EditorialA floating stage on the Fulda River, built by Black Quantum Futurism, a collective from Philadelphia, in Documenta 15, Kassel, Germany, on June 20, 2022. (Felix Schmitt/The New York Times)
EditorialA visitor runs through Caroline Gueye’s “Quantum Tunneling” installation at the Dakar Biennale’s official exhibition at the former Palace of Justice, in Dakar, Senegal, May 21, 2022. (Ricci Shryock/The New York Times)
EditorialKevin and Jennifer McCoy with “Quantum Leap,” a recent digital image offered for sale as an NFT, projected in their home studio in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, Feb. 15, 2022. (Victor Llorente/The New York Times)
EditorialThe tech industry has grown ever more rich off big ideas that were developed more than a decade ago. New things like quantum computing and self-driving cars could take a while. (Sean Dong/The New York Times)
EditorialQuantum Marketing: Classical Rules No Longer Apply, Advertising Week New York 2021, Great Minds Stage presented by Roundel, Hudson Yards, New York, USA - 18 Oct 2021
EditorialEuroopan komissio julkistaa arvionsa Suomen elpymissuunnitelmasta ja puheenjohtaja Ursula von der Leyen vierailee Helsingiss?, Espoo, Finland - 04 Oct 2021
EditorialEuroopan komissio julkistaa arvionsa Suomen elpymissuunnitelmasta ja puheenjohtaja Ursula von der Leyen vierailee Helsingiss?, Espoo, Finland - 04 Oct 2021
EditorialCamae Ayewa, left, and Rasheedah Phillips, the art duo of Black Quantum Futurism, hold up the wraps — featuring archival images from Arthur Hall’s West African dance school — that will cover their artwork, “Reclamation: Space-Times,” in Philadelphia, April 27, 2021. (Kriston Jae Bethel/The New York Times)
EditorialOppenheimer, Julius Robert (New York, 1904-Princeton, 1967), American physicist known for his work on quantum mechanics. He directed the research center where they built the first atomic bomb.
EditorialA crowd gathers around the exhibit for IBM’s Q System One, a quantum computer, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Jan. 7, 2020. (Alex Welsh/The New York Times)
EditorialPortrait of Daniel de Superville, The doctor Daniel de Superville in his library, half-dressed, dressed in a dressing gown, draped around his head with a cloth. In his right hand he holds a roll of paper with the text: Quantum est quod nescimus. To the...