Every year in October our UCSB Physics faculty present an explanation of the Nobel Prize in Physics for that year.
At Old Town Sweet Shop in Temecula, that memory isn’t just recalled; it’s recreated daily with a level of confectionary magic that ... with centers so silky they seem to defy the laws of physics. Ice ...
Researchers have made germanium superconducting for the first time, a feat that could transform computing and quantum ...
International team of physicists' innovation could vastly advance wireless communications, computer speed, and aerospace technology ...
Coherence Without Superconductivity Quantum coherence—the ability of particles to move in synchrony like overlapping waves—is usually limited to exotic states such as superconductivity, where ...
For more than 50 years, scientists have dreamed of seeing the hidden patterns that govern the motion of nonlinear waves—the ...
A conversation with the trailblazing computer scientist, who is on a mission to augment human care with the latest in AI and ...
Students and faculty of UC Santa Barbara’s physics department gathered in Corwin Pavilion for the department’s annual Nobel Prize-focused colloquium on Oct. 14. This year’s event was particularly spec ...
This year's Nobel Prizes have awarded discoveries and achievements that have benefitted humankind in a myriad of ways. Who ...
As artificial intelligence models rapidly spread through every aspect of our lives and more data becomes available for training them, the technology offers potential to improve hurricane and storm ...
According to the model, dark matter may have started as particles that were hot, light, massless, and fast. As the universe cooled, these particles became heavy, slow, and dark, becoming an invisible ...