Quantum news: IonQ and Accenture announce partnership and a startup uses diamonds as qubits0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- September 23, 2021
Quantum news: IonQ and Accenture announce partnership and a startup uses diamonds as qubits
Quantum news: IonQ and Accenture announce partnership and a startup uses diamonds as qubits
Extrasolar planets hosted by stars with sufficiently high carbon-to-oxygen ratios could be made of diamonds and silica, according to new research by Arizona State University and the University of Chicago.
Thousands of tonnes of radioactive materials could be used to power everything from pacemakers to spacecraft
What’s driving Earth’s deepest earthquakes? Diamonds may hold answers.
Our use of battery-operated devices and appliances has been increasing steadily, bringing with it the need for safe, efficient, and high-performing power sources.
The so-called Russian nesting doll diamond is the first of its kind to ever be found.
A team of physicists at the Yokohama National University, Japan, has successfully demonstrated quantum teleportation — the remote exchange of quantum states — in a diamond.
The particles could be spotted when they slam into electrons or atomic nuclei in the crystals
When our solar system was in its infancy 4.5 billion years ago, a swarm of protoplanets swirled around the sun—some of which coalesced into larger and larger masses, while others were blasted to smithereens in a demolition derby of planetary proportions.
The maser (microwave amplification by stimulated emission of radiation), the older microwave frequency sibling of the laser, was invented in 1954. However unlike lasers, which have become widespread, masers are much less widely used because in order to function they must be cooled to temperatures close to absolute zero (-273°C).