惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
罗磊的独立博客
S
Secure Thoughts
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
博客园 - Franky
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
爱范儿
爱范儿
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
S
Security Affairs
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
博客园 - 聂微东
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
H
Heimdal Security Blog
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
V
Visual Studio Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Project Zero
Project Zero
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
W
WeLiveSecurity
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
月光博客
月光博客
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
S
Securelist
GbyAI
GbyAI
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
B
Blog RSS Feed
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
H
Hacker News: Front Page
D
Docker
雷峰网
雷峰网
Latest news
Latest news
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog

Interesting Engineering

US firm to scale laser-based nuclear fusion ‘breakthrough’ with new partnership Military Archives - Interesting Engineering World’s first non-nuclear lead-cooled reactor to generate electricity begins installation US scientists devise new process to turn sewage sludge into 99% pure natural gas US firm unveils submarine-hunting drone with 9,200-mile-range, 35 mph top speed Military Archives - Interesting Engineering Supercomputer finds lithium-titanium tweak to boost sodium-ion batteries for grids Lockheed Martin demonstrates vertical launch missile system for mobile drone defense China’s 1116 MWe Taipingling Unit 1 reactor goes online, set to generate 9bn kWh yearly ChatGPT Images 2.0 update combines reasoning, research, and design with 2K output US Navy tests plug-and-play laser system on USS Bush carrier, downs drones at sea China’s CATL reveals 621-mile EV battery, under-7-minute charging to challenge BYD US uses world’s first exascale supercomputer to model supernovae, fusion reactors AI and Robotics Archives - Interesting Engineering First-in-human study confirms safety of graphene-based brain interface Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robot greets runners, poses for photos at Boston Marathon Interlocking materials offer high strength and flexibility for robotics, infrastructure US redeploys 100,000-ton nuclear-powered aircraft carrier in Red Sea after repairs US scientists unveil concept for ‘world’s first neutrino laser’ to unlock breakthroughs New military tech can maintain communication in contested electronic warfare environments Got a dark personality? Psychologists can help you choose your career wisely Humidity boosts performance of 3D-printed nanogenerator instead of degrading it China demonstrates microwave beam that recharges drones in flight, continues power delivery Scientists run compact free-electron laser for eight hours, cracks FEL stability problem China’s PLA considers to use minelaying underwater drones to enforce Taiwan blockade: Report 1-ton sharks may struggle for survival in waters exceeding 62.6°F, study suggests US firm’s thorium nuclear fuel bundles move to manufacturing for commercial reactors Tesla hits 0% charge in remote Chilean desert as YouTuber uses hood-mounted solar Humanoid robot surpasses human world record in Beijing half-marathon, clocking 50:26 mins New method extracts maximum work from unknown quantum states using symmetry tricks US scientists’ new method can measure rare-earth elements in plants without destroying them 1,800-year-old feces reveal disease and hygiene linked to Roman Empire in Bulgaria Tankers come under fire as Iranian forces close Strait of Hormuz over US blockade Iran announces opening of Strait of Hormuz, Donald Trump says blockade to continue US scientists confirm altermagnetism in rust, unlock faster, low-power electronics Chinese scientists hit record 63 K in nickel superconductors without extreme pressure Songbird study reveals potential paths for human brain’s self-repair, neurogenesis US dumping ground that stores hundreds of drums with nuclear waste set to be cleaned up Chinese scientists’ diamond-based coating to boost data center cooling efficiency by 80% US’ 100,000-ton nuclear warship sets record with longest deployment since Vietnam War World-first eVTOL two-way transition flight test completed by Vertical Aerospace New electrolyte design improves solid-state battery conductivity by 2.7 times 50-year-old prediction confirmed as scientists spot darkness moving faster than speed of light Uncrewed underwater vehicle enters service in Australia, can boost autonomous warfare power Quasi-solid-state battery hits 99.98% efficiency, stops dendrites, and boosts cycle life France plugs Lucy photonic quantum system