Archive for the ‘Science’ Category

The Art of Failure 2010

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

When a microchip is born during the prototyping phase, it doesn’t always come out as expected. Analysis of these failures often brings to the eye very peculiar images.. Check the slideshow below!

Just as one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, one person’s systems failure is another one’s masterpiece. This is the third year that the “Art of Failure Analysis”was featured at the IEEE International Symposium on the Physical and Failure Analysis of Integrated Circuits (IPFA). Participants submitted the most intriguing images they’d captured during chip autopsies. Favorite pictures from the collection, which range from charming to just plain creepy, were on display at the symposium from 5 to 9 July in Singapore.

Source: http://spectrum.ieee.org

Intel Brings Integrated Silicon Optics Closer

Friday, August 6th, 2010

4 August 2010—The race to replace copper wiring with optics in chip-to-chip communications reached a new milestone last week as Intel announced it had produced a system using silicon-based photonics to transmit data between printed circuit boards at 50 gigabits per second.

”We’re bringing silicon manufacturing to optical communication,” says Mario Paniccia, director of Intel’s Photonics Technology Lab. ”It changes the way in the future that we’re going to connect.” Until recently, optical communications was done using exotic semiconductors and other expensive components. Making such systems in silicon should lower their price and allow for easy integration into computers.

The prototype, which was announced at the Integrated Photonics Research Conference in Monterey, Calif., takes several discrete technologies that Intel has invented over the past few years and combines them into one package. These include a hybrid silicon/indium phosphide laser, a silicon modulator operating at 40 Gb/s, and a germanium detector, also operating at 40 Gb/s. The company has brought those together into a four-channel link, with each channel operating at 12.5 Gb/s, for a total bandwidth of 50 Gb/s. ”We’ve always said the real value of silicon photonics is in integration,” Paniccia says.

Read the full article over at: http://spectrum.ieee.org

Quantum entanglement in photosynthesis and evolution

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Recently, academic debate has been swirling around the existence of unusual quantum mechanical effects in the most ubiquitous of phenomena, including photosynthesis, the process by which organisms convert light into chemical energy. In particular, physicists have suggested that entanglement (the quantum interconnection of two or more objects like photons, electrons, or atoms that are separated in physical space) could be occurring in the photosynthetic complexes of plants, particularly in the pigment molecules, or chromophores. The quantum effects may explain why the structures are so efficient at converting light into energy — doing so at 95 percent or more.

In a paper in The Journal of Chemical Physics, which is published by the American Institute of Physics, these ideas are put to the test in a novel computer simulation of energy transport in a photosynthetic reaction center. Using the simulation, professor Shaul Mukamel and senior research associate Darius Abramavicius at the University of California, Irvine show that long-lived quantum coherence is an “essential ingredient for quantum information storage and manipulation,” according to Mukamel. It is possible between chromophores even at room temperature, he says, and it “can strongly affect the light-harvesting efficiency.”

If the existence of such effects can be substantiated experimentally, he says, this understanding of quantum energy transfer and charge separation pathways may help the design of solar cells that take their inspiration from nature.

How photosynthesis achieves this near instantaneous energy transfer is a long-standing mystery that may have finally been solved.

Source and published papers @ EurekAlert