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Studying the role of the quantum environment in attosecond science

Attosecond science is undoubtedly one of the fastest growing branches of physics today.

Its popularity was demonstrated by the award of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics to Anne L’Huillier, Paul Corkum and Ferenc Krausz for experimental methods that generate attosecond pulses of light for the study of electron dynamics in matter.

One of the most important processes in this field is dephasing. This happens when an electron loses its phase coherence because of interactions with its surroundings.

This loss of coherence can obscure the fine details of electron dynamics, making it harder to capture precise snapshots of these rapid processes.

The most common way to model this process in light-matter interactions is by using the relaxation time approximation. This approach greatly simplifies the picture as it avoids the need to model every single particle in the system.

Its use is fine for dilute gases, but it doesn’t work as well with intense lasers and denser materials, such as solids, because it greatly overestimates ionisation.

This is a significant problem as ionisation is the first step in many processes such as electron acceleration and high-harmonic generation.

To address this problem, a team led by researchers from the University of Ottawa have developed a new method to correct for this problem.

By introducing a heat bath into the model they were able to represent the many-body environment that interacts with electrons, without significantly increasing the complexity.

This new approach should enable the identification of new effects in attosecond science or wherever strong electromagnetic fields interact with matter.

Read the full article

Strong field physics in open quantum systems – IOPscience

N. Boroumand et al, 2025 Rep. Prog. Phys. 88 070501

 

The post Studying the role of the quantum environment in attosecond science appeared first on Physics World.

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Characterising quantum many-body states

Describing the non-classical properties of a complex many-body system (such as entanglement or coherence) is an important part of quantum technologies.

An ideal tool for this task would work well with large systems, be easily computable and easily measurable. Unfortunately, such a tool for every situation does not yet exist.

With this goal in mind a team of researchers from Spain and Poland began work on a special type of quantum state used in quantum computing – graph states.

These states can be visualised as graphs or networks where each vertex represents a qubit, and each edge represents an interaction between pairs of qubits.

The team studied four different shapes of graph states using new mathematical tools they developed. They found that one of these in particular, the Turán graph, could be very useful in quantum metrology.

Their method is (relatively) straightforward and does not require many assumptions. This means that it could be applied to any shape of graph beyond the four studied here.

The results will be useful in various quantum technologies wherever precise knowledge of many-body quantum correlations is necessary.

Read the full article

Many-body quantum resources of graph states – IOPscience

M. Płodzień et al, 2025 Rep. Prog. Phys. 88 077601

 

The post Characterising quantum many-body states appeared first on Physics World.

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Honoring a career opening doors for the commercial space sector

Phil McAlister. Credit: NASA

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated at a Dec. 2 ceremony hosted […]

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Defending NASA science in the face of sweeping budget cuts

Casey Dreier. Credit: The Planetary Society

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Sophisticated maneuvers from a new spacecraft

Photo of Impulse Space’s Mira in-space vehicle in orbit. Credit: Impulse Space.

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Leading the integration of commercial and military capabilities in space

Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy at the 2025 Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colo. Credit: U.S. Air Force

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Making seamless connections between D2D patchwork

Space42 and e& executives signed their partnership agreement at the GITEX Global conference in Dubai. Credit: Space42

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Using AI to scan the Earth

CogniSat-6, built by Open Cosmos with Ubotica edge processing and software for artificial intelligence, is the platform for Dynamic Targeting. Credit: Ubotica

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Teaming up to create multi-orbit broadband

SES’s Betzdorf headquarters in Luxembourg, shown here with its satellite antenna field, anchors the company’s global operations following its Intelsat acquisition.

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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A rapid deployment of a space traffic management platform

The TraCSS logo. Credit: NOAA

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Spotting smaller wildfires sooner than ever

A small fire in Oregon imaged by the FireSat Protoflight satellite that went undetected by existing satellites. Credit: MUON SPACE/Earth Fire Alliance

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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Making multiple breakthroughs in spacecraft swarms

Starling is testing autonomous swarm navigation in low Earth orbit. Credit: NASA/Daniel Rutter

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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A vindication for NASA’s CLPS program, and a victory for Firefly

Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander captured footage of the moon during its third lunar orbit maneuver on Feb. 24 that inserted the spacecraft in a near-circular low lunar orbit. This photo was captured about 100 km above the lunar surface. Credit: Firefly Aerospace

Each year, SpaceNews selects the people, programs and technologies that have most influenced the direction of the space industry in the past year. Started in 2017, our annual celebration recognizes outsized achievements in a business in which no ambition feels unattainable. This year’s winners of the 8th annual SpaceNews Icon Awards were announced and celebrated […]

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The U.S. Senate vs. the Athena Plan — NASA on trial

Isaacman

On December 3, 2025, the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation will hold a hearing to examine the re-nomination of Mr. Jared Isaacman for NASA Administrator. A central issue at the Hearing will be the implications of Mr. Isaacman’s leaked “Project Athena Strategic Plan” (the Plan), which outlines potential reasons for and actions […]

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It’s time to give NASA an astrophysics nervous system

The element assembly wheel of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. Credit: NASA

The most tragic event in modern astronomy isn’t a funding cut or a launch failure. It is a “missed connection.” Right now, a neutron star collision somewhere in the distant universe is blasting out a short gamma-ray burst. In seconds, that signal will fade. In minutes, the afterglow will vanish. While a few elite robotic […]

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