Scientists have hypothesized that moir excitons — electron-hole pairs confined in moir interference fringes which overlap with slightly offset patterns — may function as qubits in next-generation nano-semiconductors. However, due to diffraction limits, it has not been possible to focus light enough in measurements, causing optical interference from many moir excitons. To solve this, researchers have developed a new method of reducing these moir excitons to measure the quantum coherence time and realize quantum functionality.
Source link
Trending
- Mass-production architecture matches top performers
- Amazon releases a video generator — but only for ads
- Teralys Capital says it “should” hit $570-million fund-of-funds target by end of year
- International law enforcement shuts down cybercrime communication platform Ghost
- Nintendo Download: 19th September (North America)
- iPhone 16 battery life almost matches 15 Pro Max in tests
- Constriction junction, do you function?
- IT professionals want stronger AI regulation