Sunday, 27 May 2012

New Silicon Memory Chip May Offer Super-Fast Memory

The first purely silicon oxide-based 'Resistive RAM' memory chip that can operate in ambient conditions -- opening up the possibility of new super-fast memory -- has been developed by researchers at UCL.

Resistive RAM (or 'ReRAM') memory chips are based on materials, most often oxides of metals, whose electrical resistance changes when a voltage is applied -- and they "remember" this change even when the power is turned off.

ReRAM chips promise significantly greater memory storage than current technology, such as the Flash memory used on USB sticks, and require much less energy and space.

The UCL team have developed a novel structure composed of silicon oxide, described in a recent paper in the Journal of Applied Physics, which performs the switch in resistance much more efficiently than has been previously achieved. In their material, the arrangement of the silicon atoms changes to form filaments of silicon within the solid silicon oxide, which are less resistive. The presence or absence of these filaments represents a 'switch' from one state to another.

Unlike other silicon oxide chips currently in development, the UCL chip does not require a vacuum to work, and is therefore potentially cheaper and more durable. The design also raises the possibility of transparent memory chips for use in touch screens and mobile devices.

The team have been backed by UCLB, UCL's technology transfer company, and have recently filed a patent on their device. Discussions are ongoing with a number of leading semiconductor companies.

Dr Tony Kenyon, UCL Electronic and Electrical Engineering, said: "Our ReRAM memory chips need just a thousandth of the energy and are around a hundred times faster than standard Flash memory chips. The fact that the device can operate in ambient conditions and has a continuously variable resistance opens up a huge range of potential applications.

"We are also working on making a quartz device with a view to developing transparent electronics."

For added flexibility, the UCL devices can also be designed to have a continuously variable resistance that depends on the last voltage that was applied. This is an important property that allows the device to mimic how neurons in the brain function. Devices that operate in this way are sometimes known as 'memristors'.

This technology is currently of enormous interest, with the first practical memristor, based on titanium dioxide, demonstrated in just 2008. The development of a silicon oxide memristor is a huge step forward because of the potential for its incorporation into silicon chips.

The team's new ReRAM technology was discovered by accident whilst engineers at UCL were working on using the silicon oxide material to produce silicon-based LEDs. During the course of the project, researchers noticed that their devices appeared to be unstable.

UCL PhD student, Adnan Mehonic, was asked to look specifically at the material's electrical properties. He discovered that the material wasn't unstable at all, but flipped between various conducting and non-conducting states very predictably.

Adnan Mehonic, also from the UCL Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, said: "My work revealed that a material we had been looking at for some time could in fact be made into a memristor.

"The potential for this material is huge. During proof of concept development we have shown we can programme the chips using the cycle between two or more states of conductivity. We're very excited that our devices may be an important step towards new silicon memory chips."

The technology has promising applications beyond memory storage. The team are also exploring using the resistance properties of their material not just for use in memory but also as a computer processor.

The work was funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.

Source- http://www.sciencedaily.com

Sunday, 20 May 2012

Li-Fi INSTEAD OF Wi-Fi?


"DATA TRANSMISSION THROUGH VISIBLE LIGHT POSSIBLE, says researchers"




Many of us are familiar with Wi-Fi technology and its impact in our daily lives. We cannot survive without it. Wi-Fi is being used everywhere like in repair shops, educational institutes, computer shops, offices. We have become quite dependent upon this technology that we can hardly imagine our life without it.

Wi-Fi technology can cover an entire home and it is band limited to 50-100 megabits per second today using IEEE802.11n standard. This is a good standard to use current services provided by internet like browsing and moving larger data files like softwares, HD movies, video games, music libraries etc. It may be very useful in today’s life but it may not be that efficient in future where we have a gesture recognition technology coming.

So here comes in the new technology names as VISIBLE LIGHT COMMUNICATION or simply VLC. It is more frequently referred to as Li-Fi(Light Fidelity).

This emerging new technology offers optical wireless communication by using visible light. An additional opportunity is arising by using current state-of-the-art LED lighting solutions for illumination and communication as the same time and with the same module. Hence when the LEDs are illuminating, their secondary duty will be to communicate data onto lighting system. This will be relevant in the indoor systems where the light will be fully ‘on’.

The premise behind VLC is that since light is always on and we have reflections everywhere communications can ride along for nearly free. The VLC technology include giga-speed technology, optical mobility technologies, navigation, precision location and gesture recognition technology.

For giga-speed technology, the Li-Fi Consortium defined GigaDock, GigaBeam, GigaShower, Giga Spot and GigaMIMO models to address different user scenarios for wireless indoor and indoor like data transfers. While GIgaDock is a wireless docking solution including wireless charging for smartphones, tablets or notebooks, with speeds upto 10Gbps, the GigaBeam model is a point to point data link for kiosk applications or portable-to-portable data exchanges. Thus a two hour full HD movie, whose size can be imagines around 5GB, can be transferred from one device to other in merely 4 seconds!

