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University of Vienna

University of Vienna

The University of Vienna (German: Universität Wien) is a public university located in Vienna, Austria.

Creating super-spuds that are resistant to heat, drought and flooding

A new way of making quantum computers trustworthy by letting quantum computers check each other

Quantum artificial intelligence can learn significantly faster

Computer circuits using magnons to convey information in place of electrons use 10 times less energy

A step towards the long-term goal of quantum computing at room temperature

3D-printed super magnets that are sustainable

One more step to a super-secure quantum internet

Scientists have managed to send a record-breaking amount of data in quantum form, using a strange unit of quantum information called a qutrit. The news: Quantum tech promises to allow data to be sent securely over long distances. Scientists have already shown it’s possible to transmit information both on land and via satellites using quantum bits, or

One more step to a super-secure quantum internet

Could a bacteria that feeds on methane be a tool in the climate change toolbox?

A newly identified bacteria inhales methane from the atmosphere for energy Methane is an atmospheric trace gas whose concentration has steadily increased since the beginning of the industrial age and which as a greenhouse gas contributes significantly to the warming of the earth. While many processes are known that contribute to methane production, only specific microorganisms

Could a bacteria that feeds on methane be a tool in the climate change toolbox?

Complex quantum teleportation moves closer

Novel complex quantum entanglement generated in the laboratory for the first time For future technologies such as quantum computers and quantum encryption, the experimental mastery of complex quantum systems is inevitable. Scientists from the University of Vienna and the Austrian Academy of Sciences have succeeded in making another leap. While physicists around the world are

Complex quantum teleportation moves closer

Chemical fingerprints in minutes instead of thousands of years with AI

Neural networks carry out chemical simulations in record time Researchers at the Universities of Vienna and Göttingen have succeeded in developing a method for predicting molecular infrared spectra based on artificial intelligence. These chemical “fingerprints” could only be simulated by common prediction techniques for small molecules in high quality. With the help of the new

Chemical fingerprints in minutes instead of thousands of years with AI

Inspired by the Star Trek Holodeck, biologists are enabling new experiments in virtual reality

Inspired by Star Trek, biologists are enabling new experiments in virtual reality How do people orient themselves when they are in a new area? How do we use street signs or houses, for instance, to estimate the distance we have traveled? Put simply: how do we update our mental map? Neuroscientists have been studying such

Inspired by the Star Trek Holodeck, biologists are enabling new experiments in virtual reality

Three “twisted” photons in three dimensions

Experiment opens door for quantum encryption Researchers at the Institute of Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI), the University of Vienna, and the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona have achieved a new milestone in quantum physics: they were able to entangle three particles of light in a high-dimensional quantum property related to the “twist” of their

Three “twisted” photons in three dimensions

A quantum lab for everyone

Modern science as a photorealistic online game A virtual laboratory allows, for the first time, to actively engage with topical quantum physics. The novel learning environment was developed at the Faculty of Physics at the University of Vienna in collaboration with university and high-school students. In time for the start of the new term, the

A quantum lab for everyone

Paving the way for a faster quantum computer

Unordered quantum computation: improved efficiency A team of physicists from the University of Vienna and the Austrian Academy of Sciences have demonstrated a new quantum computation scheme in which operations occur without a well-defined order.  The researchers led by Philip Walther and Caslav Brukner used this effect to accomplish a task more efficiently than a

Paving the way for a faster quantum computer

Quantum physics enables revolutionary imaging method

Researchers from the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI), the Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology (VCQ), and the University of Vienna have developed a fundamentally new quantum imaging technique with strikingly counterintuitive features. For the first time, an image has been obtained without ever detecting the light that was used to

Quantum physics enables revolutionary imaging method

Nano World: Where towers construct themselves

Imagine a tower builds itself into the desired structure only by choosing the appropriate bricks. Absurd – and however, in the nano world this is reality: There an unordered crowd of components can initiate the formation of an ordered structure – a process known as self-assembly. The physicists Christos Likos (University of Vienna), Emanuela Bianchi

Nano World: Where towers construct themselves

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