entangled dot cloud
MIT engineers develop a magnetic transistor for more energy-efficient electronics
Transistors, the building blocks of modern electronics, are typically made of silicon. Because it’s a semiconductor, this material can control the flow of electricity in a circuit. But silicon has fundamental physical limits that restrict how compact and energy-efficient a transistor can be.MIT researchers have now replaced silicon with a magnetic semiconductor, creating a magnetic transistor that could enable smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient circuits. The material’s magnetism strongly
Quantum computers go high-dimensional with a four-state photon gate
The collaboration of TU Wien with research groups in China has resulted in a crucial building block for a new kind of quantum ...
World-first: Quantum-inspired optimization computer installed on mobile robot
Japanese firms Toshiba and MIRISE Technologies have demonstrated a breakthrough in autonomous mobility. The ...
Breaking encryption with a quantum computer just got 10 times easier
The commonly used RSA encryption algorithm can now be cracked by a quantum computer with only 100,000 qubits, but the technical challenges to building such a machine remain numerous ...
Cracking encryption with a quantum computer just got 10x easier
A team at Google Quantum AI, led by researcher Craig Gidney, has shown that breaking RSA-2048 encryption could require roughly 20 times fewer physical qubits than previously estimated, collapsing the ...
John Lilic: Quantum computing threatens all classical cryptography by 2030, the dynamic quantum ecosystem reshapes finance, and investment is crucial for advanc…
Quantum computing's rapid evolution threatens to upend cryptographic security by 2030, urging immediate industry action.
Want to Invest in Quantum Computing? 2 Stocks That Are Great Buys Right Now
Quantum computing is still years away from becoming practical for mainstream use, but we're seeing incredible progress in the ...
Italian court suspends €47m quantum computing contract with IBM following tender process appeal
An Italian court has suspended a €47 million ($56m) contract between IBM and the University of Salerno for the delivery and ...
1 Top Quantum Computing Stock to Buy in 2026
Management says it could take five to 10 years before useful quantum computers emerge. Most quantum computing stocks are ...
Show HN: Quantumopt – GNN-based quantum circuit compiler (34% gate reduction)
I'm a CS student with no prior quantum computing
background who built this in about a week.quantumopt uses a Graph Attention Network trained
on 10,240 quantum circuits to predict optimization
potential, then passes to Qiskit's transpiler for
hardware-specific compilation targeting IBM Brisbane.Results on 41 real QASMbench circuits:
- 34% average gate reduction
- 28% average depth reduction
- 0 circuits made worse
- 82% GNN prediction accuracyHappy to answer questions about the GNN
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US Solar Surged 35% in 2025, Overtaking Hydro for the First Time
Fossil fuels still dominate the energy mix. But growth in renewables offset nearly 75% of new power demand. Booming energy demand is driving a scramble to set up new generating capacity, and one technology is proving to be the clear winner. Newly released federal data shows that solar power grew by more than 35 percent year-over-year in 2025, outpacing all other forms of generation.After decades of relatively flat electricity use, US power demand is rising again. A new report from the US Energy
Show HN: Cifer, zero-key custody using threshold cryptography
I built CIFER, a distributed encryption + access-control system designed so that no component ever holds a complete decryption key at rest.Core idea: each “secret” (per user or per dataset) has its own independent post-quantum keypair. There is no master key.Architecture summary:Control plane: verifiable ownership, delegation, revocation, and append-only audit records (tamper-evident authorization history)Custody plane: 5 custody nodes running in TEEs, each storing 1 key fragmentOrchestration: v
Matching vibrations is all it takes to shut down superconductivity in a nearby crystal
The world is never really at rest. Even in a vacuum near ultracold temperatures where all classical motion should come to a halt, you'll find quantum fluctuations. In thin, two-dimensional materials, these include random vibrations that can alter electromagnetic fields, a feature that theorists have posited could be quite useful for modifying materials.
Rydberg atoms detect clear signals from a handheld radio
For the first time, a team of US researchers has used sensors containing highly excited Rydberg atoms to detect signals from an ordinary handheld radio. Through a careful approach to demodulating the incoming signals, Noah Schlossberger and colleagues at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) were able to recover audio encoded in multiple public radio channels, with promising implications for everyday uses in consumer electronics. The research has been published in Physical Re
Researchers unlock hidden dimensions inside a single photon
Researchers have discovered new ways to shape quantum light, creating high-dimensional states that can carry much more information per photon. Using advanced tools like on-chip photonics and ultrafast light structuring, they’re pushing quantum communication and imaging into exciting new territory. Although long-distance transmission remains tricky, innovative approaches—such as topological quantum states—could make these fragile signals far more resilient. The momentum suggests quantum optics is
Apollo rocks reveal the Moon had brief bursts of super-strong magnetism
Scientists at the University of Oxford have finally settled a decades-long mystery about the Moon’s magnetic field — and it turns out both sides were right. By reanalyzing Apollo mission rocks, they discovered that the Moon did occasionally generate an incredibly powerful magnetic field, even stronger than Earth’s — but only for fleeting bursts lasting thousands of years or less. Most of the time, the Moon’s magnetic field was weak.
Energy loss triggers quantum thermal Hall-like effect at macroscopic scale
In many quantum materials—materials with unusual electrical and magnetic properties driven by quantum mechanical effects—electrons can organize themselves into Landau levels. Landau levels are essentially quantized energy states that form when charged particles move in a magnetic field.
Quantum data teleported 19 miles across German capital with 95% peak accuracy
Researchers in Berlin have teleported quantum data across a 19-mile loop of commercial fiber ...
Quantum-secure Internet expands to citywide scale
While the basic form of QKD enables information to be transmitted securely, it does have some weak points. One of them is that a malicious third party could steal the key by hacking the devices the ...