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

Many-body effects at the world’s largest physics conference

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Researchers use quantum biosensors to peer into cells' inner workings

In a major advance applying insights from quantum physics to the inner workings of biology, a team of WashU researchers has ...

First "half-Möbius" molecule has unique electron properties mapped by quantum computer

For the first time a molecule has been created that is twisted half-way to a Möbius strip shape, causing its electrons to ...

Your Consciousness Shifts to a Parallel Universe When You Die, Bold Theory Suggests

Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story… A mind-bending theory called quantum immortality suggests that your ...

Quantum computer accurately simulates real magnetic materials, reproducing national laboratory data

Studying and designing novel materials is a central application of quantum mechanics. Chemists, materials scientists, and ...

Temperature gets a new definition using a quantum device

A device that relies on quantum effects and oversized atoms may be a more reliable way to measure temperature that doesn't require calibration

Scientists create clear nail polish that lets you use touchscreens with long nails

Using a smartphone with long nails can be frustrating, forcing people to awkwardly tap with their fingertips instead of their nails. Now, researchers are working on a clear nail polish that could change that by turning fingernails into touchscreen-friendly tools. By experimenting with dozens of formulas, they discovered that combining common compounds like taurine and ethanolamine can help nails carry just enough electrical charge for screens to detect a touch.

Novel measurement confirms a 50-year-old prediction: Dark points are faster than light

A research group from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology reports in Nature an unprecedented achievement in electron microscopy: the direct measurement of "dark points" within light waves. By doing so, the researchers were able to confirm a prediction from the 1970s that the speed of these points exceeds the speed of light.

Experimental evidence shows how photons spread across multiple paths in an interferometer

The nature of quantum particles has long puzzled scientists. While single-particle interference suggests that a photon can behave like a spread-out wave, a whole photon is only ever detected in one specific place. Traditional interpretations of quantum mechanics often address this by suggesting the particle is in a superposition of being here and there at the same time. However, this tells us only where the particle is when it is measured, not where the particle physically is when no detector is

Quantum computer accurately simulates real magnetic materials, reproducing national laboratory data

Studying and designing novel materials is a central application of quantum mechanics. Chemists, materials scientists, and physicists focus on subtle interactions in quantum materials and to uncover them they rely on sophisticated computational and experimental techniques. Computer simulations that connect microscopic quantum interactions to measurable material properties complement experimental data to connect structure to function—but classical computers can struggle to simulate those propertie

Unlocking scalable entanglement will enable next-generation quantum computing

Quantum computing promises to transform our world in rapid, radical and revolutionary ways: solving in seconds problems that would take classical computers years, accelerating the discovery of new medicines, creating sustainable materials, optimizing complex systems, and strengthening cybersecurity. It does so using qubits, the quantum counterparts of classical bits, which can occupy multiple states simultaneously and enable a fundamentally new kind of computation.

What We Actually See—and Don’t See—Shows Consciousness Is Only the Tip of the Iceberg

Visual experiments suggest just a small fraction of the information our brains process enters awareness. What can you see right now? This might seem like a silly question, but what enters your consciousness is not the whole story when it comes to vision. A great deal of visual processing in the brain goes on well below our conscious awareness.Some studies have probed the unconscious depths of vision. One source of evidence comes from the neurological condition known as blindsight, which is cause

Quantum experiment shows events may have no fixed order

For the first time, a team of physicists in Austria has carried out an experiment that appears to verify the principle of indefinite causal order: an idea that suggests that timelines of events can exist in multiple orders at the same time. Led by Carla Richter at the Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology, the researchers hope their result could finally allow physicists to verify a key prediction of quantum theory. The results have been published in PRX Quantum.

“Near-misses” in particle accelerators can illuminate new physics, study finds

Particle accelerators reveal the heart of nuclear matter by smashing together atoms at close to the speed of light. The high-energy collisions produce a shower of subatomic fragments that scientists can then study to reconstruct the core building blocks of matter.An MIT-led team has now used the world’s most powerful particle accelerator to discover new properties of matter, through particles’ “near-misses.” The approach has turned the particle accelerator into a new kind of microscope — and led

Dual-rail superconducting qubits generate high-fidelity logical entanglement, study finds

Quantum computers, systems that process information leveraging quantum mechanical effects, could outperform classical computers on some advanced tasks. These systems rely on qubits, the fundamental units of quantum information, that become linked via an effect known as quantum entanglement and share a unified quantum state.

Lab demo shows a quantum battery effect can speed up charging

Researchers have demonstrated in a controlled lab setting that a quantum battery built from multiple cells can charge faster ...

Deepfake X-rays are so real even doctors can’t tell the difference

Deepfake X-rays created by AI are now convincing enough to fool both doctors and AI models. In tests, radiologists had limited success identifying fake images, especially when they didn’t know they were being shown. This opens the door to risks like fraudulent medical claims and tampered diagnoses. Experts say stronger safeguards and detection tools are critical as the technology advances.

First atlas of brain organization shows development over a lifetime

<p>Nature, Published online: 25 March 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00975-1">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00975-1</a></p>Scans of more than 3,500 people allow scientists to draw up a guide to the brain areas that work together from birth to 100 years old.

A cancer-promoting fusion protein acts during embryonic brain development

<p>Nature, Published online: 25 March 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00924-y">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00924-y</a></p>ZFTA–RELA is the cancer-promoting protein product of a gene fusion. Analyses of accessible sites in the DNA–protein complex chromatin in developing mice show that ZFTA–RELA binds to chromatin modules that are accessible during embryonic brain development, placing some cell lineages at risk of transformation into cancer.