A fifteen-year-old dubbed "Belgium's little Einstein" has completed his PhD in quantum physics in what could be record time.
By PHILIP HOPKINS THE Yallourn power station is likely to remain open longer because the large-scale battery technology to [...] ...
Periodic maintenance is common too, but still inefficient and often based on time, not actual machine condition. That ...
Using artificial intelligence, researchers at the RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences, ...
Whether it is a cube of sugar or a chunk of a mineral, a mathematical analysis can identify how many fragments of each size ...
We can't see dark matter directly, so studying it pushes the boundaries of our creativity as scientists. How exciting, says ...
China’s Giant Underground Neutrino Observatory Just Released Its First Results—And They’re Promising ...
The University of Chicago, where Fermi split the atom in 1942, is becoming the center of a new form of advanced technology.
Shattered glass does not leap back into your hand. Smoke from a match does not gather itself and crawl back inside. In ...
A 15-year-old prodigy in Belgium has earned a PhD in Quantum Physics, securing his place as one of the youngest PhD holders ...
Over the past decades, physicists and quantum engineers introduced a wide range of systems that perform desired functions ...
What if the famous P vs NP problem isn’t just about algorithms but about the observers trying to solve them? Research ...