News

Wrinkles can be an asset—especially for next-generation electronics. Rice University scientists have discovered that tiny ...
Scientists at Rice University have discovered that tiny creases in two-dimensional (2D) materials can control electron spin ...
Anyons – the particle-like collective excitations that can exist in some 2D materials – tend to bunch together in a two-dimensional conductor. This behaviour, which has now been observed by physicists ...
A condition long considered to be unfavorable to electrical conduction in semiconductor materials may actually be beneficial in 2D semiconductors, according to new findings by UC Santa Barbara ...
A study co-led by ICN2 reveals that ice is a flexoelectric material, meaning it can produce electricity when unevenly ...
Segment 4C: Collisions We differentiate between elastic and inelastic collisions Segment 4C: Collisions In this segment, we differentiate between elastic and inelastic collisions. The conservation ...
Might two bent crystals pave the way to finding new physics? The Standard Model of particle physics describes our world at its smallest scales exceptionally well. However, it leaves some important ...
Physicists propose new solution to the neutron lifetime puzzle Moreover, this technique could enhance our understanding of the quark–gluon plasma, a state of matter not only produced in high-energy ...
09 December 2020 Proton collisions probe the final frontier of the standard model of particle physics The nuclear forces that act on short-lived subatomic particles have been hard to study.
Extreme collisions between neutron stars could create exotic particles beyond the standard model, including axions, the hypothetical particle that comprises dark matter.