Science
Quantum entanglement of electrons using heat – theinformant.co.nz
False-color electron microscope image of the sample, the green layers being graphene on top of the gray superconductor. Blue metal electrodes are used to

False-color electron microscope image of the sample, the green layers being graphene on top of the gray superconductor. Blue metal electrodes are used to extract entangled electrons. Credit: Aalto University
Quantum entanglement is key to the next generation of computing and communications technology, and Aalto researchers can now reproduce it using temperature differences.
A joint group of scientists from Finland, Russia, China and the USA demonstrated that temperature differences can be used to…
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
Brisbane’s Triffid forces redesign of $1.5 billion tower project
-
Noosa News24 hours ago
Man dies in Gold Coast after rolling trailer pins him to lamp-post
-
General17 hours ago
Israeli forces open fire towards diplomatic delegation touring Jenin in the northern West Bank
-
General20 hours ago
Sussan Ley’s office says Bridget McKenzie made false claims about cabinet solidarity