Albert Einstein was right about a shocking among of things, but not necessarily everything.
Can a small lump of metal be in a quantum state that extends over distant locations? A research team at the University of Vienna answers this question with a resounding yes. In the journal Nature, ...
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Demonstration of first antimatter quantum bit paves way for improved comparisons of matter and antimatter
In a breakthrough for antimatter research, the BASE collaboration at CERN has kept an antiproton—the antimatter counterpart of a proton—oscillating smoothly between two different quantum states for ...
When scientists repeatedly drove a strongly interacting quantum system with laser “kicks,” they expected it to heat up and grow chaotic. Instead, the atoms abruptly stopped absorbing energy and locked ...
The qubit state decays toward the "north pole" of the sphere due to decoherence. Using the study's coherence-stabilized sensing protocol, the researchers temporarily counteracted the decay, leading to ...
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Building quantum entanglement at the nanoscale
Quantum entanglement has shifted from a philosophical puzzle to a design brief for engineers working at the scale of atoms, ...
Quantum gravity is the missing link between general relativity and quantum mechanics, the yet-to-be-discovered key to a unified theory capable of explaining both the infinitely large and the ...
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