Automatically selected top science news story of the day ( ? )
Follow us with Twitter - Facebook
Next update in hours

Sound drives 'quantum jumps' between electron orbits

Phys.org - Mon 26 Aug 24

Cornell University researchers have demonstrated that acoustic sound waves can be used to control the motion of an electron as it orbits a lattice defect in a diamond, a technique that can potentially ...

Sound Drives 'quantum Jumps' Between Electron Orbits, Mirage News - Mon 26 Aug 24
'Quantum Coherence' Survives In Ultracold Molecules, Mirage News - Mon 26 Aug 24

Physicists observe key minuscule molecular interactions in ultra-fast atomic processes

Phys.org - Thu 22 Aug 24

An international team of scientists is the first to report incredibly small time delays in a molecule's electron activity when the particles are exposed to X-rays.

Quantum sensor detects magnetic and electric fields from a single atom

Physics World - Thu 22 Aug 24

Researchers in Germany and Korea have fabricated a quantum sensor that can detect the electric and magnetic fields created by individual atoms – something that scientists have long dreamed ...

World's fastest microscope freezes time at 1 quintillionth of a second

New Atlas - Thu 22 Aug 24

The subatomic world is hard to image not just because it’s incredibly tiny, but super fast too. Now physicists at the University of Arizona have developed the world’s fastest electron microscope ...

Freeze-frame: Researchers develop world's fastest microscope that can see electrons in motion

Phys.org - Wed 21 Aug 24

Imagine owning a camera so powerful it can take freeze-frame photographs of a moving electron—an object traveling so fast it could circle the Earth many times in a matter of a second. Researchers ...

Freeze-frame: U of A researchers develop world’s fastest microscope that can see electrons in motion, Scienmag - Wed 21 Aug 24

World's Fastest Microscope Captures Electron Motion in Attoseconds

ScienceAlert - Wed 28 Aug 24

A long-anticipated breakthrough.

Scientists Develop World’s Fastest Microscope — It’s So Fast It Can Capture Electrons Moving

ZME Science - Thu 22 Aug 24

The new microscope captures the fleeting motions of electrons with unprecedented precision, revealing the hidden dynamics of the subatomic world.

The world’s fastest microscope captures electrons down to the attosecond

Popular Science - Thu 22 Aug 24

Electron microscopy has existed for nearly a century, but a record-breaking modern iteration finally achieved what physicists have waited decades to see—for the first time, a transmission ...

World's fastest microscope can see electrons moving

Livescience - Wed 21 Aug 24

Scientists have created the world's fastest microscope, which they hope will answer fundamental questions about how electrons behave. ...

Arizona researchers develop microscope that captures electrons in motion

optics.org - Wed 21 Aug 24

Prof. Mohammed Hassan’s team describes new capability as “attomicroscopy”.

World’s Fastest Microscope Freezes Time To Capture Moving Electrons

SciTechDaily - Sat 24 Aug 24

University of Arizona researchers have developed an ‘attomicroscopy’ technique using a novel ultrafast electron microscope that captures moving electrons in unprecedented detail, ...

Physicists shine new light on ultra-fast atomic processes

ScienceDaily - Fri 23 Aug 24

Scientists report incredibly small time delays in a molecule's electron activity when the particles are exposed to X-rays. To measure these tiny high-speed events, known as attoseconds, researchers ...

Physicists shine new light on ultra-fast atomic processes, Scienmag - Thu 22 Aug 24
Physicists shine new light on ultra-fast atomic processes, Eurekalert - Thu 22 Aug 24
Physicists shine new light on ultra-fast atomic processes, Newswise - Wed 21 Aug 24
Physicists shine new light on ultra-fast atomic processes, Science Blog - Wed 21 Aug 24

Freeze-frame: World's fastest microscope that can see electrons in motion

ScienceDaily - Thu 22 Aug 24

A team of researchers has developed the first transmission electron microscope which operates at the temporal resolution of a single attosecond, allowing for the first still-image of an electron ...