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23.03.2026
21:13 Yahoo Science Are mysterious 'Little Red Dots' discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope actually baby galaxies under construction?

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18:13 PowerMag.com OpenAI in Talks With Helion to Secure Fusion Energy

Artificial intelligence (AI) group OpenAI is reportedly discussing buying electricity from Helion Energy, the fusion startup company based in Everett, Washington. Sources told POWER that a deal would enable OpenAI to be guaranteed part of Helion's power generation, with as much as 5 GW available by 2030 and up to 50 GW by 2035. The post OpenAI in Talks With Helion to Secure Fusion Energy appeared first on POWER Magazine.

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18:11 Phys.org Quantum computers could have a fundamental limit after all

The performance of quantum computers could cap out after around 1,000 qubits, according to a new analysis published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Through new calculations, Tim Palmer at the University of Oxford has reconsidered the mathematical foundations underlying the quantum principles behind the technology, concluding that restrictions on the information-carrying capacity of large quantum systems could make their computing power far more limited than many researchers predict.

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17:55 UniverseToday.Com Black Hole Mergers Test the Limits of General Relativity

We can now use the gravitational waves of black holes to test general relativity and look for evidence of alternative theories of gravity.

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16:43 Phys.org Superconducting quantum processor performs well with significantly less wiring

Quantum computers, computing systems that process information using quantum mechanical effects, could outperform classical computers on some computational tasks. These computers rely on qubits, the basic units of quantum information, which can exist in multiple states (0, 1 or both simultaneously), due to quantum effects known as superposition and entanglement.

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15:21 Yahoo Science Could our universe exist because black holes ate up all the antimatter?

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15:09 Space.com Are mysterious 'Little Red Dots' discovered by the James Webb Space Telescope actually baby galaxies under construction?

What if the mysterious 'Little Red Dots' aren't baby black holes, but rather globular clusters in their messy, glorious formation?

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14:13 Photonics.com Focused Energy, University of Rochester Partner on Fusion Research

Fusion energy startup Focused Energy and the University of Rochester’s Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE) have established a $6.9 million partnership to address fundamental challenges in inertial fusion energy (IFE) and accelerate progress toward practical, sustainable fusion power. Conceptual rendering of Focused Energy’s planned Fusion Pilot Plant. Courtesy of Focused Energy. Through the collaboration, LLE will contribute its advanced experimental and modeling capabilities — including the high-bandwidth FLUX laser system — to investigate laser-plasma instabilities (LPI). These instabilities, which include phenomena such as cross-beam energy transfer, stimulated Raman scatter, and two-plasmon decay, can...

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13:03 Space.com Could our universe exist because black holes ate up all the antimatter?

Did primordial black holes born during the Big Bang swallow the universe's antimatter, allowing matter to dominate the cosmos?

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06:44 ScienceDaily.com World’s first quantum battery could enable ultra fast charging

Scientists in Australia have demonstrated a prototype quantum battery that could revolutionize energy storage. By harnessing quantum effects, it can absorb energy in a rapid “super absorption” event, enabling much faster charging than conventional batteries. Even more surprisingly, the system becomes more efficient as it scales up. The research opens the door to ultra-fast, next-generation energy technologies.

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05:07 ScienceDaily.com This floating time crystal breaks Newton’s third law of motion

Scientists have created a new kind of time crystal using sound waves to levitate tiny beads in mid-air. These particles interact in a one-sided, unbalanced way, breaking the usual rules of motion and creating a steady, repeating rhythm. The system is surprisingly simple yet reveals complex physics with big implications. It could help advance quantum computing and deepen our understanding of biological timing systems.

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22.03.2026
22:11 NYT Science J. Michael Bishop, Nobel Prize Winner for Cancer Research, Dies at 90

He helped discover cancer-causing genes. Later, as chancellor of the University of California, San Francisco, he led a major expansion.

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00:55 UniverseToday.Com How Will Martian Gravity Affect Skeletal Muscle?

