Researchers find a new way to control magnets
Reversible system can flip the magnetic orientation of particles with a small voltage; could lead to faster data storage and smaller sensors.
Reversible system can flip the magnetic orientation of particles with a small voltage; could lead to faster data storage and smaller sensors.
New chip eliminates the need for specific decoding hardware, could boost efficiency of gaming systems, 5G networks, the internet of things, and more.
The 2021 School of Engineering Accenture Fellows are bolstering research and igniting ideas to help transform global business.
Students in STS.032 (Energy, Environment, and Society) learn about environmental and health consequences of discarded electronics.
In a first, the digital fiber contains memory, temperature sensors, and a trained neural network program for inferring physical activity.
Benton Calhoun SM '02 PhD '06 and David Wentzloff SM '02 PhD '07 are co-founders of Everactive, which uses wireless sensing to provide continuous remote monitoring for the industrial internet of things.
Work on three graphene-based devices may yield new insights into superconductivity.
The findings could lead to faster, more secure memory storage, in the form of antiferromagnetic bits.
MIT researchers develop compact on-chip device for detecting electric-field waveforms with attosecond time resolution.
Wireless sensing technology could help improve patients’ technique with inhalers and insulin pens.
Study uncovers overlooked environmental impacts of internet use by estimating associated carbon, land, and water footprints.
Reducing internal losses could pave the way to low-cost perovskite-based photovoltaics that match silicon cells’ output.
The advance could improve energy efficiency of data centers and lighten the load for electronics-rich vehicles.
Inspired by decades-old MIT research, the new technology could boost quantum computers and other superconducting electronics.
The advance could cut production costs and reduce the size of microelectronics for sensing and communication.