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China develops new ultra-cold alloy that can reach -273°C without helium
Chinese scientists develop europium, cobalt, and aluminum alloy that can be used to cool down quantum computers and military ...
The heated race to achieve the extreme cold that quantum technologies demand may have a frontrunner. Chinese scientists have developed an alloy that almost reaches absolute zero, the coldest possible ...
China solution’ delivers helium‑3‑free cooling tech for quantum chips, offers stable, portable system to support space exploration.
Chinese scientists have developed the world's coldest alloy, potentially revolutionizing quantum computing and ultra-sensitive detectors, surprising even DARPA.
A new specimen holder gives scientists more control over ultra-cold temperatures, enabling the study of how materials acquire properties useful in quantum computers. Scientists can now reliably chill ...
Superfluid helium exhibits a range of remarkable physical phenomena that challenge conventional fluid dynamics and heat transfer theories. At temperatures near absolute zero, helium transitions into a ...
Scientists can now reliably chill specimens near absolute zero for over 10 hours while taking images resolved to the level of individual atoms with an electron microscope. The new capability comes ...
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