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This Purple Diamond Microwave Laser Could Be Key To Detecting Future Deep Space SignalsThe system creates a maser, the microwave equivalent of a laser. It is used to amplify weak microwave and radio signals. Amplifiers are very useful and not just for music concerts. With the right ...
Now, a team of physicists from Washington University in St. Louis have created a new type of time crystal called a ...
You reach for the microwave meal, and think, if only I didn’t have to wait that three-and-a-half minutes, 900 watts just isn’t enough power. What you need is a laser microwave, and as luck ...
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ZME Science on MSNResearchers create a new type of “time crystal” inside a diamondYet, in a dazzling experiment, a group of physicists has done just that. They’ve created a new kind of temporal structure ...
Princeton University researchers have built a rice grain-sized microwave laser. Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert!
WashU physicists shine a microwave laser into a chunk of diamond to create a time quasicrystal, a new phase of matter that repeats precise patterns in time and space. Credit: WashU In a new and ...
In the effort to build superconducting quantum computers, researchers around the world are working to develop electrical ...
Quantum computers use special bits called qubits, which are often made from microwave photons—tiny particles of microwave ...
By zapping a tiny diamond with a microwave laser, the scientists knocked out carbon atoms to allow electrons to move into the empty spaces and have quantum interactions that would form quasicrystals.
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