Establishing the boundaries of quantum secure communications
Scientists at the University of York's Centre for Quantum Technology have made an important breakthrough in the theory of quantum secure communications.
Scientists at the University of York's Centre for Quantum Technology have made an important breakthrough in the theory of quantum secure communications.
A University of British Columbia-developed system that uses bacteria to turn non-potable water into drinking water will be tested next week in West Vancouver prior to being installed in remote communities in Canada and beyond.
Estonia is a small country in the Baltic region of Northern Europe with a population of 1.3 million and a GDP of US $23 billion, roughly 10% of Apple's annual earnings.
New light has been shed on the functioning of human gut bacteria which could help to develop medicines in the future to improve health and wellbeing.
Scrambled and indecipherable messages are the back bone of the internet as we know it.
The chemical industry can learn a lot from the common mussel. Not only are the mollusc's mother of pearl and tough threads with which it clings to the seafloor remarkable, but the way in which these materials are produced ...
Research led by ANU on the use of magnets to steer light has opened the door to new communications systems which could be smaller, cheaper and more agile than fibre optics.
Decreasing the emission linewidth from a molecule is one of the key aims in precision spectroscopy. One approach is based on cooling molecules to near absolute zero. An alternative way is to localize the molecules on subwavelength ...
Âé¶¹ÒùÔºicists from the Faculty of Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics at the University of Warsaw have developed a holographic atomic memory device capable of generating single photons on demand in groups of several dozen or more. The device, successfully ...
The rib of a long-necked, plant-eating dinosaur that lived 195 million years ago has yielded what may be the oldest remains of soft tissue ever recovered, scientists said Tuesday.