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 simulations that bypass resolution limits offer insights into high-temperature superconductivity
A new method developed at LMU overcomes fundamental resolution limits and may provide insights into high-temperature ...
Atomic clocks could catch time going quantum, measuring ticking that goes faster and slower at the same time
About a decade ago, physicists put forward a theory that proposes how to investigate the quantum nature of time. It can be ...
Cisco unveils universal switch for the quantum networking era
Networking technology giant Cisco Systems Inc. today introduced a new networking switch for quantum systems that routes ...
MIT scientists explain the quantum behavior of subatomic particles through classical physics
A new study by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) now bridges ...
Quantum Physics’ Strangest Problem May Hold the Key to Time Itself
In quantum mechanics, particles do not behave like everyday objects. Instead of existing in one clearly defined state, they ...
The strange connection between falling balls and quantum weirdness
A ball tossed into the air follows a path that classical physics can track with confidence. Shrink that ball down to the size ...
Why patents are so vital for the quantum economy
Create a Physics World account to get access to all available digital issues of the monthly magazine. Your Physics World ...
Classical physics can explain quantum weirdness, study shows
When you throw a ball in the air, the equations of classical physics will tell you exactly what path the ball will take as it ...
New “optical tornado” technology could transform quantum communication
Scientists have created tiny “optical tornadoes” — swirling beams of light that twist like miniature whirlwinds — using a surprisingly simple setup based on liquid crystals. Instead of relying on complex nanotechnology, the team used self-organizing structures called torons to trap and manipulate light, causing it to spiral and rotate in intricate ways. Even more impressively, they achieved this effect in light’s most stable, lowest-energy state, making it far easier to generate laser-like beams
This exotic particle could finally explain why matter has mass
A major physics experiment has uncovered evidence for a strange new form of matter, where a fleeting particle gets trapped inside a nucleus. This exotic state may reveal how mass is generated, suggesting that particles can weigh less when surrounded by dense nuclear matter. The findings support long-standing theories about how the vacuum of space influences mass.
Gravitational waves may have created dark matter in the early universe
In the chaotic first moments after the Big Bang, ripples in spacetime may have done more than just echo through the cosmos—they could have helped create dark matter itself. New research suggests that faint, ancient gravitational waves might have transformed into particles that eventually became the invisible substance shaping galaxies today.
Show HN: RoboAPI – A unified REST API for robots, like Stripe but for hardware
Every robot manufacturer ships a different SDK and a different protocol. A Boston Dynamics Spot speaks nothing like a Universal Robots arm. Every team building on top of robots rewrites the same integration layer from scratch. This is a massive tax on the industry.RoboAPI is a unified API layer that abstracts all of that into one clean developer experience. One SDK, one API key, any robot — simulated or real hardware.You can connect a simulated robot and read live telemetry in under 5 minutes:
Ask HN: How are you evaluating AI apps and CLI?
I'm sure many of you work for companies where various AI tools are being made available and IT departments asking for feedback on those tools. The IT departments are allocating in some cases unlimited budget in the hopes that something comes out as a winner and sticks out eventually...For example the models from Anthropic, OpenAI, Google etc. can be accessed via:
- IDE integration, e.g. VS Code, JetBrains etc.
- Dedicated apps and CLIs, e.g. Codex, Claude, Copilot CLI etc.It's already
A Humanoid Robot Beat the Human World Record for a Half Marathon
A year after most robots failed to finish the Beijing race, nearly half the field autonomously ran a course of slopes, narrow passages, and 20 turns. Humanoid robots are Silicon Valley’s latest obsession, but real-world performance has lagged the hype. That may be starting to change, however, after a robot beat the human record for a half marathon by nearly seven minutes in Beijing.While tech companies around the world are piling into humanoid robots, China has made it a national priority. The g
Daily briefing: This AI-powered robot is a table-tennis master
<p>Nature, Published online: 23 April 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01356-4">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01356-4</a></p>‘Ace’, a robotic arm, can best elite ping-pong players. Plus, a new network of cells in a mouse’s brain and monkeys in Gibraltar are eating dirt to settle their stomachs.
Brain tissue near tumours is loaded with plastic
<p>Nature, Published online: 24 April 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01281-6">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01281-6</a></p>Relatively high levels of micro- and nanoplastics around brain tumours might indicate breakdown of the blood–brain barrier.
New Waterloo quantum startup gains fast momentum with $10.7 million in funding
Fri, 24 Apr 2026 12:00:00 +0000A new startup spun out of research at the Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) at the University of Waterloo is accelerating its push toward commercialization with $10.7 million in dilutive and non-dilutive funding and a public listing after launching just more than six months ago. Tags: Awards, grants and funding, Commercialization, Quantum computing
NASA scientist says a "fifth force" may be hiding in our solar system
Scientists are grappling with a cosmic mystery: why does the Universe behave differently on massive scales compared to our own solar system? While distant galaxies reveal clear signs of something bending the rules of gravity—often attributed to dark energy or a hidden “fifth force”—everything nearby seems to follow Einstein’s playbook perfectly.
Astronomers may have found a strange new kind of cosmic explosion
A mysterious cosmic explosion has astronomers buzzing, as a strange event may hint at an entirely new kind of stellar cataclysm. After detecting ripples in space-time, scientists spotted a fast-fading red glow that initially looked like a rare kilonova—the kind of collision that forges gold and uranium. But just days later, the signal shifted, behaving more like a supernova, leaving researchers puzzled. Now, some think they may have witnessed something never seen before: a “superkilonova.”