Engineers demonstrate nanotube wires operating at speed of commercial chips from PhysOrg.com
Integrated circuits, such as the silicon chips inside all modern electronics, are only as good as their wiring, but copper conduits are approaching physical performance limitations as they get thinner.
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2008-01-31
Engineers demonstrate nanotube wires operating at speed of commercial chips
2008-01-30
DNA is blueprint, contractor and construction worker for new structures
DNA is blueprint, contractor and construction worker for new structures from PhysOrg.com
DNA is the blueprint of all life, giving instruction and function to organisms ranging from simple one-celled bacteria to complex human beings. Now Northwestern University researchers report they have used DNA as the blueprint, contractor and construction worker to build a three-dimensional structure out of gold, a lifeless material.
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2008-01-17
Programming Biomolecular Self-Assembly Pathways
Programming Biomolecular Self-Assembly Pathways from PhysOrg.com
Nature knows how to make proteins and nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) dance to assemble and sustain life. Inspired by this proof of principle, researchers at the California Institute of Technology have demonstrated that it is possible to program the pathways by which DNA strands self-assemble and disassemble, and hence to control the dynamic function of the molecules as they traverse these pathways.
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"It's about time for the stone age of molecular compilers to begin."
Big Brain Theory: Have Cosmologists Lost Theirs?
It could be the weirdest and most embarrassing prediction in the history of cosmology, if not science.
If true, it would mean that you yourself reading this article are more likely to be some momentary fluctuation in a field of matter and energy out in space than a person with a real past born through billions of years of evolution in an orderly star-spangled cosmos. Your memories and the world you think you see around you are illusions.
Full article
2008-01-10
Nanotechnology innovation may revolutionize gene detection in a single cell
Nanotechnology innovation may revolutionize gene detection in a single cell from PhysOrg.com
Scientists at Arizona State University’s Biodesign Institute have developed the world’s first gene detection platform made up entirely from self-assembled DNA nanostructures. The results, appearing in the January 11 issue of the journal Science, could have broad implications for gene chip technology and may also revolutionize the way in which gene expression is analyzed in a single cell.
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2008-01-09
An 'attractive' man-machine interface
An 'attractive' man-machine interface from PhysOrg.com
Researchers at Children’s Hospital Boston have developed a new “nanobiotechnology” that enables magnetic control of events at the cellular level. They describe the technology, which could lead to finely-tuned but noninvasive treatments for disease, in the January issue of Nature Nanotechnology (published online January 3).
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2008-01-01
Version 2007k of the Chronos Time Zone Repository has been published
Downloads:
- Chronos-proprietary format (for use by the Chronos Date/Time Library)
- XML format (for general use; not used by Chronos)