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In August 2020, a YouTube video featuring Tim and Fred Williams, 21-year old twins from Gary, Indiana, went viral. In it, the two young men were listening to Phil Collins’ 1981 hit song In The Air Tonight for the first time, commenting as they went along. They listen intently for the first few minutes, their heads bobbing along. Then Collins’ drum fill with the famous gated-reverb starts and they are astonished. “I ain’t never seen anyone drop a beat three minutes into a song,” Fred explains. When the song concludes, Fred cries: “You killed it Phil!”
The video was viewed millions of times and shared widely on social media. In the Air Tonight immediately went to number one on US college radio stations. The Guardian and The New York Times covered the video, praising not only Collins’ iconic song but celebrating his solo career as a whole. This was a marked departure from only a few years earlier, when his solo work was dismissed by critics as cultur
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Researchers from the Delft University of Technology, in collaboration with RWTH Aachen University and the Jülich Research Center, intercepted the reaction of two atoms to each other.
Atoms, of course, cannot talk. But they can react to each other. This applies in particular to magnetic atoms.
Each such atom carries a small magnetic moment called a spin. These rotations affect each other, like the arrows of a compass, when you bring them closer to each other. If you give one of them a push, they will begin to move together in a very specific way. But, according to the laws of quantum mechanics, each spin can be simultaneously directed in different directions, forming a superposition. This means that the actual transfer of quantum information occurs between atoms, like
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IMAGE: Artist s impression of the experiment, where an electric pulse is applied to a titanium atom. As a result, its magnetic moment suddenly flips around. A neighbouring titanium atom (right) reacts. view more
Credit: TU Delft/Scixel
How materials behave depends on the interactions between countless atoms. You could see this as a giant group chat in which atoms are continuously exchanging quantum information. Researchers from Delft University of Technology in collaboration with RWTH Aachen University and the Research Center Jülich have now been able to intercept a chat between two atoms. They present their findings in
Science on 28 May.