A pair of identical particles swapping places sounds like a small move. In quantum physics, it is a defining one.
In a spinor-dipolar Bose–Einstein condensate of europium atoms, near-zero magnetic fields allow dipole–dipole interactions to drive spin relaxation, producing circulating flow in the quantum fluid.
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Atomic spins set quantum fluid in motion: Experimental realization of the Einstein–de Haas effect
The Einstein–de Haas effect, which links the spin of electrons to macroscopic rotation, has now been demonstrated in a quantum fluid by researchers at Science Tokyo. The team observed this effect in a ...
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Finished high school at 8, PhD at 15, and now he’s taking on biology with AI to create the next generation of superhumans
A 15-year-old with verified academic credentials has entered a second PhD program in medical science, focusing on artificial intelligence and biological modeling. This follows the confirmed completion ...
When students learn that Albert Einstein won a Nobel Prize, the assumption feels automatic: relativity. The bending of space and time. The theory that redefined gravity and reshaped modern physics.
Violations marked as priority contribute directly to the elimination, prevention or reduction in the hazards associated with ...
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