Mostafa Fawzy became interested in physics in high school. It was the "elegance and paradox" of quantum theory that got his attention and led to his ...
Gabriel Lippmann received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1908 for an interference-based method of colour photography that was never commercially successful. Margaret Harris finds out why ...
No one understands the 2°C climate change target, it's time to reframe the debate around the real, tangible impact of climate change - like floods and wildfires ...
The future of computing lies in the surprising world of quantum physics, where the rules are much different from the ones that power today's devices. Quantum computers promise to tackle problems too ...
The team achieved a record-breaking coherence time of 12.6 seconds—the longest ever for hyperfine qubits in an optical tweezer array. They also maintained an imaging survival rate of 99.99%, meaning ...
A new platform developed by Illinois Grainger engineers demonstrates the utility of a ytterbium-171 atom array in quantum networking. Their work represents a key step toward long-distance quantum ...
Anomalous” heat flow, which at first appears to violate the second law of thermodynamics, gives physicists a way to detect quantum entanglement without destroying it.
A team of Harvard physicists built the first-ever quantum computing machine that can operate continuously without restarting, achieving a major breakthrough in a field that could revolutionize ...
Science fiction sometimes uses quantum concepts to make the impossible seem plausible. But real-world developments will likely have profound societal implications.
Once tightly focused on those revolving around our sun, our understanding of planetary bodies has expanded significantly during the last 30 years to include in-depth studies of exoplanets. Despite ...
Constantinos G. Vayenas 1, Dionysios Tsousis 1,2 and Eftychia Martino 1 examine positron and electron catalysis of neutrino hadronization, as they continue to explore how our Universe was made The ...
We are strengthening our research links with Japan with the appointment of Professor Claire O’Malley as the UK co-chair of the Japan-UK RENKEI consortium. Launched in 2012 by the UK and Japanese ...