Marie Mortreux, an assistant professor in the University of Rhode Island’s College of Health Sciences, is part of an international team of researchers studying how the Mars’s gravity would affect astronauts’ skeletal muscle.

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21.03.2026
22:06 Phys.org JWST probes emerging young star clusters in nearby spiral galaxy NGC 628

Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), an international team of astronomers has observed a nearby spiral galaxy known as NGC 628. Results of the observational campaign, published March 10 on the arXiv pre-print server, shed more light on the population of emerging young star clusters in this galaxy.

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19:04 Phys.org Superconducting altermagnets could carry spin without energy loss

Researchers have proposed that a newly identified class of magnetic materials could extend the zero-resistance currents of superconductors to electron spins. Publishing their calculations in Physical Review X, Kyle Monkman and colleagues at the University of British Columbia propose how "altermagnets" could enable persistent spin currents to flow without dissipation. If confirmed experimentally, the effect could provide a powerful new platform for spintronics, where information is encoded in spin rather than electric charge.

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18:16 NewScientist.Com You can now buy a DIY quantum computer

Qilimanjaro is selling a relatively cheap kit with everything you need for a quantum computer – you just need to be able to put it together

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18:08 LiveScience.com Physicists created an electron 'catapult' that moves particles at 'extraordinary' speed

Using a new method, physicists found a way to 'catapult' electrons across solar materials in quadrillionths of a second.

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15:33 Phys.org Saturday Citations: Merging brown dwarfs, ancient machine guns, gravitational wave detection

This week, among a lot of other important findings, we learned that emperor cichlid fish have gaze sensitivity and dislike it if you look at them—or especially their children. England is looking for a solution to its 5-billion-liter water deficit. And a high-fiber diet isn't only healthy for you—it also benefits your parasitic tapeworms!

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14:45 ScienceDaily.com Scientists just found a hidden 48-dimensional world in quantum light

A routine quantum optics technique just revealed an extraordinary secret: entangled light can carry incredibly complex topological structures. Researchers found these hidden patterns reach up to 48 dimensions, offering a vast new “alphabet” for encoding quantum information. Unlike previous assumptions, this topology can emerge from a single property of light—orbital angular momentum.

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14:21 Phys.org Physicists find electronic agents that govern flat band quantum materials

Physicists have directly visualized the fundamental electronic building blocks of flat-band quantum materials, a class of systems in which electron motion is effectively quenched and strong interactions give rise to emergent phases of matter. In a study published in Nature Physics, Qimiao Si's group at Rice University, in collaboration with researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science, identified compact molecular orbitals that act as the key electronic agents governing the exotic behavior of these materials.

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10:59 NewScientist.Com Inside the world’s first antimatter delivery service

On Tuesday, CERN will transport antiprotons on a truck for the first time, testing the plan to deliver antimatter by road to research labs across Europe

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20.03.2026
20:34 Phys.org 'Plastic-eating' fusion enzyme improves polyester textile recycling

In a new study, scientists from the universities of Portsmouth and Manchester report that a specially engineered enzyme can significantly speed up the breakdown of PET—the plastic used in water bottles, food packaging and polyester clothing—when it is processed at high concentrations similar to those used in industry. The findings are published in the journal Bioresource Technology.

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19:51 Phys.org New controls can stretch, blur and even reverse quantum time flow

In new research published in Physical Review X, scientists have designed quantum control protocols that generate processes more consistent with time flowing backward than forward. The protocols—techniques to control quantum systems—modify a quantum system's "arrow of time," the concept of time as moving in one forward direction. The work opens up possibilities for energy extraction from quantum systems and for quantum state preparation.

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17:50 PhysicsWorld.com Extracting entropy information from quantum dots

New work could help optimize quantum memories and information processing The post Extracting entropy information from quantum dots appeared first on Physics World.

