Off the wire
Africa Focus: China to assist Kenya to develop its industrial capacity  • South Africa launches paperless classrooms  • 49 detained for frozen meat smuggling  • 2nd LD: BRICS New Development Bank launched in Shanghai  • Weather information for Asia-Pacific cities  • Xinhua Asia-Pacific news summary at 1000 GMT, July 21  • HK gov't reshuffles cabinet  • India to hang Muslim terrorist July 30 after apex court rejects plea  • China condemns terrorist attack in Turkey  • 600,000 Tibetans have access to solar power  
You are here:   Home

Chinese scientists isolate Weyl fermions theorized 86 years ago

Xinhua, July 21, 2015 Adjust font size:

Scientists have isolated a massless particle called the Weyl fermion, which might lead to faster and more efficient electronics, said the Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) on Tuesday.

First proposed by physicist Hermann Weyl in 1929, Weyl fermions are more basic particles than electrons and, because of being massless, can facilitate a more free and efficient flow of electricity.

However, scientists had not observed them in experiments before.

Scientists with the CAS Institute of Physics discovered a way to reproduce the particle by shooting synchrotron radiation light beams through a synthetic metallic crystal called tantalum arsenide (TaAs).

The discovery of Weyl fermions may lead to progress in reducing the energy consumption of smaller electronic devices. The particle may also be used to achieve high fault tolerance in topological quantum computing. Endi