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Kevin's avatar

I'm working on a large-scale physics research project right now. I'm not myself a physicist but I work with a lot of them. I can already tell that AI is accelerating this work, but it isn't in the way that you describe. It's not like they are training advanced AI models to do something that sounds really cutting-edge with AI.

Instead, much of the day-to-day work of a physicist, at least in some fields, is basic Python programming. And the LLMs are really good at this! Better than many physicists. Someone can be an excellent physicist, top 1%, but a mediocre Python programmer. And the LLMs already know all the details of astropy, they are good at converting one file format to another, cleaning data, all these mundane tasks that soak up the time of physicists.

If the AI can quickly do the most boring 50% of your tasks, suddenly you're accelerated to twice the speed. Plus, for most physicists, this frees them up to spend more time on the *interesting* stuff.

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Kashish's avatar

Quite an insightful read! Thank you for sharing your balanced and nuanced take on the topic.

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