Webb captured the object in infrared — light wavelengths that are invisible to human eyes but can pierce through thick dust. The new views, in both near and mid-infrared, sharpen details from the photos taken by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope more than a decade ago.
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The converse is also worth asking — whether simulating artificial environments (for instance a 3d representation of a Youtube video) might have unintended negative consequences. Fei-Fei Li’s startup World Labs, which aims to make the leading “world model” — an alternative to language models based on tokenizing physical space rather than words — recently raised a substantial amount of money. As consumer-facing robots become more plausible, the business case for such a model is obvious. But what physical spaces are “world” models actually being trained on? The contemporary physical environment, sound-proofed, plastic-coated, and artificially-colored, is radically different from the environment that Homo sapiens evolved to excel in.