Some papers read a bit like a roller coaster. The title sucks you in with a promise of a revealed truth and excitement. As you proceed though the introductory fluff and get to the anticipated revelation, it begins to dawn on you that what excited them is not going to excite you. It's kind of like going to a showing of The Princess Bride expecting to see a romance film.
So goes a recent paper in Science. Its title advertises the work as an interesting new imaging technique. The imaging, while kinda-a-sorta interesting, is nothing compared to the physics that enabled it, which preserves short-lived oscillations through a peculiar kind of coupling. I realize that "peculiar kind of coupling" sounds mysterious, but I could think of no other succinct way of describing it.
The supermassive black hole is 40 million times as massive as the sun and powers a quasar that existed 700 million years after the Big Bang.
Vision Pro is here and it’s a surprisingly capable device. Apple has also loaded the headset with a ton of options and features that aren’t obvious at first glance.
Apple announced that its Major League Soccer Season Pass (through Apple TV) will include new immersive video content covering the 2023 playoffs. Apple TV is the exclusive provider of online Major League Soccer broadcasts via the MLS Season Pass subscription.