Physicists at New York University have built a time crystal powered entirely by sound waves, and lab tests suggest the ...
Dark structures inside light waves can briefly move faster than light without breaking relativity or transmitting energy or information.
A recent preprint claims that we may someday be able to create gravitational waves in a lab. Through the use of “twisted” light, we could create powerful, high-frequency waves in a controlled setting.
Physicists have directly tracked tiny points of darkness in laser light racing faster than light itself, without breaking ...
Rachel Feltman: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Rachel Feltman. Today we’re leaving the podcast studio to take you on a field trip to the LIGO Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of ...
At “Physics on Tap,” locals and students shared drinks while learning about physics education research from Prof. Natasha ...