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15:07 Phys.org A new entanglement-enhanced quantum sensing scheme

Over the past decades, quantum scientists have introduced various technologies that operate leveraging quantum mechanical effects, including quantum sensors, computers and memory devices. Most of these technologies leverage entanglement, a quantum phenomenon via which two or more particles become intrinsically linked and share a unified quantum state, irrespective of the distance between them.

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11:57 ScienceDaily.com Scientists turn CO2 into fuel using breakthrough single-atom catalyst

Researchers have created a cutting-edge catalyst that turns CO2 into methanol more efficiently than ever before. Instead of using clumps of metal atoms, they engineered a system where each single indium atom actively drives the reaction. This dramatically reduces energy needs while making the process easier to study and optimize. The result could accelerate the shift toward cleaner fuels and sustainable chemical production.

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11:38 IbTimes.co.uk Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna: UFOs Are Inter-dimensional – Not Aliens – And the Pentagon Is Hiding It

Florida Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna asserts that UFOs are inter-dimensional beings, not extraterrestrial aliens, and accuses the Pentagon of concealing evidence

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11:10 IbTimes.co.uk FDA Recalls 90,000 Children's Ibuprofen Bottles Nationwide After Consumers Report Black Particles, Gel Mass

FDA Class II recall: Nearly 90,000 bottles of children's ibuprofen by Strides Pharma contaminated with black particles. Check lot numbers 7261973A and 7261974A to ensure safety. Learn about potential health risks and next steps.

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02:37 FoxNews.com Nuclear fusion advances, but challenges remain for power grid

Nuclear fusion energy could become commercially viable by the early 2030s as scientists work to replicate the sun's power, potentially transforming energy.

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02:23 Yahoo Science These cotton candy exoplanets hide behind a haze even the James Webb Space Telescope can't penetrate

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00:13 Space.com These cotton candy exoplanets hide behind a haze even the James Webb Space Telescope can't penetrate

These worlds are among the least dense ever found, and all attempts to probe their atmospheres have been blocked by a mysterious smog.

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19.03.2026
20:06 Phys.org No exotic physics needed: A new formation mechanism of skyrmions inside magnets

Skyrmions, in which electron spins inside a magnet are arranged like vortices, are a key structure in next-generation spintronics technology. KAIST researchers have shown that skyrmions can form using only the fundamental physical interactions within magnets, without requiring special physical conditions.

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19:51 Phys.org Gravitational waves leave imprints on light emitted by atoms, theoretical study predicts

Gravitational waves are ripples in spacetime produced by violent cosmic events, such as the merging of black holes. So far, direct detections have relied on measuring tiny distance changes over kilometer-scale instruments. In a new theoretical study published in Physical Review Letters, researchers at Stockholm University, Nordita, and the University of Tübingen propose an unconventional approach: tracking how gravitational waves reshape the light emitted by atoms. The work describes a possible detection route, but an experimental demonstration remains for the future.

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18:21 Phys.org Carefully controlled atoms make renewables more viable for plastics and fuels production

A catalyst developed by a Washington State University research team efficiently converts abundant, renewable ethanol into valuable molecules needed for production of plastics, fuels, and everyday products. The advance could someday make it easier to use renewables rather than petrochemicals to make common products. Led by Regents Professor Yong Wang, the researchers, including from Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), report on their work in the journal, Chem Catalysis.

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18:15 ScientificAmerican.Com Gerd Faltings, mathematician who proved the Mordell conjecture, wins the Abel Prize at age 71

The Mordell conjecture—now known as Faltings’s theorem—concerns the number of special points on a curve

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17:04 LiveScience.com Scientists witness birth of one of the universe's strongest magnets for the first time, thanks to a general relativity 'magic trick'

Astronomers have detected strange "wobbles" in the light curve of a super bright supernova, hinting that a magnetar was born inside the extreme stellar explosion.

