Breaking 17:20 Musician G. Love loses $420,000 in Bitcoin to fake wallet on Mac App Store 17:00 Oil shock widens inflation gap between emerging and developed markets 16:20 OpenAI memo claims Microsoft limited reach as Amazon demand surges 16:00 Leaked screenshots show Anthropic building app creator inside Claude 15:40 China's Q1 GDP growth forecast to rebound to 4.8% despite Iran war risks 15:00 Revolution Medicines drug nearly doubles survival in pancreatic cancer trial 14:20 Google CEO Pichai urges US to lead in AI development 13:50 AI system maps ocean currents hourly using existing weather satellites 12:20 Spring-summer 2026 fashion weeks reveal vibrant color palette 11:42 RAVE token surges 2,000 percent as analysts flag market manipulation 11:20 Bitcoin short squeeze risk rises as open interest nears $25 billion 11:00 US naval blockade of Iranian ports takes effect after failed talks 10:40 Gold falls as Trump Hormuz blockade lifts oil and dollar 10:30 Japan calls for swift US–Iran agreement amid rising regional tensions 10:20 Rockstar confirms data breach as hackers set ransom deadline 10:02 Artemis II crew reflects on iconic ‘Earthset’ photo after return 09:20 Hormuz crisis boosts China clean energy exports as oil flows disrupted 09:00 Apple pulls high RAM Mac mini and Mac Studio amid chip shortage 08:44 Rare comet unseen for 170,000 years now visible to naked eye 08:20 Harvard AI decoder cuts quantum computing errors by up to 17 times 08:00 Oil prices surge while gold falls after announcement of Iranian port blockade 07:50 Chinese crystal sets record in race to build nuclear clocks 07:45 United States and Australia double investment in critical minerals projects

Mit team cools trapped ions far below standard limit

Friday 16 January 2026 - 09:20
By: Dakir Madiha
Mit team cools trapped ions far below standard limit

Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and MIT Lincoln Laboratory have developed a breakthrough technique that cools trapped ions to temperatures about 10 times lower than the conventional Doppler limit in laser cooling. This method, leveraging integrated photonics on a chip, achieves the feat in roughly 100 microseconds, outpacing existing approaches by several multiples. The innovation tackles a key bottleneck in trapped-ion quantum computing, where ions must approach absolute zero to curb vibrations that trigger computational errors.

Traditional setups rely on bulky external lasers and optics to target ions held in cryostats, limiting scalability to just dozens of qubits. The new polarization gradient cooling employs two light beams with differing polarizations that intersect to create a rotating vortex, efficiently damping ion motion. Implemented on a photonic chip with nanoscale antennas linked by waveguides, this allows envisioning thousands of sites on a single chip interfacing with numerous ions for scalable operations. Felix Knollmann, a doctoral student in MIT's physics department, noted that this paves the way for expansive quantum systems. The findings appear in Light: Science and Applications and Physical Review Letters.

In parallel, scientists from the Technical University of Vienna and Rice University reported observing an emergent topological semimetal, a quantum state once deemed impossible because it merges two supposedly incompatible phenomena. Working with a cerium-ruthenium-tin compound near absolute zero, they detected topological properties despite electrons lacking the precise velocities and energies typically required. Diana Kirschbaum, lead author from TU Wien, described the material as oscillating between states, rendering the quasiparticle concept meaningless in this fluctuating regime. Silke Bühler-Paschen, a TU Wien physics professor and co-leader, called it a major surprise, urging broader definitions of topological states. Theoretical modeling by Lei Chen in Qimiao Si's Rice group linked the behavior to quantum criticality itself. Published in Nature Physics, these advances promise practical quantum technologies, from scalable processors to advanced sensors and low-power electronics.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.