Category Physics

First Realization of an Electric Circuit with a Magnetic Insulator using Spin Wave

 

This was first deemed impossible. Apps include: novel, energy-efficient electronic devices, particularly integrated circuits. A spin wave is caused by a perturbation of local magnetisation direction in a magnetic material. Such a perturbation is caused by an electron with an opposite spin, relative to the magnetisation. Spin waves transmit these perturbations in the material. This research demonstrates for the first time that it is possible to transmit electric signals in an insulating material.

So far, electrical circuits based on spin waves have not been realised, since it turned out to be impossible to introduce a perturbation in the system large enough to create spin waves...

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Photonic Chip Activated for Communication with Light

. On-chip visible-to-infrared supercontinuum generation with more than 495 THz spectral bandwidth

. On-chip visible-to-infrared supercontinuum generation with more than 495 THz spectral bandwidth Credit: http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.23.019596

Sending information with the help of light is an exciting prospect for future technologies. It requires ‘light chips’, made of a special glass (already known for their extremely low losses) which now have been equipped with ‘active’ functionalities, eg generating, strengthening, and modulating light. Their chip is capable of creating a very wide light spectrum that runs from blue to infrared, 470 to 2130 nm wavelengths. By doing so they have made a light chip with the largest frequency range ever.

The width and regularity of the light spectrum plays a central role in fiber optics info transfer...

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Astronomers peer into ‘Amniotic sac’ of a Planet-Hosting Star, to see innermost region of Burgeoning Solar System for 1st time

An artist’s impression of the HD 100546 system. A planet that is still in the process of forming could be boosting a transfer of material from the gas-rich outer part of the disk to the inner regions. Credit: David Cabezas Jimeno (SEA)

An artist’s impression of the HD 100546 system. A planet that is still in the process of forming could be boosting a transfer of material from the gas-rich outer part of the disk to the inner regions. Credit: David Cabezas Jimeno (SEA)

Surprising findings in observations of parent star HD 100546.

Dr Ignacio Mendigutía, University of Leeds, said: “Nobody has ever been able to probe this close to a star that is still forming and which also has at least one planet so close in. “We have been able to detect for the first time emission from the innermost part of the disk of gas that surrounds the central star. Unexpectedly, this emission is similar to that of ‘barren’ young stars that do not show any signs of active planet formation.”

They used Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI), Chil...

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Uniting Classical and Quantum Mechanics: Breakthrough Observation of Mott Transition in a Superconductor

Scientists announced the first observation of a dynamic vortex Mott transition, which experimentally connects the worlds of quantum mechanics and classical physics and could shed light on the poorly understood world of non-equilibrium physics. Credit: Image courtesy Valerii Vinokur, Argonne National Laboratory/Science

Scientists announced the first observation of a dynamic vortex Mott transition, which experimentally connects the worlds of quantum mechanics and classical physics and could shed light on the poorly understood world of non-equilibrium physics. Credit: Image courtesy Valerii Vinokur, Argonne National Laboratory/Science

It also could shed light on non-equilibrium physics, which is poorly understood but governs most of what occurs in our world. The finding may also represent a step towards more efficient electronics based on the Mott transition.

Magnetic fields penetrate superconducting material in the form of tiny filaments called vortices, which control the electronic and magnetic properties of the materials...

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