Caught on Video: Laws of attraction on the nanoscale | 6 comments
Scientific American Magazine posted 5/26/09 | 9 comments
The world today is very different from that of just a decade ago, thanks to our ability to readily access enormous quantities of information. Tools that we take for granted—social networks, Internet search engines, online maps with point-to-point directions, and online libraries of songs, movies, books and photographs—were unavailable just a few years ago. We owe the arrival of this information age to the rapid development of remarkable technologies in high-speed communications, data processing and—perhaps most important of all but least appreciated—digital data storage.
Each type of data storage has its Achilles’ heel, however, which is why computers use several types for different purposes. [more]
It's the next not-so-big thing: microscopic components that can be used as the building blocks for faster computer processors, more powerful wireless radios, cancer-fighting medical instruments, superstrong polymers and metals, and even miniature works of art. Nanotechnology is not without controversy, however, as Billy Joy, Sun Microsystem's co-founder, once famously warned us of the (now largely debunked) threat of "gray goo," or self-replicating nanobots that some feared would disassemble everything on Earth. Researchers now worry about the more prosaic environmental by-products of nanotech, such as the potential health effects of nanoscale particles--carbon nanotubes, for instance, which can behave like asbestos fibers when inhaled.
News Bytes of the Week: Large Hadron Collider gets its own rap song - 8/1/08
60-Second Science Blog
Caught on Video: Laws of attraction on the nanoscale
60-Second Science Viruses Make a Battery
60-Second Science Nanotech Paper Sops Up Oil Spills
60-Second Science Electric Gold
60-Second Science Fabric Produces Electricity As You Wear It
60-Second Science Nanotubes May Make Best Bulletproof Vest
Science Talk Tiny Technology and Talking Turkey
Science Talk Looking Into the Future At The World Science Forum; Poetry And Science with Nobel Laureate Roald Hoffmann