RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
1,103 results for "AI hallucination" — page 50 of 56
F_3_02 — Manichaean Transmission Along the Silk Road
This document examines Manichaean Transmission Along the Silk Road, a topic within the Lost Connections research area. Key areas of investigation include The Visionary Experience, The Deliberate Synthesis, Mani's Travels
ZA_2_05 — Hawking Radiation and Black Hole Thermodynamics
In 1974, Stephen Hawking showed that black holes are not truly black — they emit thermal radiation at a temperature inversely proportional to their mass, implying that black holes slowly evaporate and eventually disappea
ZA_2_11 — Spacetime Foam and Quantum Gravity Effects
At the Planck scale — lengths of ~$1.6 \times 10^{-35}$ m and times of ~$5.4 \times 10^{-44}$ s — quantum mechanics and general relativity collide, and the smooth spacetime continuum of Einstein's theory is expected to b
ZA_1_15 — Quantum Biology Revisited: Quantum Effects in Living Systems
Quantum biology investigates whether non-trivial quantum-mechanical effects — coherence, entanglement, tunneling, and superposition — play functional roles in biological processes, rather than being washed out by the war
ZA_1_22 — Observer Effect in Quantum Mechanics
The observer effect in quantum mechanics refers to the fundamental principle that measuring a quantum system inevitably disturbs it, and more profoundly, that the act of measurement appears to force a quantum system from
ZA_5_13 — Anyons and Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
Anyons are quasiparticles that exist exclusively in two-dimensional systems and obey quantum statistics intermediate between bosons and fermions — when two identical anyons are exchanged, the wave function acquires a pha
ZA_4_17 — Polymer Science: From Bakelite to Bioplastics
Polymer science — the study of macromolecules composed of repeating monomer units — underpins materials from natural rubber and silk to modern plastics, synthetic fibers, and biomedical implants. Hermann Staudinger's 192
ZA_4_22 — Superconductivity: BCS Theory to High-Temperature
Superconductivity — the complete vanishing of electrical resistance and the expulsion of magnetic fields below a critical temperature — was discovered by Heike Kamerlingh Onnes on April 8, 1911, in mercury at 4.2 K. The
ZA_4_16 — Semiconductor Physics: Band Theory, Transistors, and Modern Electronics
Semiconductor physics — the study of materials with electrical conductivity between that of conductors and insulators — underpins virtually all modern electronic technology. The development of band theory by Felix Bloch
ZA_4_05 — Superconductivity and Superfluidity: Quantum Effects at Macro Scale
Superconductivity and superfluidity are macroscopic quantum phenomena in which matter exhibits zero electrical resistance or zero viscosity, respectively. BCS theory (1957) explains conventional superconductivity through
ZA_4_01 — Zero-Point Energy and Vacuum Fluctuations
Zero-point energy (ZPE) is the energy that remains in a quantum mechanical system when it is at its lowest possible energy state (absolute zero temperature). Unlike classical physics, where a system at rest has zero ener
ZA_3_04 — Antimatter: CP Violation and the Matter-Antimatter Asymmetry
For every fundamental particle there exists an antiparticle with identical mass but opposite charge. When matter and antimatter meet, they annihilate into pure energy. Dirac's 1928 equation predicted antimatter's existen
ZA_3_12 — Lattice Gauge Theory and Non-Perturbative QCD
Lattice gauge theory — the formulation of quantum field theories on a discrete spacetime lattice rather than in continuous spacetime — is the only known first-principles method for making non-perturbative calculations in
ZA_3_11 — Cosmic Ray Physics and Ultra-High-Energy Particles
Cosmic rays — high-energy particles (primarily protons, alpha particles, and heavier atomic nuclei, with a small fraction of electrons and antimatter) that bombard Earth from space — were discovered by Victor Hess in 191
ZA_3_14 — Nuclear Astrophysics: The Cosmic Forges of the Elements
Nuclear astrophysics — the study of nuclear reactions that power stars and produce the chemical elements — addresses one of the most profound questions in science: where did the elements come from? The answer, pieced tog
I_2_07 — Project Blue Book: History and Legacy
Project Blue Book (1952–1969) was the third and longest-running official U.S. Air Force program for investigating unidentified flying objects (UFOs), preceded by Project Sign (1947–1949) and Project Grudge (1949–1952). B
I_2_04 — AARO, Congressional Oversight, and UAP Legislative History
The period from 2017 to the present represents the most significant legislative and institutional engagement with unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) in US government history. What began with the December 2017 New Yor
I_2_05 — International UAP Programs (GEIPAN, COMETA, CEFAA, and Global Investigations)
While the United States has received the most attention for UAP investigation, numerous other nations have operated — and in several cases continue to operate — official government programs to study unidentified aerial p
I_2_12 — UAP Legislation: Congressional Action and Policy
Since 2020, the United States Congress has enacted the most significant UAP-related legislation in U.S. history — a series of provisions embedded in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and the Intelligence Auth
I_3_07 — Belgian UAP Wave (1989–1990)
The Belgian UAP wave (November 1989 – April 1990) is one of the best-documented mass UAP sighting events in history, characterized by hundreds of reports of a large, silent, triangular craft with bright lights at each ve
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