The experiment Linköping University’s Joakim Argillander and Daniel Spegel-Lexne were part of the team that investigated the relationship between quantum uncertainty and wave–particle duality.
Quantum physics once shocked scientists by revealing that particles can behave like waves—and now, that strange behavior has ...
Positronium shouldn't last long enough to be interesting. It's an "atom" assembled from an electron and its antimatter twin — ...
For the first time, wave-particle duality has been observed in a biomolecule. The team of physicists at the University of Vienna in Austria have also observed wave-like behaviour in the most massive ...
This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American Recently, it was reported that an experiment ...
Everything on the electromagnetic spectrum has some properties of both waves and particles, but it’s difficult to imagine a radio wave, for example, behaving like a particle. The main evidence for a ...
Although Danish physicist Niels Bohr's atomic model was tremendously successful, and experiments by Moseley and Franck-Hertz strongly supported it, the bold hypotheses of the Bohr model were just that ...
The twenty-first century has undoubtedly been the era of quantum science. Quantum mechanics was born in the early twentieth century and has been used to develop unprecedented technologies which ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results