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Shining laser light on a material produces subtle changes in its magnetic properties

Researchers in Switzerland have found an unexpected new use for an optical technique commonly used in silicon chip manufacturing. By shining a focused laser beam onto a sample of material, a team at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) and ETH Zürich showed that it was possible to change the material’s magnetic properties on a scale of nanometres – essentially “writing” these magnetic properties into the sample in the same way as photolithography etches patterns onto wafers. The discovery could have applications for novel forms of computer memory as well as fundamental research.

In standard photolithography – the workhorse of the modern chip manufacturing industry – a light beam passes through a transmission mask and projects an image of the mask’s light-absorption pattern onto a (usually silicon) wafer. The wafer itself is covered with a photosensitive polymer called a resist. Changing the intensity of the light leads to different exposure levels in the resist-covered material, making it possible to create finely detailed structures.

In the new work, Laura Heyderman and colleagues in PSI-ETH Zürich’s joint Mesoscopic System group began by placing a thin film of a magnetic material in a standard photolithography machine, but without a photoresist. They then scanned a focused laser beam over the surface of the sample while modulating the beam’s wavelength of 405 nm to deliver varying intensities of light. This process is known as direct write laser annealing (DWLA), and it makes it possible to heat areas of the sample that measure just 150 nm across.

In each heated area, thermal energy from the laser is deposited at the surface and partially absorbed by the film down to a depth of around 100 nm). The remainder dissipates through a silicon substrate coated in 300-nm-thick silicon oxide. However, the thermal conductivity of this substrate is low, which maximizes the temperature increase in the film for a given laser fluence. The researchers also sought to keep the temperature increase as uniform as possible by using thin-film heterostructures with a total thickness of less than 20 nm.

Crystallization and interdiffusion effects

Members of the PSI-ETH Zürich team applied this technique to several technologically important magnetic thin-film systems, including ferromagnetic CoFeB/MgO, ferrimagnetic CoGd and synthetic antiferromagnets composed of Co/Cr, Co/Ta or CoFeB/Pt/Ru. They found that DWLA induces both crystallization and interdiffusion effects in these materials. During crystallization, the orientation of the sample’s magnetic moments gradually changes, while interdiffusion alters the magnetic exchange coupling between the layers of the structures.

The researchers say that both phenomena could have interesting applications. The magnetized regions in the structures could be used in data storage, for example, with the direction of the magnetization (“up” or “down”) corresponding to the “1” or “0” of a bit of data. In conventional data-storage systems, these bits are switched with a magnetic field, but team member Jeffrey Brock explains that the new technique allows electric currents to be used instead. This is advantageous because electric currents are easier to produce than magnetic fields, while data storage devices switched with electricity are both faster and capable of packing more data into a given space.

Team member Lauren Riddiford says the new work builds on previous studies by members of the same group, which showed it was possible to make devices suitable for computer memory by locally patterning magnetic properties. “The trick we used here was to locally oxidize the topmost layer in a magnetic multilayer,” she explains. “However, we found that this works only in a few systems and only produces abrupt changes in the material properties. We were therefore brainstorming possible alternative methods to create gradual, smooth gradients in material properties, which would open possibilities to even more exciting applications and realized that we could perform local annealing with a laser originally made for patterning polymer resist layers for photolithography.”

Riddiford adds that the method proved so fast and simple to implement that the team’s main challenge was to investigate all the material changes it produced. Physical characterization methods for ultrathin films can be slow and difficult, she tells Physics World.

The researchers, who describe their technique in Nature Communications, now hope to use it to develop structures that are compatible with current chip-manufacturing technology. “Beyond magnetism, our approach can be used to locally modify the properties of any material that undergoes changes when heated, so we hope researchers using thin films for many different devices – electronic, superconducting, optical, microfluidic and so on – could use this technique to design desired functionalities,” Riddiford says. “We are looking forward to seeing where this method will be implemented next, whether in magnetic or non-magnetic materials, and what kind of applications it might bring.”

