Jesse Berezovsky
@jesseberezovsky.bsky.social
Physics professor @ CWRU. Experimental quantum materials, magnetism, and applications of stat mech to music theory and composition.
Working my way through the Feynman Lectures, vol 1, and suddenly several chapters on the physiology of the eye and color vision reminds me of Les Miserables, where you suddenly get 100 pages on the minutiae of the nuns of Petit-Picpus, or the history of the Paris sewers.
November 7, 2025 at 1:57 PM
Working my way through the Feynman Lectures, vol 1, and suddenly several chapters on the physiology of the eye and color vision reminds me of Les Miserables, where you suddenly get 100 pages on the minutiae of the nuns of Petit-Picpus, or the history of the Paris sewers.
Trying a more plant-based diet, so it felt like I was making some kind of witches brew tonight. Had to sub fermented beans for the eye of newt. (Soup came out incredible, btw)
November 1, 2025 at 1:19 AM
Trying a more plant-based diet, so it felt like I was making some kind of witches brew tonight. Had to sub fermented beans for the eye of newt. (Soup came out incredible, btw)
Reposted by Jesse Berezovsky
It's about that time of the year for the CWRU physics annual Halloween Pumpkin Drop! 👻🍂🍁
Join us on October 31st at 12:35pm in front of Strosacker auditorium ⏲️
There will be free apple cider and pie! 🍎🥧
#cwru #physics #pumpkindrop #halloween
Join us on October 31st at 12:35pm in front of Strosacker auditorium ⏲️
There will be free apple cider and pie! 🍎🥧
#cwru #physics #pumpkindrop #halloween
October 22, 2025 at 7:49 PM
It's about that time of the year for the CWRU physics annual Halloween Pumpkin Drop! 👻🍂🍁
Join us on October 31st at 12:35pm in front of Strosacker auditorium ⏲️
There will be free apple cider and pie! 🍎🥧
#cwru #physics #pumpkindrop #halloween
Join us on October 31st at 12:35pm in front of Strosacker auditorium ⏲️
There will be free apple cider and pie! 🍎🥧
#cwru #physics #pumpkindrop #halloween
Another eland today, along with a personal best Saturday time. Not sure if I’ve ever actually seen “oribi” with its less common vowels.
October 4, 2025 at 10:03 PM
Another eland today, along with a personal best Saturday time. Not sure if I’ve ever actually seen “oribi” with its less common vowels.
10 min after handing out the first in-class exam in my quantum mechanics course, a young lady I don’t recognize comes in and sits down.
Sometimes students skip the lectures and only show up for exams, so I hand her the exam and say “when you finish, staple your work together and turn it in.”
Sometimes students skip the lectures and only show up for exams, so I hand her the exam and say “when you finish, staple your work together and turn it in.”
October 3, 2025 at 5:32 PM
10 min after handing out the first in-class exam in my quantum mechanics course, a young lady I don’t recognize comes in and sits down.
Sometimes students skip the lectures and only show up for exams, so I hand her the exam and say “when you finish, staple your work together and turn it in.”
Sometimes students skip the lectures and only show up for exams, so I hand her the exam and say “when you finish, staple your work together and turn it in.”
My only complaint with today’s American university is when they are radicalizing students against the concept of relativistic mass.
Hard to express how bizarre and frustrating it is to hear these non-academics press their hallucinatory visions of what campuses are like. Truly no relationship to the reality.
Im begging the NYT to spend time talking to people who actually teach and work at universities. Especially ones that don't have billion dollar endowments.
My issues are AI use, crumbling infrastructure, vanishing staff, unfunded state mandates, a customer service model of education...
My issues are AI use, crumbling infrastructure, vanishing staff, unfunded state mandates, a customer service model of education...
September 27, 2025 at 4:10 PM
My only complaint with today’s American university is when they are radicalizing students against the concept of relativistic mass.