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16:22 ComputerWeekly.com Interview: Sunrise, a supercomputer for nuclear fusion research

We speak to Rob Akers, director for computing programmes at the UK Atomic Energy Institute, about its new artificial intelligence supercomputer

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15:48 TechnologyReview.com The Download: Quantum computing for health, and why the world doesn’t recycle more nuclear waste

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. A $5 million prize awaits proof that quantum computers can solve health care problems  In a laboratory on the outskirts of Oxford, a quantum computer built from atoms and light awaits…

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15:13 ScienceDaily.com Physicists discover a heavy cousin of the proton at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider

A new subatomic particle known as the Ξcc⁺ has been discovered at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. This heavy proton-like particle contains two charm quarks and was detected using the upgraded LHCb experiment. Scientists observed it through its decay into lighter particles in high-energy collisions. The finding confirms predictions and settles a decades-long question about its existence.

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14:44 Nature.Com Mathematician who reshaped number theory wins prestigious Abel prize

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14:44 Nature.Com UK bets big on homegrown fusion and quantum — can it lead the world?

Nature is the foremost international weekly scientific journal in the world and is the flagship journal for Nature Portfolio. It publishes the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science and technology on the basis of its originality, importance, interdisciplinary interest, timeliness, accessibility, elegance and surprising conclusions. Nature publishes landmark papers, award winning news, leading comment and expert opinion on important, topical scientific news and events that enable readers to share the latest discoveries in science and evolve the discussion amongst the global scientific community.

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14:44 NewScientist.Com Mathematician wins 2026 Abel prize for solving 60-year-old mystery

Gerd Faltings shocked mathematicians around the world for his 1983 proof of the Mordell conjecture, which brought together seemingly disparate mathematical fields

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14:39 Nature.com (news) Mathematician who reshaped number theory wins prestigious Abel prize

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14:39 Nature.com (news) UK bets big on homegrown fusion and quantum — can it lead the world?

Nature is the foremost international weekly scientific journal in the world and is the flagship journal for Nature Portfolio. It publishes the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science and technology on the basis of its originality, importance, interdisciplinary interest, timeliness, accessibility, elegance and surprising conclusions. Nature publishes landmark papers, award winning news, leading comment and expert opinion on important, topical scientific news and events that enable readers to share the latest discoveries in science and evolve the discussion amongst the global scientific community.

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14:06 TechnologyReview.com A $5 million prize awaits proof that quantum computers can solve health care problems

I’m standing in front of a quantum computer built out of atoms and light at the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre on the outskirts of Oxford. On a laboratory table, a complex matrix of mirrors and lenses surrounds a Rubik’s Cube–size cell where 100 cesium atoms are suspended in grid formation by a carefully manipulated…

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14:05 NYT Science Gerd Faltings of Germany Wins 2026 Abel Prize in Mathematics

Gerd Faltings proved a conjecture that had been unsolved for six decades, using connections between numbers and geometry.

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13:10 Technology.org China Plans to Finalize Post-Quantum Cryptography Standards Within Three Years

China is on track to produce national standards for post-quantum cryptography within three years, according to Wang Xiaoyun,

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12:38 Physics.Aps.org A Time Crystal as a Clock

Author(s): Sophia ChenNew theoretical work shows how an unusual state of matter that oscillates between spin states could be used in timekeeping. [Physics 19, s39] Published Wed Mar 18, 2026

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01:03 Phys.org Is glass a solid or a super slow liquid? Physicists create equilibrium glassy phase from rod-shaped particles

Glass appears to be a solid, but in theory it sometimes behaves more like an extremely slow liquid. Physicists in Utrecht now show that glass-like structures can also exist in equilibrium, which is something many theories say should be impossible.

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00:20 Phys.org Durable dual-atom catalyst enables high-temperature CO₂ to CO conversion

The conversion of carbon dioxide (CO₂) into carbon monoxide (CO), an industrial feedstock, has attracted significant attention as a key step for producing synthetic fuels and chemical products. However, because CO₂ is a chemically stable molecule, the reaction typically requires high temperatures of 500–600 °C or higher, and catalyst performance often degrades during operation.

