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Chemistry World June 7, 2007 Lionel Milgrom |
Resonance Boost for Truly Wireless Electronics Recharging electronic gadgets requires wired connection to the nearest available mains socket. Now, researchers at MIT have developed a technology they call WiTricity - wireless electricity. |
PC Magazine December 20, 2006 Angela Chang |
Recharging, The Wireless Way Two physicists have developed a concept that could let you charge your electronics as easily as you get a suntan: without wires. |
Popular Mechanics August 23, 2007 Erin McCarthy |
How MIT's Wireless Power Could Replace Cables and Outlets This past June, MIT researchers announced their own coil-based breakthrough in wireless electricity -- called WiTricity -- that's mercifully plasma-free. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2013 Ahn et al. |
The All-Electric Car You Never Plug In Wireless power transmission would let EVs draw their power from the road |
IEEE Spectrum May 2010 David Schneider |
A Critical Look at Wireless Power Wireless power at a distance is still far away |
Fast Company February 2009 Paul Hochman |
Wireless Electricity Is Here (Seriously) I'm standing next to a Croatian-born American genius in a half-empty office in Watertown, Massachusetts, and I'm about to be fried to a crisp. Or I'm about to witness the greatest advance in electrical science in a hundred years. |
Popular Mechanics April 2010 David Hambling |
New Magnetic Tech Could Help Coal Mine Rescue Workers Talk Underground At least 25 people died in an explosion at a West Virginia coal mine on Monday. A new magnetic communicator could help first responders contact victims in these underground disasters. Here's how the device works. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2006 Stephen Cass |
Air Power Wish you didn't have to plug in your laptop and cellphone? A team of researchers from MIT may have just the thing for you. |
Chemistry World January 14, 2009 Hayley Birch |
MRI at the nanoscale US scientists have demonstrated the remarkable power of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) by adapting it to create 3D nanoscale pictures of a tobacco mosaic virus. |
Chemistry World May 13, 2015 Heather Powell |
Electricity harvested from magnetic noise Wireless battery charging may benefit from a new generator that harnesses magnetic energy from our environment. |
Technology Research News July 13, 2005 |
Magnetics Drives Particle Patterns Researchers have devised a way to use electric and magnetic fields to assemble magnetic microparticles into a wide variety of patterns, including clusters, rings, chains and networks. |
PC Magazine May 31, 2006 |
Bull's-eye Can a tiny wireless gizmo radically improve our ability to fight cancer? |