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Jun 9, 2019
Quantum batteries could reduce the charging time to literally nothing
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: quantum physics
Batteries are great, except that they take a long time to charge. When you are dealing with a lot of batteries, you have to have a lot of time to charge them. But what if you could reduce the charging time by adding more batteries? Sounds unreal? Probably, but that is what scientists at the University of Adelaide are going to try to achieve by creating world’s first quantum battery.
Jun 9, 2019
Researchers craft an LED just two atoms thick
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: computing, particle physics
Jun 9, 2019
Electrifying quantum dots for lasers
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: quantum physics, space, transportation
Compositional grading of colloidal quantum dots enables electrically driven amplification of light, bringing electrically driven lasers from these materials very close.
Jun 9, 2019
Quantum Dots Make LED Lightbulbs Emit More Pleasant Light
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: quantum physics
LED lights have been working on overcoming two challenges: Generating pleasing light, and being low-cost. QD Vision and Nexxus Lighting have been working together on the first of these. Nexxus made LED lamps with white LEDs, and QD Vision is providing a cover with a coating of specially tuned quantum dots that help make the light-color more pleasing to the eye (mostly by adding some red into the mix, making the final result closer to what people are used to).
Photo: Mark Lennihan
Jun 9, 2019
Breakthrough quantum dot hybrid LED is inexpensive and delivers vibrant color
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: innovation, quantum physics
LED lighting systems could soon gain mainstream adoption with a new cost-effective hybrid LED and its solution-based process.
Jun 9, 2019
Heart of next-generation chip-scale atomic clock
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: computing, particle physics, satellites
Physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and partners have demonstrated an experimental, next-generation atomic clock — ticking at high “optical” frequencies — that is much smaller than usual, made of just three small chips plus supporting electronics and optics.
Described in Optica, the chip-scale clock is based on the vibrations, or “ticks,” of rubidium atoms confined in a tiny glass container, called a vapor cell, on a chip. Two frequency combs on chips act like gears to link the atoms’ high-frequency optical ticks to a lower, widely used microwave frequency that can be used in applications.
The chip-based heart of the new clock requires very little power (just 275 milliwatts) and, with additional technology advances, could potentially be made small enough to be handheld. Chip-scale optical clocks like this could eventually replace traditional oscillators in applications such as navigation systems and telecommunications networks and serve as backup clocks on satellites.
Jun 9, 2019
Microsoft launches Xbox Game Pass Ultimate with PC and Xbox games for $14.99 per month
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: entertainment
https://youtube.com/watch?v=VbxDn2AZgb8
Xbox Live Gold is also included in the subscription.
Jun 9, 2019
Study says new element 115, ununpentium, does exist
Posted by Quinn Sena in category: chemistry
One more element may soon be added to the Periodic Table. On September 10, 2013, scientists reported evidence supporting the existence of element 115.
Jun 9, 2019
The gene therapy revolution is here. Medicine is scrambling to keep pace
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: biotech/medical, genetics
Greg Dore at the Kirby Institute of NSW participated in Australia’s Hepatitis C pricing discussions, and believes our model will work for the new gene therapy drugs – notwithstanding their eye-popping price tags – and the fact that the patient populations for these rare genetic diseases will be tiny.
However, the real reason companies are getting into gene therapy is not just to treat rare disease. It’s because they realise this technology will be a game changer for medicine.