Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged interface

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Dario Izzo

Extreme strength observed in limpet teeth | Journal of The Royal Society Interface - 3 views

  •  
    stronger than steel - small teeth of snail like creature ...
  •  
    According to a BBC news article it's actually stronger than Kevlar...
  •  
    The spider silk is no longer the toughest natural material around.
Tobias Seidl

Information processing by biochemical networks: a dynamic approach - Interface - 1 views

  •  
    Something for the computer freaks.
jmlloren

Exotic matter : Insight : Nature - 5 views

shared by jmlloren on 03 Aug 10 - Cached
LeopoldS liked it
  •  
    Trends in materials and condensed matter. Check out the topological insulators. amazing field.
  • ...12 more comments...
  •  
    Aparently very interesting, will it survive the short hype? Relevant work describing mirror charges of topological insulators and the classical boundary conditions were done by Ismo and Ari. But the two communities don't know each other and so they are never cited. Also a way to produce new things...
  •  
    Thanks for noticing! Indeed, I had no idea that Ari (don't know Ismo) was involved in the field. Was it before Kane's proposal or more recently? What I mostly like is that semiconductors are good candidates for 3D TI, however I got lost in the quantum field jargon. Yesterday, I got a headache trying to follow the Majorana fermions, the merons, skyrnions, axions, and so on. Luzi, are all these things familiar to you?
  •  
    Ismo Lindell described in the early 90's the mirror charge of what is now called topological insulator. He says that similar results were obtained already at the beginning of the 20th century... Ismo Lindell and Ari Sihvola in the recent years discussed engineering aspects of PEMCs (perfect electro-megnetic conductors,) which are more or less classical analogues of topological insulators. Fundamental aspects of PEMCs are well knwon in high-energy physics for a long time, recent works are mainly due to Friedrich Hehl and Yuri Obukhov. All these works are purely classical, so there is no charge quantisation, no considerations of electron spin etc. About Majorana fermions: yes, I spent several years of research on that topic. Axions: a topological state, of course, trivial :-) Also merons and skyrnions are topological states, but I'm less familiar with them.
  •  
    "Non-Abelian systems1, 2 contain composite particles that are neither fermions nor bosons and have a quantum statistics that is far richer than that offered by the fermion-boson dichotomy. The presence of such quasiparticles manifests itself in two remarkable ways. First, it leads to a degeneracy of the ground state that is not based on simple symmetry considerations and is robust against perturbations and interactions with the environment. Second, an interchange of two quasiparticles does not merely multiply the wavefunction by a sign, as is the case for fermions and bosons. Rather, it takes the system from one ground state to another. If a series of interchanges is made, the final state of the system will depend on the order in which these interchanges are being carried out, in sharp contrast to what happens when similar operations are performed on identical fermions or bosons." wow, this paper by Stern reads really weired ... any of you ever looked into this?
  •  
    C'mon Leopold, it's as trivial as the topological states, AKA axions! Regarding the question, not me!
  •  
    just looked up the wikipedia entry on axions .... at least they have some creativity in names giving: "In supersymmetric theories the axion has both a scalar and a fermionic superpartner. The fermionic superpartner of the axion is called the axino, the scalar superpartner is called the saxion. In some models, the saxion is the dilaton. They are all bundled up in a chiral superfield. The axino has been predicted to be the lightest supersymmetric particle in such a model.[24] In part due to this property, it is considered a candidate for the composition of dark matter.[25]"
  •  
    Thank's Leopold. Sorry Luzi for being ironic concerning the triviality of the axions. Now, Leo confirmed me that indeed is a trivial matter. I have problems with models where EVERYTHING is involved.
  •  
    Well, that's the theory of everything, isn't it?? Seriously: I don't think that theoretically there is a lot of new stuff here. Topological aspects of (non-Abelian) theories became extremely popular in the context of string theory. The reason is very simple: topological theories are much simpler than "normal" and since string theory anyway is far too complicated to be solved, people just consider purely topological theories, then claiming that this has something to do with the real world, which of course is plainly wrong. So what I think is new about these topological insulators are the claims that one can actually fabricate a material which more or less accurately mimics a topological theory and that these materials are of practical use. Still, they are a little bit the poor man's version of the topological theories fundamental physicists like to look at since electrdynamics is an Abelian theory.
  •  
    I have the feeling, not the knowledge, that you are right. However, I think that the implications of this light quantum field effects are great. The fact of being able to sustain two currents polarized in spin is a technological breakthrough.
  •  
    not sure how much I can contribute to your apparently educated debate here but if I remember well from my work for the master, these non-Abelian theories were all but "simple" as Luzi puts it ... and from a different perspective: to me the whole thing of being able to describe such non-Abelian systems nicely indicates that they should in one way or another also have some appearance in Nature (would be very surprised if not) - though this is of course no argument that makes string theory any better or closer to what Luzi called reality ....
  •  
    Well, electrodynamics remains an Abelian theory. From the theoretical point of view this is less interesting than non-Abelian ones, since in 4D the fibre bundle of a U(1) theory is trivial (great buzz words, eh!) But in topological insulators the point of view is slightly different since one always has the insulator (topological theory), its surrounding (propagating theory) and most importantly the interface between the two. This is a new situation that people from field and string theory were not really interested in.
  •  
    guys... how would you explain this to your gran mothers?
  •  
    *you* tried *your* best .... ??
Juxi Leitner

