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Cool Qubits Make Faster Decisions

Classical machine learning has benefited several physics subfields, from materials science to medical imaging. Implementing machine-learning algorithms on quantum computers could expand their use to more complex problems and to datasets that are inherently quantum. Nayeli Rodríguez-Briones at the Technical University of Vienna and Daniel Park at Yonsei University in South Korea have now proposed a thermodynamics-inspired protocol that could make quantum machine-learning techniques more efficient [1].

In one common classical machine-learning task, a system is trained on a known dataset and then challenged to classify new data. Its output quantifies both the classification and that classification’s uncertainty. Once the system’s parameters are fixed, evaluating the same data yields the same output. In contrast, the output of a quantum machine-learning algorithm is read out as binary measurements of qubits, which are inherently probabilistic. Because a single measurement provides only limited information, the computation must be repeated many times.

Rodríguez-Briones and Park recognized that how clearly a quantum computer reveals its output is determined by entropy. When the readout qubit is highly polarized—strongly favoring one outcome—its entropy is low. Few repetitions are needed to obtain a firm result. An unpolarized, high-entropy readout qubit returns both states more evenly, meaning more repetitions are required. The researchers showed that the readout qubit’s polarity can be increased by transferring its entropy to ancillary qubits, effectively cooling one while warming the others. Between runs, the ancillary qubits are reset by coupling them to a heat bath. Crucially, this entropy transfer affects the readout qubit’s degree of polarization without changing the encoded decision. The upshot: A given result can be arrived at with fewer repetitions.

Local droplet etching yields more symmetric quantum dots for integrated photonics

Light-based quantum technologies, such as quantum communication and photonic quantum computing, require reliable sources of individual photons and, ideally, pairs of entangled photons. Semiconductor quantum dots are promising candidates for this purpose. These nanostructures have electrical conductivity between that of insulators and conductors and are capable of confining electrons and holes. This property causes them to emit light at well-defined frequencies when excited by a laser.

Scalable quantum batteries can charge faster than their classical counterparts

Over the past decades, energy engineers have developed increasingly advanced battery technologies that can store more energy, charge faster and maintain their performance for longer. In recent years, some researchers have also started exploring the potential of quantum batteries, devices that can store energy leveraging quantum mechanical effects.

To store energy, quantum batteries rely on qubits, quantum systems that can exist in two energy states simultaneously, leveraging a property known as superposition. While in principle these batteries could perform better than classical batteries, the realization of battery prototypes that exhibit this predicted quantum advantage has proved challenging.

Researchers at the Southern University and Technology in China (Sustech) and the Superior Council for Scientific Research (CSIC) in Spain recently realized a quantum energy storage device that was found to outperform a classical equivalent when operating under realistic conditions.

Twisted bilayer photonic crystals dynamically tune light’s handedness

Researchers at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have created a chip-scale device that can dynamically control the “handedness” of light as it passes through—also known as its optical chirality—with a simple twist of two specially designed photonic crystals. The study is published in the journal Optica.

The work, led by graduate student Fan Du in the lab of Eric Mazur, the Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics, describes a reconfigurable twisted bilayer photonic crystal that can be tuned in real time using an integrated micro-electromechanical system (MEMS). The breakthrough opens new possibilities for advanced chiral sensing, optical communication, and quantum photonics.

“Chirality is very important in many fields of science—from pharma to chemistry, biology, and of course, physics and photonics,” Mazur said. “By integrating twisted photonic crystals with MEMS, we have a platform that is not only powerful from a physics standpoint, but also compatible with the way modern photonics are manufactured.”

Photonic ‘ski jumps’ efficiently beam light into free space

Photonic chips use light to process data instead of electricity, enabling faster communication speeds and greater bandwidth. Most of that light typically stays on the chip, trapped in optical wires, and is difficult to transmit to the outside world in an efficient manner.

If a lot of light could be rapidly and precisely beamed off the chip, free from the confines of the wiring, it could open the door to higher-resolution displays, smaller Lidar systems, more precise 3D printers, or larger-scale quantum computers.

Now, researchers from MIT and elsewhere have developed a new class of photonic devices that enable the precise broadcasting of light from the chip into free space in a scalable way.

Acoustic driving enables controlled condensation of light and matter on chip

An international research team led by Alexander Kuznetsov at the Paul Drude Institute for Solid State Electronics (PDI) in Berlin has demonstrated a fundamentally new way to control the condensation of hybrid light-matter particles. Using coherent acoustic driving to dynamically reshape the energy landscape of a semiconductor microcavity, the researchers achieved deterministic steering of a macroscopic quantum state into its lowest energy configuration.

The results, published in Nature Photonics, establish a strategy for engineering nonequilibrium quantum states and open prospects for ultrafast, tunable photonic technologies.

In collaboration with long-term partners from the National Scientific and Technical Research Council CONICET and the Bariloche Atomic Center and Balseiro Institute in Argentina, the team experimentally realized a universal scheme for selectively transferring populations within a multilevel quantum system using strong time periodic modulation.

Fiber setup compresses mid-infrared pulses to 187 femtoseconds using just 80 watts

Ultrashort mid-infrared (mid-IR) laser pulses are essential for applications such as molecular spectroscopy, nonlinear microscopy, and biomedical imaging, but their generation often relies on complex and power-intensive systems that are difficult to implement outside of specialized laboratories. These systems usually require high pump powers, elaborate optical setups, and precise alignment, which can limit their widespread adoption and practical use in everyday research and clinical settings.

In a paper published in the IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, a team of researchers from SASTRA Deemed University, Thanjavur, report a compact, fiber-based method for generating clean ultrashort mid-IR pulses at significantly reduced input power.

The study demonstrates that high-quality pulse compression can be achieved using a holmium-doped ZBLAN photonic crystal fiber integrated into a nonlinear optical loop mirror (NOLM), offering a simpler and more energy-efficient alternative to conventional systems.

Stacked quantum materials enable precise spin control without external magnetic fields

Spintronics—a technology that harnesses the electron’s magnetic quantum states to carry information—could pave the way for a new generation of ultra-energy-efficient electronics. Yet a major challenge has been the ability to control these delicate quantum properties with sufficient precision for practical applications. By combining different quantum materials, researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have now taken a decisive step forward, achieving unprecedented control over spin phenomena. The advance opens the door to next-generation low-power data processing and memory technologies.

Data centers, cloud services, AI and connected systems account for a rapidly growing share of global energy consumption. In the quest for new, more energy-efficient technological solutions, spin electronics, or spintronics, has proven to be a new and promising approach. Instead of relying solely on the movement of electric charge, spintronics use magnetic states to carry information. More specifically, it takes advantage of a quantum property of electrons known as spin, which makes electrons behave like tiny magnets.

“Just like a compass needle, an electron’s spin can point in one of two directions—up or down. These two directions can be used to represent digital information, in the same way today’s electronics use 0s and 1s,” explains Saroj Dash, Professor of Quantum Device Physics at Chalmers University of Technology.

This Spacetime Quasicrystal Could Solve Physicists’ Biggest Problem

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What is space, really? That’s one of the biggest questions in science. According to a pair of researchers from the Perimeter Institute, the answer to that is: a quasicrystal. What is a quasicrystal, and how is space a quasicrystal? Let’s take a look.

Paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.

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#science #sciencenews #spacetime #physicsteacher.

What is space? That’s one of the biggest questions, not just in the foundations of physics, but in all of science. According to a new paper, the answer may be a quasicrystal, an idea from researchers working on quantum gravity. This video explores the implications of this idea, touching on concepts like String Theory and Loop Quantum Gravity, to understand what it might mean for theoretical physics.

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