Researchers from the University of Groningen, along with colleagues from the universities of Nijmegen and Twente in the Netherlands and the Harbin Institute of Technology in China, have discovered a new superconductive state that could have significant applications in the field of superconducting electronics. The team has presented evidence for a variant of the FFLO
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Millimeter wave (mmWave) radio frequencies are widely used in modern cars and autonomous vehicles to enable advanced features such as self-driving and assisted driving. However, the use of these frequencies also exposes these vehicles to potential cyberattacks, which can compromise the safety of passengers and pedestrians. To address this issue, researchers from the lab of
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In the world of quantum computing, it is important to have scalable photonic quantum computing architectures that rely on low-loss, high-speed, reconfigurable circuits and near-deterministic resource state generators. Recently, in a report published in Science Advances, Patrik Sund and his team at the center of hybrid quantum networks at the University of Copenhagen and the
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A new study conducted by Neil J. Lant and his team at Procter & Gamble’s Newcastle Innovation Center suggests that condenser dryers, while reducing airborne microfibers compared to vented dryers, are significant contributors to waterborne microfiber pollution. The study found that both dryer types produce microfiber pollution, including water pollution from rinsing lint traps in
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Efficient energy conversion devices for powering electronic devices and heating homes necessitate a detailed understanding of how molecules move and vibrate when undergoing light-induced chemical reactions. Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have successfully visualized the distortions of chemical bonds in a methane molecule after it absorbs light, loses
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