I remember as a kid having a book of NYT crosswords and it suggested if the clue is “African antelope,” 5 letters, you might pencil in “eland” or “oribi”. Finally got to use it on the final word today.
September 26, 2025 at 12:09 AM
I remember as a kid having a book of NYT crosswords and it suggested if the clue is “African antelope,” 5 letters, you might pencil in “eland” or “oribi”. Finally got to use it on the final word today.
Reposted by Jesse Berezovsky
Science takes a team! At CWRU Physics, we’re bridging disciplines with Expansion Microscopy—embedding cells in gels and stretching them to study their inner workings. Here, Dr. Marouen Zammali optimizes hydrogels for maximum expansion.
#askmeaboutmyresearch #CWRU #physics #micrs
#askmeaboutmyresearch #CWRU #physics #micrs
September 10, 2025 at 7:41 PM
Science takes a team! At CWRU Physics, we’re bridging disciplines with Expansion Microscopy—embedding cells in gels and stretching them to study their inner workings. Here, Dr. Marouen Zammali optimizes hydrogels for maximum expansion.
#askmeaboutmyresearch #CWRU #physics #micrs
#askmeaboutmyresearch #CWRU #physics #micrs
Don’t mind me, just wringing out my pants into my office wastebasket.
Misjudged the weather a bit before biking to work.
Misjudged the weather a bit before biking to work.
September 4, 2025 at 2:10 PM
Don’t mind me, just wringing out my pants into my office wastebasket.
Misjudged the weather a bit before biking to work.
Misjudged the weather a bit before biking to work.
Reposted by Jesse Berezovsky
I made a quantum foundations alignment chart — go forth and fight about it!
(also, "good" is not an endorsement)
(also, "good" is not an endorsement)
August 30, 2025 at 9:27 PM
I made a quantum foundations alignment chart — go forth and fight about it!
(also, "good" is not an endorsement)
(also, "good" is not an endorsement)
This compound angle has required the most thought of any cut I’ve done. Wish me luck.
August 23, 2025 at 4:44 PM
This compound angle has required the most thought of any cut I’ve done. Wish me luck.
Can we understand consciousness with AI and quantum? I think this quote from me in Popular Mechanics accurately sums up my skepticism. ⚛️🧪
August 15, 2025 at 4:47 PM
Can we understand consciousness with AI and quantum? I think this quote from me in Popular Mechanics accurately sums up my skepticism. ⚛️🧪
Last night’s insomnia rabbit hole: Do mirrors flip images left-right? Why not up-down? Our brains seem to have a bias towards certain rotations, probably due to the symmetry and typical motion of the human body. And this can help explain why special relativity is so counterintuitive. (1/7) 🧵🧪⚛️
August 14, 2025 at 11:22 PM
Last night’s insomnia rabbit hole: Do mirrors flip images left-right? Why not up-down? Our brains seem to have a bias towards certain rotations, probably due to the symmetry and typical motion of the human body. And this can help explain why special relativity is so counterintuitive. (1/7) 🧵🧪⚛️
Reposted by Jesse Berezovsky
Let me try to explain why it's important to study the foundations of quantum mechanics. (1/n)
(Have to do some breathing exercises, b/c to me it's blindingly obvious that "understanding the most important theory in physics" is something physicists should care about, but apparently opinions differ.)
(Have to do some breathing exercises, b/c to me it's blindingly obvious that "understanding the most important theory in physics" is something physicists should care about, but apparently opinions differ.)
Nature (and @lizziegibney.bsky.social) take a more-than-usually systematic look at the greatest failure of modern physics: the fact that we can't even agree on what quantum mechanics says.
And the leader is an approach that is notoriously not well-defined. Ugh.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
And the leader is an approach that is notoriously not well-defined. Ugh.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
July 30, 2025 at 4:35 PM
Let me try to explain why it's important to study the foundations of quantum mechanics. (1/n)
(Have to do some breathing exercises, b/c to me it's blindingly obvious that "understanding the most important theory in physics" is something physicists should care about, but apparently opinions differ.)
