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Why Binance and Banking Giant MUFG Want to Issue Stablecoins in Japan – CoinDesk

Binances Japan unit on Monday said its working with financial giant Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corporation (MUTB) on developing stablecoins.

MUTB and Binance Japan are running a joint study on issuing stablecoins pegged to sovereign currencies like the yen that comply with local laws but the stated goal is driving Web3 adoption in the country.

Through this joint study, both companies aim to issue new stablecoins to help accelerate the mass adoption of Web3 in Japan, a press release said, adding that the companies hope to start relevant operations by the end of next year.

The study does not translate to a promise to issue stablecoins, and Binance Japan still has to secure applicable regulatory approvals before issuing anything. However, Japans Web3 ambitions and new stablecoin rules may actually set the necessary conditions for incubating such a project.

Involvement of a TradFi giant like MUTB also adds some legitimacy to the initiative as it leads a consortium of banks and trust banks that plans to issue stablecoins on private and public blockchains through a compliant platform called Progmat Coin, which Binance Japan also intends to use.

The platform has permissions under new stablecoin rules that kicked in this June that let Japanese exchanges apply for a special license to trade stablecoins even those issued overseas, like tether (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC). In fact, USDC issuer Circle hinted it may take advantage of the new rules to make the stablecoin available to the Japanese market.

Other jurisdictions like the European Union and even the U.K. have taken more stringent approaches to regulating stablecoins, particularly after one such cryptocurrency, terraUSD, rapidly lost parity with the U.S. dollar last year, leading to the collapse of not just the issuer but a string of other prominent players in the crypto world.

MUTB also claims its Progmat platform could help mitigate some of the risks inherent in stablecoins that regulators fear.

Progmat is a neutral infrastructure that enables the issuance of various brands of stablecoins with the greatest flexibility of use and the least risk of de-pegging, Tatsuya Saito, founder and CEO of Progmat Inc and vice president of product at MUTB said on a Monday press release.

Binance Japan and MUTB plan to study the issuance of stablecoins that could be deployed on multiple blockchains such as Ethereum and Binances BNB Chain.

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SHIB and XRP Payments Now Available for HSBC Bank Users, Binance Japan to Launch New Stablecoin with Mitsubishi UFJ, XRP Ledger Set to Receive…

Valeria Blokhina

U.Today's daily news digest keeps you informed of the most important updates in the crypto industry

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U.Today presents the top three news stories over the past day. Take a closer look at the world of crypto!

Per a recent announcement posted on X platform by blockchain payments system FCF Pay, HSBC users can nowpay their mortgage bills and loans with crypto through FCF Pay. Among the digital assets available for payments are Shiba Inu, XRP, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Binance Coin, Dogecoin and several others. The news is a major development for cryptocurrencies, as HSBC is one of the world's top banking and financial services firms and serves millions of customers around the globe. Earlier this month, FCF launched a Crypto Bills service, allowing customers to pay mortgages, car payments and subscriptions with USDT, BTC, ETH and SHIB.

According to a press release from Sept. 26, Binance Japan and Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking Corporation (MUFG)joined forces to develop a new stablecoin pegged to the Japanese yen (JPY) and other global currencies. The initiative centers on the utilization of the Progmat Coin platform, which was created to facilitate the creation and management of stablecoins linked to the Japanese yen. Both companies have set an ambitious timeline, planning to start stablecoin operations by the end of 2024.

As recently posted by Xumm, a major XRPL wallet, XRP Ledger is going to receivea monumental upgrade: a planned infrastructure overhaul. The anticipated outcome of this revamp is faster local node connections, real-time transaction information and an overall improved user experience. As part of this, the code and intellectual property of the new software to power the xrplcluster will be designed, written and subsequently donated to the XRPL Foundation. Also, the revamp will introduce a paradigm shift: instead of relying on third-party hosting sites where only a handful make a profit, the xrplcluster software will be rebuilt from scratch.

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SHIB and XRP Payments Now Available for HSBC Bank Users, Binance Japan to Launch New Stablecoin with Mitsubishi UFJ, XRP Ledger Set to Receive...

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Polygon price slides after whale moves 10.78 million MATIC into Binance – FXStreet

Polygon (MATIC) price has been on a steep downtrend for the most part of the year, with the token withstanding the worst of the bear market. The situation was made worse when the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) labeled MATIC a security, among other tokens like Solana (SOL and Cardano (ADA).

Also Read: MATIC price climbs asPolygonoutlines proposals for 2.0 upgrade

Polygon (MATIC) price is bearish, cutting down on the mid-September gains inspired by the developers proposals to implement the transition to Polygon 2.0.The proposals included the creation of a POL token to replace MATIC as the native gas and staking token of the ecosystem.

At the time of writing, Polygon price is $0.5054, with clear indications of a continued downtrend as long as it remains trapped underneath the foothold of the downtrend line. With the Relative Strength Index (RSI) dipping, momentum seems to be falling and MATIC could drop in value. Worse, the Awesome Oscillator (AO) remains in the positive, with its histogram bars flashing red to show bears are having their say in the market.

MATIC/USDT 1-day chart

However, the gains made during this hype have all been cut down, with a recent report by web3 data analysis tool Lookonchain attributing it to a whale moving a total of 10.78 million MATIC tokens to the Binance exchange. At current rates, that volume in MATIC tokens is worth approximately $5.5 million. The transaction happened over the last 26 hours, causing a 3% slump in Polygon price.

Notably, moving tokens to exchanges is often interpreted as intention to sell, with the ongoing slump suggesting token holders are already closing their positions to avoid being caught as part of exit liquidity.

According to data from behavior analytics platform Santiment, the number of active addresses on a 24-hour scale has been on a steady rise since September 24, recording a 35% increase. In the same way, the whale transaction count for wallets with more than 100,000 MATIC and more than one million tokens has increased significantly.

MATIC Santiment

With these, it is likely that the Polygon MATIC price will record increased volatility over the coming days

The developer or creator of each cryptocurrency decides on the total number of tokens that can be minted or issued. Only a certain number of these assets can be minted by mining, staking or other mechanisms. This is defined by the algorithm of the underlying blockchain technology. Since its inception, a total of 19,445,656 BTCs have been mined, which is the circulating supply of Bitcoin. On the other hand, circulating supply can also be decreased via actions such as burning tokens, or mistakenly sending assets to addresses of other incompatible blockchains.

