Friday, June 06, 2025

 

FAMU-FSU College of Engineering researchers discover universal law of quantum vortex dynamics





Florida State University
Researchers 

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From left, postdoctoral researcher Yiming Xing, Professor Wei Guo, and graduate student Yousef Alihosseini at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. The researchers injected tiny frozen particles into superfluid helium to make invisible quantum vortices visible. They then used a laser sheet and a high-speed camera to capture how these vortices moved and reconnected.

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Credit: Scott Holstein/FAMU-FSU College of Engineering





An international research collaboration featuring scientists from the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering and the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory discovered a fundamental universal principle that governs how microscopic whirlpools interact, collide and transform within quantum fluids, which also has implications for understanding fluids that behave according to classical physics.

The study, which was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, revealed new insights into vortex dynamics within superfluid helium, a remarkable liquid that exhibits zero-resistance flow at temperatures approaching absolute zero. The research demonstrates that when these quantum vortices intersect and reconnect, they separate faster than their initial approach velocity, creating bursts of energy that characterize turbulence in both quantum and classical fluids.

“Superfluids offer a uniquely clear perspective on turbulence,” said FAMU-FSU College of Engineering Professor Wei Guo, a study co-author. “We’re beginning to understand the universal physics that connect quantum and classical worlds, and that’s an exciting frontier for both science and technology.”

MICROSCOPIC QUANTUM TORNADOES
Superfluid helium represents one of nature’s most extraordinary states of matter. When cooled to near absolute zero temperatures, this unique substance transcends conventional fluid behavior, flowing without friction, defying gravity by climbing container walls and penetrating microscopic barriers with ease. Unlike ordinary liquids that can swirl freely, superfluid helium confines all rotational motion to quantized vortices, which are ultra-thin, hollow tubes that maintain precisely fixed circulation amounts dictated by quantum mechanical principles.

“These vortices are like microscopic tornadoes,” Guo said. “Each one carries an exact amount of circulation, dictated by quantum mechanics. They are topologically protected, meaning they’re remarkably stable and much easier to track than vortices in regular fluids.”

This exceptional stability transforms these quantum structures into powerful investigative tools for exploring turbulence, one of physics’ most complex and chaotic phenomena that influences everything from aircraft aerodynamics to oceanic current patterns.

BREAKTHROUGH DISCOVERY IN VORTEX DYANMICS
Guo’s team, together with collaborators in the UK and France, captured high-resolution imaging and conducted computational simulations that revealed the fundamental behavioral patterns of colliding quantum vortices. Their findings establish a universal physical law governing vortex interactions across multiple fluid types and temperature ranges.

The researchers injected tiny frozen particles of deuterium, an isotope of hydrogen, into superfluid helium to make invisible quantum vortices visible. They then used a laser sheet and a high-speed camera to capture how these vortices moved and reconnected.

“We found that after they reconnect, the vortices always move apart faster than they came together,” Guo said. “This time-asymmetry, or irreversibility, turns out to be a fundamental property of how energy moves in fluids, whether they’re quantum or classical.”

Each reconnection event generated sudden energy bursts that propagated throughout the surrounding fluid medium, creating ripple-like effects comparable to cardiac rhythms sending waves through water. When multiple reconnections occur simultaneously within complex vortex networks, these coordinated energy releases can trigger distinctive forms of quantum turbulence with unique characteristics not observed in classical fluids.

ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY IMPLICATIONS
While quantum vortices exist exclusively in exotic materials like superfluid helium, their behavioral patterns mirror fundamental principles governing vortices in everyday fluids including air and water. This similarity enables quantum superfluid research to provide insights into classical mechanisms.

“By studying these well-behaved and easily observable quantum vortices, we gain valuable insight into the fundamental nature of turbulence,” explains Yiming Xing, a postdoctoral researcher in Guo’s group. “This understanding could one day help us design more efficient engines, optimize energy transfer in quantum systems, or even improve weather prediction models.”

INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH PARTNERSHIP
This transformative research exemplifies the power of international scientific collaboration, bringing together distinguished institutions including Newcastle University and Lancaster University in the UK, Côte d’Azur University in France and the Mauro Picone Institute for Computing Applications – National Research Council in Italy, alongside the research teams at FAMU-FSU.

FUNDING AND SUPPORT
This work has received support from The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the U.S. Department of Energy and the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, which operates through National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreement funding and State of Florida investment.


Vortex reconnection [VIDEO] | 

 

As many as 1 in 5 women with a history of pregnancy or testing for pregnancy report using crisis pregnancy centers across 4 US states



Attendance varied by state, with little correlation with age, race, or socioeconomic status





PLOS

Prevalence of crisis pregnancy center attendance among women in four U.S. states 

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Visiting a crisis center is a common experience among reproductive aged-women in these four states.

