American researchers have measured a tiny electrical voltage by exploiting Earth's magnetic field in the planet's rotational motion. This discovery, though modest, revives a scientific debate ...
A flower-shaped structure only a few micrometers in size made of a nickel-iron alloy can concentrate and locally enhance ...
Magnetoresistive random-access memory, or MRAM, promises to make computers more efficient and powerful, but a few hurdles ...
From shielding to optimized vias, engineers can employ a number of commonly used approaches to reduce EMI in their designs.
If there was a contest for the most interesting moon in our solar system, Callisto would be a contender. Jupiter's second-largest moon has more impact craters on its surface than any other planetary ...
With today’s data rates of only a few hundred megabytes per second, access to digital information remains relatively slow.
For the past several days it felt like the Pittsburgh Steelers starting quarterback in 2025 was going to be Justin Fields. It's what all the pundits were saying and all signs pointed to Fields ...
Wireless charging relies on the law of electromagnetic induction ... of copper wire. When you plug it in, the electric current passing through this coil generates a magnetic field.
Theoretically it would be a more stable qubit because interference would have to scramble both ends of the wire simultaneously ... That raises fears of the field becoming, like nuclear fusion ...
Credit: NASA / Johns Hopkins APL / Steve Gribben "The utilization of the Zeeman technique to remotely map current-induced magnetic fields is really a game-changing approach to get these ...