INVISIBILITY CLOAK

Posted by Dave Enoch On May - 02 - 2009

Would'nt that be amazing to be invisible. The scientists have kept a step forward and made a cloak which is called an invisibility cloak which neither absorbs nor reflects light making the body invisible. This can lead to invisible suits which are going to be available in the market but may be expensive at the start.

FIRST PLASMA TRANSISTOR

Posted by Dave Enoch On May - 02 - 2009

Scientists finally fabricate the first plasma transistor.Though this is not good enough to be used in the commercial systems but this has made a path to use them in future.
In the plasma transistor, the electron emitter injects electrons in a controlled manner into the sheath of a partially ionized neon gas (the plasma). The scientists discovered that even a voltage as low as 5 volts can change the properties of the microplasma, including quadrupling the current and increasing the visible light emission.

500GB Optical Disc

Posted by David On May - 02 - 2009

The storage capacity of micro-holographic discs that the normal DVDs or the blue-ray discs because the micro-holographic discs store information in a 3D way rather than just putting it onto the surface of the disc.
G.E(General Electrics) has made dramatic changes in the material to increase the reflectivity of the surface.If the reflectivity of the surface increases then the amount of information that can stored automatically increases.

NANO-CLOTH NEVER GETS WET

Posted by David On May - 02 - 2009

If you were to soak even your best raincoat underwater for two months it would be wet through at the end of the experience. But a new waterproof material developed by Swiss chemists would be as dry as the day it went in.
Lead researcher Stefan Seeger at the University of Zurich says the fabric, made from polyester fibres coated with millions of tiny silicone filaments, is the most water-repellent clothing-appropriate material ever created.

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SCIENTISTS FABRICATE FIRST PLASMA TRANSISTOR

Posted by gamer On 2:09 AM
Source PHYSORG.COM
Since their development in the 1940s, transistors have been at the heart of computers and other modern electronic devices. Transistors - whose job is to start, stop, or amplify electric current - come in all shapes, sizes and materials, depending on the application. Recently, scientists have fabricated a new variation: a micro-sized plasma transistor.
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign developed the microplasma transistor by integrating a conventional microcavity plasma device with an electron emitter. Kuo-Feng (Kevin) Chen and Professor J. Gary Eden, Director of the Laboratory for Optical Physics and Engineering, published their study in a recent issue of Applied Physics Letters. As Eden explained, a plasma transistor could one day have certain advantages compared with conventional transistors.“As you might imagine, this first plasma transistor has not yet been engineered to the degree necessary for a commercial product,” Eden told PhysOrg.com. “Nevertheless, it should be mentioned that a microplasma transistor is advantageous in those situations requiring the transistor to handle high voltages and power. Unlike conventional transistors that can be damaged by a voltage transient, for example, the microplasma transistor is expected to be quite rugged because a gas (and plasma) cannot be ‘burnt.’”

A plasma lamp contains a partially ionized gas.
For the first time, researchers have fabricated a
plasma transistor (not shown).
Image credit: Luc Viatour.

In the plasma transistor, the electron emitter injects electrons in a controlled manner into the sheath of a partially ionized neon gas (the plasma). The scientists discovered that even a voltage as low as 5 volts can change the properties of the microplasma, including quadrupling the current and increasing the visible light emission.

By controllably altering the microplasma’s properties, the electron emitter effectively transforms the plasma microcavity device into a three-terminal transistor. Like a regular transistor, the microplasma transistor has the ability to control the current traveling through the terminals, and act as a switch or amplifier.

The scientists began investigating the plasma transistor while trying to solve a problem that arises in plasma devices, such as those in plasma TV displays. In such devices, scientists have limited control over electron production in the plasma sheath, in which current flow is normally dominated by ions. The result is that these plasma devices require high voltages to operate. In an attempt to lower the required voltage and increase efficiency, Chen, Eden, and others have been investigating methods of generating additional electrons, such as by growing electron-emitting carbon nanotubes on the inside wall of the microplasma device, as in a previous study.

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