Market capitalization is the result of multiplying the circulating supply of a certain asset by the assets current market value. For Bitcoin, the market capitalization at the beginning of August 2023 is above $570 billion, which is the result of the more than 19 million BTC in circulation multiplied by the Bitcoin price around $29,600.

Trading volume refers to the total number of tokens for a specific asset that has been transacted or exchanged between buyers and sellers within set trading hours, for example, 24 hours. It is used to gauge market sentiment, this metric combines all volumes on centralized exchanges and decentralized exchanges. Increasing trading volume often denotes the demand for a certain asset as more people are buying and selling the cryptocurrency.

Funding rates are a concept designed to encourage traders to take positions and ensure perpetual contract prices match spot markets. It defines a mechanism by exchanges to ensure that future prices and index prices periodic payments regularly converge. When the funding rate is positive, the price of the perpetual contract is higher than the mark price. This means traders who are bullish and have opened long positions pay traders who are in short positions. On the other hand, a negative funding rate means perpetual prices are below the mark price, and hence traders with short positions pay traders who have opened long positions.

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Polygon price slides after whale moves 10.78 million MATIC into Binance - FXStreet

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Bizarre Quantum Theory Explains Why Your Coffee Takes So Long to Drip through a Narrow Filter – Scientific American

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What happens when matter transitions from one phase to anothera solid to a liquid or a liquid to a gas? Describing these critical points precisely, in solvable mathematical terms, is no simple feat. And for theoretical physicist John Cardy, work in this area has led to insights into everything from the way fluids percolate through a network of pores to calculations of the entropy of black holes.

Cardy is one of the key developers of conformal field theory, which is a type of quantum field theory concerned with systems that look the same under translations (or movements) in any direction, rotations or scale transformations (changes in size). Imagine blowing up a photograph by a constant factor and seeing something that looks, on average, the same as the original. Going one step further, imagine blowing up that same photograph by different factors in different places. The image will be distorted, but the angles between lines will be preserved. This is called a conformal transformation. As it turns out, this kind of invariance is a key property for matter about to flip from one phase to another.

Conformal field theory acts as a bridge between different fields of physics: the underlying math is used in string theory, condensed matter physics and quantum statistical mechanics. Cardys formulas can describe the entropy of certain kinds of two-dimensional black holes that are used as models of the real thing. They can describe how fluids move through networks of pores when new nodes are added. This explains quantitatively why your morning coffee takes longer to percolate through a tall, narrow filter than a short, wide one, but it also has a lot of implications for fundamental physics. (More on this below.)

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Cardy, age 76, is being honored for this lifetime of contributions with a Breakthrough Prize, a prestigious award founded in 2012 by Silicon Valley innovators. Cardy is splitting the 2024 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics with Alexander Zamolodchikov, another giant of quantum field theory now at Stony Brook University.

Scientific American caught up with Cardy, an emeritus fellow at All Souls College of the University of Oxford, to talk about the work that earned the 2024 prize.

[An edited transcript of the interview follows.]

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How does it feel to have won this prize?

Im very, very pleased that the Breakthrough committee has chosen to recognize my work in this particular way. I dont work in particle physics or cosmology; I work in condensed matter physics. But my work is as fundamental as any work in those areas because the mathematics we use to describe it is very similar to work in string theory and that kind of thing. Im happy.

How do you explain to people outside of physics what your research is about?

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I work in statistical physics, which deals with any situation where you have a large number of things. That could be molecules, or atoms, or stars in the galaxy or people in a large crowd, even. This subject was, in fact, invented in the 19th century, but the thing that became of interest toward the end of the 20th century was using statistical physics to describe different states of matter and, in particular, to try to explain the phase transitions that happen when you go from one state of matter to another, such as from a solid to a liquid, for example.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s it was realized that these phase transitions can be described by the same kind of quantum field theory that had already been developed to understand elementary particle physics. It was the same mathematical structure.

But the kind of quantum field theories that we were dealing with arent the weakly interacting kinds that people had looked at in previous contexts. [Weak and strong interactions are two fundamental forces in physics. Strong attractions hold together subatomic particles such as protons and neutrons, and weak interactions govern radioactive decay.] One had to somehow develop the kinds of mathematics that could treat the system as a whole as strongly interacting. That came along in the 1980s when there were a series of papers by some Russian physicists, including Zamolodchikov, who Im sharing the award with.

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Its a subject called conformal field theory. It turns out that these [conformal] systems, when theyre at phase transitions, have very special geometric properties that allow for some strong constraints that let you solve them exactlynot in some approximation.

We don't really think about something such as phase transitions in fluids flowing through a network of pores such as a coffee filter. What is the phase transition that occurs in this situation?

Instead of temperature, the control parameter is the proportion of pores that are open. We imagine that each pore is open with probability p and closed with probability 1 p independently. If p is small, the fluid doesn't flow through the network; if p is close to 1, it does. Somewhere in between is a critical value, called the percolation threshold, at which the fluid begins to flow all the way across the network. It turns out that the percolation threshold is analogous to the critical temperature. We get universal power laws, and the system is scale invariant: if you take a photograph of the fluid flowing through the pores and blow it up, it looks like the original. It is also conformally invariant: if you blow up the photograph by different factors in different places, it also looks the sameat least on large enough scales.

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In two dimensions, conformal invariance using conformal field theory was powerful enough to predict the exact values of the critical exponents (the indices of the power laws), as well as the shape dependence. For example, how does the probability that the fluid can flow from top to bottom across a rectangle depend on the ratio of its height to its width? This is the Cardy formula.

To get ridiculously concrete with it, why does thisas you saidexplain why your morning coffee is slower to percolate through a tall, narrow filter? What's the physical process that this math is describing?

In a wider filter, there are more potential paths for the fluid to take. If it is taller, however, each path has to go farther.

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How did your work open these new doors for mathematicians to solve problems related to percolation theory?

