By using quantum effects, researchers have created a design for atomic clocks that is many times more accurate than the atomic clocks used today.
Rapid tests with a low margin of error make it possible to know how well protection a vaccine dose provides to each patient.
By washing toxic fly ash with acid, 90 percent of the ash can be reused, among other things by extracting zinc and other metals.
Lithium-ion batteries have fallen sharply in price over the past decade, and in three years' time they may be so cheap that electric cars do not cost more to make than petrol and diesel cars.
Researchers have shown that a quantum computer can solve practical problems that traditional computers cannot solve in a reasonable amount of time.
Laser scanning and AI give us maps that mark streams and wet areas with much higher accuracy than before.
The Danish company Nordic Harvest will build a 7,000 square meter vertical farm that will produce 1,000 tonnes of food a year.
It's possible to get transfer speeds of over one gigabit per second, even on a moving train, as shown in a test carried out by KTH.
Hologram and haptic interfaces are just some of the possibilities that 6G can give us in ten years when the next-generation mobile network is to be put into operation.