First applications of Li-Fi have already been put to use in hospitals where RF signals are a threat due to interference problems with medical equipment such as blood pumps and other life supporting instruments. The prototype of a mobile phone with an incorporated VLC system was presented by Casio in Las Vegas earlier this year. In coming years we are surely going to see more of the Li-Fi technology and more compatible products entering the market from labs.

Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Infinite number of wireless channels possible in a fixed bandwidth

Infinite number of wireless channels possible in a fixed bandwidth

Italian researchers have demonstrated in Venice a technique which could allow the implementation of an infinite number of channels in a given, fixed bandwidth.

“We have experimentally shown that by using helicoidal parabolic antennae, the use of OAM (orbital angular momentum) states might dramatically increase the capacity of any frequency band, allowing the use of dense coding techniques in each of these new vortex radio channels,” say the researchers, “this might represent a concrete proposal for a possible solution to the band saturation problem.”

Most of the researchers are from the University of Padova, with one from the Swedish Institute of Space Physics and one from the Padova Nanofabrication Laboratory.

The experimental transmission, from the isle of San Giorgio across the water to the Doge’s Palace – a distance of 442m - showed  that it is possible to use two beams of incoherent radio waves, transmitted on the same frequency but encoded in two different orbital angular momentum states, to simultaneously transmit two independent radio channels.

The location of the experiment was chosen because it is where Galileo first demonstrated his invention of the telescope 400 years ago.

The technique could be used in TV broadcasts, WiFi and radio.

‘This novel radio technique allows the implementation of, in principle, an infinite number of channels in a given, fixed bandwidth, even without using polarization, multiport or dense coding techniques,’ say the researchers in a paper describing the experiment, ‘this paves the way for innovative techniques in radio science and entirely new paradigms in radio communication protocols that might offer a solution to the problem of radio-band congestion.’

Source: Epoch Times

DISCOVERY OF A NEW PARTICLE.


New Particle Discovered at Large Hadron Collider


Scientists analyzing data from the ATLAS experiment found a new particle—the Chi-b(3P). (ATLAS Experiment © 2007 CERN)
A new particle has been observed by scientists from the U.K.’s University of Birmingham and Lancaster University, who made the discovery after analyzing data from the ATLAS experiment at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider.
The ATLAS experiment is a particle physics experiment involving smashing protons together with extremely high energies, according to the ATLAS website. The LHC is the largest particle accelerator in the world, built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) on the border of France and Switzerland.

“Analyzing the billions of particle collisions at the LHC is fascinating. There are potentially all kinds of interesting things buried in the data, and we were lucky to look in the right place at the right time,” said University of Birmingham Ph.D. student Andy Chisholm in a press release.
The particle—the Chi-b(3P)—is a boson particle, like the famous Higgs particle, but is made up of two very heavy objects held together by a strong force, said the researchers. The Higgs is currently thought to exist as a single object.
Chi-b(3P) had been previously predicted but had until now remained unobserved. The Chi-b(3P) is a new way of binding together a “beauty quark and its antiquark”—collectively known as quarkonium, said the scientists in their research paper.
The beauty quark is a quark with a charge of one-third of the charge carried by an electron. Its associated antiquark is a particle with the same mass but opposite electric charge. That is, the beauty quark’s antiquark carries one-third of the charge of a proton.
In the (3P) state, the beauty quark and its antiquark are almost separated from each other, said the ATLAS team. “One surprise is that the Chi-b(3P) is slightly heavier than predicted, meaning the quark antiquark pair is a little more loosely bound than expected,” states an ATLAS press release.

Source:- Epoch times.

Thursday, 8 March 2012

APPLE UNVEILS ITS NEW iPad

THE NEW iPad FEATURES A SHARPER SCREEN AND A FASTER PROCESSOR...




Apple unveild its new iPad on Wednesday 7th morning in San Francisco and I was browsing the sites here in night as the LIVE EVENT was going on in the States. Many sites offered the live coverage of it online but I looked for reading the specifications. I knew the event was going to be a sad one as the company would remember their former CEO Steve Jobs.
Anyhow, coming to the launch event, Chief Executive Tim Cook, presiding over his second major product launch after debuting with 2011's voice-enabled iPhone 4S, introduced the highly anticipated third iteration of the tablet, which is available for pre-orders from Wednesday and will hit store shelves March 16 in USA.
But he stumped many in the audience by breaking away from the tradition of calling the third-generation tablet the iPad 3, as some had expected, referring to it simply as the "new iPad."

