Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
The world's first nuclear clocks are ticking, opening a new way to investigate dark matter and other mysteries of physics
For decades, scientists have tried to build a device even more precise than an atomic clock, which keeps time using electrons ...
By using a rare thorium nucleus as a timekeeper, physicists have demonstrated the first working nuclear clock, a device that ...
Nuclear clocks should be more robust and portable than the best available clocks today because nuclei are hard to perturb and ...
But physicists have long dreamt of even better clocks that run on atomic nuclei, which are less sensitive to environmental disturbances. According to new research, that dream might soon become reality ...
Traditional nuclear plants are powered by uranium rods that super heat water to a high enough pressure to activate turbines, ...
Atoms are the building blocks of matter. Everything around us — from air and water, to rocks, plants and animals — as well as everything within our bodies, is made up of atoms. They are very small, ...
Scientists at Delft University of Technology have managed to watch a single atomic nucleus flip its magnetic state in real time. Using a scanning tunneling microscope, they indirectly read the nucleus ...
With its depiction of the first atomic bomb explosion, "Oppenheimer" highlights the massive destructive power of these early nuclear weapons. While you might want to brush up on your physics before ...
Using nuclear magnetic resonance, researchers at ETH Zurich have studied the atomic environments of single platinum atoms in solid supports as well as their spatial orientation. In the future, this ...
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