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

Ask HN: Is Consciousness Divine?

I don't know. Can anyone explain?

Show HN: API Ingest – Agentic Search (Inter) API Docs

1. CC / Codex dont handle API Docs well enoughNo matter what I do, I run into bad requests with claude, day in, day out.Its making up arguments, misunderstands required types, and misses fields in the requests. And when it catches its issues, the then inititated web search usually ends fuzzy scraped information, that yields even more issues.Context7 helps. Its better than starting only with the LLM's vague (mis)understanding from pretraining. But it only does semantic search. And often

Can Rigetti's 99.9% fidelity enable large-scale quantum systems?

Rigetti Computing RGTI is making meaningful strides in addressing one of quantum computing’s toughest constraints, fidelity.

Newfound brain network is a ‘secret system’ made of helper cells

<p>Nature, Published online: 22 April 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01338-6">doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01338-6</a></p>Webs of star-shaped cells called astrocytes connect distant parts of the brain, allowing long-distance exchange of molecules.

Astrocytes connect specific brain regions through plastic networks

<p>Nature, Published online: 22 April 2026; <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-026-10426-6">doi:10.1038/s41586-026-10426-6</a></p>Communication between distant brain regions is mediated by plastic networks of gap junction-coupled astrocytes.

Soundwaves settle debate about elusive quantum particle

It was a head-spinning discovery. In 2018, researchers in Japan claimed to find concrete evidence of an elusive particle, a Majorana fermion, in a quantum spin liquid called ruthenium trichloride. Majoranas are highly sought-after by quantum materials scientists because when a pair are localized, or trapped, they can securely encode information and form a stable qubit—the building block of quantum computing.

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 superconductivity. Physicist Dr. Sebastian Paeckel has developed a method that can be used to calculate spectral functions of complex quantum systems much more precisely than was possible previously. His approach reconstructs precise energy spectra without requiring lengthy calculations.

MIT affiliates elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences for 2026

Four MIT faculty members are among the roughly 250 leaders from academia, the arts, industry, public policy, and research elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the academy announced April 22. Thirteen additional MIT alumni were also honored.One of the nation’s most prestigious honorary societies, the academy is also a leading center for independent policy research. Members contribute to academy publications, as well as studies of science and technology policy, energy and global s

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 falls, and when and where it will land. But if you were to squeeze that same ball down to the size of an atom or smaller, it would behave in ways beyond anything that classical physics can predict.

Particle thought to break physics followed rules all along, research reveals

A tiny discrepancy in particle physics has loomed for decades as an exciting possible crack in one of science's most successful theories, hinting at unknown forces or quantum objects. Now, an international team led by a Penn State physicist has published the most precise study yet to reveal the discrepancy was a fluke in calculation, not nature.

QMatter secures $1.2M to tackle quantum scaling challenges

QMatter reduces problem complexity to enable computation on existing quantum and classical systems, with the funding supporting continued development and scaling of its quantum compression platform.

Quantum AI: Is This Humanity’s Most Consequential Innovation?

Quantum AI is the combination of the computational power of quantum computing with the learning and pattern recognition capabilities of AI.

Quantum researchers created a new kind of laser built from sound

A tiny silica bead, just 100 nanometers across, sits suspended in a vacuum and vibrates under the grip of laser light. Those ...

Stretching and squeezing diamond opens new path for ultra-precise quantum sensors

Researchers have discovered a new way to tune the quantum properties of tiny defects in diamond—by gently stretching or ...

Pressure-tuned quantum spin liquid-like behavior observed in material Y-kapellasite

A quantum spin liquid is a phase of matter in which the magnetic moments in a material do not align or freeze, even at ...

Bringing quantum time into the lab—a single clock can run young and old at once

Few concepts in physics are as familiar, yet as enigmatic, as time. In Einstein's theory of relativity, time is not absolute: ...

Breakthrough ion clock experiments reveal that time can go quantum

Time already behaves strangely in modern physics. It can stretch, slow, and split depending on speed and gravity.

Should You Buy Sell or Hold IonQ at $42 – Is the Quantum Rally Back?

IonQ (NYSE:IONQ | IONQ Price Prediction) has staged a sharp two-day recovery on genuine technical breakthroughs and a fresh ...

The quantum mystery that may explain how God knows every thought you have

Quantum entanglement, validated by physicists since 1935, offers a scientific perspective on how an omniscient God could know ...