Scientists have chilled tiny electronics to a record low temperature0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- March 12, 2019
For the first time, nanoelectronics have been cooled to below a thousandth of a kelvin

For the first time, nanoelectronics have been cooled to below a thousandth of a kelvin

Human tissues experience a variety of mechanical stimuli that can affect their ability to carry out their physiological functions, such as protecting organs from injury. The controlled application of such stimuli to living tissues in vivo and in vitro has now proven instrumental to studying the conditions that lead to disease.

A team of physicists from the Joint Quantum Institute, the University of Maryland, the University of California Berkeley and Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics has implemented a test for quantum scrambling, a chaotic shuffling of the information stored among a collection of quantum particles. The team’s experiment, carried out on a group of seven ions, demonstrated a new way to distinguish between scrambling and true information loss.

Gene editors that target DNA bases may not be as safe as thought

The proposed accelerator would help physicists study Higgs boson particles in detail

Researchers have proposed a new idea that may explain why some Antarctic icebergs are tinged emerald green rather than the normal blue, potentially solving a decades-long scientific mystery.

Humans and animals aren’t the only ones farming – microbes are doing it, too, according to researchers who discovered that a fungus can farm bacteria.

A pair of Hewlett Packard Enterprise servers sent up to the International Space Station in August 2017 as an experiment have still not come back to Earth, three months after their intended return.

New research reveals that pairs of protons and neutrons within atomic nuclei influence the speed of quarks passing through

As digital billboards record customers’ reactions to advertisements tailored to them, just who is safeguarding Australians’ privacy?