This result puzzled mathematicians who had been working on these kinds of problems. In fact, the story is as follows: I got a message from a mathematician at Princeton University saying that they had numerical evidence that this quantity might be universal (that is, independent of microscopic details), and did I know the precise formula? I thought about it for a week or so and came up with the formula. But to be sure, I asked them to send me their data before I sent them the formula. When I overlaid the graph of their data on my predicted curve, it fit perfectly! It was one of those aha! moments one sometimes, but rarely, gets in science.

The mathematicians were not happy about my nonrigorous arguments, however. A different group developed a different approach called SchrammLoewner evolution (SLE), which describes the actual path that the fluid takes as it percolates through the network. After a lot of mathematics, this reproduces my formula and gives many other results.

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Why is this kind of work so important?

A lot of the public has the idea that in order to be fundamental, physics has to be either very smallparticle physics or string theoryor it has to be cosmology. But there is this modern idea of emergence that on different scales of energy and distance, new phenomena arise. A good example is superconductivity in a metal, which is described by quantum field theory.

You can develop the theory of a superconductor without knowing anything about particle physics. The actual description is in terms of quantum fields. Its just as interesting and just as fundamental, in a way. We can think about waves on the ocean. Theyre described by equations which are sufficient enough to explain everything we know about waves, but we dont need to know theyre made out of water molecules. This idea of emergence has developed rather gradually. Its a different way of understanding how the different sciences relate to one another.

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What is the quantum quench?

Im quite proud of having coined that term! Its an obvious term because it rolls off the tongue. A quench means when you change the external parameters of an experiment almost instantaneously. The name comes from subjects such as metallurgy. When you quench an alloy, you heat it up, and then you plunge it into cold water and alter the temperature almost instantaneously. That freezes the impurities in the alloy in place. Thats what we call a thermal quench.

So a quantum quench is when you have a quantum system that you prepare in a certain state, and then you change a magnetic field or something and watch what happens. All sorts of many-body quantum effects occur. The interesting thing is the way the quantum entanglement of the system grows as a function of time. [Entanglement refers to particles that are linked to one another despite being physically far apart; in a system of growing quantum entanglement, more particles will become linked over time.] I realized that conformational field theory was a good model for this kind of process. You cant really simulate this on a digital computer because its too complicated. It will take longer than the age of the universe to simulate this kind of problem. You can do it on a quantum computerIm not an expert on quantum computing, but Ive done this, which has informed some of that work.

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Are there any other aspects of your work that were particularly rewarding?

Its all rewarding. Ever since I was quite young, I thought I was going to be a scientist, though obviously at that age I didnt realize exactly what it entailed. I am very pleased I was able to make a success of it because there were certainly times when I was younger, as a graduate student and a postdoc, when it seemed really, really hard.

I understand you have spent a lot of time climbing. Does that hobby scratch a similar itch to physics, or is it a total escape?

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I started climbing as a teenager, and I have always tried to fold that in with my work and my travel. There are a lot of physicists and mathematicians who are interested in climbing. Its something to do with problem-solving, but the thing about climbing is that you have to solve the immediate problem in front of you in a cool way so you dont panic or fall off. The other aspect is just being out in nature and the beauty of the mountains.

Now I paint. I love to get out into the mountains, so even though Im not as energetic and cant climb them these days, I enjoy just painting them.

I was diagnosed with Parkinsons about five or six years ago, and Im really pleased to see that there is also going to be a Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences for the study of Parkinsons. [Researchers Thomas Gasser, Ellen Sidransky and Andrew Singleton are sharing that prize for their discovery of risk genes for the neurological disease.] Its something that affects more than one million Americans and more worldwide, and its actually increasing. People should understand that (a) a lot of people have it, and (b) it doesnt stop them living and pursuing a meaningful life.

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Canceling Noise: MIT’s Innovative Way To Boost Quantum Devices – SciTechDaily

By Peter Reuell, MIT Department of Nuclear Science and EngineeringSeptember 24, 2023

MIT physicists, inspired by noise-canceling headphones, have advanced the coherence time of quantum bits by 20-fold, marking significant progress for quantum computing. The team used an unbalanced echo technique to counteract system noise, and they believe further improvements are possible. This breakthrough has vast potential, from quantum sensors in biology to advancements in quantum memory.

For years, researchers have tried various ways to coax quantum bits or qubits, the basic building blocks of quantum computers to remain in their quantum state for ever-longer times, a key step in creating devices like quantum sensors, gyroscopes, and memories.

A team of physicists from MIT have taken an important step forward in that quest, and to do it, they borrowed a concept from an unlikely source noise-canceling headphones.

Led byJu Li, the Battelle Energy Alliance Professor in Nuclear Engineering and professor of materials science and engineering, andPaola Cappellaro, the Ford Professor of Engineering in the Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering and Research Laboratory of Electronics, and a professor of physics, the team described a method to achieve a 20-fold increase in the coherence times for nuclear-spin qubits. The work is described in a paper published inPhysical Review Letters. The first author of the study isGuoqing Wang PhD 23, a recent doctoral student in Cappellaros lab who is now a postdoc at MIT.

This quantum sensor in the MIT Quantum Engineering Group is based on NV centers in diamond. It was designed and built by the research team. Credit: Photo courtesy of the researchers

This is one of the main problems in quantum information, Li says. Nuclear spin (ensembles) are very attractive platforms for quantum sensors, gyroscopes, and quantum memory, (but) they have coherence times on the order of 150 microseconds in the presence of electronic spins and then the information just disappears. What we have shown is that, if we can understand the interactions, or the noise, in these systems, we can actually do much better.

In much the same way noise-canceling headphones use specific sound frequencies to filter out surrounding noise, the team developed an approach they dubbed an unbalanced echo to extend the systems coherence time.

By characterizing how a particular source of noise in this case, heat affected nuclear quadrupole interactions in the system, the team was able to use that same source of noise to offset the nuclear-electron interactions, extending coherence times from 150 microseconds to as long as 3 milliseconds.

Those improvements, however, may only be the beginning. More advances may be possible, says Wang, first author of the study who came up with the protection protocol, as they explore other possible sources of noise.

In theory, we could even improve it to hundreds or even thousands of times longer. But in practice, there may be other sources of noise in the system, and what weve shown is that if we can describe them, we can cancel them.

