Scientists have developed tunable materials that let free electrons move and interact in new ways, opening paths to faster computing, smarter machines, and advanced catalysts. (Nanowerk News) Imagine ...
Associate Professor Yuichiro Matsushita of Materials and Structures Laboratory, Institute of Science Tokyo, Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Associate Professor Takahide Umeda of Institute of Pure and ...
Researchers review recent advancements in electron-photon interactions in electron microscopes, furthering nonlinear integrated photonics and electron microscopy. Nonlinear optical ...
Auburn scientists have designed new materials that manipulate free electrons to unlock groundbreaking applications. These “Surface Immobilized Electrides” could power future quantum computers or ...
A new study published in Nature Physics introduces a theory of electron-phonon coupling that is affected by the quantum geometry of the electronic wavefunctions. The movement of electrons in a lattice ...
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