(Have to do some breathing exercises, b/c to me it's blindingly obvious that "understanding the most important theory in physics" is something physicists should care about, but apparently opinions differ.)
“Republicans look at the Republican Party, slowly digesting deep within Trump’s belly, and think, this looks good to me.”
I had some thoughts on the new WSJ poll and on what lessons it offers for the Democratic Party in the moment. www.pbump.net/o/the-party-...
The party is the problem
Late Friday evening, the Wall Street Journal published a poll that fell solidly in the affirming-but-not-surprising category: the Democratic Party is viewed more unfavorably now than at any point in t...
www.pbump.net
July 28, 2025 at 4:54 PM
“Republicans look at the Republican Party, slowly digesting deep within Trump’s belly, and think, this looks good to me.”
After years of teaching quantum, I just realized that I have gotten this equation, at the heart of QM, backwards. It’s not saying that the frequency f of a particle’s wave function is given by its energy E. It’s saying that energy is *defined* as the frequency of the wave function. ⚛️🧪 (1/4)
July 28, 2025 at 1:48 PM
After years of teaching quantum, I just realized that I have gotten this equation, at the heart of QM, backwards. It’s not saying that the frequency f of a particle’s wave function is given by its energy E. It’s saying that energy is *defined* as the frequency of the wave function. ⚛️🧪 (1/4)
Replacing the seats on some Adirondack chairs I built about 15 years ago. Yeah, those were probably not good to sit on anymore.
July 15, 2025 at 9:12 PM
Replacing the seats on some Adirondack chairs I built about 15 years ago. Yeah, those were probably not good to sit on anymore.
Thanks, AI overview, for giving my 11 yr old an inferiority complex.
June 29, 2025 at 1:23 AM
Thanks, AI overview, for giving my 11 yr old an inferiority complex.
Writing about how nuclear decay can be understood through the Many Worlds picture of quantum mechanics, and I'm stymied with confusion over which is the anode and which is the cathode.
...can I just call them both "electrodes?"
Just saying, electrochemistry is more confusing than QM.
...can I just call them both "electrodes?"
Just saying, electrochemistry is more confusing than QM.
June 12, 2025 at 7:29 PM
Writing about how nuclear decay can be understood through the Many Worlds picture of quantum mechanics, and I'm stymied with confusion over which is the anode and which is the cathode.
...can I just call them both "electrodes?"
Just saying, electrochemistry is more confusing than QM.
...can I just call them both "electrodes?"
Just saying, electrochemistry is more confusing than QM.
Achieving a quantum advantage with billiard balls?
Following up on my visualizations of quantum gates using billiard-ball-like particles, here’s a 🧵 on visualizing a quantum algorithm with speedup over its classical counterpart. (1/15) ⚛️🧪
Following up on my visualizations of quantum gates using billiard-ball-like particles, here’s a 🧵 on visualizing a quantum algorithm with speedup over its classical counterpart. (1/15) ⚛️🧪
Quantum computing with billiard balls? The operation of a quantum computer is usually described with abstract mathematics. This 🧵 is part 1 of my attempt to visualize what is going on based on examples developed in my quantum tutorial, Catland: jablab.case.edu/catland/
(1/14) ⚛️🧪
(1/14) ⚛️🧪
Welcome to Catland! — Catland 0.1 documentation
jablab.case.edu
June 6, 2025 at 6:19 PM
Achieving a quantum advantage with billiard balls?
