Quantum Tug-of-War and Water’s Weirdness
An international team of researchers has used a high-speed electron camera to observe the atomic motion of liquid water for the first time.
An international team of researchers has used a high-speed electron camera to observe the atomic motion of liquid water for the first time.
An international team of researchers has used a high-speed electron camera to observe the atomic motion of liquid water for the first time.
The University of Adelaide is reporting the ability to fire one billion electrons per second using quantum mechanics; repeatedly. This is a major step to “reliable, continuous, and consistent” electron flow using quantum mechanics, a ‘must have’ for quantum computing. Clicking image takes you to schematic’s abstract.