Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged phys

Rss Feed Group items tagged

santecarloni

Breakthrough could double solar electricity ouput - latimes.com - 2 views

  •  
    A new discovery from a chemist at the University of Texas at Austin may allow photovoltaic solar cells to double their efficiency, thus providing loads more electrical power from regular sunlight.
santecarloni

New Kind of Metal in the Earth | Geophysical Laboratory - 0 views

  •  
    New experiments and supercomputer computations discovered that iron oxide undergoes a new kind of transition under deep Earth conditions. Iron oxide, FeO, is a component of the second most abundant mineral at Earth's lower mantle, ferropericlase. The finding, published in an upcoming issue of Physical Review Letters, could alter our understanding of deep Earth dynamics and the behavior of the protective magnetic field, which shields our planet from harmful cosmic rays.
santecarloni

Was a metamaterial lurking in the primordial universe? - physicsworld.com - 1 views

  •  
    A scientist in the US is arguing that the vacuum should behave as a metamaterial at high magnetic fields. Such magnetic fields were probably present in the early universe, and therefore he suggests that it may be possible to test the prediction by observing the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation - a relic of the early universe that can be observed today.
santecarloni

Introducing the 'nano-ear' - physicsworld.com - 0 views

  •  
    Physicists in Germany have developed the first-ever "nano-ear" capable of detecting sound on microscopic length scales with an estimated sensitivity that is six orders of magnitude below the threshold of human hearing.
  •  
    one can see that you are in bed and bored :-)
santecarloni

Three new maps shine light on dark matter - physicsworld.com - 0 views

  •  
    Three independent teams of astronomers have released new and improved maps of where dark matter is lurking in parts of the universe
santecarloni

Invisibility cloak gives sound performance - physicsworld.com - 2 views

  •  
    "...scientists in Germany have built a device that can effectively make objects invisible to sound waves. The performance of the acoustic "invisibility cloak" exceeds that of existing electromagnetic devices and could open up new ways of manipulating waves, including the development of shields against seismic waves."
  •  
    shit.... they are a few months ahead of us it seems ... :-( what is the impact on our ariadna??
Ma Ru

LHC delivers - 2 views

shared by Ma Ru on 22 Dec 11 - No Cached
  •  
    According to BBC the abstract means they've found a new particle...
santecarloni

Rydberg atom simulates Trojan asteroids - physicsworld.com - 3 views

  •  
    The atom may not be a planetary system, but under specific circumstances it can behave like one. That is the curious finding of physicists in Austria and the US, who have confirmed a 1994 prediction that, in the presence of an applied electromagnetic field, electrons in very highly energized atomic states should behave like the Trojan asteroids of Jupiter.
  •  
    Bohr's model finally not so wrong?
santecarloni

Artificial Braneworlds Made to Collide In Lab - Technology Review - 4 views

  •  
    Physicists have simulated two universes colliding inside a metamaterial--  Now, this is cool (if it is true...)
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    we... the article is a bit overblown in my view ... except maybe the last paragraphs: "The collision between universe's is a variation on this theme. "The "colliding universe" scenario can be realized as a simple extension of our earlier experiments simulating the spacetime geometry in the vicinity of big bang," he says. He simulates an expanding universe using concetric rings of gold separated by a dielectric. "When the two concentric ring ("universe") patterns touch each other ("collide"), a Minkowski domain wall is created, in which the metallic stripes touch each other at a small angle," he says. Being able to recreate these exotic events in the lab is certainly interesting but it is beginning to lose its novelty. The problem is that this work is not telling us anything we didn't know--the universe behaves the same way inside a metamaterial as it does outside. What Smolyaninov needs is a way of using his exotic materials to do something interesting. In other words, he needs a killer app. Any ideas? "
  •  
    Hm, they use more or less everything I don't especially like. They are nonmagnetic, so the relation materialGR is already rather weak. Usually, experimentalists prefer nonmagnetic media, since they are cheaper and broadband. At least the broadband is no argument here, since the frequency defines the "mass", which I find a rather strange point of view. And finally, they use strong anisotropy as a model of "time", which is rather problematic. Of course, the spatial direction with eps<0 appears in the wave equation with the same sign as time. But this does not mean that it behaves like time. But to teach material physicists that time is more than just a different sign in the wave equation seems to be as hopeless as to teach them that a black hole is more than something that absorbs all light... SIGHHH
  •  
    Luzi I miss you ...
santecarloni

Laser gyroscope measures the Earth's 'wobble' - physicsworld.com - 2 views

  •  
    An international team of researchers have developed a new type of gyroscope that is the first to measure the "wobble" in the rotational axis of the Earth from a ground-based laboratory. Astronomers normally track this wobble by continuously monitoring the position of distant objects, such as quasars. But this new method will provide a much simpler and cheaper alternative to these large-scale astronomical readings, the scientists claim.
  •  
    is this of any use for spacecraft?
  •  
    mmm it's like saying that you can replace satellite tracking by accelerometers on-board satellites... for Leo: you'd better put an atomic gyro on a spacecraft these laser gyro are huge !
santecarloni

Memristor memory could be used in wearable electronics - 0 views

  •  
    Researchers in South Korea are the first to make a bendable digital memory that can store data without constant power. Such memories could find applications in electronic paper for more comfortable reading and in wearable computers, which could be used in medical monitoring and treatment.
santecarloni

Four-wheel nanocar takes to the road - physicsworld.com - 1 views

  •  
    A "four-wheel drive car" less than one billionth the length of an average SUV has been built and operated by researchers in the Netherlands and Switzerland.
  •  
    "Molecular machines are common in nature. Motor proteins, for example, can move along a surface to transport molecular-sized cargo and are often used to build structures within living cells. " reminds me of the fantastic movie on what happens inside a cell ...
santecarloni

Pristine relics of the Big Bang spotted - physicsworld.com - 1 views

  •  
    For the first time, astronomers have discovered two distant clouds of gas that seem to be pure relics from the Big Bang.
  •  
    and one of them is in "leo" .... "This gas is of primordial composition, as it was produced during the first few minutes after the Big Bang." One gas cloud resides in the constellation Leo"
LeopoldS

Particle self-bunching in the Schwinger effect in spacetime-dependent electric fields - 3 views

shared by LeopoldS on 11 Nov 11 - No Cached
pacome delva liked it
  •  
    magic :-)
  •  
    "self-bunching effect" haha
Lionel Jacques

Event-hiding "temporal cloak" demonstrated - 2 views

  •  
    Last year researchers at Imperial College London proposed that along with being used to cloak physical objects metamaterials could also be used to cloak a singular event in time. A year later, researchers from Cornell University have demonstrated a working "temporal cloak" that is able to conceal a burst of light as if it had never occurred.
LeopoldS

Layer 8: NASA looking at building tractor beams for space - 3 views

  •  
    Three very interesting concepts indeed! Especially the solenoid one...
  •  
    Does anyone know a proper reference?
santecarloni

New 2D semiconductor could outperform silicon - physicsworld.com - 1 views

  •  
    A new class of 2D semiconductor has been developed by researchers in the US. The free-standing quantum membranes, which are made of indium arsenide (InAs) and are just a few layers thick, have properties that are in stark contrast to the semiconductor layers used in conventional transistors.
« First ‹ Previous 201 - 220 of 822 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page