The post Shining laser light on a material produces subtle changes in its magnetic properties appeared first on Physics World.

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Accelerating digital transformation is the keystone to deterring space war

The United States cannot beat China without accelerating digital transformation: cloud-native services, edge computing, AI/ML-driven autonomy, software-defined payloads, zero-trust cybersecurity, network maneuver and automated DevSecOps pipelines. Digital transformation drives the pace at which militaries convert data into decisions, and decision dominance enables proactive deterrence.  Choices made today about software, data, resilience and partnerships will therefore […]

The post Accelerating digital transformation is the keystone to deterring space war appeared first on SpaceNews.

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The obscure physics theory that helped Chinese science emerge from the shadows

“The Straton Model of elementary particles had very limited influence in the West,” said Jinyan Liu as she sat with me in a quiet corner of the CERN cafeteria. Liu, who I caught up with during a break in a recent conference on the history of particle physics, was referring to a particular model of elementary particle physics first put together in China in the mid-1960s. The Straton Model was, and still largely is, unknown outside that country. “But it was an essential step forward,” Liu added, “for Chinese physicists in joining the international community.”

Liu was at CERN to give a talk on how Chinese theorists redirected their research efforts in the years after the Cultural Revolution, which ended in 1976. They switched from the Straton Model, which was a politically infused theory of matter favoured by Mao Zedong, the founder of the People’s Republic of China, to mainstream particle physics as practised by the rest of the world. It’s easy to portray the move as the long-overdue moment when Chinese scientists resumed their “real” physics research. But, Liu told me, “actually it was much more complicated”.

A physicist by training, Liu received her PhD on contemporary theories of spontaneous charge-parity (CP) violation from the Institute of Theoretical Physics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) in 2013. She then switched to the CAS Institute for History of Natural Sciences, where she was its first member with a physics PhD. Her initial research topic was the history and development of the Straton Model.

The model is essentially a theory of the structure of hadrons – either baryons (such as protons and neutrons) or mesons (such as pions and kaons). But the model’s origins are as improbable as they are labyrinthine. Mao, who had a keen interest in natural science, was convinced that matter was infinitely divisible, and in 1963 he came across an article by the Marxist-inspired Japanese physicist Shoichi Sakata (1911–1970).

First published in Japanese in 1961 and later translated into Russian, Sakata’s paper was entitled “Dialogues concerning a new view of elementary particles”. It restated Sakata’s belief, which he had been working on since the 1950s, that hadrons are made of smaller constituents – “elementary particles are not the ultimate elements of matter” as he put it. With some Chinese scholars back then still paying close attention to publications from the Soviet Union, their former political and ideological ally, that paper was then translated into Chinese.

Mao Zedong was engrossed in Shoichi Sakata’s paper, for it seemed to offer scientific support for his own views.

This version appeared in the Bulletin of the Studies of Dialectics of Nature in 1963. Mao, who received an issue of that bulletin from his son-in-law, was engrossed in Sakata’s paper, for it seemed to offer scientific support for his own views. Sakata’s article – both in the original Japanese and now in Chinese – cited Friedrich Engels’ view that matter has numerous stages of discrete but qualitatively different parts. In addition, it quoted Lenin’s remark that “even the electron is inexhaustible”.

A wider dimension

“International politics now also entered,” Liu told me, as we discussed the issue further at CERN. A split between China and the Soviet Union had begun to open up in the late 1950s, with Mao breaking off relations with the Soviet Union and starting to establish non-governmental science and technology exchanges between China and Japan. Indeed, when China hosted the Peking Symposium of foreign scientists in 1964, Japan brought the biggest delegation, with Sakata as its leader.

At the event, Mao personally congratulated Sakata on his theory. It was, Sakata later recalled, “the most unforgettable moment of my journey to China”. In 1965, Sakata’s paper was retranslated from the Japanese original, with an annotated version published in Red Flag and the newspaper Renmin ribao, or “People’s Daily”, both official organs of the Chinese Communist Party.

