Pulses of light to encrypt data and protect security of cryptocurrencies

Physorg  January 11, 2018 An international team of researchers (USA – University of Southern California, Mexico) report a new strategy to fabricate near-infrared frequency combs based on combining high-Q microcavities with monomolecular layers of highly nonlinear small molecules. The functionalized microcavities demonstrate high-efficiency parametric oscillation in the near-IR and generate primary frequency combs with 0.88-mW thresholds, improving optical parametric oscillation generation over nonfunctionalized devices by three orders of magnitude. This organic-inorganic approach enables otherwise unattainable performance and will inspire the next generation of integrated photonic device platforms… read more. Open Access TECHNICAL ARTICLE

Developing a secure, un-hackable net

Physorg  January 11, 2018 A method of securely communicating between multiple quantum devices developed by researchers in the UK does not rely on assumptions, but instead it uses the quantum laws of physics to ensure security, which would need to be broken to hack the encryption. They report on a way of communicating securely between three or more quantum devices, irrespective of who built them. The method works by using the network’s structure to limit what an eavesdropper can learn. They used machine learning and causal inference to develop the test for the un-hackable communications system. This approach distributes secret […]

Engineers reinvent the inductor after two centuries

Nanotechweb  January 15, 2018 An international team of researchers (USA – UC Santa Barbara, Japan, China) has made high-performance inductors from intercalated graphene that work in the 10-50 GHz range due to the mechanism of kinetic inductance rather than magnetic inductance. The new inductors, which have both small form-factors and high inductance values, of around 1-2 nanoHenry are a third smaller in terms of surface area than conventional devices but with the same performance. They might thus be used in ultra-compact wireless communication systems for applications in the IoT, sensing and energy storage/transfer. It also highlights a practical application for […]

Making the internet of things possible with a new breed of ‘memristors’

Science Daily  January 10, 2018 Researchers in Finland have fabricated a new kind of ferroelectric tunnel junctions using organic hydro-carbon materials. The junctions work in low voltages of less than five volts and with a variety of electrode materials including silicon. They can retain data for more than 10 years without power and be manufactured in normal conditions. They can be made from the water or oxygen in the air and would reduce the amount of toxic heavy metal waste in electronics. They are working to integrate millions of tunnel junction memristors into a network on a one square centimetre […]

Surprising discovery could lead to better batteries

Science Daily  January 12, 2018 When a lithium-ion battery supplies electricity, lithium ions flow into empty sites in the atomic lattice. It was assumed that the concentration of lithium would continuously increase in the lattice. By imaging reactions inside the electrodes in real time, an international team of researchers (USA – Brookhaven National Laboratory, University of Michigan, MIT, UC Berkeley, UK, China) has shown that, when the battery’s electrodes are made from nano-sized particles, the lithium concentration within local regions of nanoparticles go up, and then down. This discovery is a major step toward improving the battery life of consumer […]

High-temperature superconductivity gets agile (w/video)

Nanotechweb  January 12, 2018 An international team of researchers (Japan, Australia) has synthesized of YBa2Cu3O x superconducting nanorods using solution chemistry. Initially, a mixture of fine-grained coprecipitated powder was obtained and subsequently converted to YBa2Cu3O x nanorods by heating to 1223 K in oxygen for 12 h. The nanorods are superconducting without the need for any further sintering or oxygenation, thereby providing an avenue for direct application to substrates at room temperature or direct use as formed nanorods. The research opens a route to designer superconductors, tailoring them for specific uses… read more. TECHNICAL ARTICLE

What sort of stream networks do scientific ideas flow along?

Physorg  January 12, 2018 Researchers in Poland have shown that tracking the dependencies between co-authors reveals not only the paths along which scientific ideas flow, but also reconstructs the structure of scientific cooperation and detects emerging communities. Interestingly, the proposed method of analysis can be an effective tool to fight terrorists and even dishonest politicians… read more. TECHNICAL ARTICLE  

Top 10 Science and Technology Inventions for the Week of January 13, 2018

01. Researchers design dendrite-free lithium battery 02. A biological solution to carbon capture and recycling? 03. Researchers demonstrate the existence of a new kind of magnetoresistance involving topological insulators 04. What’s the noise eating quantum bits? 05. Scientists develop ultrafast battery with quarter-million cycle life 06. A major step forward in organic electronics 07. Leaving flatland – quantum Hall physics in 4-D 08. How the Meltdown Vulnerability Fix Was Invented 09. Beijing Is Getting a $2.1 Billion AI District 10. FAU to develop novel real-time undersea wireless communications and surveillance technology

FAU to develop novel real-time undersea wireless communications and surveillance technology

Eurekalert  January 11, 2018 The current state-of-the-art approaches for undersea localization and tracking are expensive and power-intensive. Under an NSF grant, researchers at Florida Atlantic University will develop novel optimal algorithms for oceanic-scale 3D acoustic underwater localization and tracking, software and hardware technology to create and maintain a programmable software-defined undersea acoustic testbed comprising of four nodes. The new technology is expected to resolve interoperability issues in heterogeneous network deployments that include real-time interaction between undersea, water-surface, aerial, and satellite communication nodes… read more.

Beijing Is Getting a $2.1 Billion AI District

MIT Technology Review  January 4, 2018 China is gearing up to build a technology park in Beijing entirely dedicated to the development of artificial intelligence. The endeavor is just the latest sign of China’s remarkable ambition to master and dominate artificial intelligence by 2020. The plan will apparently establish a “national AI research center” and will include efforts to form partnerships with foreign research institutions and companies. China’s AI masterplan seems to have been inspired, in part, by the the U.S. government report at the very end of the Obama administration, PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE. Related document National […]