A stable graphene signal suggests some quantum particles can remember past interactions, a key step toward quantum computing.
Morning Overview on MSN
Hidden networks finally crack a decades-old mystery about waves
For more than a century, scientists have known that waves can behave in ways that seem to defy common sense, from freak walls of water in the open ocean to ghostly ripples inside atoms. What has ...
One of the discoveries that fundamentally distinguished the emerging field of quantum physics from classical physics was the ...
The double-slit experiment is one of the most famous experiments in physics and definitely one of the weirdest. It demonstrates that matter and energy (such as light) can exhibit both wave and ...
The same phenomenon was later confirmed for neutrons, helium atoms, and even large molecules, making matter-wave diffraction ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists see a positronium beam as a quantum matter wave for the 1st time
For the first time, physicists have watched a beam of positronium, a short‑lived atom made of an electron and its antimatter ...
“Positronium is the simplest atom composed of equal-mass constituents, and until it self-annihilates, it behaves as a neutral ...
For the first time, researchers from Tokyo University of Science have observed wave-like interference patterns from ...
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