The world's fastest nano-optical shutter
Physicists from several U.S. labs have clocked the transition of vanadium dioxide nanoparticles from a transparent to a reflective, mirror-like state, at less than 100 femtoseconds (a tenth of a trillionth of a second). According to this Vanderbilt University report, this effect has a size limit : "it does not occur in particles that are smaller than about 20 atoms across (10 nanometers)." This opens the door - if I can say so - to windows that are transparent at low temperatures and block out sunlight when the temperature rises. But other applications are possible, such as nanosensors which could measure the temperature at different locations within human cells, or "ultrafast" optical switches which could be used in communications and optical computing.
Read the complete story . (Technology Trends)
- Intel increases NOR Flash density
- Samsung leads organic display market
- I/O Magic increases capacity of mini storage device to 6 GByte
- Sony patent takes first step towards real-life Matrix
- Eidos board backs SCi bid
- Law to make iTunes compatible with Microsoft?
- Microsoft launches MSN Messenger 7.0
- Time runs out for blocking XP SP2 updates
- Nvidia's Intel nForce4 SLI 60 percent more expensive than Intel's chipset
- Windows Service Pack downloads on April 12
- Dell sees 16 percent revenue increase
- Mandrakesoft's got a new name
- Yahoo to support Wikipedia
- New ATI Catalyst driver has HDTV wizard and 64-bit extensions
- Sophos: US leads worldwide spam ranking
- The world's fastest DDR2 memory
- Dell remains open to AMD
- Intel Q&A: Homework for motherboard makers




