Using a revolutionary NASA telescope, astronomers have discovered a remarkably Earth-like world orbiting in the habitable zone of a distant red dwarf star.| AZoQuantum
The race is on for nations to establish themselves at the forefront of the quantum revolution, with academic, federal, and private investments of time, resources, and brainpower flooding into the field. One country that is well on the way to marking itself as a world leader in quantum technology is the Netherlands.| AZoQuantum
The most powerful telescope ever devised zoomed in on the dynamic star-forming region NGC 346 for a clue as to how stars were born in the early universe.| AZoQuantum
New data from the JWST has provided insights into the atmospheric composition of the exoplanet WASP-39B. What does this breakthrough mean for our understanding of other worlds and our search for life elsewhere in the universe?| AZoQuantum
The transference of quantum keys via satellites will provide the cybersecurity breakthrough of the future.| AZoQuantum
Gravitational waves, tiny ripples in spacetime that Einstein believed are too faint ever to be detected, are revolutionizing both our understanding and our view of the cosmos.| AZoQuantum
The discovery points to a vast subsurface fracture network that may be more habitable for microbial life than the harsh Martian surface.| AZoQuantum
The map of the observable universe doesn’t just allow users to travel through space, it lets them look back to the dawn of the cosmos.| AZoQuantum
The weakly interacting “ghost particles” were created in the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s most powerful particle accelerator.| AZoQuantum