The paper will have significant impact on future work on quantum devices, says Dmitry Budker, leader of the Matter-Antimatter Section of the Helmholtz Institute Mainz, professor at the Johannes Gutenberg University and at the University of California at Berkeley, who was not involved in the research.

(This group is) the world leaders in the field of quantum sensing, he says. They constantly invent new approaches to stimulate developments in this booming field. In this work, they demonstrate a practical way to stretch nuclear coherence time by an order of magnitude with an ingenious spin-echo technique that should be relatively straightforward to implement in applications.

Cornell University professor of applied and engineering physics Gregory Fuchs calls the work innovative and impactful.

This (work) is important because although nuclear spin can in principle have much longer coherence lifetimes than the electron spins native to the NV centers, it has been challenging for anyone to observe long-lived nuclear spin ensembles in diamond NV center experiments, he says. What Professor Cappellaro and her students have shown is a rather unexpected strategy for doing that. This approach can be highly impactful for applications of nuclear spin ensembles, such as for rotation sensing (a gyroscope).

The experiments and calculations described in the paper deal with a large ensemble approximately 10 billion of atomic-scale impurities in diamond known as nitrogen vacancy centers, or NV centers, each of which exists in a specific quantum spin state for the nitrogen-14 nucleus, as well as a localized electron nearby.

While they have long been identified as an ideal candidate for quantum sensors, gyroscopes, memories, and more, the challenge, Wang explains, lay in working out a way to get large ensembles of NV centers to work together.

If you think of each spin as being like a clock, these 10 billion clocks are all slightly different and you cannot measure them all individually, Wang says. What we see is when you prepare all these clocks, they are initially in sync with each other at the beginning, but after some time, they completely lose their phase. We call this their de-phasing time.

The goal is to use a billion clocks but achieve the same de-phasing time as a single clock, he continues. That allows you to get enhancements from measuring multiple clocks, but at the same time you preserve the phase coherence, so you dont lose your quantum information as fast.

The underlying theory of temperature heterogeneity induced de-phasing, which relates to the materials properties, was first outlined in March by a team of researchers that included Li, Cappellaro, Wang, and other MIT graduate students. That paper, published in the Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters, described a theoretical approach for calculating how temperature and strain affect different types of interactions which can lead to decoherence.

The first, known as nuclear quadrupole interaction, occurs because the nitrogen nucleus acts as an imperfect nuclear dipole essentially a subatomic magnet. Because the nucleus is not perfectly spherical, Wang explains, it deforms, disrupting the dipole, which effectively interacts with itself. Similarly, hyperfine interaction is the result of the nucleus magnetic dipole interacting with the nearby electron magnetic dipole. Both of these two types of interactions can vary spatiotemporally, and when considering an ensemble of nuclear spin qubits, de-phasing can happen since clocks at different locations can get different phases.

Based on their earlier paper, the team theorized that, if they could characterize how those interactions were affected by heat, they would be able to offset the effect and extend coherence times for the system.

Temperature or strain affects both of those interactions, Wang says. The theory we described predicted how temperature or strain would affect the quadrupole and hyperfine, and then the unbalanced echo we developed in this work is essentially canceling out the spectral drift due to one physical interaction using another different physical interaction, utilizing their correlation induced by the same noise.

The key novelty of this work, compared to existing spin echo techniques commonly used in the quantum community, is to use different interaction noises to cancel each other such that the noises to be canceled can be highly selective. Whats exciting, though, is that we can use this system in other ways, he continues. So, we could use this to sense temperature or strain field spatiotemporal heterogeneity. This could be quite good for something like biological systems, where even a very minute temperature shift could have significant effects.

Those applications, Wang says, barely scratch the surface of the systems potential applications.

This system could also be used to examine electrical currents in electric vehicles, and because it can measure strain fields, it could be used for non-destructive structural health evaluation, Li says. You could imagine a bridge, if it had these sensors on it, we could understand what type of strain its experiencing. In fact, diamond sensors are already used to measure temperature distribution on the surface of materials, because it can be a very sensitive, high spatial resolution sensor.

Another application, Li says, may be in biology. Researchers have previously demonstrated that the use of quantum sensors to map neuronal activity from electromagnetic fields could offer potential improvements, enabling a better understanding of some biological processes.

The system described in the paper could also represent a significant leap forward for quantum memory.

While there are some existing approaches to extending the coherence time of qubits for use in quantum memory, those processes are complex, and typically involve flipping or reversing the spin of the NV centers. While that process works to reverse the spectral drift that causes decoherence, it also leads to the loss of whatever information was encoded in the system.

By eliminating the need to reverse the spin, the new system not only extends the coherence time of the qubits, but prevents the loss of data, a key step forward for quantum computing.

Going forward, the team plans to investigate additional sources of noise like fluctuating electrical field interference in the system with the goal of counteracting them to further increase coherence time.

Now that weve achieved a 20-fold improvement, were looking at how we can improve it even more, because intrinsically, this unbalanced echo can achieve an almost infinite improvement, Li says. We are also looking at how we can apply this system to the creation of a quantum gyroscope, because coherence time is just one key parameter to building a gyroscope, and there are other parameters were trying to optimize to (understand) the sensitivity we can achieve compared to previous techniques.

Reference: Characterizing Temperature and Strain Variations with Qubit Ensembles for Their Robust Coherence Protection by Guoqing Wang, Ariel Rebekah Barr, Hao Tang, Mo Chen, Changhao Li, Haowei Xu, Andrew Stasiuk, Ju Li and Paola Cappellaro, 25 July 2023, Physical Review Letters.DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.043602

This work was supported in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DRINQS program, the National Science Foundation, and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency Interaction of Ionizing Radiation with Matter University Research Alliance. The calculations in this work were performed in part on the Texas Advanced Computing Center and the MIT engaging cluster.

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Stanislav Kondrashov Unveils the Unfathomable in the Enigmatic … – Shoreline Beacon

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Stanislav Kondrashov's piece on Quantum Physics Provides an Overview of the Concept. The article aims to widen understanding, covering topics from quantum entanglement to the Uncertainty Principle.

