Most of today's quantum computers rely on qubits with Josephson junctions that work for now but likely won't scale as needed ...
Superconductive technologies have long been central to particle physics, but they have also repeatedly moved beyond the laboratory, most notably with the emergence of magnetic resonance imaging ...
Close-up of the cross-section of the new superconducting cables being developed at CERN's main workshop (Image: Corinne Longhi) Superconductive ...
For three decades, one quiet crystal has sat at the center of a fierce argument about how exotic superconductors really work.
Experiments show Josephson junction-like behavior can arise with only one superconductor, challenging the standard two-superconductor model.
Ultracold atoms have successfully mimicked a fundamental quantum effect normally found in electronic circuits.
A shiny gray crystal called platinum-bismuth-two hides an electronic world unlike anything scientists have seen before.
Scientists may have finally unlocked the unusual role quasiparticles known as "anyons" play in a pair of quantum experiments ...