If you’re reading this column Sunday morning, I’m currently on the road headed north to the University of Vermont to watch my ...
Traditionally, science has been the counterargument for the existence of God. But mathematicians Olivier Bonnassies and ...
Two engineers, Michel-Yves Bolloré and Olivier Bonnassies, set out to explore whether the universe has a cause in their new book God: The Science, The Evidence. A best-seller in Europe, it examines ...
Why do so many turn to quantum physics to explain mystical experiences? This post explores how Quantum Field Theory has ...
Two physicists at the University of Stuttgart have proven that the Carnot principle, a central law of thermodynamics, does ...
A glittering hunk of crystal gets its iridescence from a highly regular atomic structure. Frank Wilczek, the 2012 Nobel ...
This is an exciting time for the physics community. The Nobel Prize in Physics was announced last week. A Berkeley professor, along with two other scientists, his postdoc and a ...
Read about the inauguration of the three-day international workshop on Quantum Technologies (IWQT-2025) at Banaras Hindu ...
Quantum Computing Nobel Prize honors John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for their pioneering work in macroscopic ...
Here’s one for the annals of unpredictable history: the most googled, streamed, STEMmed-up generation is also the one ...
John Clarke of UC Berkeley and Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis of UC Santa Barbara won the Nobel Prize in physics for ...
In the 1980s, John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis demonstrated quantum effects in an electric circuit, an advance that underlies today’s quantum computers.