Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘quantum physics’ category: Page 341

Nov 1, 2022

Connecting Phases of the Strong Force

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics, space

Thermodynamic phases governed by the strong nuclear force have been linked together using multiple theoretical tools.

Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of the strong nuclear force. On a fundamental level, it describes the dynamics of quarks and gluons. Like more familiar systems, such as water, a many-body system of quarks and gluons can exist in very different thermodynamic phases depending on the external conditions. Researchers have long sought to map the different corners of the corresponding phase diagram. New experimental probes of QCD—first and foremost the detection of gravitational waves from neutron-star mergers—allow for a more comprehensive view of this phase structure than was previously possible. Now Tuna Demircik at the Asia Pacific Center for Theoretical Physics, South Korea, and colleagues have put together models originally used in very different contexts to push forward a global understanding of the phases of QCD [1].

Phase transitions governed by the strong force require extreme conditions such as high temperatures and high baryon densities (baryons are three-quark particles such as protons and neutrons). The region of the QCD phase diagram corresponding to high temperatures and relatively low baryon densities can be probed by colliding heavy ions. By contrast, the region associated with high baryon densities and relatively low temperatures can be studied by observing single neutron stars. For a long time, researchers lacked experimental data for the phase space between these two regions, not least because it is very difficult to create matter under neutron-star conditions in the laboratory. This difficulty still exists, although collider facilities are being constructed that are intended to produce matter at higher baryon densities than is currently possible.

Nov 1, 2022

Unidirectional luminescence from InGaN/GaN quantum-well metasurfaces

Posted by in categories: materials, quantum physics

face_with_colon_three circa 2020.


Exploiting two-dimensional metamaterials, the direction of emission from InGaN/GaN quantum wells is engineered while simultaneously improving quantum efficiency.

Nov 1, 2022

Hyperbolic Propagation: Columbia Physicists See Light Waves Moving Through a Metal

Posted by in categories: materials, quantum physics

New research finds evidence of waveguiding in a unique quantum material. These findings counter expectations about how metals conduct light and may push imaging beyond optical diffraction limits.

We perceive metals as shiny when we encounter metals in our day-to-day lives. That’s because common metallic materials are reflective at visible light wavelengths and will therefore bounce back the light that strikes them. Although metals are well suited to conducting electricity and heat, they aren’t typically thought of as a means to conduct light.

However, scientists are increasingly finding examples that challenge expectations about how things should behave in the burgeoning field of quantum materials. New research describes a metal capable of conducting light through it. Conducted by a team of researchers led by Dmitri Basov, Higgins Professor of Physics at Columbia University.

Oct 31, 2022

New Entanglement Results Hint at Better Quantum Codes

Posted by in categories: encryption, quantum physics

A team of physicists has entangled three photons over a considerable distance, which could lead to more powerful quantum cryptography.

Oct 31, 2022

Scientists Just Discovered an Entirely New Way of Measuring Time

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Marking the passage of time in a world of ticking clocks and swinging pendulums is a simple case of counting the seconds between ‘then’ and ‘now’.

Down at the quantum scale of buzzing electrons, however, ‘then’ can’t always be anticipated. Worse still, ‘now’ often blurs into a haze of uncertainty. A stopwatch simply isn’t going to cut it for some scenarios.

A potential solution could be found in the very shape of the quantum fog itself, according to researchers from Uppsala University in Sweden.

Oct 31, 2022

The Hard Problem of consciousness solved

Posted by in categories: computing, particle physics, quantum physics

How does something as immaterial as consciousness arise from something as unconscious as matter?
This is known as the Hard Problem and this theory gets around this problem by explaining consciousness as electrical activity that is aware of its own electrical potential. This is possible because the light photon is the carrier of the electromagnetic force. Because light has momentum and momentum is frame dependent electrical activity in the brain is always in the centre of its own reference frame in ‘the moment of now’ with a potential future that is always uncertain and a past that has gone forever. It is because consciousness is always in the centre of its own reference frame that we have the concept of ‘mind’ with each one of us having our own personal view of the Universe. This is within a process formed by the spontaneous absorption and emission of light a process of continuous energy exchange forming the ever changing world of our everyday life. If our eyes where more sensitive to light we would be able to see that everything is radiating EMR or light continuously because the Universe is never at absolute zero.
In this theory consciousness is the most advanced part of a universal process that can be explained by physics. There are no paradoxes in this theory! We are in the centre of our own reference frame being able to look back in time in every direction at the beauty of the stars. We can also look down into individual reference frames seeing the future unfold photon by photon relative to that frame of reference.
The greatest affect this process of continuous energy exchange has on us is the aging process with photon energy from the Sun cascading down forming greater degrees of freedom for the continuous increase in entropy or disorganization.
But above all this is a creative process with the future coming into existence relative to the energy and momentum or actions of each individual life form. The wave-particle duality of light is acting like the bits or zeros and ones of a computer. This forms a blank canvas for life to form its own future relative to its position and the energy and momentum of its own actions. The Universe is a continuum with spacetime as an emergent property with an Arrow of Time for each object or life form with a future coming into existence relative to their energy & momentum with each new photon electron coupling or dipole moment.
I believe this is what we are seeing when we see an artist at work we are seeing the future unfolding relative to the energy and momentum of the artist!
In this theory creation is truly in the eye and hand of the beholder!
Thanks for watching please share and subscribe on YouTube and be part of the promotion of this theory!

Find me on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/nick.harvey.1806
Link to my web site: http://quantumartandpoetry.blogspot.co.uk/

Continue reading “The Hard Problem of consciousness solved” »

Oct 30, 2022

Scientists Dug 12km Into The Earth And Discovered This

Posted by in categories: quantum physics, space

Physics-Astronomy.com, TheSpaceAcademy, Physics, Quantum, Technology, BlackHole.

Oct 30, 2022

First 3D quantum accelerometer could let ships navigate without GPS

Posted by in category: quantum physics

A device that measures acceleration very precisely using quantum effects could be used for navigation when GPS is unavailable.

Oct 30, 2022

Is A Subatomic World Possible And What Would It Look Like?

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

While the quantum world is not far away, shrinking down to the size of an atom to experience the quantum realm would be difficult for humans.

Oct 29, 2022

Electrons with Planckian scattering in strange metals follow standard rules of orbital motion in a magnet

Posted by in categories: materials, quantum physics

Strange metals, or non-Fermi liquids, are distinct states of matter that have been observed in different quantum materials, including cuprate superconductors. These states are characterized by unusual conductive properties, such as a resistivity that is linearly associated with temperature (T-linear).

In the strange phase of matter, electrons undergo what is known as “Planckian dissipation,” a high scattering rate that linearly increases as the . This T-linear, strong electron scattering is anomalous for metals, which typically present a quadratic (T2), as predicted by the standard theory of metals.

Researchers at Université de Sherbrooke in Canada, Laboratoire National des Champs Magnétiques Intenses in France, and other institutes worldwide have recently carried out a study exploring the possibility that the resistivity of is not only associated with temperature, but also with an applied . This magnetic field linearity had been previously observed in some cuprates and pnictides, with some physicists suggesting that it could also be linked to Planckian dissipation.