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18.03.2026
23:21 Phys.org Terahertz spin waves can be converted into computer signals, study shows

What will the computers of tomorrow look like? Chances are good that spintronics will play a decisive role in the next generation of computers. In spintronics, the intrinsic angular momentum of an electron (the spin) is used to store, process and transmit data. This technology is already in use today, for example in hard drives. However, the scope of what is possible extends much further: More recent approaches aim at using not just individual spins, but entire spin waves made up of partly hundreds of trillions of spins. Such collective spin excitations are known as magnons. They could enable extremely energy-efficient data transmission—even in the terahertz range.

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22:04 Phys.org Building trust in the future of quantum computing

Quantum computers could solve certain problems that would take traditional classical computers an impractically long time to solve. At the Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (JAIST), researchers are now working to make these systems reliable and trustworthy.

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20:10 Nature.Com Adventitious carbon breaks symmetry in oxide contact electrification

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20:10 Nature.Com Bistable superlattice switching in a quantum spin Hall insulator

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20:10 Nature.Com Magnetic resonance control of spin-correlated radical pair dynamics in vivo

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20:04 Nature.com (news) Adventitious carbon breaks symmetry in oxide contact electrification

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20:04 Nature.com (news) Bistable superlattice switching in a quantum spin Hall insulator

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20:04 Nature.com (news) Magnetic resonance control of spin-correlated radical pair dynamics in vivo

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18:00 PhysicsWorld.com Quantum physicists Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard win $1m Turing Award

Duo bag award often described as the “Nobel Prize in Computing” The post Quantum physicists Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard win $1m Turing Award appeared first on Physics World.

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17:23 Phys.org A world‑first quantum battery charges faster when it gets bigger—but it's tiny and only lasts nanoseconds

You're late for an important appointment. Just as you are leaving your house, you realize your phone is flat. Imagine you could charge it almost instantly by exploiting the strange rules of quantum physics. That's the promise of quantum batteries.

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17:08 Phys.org Clearest evidence yet that giant planets spin faster than their cosmic lookalikes

For decades, astronomers have struggled to differentiate giant planets from brown dwarfs, a class of objects more massive than planets but too small to ignite nuclear fusion like true stars. Through a telescope, these cosmic lookalikes can have overlapping brightness, temperatures, and even atmospheric fingerprints. The striking similarity leaves astronomers unsure if they have observed an oversized planet or an undersized star. Now, a Northwestern University-led team has uncovered a crucial clue that separates the two: how fast they spin.

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16:30 PhysicsWorld.com Superfluid plasmon appears in a two-dimensional superconductor

New finding could advance our understanding of high-temperature superconductors The post Superfluid plasmon appears in a two-dimensional superconductor appeared first on Physics World.

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14:44 Phys.org Microwave quantum network shows resilience against heat-related disturbances

Quantum communication systems are emerging solutions to transmit information between devices in a network leveraging quantum mechanical phenomena, such as entanglement. Entanglement is a quantum effect that entails a link between two or more particles that share a unified state even at a distance, so that measuring one instantly affects the other.

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14:08 Photonics.com Microscope Provides View of Electrons in Solids

Electrons are tiny and constantly in motion. How they behave in a crystal lattice determines key material properties: electrical conductivity, magnetism, or novel quantum effects. Anyone aiming to develop the information technologies of tomorrow must understand what electrons do. At Forschungszentrum Jülich, a new tool is now available for this purpose: a momentum microscope that was fully developed and built on site. The new Jülich momentum microscope requires only a UV laser (right). Courtesy of Forschungszentrum Jülich/Bernd Nörig. “Internationally, we are currently seeing rapidly growing interest in this method,” said researcher Christian Tusche of Forschungszentrum Jülich. Until...

