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Chemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, California 94720, and Department of Chemistry and Physics, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley ...
The Large Hadron Collider created 89,000 gold atoms per second. In a breakthrough that would make medieval alchemists envious, scientists at Europe's Large Hadron Collider have successfully ...
There wasn't a lot of gold and it didn't last long, but the results are still impressive. For centuries, alchemists dreamed of turning lead into gold — not through magic, but by unlocking the ...
National Key Laboratory for Development and Utilization of Forest Food Resources, Zhejiang A&F University, Hangzhou 311300, China Ecological-Environment & Health College (EEHC), Zhejiang A&F ...
Using a particle accelerator at CERN, researchers fired lead atoms at one another. Rather than hitting each other, they just slightly missed and their interactions created a high energy pulse.
Two types of atoms, bosons on the left exhibit bunching while the fermions on the right display anti-bunching – Credit: Sampson Wilcox / MIT MIT physicists have captured the first images of ...
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Melissa Fleur Afshar is a Newsweek reporter based in London, United Kingdom. Her current focus is on trending life stories and human-interest features on a variety of topics ranging from ...
We may earn commission if you buy from a link. Why Trust Us? Until now, atoms have never been imaged interacting freely in space, but a new technique known as non-resolved microscopy has changed that.
Using single-atom-resolved microscopy, ultracold quantum gases composed of two types of atoms reveal distinctly different spatial correlations — the bosons on the left exhibit bunching, while the ...
Alfredo (he/him) has a PhD in Astrophysics on galaxy evolution and a Master's in Quantum Fields and Fundamental Forces.