Chinese physicists realized that they could capitalize on Mao’s enthusiasm to make elementary particle physics a legitimate research direction.

Chinese physicists, who had been assigned to work on the atomic bomb and other research deemed important by the Communist Party, now started to take note. Uninterested in philosophy, they realized that they could capitalize on Mao’s enthusiasm to make elementary particle physics a legitimate research direction.

As a result, 39 members of CAS, Peking University and the University of Science and Technology of China formed the Beijing Elementary Particle Group. Between 1965 and 1966, they wrote dozens of papers on a model of hadrons inspired by both Sakata’s work and quark theory based on the available experimental data. It was dubbed the Straton Model because it involved layers or “strata” of particles nested in each other.

Liu has interviewed most surviving members of the group and studied details of the model. It differed from the model being developed at the time by the US theorist Murray Gell-Mann, which saw quarks as not physical but mathematical elements. As Liu discovered, Chinese particle physicists were now given resources they’d never had before. In particular, they could use computers, which until then had been devoted to urgent national defence work. “To be honest,” Liu chuckled, “the elementary particle physicists didn’t use computers much, but at least they were made available.”

The high-water mark for the Straton Model occurred in July 1966 when members of the Beijing Elementary Particle Group presented it at a summer physics colloquium organized by the China Association for Science and Technology. The opening ceremony was held in Tiananmen Square, in what was then China’s biggest conference centre, with attendees including Abdus Salam from Imperial College London. The only high-profile figure to be invited from the West, Salam was deemed acceptable because he was science advisor to the president of Pakistan, a country considered outside the western orbit.

The proceedings of the colloquium were later published as “Research on the theory of elementary particles carried out under the brilliant illumination of Mao Tse-Tung’s thought”. Its introduction was what Liu calls a “militant document” – designed to reinforce the idea that the authors were carrying Mao’s thought into scientific research to repudiate “decadent feudal, bourgeois and revisionist ideologies”.

Participants in Beijing had expected to make their advances known internationally by publishing the proceedings in English. But the Cultural Revolution had just begun two months before, and publications in English were forbidden. “As a result,” Liu told me, “the model had very limited influence outside China.” Sakata, however, had an important influence on Japanese theorists having co-authored the key paper on neutrino flavour oscillation (Prog. Theoretical. Physics 28 870).

A resurfaced effort

In recent years, Liu has shed new light on the Straton Model, writing a paper in the journal Chinese Annals of History of Science and Technology (2 85). In 2022, she also published a 2022 Chinese-language book entitled Constructing a Theory of Hadron Structure: Chinese Physicists’ Straton Model, which describes the downfall of the model after 1966. None of its predicted material particles appeared, though a candidate event once occurred in a cosmic ray observatory in the south of China.

By 1976, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) had convincingly emerged as the established model of hadrons. The effective end of the Straton Model took place at a conference in January 1980 in Conghua, near Hong Kong. Hung-Yuan Tzu, one of the key leaders of the Beijing Group, gave a paper entitled “Reminiscences of the Straton Model”, signalling that physics had moved on.

During our meeting at CERN, Liu showed me photos of the 1980 event. “It was a very important conference in the history of Chinese physics,” she said, “the first opening to Chinese physicists in the West”. Visits by Chinese expatriates were organized by Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen-Ning Yang, who shared the 1957 Nobel Prize for Physics for their work on parity violation.

The critical point

It is easy for westerners to mock the Straton Model; Sheldon Glashow once referred to it as about “Maons”. But Liu sees it as significant research that had many unexpected consequences, such as helping to advance physics research in China. “It gave physicists a way to pursue quantum field theory without having to do national defence work”.

The model also trained young researchers in particle physics and honed their research competence. After the post-Cultural Revolution reform and its opening to the West, these physicists could then integrate into the international community. “The story,” Liu said, “shows how ingeniously the Chinese physicists adapted to the political situation.”

The post The obscure physics theory that helped Chinese science emerge from the shadows appeared first on Physics World.

