Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘quantum physics’ category: Page 156

Jan 19, 2024

Quantum physicists develop robust and ultra-sensitive topological quantum device

Posted by in categories: materials, quantum physics

A significant breakthrough has been achieved by quantum physicists from Dresden and Würzburg. They’ve created a semiconductor device where exceptional robustness and sensitivity are ensured by a quantum phenomenon. This topological skin effect shields the functionality of the device from external perturbations, allowing for measurements of unprecedented precision.

This remarkable advance results from the clever arrangement of contacts on the aluminum-gallium-arsenide material. It unlocks potential for high-precision quantum modules in topological physics, bringing these materials into the industry’s focus. These results, published in Nature Physics, mark a major milestone.

Jan 19, 2024

From quantum leaps to threats, IBM foresees ‘Cybersecurity Armageddon’

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, quantum physics

IBM warns that advancements in quantum computing could lead to a cybersecurity crisis.

Jan 19, 2024

Unlocking the secrets of quasicrystal magnetism: Revealing a novel magnetic phase diagram

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Quasicrystals are intermetallic materials that have garnered significant attention from researchers aiming to advance condensed matter physics understanding. Unlike normal crystals, in which atoms are arranged in an ordered repeating pattern, quasicrystals have non-repeating ordered patterns of atoms.

Their unique structure leads to many exotic and interesting properties, which are particularly useful for practical applications in spintronics and magnetic refrigeration.

A unique quasicrystal variant, known as the Tsai-type icosahedral quasicrystal (iQC) and their cubic approximant crystals (ACs), display intriguing characteristics. These include long-range ferromagnetic (FM) and anti-ferromagnetic (AFM) orders, as well as unconventional quantum critical phenomenon, to name a few.

Jan 19, 2024

Quantum Approaches to Consciousness

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, quantum physics

It is widely accepted that consciousness or, more generally, mental activity is in some way correlated to the behavior of the material brain. Since quantum theory is the most fundamental theory of matter that is currently available, it is a legitimate question to ask whether quantum theory can help us to understand consciousness. Several approaches answering this question affirmatively, proposed in recent decades, will be surveyed. There are three basic types of corresponding approaches: consciousness is a manifestation of quantum processes in the brain, quantum concepts are used to understand consciousness without referring to brain activity, and matter and consciousness are regarded as dual aspects of one underlying reality. Major contemporary variants of these quantum-inspired approaches will be discussed.

Jan 19, 2024

Scientists compute with light inside hair-thin optical fiber

Posted by in categories: computing, engineering, quantum physics

Scientists at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, have found a powerful new way to program optical circuits that are critical to the delivery of future technologies such as unhackable communications networks and ultrafast quantum computers.

“Light can carry a lot of information, and optical circuits that compute with light—instead of electricity—are seen as the next big leap in computing technology,” explains Professor Mehul Malik, an experimental physicist and Professor of Physics at Heriot-Watt’s School of Engineering and Physical Sciences.

“But as optical circuits get bigger and more complex, they’re harder to control and make—and this can affect their performance. Our research shows an alternative—and more versatile—way of engineering optical circuits, using a process that occurs naturally in nature.”

Jan 19, 2024

Quantum Computing Could Make Cancer More Like The Common Cold

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, computing, quantum physics

“In recent years, the clinical development of liquid biopsies for cancer, a revolutionary screening tool, has created great optimism,” write Liz Kwo and Jenna Aronson in the American Journal of Managed Care.

At present, liquid biopsies can detect more than 50 different types of cancer. A standard visit to the doctor may eventually be able to detect cancers years before they become lethal.

In the future, even the toilet in your bathroom may be sensitive enough to detect the signs of cancer cells, enzymes and genes circulating in your bodily fluids, so that cancer becomes no more lethal than the common cold. Every time you go to the bathroom, you might be tested for cancer. The “smart toilet” might become our first line of defense.

Jan 19, 2024

Researchers reverse the flow of time on IBM’s quantum computer

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

We all mark days with clocks and calendars, but perhaps no timepiece is more immediate than a mirror. The changes we notice over the years vividly illustrate science’s “arrow of time”—the likely progression from order to disorder. We cannot reverse this arrow any more than we can erase all our wrinkles or restore a shattered teacup to its original form.

Or can we?

An international team of scientists led by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory explored this question in a first-of-its-kind experiment, managing to return a computer briefly to the past. The results, published March 13 in the journal Scientific Reports, suggest new paths for exploring the backward flow of time in . They also open new possibilities for quantum computer program testing and .

Jan 19, 2024

Scientists created a ‘giant quantum vortex’ that mimics a black hole

Posted by in categories: cosmology, quantum physics

Black holes can be difficult to study, so researchers have made a powerful quantum vortex in a tank of superfluid helium that acts as a simulation of a black hole.

By Leah Crane

Jan 19, 2024

Guest Post: The Unexaggerated Magic of Quantum

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

Shai Phillips conduct an audit of broad industry-internal accusations of exaggeration in quantum computing and associated fields.

Jan 19, 2024

Leave no stone unturned in search for an explanation of consciousness

Posted by in categories: neuroscience, quantum physics

A solid theory of human consciousness eludes us, which is why seemingly fringe ideas such as those that rely on quantum effects in the brain are still worth pursuing.