The Universe Is Not Locally Real, and the Physics Nobel Prize Winners Proved It
Elegant experiments with entangled light have laid bare a profound mystery at the heart of reality
Daniel Garisto is a freelance science journalist covering advances in physics and other natural sciences. He is based in New York. Credit: Nick Higgins
Elegant experiments with entangled light have laid bare a profound mystery at the heart of reality
This year’s Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics honors some of the pioneers of quantum information science
Over 10 days, researchers participating in the once-a-decade “Snowmass process” attempted to build a unified scientific vision for the future of particle physics
Long-awaited boosts to the world’s most powerful collider could spur breakthroughs in the hunt for physics beyond the Standard Model
A new analysis by the CDF collaboration is a bolt from the blue, finding that the W boson is significantly heavier than suggested by previous measurements and theoretical prediction
Runaway success and underfunding have led to growing pains for the preprint server
Muons and electrons might not experience the same fundamental interactions, contrary to Standard Model predictions
The prestigious award finally recognizes work that helped scientists understand climate change and, more broadly, find order in disorder
The competition between the U.S. and China over development of quantum technology has implications for both the future of science and the two countries’ political relations
Two teams have demonstrated new degrees of quantum measurements in micron-sized metal drums
Initial data from the Muon g-2 experiment have excited particle physicists searching for undiscovered subatomic particles and forces
The popular term “quantum supremacy,” which refers to quantum computers outperforming classical ones, is uncomfortably reminiscent of “white supremacy”
The setup of lasers and mirrors effectively “solved” a problem far too complicated for even the largest traditional computer system
Over the past century, the existence of these invisible cosmic bodies has become unmistakable
Hints of anomalous activity in heavy isotopes could be clues to new physics
Experiments at the Large Hadron Collider suggest that muons and other “second-generation particles” obtain their mass from interacting with the Higgs, further strengthening the Standard Model...
Mysterious effects in a new generation of dark matter detectors could herald a revolutionary discovery
Using gravitational waves to approximate pi, physicists see no problem with Einstein’s theory
If built, the International Linear Collider would investigate some of the biggest mysteries in physics on the smallest of scales
Physicists take the first step toward taming the short-lived particle
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