Engineeringness on MSN
The Invisible Force That Moves Everything Around You
Magnets may be invisible, but their impact is everywhere. From powering electric motors to keeping your phone speaker working ...
MIT scientists used radium monofluoride atom to observe electrons entering atomic nuclei, revealing new details of nuclear magnetism.
Magnetic graphene oxide sheets fold, move, sense motion, and switch function by swapping magnetic layers, offering a fast, reprogrammable platform for soft robots and other morphable structures.
A fundamental link between two counterintuitive phenomena in spin glasses—reentrance and temperature chaos—has been ...
In April, China imposed export restrictions on seven rare earth elements, crippling American manufacturing across dozens of critical sectors. Ford temporarily shuttered production lines while European ...
For the first time, researchers have uncovered a giant anomalous Hall effect in a nonmagnetic material, rewriting established physics and hinting at novel device possibilities. Credit: ...
The findings open up new pathways to advanced electronic devices based on nonmagnetic materials. (Nanowerk News) In 1879, American physicist Edwin Hall discovered that a voltage develops across a ...
A giant anomalous Hall effect (AHE) has been observed in a nonmagnetic material for the first time, as reported by researchers from Japan. This surprising result was achieved using high-quality Cd 3 ...
Scientists have discovered that electron spin loss, long considered waste, can instead drive magnetization switching in spintronic devices, boosting efficiency by up to three times. The scalable, ...
Researchers cracked the mystery of altermagnets, materials with no net magnetization yet strange light-reflecting powers, by creating a new optical measurement method. Their findings confirmed ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results