There are few sports more exciting than playoff baseball, but behind every pitch there is also a fascinating story of physics ...
Des chercheuses et chercheurs francophones et bilingues parmi les lauréats, dont l’Université d’Ottawa, l’ÉTS, le Cégep de ...
In a Physical Review Letters study, the HOLMES collaboration has achieved the most stringent upper bound on the effective ...
The UBC cement recycler transforms waste cement into low-emission clinker precursors, significantly reducing CO2 emissions ...
Canadian researchers have identified a new microbe that turns food waste into renewable natural gas, even under high ammonia ...
New CRCs focus on software security, electrocatalysts for carbon recycling, isotope geochemistry, quantum systems, and ...
Detailed price information for Benchmark Electronics (BHE-N) from The Globe and Mail including charting and trades.
Time has occupied the greatest minds for centuries and we’re still none the wiser about its absolute nature. Although there’s nothing in physics that says time must flow in a certain direction, nor ...
Nobel Prize in Physics 2025: Very small particles, on the scale of an atom or smaller, behave in ways that are very different compared to objects we encounter in our everyday lives. The behaviour of ...
Six weeks into labour action that has seen 22,000 public service workers taking part in a full or partial strike from the jobs that keep provincial services functioning, people across the province are ...
STOCKHOLM (AP) — John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis won the Nobel Prize in Physics on Tuesday for research on seemingly obscure quantum tunneling that is advancing digital technology.
John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis’s experiments in the 1980s proved that the strange laws of quantum mechanics could govern not just subatomic particles but entire circuits visible to the ...