and for patients like anna and ligia, their high—tech ivf journey isn't over yet.i will ask the doctor to use artificial intelligence. we have considered having a second child, because we'd like to have siblings. i mean, it's automatically a friend, isn't it, for your child? wow, that was literally life—changing stuff. it's not always about practical outcomes, though. some technology is just about pushing the boundaries of creativity — as this quantum physicist, trained astronaut, and ballerina has been showing us. so, my name is merritt moore, and i'm a ballet dancer and physicist. as a young kid, i never spoke a lot. and so, then, when i found dance at 13, i became instantly hooked. i was going to quite an academic school. and following those lines of not being particularly verbal when i was a kid, and also loving puzzles, i then fell into physics. all this time, it's been — i've had to pursue physics and dance, like, totally separated. and after i graduated from my phd, ijust had this feeling of, like, "why not both? " i had access to, like, this amazing robot,