The BCI X PRIZE: This Time It's Inner Space | h+ Magazine - 3 views

  • The Brain-Computer Interface X PRIZE will reward a team that provides vision to the blind, new bodies to disabled people...
  •  
    nice! are they studying our website?
LeopoldS

Track changes with LaTeX - 3 views

  •  
    did any of you Latex gurus already try this out?
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    It's installed on my computer, but I never really used it. I think it's fine, but for my purposes latexdiff mostly is enough.
  •  
    I assume that you use latexdiff from the command line ... still have to find a nice script with which to integrate it into the TexShop GUI for Karène ...
  •  
    A command line is an interface as well. I was able to explain via phone to a (computer-wise) avarage undereducated Mac-user how to install and run latexdiff. Thus I think also Karene can use it...
Juxi Leitner

Brain Chips: Artificial Intelligence Is All in Your Head - GigaOM - 1 views

  •  
    Why isn't our good old Raymond Kurzweil mentioned? Some of the nonsense written in that page is one-to-one copy/paste from the Signularity bible...
  •  
    luzi how I miss you!!!!
LeopoldS

UW researchers look to reinvent the graphical user interface - 4 views

  •  
    Francesco have a look at this - any interest?
Tobias Seidl

Structure and formation of ant transportation networks - Interface - 3 views

  •  
    You guys could like this....
Luís F. Simões

Pattern | CLiPS - 2 views

  • Pattern is a web mining module for the Python programming language. It bundles tools for data retrieval (Google + Twitter + Wikipedia API, web spider, HTML DOM parser), text analysis (rule-based shallow parser, WordNet interface, syntactical + semantical n-gram search algorithm, tf-idf + cosine similarity + LSA metrics) and data visualization (graph networks).
  •  
    Intuitive, well documented, and very powerful. A library to keep an eye on. Check the example Belgian elections, June 13, 2010 - Twitter opinion mining
pandomilla

Bioinspired self-repairing slippery surfaces with pressure-stable omniphobicity : Natur... - 3 views

  • a strategy to create self-healing, slippery liquid-infused porous surface(s) (SLIPS) with exceptional liquid- and ice-repellency, pressure stability and enhanced optical transparency. Our approach—inspired by Nepenthes pitcher plants13—is conceptually different from the lotus effect, because we use nano/microstructured substrates to lock in place the infused lubricating fluid. We define the requirements for which the lubricant forms a stable, defect-free and inert ‘slippery’ interface.
  • ts capability to repel various simple and complex liquids (water, hydrocarbons, crude oil and blood),
  •  
    ...This slippery surface was bio-inspired by the carnivorous plant I showed you sometimes ago! I was sure it was a good idea! next time I will be quicker!!
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    Shit. I am sure that there is more to do on this. Let's have a closer look.
  •  
    And a good lesson that it is important to proceed quickly when you have an idea and don't wait ...
  •  
    Yes, I will see what we could do, but they really did a good job, from the biomimetic of the surface, up to the realization of the material, and the tests...
Tobias Seidl

Journal of the Royal Society Interface - Focus: Synthetic Biology - 0 views

  •  
    A toc of a spcial issue on synthetic biology: How to assemble organisms from scratch. Could one day be intersting for large scale deterministic self assembly or some other crazy idea...
Tobias Seidl

Hygromorphs: from pine cones to biomimetic bilayers - Interface - 0 views

  •  
    This is about biological and technical hygromorphs, i.e. structures that change shape according to humidity. Next to pine cones, there is also a cool study on wheat awns which drill themselves into the soil just by daily variance of air humidity. Biomimetics would be passively controlled acutators or humidity driven valves in space station to open/close dehumidification devices.
  •  
    Interesting, but only an abstract... do you have the full paper ?
  •  
    Not yet. There is also some other nice mechanism of wheat awns and how they use changes in humidity to anchor in soil. Would maybe fit with the above mentioned work of oisin.
ESA ACT

All Optical Interface for Parallel, Remote, and Spatiotemporal Control of Neuronal Acti... - 0 views

  •  
    A key technical barrier to furthering our understanding of complex neural networks has been the lack of tools for the simultaneous spatiotemporal control and detection of activity in a large number of neurons.
ESA ACT

Interfacing Silicon Nanowires with Mammalian Cells - 0 views

  •  
    The title says it all - now we just need to make nerve cells and establish electric circuits.
ESA ACT

A solid-state light-matter interface at the single-photon level - 0 views

  •  
    First demostration of coherent and reversible mapping of a light field with less than one photon per pulse onto an ensemble of approx10^7 atoms naturally trapped in a solid.
ESA ACT

ScienceDirect - Advances in Colloid and Interface Science : nanoparticle polymer PV cells - 0 views

  •  
    of interest? -LS
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 48 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page