


The spin-polarized chromium (Cr) tip being scanned over the pristine superconducting area of the C2 magnetic order, represented in the background with electron pairs shown as coupled red spheres. The spin current through the tip induces the C4 magnetic order (yellow and blue plaquettes) with suppressed superconductivity in the sample because its spin fluctuations cannot mediate electron pairing, represented as decoupled red spheres in the plaquette area.
< Professor Kyung-Jin Lee at the ceremony > KAIST announced on February 12th that it has selected Professor Kyung-Jin Lee from the Department of Physics as the recipient of the ‘KAISTian of the Year’ award in celebration of the university's 55th anniversary. Established in 2001, the ‘KAISTian of the Year’ award is the university’s highest honor, presented to members who have significantly enhanced KAIST's global prestige through exceptional academic and r
2026-02-12<(From Left) Dr. Sukkyung Kang, Professor Sanha Kim from Department of Mechanical Engineering> The performance and stability of smartphones and artificial intelligence (AI) services depend on how uniformly and precisely semiconductor surfaces are processed. KAIST researchers have expanded the concept of everyday “sandpaper” into the realm of nanotechnology, developing a new technique capable of processing semiconductor surfaces uniformly down to the atomic level. This techn
2026-02-11<(From top left) Professor Woo Youn Kim (KAIST), Dr. Jeheon Woo (KISTI), Dr. Seonghwan Kim (KAIST), and Jun Hyeong Kim (PhD candidate)> Whether a smartphone battery lasts longer or a new drug can be developed to treat incurable diseases depends on how stably the atoms constituting the material are bonded. The core of 'molecular design' lies in finding how to arrange these countless atoms to form the most stable molecule. Until now, this process has been as difficult as finding the lowes
2026-02-10< KAIST Professor Kyung Ryul Park delivering a keynote speech > KAIST announced on February 9th that the KAIST-NYU AI and Digital Governance Summit, co-hosted with New York University (NYU), was held at NYU in New York from February 6 to 7 (local time). Amid the rapidly expanding impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) across society, this summit was designed to combine private consensus meetings with public discussions to seek practical AI governance solutions that harmonize technolog
2026-02-09< (From left) Ph.D candidate Changhwan Kim, Ph.D candidate Seunghwan Kim , Ph.D candidate Namwook Hur, Professor Joonki Suh, Ph. D candidate Youngseok Cho> As artificial intelligence advances, computers demand faster and more efficient memory. The key to ultra-high-speed, low-power semiconductors lies in the "switching" principle—the mechanism by which memory materials turn electricity on and off. A South Korean research team has successfully captured the elusive moment of switchi
2026-02-09