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🔬Doing Vibe Physics — Alex Lupsasca, OpenAI

The full story of how GPT‑5.x derived new results in theoretical physics and quantum gravity.

Latent.Space
May 05, 2026
∙ Paid
This post originally appeared in Latent Space.

“A year prior LLMs were just starting do correct math. Now ChatGPT could reproduce his hardest paper in the time it takes to get a coffee.”

Some people are going crazy over GPT 5.5. Some people. This is the story of the Jagged Frontier. People who use AI to write emails or even code implementation work find the lift moderate whereas people pushing the limits of the model are figuring out that the limits just moved outwards.

Alex Lupsaska has been tracking this limit for a year and a half now. “When GPT5 came out, it was able to reproduce one of my best papers (that took a very long time to come up with) in 30 minutes.”

But Alex also notes that this shift was mostly invisible.

I remember when GPT-5 came out… on Twitter, the reception was lukewarm. A lot of people were like, well, we expected a lot more, and it’s not better at writing email. And I remember thinking, well, okay, GPT-3 could write email. How much better can it get at writing email? That’s not the point. But at the science frontier, the capabilities were really taking off.

We walk through his paper and more with him in today’s Science pod! Watch here.

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A guest post by
Latent.Space
Writer, curator, latent space explorer. Main blog: https://swyx.io Devrel/Dev community: https://dx.tips/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/swyx
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