Patterns in chaos have been proven, in the incredibly tiny quantum realm, by an international team co-led by UC Santa Cruz physicist Jairo Velasco, Jr. In a new paper published on November 27 in ...
New technologies are enabling scientists to tackle previously elusive physics problems. The macroscopic realm, which consists of everything from falling balls to orbiting planets, can be explained by ...
A recent study in Physical Review Letters explores quantum effects on black hole thermodynamics and geometry, focusing on extending two classical inequalities into the quantum regime. Black holes have ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. In our lived reality, we perceive time as a linear progression moving in one direction. While today gives way to tomorrow and the ...
Xuedong Hu, professor and chair of the Department of Physics, College of Arts and Sciences, has been named interim director of the UB Quantum Institute. Hu joined the Department of Physics in 2002 to ...
A new study by Nagaland University has placed the institution firmly on the global quantum research map. In a first for the central university, a paper by Dr. Biplab Pal, Assistant Professor at the ...
A team of international physicists has brought Bayes’ centuries-old probability rule into the quantum world. By applying the “principle of minimum change” — updating beliefs as little as possible ...
In a study, physicists now observed a class of quantum particles called fractional excitons, which behave in unexpected ways and could significantly expand scientists' understanding of the quantum ...
Breaking the time asymmetry remains a fundamental yet tantalizing scientific challenge. At the macroscopic level the quest has so far turned out to be fruitless, but on the other hand in the subatomic ...
What if time is not as fixed as we thought? Imagine that instead of flowing in one direction – from past to future – time could flow forward or backwards due to processes taking place at the quantum ...