Dataconomy
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI toolsNEW
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • AI
  • Tech
  • Cybersecurity
  • Finance
  • DeFi & Blockchain
  • Startups
  • Gaming
Dataconomy
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI toolsNEW
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Dataconomy
No Result
View All Result

Physics at -271°C: How the cold is heating up quantum computing

byKerem Gülen
January 8, 2026
in Research
Home Research
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on WhatsAppShare on e-mail
Google Preferred Source

Scientists are utilizing ultracold temperatures to advance physics, ranging from particle accelerators to quantum computers.

CERN’s Large Hadron Collider entered its final data-taking phase before a summer transformation to the High-Luminosity LHC, an upgrade delivering approximately five times more particle collisions. This enhancement requires cooling over 1,000 superconducting electromagnets within the 27-kilometer ring to 1.9 Kelvin, or roughly -271°C.

“We aim to be leaders in technology with this heat exchanger,” said Stefan Brohm, lead business engineer at Swep. Swep develops carbon dioxide-based refrigerant systems for the ATLAS experiment to minimize electronics noise. The superconducting magnets utilize niobium-titanium wire cooled by superfluid helium, allowing resistance-free electrical flow.

Stay Ahead of the Curve!

Don't miss out on the latest insights, trends, and analysis in the world of data, technology, and startups. Subscribe to our newsletter and get exclusive content delivered straight to your inbox.

Researchers at TU Wien in Vienna recently created a quantum “wire” from thousands of rubidium atoms cooled to near absolute zero, where energy and mass flow without resistance. “The gas behaves like a perfect conductor; even though countless collisions occur between the atoms, quantities like mass and energy flow freely, without dissipating into the system,” said Frederik Møller from TU Wien’s Atominstitut. The atoms, confined to a single line, pass momentum akin to a Newton’s cradle.

Ultracold atoms enable the world’s most accurate atomic clocks. MIT physicists announced in October 2025 that they had doubled the precision of optical atomic clocks using quantum entanglement to reduce measurement noise.

Tech companies increasingly use ultracold neutral atoms for quantum computing. Atom Computing operates systems with over 1,200 physical qubits and projects 2026 as “the year of quantum execution and delivery.” Unlike superconducting systems, many neutral atom computers can operate at room temperature while offering scalability to thousands of qubits.

India has established a presence in ultracold physics, with TIFR Mumbai, IISc Bengaluru, and IISER Pune conducting research on laser-cooled atoms and quantum coherence.


Featured image credit

Tags: quantum computing

Related Posts

Study links AI-assisted homework to lower exam scores

Study links AI-assisted homework to lower exam scores

June 22, 2026
Harvard and Boston Children’s use AI to revisit unsolved genetic cases

Harvard and Boston Children’s use AI to revisit unsolved genetic cases

June 19, 2026
Adobe report finds 86% of creators now use generative AI in workflows

Adobe report finds 86% of creators now use generative AI in workflows

June 17, 2026
AI transfer learning speeds cosmology research but has hidden risks

AI transfer learning speeds cosmology research but has hidden risks

June 15, 2026
Phishing scams targeting travelers hit record levels in 2026

Phishing scams targeting travelers hit record levels in 2026

June 15, 2026
Most UK SMEs now consult AI before their accountants

Most UK SMEs now consult AI before their accountants

June 12, 2026

LATEST NEWS

PlayStation 6 leak points to 2027 release window

Samsung unveils UFS 5.0 storage for future Galaxy phones

Getty Images partners with OpenAI to supply licensed visuals for ChatGPT

Instagram for TV launches on Samsung TVs in the US

Valve opens Steam Machine reservations starting at $1,049

Apple releases iOS 27 beta 2 with new “Write with Siri” feature

BEST AI MODELS LEADERBOARD

See the best AI models, ranked by intelligence, benchmark results, speed and token price. Find the most suitable LLMs, Text-to-Image, Image Editing, Text-to-Speech, Text-to-Video and Image-to-Video  artificial intelligence model for your tasks and business.

LATEST TOOLS

Moonbeam

Charisma AI

Essay Writer by Papertyper

Slite

Wonderin AI

Spur

Stenography

Calldesk

MaxAI.me

PhotoRestore

Dataconomy

COPYRIGHT © DATACONOMY MEDIA GMBH, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  • About
  • Imprint
  • Contact
  • Legal & Privacy

Follow Us

  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI tools
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. You can choose to accept or reject them. Visit our Privacy Policy.