Physicists have found a way to measure how long ultra-fast quantum events actually take—without using a clock at all.
Time feels steady and familiar in daily life, but at the quantum level it becomes slippery. That puzzle now has a fresh twist ...
Measurement does not become useful because it moves faster. According to the report, it becomes useful when teams trust what they are seeing and understand its limits. AI may support that outcome, but ...
Measuring conditions in volatile clouds of superheated gases known as plasmas is central to pursuing greater scientific ...
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio — Cleveland Heights City Council received a detailed plan Monday for placing ranked-choice voting ...
Will two rare supernovas finally tell us how fast the universe is expanding? Perhaps, but we'll have to wait for it for them ...
The 2026 F1 World Championship will finalize all engine homologation on March 1st, which would give Mercedes very little time ...
The concept of time has troubled philosophers and physicists for thousands of years, and the advent of quantum mechanics has not simplified the ...
For the first time in more than two decades, San Francisco is changing the way it counts the number of unhoused individuals on its streets.
Today, checking the time is effortless. A quick glance at a wristwatch, a wall clock, or even a mobile phone instantly tells us whether we are late for class, early for an appointment or right on time ...
The new series of Consumer Price Index (CPI), used for measuring retail inflation, is going live from February 2026. The ...
Scientists have long known that cellular membranes vary in thickness, but measuring those differences inside actual cells has been out of reach. Until now, scientists could only measure membrane ...