Morning Overview on MSN
New physics code could expose dark matter’s hidden behavior
Physicists are quietly rolling out a new generation of simulation codes that promise to do more than crunch numbers. By ...
Diamonds are no longer just prized for their brilliance. In cutting-edge physics labs, synthetic diamonds with carefully ...
Humanoid robots are expected to be deployed in factories and households - carrying out both basic and, potentially, advanced tasks. Bringing robots that look and move like humans to households and ...
Opinion
Quantum computing is the stock market's next big tech play - and these stocks are still cheap
The Defiance Quantum ETF QTUM provides broad exposure and trades at roughly 23 times cash flow. Not cheap, but not insane for a sector where winners might return 50 times. It's up almost 40% so far ...
More than 200 years ago, Count Rumford showed that heat isn’t a mysterious substance but something you can generate endlessly ...
Alonso breaks down how advances in computational fluid dynamics and physics AI are enabling designers to simulate complex ...
The possibility of generating useful amounts of electricity by blowing hot gas between the poles of a magnet has long intrigued adventurous physicists. Many have tried to turn the trick, but until Dr.
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Seventy years ago, in Osmond Laboratory on Penn State’s University Park campus, Erwin W. Müller, Evan Pugh Research Professor of Physics, became the first person to see an atom.
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