You managed to board the harvester and make your way through the Barant Ship in the Equilibrium Dungeon. You have come across a Gladiator wielding two Praxic Blades. Yes, you saw that right. You are ...
Chinese physicist Pan Jianwei and his team have created a “quantum Lego block” that refuses to fall apart – even when shaken. Using a programmable quantum processor named Zuchongzhi 2, Pan’s team has ...
Quantum computing has crossed a line that classical machines cannot easily follow, pushing simulations of matter and forces into regimes that even the largest supercomputers struggle to touch. Instead ...
Abstract: This article explores the setup where large numbers of single-phase grid-forming inverters with droop control across distribution networks self-organize into a stable and balanced system ...
Researchers used a 58-qubit quantum processor to realize and probe a Floquet topological phase, revealing exotic non-equilibrium matter beyond classical reach. (Nanowerk News) Unlike conventional ...
Unlike conventional phases of matter, the so-called non-equilibrium quantum phases are defined by their dynamical and time-evolving properties — a behavior that cannot be captured by traditional ...
Creative Commons (CC): This is a Creative Commons license. Attribution (BY): Credit must be given to the creator. Aqueous two-phase systems (ATPS) are an effective alternative method for partial or ...
ABSTRACT: We investigate a representation of thermodynamic equations-of-state for water and steam using only physical constants and zero ad hoc parameters. Following the reported phase equilibria of a ...
Researchers have discovered that by shining different wavelengths (colors) of light on a material called magnetite, they can change its state, e.g. making it more or less conducive to electricity. The ...
Physicists discovered how to control magnetite’s structural properties through light-induced phase transitions, revealing hidden phases and offering a new method for manipulating materials on ...
“Some time ago, we showed that it is possible to induce an inverse phase transition in magnetite,” says physicist Fabrizio Carbone at EPFL. “It’s as if you took water and you could turn it into ice by ...
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