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Oct 25, 2016

Scientists Generate the Fastest Electric Current Ever Measured Inside a Solid Material

Posted by in categories: computing, mobile phones, particle physics, quantum physics

Using ultrafast laser flashes, physicists from the Max Planck Institute have generated the fastest electric current that has ever been measured inside a solid material.

In the field of electronics, the principle ‘the smaller, the better’ applies. Some building blocks of computers or mobile phones, however, have become nearly as small today as only a few atoms. It is therefore hardly possible to reduce them any further.

Another factor for the performance of electronic devices is the speed at which electric currents oscillate. Scientists at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics have now created electric currents inside solids which exceed the frequency of visible light by more than ten times They made electrons in silicon dioxide oscillate with ultrafast laser pulses. The conductivity of the material which is typically used as an insulator was increased by more than 19 orders of magnitude.

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Oct 25, 2016

From the X-Files Dept: “Quantum Tunneling May Trigger Destruction of the Cosmos” (VIEW VIDEO)

Posted by in categories: existential risks, particle physics, quantum physics

Oh boy!


Space vacuum that appears to be stable due to the complete absence of substance in it, is likely to be fraught with great danger. The idea about the destruction of the universe is based on the hypothesis of vacuum instability. Any system in our world has a certain amount of potential energy. But, space vacuum is not as empty as it may seem to be. Vacuum in space is filled with quantum particles, which, in turn, may seek their own “stability” to annihilate the material world in its entirety during the process.

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Oct 25, 2016

Iridescent Leaves Take Advantage Of Quantum Mechanics To Thrive In The Shade

Posted by in category: quantum physics

A shiny solution.

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Oct 25, 2016

Beyond Moore’s Law: 13 Investors, CEOs, And Researchers Sound Off On Quantum Computing

Posted by in categories: computing, finance, quantum physics, robotics/AI

A nice read on the who’s who in QC: congrats Vern Brownell and Michelle S. in making the top 13 list.


Leaders in quantum computing discuss the challenges and potential for this technology across finance, AI, and many other fields.

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Oct 25, 2016

Scientists slam carbon out of diamonds to create the first quantum computing bridge

Posted by in categories: computing, quantum physics

What happens when you knock the carbon out of diamonds? You end up maintaining 100 percent quantum integrity; therefore, you can now transmit multitude of Qubits together over a long distance instead of 1 Qubit in one transmission and among multiple QC Devices.


New breakthrough paves the way for the first practical quantum computers

Quantum computers are a reality but unlike the first traditional computers, which were large enough to fill a room, most of today’s quantum computers are very small with one, five, or even 16 qubits at their core and getting to the point where we have a truly practical quantum computer is going to require component by component advances until, one day, we get to the point where all of the blocks “just work”.

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Oct 25, 2016

The Universe

Posted by in category: space

Click on photo to start video.

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Oct 25, 2016

‘Atomic sandwich’ computing material uses 100 times less energy

Posted by in categories: computing, materials

New magnetoelectric multiferroic material operates at 100 times lower power (credit: Julia A. Mundy/Nature)

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory scientists have developed a new “magnetoelectric multiferroic*” material that could lead to a new generation of computing devices with more computing power while consuming a fraction of the energy that today’s electronics require.

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Oct 25, 2016

Opinion: Workers will simply try to survive, rather than prosper, as tech takes over the economy

Posted by in categories: economics, employment

An assumption was that new jobs in new industries would take up displaced workers — but that hasn’t happened, says Satyajit Das.

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Oct 25, 2016

Vantablack, the Darkest Material Ever Made, Absorbs 99.965% Of Light

Posted by in category: materials

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Oct 25, 2016

Will AI replace judges and lawyers?

Posted by in categories: computing, information science, law, robotics/AI

(credit: iStock)

An artificial intelligence method developed by University College London computer scientists and associates has predicted the judicial decisions of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) with 79% accuracy, according to a paper published today (Monday, Oct. 24) in PeerJ Computer Science.

The method is the first to predict the outcomes of a major international court by automatically analyzing case text using a machine-learning algorithm.*.

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