Did you know? Our 45-tesla magnet has its own overhead crane for moving magnets, parts, and other equipment. With a 20-ton capacity, it could lift a whale shark or a full coach bus!
Great to host this group from the HopeX Camp at the lab this afternoon!
Summer's here-- this will keep the kids busy and entertained!
A fun experiment using items you probably have around the house.
https://nationalmaglab.org/magnet-academy/try-this-at-home/inflating-puffer-fish/
A special Stars and Stripes hangs above our flagship magnet, the 45T hybrid. The flag was flown over the U.S. Capitol and sent to the MagLab by the Dept. of Commerce.
Happy Flag Day!
Read about this new step toward scalable quantum information processing.
https://bit.ly/43AzFPe
HERE'S A RANDOM POST.
About achieving the first "perfect randomness."
https://bit.ly/4x7czxk
Magnons, magnetic ripples through a material, might just help build better quantum computers.
https://bit.ly/4u1hVr2
nationalmaglab.org
Learn simple chemistry by triggering a reaction between an acid and a base that makes a ‘fish’ come to life.
Researchers have created a compact chip that manipulates light-based quantum information with remarkable precision, advancing the development of next-generation photonic and quantum technologies.
The World Cup is here!
As we celebrate teams from around the globe, this story from a few years back explores the importance of teamwork in science: https://bit.ly/4e4FJV6
National MagLab
WATCH: Five researchers from FSU and the MagLab are teaming up for an ambitious drug discovery initiative to fight "superbugs."
READ MORE: https://bit.ly/4fBzESn
scitechdaily.com
Physicists at the University of Vienna have discovered magnons with lifespans that are one hundred times longer.
You never know what scientists might be studying in high magnetic fields!
Read more about research on whale poop: https://bit.ly/4fvYiDU
National MagLab
With help from the MagLab, scientists are learning how whale waste impacts ocean ecosystems. Whales help fuel the ocean by releasing a form of iron in their waste that the plants of the sea (phytopla...
Physicists used quantum bits to achieve perfect randomness for the first time ever. The results of their research could strengthen cryptography and other security systems.