It isn’t really a book, but Richard Feynman’s Appendix to the Challenger Disaster Report is still definitely something you should read. It’s not particularly long, but it’s educational ...
How small can an electric motor be without resorting to manufacturing methods like lithography? In a recent video, [Chronova ...
How does cold milk disperse when it is dripped into hot coffee? Even the fastest supercomputers are unable to perform the ...
That’s what Richard Feynman, a theoretical physicist, thought—at least in theory. According to many possibly apocryphal sources, the Nobel Prize-winner once said, “If you cannot explain ...
Physicists have built a new type of digital-analogue quantum simulator in Google’s laboratory, which can be used to study ...
Richard Feynman (1918-88) was one of the most remarkable and gifted theoretical physicists of any generation. He was also known as the 'Great Explainer' because of his passion for helping non ...
Google’s latest quantum chip, Willow, recently demonstrated remarkable progress in this area. The more qubits Google used in ...
Mathematicians just solved Feynman's Sprinkler Problem, a longstanding physics puzzle. In the 1880s, scientist Ernst Mach first presented this problem to Nobel laureate Richard Feynman.
Richard Feynman was a man of many talents: accomplished author, lively lecturer, Nobel Prize-winning physicist, halfway decent bongo player. Among his arsenal of skills was an unwavering tendency to ...
Feynman's lecture was, in truth, a very minor incident in his brilliant career, but if we were to look for the source of its later power, the starting point must be the figure of Feynman himself.