Magnetic neural control with nanoparticles
Customized arrays of iron oxide nanoparticles are possible based on their differing responses to alternating magnetic fields, MIT researchers report.
Customized arrays of iron oxide nanoparticles are possible based on their differing responses to alternating magnetic fields, MIT researchers report.
Particles suspended in cooling water could prevent hotspots in nuclear plant cooling systems and electronics.
Researchers use low-frequency laser pulses to probe the properties of a kind of fluctuating magnetism known as a spin-liquid state.
MIT researchers discover efficient control of magnetism in chiral ferromagnets.
Experiments demonstrate ‘quantum spin liquid,’ which could have applications in new computer memory storage.