Author of the article:

Published Sep 26, 2023 3 minute read

Lugano, Switzerland(Newsfile Corp. September 26, 2023) The article The Mysteries of Quantum Physics by Stanislav Kondrashov, which is anticipated to contribute to important discussions in the scientific community and beyond, offers a deep dive into the realm of quantum physics, elucidating its core principles and examining its implications for the future of science and technology.

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The publication introduces readers to the enigmatic world of quantum physics. It begins by discussing the dual nature of particles, which behave as particles and waves depending on the observers perspective. The piece then moves on to explore the phenomenon of quantum entanglement, wherein two particles become so closely linked that the state of one immediately affects the other, regardless of distance.

Stanislav also explores Werner Heisenbergs Uncertainty Principle, explaining that its impossible to precisely measure a particles position and momentum simultaneously. This is followed by an examination of the concept of quantum superposition, most famously illustrated by Schrodingers cat thought experiment, which suggests a particle exists in multiple states until observed.

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The article further describes the peculiar ability of particles to tunnel through barriers as if by magic, a phenomenon known as quantum tunneling. It then moves on to outline the nature of particles as vibrations on quantum fields, likened to waves in an ocean.

Kondrashov concludes by touching on the potential of quantum computing to solve, heretofore impossible problems and discussing the ongoing search for a unified theory that reconciles quantum mechanics with general relativity. The article also takes a moment to reflect on the inherent beauty and complexity of the quantum world, inviting readers to ponder the unimaginable possibilities it holds for our understanding of existence.

The piece serves as an insightful resource for a diverse audience, ranging from students and educators to professionals in scientific research and technology. It is now available for reading and sharing across various academic journals and online platforms.

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Interested readers are invited to read the full article and watch the accompanying video. All are invited to take a look at Stanislavs social media channels and other blogs for more thought-provoking pieces. Links to Kondrashovs Social Media channels are readily available for further engagements and insights below.

For more insights and content from Stanislav Kondrashov, visit http://www.stanislavkondrashov.com.

About Stanislav Kondrashov:

Stanislav is a dedicated writer, consistently exploring subjects with depth and nuance. Stanislavs approach to sharing his experiences is a testament to his commitment to unveiling the stories and philosophies shaping our world. Furthermore, Kondrashov is a world traveler who appreciates every locations natural wonders. In his travels, Stanislav refined his interests and learned about his passions: architecture, art, history, and local cuisines. Stanislav values connection- both familial and civic.

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For more on Stanislav Kondrashov and to access additional writings, follow the links provided.

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Media ContactContact Person: Stanislav KondrashovEmail: press@stanislavkondrashov.comWebsite: https://stanislavkondrashov.com/

Disclaimer: There is no offer to sell, no solicitation of an offer to buy, and no recommendation of any security or any other product or service in this article. Moreover, nothing contained in this PR should be construed as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any investment or security, or to engage in any investment strategy or transaction. It is your responsibility to determine whether any investment, investment strategy, security, or related transaction is appropriate for you based on your investment objectives, financial circumstances, and risk tolerance. Consult your business advisor, attorney, or tax advisor regarding your specific business, legal, or tax situation. For more info, please contact brandnewsproject@gmail.com.

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New Form of Quantum Entanglement Gives Insight into Nuclei – Energy.gov

Everything relies on quantum mechanics, even if we dont realize it. It explains the behavior of the tiniest particles that make up everything we know, from atoms on down. However, quantum mechanics seems strange to us because it seems to contradict the physics of the everyday world.

Entanglement is one of the weirdest phenomena in quantum mechanics. Quantum entanglement is when two particles have a special relationship to each other. They dont and cant act independently. Instead, each particles quantum state is linked to the others. If ones state is measured, the others state is fixed. This happens no matter how geographically far apart the particles are from each other potentially other sides of the galaxy. Understanding entanglement is important to building quantum computers and quantum networks.

Until recently, scientists thought entanglement only occurred between two identical particles. All of the examples of entanglement they had observed were between particles of light or identical electrons.

But earlier this year, scientists at the Department of Energys (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory found a new type of quantum entanglement. This entanglement was between two particles that were dissimilar they had different charges.

The scientists found this through their research at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a DOE Office of Science user facility. Most of the time, RHIC is used to replicate the conditions just after the Big Bang. It helps us better understand the beginning of the universe. However, nuclear physicists also use it to study how matter behaves today. They want to know how quarks and the gluons that hold them together in protons and neutrons are arranged. They also want to understand how gluons hold those building blocks of our universe together.

This research is how they found the new form of quantum entanglement. RHIC collides ions of heavy elements, like gold. Ions are atoms with electrons stripped off of them. Usually, the ions smash into each other and separate out into quarks and gluons.

But in this study, the scientists examined ions that passed by each other extremely closely without colliding. The ions have a cloud of particles of light (photons) that surround them. As the two ions pass by, the cloud of photons of one ion interacts with the gluons in the other ion. This interaction results in an intermediate particle that falls apart. The intermediate particle decays into two differently charged pions, another type of exotic particle. The pions then strike the particle detector. The detector can measure how fast the pions are moving, what direction theyre moving, and the angle at which they hit the detector. Like detectives, the scientists trace backwards to get information about the photons surrounding the ions. The photons reveal information about the gluons, like a high-powered microscope.

The new form of quantum entanglement occurs between the pions. This form of entanglement makes it possible to peer inside the ions in RHIC in a way that scientists have never before been able to. It provides clarity to the measurements of gluons thats not possible otherwise. Previous measurements only provided information about how dense gluons were across the whole nucleus. That doesnt give a lot of details about how they are distributed. This new technique allows scientists to go from having essentially a one-dimensional image to a two-dimensional one.

This new map of the nucleus is at the scale of quadrillionths of a meter. But it lines up much better with theoretical predictions than previous observations did. Sometimes, even the smallest measurements can have big effects on our understanding of the universe.

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Why Einstein must be wrong: In search of the theory of gravity – Phys.org

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Einstein's theory of gravitygeneral relativityhas been very successful for more than a century. However, it has theoretical shortcomings. This is not surprising: the theory predicts its own failure at spacetime singularities inside black holesand the Big Bang itself.

Unlike physical theories describing the other three fundamental forces in physicsthe electromagnetic and the strong and weak nuclear interactionsthe general theory of relativity has only been tested in weak gravity.

