A quiet revolution is taking shape in the world of physics, and it doesn’t rely on exotic particles or massive particle colliders. Instead, it begins with something much more familiar—sound.
In the fast-evolving world of quantum computing, one of the biggest hurdles isn’t how fast calculations can be done—it’s how long you can hold onto the delicate quantum information in the first place.
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Sound waves crack open quantum secrets
Sound is usually treated as the most familiar of physical phenomena, the background noise of daily life rather than a frontier of fundamental physics. Yet in laboratories around the world, carefully ...
While many plans for quantum computers transmit data using the particles of light known as photons, researchers from the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (UChicago PME) ...
While conventional computers store information in the form of bits, fundamental pieces of logic that take a value of either 0 or 1, quantum computers are based on qubits. These can have a state that ...
Live Your Sound pop-up takes place this weekend. And while it’s okay to think of it as just another ‘roadshow’, there are a ...
In 1913, legendary Danish physicist Niels Bohr created the Bohr model to help mankind understand what an atom looks like. Nearly a century later in 2014, scientists from Columbia University and Sweden ...
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