Read more about the great potential quantum computing could have on implementing effective climate change mitigation strategies.
By Cvetelin Vasilev
20 Oct 2021
Just as the first X-ray telescope revolutionized observational astronomy by allowing scientists to probe physics that did not lie within the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, gravitational wave detectors allow the study of the Universe in a separate, previously unimagined spectrum – the gravitational wave (GW) spectrum.
By Harvey Musgrave
20 Oct 2021
AZoQuantum explores how innovations in quantum technologies are helping to address key climate change issues highlighted in the IPCC reports.
By Megan Craig
20 Oct 2021
Hydrogen may be the Universe’s most common and simplest element, but it is important not to underestimate its importance to the physics of the very large and the infinitesimally small.
By Robert Lea
19 Oct 2021
AZoQuantum talks to Dr. Sunny Vagnozzi, a researcher at the University of Cambridge, about his work relating to the direct detection of dark energy.
By Skyla Baily
14 Oct 2021
Creating a pair of entangled photons in a crystal with eight possible paths could lead to a much more secure and robust form of quantum cryptology.
By Robert Lea
15 Oct 2021
AZoQuantum speaks with Dr. Cathy Olkin, Deputy Principal Investigator (DPI) of NASA's Lucy mission. Lucy is scheduled to launch no earlier than 5:34 a.m. (EDT) on Saturday 16th October, on a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V 401 rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
By Joan Nugent
13 Oct 2021
Recent research suggests that quantum physics has a role to play in bird navigation, as electrons within a specific protein in the birds’ eyes act like little magnets due to a quantum property called spin.
By Clarissa Wright
13 Oct 2021
As the next phase of manned space exploration begins and space around Earth becomes crowded with satellites, researchers search for the ideal way to control spacecraft and allow them to precisely maneuver.
By Robert Lea
12 Oct 2021
The active satellites currently orbiting Earth have to be careful not to hit the 9,500 tons of debris in space, as well as spacecraft like the International Space Station (ISS). Astroscale has been operating its ELSA-d mission to demonstrate a proof of concept for its ELSA technology, removing space debris from orbit.
By Ben Pilkington
8 Oct 2021