Deviations of gravity from general relativity are by no means excluded nor tested everywhere in the universe. And, according to theoretical physicists, deviation must happen.

According to a theory initially proposed by Georges Lematre and widely accepted by the astronomical community, our universe originated in a Big Bang. Other singularities hide inside black holes: Space and time cease to have meaning there, while quantities such as energy density and pressure become infinite. These signal that Einstein's theory is failing there and must be replaced with a more fundamental one.

Naively, spacetime singularities should be resolved by quantum mechanics, which apply at very small scales.

Quantum physics relies on two simple ideas: point particles make no sense; and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, which states that one can never know the value of certain pairs of quantities with absolute precisionfor example, the position and velocity of a particle. This is because particles should not be thought of as points but as waves; at small scales they behave as waves of matter.

This is enough to understand that a theory that embraces both general relativity and quantum physics should be free of such pathologies. However, all attempts to blend general relativity and quantum physics necessarily introduce deviations from Einstein's theory.

Therefore, Einstein's gravity cannot be the ultimate theory of gravity. Indeed, it was not long after the introduction of general relativity by Einstein in 1915 that Arthur Eddington, best known for verifying this theory in the 1919 solar eclipse, started searching for alternatives just to see how things could be different.

Einstein's theory has survived all tests to date, accurately predicting various results from the precession of Mercury's orbit to the existence of gravitational waves. So, where are these deviations from general relativity hiding?

A century of research has given us the standard model of cosmology known as the -Cold Dark Matter (CDM) model. Here, stands for either Einstein's famous cosmological constant or a mysterious dark energy with similar properties.

Dark energy was introduced ad hoc by astronomers to explain the acceleration of the cosmic expansion. Despite fitting cosmological data extremely well until recently, the CDM model is spectacularly incomplete and unsatisfactory from the theoretical point of view.

In the past five years, it has also faced severe observational tensions. The Hubble constant, which determines the age and the distance scale in the universe, can be measured in the early universe using the cosmic microwave background and in the late universe using supernovae as standard candles.

These two measurements give incompatible results. Even more important, the nature of the main ingredients of the CDM modeldark energy, dark matter and the field driving early universe inflation (a very brief period of extremely fast expansion originating the seeds for galaxies and galaxy clusters)remains a mystery.

From the observational point of view, the most compelling motivation for modified gravity is the acceleration of the universe discovered in 1998 with Type Ia supernovae, whose luminosity is dimmed by this acceleration. The CDM model based on general relativity postulates an extremely exotic dark energy with negative pressure permeating the universe.

Problem is, this dark energy has no physical justification. Its nature is completely unknown, although a plethora of models has been proposed. The proposed alternative to dark energy is a cosmological constant which, according to quantum-mechanical back-of-the-envelope (but questionable) calculations, should be huge.

However, must instead be incredibly fine-tuned to a tiny value to fit the cosmological observations. If dark energy exists, our ignorance of its nature is deeply troubling.

Could it be that troubles arise, instead, from wrongly trying to fit the cosmological observations into general relativity, like fitting a person into a pair of trousers that are too small? That we are observing the first deviations from general relativity while the mysterious dark energy simply does not exist?

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This idea, first proposed by researchers at the University of Naples, has gained tremendous popularity while the contending dark energy camp remains vigorous.

How can we tell? Deviations from Einstein gravity are constrained by solar system experiments, the recent observations of gravitational waves and the near-horizon images of black holes.

There is now a large literature on theories of gravity alternative to general relativity, going back to Eddington's 1923 early investigations. A very popular class of alternatives is the so-called scalar-tensor gravity. It is conceptually very simple since it only introduces one additional ingredient (a scalar field corresponding to the simplest, spinless, particle) to Einstein's geometric description of gravity.

The consequences of this program, however, are far from trivial. A striking phenomenon is the "chameleon effect," consisting of the fact that these theories can disguise themselves as general relativity in high-density environments (such as in stars or in the solar system) while deviating strongly from it in the low-density environment of cosmology.

As a result, the extra (gravitational) field is effectively absent in the first type of systems, disguising itself as a chameleon does, and is felt only at the largest (cosmological) scales.

Nowadays the spectrum of alternatives to Einstein gravity has widened dramatically. Even adding a single massive scalar excitation (namely, a spin-zero particle) to Einstein gravity and keeping the resulting equations "simple" to avoid some known fatal instabilitieshas resulted in the much wider class of Horndeski theories, and subsequent generalizations.

Theorists have spent the last decade extracting physical consequences from these theories. The recent detections of gravitational waves have provided a way to constrain the physical class of modifications of Einstein gravity allowed.

However, much work still needs to be done, with the hope that future advances in multi-messenger astronomy lead to discovering modifications of general relativity where gravity is extremely strong.

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Quantum information science is rarely taught in high school – uta.edu

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 Karen J. Matsler :

The first time I heard about quantum information science, I was at a teacher development workshop in Canada in 2008.

I already knew that quantum science was the study of the smallest objects in nature. I also knew that information science was the study of computers and the internet. What I didnt know was that quantum information science sometimes called QIS was a new field of science and technology, combining physical science, math, computer science and engineering.

Until then, I didnt realize how QIS was key to so many everyday items, like cellphones, satellites, MRI machines, lasers, cybersecurity and solar technology. I was a physics teacher and didnt know this, so I knew other teachers didnt either. And if they didnt know about it, that meant K-12 students were definitely not learning it.

I vowed to do a better job of teaching these concepts in my own classroom and to the teachers I mentor. But I quickly discovered significant barriers.

Those barriers include:

Lack of materials about quantum information science that high school students can understand.

Limited funding and opportunities for teacher professional development focusing on quantum information science.

Lack of state or federal quantum information science standards for schools to follow.

With the help of colleagues, I organized Quantum for All in 2020 to help give high school teachers support in teaching quantum information science. The project received nearly US$1 million in funding from the National Science Foundation. The goal of the grant is to help students become quantum smart by teaching K-12 educators how to teach QIS.

From a societal perspective, there are many reasons to invest in quantum education at the high school level.

The quantum information technology market is poised to be worth $44 billion by 2028. Yet one study estimates a major talent shortage in the industry with the number of open jobs outnumbering the number of qualified applicants by about 3 to 1.