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Credit: OPEN, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)





Between 12 and 20% of women with a history of pregnancy or testing for pregnancy visited crisis pregnancy centers across four U.S. states, according to a new study by Maria Gallo and colleagues from The Ohio State University, U.S., published June 4, 2025, in the open-access journal PLOS One.

Crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) typically provide pregnancy and parenting resources and associate with organizations which promote missions focused on preventing abortion, opposing contraception, and advocating for abstinence outside of marriage. They are typically not medically licensed clinics, though they can be perceived as medical facilities or abortion clinics, and often provide inaccurate or misleading information about sexual and reproductive health. There is limited evidence on how many women use such centers.

In this study, researchers used data for 2018 to 2020 from Surveys of Women, a population-representative survey of adult women in four U.S. states (Arizona, Wisconsin, Iowa and New Jersey). The data comprised nearly 9,000 women.

Of the women who reported ever being pregnant or ever having tested for pregnancy and thus might have had a reason to attend a CPC, 11.6% to 20.2% reported visiting a CPC for pregnancy-related care. Attendance was highest in Arizona at 20.2% and lowest in New Jersey at 11.6%. The other two states represented, Wisconsin and Iowa, each had attendance rates of approximately 14%. The study found no correlation between CPC attendance and age, race/ethnicity, or socioeconomic status.

The results serve as an important pre-Dobbs measurement of CPC attendance that will be key to understanding their role in pregnancy-related health as the reproductive healthcare landscape shifts.

The authors add: “Crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) are unlicensed facilities that often pose as medical clinics to target pregnant people. The centers are increasingly supported with public funding in the U.S. Because the centers do not have to follow medical and safety standards, people should not turn to them for medical care.”

“We surveyed a representative group of adult, reproductive-age women in four states. We found that attending a CPC in each of the states was not rare. Attendance among all women ranged from one in 11 women in New Jersey to one in six women in Arizona.”

“Previous studies have shown that CPCs spread inaccurate health information. This new work shows that attending these centers is not rare. Given these findings, providers should be aware that their pregnant patients might have previously attended a CPC and might have been exposed to misinformation that needs to be corrected.” 

 

 

In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Onehttps://plos.io/43bV0za

Citation: Yang TJ, Smith MH, Kavanaugh ML, Ricks JM, Gallo MF (2025) Prevalence of crisis pregnancy center attendance among women in four U.S. states. PLoS One 20(6): e0324228. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0324228

Author countries: U.S.

Funding: Funding for this project was provided anonymously and the funding organization had no role or involvement in study design, data collection, data analysis, writing, or the decision to submit the work for publication.

 

Ethical considerations for closing projects "well" in the context of withdrawal of USAID





PLOS

Ethical considerations for closing projects "well" in the context of withdrawal of USAID 

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A resident wades through flooded farmlands after the onslaught of the southwest monsoon coupled by a super typhoon in Pangasinan, Philippines, among the areas in the country with high exposure to multiple hazards such as typhoon winds and flooding.

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Credit: Center for Disaster Preparedness, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)





Ethical considerations for closing projects "well" in the context of withdrawal of USAID are explored by researchers and members of an affected Philippines disaster-preparedness project.

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Article URL: https://plos.io/45tYSNr

Article Title: Thinking through abrupt closure in humanitarian assistance: Key ethical considerations in seemingly impossible conditions

Author Countries: Canada, Philippines, United States

Funding: This work was supported by the Social Sciences and Research Council of Canada (4330-220-00743 to LE; 4330-220-00743 to IMB; 4330-220-00743 to ML; 4330-220-00743 to SRH; 4330-220-00743 to LS; 4330-220-00743 to MH). The funder had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.


Unlocking the timecode of the Dead Sea Scrolls



Using artificial intelligence and radiocarbon dating to date ancient manuscripts



News Release 

University of Groningen

Dating Dead Sea scrolls 

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For this study, writing styles in digitized manuscripts were analyzed using BiNet, a previously developed deep neural network for detection of handwritten ink-trace patterns. By combining writing styles with carbon-14 dates of manuscripts using artificial intelligence, the date-prediction model Enoch is able to produce an accurate date for the manuscript.

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Credit: Maruf Dhali, University of Groningen





Since their discovery, the historically and biblically hugely important Dead Sea Scrolls have transformed our understanding of Jewish and Christian origins. However, while the general date of the scrolls is from the third century BCE until the second century CE, individual manuscripts thus far could not be securely dated. Now, by combining radiocarbon dating, palaeography, and artificial intelligence, an international team of researchers led by the University of Groningen has developed a date-prediction model, called Enoch, that provides much more accurate date estimates for individual manuscripts on empirical grounds. Using this model, the researchers demonstrate that many Dead Sea Scrolls are older than previously thought. And for the first time, they establish that two biblical scroll fragments come from the time of their presumed biblical authors. They presented their results in the journal PLOS One on 4 June.

