Similar Articles |
|
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 John Carey |
Physics: "Putting The Weirdness To Work" Scientists say quantum materials will be the basis for amazing devices, but when? |
IEEE Spectrum May 2012 Rachel Courtland |
The Kilogram, Reinvented Two difficult experiments are poised to remake one of the world's most fundamental units |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2004 John McHale |
Nanotechnology: The Revolution Has Begun Nanotechnology, heavily researched and funded across the globe, promises to revolutionize many applications in space flight and communications. The advanced miniaturization concepts will proliferate across many industries in addition to defense and aerospace. |
Technology Research News February 26, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Quantum computing catches the bus National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) researchers have tapped an aspect of classical computers and a pair of weird particle traits to allow distant particles, or qubits, to communicate as though they were in contact. |
Wired December 2001 |
Optical Atomic Clock The optical clock signals a paradigm shift: It measures time using the femtosecond -- one-quadrillionth of a second -- making it potentially 1,000 times more precise than today's time leader... |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2002 Jill Jusko |
R&D Stars To Watch These researchers and engineers continue to push the boundaries of technological and scientific achievement. |
Technology Research News October 6, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Atomic clock to sync handhelds Its physics package, or atomic works, is about the size of a grain of rice, making it potentially easy to mass produce and integrate with hand-helds and other electronics. It is accurate within 25 microseconds per day, or about a second per 126 years. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2005 Linda Geppert |
Move Over, Quartz The atomic clock gets smaller and cheaper. |
Scientific American November 14, 2005 Wendy M. Grossman |
Wait a Second Official timekeeping may depend on atoms, not day-night cycles. |
Chemistry World July 31, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
US government science institute's one time police chief linked to campus meth lab A methamphetamine lab was discovery at the NIST's Maryland facility, prompting questions over security at the institute. |
Technology Research News July 14, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Teleport lifts quantum computing Researchers transported the states of charged atoms and showed that it is possible to do so on demand. The feat boosts the prospects for building quantum computers that employ trapped ions, quantum particles that live long enough to carry out multiple computations. |
Information Today November 2000 |
NIST Demonstrates New Reading Device for the Visually Impaired The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has announced the release of a new Braille reader that may soon bring the benefits of electronic books to the visually impaired... |
ONLINE Jan/Feb 2004 Allmang & Remshard |
Leading the Pack: Librarians Create an Original Model for a Customer-Friendly Publications System Our organization took a complex collection of electronic and manual publishing processes that no one wanted to use and developed a cohesive, unified system model that includes a digital library and a library online catalog. |