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13:57 ScienceDaily.com Even JWST can’t see through this planet’s massive haze

Kepler-51d is a giant, ultra-light “super-puff” planet wrapped in an unusually thick haze that’s blocking scientists from seeing what it’s made of. Observations from JWST revealed that this haze may be one of the largest ever detected, possibly stretching as wide as Earth itself. The planet’s low density and close orbit don’t match existing models of how gas giants form or survive. Now, researchers are left with more questions than answers about how such a strange world came to be.

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13:57 ScienceDaily.com Scientists used 7,000 GPUs to simulate a tiny quantum chip in extreme detail

Researchers have pushed quantum chip design into a new era by simulating every physical detail before fabrication. Using a supercomputer with nearly 7,000 GPUs, they modeled how signals travel and interact inside an ultra-tiny chip. Unlike earlier “black box” approaches, this method captures real materials, layouts, and qubit behavior. The result is a powerful new way to spot problems early and build better quantum hardware faster.

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13:57 ScienceDaily.com MIT scientists finally see hidden quantum “jiggling” inside superconductors

MIT physicists have built a powerful new microscope that uses terahertz light to uncover hidden quantum motions inside superconductors. By compressing this normally unwieldy light into a tiny region, they were able to observe electrons moving together in a frictionless, wave-like state for the first time. This discovery opens a new window into how superconductors really work. It could also help drive future breakthroughs in high-speed wireless communication.

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12:55 Nature.com (news) Founders of quantum information win top prize in computer science

Nature is the foremost international weekly scientific journal in the world and is the flagship journal for Nature Portfolio. It publishes the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science and technology on the basis of its originality, importance, interdisciplinary interest, timeliness, accessibility, elegance and surprising conclusions. Nature publishes landmark papers, award winning news, leading comment and expert opinion on important, topical scientific news and events that enable readers to share the latest discoveries in science and evolve the discussion amongst the global scientific community.

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12:46 Nature.Com Founders of quantum information win top prize in computer science

Nature is the foremost international weekly scientific journal in the world and is the flagship journal for Nature Portfolio. It publishes the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science and technology on the basis of its originality, importance, interdisciplinary interest, timeliness, accessibility, elegance and surprising conclusions. Nature publishes landmark papers, award winning news, leading comment and expert opinion on important, topical scientific news and events that enable readers to share the latest discoveries in science and evolve the discussion amongst the global scientific community.

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12:32 Physics.Aps.org Refining Control of Quantum Memories

Author(s): Ryan WilkinsonA new technique efficiently and reliably manipulates information held in a quantum memory. [Physics 19, s29] Published Tue Mar 17, 2026

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12:12 QuantaMagazine.org Quantum Cryptography Pioneers Win Turing Award

Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard were recognized for their foundational work in quantum information science. The post Quantum Cryptography Pioneers Win Turing Award first appeared on Quanta Magazine

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11:39 Technology.org Five reasons businesses need to start preparing for quantum

Developed by researchers and industry across the Quantum Australia network  Quantum technologies are beginning to influence the systems

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05:56 ScienceDaily.com JWST reveals a strange sulfur world unlike any planet we know

Astronomers have identified a strange new kind of exoplanet that challenges how scientists classify worlds beyond our Solar System. The planet, L 98-59 d, appears to contain a vast ocean of molten rock beneath its surface that traps large amounts of sulfur deep inside. Observations from the James Webb Space Telescope revealed unusual sulfur-rich gases in its atmosphere and a surprisingly low density for its size.

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05:04 UniverseToday.Com CERN Adds a New Particle to Large Hadron Collider's Subatomic Zoo

Scientists at Europe's CERN research center say the Large Hadron Collider's LHCb experiment has discovered a "doubly charmed" particle that's like a proton, but four times as weighty.

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02:33 Yahoo Science X-ray spacecraft watches monster black hole wake up and fire cosmic bullets at starburst galaxy

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02:30 Phys.org Scientists create a new state of matter at room temperature using light and nanostructures

Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) have created a new and unusual state of matter—known as a supersolid—by engineering how light and matter interact inside a nanoscale device. The work, published in Nature Nanotechnology, demonstrates that this exotic quantum phase can exist at room temperature, overcoming a long-standing limitation in the field.