Until now, the dating of individual manuscripts was mostly based on palaeography–the study of ancient handwriting–alone. However, the traditional palaeographic model has no solid empirical foundation. For most Dead Sea Scrolls, a calendar date is not known, and there are no other date-bearing manuscripts from the time period available for palaeographic comparison. Between the few date-bearing manuscripts in Aramaic/Hebrew from the fifth–fourth centuries BCE and the late first and early second century CE a gap is present that prevents accurate dating of the more than one thousand scrolls and fragments from the Dead Sea Scrolls collection.

Digitized manuscripts

This gap is now closed by researchers in the ERC project The Hands That Wrote the Bible by combining radiocarbon dates from 24 scrolls samples, in combination with palaeographic analysis using a machine-learning-based model applying a Bayesian ridge regression method. The new radiocarbon dates are reliable, empirical time markers that bridge the palaeographic gap between the fourth century BCE and the second century CE. They provide an objective date for the writing styles in the tested manuscripts.

Based on this information, the researchers trained the date-prediction model named Enoch. They used a previously in-house developed deep neural network for detection of handwritten ink-trace patterns, BiNet, in digitized manuscripts. This allows for a subsequent geometric shape analysis at the microlevel of the ink trace, such as curvature (called textural), as well as at the level of character shapes (called allographic). It provides a quantitative and empirical basis for the style analysis of handwriting which traditional palaeography cannot deliver. Cross-validation then showed that Enoch can predict radiocarbon-based dates from style with an uncertainty of some 30 years (plus and minus). This is even more precise than direct radiocarbon dating results in the period range of 300–50 BCE.

The first machine-learning-based model

Now that Enoch is ready for use, it becomes possible to date the roughly one thousand Dead Sea manuscripts from this time period. The researchers took a first step in this by feeding Enoch the binarized images of 135 scrolls and having the date predictions evaluated by palaeographers. With Enoch, researchers have a powerful new tool that they can use to support, refine, or modify their own subjective estimates for specific manuscripts, often to an accuracy of only 50 years for manuscripts over 2,000 years old.

Enoch is the first complete machine-learning-based model that employs raw image inputs to deliver probabilistic date predictions for handwritten manuscripts, while ensuring transparency and interpretability through its explainable design. The combination of empirical evidence (radiocarbon from physics and character-shape-based analyses from geometry) brings a degree of quantified objectivity to palaeography never before achieved in the field. And the methods underpinning Enoch can be used for date prediction in other partially-dated manuscript collections.

New chronology

First results from Enoch’s date predictions, presented in the PLOS One paper, demonstrate that many Dead Sea Scrolls are older than previously thought. This also changes how researchers should interpret the development of two ancient Jewish script styles which are called ‘Hasmonaean’ and ‘Herodian’. Specifically, manuscripts in Hasmonaean-type script can be older than the current estimate of ca. 150–50 BCE. And the Herodian-type script emerged earlier than previously thought, suggesting that these scripts existed next to each other since the late second century BCE instead of the mid-first century BCE which is the prevailing view.

This new chronology of the scrolls significantly impacts our understanding of political and intellectual developments in the eastern Mediterranean during the Hellenistic and early Roman periods (late fourth century BCE until second century CE). It allows for new insights to be developed about literacy in ancient Judaea in relation to historical, political, and cultural developments such as urbanization, the rise of the Hasmonaean dynasty, and the rise and development of religious groups such as those behind the Dead Sea Scrolls and the early Christians.

Anonymous authors

Furthermore, this study establishes 4QDanielc (4Q114) and 4QQoheleta (4Q109) to be the first known fragments of a biblical book from the time of their presumed authors. We do not know who exactly finished the Book of Daniel but the common assumption is that this author did that during the early 160s BCE. Likewise, for Ecclesiastes (Qohelet) scholars assume that an anonymous author from the Hellenistic period (third century BCE) was behind this biblical book, instead of the view of tradition that it was King Solomon from the tenth century BCE. Our novel radiocarbon dating for 4Q114 and the Enoch date prediction for 4Q109 place these manuscripts in the same time as these anonymous authors from respectively the second and third centuries BCE. Thus, these results have now created the opportunity to study tangible evidence of hands that wrote the Bible.

Reference: Mladen Popović, Maruf A. Dhali, Lambert Schomaker, Johannes van der Plicht, Kaare Lund Rasmussen, Jacopo La Nasa, Ilaria Degano, Maria Perla Colombini, Eibert Tigchelaar, Dating ancient manuscripts using radiocarbon and AI-based writing style analysis. PLOS One, 4 June 2025.


This photo shows prof. Mladen Popovic, Professor of Hebrew Bible and Ancient Judaism and Director of the Qumran Institute (front) and his colleauge Dr. Maruf Dhali, Assistant Professor in Artificial Intelligence, working with Enoch to date a manuscript from the Dead Sea scrolls.

This is a still from a short video on the project, which is linked from the PLOS One paper.

Credit

University of Groningen