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A surprising critical state emerges in active nematic materials

Nematics are materials made of rod‑like particles that tend to align in the same direction. In active nematics, this alignment is constantly disrupted and renewed because the particles are driven by internal biological or chemical energy. As the orientation field twists and reorganises, it creates topological defects-points where the alignment breaks down. These defects are central to the collective behaviour of active matter, shaping flows, patterns, and self‑organisation.

In this work, the researchers identify an active topological phase transition that separates two distinct regimes of defect organisation. As the system approaches this transition from below, the dynamics slow dramatically: the relaxation of defect density becomes sluggish, fluctuations in the number of defects grow in amplitude and lifetime, and the system becomes increasingly sensitive to small changes in activity. At the critical point, defects begin to interact over long distances, with correlation lengths that grow with system size. This behaviour produces a striking dual‑scaling pattern, defect fluctuations appear uniform at small scales but become anti‑hyperuniform at larger scales, meaning that the number of defects varies far more than expected from a random distribution.

A key finding is that this anti‑hyperuniformity originates from defect clustering. Rather than forming ordered structures or undergoing phase separation, defects tend to appear near existing defects, creating multiscale clusters. This distinguishes the transition from well‑known defect‑unbinding processes such as the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition in passive nematics or the nematic-isotropic transition in screened active systems. Above the critical activity, the system enters a defect‑laden turbulent state where defects are more uniformly distributed and correlations become short‑ranged and negative.

The researchers confirm these behaviours experimentally using large‑field‑of‑view measurements of endothelial cell monolayers which are the cells that line blood vessels. The same dual‑scaling behaviour, long‑range correlations, and clustering appear in these living tissues, demonstrating that the transition is robust across system sizes, parameter variations, frictional damping, and boundary conditions.

Read the full article

Anti-hyperuniform critical states of active topological defects

Simon Guldager Andersen et al 2025 Rep. Prog. Phys. 88 108101

Do you want to learn more about this topic?

Active phase separation: new phenomenology from non-equilibrium physics M E Cates and C Nardini (2025)

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Non-Abelian anyons: anything but easy

Topological quantum computing is a proposed approach to building quantum computers that aims to solve one of the biggest challenges in quantum technology: error correction.

In conventional quantum systems, qubits are extremely sensitive to their environment and even tiny disturbances can cause errors. Topological quantum computing addresses this by encoding information in the global properties of a system: the topology of certain quantum states.

These systems rely on the use of non-Abelian anyons, exotic quasiparticles that can exist in two-dimensional materials under special conditions.

The main challenge faced by this approach to quantum computing is the creation and control of these quasiparticles.

One possible source of non-Abelian anyons is the fractional quantum Hall state (FQH): an exotic state of matter which can exist at very low temperatures and high magnetic fields.

These states come in two forms: even-denominator and odd-denominator. Here, we’re interested in the even-denominator states – the more interesting but less well understood of the two.

In this latest work, researchers have observed this exotic state in gallium arsenide (GaAs) two-dimensional hole systems.

Typically, FQH states are isotropic, showing no preferred direction. Here, however, the team found states that are strongly anisotropic, suggesting that the system spontaneously breaks rotational symmetry.

This means that it forms a nematic phase – similar to liquid crystals – where molecules align along a direction without forming a rigid structure.

This spontaneous symmetry breaking adds complexity to the state and can influence how quasiparticles behave, interact, and move.

The observation of the existence of spontaneous nematicity in an even-denominator fractional quantum Hall state is the first of its kind.

Although there are many questions left to be answered, the properties of this system could be hugely important for topological quantum computers as well as other novel quantum technologies.

Read the full article

Even-denominator fractional quantum Hall states with spontaneously broken rotational symmetry – IOPscience

C. Wang et al 2025 Rep. Prog. Phys. 88 100501

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Space Foundation to Host Innovate Space: Finance Forum in Partnership With Texas Space Commission

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Jan. 15, 2026 — Space Foundation, a nonprofit organization founded in 1983 to advance the global space community, today announced it will host Innovate Space: Finance […]

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