Physicists have found a way to study the inner workings of Josephson junctions without using electronics at all.
Ultracold atoms have successfully mimicked a fundamental quantum effect normally found in electronic circuits.
Using ultracold atoms and laser light, researchers recreated the behavior of a Josephson junction—an essential component of ...
What is the speed and timing of the Earth’s inner core cooling? This is what a recent study published in Nature Communications hopes to address as a team of scientists investigated the composition ...
A recent special issue in The Journal of Chemical Physics highlights Pacific Northwest National Laboratory's (PNNL) contributions to developing two prominent open-source software packages for ...
For almost as long as Lawrence Livermore has existed, scientists have been experimenting with materials to learn what happens to them under high pressure. In the brief instant of a high-explosive ...
A team of scientists from the UK Atomic Energy Authority, the Johannes Kepler University Linz, and Emmi AI, have developed an ...
They enable high-precision measurements, define the unit of voltage, and form the heart of many quantum computers – the so-called Josephson contacts. However, the microscopic processes taking place in ...
Supercomputers built using Nvidia Corp.’s most advanced platforms are leading the fight against the coronavirus pandemic, helping researchers gain more insights into the nature of the SARS-CoV-2 virus ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World-first: US scientists capture atomic oxygen in water using an ultrafast laser
The researchers directed a precisely tuned 225.7 nm femtosecond laser into water enriched with atomic oxygen generated by a ...
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