Wiktionary
a. 1 (context of quantum coding of information English) Having an information density of two classical bits per qubit, made possible by a shared entanglement state between sender and recipient. 2 (context of matter English) More dense than ordinary matter.
Usage examples of "superdense".
But the gravity was one and a half times heavier than standard, because Cinder was made up of impossible things: compounds with inert elements, superdense rocks with incredible crystalline structures, super-heavy elements that were never supposed to occur outside a lab.
Looks as if that shoots a whole flock of holes in that bedtime story you were telling us about a superdense star.
The star blows away most of its gaseous envelope, leaving only the superdense core.
Mars gravity or at the worst a superdense object like a black hole has to offer.
In the distance, Zeta was orbited by three gas giants like Jupiter, ringed, with powerful, stormy atmospheres of superdense hydrogen.
They had multiple layers of superdense metal shielding, high-power dipole field generators, even a liquid-envelope radiation reflector.
Focused and concentrated by all that superdense metal and liquid reflectors that were there to keep radiation out.
Shapieron used a system that constrained superdense masses to move in closed paths at relativistic speeds, which generated high rates of change of gravitic potential and created a matter-annihilation zone that powered the stress field.
At the other end he carefully set the bronze bust of Plato, packed with enough superdense plastique to bring down a small skyscraper.
Another blast of superheated, superdense gas erupted beneath the ship, which listed sharply to starboard.
The rushing wall of superdense, semiliquid gases pushed a shock wave of compressed air ahead of it that knocked Duffy backward, away from the lever, and lifted the abandoned Work Bug and tossed it forward like a toy in a tornado.
The gravitational field of the superdense matter that makes up a black hole is strong enough to trap light itself.
It held a pair of Covenant memory blocks, brick-shaped chunks of some superdense material that could store who knew how many gazillion bytes of information.
Its thermonuclear sphere carved a five-kilometer crater into the superdense ring material and sent powerful pressure waves rippling throughout the structure.
They stood behind a portable shield, watching through the superdense but transparent plate as the field nullifier continued to hum at the stasis box.