Nobel Prize winners show how superconducting circuits can exhibit quantum behavior, leading to transformative technologies.
The discovery could significantly reduce the production costs of fuels, chemicals, and materials. A research team from the University of Minnesota Twin Cities College of Science and Engineering and ...
New studies of the “platypus of materials” help explain how their atoms arrange themselves into orderly, but nonrepeating, ...
Virtual particles may not be real, but they help physicists track how forces move, and allow for incredibly precise ...
Discover the groundbreaking work of John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis in the field of quantum physics. Learn how ...
In a new study, scientists have shown that chemical receptors that plants use to recognize nitrogen-fixing bacteria have ...
EPFL physicists and their collaborators have directly observed and controlled a rare double-dome pattern of superconductivity in twisted trilayer ...
The detection of the molecule phosphine in a brown dwarf’s atmosphere may help astronomers in their search for life elsewhere ...
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Science history: Invention of the transistor ushers in the computing era — Oct. 3, 1950
On Oct. 3, 1950, three Bell Labs scientists received a patent for a "three-electrode circuit element" that would usher in the ...
Deep beneath South Dakota, scientists are closing in on one of the greatest mysteries in the universe — the true nature of ...
An international team of scientists led by Le Phuong Hoang and Giuseppe Mercurio from European XFEL has unveiled a new way to ...
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