Scientists at TU Wien found that electrons need specific “doorway states” to escape solids, not just energy. The insight ...
Physicists finally identified why some quantum materials seemingly lose their electrical conductivity for no reason.
Anomalous” heat flow, which at first appears to violate the second law of thermodynamics, gives physicists a way to detect ...
The proof, known to be so hard that a mathematician once offered 10 martinis to whoever could figure it out, uses number ...
Google launched its new video model Veo 3.1 with improved audio output, granular editing controls, and better output for image to video. It said that Veo 3.1 builds on May’s Veo 3 release and ...
Otto Aerospace recently introduced a full-scale mockup of its Phantom 3500 to the market. The news of its formal launch at the UP.Summit in Bentonville, Arkansas, dovetails with an order by Flexjet, ...
I don't remember the aviation industry ever being as dynamic as it is today. Everywhere you look, people and companies are working on new aircraft designs, be they in the form of helicopters, VTOLs, ...
It is fair to say that business aviation, and commercial aviation broadly, is a conservative place when it comes to aircraft design. Sure, new technologies and materials have been incorporated over ...
John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis’s experiments in the 1980s proved that the strange laws of quantum mechanics could govern not just subatomic particles but entire circuits visible to the ...
On Tuesday the field of quantum mechanics received a thoughtful 100th-birthday present from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences: three shiny new medals, 11 million Swedish kronor (to be divided ...
Scientists John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics for "the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric ...