Gilles Brassard was attending a computer science meeting in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in the fall of 1979, when he decided to ...
Fiber Connect 2026 revealed how quantum computing is rapidly converging with fiber, edge, security, and data center ...
The use of quantum entanglement to enable selective image transmission through complex media can enhance applications from ...
Using a conventional computer and cutting-edge mathematical tools and code, physicists at the Center for Computational ...
Physicists at Peking University have uncovered a new way to confine light far beyond conventional limits — without relying on ...
Physicists searching for a better understanding of quantum gravity stumbled upon something unexpected: the defining ...
As the Colorado River dries up, how Western states are confronting the water crisis Roughly one in ten Americans gets their water from the Colorado River. But a worsening drought, driven in part by ...
STOCKHOLM (AP) — John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis won the Nobel Prize in Physics on Tuesday for research on seemingly obscure quantum tunneling that is advancing digital technology.