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Scientists plan to march on Washington — but where will it get them?
In April, thousands of scientists will take to the streets to rally on behalf of publicly funded, openly communicated, evidence-based research.
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Russian Jamming Got You Down? Try Talking Underwater
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is preparing to test a network of radio relays on sea buoys (developed by the UW's Applied Physics Lab) and connected via fiber-optic cable.
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UW Hyperloop team fuels its final dash to the national pod races with crowdfunding
The UW’s Hyperloop team is getting ready to compete in a set of pod races aimed at blazing a trail for a new means of near-supersonic travel – but they need a little help to get to the starting line. -
Dark Matter Hunters Are Hoping 2017 Is Their Year
It can be unsettling to realize that only 5 percent of the universe is made of the kind of matter we know and understand. Leslie Rosenberg, professor of physics at the UW, is quoted. -
Microsoft researchers lay down a big bet on topological quantum computers
Microsoft says it’s moving ahead from just talking about quantum computing to building an actual quantum computer, based on the physics that won a Nobel Prize this year.
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Quantum computers can talk to each other via a photon translator
Researchers have come up with a way to allow one quantum computer component to efficiently transmit information to another, without losing its quantum character.
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The Structures of Our Cells Live Inside the Stars
Instead of being unique to human cells, it turns out that Terasaki "ramps" show up elsewhere, too: in the crust of collapsed stars.
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Axion Alert! Exotic Particle Detector May Miss Out on Dark Matter
Supercomputer calculation suggests hypothesized particle may be heavier than thought.
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For Physics, Another Nobel
Professor Emeritus David Thouless is the Physics Department's second Nobel Prize recipient.
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What The Hell Is Going On With Dark Energy?
Last week, the science media was abuzz with reports that dark energy might not exist. Chanda Prescod-Weinstein, postdoctoral associate in physics at the UW, is quoted.
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Foreign-born professors account for US Nobel haul
Of the six winners of Nobel Prizes affiliated with American universities so far this year, all are foreign born.
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Are the Nobel prizes missing female scientists?
A total of 203 people have won the Nobel Prize in Physics, but only two were women.
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UW's David Thouless wins share of Nobel physics prize for weird science of superconductors
David Thouless, a British-born professor emeritus at the University of Washington, has been awarded half of this year’s Nobel physics prize.
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Bagels and buns: The research that won the 2016 Nobel Prize for Physics explained
This year, the Nobel Prize in Physics went to three men — all born in Britain, but working at U.S. universities. -
3 who studied unusual states of matter win Nobel Prize in Physics
David J. Thouless from the UW, F. Duncan M. Haldane and J. Michael Kosterlitz were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics on Tuesday.