Not having fundamental knowledge in the field may keep students from pursuing these highly paid jobs. Annual salaries can start at about $100,000 for quantum engineers, developers and scientists. Quantum physicists can earn up to $170,000.

While there is a need for quantum science talent in many industries, one of the most critical is in national security.

Historically, huge scientific and technological advancements have been made in the United States when politicians invest in efforts they deem critical to national security think of the space race, where the U.S. spent US$257 billion over 13 years, or the atomic bomb that cost about $30 billion to $50 billion over four years, both in todays dollars.

In 2016, the U.S. government recognized the importance of quantum information science in maintaining the countrys strategic edge when China launched the worlds first quantum satellite, showcasing its emerging space and technology program. U.S. military leaders also worried that China was on the verge of creating hack proof communications tools far more sophisticated than American designs. This raises questions about which nation will dominate from space in times of crisis.

The Center for New American Security, a Washington-based think tank, warned that Chinas focus on quantum science as part of its research efforts could help that country surpass the U.S. as an economic and military superpower.

In 2018, the National Quantum Initiative Act was signed into law to accelerate quantum research and development and develop a quantum information science and technology workforce pipeline. However, the initiative lacked details on how this workforce would be developed.

With a new national focus on quantum information science, the National Quantum Network was launched in 2020 to help support and coordinate the K-12 education efforts, expand available learning tools and create opportunities for students to envision their role in a quantum workforce.

The most logical venue for exposure to quantum information science would be a high school physics course. However, as many as 16% to 39% of high school students do not attend high schools where physics is offered each year.

Traditional professional development focuses on teaching the teacher, rather than helping the teacher prepare to teach. Thats why I and other researchers are studying the effectiveness of a different professional development model. Components of the model include having the content taught by fellow science teachers.

Our model educates teachers one week and then allows them to teach students at a camp the following week while the information and techniques are still fresh. Research has shown that this approach is more effective than doing summer workshops that dont allow teachers to try out what they learned until much later.

This model also allows teachers to gain confidence as they practice teaching techniques with fellow science teachers, making it more likely they will implement this knowledge in their own lessons.The lessons being developed by the project can be embedded into existing STEM curricula science, technology, engineering and math or taught as stand-alone topics.

Examples of quantum information science lessons that have been developed include levitation, where students are shown the basics of superconductors and quantum levitation. These concepts are already being used in applications such as Maglev trains, which use magnets to quietly float above the tracks instead of using wheels. There are many benefits to this type of travel, including energy efficiency, fewer derailments, less maintenance and less impact on the environment.

Other lessons involve understanding cryptography and cybersecurity. Cryptography is the technique of coding information or encryption so it can only be read by the intended receiver, whereas cybersecurity is the process or procedures taken to keep information secure in devices and networks.

As districts and educators begin to implement quantum information science concepts, my colleagues and I are collecting feedback from teachers on the effectiveness of their lessons and student engagement. This feedback will be used to inform how to add quantum information into more lessons.

If this new model of teacher education works, it could be expanded nationwide.

This type of professional development may be expensive due to the time teachers need to learn the content and increase their teaching confidence. But failing to prepare students for the jobs of the future could be even more costly if the U.S. yields its place in quantum technology, allowing countries like China to assert their supremacy in the field.

***

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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NTT Research Boosts Scientific Teams with Nine New Hires – Yahoo Finance

Distinguished Researcher Timothe Leleu and Several Strategic Hires Add to NTT Researchs Growing Team

SUNNYVALE, Calif., September 26, 2023--(BUSINESS WIRE)--NTT Research, Inc., a division of NTT (TYO:9432), today announced that it has named Timothe Leleu as Senior Research Scientist and a Group Head in the Physics & Informatics (PHI) Lab. It has also named Victor Bastidas and Maya Okawa as Research Scientists in the PHI Lab; Abhishek Jain, Senior Scientist in the Cryptography & Information Security (CIS) Lab; and Manae Abe as marketing coordinator. Joining NTT Research as post-doctoral fellows are Kyungduk Kim, Midya Parto and Ryotatsu Yanagimoto in the PHI Lab; and Naresh Boddu Goud and Xiao Liang in the CIS Lab. An expert in neuromorphic computing, Dr. Leleu strengthens the PHI Labs proficiency in artificial neural networking and sharpens its focus on Coherent Ising Machines (CIMs). The additional hires and appointments will boost the PHI and CIS Labs respective research capabilities. Separately, the Medical & Health Informatics (MEI) Lab has expanded its capacity through an innovative partnership with a premier cardiovascular research institute.

"We are pleased to welcome Drs. Leleu, Bastidas, Okawa and Jain, the five research fellows and Manae Abe," said Kazuhiro Gomi, President & CEO of NTT Research. "Im excited to see progress on all fronts: the PHI Lab deepening its interdisciplinary bench; the CIS Lab becoming a premier cryptography research center of excellence; and the MEI Lab executing on its ambitious bio digital twin strategy. All of which advances our mission to Upgrade Reality."

PHI Lab Gains Two Scientists, Three Post-Docs

The PHI Lab conducts research in quantum physics, neuroscience and optical networking. Many of its scientists are working on CIMs, which are networks of optical parametric oscillators programmed to solve problems mapped to an Ising model, which typically represents combinatorial optimization problems. Recent progress includes the development of an initial application. Joining the PHI Lab in its three areas of research are Drs. Leleu, Bastidas, Okawa, Kim, Parto and Yanagimoto:

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Timothe Leleu, Senior Research Scientist and Head of the Algorithms & Applications Group, PHI Lab. Dr. Leleu was previously Project Associate Professor at the International Research Center for Neurointelligence at the University of Tokyo, where he worked on neuromorphic computing algorithms and architecture. He is primarily interested in the combinatorial aspects of neural computation, with a particular focus on the analysis of neuronal activity for the inference of network structure and the use of artificial neural networks for solving combinatorial optimization problems. Dr. Leleu invented the chaotic amplitude control (CAC) algorithm, which is highly relevant to the PHI Labs work on CIMs.

