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Quantum dots generate entangled photon pairs on demand

For the first time, researchers in China have demonstrated how quantum dots can be engineered to consistently generate pairs of entangled photons. By carefully tailoring the photonic environment surrounding a single quantum dot, the team showed that it is possible to produce highly correlated photon pairs with remarkable efficiency, potentially opening new opportunities for emerging quantum technologies. The work, led by Zhiliang Yuan at the Beijing Academy of Quantum Information Sciences, is reported in Nature Materials.

In recent years, technologies capable of generating single photons on demand have advanced at an impressive pace. Already, these sources have led to substantial progress in fields ranging from quantum computing and secure communications, to advanced sensing and biomedical imaging.

A natural next step will be the ability to produce pairs of photons that are identical and strongly entangled. Even when separated by large distances, the properties of entangled photons remain linked: an effect that lies at the heart of many quantum technologies.

Quantum computers must overcome major technical hurdles before tackling quantum chemistry problems

Although the potential applications of quantum computing are widespread, a new feasibility study suggests quantum computers still face major hurdles in solving quantum chemistry problems. The study, published in Physical Review B, evaluates what criteria are needed for a quantum advantage in searching for the ground state energy of molecules. The researchers attempt this feat using two different algorithms with differing strengths and weaknesses.

The team first determined the criteria for the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) algorithm, which is used for noisy, near-term devices and sets an upper bound to the level of imprecision or decoherence in quantum hardware. The researchers derived quantitative criteria for VQE and QPE based on error rates, energy scales, and overlap with the ground state.

Results showed that VQE is extremely sensitive to hardware errors and decoherence. The team says that achieving chemical accuracy would require error rates far below current hardware capabilities. Available error mitigation techniques offer only limited improvement and scale poorly with system size.

Inside the light: How invisible electric fields drive device luminescence

Fleeting electron-hole pairs are giving scientists a new window into optimizing light-emitting devices (LEDs). Using quantum magnetic resonance, Osaka Metropolitan University researchers have discovered how shifting internal electric fields dictate whether these devices shine brightly or dimly. Their study is published in the journal Advanced Optical Materials.

Light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) are simple, flexible, and low-cost thin-film devices that generate light from an electric current. Unlike conventional organic LEDs, LECs contain just a single active layer—an organic semiconductor blended with mobile ions—sandwiched between two electrodes. This structural simplicity makes them promising tools for next-generation light-emitting technologies.

Inside that apparently simple structure, however, things aren’t so simple after all.

The deep mystery physicists call “the problem of time” | Jim Al-Khalili: Full Interview

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Up next.
Brian Cox: The quantum roots of reality | Full Interview ► • Brian Cox: The quantum roots of reality |…

Time feels obvious, but physics tells a stranger story about its existence: Theoretical physicist Jim Al-Khalili explores why our sense of time may be incredibly misleading, including the idea that past, present, and future might all exist at once.

0:00 Chapter 1: Does time flow?
2:42 Why Time Feels Faster as We Age.
3:56 Time and Change in Philosophy and Physics.
5:28 Einstein and the End of Absolute Time.
6:19 Time in the Equations of Physics.
7:50 Chapter 2: How do we reconcile quantum field theory with the general theory of relativity?
12:10 Evidence for Time Dilation: Muons.
14:29 Gravity Slows Time: General Relativity.
19:22 Space-Time and the Block Universe.
21:55 Does Time Really Exist?
26:33 The Debate: Eternalism vs Presentism.
34:12 Chapter 3: Is There a “Now”?
40:40 Chapter 4: Why Does Thermodynamics Have a Direction in Time?
49:38 Quantum Entanglement and the Direction of Time.
55:10 Did Time Begin at the Big Bang?
45:00 Will Time End?
1:05:40 Chapter 5: Is Time Travel Possible?

Emergent topological semimetal from quantum criticality

Consider a material that doesn’t just “have” a certain property, but spontaneously creates it out of total chaos. That is the essence of what researchers found in a recent study on a specific metal called CeRu4Sn6.

This isn’t just a lab curiosity. By proving that quantum fluctuations (the tiny, frantic jitters of atoms) can work together with a material’s symmetry to create new phases, the researchers have provided a new “treasure map.”

Key Takeaway: You don’t always need solid building blocks (quasiparticles) to build a structure; sometimes, the “jitter” of quantum physics is enough to weave a new reality.


Examples of materials with non-trivial band topology in the presence of strong electron correlations are rare. Now it is shown that quantum fluctuations near a quantum phase transition can promote topological phases in a heavy-fermion compound.

Cool Qubits Make Faster Decisions

Classical machine learning has benefited several physics subfields, from materials science to medical imaging. Implementing machine-learning algorithms on quantum computers could expand their use to more complex problems and to datasets that are inherently quantum. Nayeli Rodríguez-Briones at the Technical University of Vienna and Daniel Park at Yonsei University in South Korea have now proposed a thermodynamics-inspired protocol that could make quantum machine-learning techniques more efficient [1].

In one common classical machine-learning task, a system is trained on a known dataset and then challenged to classify new data. Its output quantifies both the classification and that classification’s uncertainty. Once the system’s parameters are fixed, evaluating the same data yields the same output. In contrast, the output of a quantum machine-learning algorithm is read out as binary measurements of qubits, which are inherently probabilistic. Because a single measurement provides only limited information, the computation must be repeated many times.

Rodríguez-Briones and Park recognized that how clearly a quantum computer reveals its output is determined by entropy. When the readout qubit is highly polarized—strongly favoring one outcome—its entropy is low. Few repetitions are needed to obtain a firm result. An unpolarized, high-entropy readout qubit returns both states more evenly, meaning more repetitions are required. The researchers showed that the readout qubit’s polarity can be increased by transferring its entropy to ancillary qubits, effectively cooling one while warming the others. Between runs, the ancillary qubits are reset by coupling them to a heat bath. Crucially, this entropy transfer affects the readout qubit’s degree of polarization without changing the encoded decision. The upshot: A given result can be arrived at with fewer repetitions.

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