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WashU physicists build quantum sensors in boron nitride sheets to study magnetism and stress under extreme pressure.
Quantum computing promises to solve the seemingly unsolvable in fields such as physics, medicine, cryptography and more.
Scientists have finally unlocked a way to identify the elusive W state of quantum entanglement, solving a decades-old problem ...
For many business leaders, quantum computing feels like science fiction—a technology that’s exciting, but distant. That’s a ...
For the first time, scientists have observed electrons in graphene behaving like a nearly perfect quantum fluid, challenging ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Google quantum chip that peeked into ‘parallel universe’ reveals exotic matter
An international team of scientists has observed a never-before-seen exotic phase of matter on a quantum processor using ...
The world of quantum physics is already mysterious, but what happens when that strange realm of subatomic particles is put ...
Tapping into the growing market for Vertical AI solutions, the partnership between Marine Biologics and MQS addresses these ...
Quantum sensors built in nanometer thin boron nitride sheets endure extreme pressure, enabling precise measurements of stress ...
Made out of a fluorescent protein, the qubit is just 3 nanometers in diameter, scientists report August 20 in Nature. By hitting the protein with laser light, tweaking it with microwaves and observing ...
A researcher from Nagaland University (NU), the only central university in the state, has made significant strides in the ...
A survey of Scientific American’s century of quantum coverage helps explain the enduring popularity of strange physics ...
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