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Feb 26, 2024

Eclipsing Silicon: The Emergence of Magnon-Based Computing Technologies

Posted by in category: computing

A recent study has advanced the understanding of magnonics by showing how magnons can interact nonlinearly, marking a critical step towards faster and more stable computing technologies.

Feb 26, 2024

Lithography Leader ASML Hyper-NA is Next Step in Smaller Transistors. 2.9X Density

Posted by in category: computing

High NA EUV is the next step in smaller transistors. Like NXE systems, it uses EUV light to print tiny features on silicon wafers. And by turning the NA knob, we deliver even better resolution: The new platform, known as EXE, offers chipmakers a CD (critical dimension) of 8 nm. That means they can print transistors 1.7 times smaller – and therefore achieve transistor densities 2.9 times higher – than they can with NXE systems.

Above – High NA EUV mirror testing at ZEISS (Credit: ZEISS SMT)

EUV lithography allowed us to make a big turn of the wavelength knob. It uses 13.5 nm light, compared to 193 nm for the highest-resolution DUV systems. The first pre-production EUV lithography platform, the NXE, shipped in 2010 and delivered a drop in CD (critical dimension) from more than 30 nm in DUV down to 13 nm with EUV.

Feb 26, 2024

To unravel the origin of life, treat findings as pieces of a bigger puzzle

Posted by in categories: biological, chemistry

Explaining isolated steps on the road from simple chemicals to complex living organisms is not enough. Looking at the big picture could help to bridge rifts in this fractured research field.

Feb 26, 2024

New Superconducting ‘Flowermon’ Qubit Boosts Stability of Quantum Information

Posted by in category: quantum physics

Researchers published a paper describing a new superconducting qubit expected to increase coherence times in quantum processors.

Feb 26, 2024

Speculations about future humans

Posted by in category: futurism

Shared with Dropbox.

Feb 26, 2024

Resurrection of the Dead (Science-Fiction)

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, futurism

DNA and Information combined with science and biotechnology. Can we resurrect the dead?

Feb 26, 2024

GPTVQ: The Blessing of Dimensionality for LLM Quantization

Posted by in category: futurism

Join the discussion on this paper page.

Feb 26, 2024

The Limits of Math: Study Shows Forests Are More Complex Than Thought

Posted by in category: mathematics

Scientists have found that the growth patterns of trees in a forest differ significantly from the way branches expand on an individual tree.

Nature is full of surprising repetitions. In trees, the large branches often look like entire trees, while smaller branches and twigs look like the larger branches they grow from. If seen in isolation, each part of the tree could be mistaken for a miniature version of itself.

It has long been assumed that this property, called fractality, also applies to entire forests but researchers from the University of Bristol have found that this is not the case.

Feb 26, 2024

The Family of Imagers Trusted by Scientists for More Than 20 Years

Posted by in category: innovation

The family of imagers scientists around the world have trusted for more than 20 years to deliver exceptional data quality.

Whatever your needs, the Odyssey family has an imaging solution to enable you to make breakthrough discoveries with confidence.

Feb 26, 2024

Graphene research: Numerous products, no acute dangers

Posted by in categories: health, neuroscience

Think big. Despite its research topic, this could well be the motto of the Graphene Flagship, which was launched in 2013: With an overall budget of one billion Euros, it was Europe’s largest research initiative to date, alongside the Human Brain Flagship, which was launched at the same time.

The same applies to the review article on the effects of graphene and related materials on health and the environment, which Empa researchers Peter Wick and Tina Bürki just published together with 30 international colleagues in the journal ACS Nano; they summarize the findings on the health and ecological risks of graphene materials, the reference list includes almost 500 original publications.

A wealth of knowledge—which also gives the all-clear. “We have investigated the potential acute effects of various graphene and graphene-like materials on the lungs, in the and in the placenta—and no serious acute cell-damaging effects were observed in any of the studies,” says Wick, summarizing the results.

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