A pair of identical particles swapping places sounds like a small move. In quantum physics, it is a defining one.
In chemistry, molecules with a "flat" geometry are often stable enough to support a wide range of reactions. But in the quantum world, that's not technically true.
An “echo” that arrives before you finish speaking sounds like a glitch. In quantum hardware, that kind of self-interference ...
The collaboration of TU Wien with research groups in China has resulted in a crucial building block for a new kind of quantum ...
Reservoir computing is a promising machine learning-based approach for the analysis of data that changes over time, such as ...
“The theoretical framework we developed explains how quasiparticles emerge in systems with an extremely heavy impurity, ...
Quantonation Ventures, a venture firm investing in quantum and physics-based startups, has closed its oversubscribed second ...
An experiment measuring a single atom's recoil confirmed that observing a particle destroys interference, settling the ...
Quantum key distribution promises ultra-secure communication by using the strange rules of quantum physics to detect eavesdroppers instantly. But even the most secure quantum link can falter if the ...
Forgetting feels like a failure of attention, but physics treats it as a fundamental process with a measurable price. At the smallest scales, erasing information is not free, it consumes energy and ...
Looming behind Regenstein Library is a bronze, mushroom cloud–shaped sculpture—Henry Moore’s Nuclear Energy. Installed in 1967, it now seems like an inconspicuous part of the campus landscape. In ...
Researchers in Berlin have teleported quantum data across a 19-mile loop of commercial fiber ...