Archive for the ‘quantum physics’ category: Page 325
Mar 3, 2021
CrownBio and JSR Life Sciences Partner with Cambridge Quantum Computing to Leverage Quantum Machine Learning for Novel Cancer Treatment Biomarker Discovery
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: genetics, quantum physics, robotics/AI
Crown Bioscience (CrownBio), JSR Life Sciences and Cambridge Quantum Computing (CQC) today announced a partnership agreement to explore the application of quantum technology to drive the identification of multi-gene biomarker discovery for oncology drug discovery.
Mar 2, 2021
Here’s how quantum computing could transform the future
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: computing, quantum physics
Experts predict that quantum computers will help “address humanity’s greatest challenges,” whether through drug discovery or climate tech.
Mar 2, 2021
Atomic nuclei in the quantum swing
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in category: quantum physics
The coherent excitation of atomic nuclei enables applications in atomic clocks, nuclear batteries and in the verification of natural constants. A team led by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics succeeded in the experiment by controlling laser pulses extremely precisely.
Mar 2, 2021
Interesting pattern in cross-sections observed in F + HD → HF + D reaction
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in categories: chemistry, quantum physics
A team of researchers from the University of Science and Technology of China, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Southern University of Science and Technology, has discovered a thought-provoking pattern in cross-sections observed in an F + HD → HF + D reaction. In their paper published in the journal Science, the group describes their double-pronged approach to learning more about the role of relativistic spin-orbit interactions in chemical reactions. T. Peter Rakitzis, with the University of Crete, and IESL-FORTH, has published a Perspectives piece in the same journal issue outlining the difficulty of studying chemical reactions at the quantum level and the work done by the team in China.
Mar 1, 2021
Quantum Building Blocks to Produce Exotic Electronic and Magnetic Properties
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: particle physics, quantum physics
Oak Ridge National Laboratory scientists demonstrated that an electron microscope can be used to selectively remove carbon atoms from graphene ’s atomically thin lattice and stitch transition-metal dopant atoms in their place.
This method could open the door to making quantum building blocks that can interact to produce exotic electronic, magnetic and topological properties.
This is the first precision positioning of transition-metal dopants in graphene. The produced graphene-dopant complexes can exhibit atomic-like behavior, inducing desired properties in the graphene.
Feb 28, 2021
Quantum Theory May Twist Cause And Effect Into Loops, With Effect Causing The Cause
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: quantum physics
Causality is one of those difficult scientific topics that can easily stray into the realm of philosophy.
Feb 26, 2021
Quantum communication device could create limitless data capacity
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: computing, quantum physics
California researchers discovered a way to leverage an unused property of light to apply the unrestricted nature of the quantum domain to wireless communication, creating a new type of channel with infinite capacity that could make looming data limitations irrelevant.
Feb 25, 2021
Dark Matter May Be Ordinary Matter in Parallel Spacetime Continuums – Here’s Why
Posted by Alex Vikoulov in categories: alien life, quantum physics, singularity
Now cosmology inches towards the next paradigm shift: One of the most mind-boggling discoveries of modernity is that the fabric of spacetime is emergent from something beneath it. “[O]ne new theory says that Dark Matter may be ordinary matter in a parallel universe. If a galaxy is hovering above in another dimension, we would not be able to see it. It would be invisible, yet we would feel its gravity. Hence, it might explain Dark Matter,” in the words of Michio Kaku as an opening quote to this article. #DarkMatter #DarkEnergy #QuantumGravity #ComputationalPhysics #MTheory #DTheoryofTime #OmegaSingularity #pancomputationalism #multiverse #ontology
Dark Matter could be ordinary matter in the “probabilistic space” and “phase space” (5th and 6th dimensions of M-theory), possibly with “dark star systems” and life, imperceptible to us at our current level of development. In turn, Dark Energy could be a.
Feb 24, 2021
Antimatter hydrogen has the same quantum quirk as normal hydrogen
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: nuclear energy, particle physics, quantum physics
O.,.o Could make a semi renewable fusion reactor or propulsion system.
Atoms of antihydrogen are affected by the Lamb shift, which results from transient particles appearing and disappearing.