Victor M. Bastidas, Research Scientist, PHI Lab. Dr. Bastidas was previously Senior Research Scientist in the Theoretical Quantum Physics Research Group and the Research Center for Theoretical Quantum Physics, NTT Basic Research Laboratories (BRL), Atsugi-city, Japan. His interests include driven quantum systems and quantum criticality in nonequilibrium, quantum phase transitions in closed systems, topology in driven quantum systems, many-body physics and quantum simulation and ergodic behavior in driven systems. From 2020 to 2023 he was Visiting Associate Professor at the National Institute of Informatics in Tokyo.

Maya Okawa, Research Scientist, PHI Lab. Dr. Okawa completed her Ph.D. from Kyoto University Graduate School of Informatics in 2022 and was previously a research scientist for NTT R&D in Japan and a graduate student researcher for the ATLAS volume particle detection experiment at CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research). Her main research interest lies in developing machine learning and data mining methods to model, understand and predict social phenomena.

Kyungduk Kim, Post-Doctoral Fellow, PHI Lab. Dr. Kim received his Ph.D. in 2022 from the Department of Applied Physics, Yale University, where he subsequently served as a Post-Doctoral Associate. His doctoral research focused on studying the spatiotemporal dynamics of highly multimode lasers and their applications. Dr. Kim's research interests include experimental studies in understanding and controlling complex photonic systems.

Midya Parto, Post-Doctoral Fellow, PHI Lab. Dr. Parto has also been a Post-Doctoral Scholar at Caltech. He was previously a Post-Doctoral Researcher at College of Optics and Photonics (CREOL) at University of Central Florida. His research interests encompass a broad range of optical phenomena arising from the harmonious interplay between non-Hermitian and topological effects alongside optical nonlinear processes. These investigations hold significant promise for on-chip light sources as well as advancements in optical information processing and computing."

Ryotatsu Yanagimoto, Post-Doctoral Fellow, PHI Lab. Dr. Yanagimoto is a 2020 recipient of a fellowship from the Stanford University Quantum Fundamentals, Architectures and Machines (Q-FARM) initiative. He has worked in the Quantum Meta-Engineering lab of Dr. Hideo Mabuchi. His primary research interest involves understanding and engineering broadband quantum dynamics of optical photons in highly nonlinear systems.

CIS Lab Gains One Scientist, Two Post-Docs

The CIS Lab has emerged as one of the worlds top cryptographic research organizations. Directed by Brent Waters, the co-founder of attribute-based encryption and recipient of numerous awards, including two Best Paper Awards in the past three years, the CIS Lab contributes an outsized number of papers to the leading conferences in the field. Joining the CIS Lab team are Drs. Jain, Goud and Liang:

Abhishek Jain, Senior Scientist, CIS Lab. Dr. Jain is broadly interested in cryptography, computer security, privacy and related topics in theoretical computer science. Recent papers include "hinTS: Threshold Signatures with Silent Setup," "Scalable Multiparty Garbling," "Indistinguishability Obfuscation from Functional Encryption for Simple Function," and "zkSaaS: ZK-SNARKs as a Service." Dr. Jain is also Associate Professor in Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University.

Naresh Goud Boddu, Post-Doctoral Fellow, CIS Lab. Dr. Boddu received his Ph.D. in 2022 from the Center for Quantum Technologies (CQT), National University of Singapore, where he was advised by Dr. Rahul Jain. At CQT, he also served as a research assistant. His current research interests include quantum tamper-resilient cryptography and theoretical computer science, more broadly.

Xiao Liang, Post-Doctoral Fellow, CIS Lab. Dr. Liang was previously a Post-Doctoral Associate at Rice University. He received his Ph.D. from Stony Brook University in 2021. His interests include classical and quantum cryptography and its interplay with computational complexity theory. His work has been focused on zero-knowledge proofs, secure multi-party computation, non-malleability and signatures.

MEI Lab, Corporate Marketing and Fellowships

NTT Researchs MEI Lab has also experienced growth through the expansion of a strategic collaboration designed to advance its bio digital twin initiative. NTT Research recently struck an agreement with the National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center (NCVC) in Suita, Japan, to jointly launch a Bio Digital Twin Center. This is the NCVCs first such collaboration with an industrial partner. It extends and expands the scope of a joint research agreement reached in 2020 and amplifies the MEI Labs research capabilities.

On the corporate front, the addition of Marketing Coordinator Manae Abe, through coordination with Japans National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT), strengthens the team of Chief Marketing Officer Chris Shaw. An award-winning marketer and previous owner of what became the long-time agency of record for NTT Communications global social media content marketing, Shaw has shepherded the branding of this Silicon Valley startup, using a compelling mix of written and video assets (including a short film produced by Academy Award Winner Janusz Kaminski) to tell the story of how fundamental research can someday improve and even extend human lives. He has also organized three Global Research Summits (Upgrade 2021, 2022 and 2023) which showcase the innovation and initiatives of NTT Research and the broader NTT family of companies.

NTT Research is highly valued by its scientific employees for its freedom and ambitious goals. It is an equal opportunity employer with an active fellowship program for young scientists looking to advance their careers and join our mission to Upgrade Reality. For more on current fellowship and other employment opportunities, please visit our careers page.

About NTT Research

NTT Research opened its offices in July 2019 as a new Silicon Valley startup to conduct basic research and advance technologies that promote positive change for humankind. Currently, three labs are housed at NTT Research facilities in Sunnyvale: the Physics and Informatics (PHI) Lab, the Cryptography and Information Security (CIS) Lab, and the Medical and Health Informatics (MEI) Lab. The organization aims to upgrade reality in three areas: 1) quantum information, neuroscience and photonics; 2) cryptographic and information security; and 3) medical and health informatics. NTT Research is part of NTT, a global technology and business solutions provider with an annual R&D budget of $3.6 billion.

NTT and the NTT logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION and/or its affiliates. All other referenced product names are trademarks of their respective owners. 2023 NIPPON TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE CORPORATION

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230926121266/en/

Contacts

NTT Research Contact:Chris ShawChief Marketing OfficerNTT Research +1-312-888-5412chris.shaw@ntt-research.com

Media Contact:Stephen RussellWireside Communications For NTT Research+1-804-362-7484srussell@wireside.com

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NTT Research Boosts Scientific Teams with Nine New Hires - Yahoo Finance

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