Physicists finally identified why some quantum materials seemingly lose their electrical conductivity for no reason.
The poet Blake wrote that you can see a world in a grain of sand. But even better, you can see a universe in an atom!
The uncertainty inherent to quantum mechanics has long left physicists wondering whether the observations we make on the ...
Physicists show knotted cosmic strings may have dominated the early universe before collapsing to create matter—a theory ...
The experiment at CERN produced pairs of electron and positron beams, propagating into an ambient plasma. The international team of researchers found that the beams were narrow and nearly parallel, ...
On July 4, 2012, researchers at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Switzerland announced with great fanfare that they had ...
Evidence of this quantum layer may be coming soon. Here’s what you’ll learn in this story: Physicists are still puzzling over ...
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.
The team used intense X-rays to confirm a key theoretical concept that explains a material's conductivity crash.
Physicists at the Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter (MPSD) in Hamburg have discovered a striking ...
Discover how Google's quantum echoes algorithm is solving real-world problems in drug discovery, material science, and ...
We build high-tech tools to make our lives easier, and then forget that we still need to think, 'How do we know it's right?' ...