Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Business
Society & Culture
Sports
History
News
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/b3/f9/d0/b3f9d0ba-f626-4906-5a4e-3806cea89d3c/mza_16918548926987967251.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
From First Principles
Lester Nare and Krishna Choudhary
20 episodes
1 week ago
We break down the week’s biggest science headlines from first principles—because understanding the world shouldn’t require a PhD.
Show more...
Science
RSS
All content for From First Principles is the property of Lester Nare and Krishna Choudhary and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
We break down the week’s biggest science headlines from first principles—because understanding the world shouldn’t require a PhD.
Show more...
Science
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_nologo/44168556/44168556-1754000849416-6a0fc8e79d211.jpg
FFP EP. 17 | Hypersonic Physics, Deep Sea Life & Princeton’s Millisecond Qubits
From First Principles
1 hour 32 minutes 59 seconds
1 month ago
FFP EP. 17 | Hypersonic Physics, Deep Sea Life & Princeton’s Millisecond Qubits

Hosted by Lester Nare and Krishna Choudhary, this episode dives into three breakthroughs stretching across aerospace engineering, astrobiology, and quantum computing. We start with a Nature Communications paper from Stevens Institute that experimentally validates a 60-year-old hypothesis underpinning hypersonic flight modeling. Then we head 3,000 meters below the Pacific to explore a newly discovered cold, ultra-alkaline biosphere near the Mariana forearc — a finding that reshapes the search for extraterrestrial life. And we close with Princeton’s millisecond-coherent transmon qubit, a materials science triumph pushing the quantum hardware frontier toward real-world quantum advantage.


Summary

  • Hypersonics without supercomputers — Stevens Institute validates the Morkovin hypothesis up to Mach ~6 using krypton-tagging velocimetry, confirming that “simple” turbulence models still work in hypersonic regimes and opening the door to viable, inexpensive hypersonic aircraft design.
  • Life where it shouldn’t exist — University of Bremen researchers uncover evidence of a chemosynthetic biosphere in the cold, pH-12.6 serpentinizing fluids of the Mariana forearc, offering the clearest Earth analog yet for Enceladus- and Europa-like conditions.
  • A millisecond qubit breakthrough — Princeton’s tantalum-on-high-resistance-silicon transmon hits 1.7 ms coherence, 15× the industry norm — drop-in compatible with Google/IBM architectures and a major step toward practical quantum computing.


Show Notes

  • Hypersonics — Nature Communications (Stevens Institute)
  • Deep Sea Life — Nature Communications Earth & Environment (Univ. of Bremen)
  • Princeton Millisecond Qubit — Nature (Transmon Hardware)
From First Principles
We break down the week’s biggest science headlines from first principles—because understanding the world shouldn’t require a PhD.