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Electroengineering
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Electroengineering - Physics - 05.09.2011
Research gives crystal clear temperature readings from toughest environments
Researchers have developed a form of crystal that can deliver highly accurate temperature readings, down to individual milli-kelvins, over a very broad range of temperatures: -120to +680 degrees centigrade. The researchers used a "birefringent" crystal which splits light passing through it into two separate rays.
Electroengineering - Physics - 31.08.2011

UCL scientists are part of an international team which has developed a novel X-ray technique for imaging atomic displacements in materials with unprecedented accuracy. The team has applied the technique to determine how a recently discovered class of exotic materials - multiferroics - can be simultaneously both magnetically and electrically ordered.
Physics - Electroengineering - 31.08.2011

Precise measurement of the molecular weight, size and density of a nanoparticle in a single procedure is now possible, thanks to an ultracentrifugation method. Although nanoparticles are used in a variety of domains - such as medicine, solar energy and photonics - there is still much about them to be discovered.
Physics - Electroengineering - 31.08.2011

Internet connection speeds could be tens of times faster than they currently are, thanks to research by University of Manchester scientists using wonder material graphene. A collaboration between the Universities of Manchester and Cambridge, which includes scientists Andre Geim and Kostya Novoselov, has discovered a crucial recipe for improving characteristics of graphene devices for use as photodetectors in future high-speed optical.
Electroengineering - Environment - 29.08.2011

Environmentally friendly fuels are not just of interest for use in cars. The University of Birmingham has been operating a canal boat with a fuel cell drive for three years now.
Physics - Electroengineering - 19.08.2011

Sunspots spawn solar flares that can cause billions of dollars in damage to satellites, networks and power grids. But researchers have developed a way to detect incipient sunspots as deep as 65,000 kilometers inside the sun, providing up to two days' advance warning of a damaging solar flare. Viewed from the technological perspective of modern humans, the sun is a seething cauldron of disruptive influences that can wreak havoc on communication systems, air travel, power grids and satellites - not to mention astronauts in space.
Physics - Electroengineering - 18.08.2011
Bending Light the "Wrong" Way
The effect can be seen just by poking a stick into the water; at the water surface, the light changes its direction, the stick appears to be bent. This tilt is described by the refractive index. For years, scientists have been trying to create special materials with a negative refractive index - their optical properties are quite different from those of normal materials.
Electroengineering - Physics - 12.08.2011

Researchers have taken a step forward in studying the wonder material graphene and revealing its exciting electronic properties for future electronic applications. The academics have revealed more about the electronic properties of its slightly fatter cousin - bilayer graphene. The researchers, from the universities of Manchester, Lancaster (UK), Nijmegen (the Netherland) and Moscow (Russia), have studied in detail the effect of interactions between electrons on the electronic properties of bilayer graphene.
Mechanical Engineering - Electroengineering - 03.08.2011

An electromagnetic three-phase motor will enable the watchmaking industry to build watches that are three times more efficient and that can include more applications.
Electroengineering - Physics - 25.07.2011

Researchers have taken another step forward towards the understanding of wonder material graphene. Research institutes and universities around the world are already looking at ways to build devices such as touch-screen phones, ultrafast transistors and photodetectors. Now the new findings promise to accelerate that research, and potentially open up countless more electronic opportunities.
Physics - Electroengineering - 22.07.2011

PASADENA, Calif.—Water really is everywhere. Two teams of astronomers, each led by scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), have discovered the largest and farthest reservoir of water ever detected in the universe. Looking from a distance of 30 billion trillion miles away into a quasar—one of the brightest and most violent objects in the cosmos—the researchers have found a mass of water vapor that's at least 140 trillion times that of all the water in the world's oceans combined, and 100,000 times more massive than the sun.
Health - Electroengineering - 13.07.2011
College of Medicine receives additional funding from Gates Foundation
Hershey, Pa. Penn State College of Medicine announced Wednesday (July 13) that it will receive additional funding through Grand Challenges Explorations, an initiative created by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that enables researchers worldwide to test unorthodox ideas that address persistent health and development challenges.
Electroengineering - 10.07.2011
While you re up, print me a solar cell
New MIT-developed materials make it possible to produce photovoltaic cells on paper or fabric, nearly as simply as printing a document. The sheet of paper looks like any other document that might have just come spitting out of an office printer, with an array of colored rectangles printed over much of its surface.
Electroengineering - 05.07.2011

