Tuning in to magnetic ink

Eurekalert  April 4, 2018 By injecting iron-based reagents into a hot acetic acid solution, researchers in Saudi Arabia synthesized magnetic iron-oxide nanoparticles that dispersed into deionized water to form an ink. When deposited as a thin film on a glass substrate, the new magnetic substrate could act as an energy-storing inductor device with an adjustable capacity of over 20 percent. By modifying the nanoparticles’ surfaces with hydrocarbon chains, they were able to produce free-standing magnetic sheets of a few millimeters in thickness. The discovery boosts prospects for inexpensive electronics that work worldwide by tuning in to multiple cellular bands and […]

Top 10 Science and Technology Innovations for the Week of March 30, 2018

01. Self-assembling, tunable interfaces found in quantum materials 02. A new kind of quantum bits in two dimensions 03. New laser technique may help detect chemical warfare in atmosphere 04. Smaller and faster: The terahertz computer chip is now within reach 05. Fractal AI: A fragile theory of intelligence 06. Generating energy from fluctuations of light 07. Lightweight metal foam blocks blastwave, debris from high-explosive rounds 08. Preventing hurricanes using air bubbles 09. Modified biomaterials self-assemble on temperature cues 10. In five years quantum computing will be mainstream And others… Atomically thin light-emitting device opens the possibility for ‘invisible’ displays […]

Atomically thin light-emitting device opens the possibility for ‘invisible’ displays

Science Daily  March 26, 2018 Transition-metal dichalcogenide monolayers have naturally terminated surfaces and can exhibit a near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield in the presence of suitable defect passivation. An international team of researchers (USA – UC Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Saudi Arabia) fabricated a monolayer seven-segment display and achieved the first transparent and bright millimeter-scale light-emitting monolayer semiconductor device. Electroluminescence is obtained by applying an AC voltage between the gate and the semiconductor. The electroluminescence intensity is weakly dependent on the Schottky barrier height or polarity of the contact. According to the researchers the device is a proof-of-concept, and much […]

China versus USA in AI potential

Next Big Future  March 19, 2018 According to Oxford and the Future of Humanity report on China’s AI plans China is still far behind on hardware but ahead in mobile and data and lagging in algorithms and commercial AI companies. China has relied on imports and acquisitions to boost the most immediately relevant aspects of AI hardware. As this strategy has come under more scrutiny by the U.S. and EU, China is promoting national champions in its domestic chip-making industry and making long-term bets on powerful supercomputing facilities… read more.

Earth’s magnetosphere

Phys.org  March 26, 2018 The magnetosphere was key to helping Earth develop into a habitable planet. NASA’s Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) was launched in March 2015 to observe the electron physics of magnetic reconnection for the first time. Bristling with energetic particle detectors and magnetic sensors, the four MMS spacecraft flew in close formation to areas on the front side of Earth’s magnetosphere where magnetic reconnection occurs. Data from investigations by NASA and partner agencies not only help unravel the fundamental physics of space, but also help improve space weather forecasting. Understanding our magnetosphere is a key element to helping […]

Fractal AI: A fragile theory of intelligence

ArXiv  March 13, 2018 Fractal AI is a theory for general artificial intelligence. It allows to derive new mathematical tools that constitute the foundations for a new kind of stochastic calculus. Among other things, Fractal AI makes it possible to generate a huge database of top performing examples with very little amount of computation required, transforming Reinforcement Learning into a supervised problem. The new techniques presented here have direct applications to other areas such as: Non-equilibrium thermodynamics, chemistry, quantum physics, economics, information theory, and non-linear control theory… read more. Open Access TECHNICAL ARTICLE 

Generating energy from fluctuations of light

Phys.org  March 27, 2018 Researchers in Sweden have developed a method and a material that generates an electrical impulse when the light fluctuates from sunshine to shade and vice versa. They created a tiny optical generator by combining the small antennas consisting gold nanodiscs placed on a substrate and coated with a polymeric film to create the pyroelectric properties. The antennas generate heat that is then converted to electricity with the aid of the polymer. The degree of polarisation of the polymer affects the magnitude of the generated power, while the thickness not to have any effect at all. Applications […]

Geoengineering polar glaciers to slow sea-level rise

Science Daily  March 19, 2018 The ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica will contribute more to sea-level rise this century than any other source. An international team of researchers (Finland, USA – Princeton University) argue that geoengineering of glaciers could delay much of Greenland and Antarctica’s grounded ice from reaching the sea for centuries, buying time to address global warming. According to them this is plausible because about 90% of ice flowing to the sea from the Antarctic ice sheet and about half of that lost from Greenland travels in narrow, fast ice streams. These streams measure tens of kilometres […]

In five years quantum computing will be mainstream

Next Big Future  March 19, 2018 IBM Researchers are already reaching major quantum chemistry milestones, having recently used a quantum computer to successfully simulate atomic bonding in beryllium hydride (BeH2), the most complex molecule ever simulated by a quantum computer. In the future quantum computers will continue to address problems with ever-greater complexity, eventually catching up to and surpassing what we can do with classical machines alone… read more.

Lightweight metal foam blocks blastwave, debris from high-explosive rounds

Science Daily  March 26, 2018 A team of researchers in the US (North Carolina State University, US Army) found that steel-CMF (composite metal foam) offers much more protection than all other existing armor materials while lowering the weight remarkably. In tests the steel-CMF held up against the wave of blast pressure and against the copper and steel fragments created by the exploding round, as well as aluminum from the strikeplate. When compared to the experimental results, their model matched very closely. The experimental and analytical results are proving that novel CMF material can be the solution for the pressing need […]