The company said it will continue to sell the iPad 2 but dropped its price by $100. The older tablet now starts at $399 while the new third-generation wi-fi only iPad starts at $499.
Now moving on to the specifications and features, I’ve compiled them in major points. So here it goes.. Perhaps the most touted accomplishment of the new iPad 3 is its new screen, or ‘Retina display.’ The screen boasts incredibly high resolution, 2048 x 1536, which is double that of the current iPad 2. At 3.1 million megapixels, the most ever in a mobile device, the iPad 3 Retina display has over a million more pixels than 1080p full HD TVs. A new processor, the Apple A5X makes the iPad 3 even faster than its predecessor, the X standing for quad-core graphics. The A5X claims to deliver 4x the performance of NVIDIA’s Tegra 3. In addition, added image stabilization feature in the iPad 3 makes gaming and watching video clips that much easier on the go. 


The theme of the innovations and design changes for the iPad 3 seems to be enhanced visual capacity and graphics, and increased diversity of features that are guaranteed to deliver the ‘Wow!’ factor. The iPad 3 incorporates a brand new camera, dramatically increased from the 1.0 megapixel in the iPad 2 to a 5.0 megapixel camera. Referred to as the iSight, the new camera enables the iPad 3 to have even more of the same functions of a digital camera. For example, the new camera is capable of shooting 1080p full HD video.
For those interested in speed and connectivity, the iPad 3 does indeed offer 4G LTE, and boasts 21Mbps HSPA, DC-HSPA for 42Mbps, together with LTE for 72Mbps. The 4G LTE will be available from AT&T and Verizon carriers. Also new on the iPad 3 is a dictation feature with an incredibly simple on/off switch that allows users to have the iPad 3 take notes from their dictation. Incredibly useful for students and presenters, this new feature is a sure-fire draw for the education and business communities. 



Believe it or not, the iPad 3 runs all of its impressive new features with 10 hours of battery life, 9 hrs if 4G LTE is turned on. And if all of the new tech specs weren’t enough to grab consumers’ attention, Apps like Sketchbook Pro and Garageband and have exciting updates that take full advantage of the new Retina Display. And the things the latest version of iPhoto is capable of make it fully drool-worthy for every photographer alive, amateur and professional. 



Here’s the table of specifications:-
General
2G Network
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 for AT&T

CDMA 800 / 1900 for Verizon
3G Network
HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 for AT&T

CDMA2000 1xEV-DO for Verizon
4G Network
LTE 700 MHz Class 17 / 2100 for AT&T

LTE 700 MHz Class 13 for Verizon
Announced
2012, March
Status
Coming soon. 2012, March 16

Body 
Dimensions
241.2 x 185.7 x 9.4 mm
Weight
662 g

Display
Type
LED-backlit IPS TFT, capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size
1536 x 2048 pixels, 9.7 inches (~264 ppi pixel density)
Multitouch
Yes
Protection
Scratch-resistant glass, oleophobic coating

Sound
Alert types
N/A
Loudspeaker
Yes
3.5mm jack
Yes

Memory
Card slot
No
Internal
16/32/64 GB storage

Data
GPRS
Yes
EDGE
Yes
Speed
HSDPA, 21 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps, LTE, 73 Mbps; Rev. A, up to 3.1 Mbps
WLAN
Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n
Bluetooth
Yes, v4.0 with A2DP, EDR
USB
Yes, v2.0

Camera
Primary
5 MP, 2592 x 1944 pixels, autofocus
Features
Touch focus, geo-tagging, HDR, face detection
Video
Yes, 1080p@30fps, video stabilization
Secondary
Yes, VGA

Features
OS
iOS 5
Chipset
Apple A5X
CPU
Dual-core 1 GHz Cortex-A9
GPU
PowerVR SGX543MP4
Sensors
Accelerometer, gyro, compass
Messaging
iMessage, Email, Push Email, IM
Browser
HTML (Safari)
Radio
No
GPS
Yes, with A-GPS support
Java
No
Colors
Black, White

- MicroSIM card support only
- iCloud cloud service
- Twitter integration
- MP4/MP3/WAV/AAC player
- Photo viewer/editor
- Audio&video player/editor
- Voice dictation
- iBooks PDF reader
- Google Maps
- TV-out

Battery

Standard battery, Li-Po 42.5 Wh
Stand-by
Up to 720 h
Talk time
Up to 10 h



The launch Apple iPad 3 Price and Launching Date:

Apple iPad 3 release date in US- March, 2012.
Apple iPad 3 release date in UK- March, 2012.
Apple iPad 3 release date in India- Spring, 2012.
Apple iPad 3 price in US is $ 800 and the price in India is around Rs.40,000/-.
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 Sources:- TOI, Yahoo news, gsmarena.com