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IEEE Spectrum September 2007 Lieven Vandersypen |
Dot-to-Dot Design Researchers are connecting tiny puddles of electrons in a chip and making them compute -- the quantum way. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 Saswato R. Das |
Scheme for a Single-Photon Transistor Researchers have taken a big step toward building a really fast computer that uses light rather than electricity to perform calculations. |
Wired August 21, 2007 Erin Biba |
We Have Ignition! NASA Tests a New Rocket Engine in the Mojave Desert. NASA is firing up the 5M15, which runs on compressed liquid methane. The odorless substance has multiple advantages over conventional rocket propellants. |
Wired August 21, 2007 Charlie Emrich |
Aussie Researchers Cut, Grind, and Polish the Perfect Kilogram Materials scientists create the roundest object in world weighing one perfect kilogram... International System of Units Standards: Meter... Second... Ampere... Kelvin... etc. |
Scientific American September 2007 Marguerite Holloway |
What Visions in the Dark of Light Lene Vestergaard Hau made headlines by slowing light to below highway speed. Now the ringmaster of light can stop it, extinguish it and revive it and thereby give quantum information a new look. |
Geotimes August 2007 Carolyn Gramling |
Earth's Core is Solid, After All Seismic waves passing through Earth's center have long puzzled researchers, as some waves travel fast enough to indicate that Earth's inner core is solid iron-nickel crystals, but they do not travel quite as quickly as scientists would expect, based on studies of stiff iron alloys. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 Stick et al. |
The Trap Technique In this first part of a two-part series, the authors discuss how today's computers are running out of room for classical physics to work and how working with the quantum nature of things instead of against it will open up vast new frontiers for computing. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2007 Brian Santo |
Plans for Next-Gen Chips Imperiled Dim lights are casting shadows on extreme-ultraviolet lithography's debut date. Wisely, chip makers and their equipment suppliers are exploring alternatives, particularly those processes that will let them extend today's lithographic technology. |
Chemistry World July 30, 2007 Lewis Brindley |
AFM Tip Feels Nano-Surfaces Scientists in the US have developed an artificial fingertip that boosts the resolution of atomic force microscopy, a technique that opens a window onto the nanoscale world. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2007 |
European Fusion Researchers Choose Cedip Infrared for IR Thermography The European Fusion Development Agreement has awarded Cedip Infrared Systems in France a contract to supply a further advanced infrared thermography system for monitoring the temperature of components inside its Tokamak Fusion reactor. |
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