superconducting

MIT scientists and colleagues have created a superconducting device that could dramatically cut energy use in computing, among other important applications. In one design the diode consists of a ferromagnetic strip (pink) atop a superconducting thin film (grey). The team also identified the key factors behind the resulting current that travels in only one direction with no resistance.Credit: A. Varambally, Y-S. Hou and H. Chi Team creates simple
Dramatically cutting energy use in computing with a simple superconducting device
MIT scientists and colleagues have created a superconducting device that could dramatically cut energy use
Schematic illustration of the superconducting highway for energy transport and storage and superconductor levitation for the transport of people and goods. CREDIT Vakaliuk et al.
A superconducting highway that could transport vehicles and electricity
Schematic illustration of the superconducting highway for energy transport and storage and superconductor levitation for
Building a room-temperature superconductor that could transform technology
via University of Virginia School of Medicine Building a room-temperature superconductor that could transform technology
The way to pack a million qubits into a quantum computer rather than just a few thousand
NIST physicists measured and controlled a superconducting quantum bit (qubit) using light-conducting fiber (indicated by
Room temperature superconductivity moves a step closer
Layers of molybdenum carbide and molybdenum sulfide allow superconductivity at 50 percent higher temperatures. IMAGE:
A full-size superconducting generator could be the future for wind turbines

A superconducting rotor has been successfully tested on an active wind turbine for the first

Getting much closer to room temperature superconductivity

A hydrogen-rich material becomes superconductive under high pressure and at minus 23 degrees Celsius Fewer

Could graphene become superconducting?

Scientists at the London Centre for Nanotechnology and Department of Physics & Astronomy at UCL