Breaking 16:50 Russia reaffirms offer to process Iran's enriched uranium 16:30 Chevron signs preliminary offshore exploration deal linked to Syria 16:00 Xi Jinping holds phone talks with Donald Trump 15:20 Musk becomes first person worth $800 billion after SpaceX-xAI merger 14:50 Volvo CEO predicts EVs cheaper than gas cars by 2030 14:20 Cathie Wood urges investors to swap gold for Bitcoin 13:50 Ukraine and Russia begin second round of US-mediated talks amid airstrikes 13:25 U.S. visa freeze faces legal challenge over nationality-based restrictions 13:00 US approves $3 billion f-15 maintenance services sale to Saudi Arabia 12:50 US-UK team develops real-time Arctic sea ice forecast model 12:30 Deaths in Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk following Russian drone attacks 12:20 Chinese solar stocks surge after Musk team's visits to Jinko Solar 12:00 Türkiye reaffirms support for Sudan’s unity and humanitarian relief 11:50 United States and India boost mining ties after trade pact 11:20 Asian markets mixed as gold and oil rebound amid geopolitical tensions 09:00 Almost 200 separatists killed after attacks in Pakistan 08:50 Michael Burry warns bitcoin drop could trigger cascading losses 08:30 Zohran Mamdani: “New Yorkers are already dreaming of a Morocco–Brazil match” 08:20 NATO chief pledges instant troop deployment to Ukraine after peace deal 07:50 United States agrees to shift Iran nuclear talks to Oman amid drone incident 07:00 Stephen Miran steps down from Trump advisory role 18:50 Bitcoin plunges to 10-month low amid $2 billion liquidation wave 17:50 Russia warns of countermeasures to US missile plans in Greenland 17:20 Libya Energy & Economic Summit signals investor surge

Scientists uncover hidden magnetic order in pseudogap phase

Tuesday 20 January 2026 - 11:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Scientists uncover hidden magnetic order in pseudogap phase

Physicists have identified a hidden magnetic order within the enigmatic pseudogap phase a peculiar state emerging in quantum materials just above superconducting temperatures unveiling insights that could advance the pursuit of room-temperature superconductivity. An international collaboration between experimentalists at Germany's Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics and theorists at New York's Flatiron Institute, part of the Simons Foundation, published findings this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Using a quantum simulator chilled to billionths of a degree above absolute zero, researchers recreated the Fermi-Hubbard model a theoretical framework for electron interactions in solids employing lithium atoms arranged in an optical lattice formed by laser light. A quantum gas microscope imaged individual atoms, capturing over 35,000 high-resolution snapshots revealing positions and magnetic orientations at varying temperatures and doping levels. Lead author Thomas Chalopin of the Max Planck Institute noted that magnetic correlations follow a unique universal pattern when plotted against a specific temperature scale matching the pseudogap emergence point.

Scientists long assumed doping removing electrons fully destroyed alternating antiferromagnetic structures in undoped materials. This study overturns that view, showing subtle magnetic organization persists at ultra-low temperatures. Researchers achieved unprecedented precision by measuring correlations among up to five particles simultaneously, a feat managed by few labs worldwide; prior work focused on pairwise electron links. Chalopin stated this reveals a mechanism potentially tied to superconductivity.

Understanding the pseudogap proves crucial for engineering advanced superconductors. In high-temperature versions, materials enter this regime where electrons behave oddly with fewer available states before achieving superconductivity. The experiments built on Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational Quantum Physics theories, including a 2024 Science paper. Director Antoine Georges highlighted how ultracold atom quantum simulators now access complex collective quantum phenomena. He anticipates cooler future runs probing new orders, stressing theorist-experimenter collaboration as simulations challenge classical algorithms.


  • 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.