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Results 481 - 490 of 790 for Quantum computing
  • News - 2 Aug 2007
    Spintronics has the potential to have as profound an impact on electronics as the development of the transistor had 50 years ago. This exciting and challenging area of nanotechnology will come...
  • News - 27 Jul 2007
    An international team, including scientists from the London Center for Nanotechnology, has detected a hidden magnetic "quantum order" that extends over chains of 100 atoms in a ceramic...
  • News - 5 May 2007
    NEC Corporation, Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) and the Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN) have together successfully demonstrated the world's first quantum bit (qubit)...
  • News - 2 May 2007
    Collaborative research between scientists in the UK and USA has led to a major breakthrough in the understanding of antiferromagnets, published in this week’s Nature. Scientists at the London...
  • News - 17 Apr 2007
    Physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Stanford and Northwestern Universities have built micrometer-sized solid-state lasers in which a single quantum dot can play...
  • News - 14 Mar 2007
    Every time you switch on a light bulb, 10 to the power of 15 (a million times a billion) visible photons, the elementary particles of light, are illuminating the room in every second. If that is too...
  • Article - 30 May 2013
    Quantum dots have promising applications in a wide range of fields such as photovoltaics, medicine, and quantum computing.
  • Article - 28 Jan 2004
    UCLA professors, media and net artist Victoria Vesna and nanoscience pioneer James Gimzewski, have a groundbreaking project, "nano," now on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art's Boone...
  • News - 27 Feb 2025
    Researchers at the National Graphene Institute, University of Manchester, have made progress in quantum electronics with their study on spin injection into graphene. Their findings, published in...
  • News - 31 Jan 2025
    Researchers at Cornell University have developed a method to convert symmetric semiconductor particles into chiral materials—intricately twisted structures that produce films with enhanced...

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