hikikomori to Cloud-Serfs...

 
from Google AI:
NEET is an acronym that stands for Not in Education, Employment, or Training. It is a socioeconomic classification that refers to young adults or teenagers who are unemployed and not enrolled in school or vocational training.

The Social and Economic Phenomenon

Originally coined in the United Kingdom in the late 1990s, the term has become a widely used metric for economists and sociologists globally to track the health of youth labor markets.

The Classification: It applies to individuals, typically between the ages of 16 and 24, who are either actively looking for work or have stopped participating in the labor force entirely.

Global Scope:
  • The phenomenon exists globally, with higher percentages often exacerbated by complex factors such as mental health struggles, caregiving responsibilities, or difficulties transitioning from school to work.
  • Cultural Slang: In internet culture and some countries like Japan, the term can sometimes be colloquially used to describe individuals who intentionally retreat from society, often spending their time at home.
Other Meanings

If you are not referring to the socioeconomic acronym, you might be thinking of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET). This is a massive, highly competitive medical entrance examination in India required for students seeking
admission to undergraduate medical and dental programs.
The Commodification of Information
...from Leisure to unpaid Labour
and BACK!  Everything is Kayfabe Now!

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Avoiding Civilizational Collapse - 3 Strategies


If man wants to progress, he must create new forms of energy of greater and greater densities.

-Lazare Carnot (1784)


Can Catastrophic Collapse (ie Bronze Age Collapse) be Mitigated thru Simplification?