A new chip-based quantum memory uses nanoprinted “light cages” to trap light inside atomic vapor, enabling fast, reliable storage of quantum information. The structures can be fabricated with extre...
A new chip-based quantum memory uses nanoprinted “light cages” to trap light inside atomic vapor, enabling fast, reliable storage of quantum information. The structures can be fabricated with extreme precision and filled with atoms in days instead of months. Multiple memories can operate side by side on a single chip, all performing nearly identically. The result is a powerful, scalable building block for future quantum communication and computing.
NVIDIA has revealed its next-generation Rubin AI platform at CES 2026, alongside open AI models designed to transform healthcare, robotics, autonomous driving and climate science research.
Topics:
artificial intelligence
technology
supercomputers
open-source
artificial-intelligence
ai
nvidia
science
Solar flares are generally divided into two classes: eruptive flares (with associated coronal mass ejections; CMEs) and confined flares that lack CMEs. Because eruptive flares are the principal sou...
Solar flares are generally divided into two classes: eruptive flares (with associated coronal mass ejections; CMEs) and confined flares that lack CMEs. Because eruptive flares are the principal source of major space weather effects at Earth, relatively little attention was paid to confined flares until the great sunspot group of October 2014, designated NOAA 12192, passed across the solar disk giving rise to 35 large flares (29 “M” SXR-class and [...]
Topics:
very large array (vla)
microwave emission
coronal mass ejection (cme)
solar radio science highlights
signatures
spectra
microwaves
flares
solar
science
Maternal respiratory syncytial virus vaccination and infant receipt of nirsevimab were estimated to protect infants from associated hospitalizations during their first season in 2024-2025. Medsc...
Maternal respiratory syncytial virus vaccination and infant receipt of nirsevimab were estimated to protect infants from associated hospitalizations during their first season in 2024-2025. Medscape Medical News