into supercomputer for hybrid computing US Army CH-47F Chinook helicopter makes first autonomous landing without human input 300-million-year-old German Basin could hold one of Europe’s largest lithium resources ‘World’s first’: AGIBOT G2 humanoid robots run tablet testing on live factory line Google in talks with Pentagon to deploy Gemini AI after Claude limits dispute US tests spin-polarized fuel in 180-million-degree Fahrenheit tokamaks for fusion power US unveils AI-powered drone with 66-mile reach, modular payload transforms operations Anthropic launches Opus 4.7 with 13% higher vision resolution and stronger coding Germany airdrops 5 ton ‘mini tank’ from aircraft in first airborne test trial US nuclear firm submits plan for 240 MW small modular reactor to power 1.5 million homes China turns on largest AI science hub in 2 months, using no US chips at all Relic black holes from cosmic ‘bounce’ may be dark matter shaping our Universe China releases first detailed map locating seabed minerals in eastern seabed China’s humanoid robot masters real-time tennis rallying with 90.9% return accuracy 10,000 suns: Black hole ‘dancing jets’ clocked at instantaneous power in a first US chemists turn natural gas into liquid fuel without high heat and pressures Australia’s major refinery burns for 13 hours, raises fresh fears over petrol supply crisis US firm can help faster, real time tracking of high-speed threats with infrared camera US Army trials unmanned Hunter Wolf robot with gun, radar in combat drills Massive cosmic test shows Newton and Einstein still explain gravity accurately Mondelez-backed startup debuts ‘world’s first’ chocolate bars made with cultured cocoa China trials deep sea actuator for cutting cables and pipelines at 3,500m depth ‘Missing house’: Exact location of Shakespeare’s only London property identified Boston Dynamics robot Spot now uses Gemini AI for reason-driven decision-making tasks 1,000x faster growth: China advances wafer-scale 2D chips with ultra-fast synthesis technique Chinese automaker’s new EV offers dual rear motors, 800V fast-charging capability Engineered wood converts sunlight into heat, supplies solar power even in darkness US to boost production of submarine-detection devices that could decide battle outcome Your roommate can change your gut: Study finds living together could change your biome China develops crystal that could enable GPS-free navigation for submarines, missiles Electric aircraft motor achieves 1,000 hp output with mere 207 pound weight China’s Geely touts methanol’s ’10x higher’ energy density over ‘too heavy’ lithium EVs Over 150 mergers reveal three distinct black hole origins, challenging unified model German firm’s car integrated with high-pressure hydrogen chambers that deliver 466-mile range 2,000-year-old wall paintings in Roman Hispania reveal ingenious house painters A reimagined Paul trap could help labs worldwide study antimatter beyond CERN China’s BYD debuts electric SUV with up to 590-mile range capability, 130.15 kWh battery Rare 2,000-hp Japanese WWII aircraft lifted out of ocean 80 years after combat Autonomous underwater mine warfare could become easier with French firm’s AI-powered system China showcases Y-30 plane to outperform ‘world’s best tactical transport aircraft in service’ NASA Artemis II crew splashes down safely on Earth after 694,000-mile roundtrip to moon UK firm to boost US Army’s battle firepower with new cannons for 155mm Howitzer Can defects boost light? Study shows flaws boost energy flow in organic semiconductors China could test floating rocket launch platform in South China Sea open waters: Reports Physicists unlock way to measure quantum entanglement inside real-world materials China ramps up new sodium-ion EV battery cathodes as cells survive 572°F safety tests US authorizes Mach 5+ Dark Eagle hypersonic missile for rapid global strike missions Solid-state nuclear battery claims 100-year power for ultra-low energy devices South Korea clears Saeul 3 nuclear reactor for criticality after fuel, heat tests Fake birds, real impact: Robotic decoys aim to revive grouse populations in US Faster, safer solid-state EV batteries unlocked with new US-made super polymer Microsoft out: France moves to replace Windows with Linux to cut reliance on US tech World’s first commercial-ready deep borehole nuclear waste disposal inches closer to reality New dual-frequency trap captures electrons and ions, pushing antihydrogen beyond CERN Military Archives - Interesting Engineering
Scientists find hidden ‘frozen-in’ rules in Einstein’s spacetime that shape cosmic evolution
Rupendra Bra · 2026-05-02 · via Interesting Engineering

By linking gravity to plasma physics, researchers show that spacetime can lock in structures that survive even extreme cosmic distortions.

