April issue
This month we discover how light scattering can measure material time, review the prospects for drug design on quantum computers, and examine the links between flat bands and strange metals.
This month we discover how light scattering can measure material time, review the prospects for drug design on quantum computers, and examine the links between flat bands and strange metals.
The properties of quantum matter arise from the combined effects of dimensionality, interactions and quantum statistics. An experiment now studies what happens to ultracold bosons when the dimensionality of the system changes continuously between one and two dimensions.