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With a suite of reimagined instruments at SLAC's LCLS facility, researchers see massive improvement in data quality and take ...
High pressure deflation Replication of high-temperature superconductor comes up empty Researchers create the same material, see no sign of any unusual behavior. John Timmer – May 16, 2023 10:19 ...
Superconductors require bone-shatteringly cold temperatures (as in, approaching absolute zero, or -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit, cold) to tap into those zero electrical resistance superpowers.
Researchers craft new way to make high-temperature superconductors -- with a twist Theory becomes reality when scientists help develop process for twisting materials in ways never thought possible ...
University of Michigan. "Physics of high-temperature superconductors untangled." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 18 August 2022. <www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2022 / 08 / 220818122348.htm>.
Prof. Dr. Asahi states, "Achieving room-temperature superconductivity has long been a dream, requiring an understanding of superconducting mechanisms in high-temperature superconductors.
Nearly four decades after the discovery of copper oxide superconductivity, which earned the 1987 Nobel Prize in Physics, the NUS researchers have now identified another high-temperature ...
Explore further Understanding the origin of superconductivity in high-temperature copper oxide superconductors 126 shares Facebook Twitter Email Feedback to editors ...
Most researchers behind superconductor claim now want their paper pulled Both of the superconductivity papers Ranga Dias published in Nature are now gone. John Timmer – Nov 8, 2023 7:48 AM | 92 ...
High Temperature Superconductors, Inc., (HTSI) starts novel manufacturing project for HTS superconducting tape with ARPA-E funding, DOE support.
High-temperature superconductors have been a point of interest over the past decade. Ternary hydrides composed of lanthanum and yttrium have exhibited superconductivity at 250 K have recently ...
In the early 1980s, Dr. Müller was working at IBM Research in Zurich — a laboratory he had been associated with since 1963 — when he became interested in finding high-temperature superconductors.