• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Newly Discovered “Reset Button” Lets Mathematicians Undo Any Rotation

October 21, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Imagine closing your eyes and rolling a billiards ball across a table. Where it goes; what angles it hits the sides at; how much it spins or swerves – all that is, for our purposes, basically random. And then, imagine you’re asked to roll it back to exactly its starting point. Could you do it?

Well, if you’ve read a recent paper from mathematicians Jean-Pierre Eckmann and Tsvi Tlusty, then yes, you could. In fact, it’s possible even if that ball was rolling around through three-dimensional space. “We show[ed] that almost every walk in SO(3) or SU(2), even a very complicated one, will preferentially return to the origin,” the pair announce in the paper.

It’s the kind of problem you might not have realized was still open in physics: to what extent is it possible to “undo” the movement of some body through space and get it back to where it started? And this isn’t just some niche headscratcher, either – there are numerous practical applications for such a “reset” function. “Rotations underpin nearly all modern technology and science,” points out a press release on the topic from Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), where Tlusty is a distinguished professor in physics. 

“From stabilizing satellites to decoding brain scans, from nuclear magnetic resonance to quantum computing, we constantly task rotators with performing intricate dances,” it explains. “This new result guarantees that, regardless of how complicated the choreography, there is always a way to return the system to its original pose.”

So, we know what you’re thinking: what actually is the answer? And as it turns out, it’s surprisingly easy: you “simply […] travers[e] the walk twice in a row and uniformly scal[e] all rotation angles,” the paper explains. 

Let’s start with a basic example. Suppose you manage to hit the billiard in such a way that it spins round the table from six o’clock to nine o’clock. Now, you can pretty easily imagine a way to get it back to where it started: do the same thing again, twice, but each time one-sixth as far. 

A diagram of a billiard ball moving around a table, first being rotated about the centre by 3pi/2, then by pi/4, then by pi/4, bringing it back to its starting position.

Think of the ball as being rotated about the center, first by 3pi/2, then by pi/4, then by pi/4.

Image credit: © IFLScience

You see the general idea? Now, imagine instead of that really simple path, you have a particle moving like this:

A random walk through SO(3).

Reverse this.

Image credit: UNIST

Now that doesn’t look easy to undo – but that’s why the new paper is so important. “The astonishing answer is that it is always possible,” the press release says. “No matter how tangled the history of rotations, there exists a simple recipe: rescale the driving force and apply it twice.” 

There are a couple of keys to how and why this works. First is the realization that these random walks being considered can all be expressed in terms of rotations – or, in math-speak, as operations within SO(3) or SU(2), two groups that you can think of intuitively as “moving around on and through a unit sphere”. 

That’s important, because these groups have particular structures that make working with them easier – and, as the pair told New Scientist, they noticed that half-undoing a rotation performed within the sphere is equivalent to finding a path to some point on the sphere’s surface. That’s a lot easier than trying to get back to your starting point – if only because there are so many more points on the surface than your one single origin – and so, by combining a couple of older results on how to link together rotations and find solutions to multivariable equations, they deduced that finding these routes was nearly always possible.

It’s an impressive result – but more than that, it must also be a vindication for Tlusty and Eckmann themselves. As they note in their paper, they’ve been convinced of the theorem for a couple of years now – but for too long, a proof evaded capture. Now, the chapter is complete.

“A single application is never sufficient, but applying this doubled, rescaled force guarantees an exact return,” boasts UNIST. “Under this operation, the spin – or the qubit, or any rotor – will unfailingly come home.”

The paper is published in Physical Review Letters.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Apple Maps rolls out 3D view to London, L.A., New York, and San Francisco
  2. Cousin Marriage Could Be Genetically Disastrous For Offspring. Here’s Why
  3. The Unlikely Coexistence Of Spaceships And Wild Nature Around The World
  4. DNA From Greenland Sled Dogs – Maybe The World’s Oldest Breed – Reveals 1,000 Years Of Arctic History

Source Link: Newly Discovered “Reset Button” Lets Mathematicians Undo Any Rotation

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Radical New Treatment Clears Disease In 64 Percent Of Patients With Incurable Cancer
  • People Are Just Now Realizing That The Earth Has A Tail, Stretching At Least 2 Million Kilometers
  • Where On Earth Does Cinnamon Come From?
  • Born With No Feet, Andy The Goose Got Second-Chance Sneakers – But Murder Was Afoot
  • Where Does Pepper Come From?
  • 30-Cargo-300: Major Report Outlines The Priorities For A NASA-Led Human Mission To Mars
  • Like Cheesy Vomit: Why Does American Chocolate Taste So Weird To Europeans?
  • First Treasure From The “$17-Billion-Dollar” Gold-Laden Shipwreck Has Been Recovered
  • Never-Before-Seen Strain Of Mpox Virus Identified In England
  • “Starved To Death En Masse”: Populations Of Breeding Penguins Fall 95 Percent In Just A Few Years
  • Never-Before-Seen Black Hole Blast Clocked At Record-Breaking 60,000 Kilometers Per Second
  • Does This Ancient Egyptian Scroll Recount The World’s Oldest Magic Trick?
  • How Come Wild Animals Don’t Have Floppy Ears? The Clue Is In Your Dog
  • 25-Year-Old Paper On Controversial Glyphosate Weedkiller Retracted, After It Turns Out Monsanto Staff Helped Write It
  • Gravitational Lenses Confirm That Something Is Still Broken In The Universe
  • Adorable Camera Trap Footage Of Moms And Cubs Heralds Conservation Win For Sunda Tigers
  • Exercise VS Sleep: Which Is More Important When You Don’t Have Time For Both?
  • A Deep-Sea Mining Test Carved Up The Seabed. Two Years On, We’re Seeing Devastating Impacts
  • Enormous New Study Finds COVID-19 mRNA Shots Associated With 25 Percent Lower Risk Of Death From Any Cause
  • What Is The Best Movie Set In Space? We Asked Real-Life Astronauts To Find Out
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version