Category Physics

Practical, Versatile Microscopic Optomechanical Device created

Researchers created an optomechanical silicon bullseye disk that traps optical waves in the outermost ring via total internal reflection while the radial groves confine the mechanical waves to the same area. Credit: Thiago P. Mayer Alegre, University of Campinas

Researchers created an optomechanical silicon bullseye disk that traps optical waves in the outermost ring via total internal reflection while the radial groves confine the mechanical waves to the same area. Credit: Thiago P. Mayer Alegre, University of Campinas

Trapping light and mechanical waves within a tiny bullseye, design could enable more sensitive motion detection. The new device is highly customizable and compatible with commercial manufacturing processes. Optomechanical devices use light to detect movement. They can be used as low-power, efficient building blocks for the accelerometers that detect the orientation and movement of a smart phone or that trigger a car’s airbag to deploy split seconds after an accident...

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Bio-Inspired Suction Cups withstand more than Splashes

1. The northern clingfish (Gobiesox maeandricus) lives in Pacific Northwest waters, where it seeks out prey in the crashing waves of the intertidal Credit: Petra Ditsche 2. Credit: Christina Linkem

1. The northern clingfish (Gobiesox maeandricus) lives in Pacific Northwest waters, where it seeks out prey in the crashing waves of the intertidal Credit: Petra Ditsche 2. Credit: Christina Linkem

To create prototype suction cups that are capable of glomming onto rough, wet surfaces and staying there, Ditsche has found inspiration in clingfish. On the rocky shores of Washington State, clingfish maneuver over rocks to prey on limpets – dime-sized, snail-like invertebrates. A limpet is covered by a shell shield that hides soft organs, which are fair game if the predatory clingfish can pop it off the rock. Yet the clingfish faces its own foe: heavy forces from incoming waves that threaten to slosh it off the rocks as it searches for food...

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First-ever Direct Observation of Collisional Plasmoid Instability during Magnetic Reconnection in a Lab setting

First-ever Direct Observation of Collisional Plasmoid Instability during Magnetic Reconnection in a Lab setting

FImage: PPPL physicist Hantao Ji in front of the Magnetic Reconnection Experiment
Credit: Elle Starkman
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Physicists at DOE PPPL have for the first time directly observed a phenomenon that had previously only been hypothesized to exist. The phenomenon, plasmoid instabilities that occur during collisional magnetic reconnection, had until this year only been observed indirectly using remote-sensing technology. They created the phenomenon where they could measure it directly and confirm its existence on the electron scale, which describes the range of motion of electrons and how quickly they move.

Plasmoid instabilities create magnetic bubbles within plasma, superhot gas whose atoms have separated into electrons and atomic nuclei...

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Intel announces Compute Card, offers Brain Power for Smart Gadgets, Kiosks

Intel announces Compute Card, offers brain power for smart gadgets, kiosks

A new modular compute platform called the Compute Card

We may be about to enter a brand new age of tiny computing. Tech blog MSPoweruser said on Thursday that “At CES 2017 today, Intel announced a new modular compute platform called the Compute Card.” A BBC presenter points in the video to a “fully functional Windows 10 PC. “And when I say this, I actually mean this.” He reaches for a small slab, and tells viewers that it is a complete computer. Processer, storage, memory, Wifi, there. “It is about as powerful as an ultra-thin laptop,” he said.

The Intel Compute Card can operate as a PC or act as the brains of other electronics. The card does not seem to have—anywhere to plug anything in...

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