"Multiple Room-Temperature Superconductor Studies Retracted, Dashing Hopes"

A study claiming the discovery of a room-temperature superconductor, published in Nature in March, has been retracted at the request of most of its authors. This is the second retraction of a superconductor study by the same team. Superconductors, which can carry electrical currents with zero resistance, have typically required extremely cold temperatures and high pressure to function. Finding a room-temperature superconductor could have transformative applications in electrical grids, quantum computing, and transportation. However, doubts were raised about the data in the study, leading to its retraction. Another claim of a room-temperature superconductor made by South Korean physicists also faced skepticism and has largely been debunked.
- Room-temperature superconductor study retracted by Nature Phys.org
- Most researchers behind superconductor claim now want their paper pulled Ars Technica
- Third room temperature superconductivity paper retracted as group's claims lie in tatters Chemistry World
- Superconductor hopes dashed after journal retracts 'red matter' study New Scientist
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