Morning Overview on MSN
A dust-sized device could supercharge quantum computers
A device smaller than a grain of dust is emerging as a surprisingly powerful candidate to reshape how quantum computers are ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Device smaller than a grain of dust looks to supercharge quantum computers
A device smaller than a grain of dust may help unlock the kind of quantum computers people have only dreamed about. Built on ...
CARLSBAD, CA, 3 June 2009 – Luxtera, the worldwide leader in Silicon CMOS Photonics, today announced its collaboration with Freescale Semiconductor as its foundry source to achieve production of the ...
(Nanowerk Spotlight) For nanoelectronics applications like single-electron devices to become practical, everyday items, they need to move from the highly individual and customized fabrication process ...
Universities need to have access to technology for teaching their students who can be trained at least on the most up to date technology processes. Research Laboratories usually need to have high ...
(Nanowerk Spotlight) There is a lot of buzz in the computer industry about so-called three-dimensional (3D) chips, promising higher performance with lower energy consumption, and paving the way for ...
Most of today's imaging sensors are based on CMOS technology and inorganic photodetectors that convert light signals into electric signals. Although photodetectors made from organic materials are ...
The transistor, an invention that heralded a new era in electronics, is the key component of practically all integrated circuits (ICs) and microprocessors. The point-contact transistor that Walter H.
A Grenoble, France-based research team at CEA Leti and chip maker STMicroelectronics say that they have demonstrated the first hybrid III-V/silicon laser to be fabricated using a wafer manufacturing ...
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