
March issue
This month we see how the renormalisation group can be applied to complex networks, consider topological pumping of solitons and charge, and celebrate playfulness in physics.
This month we see how the renormalisation group can be applied to complex networks, consider topological pumping of solitons and charge, and celebrate playfulness in physics.
Controlling the spatial distribution of optically active spin defects in solids is a long-standing goal in the quantum sensing and simulation communities. Measurements of the many-body noise generated by the spins were used to verify that a highly coherent and strongly interacting quantum spin system was confined to two dimensions within a diamond substrate.