Spacetime isn’t supposed to be predictable, but scientists may have just found the rules it cannot break. 

In Einstein’s theory of general relativity, the fabric of the universe constantly bends, stretches, and evolves in highly complex ways. Physicists have long struggled to identify anything that stays unchanged in this chaos. 

Now, a new study suggests that spacetime may preserve hidden geometric structures as it evolves, offering the first clear evidence that gravity follows deep, built-in constraints. 

“We identified fundamental rules that constrain how spacetime can evolve. These rules act like built-in restrictions on gravity itself, helping us predict how extreme systems such as pairs of orbiting black holes behave when gravity becomes very strong,” Luca Comisso, one of the study authors and a plasma astrophysicist at Columbia University, said.

If confirmed, this could change how scientists study extreme cosmic events like black hole mergers and gravitational waves, where predicting behavior has always been notoriously difficult.

Rewriting gravity through a plasma lens

In order to understand the gist of the study, one first needs to know a rule of plasma physics. In electrically conducting fluids such as plasmas, magnetic field lines can become frozen into the fluid. 

So they can move and twist, but they don’t easily break or reconnect as long as certain conditions, similar to Ohm’s law, are satisfied. Comisso and his team wondered whether gravity could behave in the same way. 

To test this, they rewrote Einstein’s field equations (the core equations describing gravity) so that they resemble those used in nonlinear electrodynamics. This allowed them to treat spacetime more like a dynamic medium, similar to a fluid carrying electromagnetic fields. 

With this reformulation, they could directly apply ideas from plasma physics to study how gravitational structures evolve.

When spacetime refuses to break

Using this approach, the study authors found that spacetime can host gravitational field lines, mathematical structures that describe how gravity is organized. These structures can remain connected over time, a behavior known as frozen-in. 

This only happens when a specific condition, analogous to an ideal version of Ohm’s law, is met. They also identified conserved quantities such as gravitational flux and gravitational helicity. 

These are topological properties, meaning they depend on how structures are connected rather than their exact shape. A simple way to think about it is a knot in a rope. You can stretch or twist the rope, but the knot remains unless it is deliberately undone. 

Similarly, these conserved quantities act like invisible rules that spacetime must follow as it evolves. This is where the study stands apart from earlier work. Traditionally, physicists have relied on large-scale simulations with carefully chosen initial conditions to model systems like merging black holes. 

While useful, those methods don’t always reveal universal principles. By identifying quantities that remain constant within spacetime itself, this new framework points to deeper, more general laws governing gravity.

A hidden rulebook for the universe

If these findings hold, they could transform how scientists understand the universe’s most extreme environments. Systems involving intense gravity—such as black holes, neutron stars, and gravitational waves—may follow topological rules that make their behavior more predictable than previously thought. 

This could refine models used by observatories like LIGO, Virgo, and the upcoming LISA mission, which aims to detect gravitational waves from space with greater sensitivity.

At the same time, the work comes with limitations. The “frozen-in” behavior depends on ideal conditions, and real astrophysical systems may not always meet them. It also remains unclear how these structures behave in more complex settings where matter and radiation interact strongly with gravity.

Hopefully, future studies will provide answers to these questions and also help the researchers “understand to what extent the very different phenomena that can occur in plasmas can also happen in non-vacuum spacetime,” the study authors note.

The study is published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

The Blueprint

Get the latest in engineering, tech, space & science - delivered daily to your inbox.

Rupendra Brahambhatt is an experienced writer, researcher, journalist, and filmmaker. With a B.Sc (Hons.) in Science and PGJMC in Mass Communications, he has been actively working with some of the most innovative brands, news agencies, digital magazines, documentary filmmakers, and nonprofits from different parts of the globe. As an author, he works with a vision to bring forward the right information and encourage a constructive mindset among the masses.