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01:01 ScientificAmerican.Com Physicists discover a 'charmed' new particle

The Large Hadron Collider just produced a never-before-seen particle made of charm and down quarks

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00:52 Phys.org Proof-of-concept quantum battery shows faster charging as it gets larger

Australian scientists have made a significant leap forward in energy storage technology with the world's first proof-of-concept quantum battery. Similar to conventional batteries, this quantum version charges, stores and discharges energy—and is the first to do so.

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00:32 Aps.org Editors' Suggestions Merger of Spinning, Accreting Supermassive Black Hole Binaries

Author(s): Lorenzo Ennoggi, Manuela Campanelli, Julian Krolik, Scott C. Noble, Yosef Zlochower, and Maria Chiara de SimoneState of the art numerical simulations predict telltale photon signatures from mergers of supermassive black holes. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 136, 111401] Published Tue Mar 17, 2026

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17.03.2026
23:38 Phys.org Quantum-inspired laser system delivers distance measurements with sub-millimeter accuracy

A new laser range-finding technique, inspired by quantum physics, that can measure distances under strong solar background has been demonstrated by researchers at the University of Bristol. The team has proved their hypothesis by testing out their new method on some of the university's most iconic buildings.

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22:37 Phys.org Experiment observes quantum radiation reaction as electrons hit an ultra-intense laser

For the first time, a quantum radiation reaction in strong electromagnetic fields has been demonstrated experimentally by allowing electrons to collide with an extremely intense and powerful laser beam. The research findings provide insights needed for new quantum-mechanical computational models and clues to how the laws of physics operate near neutron stars or black holes.

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21:51 Phys.org Mathematical foundations for noise-tolerant quantum catalysts in real-world environments

Quantum catalysts are specialized resources that enable quantum state transformations previously thought impossible, holding promise for advancements in quantum computing and thermodynamics. A recent international study has identified the conditions under which these catalysts can operate reliably even amid environmental noise, marking a significant step toward practical quantum technologies.

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21:20 Phys.org Scientists discover new heavy proton-like particle at CERN

Scientists from the University of Manchester have played a leading role in the discovery of a new subatomic particle at CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The particle, known as the Ξcc⁺ (Xi‑cc‑plus), is a new type of heavy proton-like particle containing two charm quarks and one down quark.

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21:05 Phys.org Perovskite crystals can host qubits, challenging long-held assumptions

For the first time, researchers have demonstrated that the properties of the perovskite family of materials can be used to create so-called quantum bits. The findings, published in the journal Nature Communications, pave the way for more affordable materials in future quantum computers.

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20:38 IbTimes.co.uk Jordin Sparks Defends American Idol Grand Prize After Kelly Clarkson's Shocking Reveal

Jordin Sparks and Kelly Clarkson discuss the unfulfilled promises of American Idol, including prize money and cars, in recent interviews.

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19:48 Phys.org Ultrafast laser pulses bring diamond-based quantum internet closer to reality

The controlled generation of single photons is an essential element of numerous quantum technology applications, such as quantum networks and quantum computing. A research team has now demonstrated the successful application of the new SUPER (Swing-UP of the quantum EmitteR population) method. The approach facilitates the controlled generation of light particles (photons). Results of the study were recently published in the journal Nature Communications.

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19:42 Nature.Com Triple-junction solar cells with improved carrier and photon management

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19:37 Nature.com (news) Triple-junction solar cells with improved carrier and photon management

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18:47 Phys.org Discrete time crystal acts as a usable sensor for weak magnetic oscillations

The bizarre properties of discrete time crystals could be harnessed to detect extremely subtle oscillations of magnetic fields, physicists in the US and Germany have revealed. Publishing their results in Nature Physics, a team led by Ashok Ajoy at the University of California, Berkeley, show for the first time that these exotic materials could have practical uses far beyond their current status as an impractical curiosity.

