This week’s science news was filled with big discoveries from the world of the small, led by a physicist’s creation of a mini-universe, which was designed so we can watch time emerge from within an isolated quantum system.

The experiment was performed using a Bose-Einstein condensate — a strange state of matter that consists of thousands of atoms blended into a single quantum object at near absolute zero (minus 273.15 degrees Celsius, or minus 459.67 degrees Fahrenheit). The system showed time speeding up, slowing down and even stopping, depending on what the system was doing.

Researchers conducted the first real-life sea ice thickening experiments in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut.

(Image credit: Arctic-Images/Getty Images)

A close up of a phone showing 90% with a "18 m until full."

Some types of batteries charge faster than others.

(Image credit: Tfilm via Getty Images)

The gravestone of “Boston,” a formerly enslaved man who died in the 18th century in Boston, Massachusetts.

(Image credit: Boston Parks and Recreation Department)

Decisions around antibiotic prescribing aren’t driven only by medical knowledge — emotions also play a role, a medical sociologist explains.

(Image credit: Angel Santana via Getty Images)

China’s Tianwen-2 spacecraft captured this photo of the quasi-moon Kamo’oalewa (a.k.a. 2016 HO3) at a distance of around 12.5 miles (20 kilometers) from the near-Earth asteroid.

(Image credit: CNSA)

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