Coming Soon.



Why does this project exist?


In December 1938, Germany, when Hitler's Nazi empire was at its peak before the war, a German chemist named Otto Hahn did an experiment with his assistant Fritz Strassman. They struck a Uranium atom with a neutron, and found that the reaction produced Barium. "Oh that's neat," they thought.

They wrote a paper describing the results and shared it with one of their friends, a Jewish physicist named Lise Meitner (a woman who had recently been persecuted by the Nazis and was on the run). She read the paper and discussed it with her nephew.

As they read Hahn's paper, something stood out to them. They did some calculations... and realized that Hahn had performed the most terrifyingly powerful chemical reaction known to humanity at the time without even realizing it.

He had split the atom — discovering nuclear fission and launching the age of atomic weapons.

They immediately shared this with other scientists, kicking off a chain of events that ultimately led to Albert Einstein sending a warning to President Roosevelt of the USA, who later announced the Manhattan Project.

You should definitely read more about this exciting story, but one thing you should notice is the extent to which science and technology relies on inter-disciplinary knowledge-sharing and good discussion around new research.

Today, science is broken. It is gate-kept, highly susceptible to fraud and manipulation, and driven by opaque processes that curb the spirit of wonder and creativity that guided the last several millennia of human progress. Public trust in science is more fragile than ever.

Scholars around the world are further separated by barriers of language and field of study, holding back countless collaborations and inter-disciplinary breakthroughs.

With DenseLayers, we've taken on the challenge to build the first universal scientific network in history: the #1 space in the world for high-quality discussions and knowledge-sharing around frontier research.

It is designed to serve humanity in the new millennium: 100% open access, greatly surpassing the quality and trustworthiness of any scientific journal that has previously existed, and equipped with a new generation of tools that would enable every scholar to feel welcome, regardless of their level of expertise in a particular domain or which language they speak.

We invite you to join us, and hope to build a kind and courageous community together.





Notable Endorsements

Prof. Roald Hoffmann

Nobel Laureate Chemist (1981), and Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor (Emeritus) at Cornell University

Prof. Joachim Frank

Nobel Laureate Biochemist (2017), and Professor at Columbia University

Jeff Dean

Chief Scientist at Google DeepMind and Google Research

(Also Investor)

© 2025 SANPRAM Research Inc.

Building with ♥ in Tokyo, Japan.