Reviews & Analysis

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  • Magnetic materials provide a new context for observing magnetic monopoles. Numerical simulations now establish an experimentally measurable signature of their dynamics — one that has in fact already been seen in a spin-ice compound.

    • Roderich Moessner
    • Peter Schiffer
    News & Views
  • Quantum Darwinism describes the proliferation, in the environment, of multiple records of selected states of a quantum system — an approach that has resulted in considerable progress towards a solution of the quantum measurement problem.

    • Wojciech Hubert Zurek
    Progress Article
  • In many ways, semiconductor quantum dots behave like natural atoms, but it has proved difficult to manipulate them using resonant laser light. That problem is now overcome.

    • Charles Santori
    • Yoshihisa Yamamoto
    News & Views
  • Shot noise measurements in carbon nanotube quantum dots show many-body effects related to exotic Kondo models with both spin and orbital angular momentum, paving the way for studies on a rich class of strongly correlated transport phenomena.

    • Reinhold Egger
    News & Views
  • A new theory for dark matter has the power to explain several experimental results simultaneously, even those seemingly at odds with each other.

    • Dan Hooper
    News & Views
  • Analogues of the resistors, capacitors and diodes of an electronic circuit could eliminate the need for bulky external pumps to control the flow of liquids in a microfluidic circuit.

    • Howard A. Stone
    News & Views
  • Using dense plasmas instead of atomic or molecular gases could enable the generation of attosecond light pulses with higher energy, shorter durations and more energetic photons.

    • Fabien Quéré
    News & Views
  • In an ensemble of atoms with long-range dipolar interactions between them, only one atom can be excited at a time. This 'dipole blockade' has now been observed for two single atoms positioned at macroscopic distances.

    • Matthias Weidemüller
    News & Views
  • Puzzling anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation across the sky are leading some researchers to contemplate cosmology in an asymmetric universe.

    • David Wands
    News & Views
  • Many studies into the properties of the recently discovered ferropnictide superconductors lead to seemingly contradictory interpretations. Such discrepancies could be explained by the emergence of temporally fluctuating excitations formed by the antiphase boundaries between local spin-density-wave domains.

    • Warren E. Pickett
    News & Views
  • A model for dense degenerate plasmas that incorporates electron spin indicates that quantum effects can be seen even under conditions previously considered to be in the classical regime.

    • Padma Kant Shukla
    News & Views
  • So-called one-way schemes have emerged as a powerful model to describe and implement quantum computation. This article reviews recent progress, highlights connections to other areas of physics and discusses future directions.

    • H. J. Briegel
    • D. E. Browne
    • M. Van den Nest
    Progress Article
  • A method for characterizing quantum measurement devices completes the suite of 'tomography techniques', which should enable us to learn all there is to know about a given quantum-physics experiment.

    • Markus Aspelmeyer
    News & Views
  • More than 100 years ago, Wilhelm Ostwald predicted that crystalline structures would grow from the melt via a series of unstable states — now this cascade has been observed directly in an inorganic semiconductor.

    • Simon J. L. Billinge
    News & Views
  • An algorithm that enables a protein's molecular structure to be determined from the faintest of diffraction patterns could increase the potential of next-generation X-ray sources.

    • Keith A. Nugent
    News & Views