You are here: Home - News & Events - Press Releases - With a simple coating, nanowires show a dramatic increase in efficiency and sensitivity Development holds promise for photodetectors and energy harvesting applications like solar cells By applying a coating to individual silicon nanowires, researchers at Harvard and Berkeley have significantly improved the materials? efficiency and sensitivity.
Electroengineering - 28.06.2011

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. The pen may have bested the sword long ago, but now it's challenging wires and soldering irons. University of Illinois engineers have developed a silver-inked rollerball pen capable of writing electrical circuits and interconnects on paper, wood and other surfaces. The pen is writing whole new chapters in low-cost, flexible and disposable electronics.
Electroengineering - Physics - 27.06.2011
New Material Promises Faster Electronics
[ Florian Aigner The novel material graphene makes faster electronics possible. Scientists at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology at the Vienna University of Technology (TU Vienna) developed light-detectors made of graphene and analyzed their astonishing properties. High hopes are pinned on this new material: Graphene, a honeycomb-like carbon structure, made of only one layer of atoms, exhibits remarkable properties.
Electroengineering - 14.06.2011
Miniaturized Power Modules for Aircraft Bodies
Sensor networks are supposed to pervade the body of airplanes in the future ' much like a nervous system. Thanks to a joint research project of EADS Deutschland GmbH (Germany) and the Vienna University of Technology, the single sensor elements do not require any external power supply. Aircraft maintenance can be time consuming and expensive.
Chemistry - Electroengineering - 13.06.2011
How to choose a catalyst
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. MIT researchers have found a new way to predict which materials will perform best as catalysts for oxygen reduction, a core process in metal air batteries and fuel cells, opening up the possibility of faster and more effective development of new high-efficiency, low-cost energy-storage technologies.
Physics - Electroengineering - 02.06.2011
Long live the qubit!
The power of quantum computers depends on keeping them in a fragile quantum-mechanical state - which researchers have found a new way to extend. A quantum computer is a device - still largely theoretical - that could perform some types of calculations much more rapidly than classical computers. While a bit in a classical computer can represent either 0 or 1, a quantum bit, or qubit, can be in 'superposition,' representing 0 and 1 at the same time.
Physics - Electroengineering - 30.05.2011

The international ITER project is setting out to store the energy of stars in a reactor. To meet this challenge, scientists must be able to measure the properties of matter in fusion. Researchers have just successfully tested some sensors that are necessary for the ITER prototype. The scientists' ambition is to keep matter with a temperature of several million degrees contained here on Earth.
Event - Mar 17
CEA Leti to Showcase Integrated Expertise In Microelectronics Reliability at IRPS 2026
CEA Leti to Showcase Integrated Expertise In Microelectronics Reliability at IRPS 2026
Health - Mar 17
AI was supposed to ease doctors' workload - instead they spend hours correcting errors
AI was supposed to ease doctors' workload - instead they spend hours correcting errors
Pharmacology - Mar 17
International trial finds rapid diagnostic testing alone does not reduce antibiotic prescribing for respiratory infections
International trial finds rapid diagnostic testing alone does not reduce antibiotic prescribing for respiratory infections
Social Sciences - Mar 17
Social background shapes how hard children work, according to a study by UC3M
Social background shapes how hard children work, according to a study by UC3M

Innovation - Mar 17
With Robotics Innovation Center, CMU and Hazelwood Partners Sustain Community Collaborations
With Robotics Innovation Center, CMU and Hazelwood Partners Sustain Community Collaborations















