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IEEE Spectrum
July 2011
Joel E. Moore
Topological Insulators Quantum magic can make strange but useful semiconductors that are insulators on the inside and conductors on the surface mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 1, 2011
Jon Cartwright
Liquid Cement Turns Liquid Metal When an alkali metal is dissolved in ammonia, the result is free electrons. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
February 11, 2004
Electricity teleportation devised Researchers from Leiden University in the Netherlands have devised a way to teleport electricity. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 29, 2007
Simon Hadlington
Researchers Crack Mystery of Diamond's Conductivity US researchers have cracked one of the most baffling mysteries in materials science -- why diamond, the supreme insulator, becomes a conductor under certain conditions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 28, 2007
Richard Van Noorden
Magnetic Field Detectors for Less Than a Penny Cheap electronic components industrially manufactured in their millions every year are also smart materials that can sense magnetic fields without any external power supply, UK scientists have discovered. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 20, 2012
Simon Hadlington
New type of chemical bond around dwarf stars The work, led by Trygve Helgaker at the University of Oslo in Norway, not only provides insights into fundamental aspects of electronic interactions with magnetic fields, but also sheds light on the exotic chemistry that exists in stellar environments. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
November 5, 2003
Electrons spin magnetic fields Spintronics researchers are looking for ways to control and use electron spin. Researchers from Cornell University and Yale University have brought the field a step forward by showing that a flow of electrons that all have the same spin can transfer angular momentum to magnetic material. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
October 2001
Wil McCarthy
Ultimate Alchemy Research into artificial atoms could lead to one startling endpoint: programmable matter that changes its makeup at the flip of a switch... mark for My Articles similar articles
Industrial Physicist
Aug/Sep 2004
Eric J. Lerner
News: Plasmon microscopy A new technique allows far-field optical microscopy with resolutions well below the wavelength of light. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 21, 2014
Simon Hadlington
Magnetic resonance taken to the limit Researchers in the US have taken magnetic resonance imaging to its extreme by developing a technique to detect the spin of a single nucleus. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 2, 2015
Tim Wogan
LEDs slim down with atom thick materials Heterostructures containing mixtures of atom thick layers have been used to create LEDs mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
August 11, 2004
Eric Smalley
Chips measure electron spin Practical quantum computers are at least a decade away, and some researchers are betting that they will never be built. But a pair of recent experiments may prove them wrong. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
January 1, 2003
Kimberly Patch
Aligned fields could speed storage Researchers from three institutes in Germany and Russia have found a material whose electric and magnetic domains line up together. The work could bring together the currently separate fields of magnetic and electronic data storage, which would give both methods more flexibility. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
November 3, 2004
Eric Smalley
Single Field Shapes Quantum Bits Researchers have recently realized that it may be possible to control the electrons in a quantum computer using a single magnetic field rather than having to produce extremely small, precisely focused magnetic fields for each electron. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
September 10, 2003
Eric Smalley
Electron teams make bigger qubits Making quantum computers from electronic chips rather than cumbersome laboratory equipment requires control over individual electrons. A scheme that has a string of electrons acting as one could ease the task by expanding the target to a whopping 250 millionths of a millimeter. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
September 2007
Lieven Vandersypen
Dot-to-Dot Design Researchers are connecting tiny puddles of electrons in a chip and making them compute -- the quantum way. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
July 30, 2003
See-through magnets hang tough Researchers from the Independent University of Barcelona (UAB) and the University of Zaragoza in Spain have found a way to form transparent, durable, lightweight magnets that maintain their magnetism in magnetic fields and high temperatures. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 5, 2004
John Carey
Enrico Fermi: Unleashing The Atom The Italian physicist made the key theoretical leap that led to the atom bomb and nuclear power. A history of Enrico Fermi. mark for My Articles similar articles
Technology Research News
June 1, 2005
Magnetic Resonance Goes Nano Researchers have built a nuclear magnetic resonance device that has the potential to overcome the quantum bit limit because it is small enough to fit on a computer chip. mark for My Articles similar articles