Experiments show that a time crystal based on magnons can interact with mechanical waves without being destroyed.
A time crystal that beats to the rhythm of both order and chaos has revealed a new way in which matter can keep time.
Electrons can freeze into strange geometric crystals and then melt back into liquid-like motion under the right quantum ...
Researchers from Hanns-Christoph Nägerl's group have produced the world's first ultracold KCs molecules in their absolute ...
Discover how reading a quantum clock can surprisingly cost more energy than keeping it ticking, impacting timekeeping and ...
Researchers engineered “gyromorphs,” a new type of metamaterial that combines liquid-like randomness with large-scale ...
An original a-cappella arrangement of Goldenrod City from Pokemon Gold, Silver, and Crystal. Hey. I herd you like Miltanks?
Over the past several decades, researchers have been making rapid progress in harnessing light to enable all sorts of ...
Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have applied ideas from polymer physics to illuminate the mechanism behind a key ...
The “spacescape” exposes crystal oscillators used in space applications to the hazards of radiation. This article focuses on ...
Young corals can still build skeletons in acidic water, but the altered crystal structure makes the skeletons smaller and ...