Not exact matches
«We are starting to get a glimpse of the kind of new astrophysical
information that can only come from gravitational wave detectors,»
said physicist David Shoemaker, who led the construction of LIGO.
Although the chat was not completely secure from hacking, it was about a million times as secure as what's possible with standard, or classical types of encryption,
says Rupert Ursin, a
physicist at the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum
Information in Vienna and a member of the Austrian team.
Quantum
physicists David Deutsch and Chiara Marletto
say information is key to understanding the universe.
How the brain does this is not fully understood, but
physicist Yasser Roudi
says one thing is clear: «It's about
information processing in a very chaotic environment that's full of signals.»
High - energy
physicists at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana will use their connection to run data analysis on computers at Argonne National Laboratory outside Chicago,
says Larry Rapagnani, an
information technologist at Notre Dame.
One way to do that is to «map the quantum
information onto a current flowing through a device,»
says study co-author Dane McCamey, a postdoctoral
physicist at the University of Utah.
«I'm surprised they could get this much
information from this data,»
says planetary
physicist David Stevenson of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
Picking out twisted photons from a black hole would provide new
information about the objects themselves and provide important tests of general relativity,
says Martin Bojowald, a theoretical
physicist at Pennsylvania State University who wrote a commentary on Thidé and his colleagues» work for Nature Physics.
«Prior to this study we really didn't have much
information on the impact of spaceflight on the liver,»
said the study's lead author Karen Jonscher, PhD, an associate professor of anesthesiology and a
physicist at CU Anschutz.
«If you can make your bit smaller, you can store more
information,»
physicist Fabian Natterer of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland
said March 16 at a meeting of the American Physical Society.
These reliable lasers could be used for sending
information in a quantum network,
says Li Ge, a
physicist at the City University of New York not involved in the work (SN: 10/15/16, p. 13).
«The big question always was... whether one can go beyond this probabilistic description,»
says physicist Markus Aspelmeyer of the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum
Information in Vienna.
«Our cluster model studies provide detailed
information important to understanding how chemicals transform in the atmosphere and biology functions,»
said Wang, PNNL chemical
physicist.
This is an important discovery, Stojkovic
says, because even
physicists who believed
information was not lost in black holes have struggled to show, mathematically, how this happens.