ScienceDaily: Consumer Electronics News |
- Atomic timekeeping, on the go: New approach may enable more stable and accurate portable atomic clocks
- A piece of the quantum puzzle
- Moving cameras talk to each other to identify, track pedestrians
- Electric cars without drivers
Posted: 12 Nov 2014 05:33 PM PST What time is it? The answer, no matter what your initial reference may be -- a wristwatch, a smartphone, or an alarm clock -- will always trace back to the atomic clock. |
Posted: 12 Nov 2014 11:48 AM PST Scientists have been exploring qubits (quantum bits) for quantum simulation. In this work, researchers have demonstrated a quantum version of Gauss's law. The novelty of the experiment is how the curvature was measured. |
Moving cameras talk to each other to identify, track pedestrians Posted: 12 Nov 2014 11:47 AM PST Electrical engineers have developed a way to automatically track people across moving and still cameras by using an algorithm that trains the networked cameras to learn one another's differences. |
Posted: 12 Nov 2014 05:41 AM PST E-Mobile will park independently in the future and will also be able to find the next charging station without a driver. Researchers are working on electric cars that can travel short distances autonomously. On the basis of cost-effective sensors, they are developing a dynamic model that perceives the environmental situation. |
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