ScienceDaily: Information Technology News |
- New dimension for integrated circuits: 3-D nanomagnetic logic
- Where humans, animals and robots meet
- How things coil: Simulation technology designed for Hollywood to predict understanding fundamental engineering problems
- From diamonds to super computers
New dimension for integrated circuits: 3-D nanomagnetic logic Posted: 30 Sep 2014 11:42 AM PDT Electrical engineers have demonstrated a new kind of building block for digital integrated circuits. Their experiments show that future computer chips could be based on three-dimensional arrangements of nanometer-scale magnets instead of transistors. As CMOS, the main enabling technology of the semiconductor industry, approaches fundamental limits, researchers are exploring 'magnetic computing' as an alternative. |
Where humans, animals and robots meet Posted: 30 Sep 2014 06:04 AM PDT To meet our everyday needs in an increasingly multifaceted technological world is a challenge that pushes researchers to find innovative tools using a multidisciplinary approach. We inhabit a globalized planet, made up of complex systems, where domains such as communications, business, healthcare, energy or transportation converge, interact and integrate. In this context, a thriving technology trend applies the concept of animal swarms or swarming to the development of complex systems that bridge the gap amongst disciplines as dissimilar as biology, robotics or networking. |
Posted: 29 Sep 2014 12:39 PM PDT Researchers have combined computer simulations designed for Hollywood with precision model experiments to examine the mechanics of coiling. Their study, which bridges engineering mechanics and computer graphics, impacts a variety of engineering applications, from the fabrication of nanotube serpentines to the laying of submarine cables and pipelines. |
From diamonds to super computers Posted: 29 Sep 2014 08:45 AM PDT By exchanging specific atoms inside the mineral structure, quantum bits, required to process complex operations faster, could be stabilized. |
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