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17:42 ScientificAmerican.Com What do hundreds of gravitational-wave events reveal about the universe?

A new data release more than doubles the number of gravitational-wave candidate events—and reveals unexpected complexities of merging black holes

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16:38 PhysicsWorld.com International scientists head into the fast-lane of Denmark’s burgeoning quantum ecosystem

Ambition and international talent converge as Denmark scales up in quantum science The post International scientists head into the fast-lane of Denmark’s burgeoning quantum ecosystem appeared first on Physics World.

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14:22 ScienceDaily.com Rare supernova from 10 billion years ago may reveal the secret of dark energy

Astronomers may have found an exciting new clue about dark energy—the mysterious force driving the universe’s accelerating expansion. They discovered an extraordinarily bright supernova from more than 10 billion years ago whose light was bent and magnified by a foreground galaxy, creating multiple images through gravitational lensing. Because the light from each image traveled slightly different paths, it arrived at Earth at different times, letting scientists effectively watch different moments of the same cosmic explosion simultaneously.

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14:22 NewScientist.Com Particle discovered at CERN solves a 20-year-old mystery

Physicists working on the LHCb experiment have spotted an elusive and fleeting particle, a heavier and more charming cousin to the proton, that has been sought for decades

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14:17 ComputerWeekly.com Nuclear Fusion HPC: A Computer Weekly Downtime Upload podcast

We speak to UKAEA director for computing programmes, Rob Akers, about the new Sunrise AI supercomputer for nuclear fusion research and development

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12:28 Physics.Aps.org Spin Supercurrents in Superconducting Altermagnets

Author(s): Huaiming GuoMaterials from a new class of magnets could host permanent dissipationless spin currents when they enter a superconducting state. [Physics 19, 33] Published Mon Mar 16, 2026

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02:47 Phys.org High-resolution electron microscopy sheds light on the cellular responses to stress

An international team led by researchers from the University Medical Center Göttingen (UMG), Germany, has used advanced electron microscopy technologies to capture key cellular mechanisms of stress resistance with near-atomic precision. They were able to show that the protein mHsp60, which helps other proteins to adopt their functional form, remodels its structure under stress conditions and thereby increases its activity to ensure mitochondrial functionality.

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01:50 Phys.org JWST maps Europa's CO₂ beyond Tara Regio, hinting at subsurface exchange

Europa is not supposed to look the way it does. Jupiter's icy moon is scarred by a chaotic patchwork of fractured terrain, crisscrossed ridges, and disrupted surface regions that suggest something dynamic is happening beneath its frozen shell. Scientists have long suspected that a vast liquid ocean, kept warm by the gravitational kneading of Jupiter's enormous gravity, lies hidden beneath that ice. Now, a new study using the James Webb Space Telescope is adding a crucial piece to the puzzle, and the implications reach right to the heart of astrobiology.

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01:21 Phys.org Laser-assisted electron scattering seen with circularly polarized light for the first time

Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have succeeded in detecting laser-assisted electron scattering (LAES) using circularly polarized light for the first time. The use of circularly polarized light promises valuable insights into how atomic scale "helicity" impacts how electrons interact with matter and light.

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00:53 Phys.org Not just spin—electron orbitals can provide new method for controlling magnetism

Research is actively underway to develop a "dream memory" that can reduce heat generation in smartphones and laptops while delivering faster performance and lower power consumption. Korean researchers propose a new possibility for controlling magnetism using the exchange interaction of electron orbitals—the motion of electrons orbiting around an atomic nucleus—rather than relying on the conventional exchange interaction of electron spin, the rotational property of electrons inside semiconductors.

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16.03.2026
19:34 Phys.org ISS study identifies thresholds for muscle atrophy and fiber changes in reduced gravity

It's well known that spaceflight causes muscle atrophy and other biological changes in reduced gravity, and especially in near-zero gravity (microgravity) environments. However, the gravity threshold needed to maintain sufficient muscle health in space is still unclear.

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