Following up on my visualizations of quantum gates using billiard-ball-like particles, here’s a 🧵 on visualizing a quantum algorithm with speedup over its classical counterpart. (1/15) ⚛️🧪
Following up on my visualizations of quantum gates using billiard-ball-like particles, here’s a 🧵 on visualizing a quantum algorithm with speedup over its classical counterpart. (1/15) ⚛️🧪
Quantum computing with billiard balls? The operation of a quantum computer is usually described with abstract mathematics. This 🧵 is part 1 of my attempt to visualize what is going on based on examples developed in my quantum tutorial, Catland: jablab.case.edu/catland/
(1/14) ⚛️🧪
(1/14) ⚛️🧪
Welcome to Catland! — Catland 0.1 documentation
jablab.case.edu
June 2, 2025 at 2:56 PM
Quantum computing with billiard balls? The operation of a quantum computer is usually described with abstract mathematics. This 🧵 is part 1 of my attempt to visualize what is going on based on examples developed in my quantum tutorial, Catland: jablab.case.edu/catland/
(1/14) ⚛️🧪
(1/14) ⚛️🧪
Reposted by Jesse Berezovsky
We're so excited to see #CWRU Physics
@cyrusctaylor.bsky.social in APS @apsphysics.bsky.social's 'A visit to Mount Kilimanjaro spurs career pivot. Cyrus Taylor, once a high-energy experimentalist, sees climate change as his calling—& physics as a tool for the public good.' tinyurl.com/CWRUcyrus 🎉
@cyrusctaylor.bsky.social in APS @apsphysics.bsky.social's 'A visit to Mount Kilimanjaro spurs career pivot. Cyrus Taylor, once a high-energy experimentalist, sees climate change as his calling—& physics as a tool for the public good.' tinyurl.com/CWRUcyrus 🎉
A visit to Mount Kilimanjaro spurs a career pivot
Cyrus Taylor, once a high-energy experimentalist, now sees climate change as his calling — and physics as a tool for the public good.
tinyurl.com
May 7, 2025 at 7:54 PM
We're so excited to see #CWRU Physics
@cyrusctaylor.bsky.social in APS @apsphysics.bsky.social's 'A visit to Mount Kilimanjaro spurs career pivot. Cyrus Taylor, once a high-energy experimentalist, sees climate change as his calling—& physics as a tool for the public good.' tinyurl.com/CWRUcyrus 🎉
@cyrusctaylor.bsky.social in APS @apsphysics.bsky.social's 'A visit to Mount Kilimanjaro spurs career pivot. Cyrus Taylor, once a high-energy experimentalist, sees climate change as his calling—& physics as a tool for the public good.' tinyurl.com/CWRUcyrus 🎉
Great fun today giving a guest lecture in Modern Physics on interpretations of quantum mechanics.
Got to use my quantum measurement demo, and I think blow a mind or two. ⚛️🧪
Got to use my quantum measurement demo, and I think blow a mind or two. ⚛️🧪
April 25, 2025 at 9:44 PM
Great fun today giving a guest lecture in Modern Physics on interpretations of quantum mechanics.
Got to use my quantum measurement demo, and I think blow a mind or two. ⚛️🧪
Got to use my quantum measurement demo, and I think blow a mind or two. ⚛️🧪
Optics people: the tiny feet of these water bugs make these big oval shadows surrounded by a bright ring.
Does anyone have a good explanation for why that happens? ⚛️
Does anyone have a good explanation for why that happens? ⚛️
April 24, 2025 at 5:33 PM
Optics people: the tiny feet of these water bugs make these big oval shadows surrounded by a bright ring.
Does anyone have a good explanation for why that happens? ⚛️
Does anyone have a good explanation for why that happens? ⚛️
One of my favorite Easter traditions: @radiofreetom.bsky.social posting his family recipe for roast lamb, and then everyone trying to dunk on each other re garlic powder.
Incisions in the lamb: this is about a 7lb piece. Filled with garlic powder and drizzled with olive oil. And now crusted with garlic salt.
April 20, 2025 at 3:27 PM
One of my favorite Easter traditions: @radiofreetom.bsky.social posting his family recipe for roast lamb, and then everyone trying to dunk on each other re garlic powder.