Quantum collapse models hint at tiny time fluctuations. Credit: FQxI/Gabriel Fitzpatrick (2026) An FQxI cofunded study ...
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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 ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
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 ...
Excitons are being explored in materials science and information technology as a means of storing light. These luminous ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Two Physical Review A papers outline how anyons could exist in one dimension, and how cold-atom experiments might spot them.
Researchers have shown that surprisingly large metal particles can behave according to quantum mechanics, existing in ...
But last year, scientists demonstrated that quantum systems don’t always follow those patterns, finding a quantum gas that ...
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World-first: Scientists observe particles emerging from nothing in collider
Scientists at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider have observed particles emerging directly from empty ...
A tiny silica bead, just 100 nanometers across, sits suspended in a vacuum and vibrates under the grip of laser light. Those ...
Some quantum cryptographers want to find ways to keep messages secret even if the rules of quantum mechanics don’t hold. The ...
A pair of identical particles swapping places sounds like a small move. In quantum physics, it is a defining one. In everyday three-dimensional space, that swap only comes in two flavors. Either the ...
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