A 3D image of mouse bladder biopsies showing the inside of a healthy bladder (top) and one with cancer (bottom). The muscle tissue and vasculature are depicted in magenta, the basement membrane in white, and the bladder epithelium in green.

February issue

This month we discover how elasticity affects cancer growth, feature a Perspective on free-electron quantum optics, and describe new options that the journal has for facilitating code peer review.

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  • Artistic schematic of two atoms forming a molecule.

    This Insight issue celebrates and reviews recent progress in the generation and study of cold and ultracold molecules and ions for applications in quantum simulation, metrology and chemistry.

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  • The pairing mechanism in kagome superconductors is still not fully understood. Now, CsV3Sb5, which belongs to this family, is shown to have orbital-selective pairing with two distinct superconducting domes that are not separated by any phase boundary.

    • Md Shafayat Hossain
    • Qi Zhang
    • M. Zahid Hasan
    Article
  • Many single cells rely on beating cilia and flagella to move. Now it is shown that the core of these appendages twists to generate the torsion waves responsible for three-dimensional motion.

    • Martin Striegler
    • Stefan Diez
    • Veikko F. Geyer
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The renormalization group is a powerful tool to study the universal properties of physical systems. A diffusion-based renormalization scheme now enables the study of scale invariance and universality in higher-order complex networks.

    • Marco Nurisso
    • Marta Morandini
    • Giovanni Petri
    Article
    • An intrinsic magnetic topological insulator with gapped surface states would be very useful for both fundamental and application prospects. Now, the use of the time-periodic drive of a laser makes these states not only possible, but also tunable.

      • Claudia Ojeda-Aristizabal
      News & Views
    • To act as nodes in quantum networks, solid-state quantum dots must combine their high performance as quantum emitters with a quantum memory. Now, nuclear spins around a gallium arsenide quantum dot have been used as a many-body quantum memory register.

      • Xia Lei
      • Liang Zhai
      News & Views
    • On average, physics students who identify as men perceive themselves more strongly as ‘physics people’ than students who are women. Varying internalization of peer recognition better explains gender differences than biases in received recognition.

      • Ben Van Dusen
      News & Views
    • Understanding the behaviour of viscous liquids close to the glass transition is a century-old problem. The microscopic underpinnings of their mechanical response have now been made clearer by a unified percolation description, in both two and three dimensions.

      • Daniele Coslovich
      News & Views
    • Higher-order interactions reveal new aspects of the interplay between topology and dynamics in complex systems. This Perspective describes the emerging field of higher-order topological dynamics and discusses the open research questions in the area.

      • Ana P. Millán
      • Hanlin Sun
      • Ginestra Bianconi
      Perspective
  • We highlight recent developments at the journal, with new editors joining the team and the roll-out of a platform to facilitate the peer review of code.

    Editorial
  • Even a child intuitively understands the cold of winter or the heat of a hot summer day. However, when it comes to a scientific definition of temperature, things get murky quickly. As Aaron Hui explains, measuring electrical noise is one way to measure temperature directly.

    • Aaron Hui
    Measure for Measure
  • Recent advances in classifying magnets according to spin-group symmetry have expanded the possibilities of unconventional magnetism. Unconventional magnets — such as collinear spin-split antiferromagnets, also known as altermagnets, noncollinear spin-split antiferromagnets and anomalous-Hall antiferromagnets — combine the advantages of ferromagnetism and antiferromagnetism.

    • Qihang Liu
    • Xi Dai
    • Stefan Blügel
    Comment
Light caught under the hand of a student as they plug wires into an electrical circuit

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