
The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss What's New in Science With Sabine and Lawrence | Fusion Dark Matter, String Theory in Biology, and Rapid Evolution
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Feb 13, 2026 Sabine Hossenfelder, theoretical physicist and science communicator known for sharp takes on modern physics, joins for a lively sweep of recent science. They discuss fusion reactors possibly producing axion-like particles. They debate macroscopic quantum interference and collapse versus decoherence. AI’s role in math gets examined. Rapid post-impact evolution, string-theory math in biology, tumor–nerve signaling, and dogs learning words round out the chat.
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Fusion Plants As Dark-Matter Sources
- Fusion reactors could double as intense local sources of light, weakly interacting particles like axions produced in neutron–lithium reactions in shielding.
- Sabine Hossenfelder and Lawrence Krauss note this is speculative but reasonable to test once fusion plants exist nearby.
’Axion’ Versus Axion-Like Particles
- Lawrence Krauss emphasizes that historically physicists restrict 'axion' to particles solving a real particle-physics problem, not every invented light particle.
- He suspects many proposed 'axion-like' detections would constrain model variants, not the original QCD axion.
Quantum Interference Near Virus Scale
- Vienna experiment showed interference of clusters of ~7,000 sodium atoms separated by ~133 nm, extending quantum interference toward virus-scale objects.
- Krauss and Hossenfelder agree pushing mass/size limits tests where quantum theory might break down or show new phenomena.


