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INSIDER Product: Photonics/Optics
CRAIC Technologies (San Dimas, CA) has added Raman Spectral Surface Mapping™ (S2M™) capabilities to its Apollo™ Raman microspectrometer line. S2M gives CRAIC Raman microspectrometer users the ability to map...
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INSIDER Product: Photonics/Optics
Ophir Photonics Group (North Logan, UT) recently introduced a new low cost laser power/energy meter called StarLite that provides both digital and analog screen displays. A compact, handheld unit, StarLite displays a...
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INSIDER Product: Photonics/Optics
Ocean Optics (Dunedin, FL) has expanded its Elite Series of high-performance modular spectrometers with the introduction of the Ventana line of high throughput spectrometers. Ventana spectrometers combine an...
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INSIDER Product: Photonics/Optics
AFL (Lowell, MA and Spartanburg, SC) has introduced the family of NOYES FOCIS PRO automatic fiber inspection solutions. The FOCIS PRO System consists of the DFD1 Touchscreen Tablet, the DFS1 Digital...
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News
Holographic Technique Could Lead to Bionic Vision
Computer-generated holography, they say, could be used in conjunction with a technique called optogenetics, which uses gene therapy to deliver light- sensitive proteins to damaged retinal nerve cells. In conditions such as Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) - a condition affecting about one in 4000 people in...
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'Yeti' Robot Explores Arctic and Antarctic Landscapes
A century after Western explorers first crossed the dangerous landscapes of the Arctic and Antarctic, researchers funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) have successfully deployed a self-guided robot that uses ground-penetrating radar to map deadly crevasses hidden in ice-covered...
Videos: Electronics & Computers
Thanks to sensors installed on trams that send data live to mobile applications, people can check air pollution levels around the city on their phones with a just click and in real time. The...
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News: Sensors/Data Acquisition
Autonomous Navigation of Mobile Robots Based on Insect Visual System
Scientists from the University of Lincoln and Newcastle University in the U.K. have created a computerized system that allows for autonomous navigation of mobile robots based on the locust’s unique visual system. The work could provide the blueprint for the development of highly...
Videos: Electronics & Computers
A classic multiphysics coupling is joule heating, also called resistive heating or ohmic heating. This video resource is the first in a three-chapter series that will see how...
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Videos: Sensors/Data Acquisition
Scientists at the UK's University of Reading have discovered that the height of clouds changes by up to 200 meters over the course of the day under the influence of a global...
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News
Virtual Vehicle Vibrations Provide Human Motion Data
A University of Iowa researcher has designed a program to predict the role posture may play in reducing head and neck injuries. The work could help vehicle designers create a robot that is actually a computerized model of a long-distance truck driver or other heavy equipment operator. The...
News
Flexible Image Sensor Enables Touch-Free Interfaces
An Austrian research team has developed a new way of capturing images based on a flat, flexible, transparent, and potentially disposable polymer sheet. The new imager, which resembles a flexible plastic film, uses fluorescent particles to capture incoming light and channel a portion of it to an...
Videos: Power
Unlike other animals, fish have a special sense called lateral line sensing that allows them to determine the speed and direction of currents - helping them hover in place and even swim upstream. A...
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Videos: Test & Measurement
Preventing glass from fogging or frosting up is a longstanding challenge with multiple applications: eyeglasses, cameras, microscopes, mirrors, and refrigerated displays, for example. While there have...
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INSIDER: Medical
Bacteria Proven to Clog Devices Swiftly
A new study by researchers at Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, examined how bacteria clogs medical devices, and found that the microbes join to create slimy ribbons that form tangles, trapping other bacteria, and creating a full blockage in a very short period of time. Their findings, they say, could...
News
2013 'Create the Future' Contest Begins
The 11th annual "Create the Future" Design Contest, sponsored by COMSOL, SAE International, and Tech Briefs Media Group has begun. The contest will recognize outstanding innovations in product design worldwide, awarding a Grand Prize of $20,000. There is no cost to enter.
News: Medical
Medical Devices to Be Affected by RoHS Directive in 2014
In addition to the Chemicals Regulation REACH (Regulation concerning the Registration, Evaluation, Authorization and Restriction of Chemical substances), medical devices will soon have to comply with the European RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) Directive on the restriction of the...
INSIDER: Medical
Researchers Develop Rechargable, Wireless Brain Sensor
A team of neuroengineers based at Brown University, Providence, RI, has developed a fully implantable and rechargeable wireless brain sensor capable of relaying real-time broadband signals from up to 100 neurons in freely moving subjects. Several copies of the novel low-power device, described...
Videos: Electronics & Computers
Demand for wireless data is projected to increase 18-fold in the next five years due to the growing popularity of data-hungry smartphones and tablets. To help meet the challenge, wireless...
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News
New Imaging Technique Allows Firefighters to See Through Flames
A team of Italian researchers has developed a new imaging technique that uses infrared (IR) digital holography to peer through chaotic conflagrations and capture potentially lifesaving and otherwise hidden details.
Videos: Energy
Sirish Shah, an engineering professor at the University of Alberta, describes how his team developed software sensors that have found use in industries ranging from polymers to oil...
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Question of the Week
Does Telecommuting Restrict Innovation and Productivity?
A Yahoo Inc. internal memo, which introduced a ban on working from home, has set off a debate on whether "telecommuting" and working remotely leads to greater productivity and job satisfaction, or kills creativity and is just a chance to take it easy. Supporters of this kind of ban say that...
Blog: Electronics & Computers
MIL/Aero Backplanes - SFF vs. OpenVPX
Today we are pleased to have a guest blog on military backplane technology from Justin Moll, vice president of U.S. market development for Pixus Technologies. 3U OpenVPX is the 800 lb gorilla in all types of heavy signal processing Mil/Aero applications for SIGINT, C4ISR applications, etc. that are deployed in...
INSIDER: Electronics & Computers
Scaling Up Production of Graphene Micro-Supercapacitors
The demand for ever-smaller electronic devices has led to the miniaturization of a variety of technologies, but energy-storage units, such as batteries and capacitors, have lagged behind. Now, researchers at UCLA say that they have developed an innovative technique using a DVD burner to...
INSIDER: Medical
Solar-Powered Sterilization for Remote Clinic Use
Researchers and students at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, are trying to change how medical equipment is sterilized in remote clinics using sunlight, an abundant commodity. Their pilot project, conducted in Nicaragua has begun to show promising results. To care for a nation of six...
INSIDER: Medical
Bioactive Film-Coated Spinal Implants Improve Bonding
Researchers at the North Carolina State University, Raleigh, have successfully coated polymer implants with a bioactive film that, they say should improve the success rate of the implants, typically used in spinal surgeries. The polymer contained in these implants, called Polyetheretherketone...
INSIDER: Electronics & Computers
New Method of Controlling Tiny Devices
Electromagnetic devices all require an electric current to create the magnetic fields that allow them to function. But as devices become smaller, being able to efficiently deliver a current to create magnetic fields becomes more difficult. Researchers at UCLA say that they have developed a method to switch...
INSIDER: Materials
Adhesive Research Inspired by Stick-on Remoras
Remoras attach themselves to larger marine animals for transportation, protection, and food but just how they attach and detach from hosts without appearing to harm them has inspired a team of researchers at the Georgia Tech Research Institute, Atlanta, to study the structure and tissue properties of...
Videos: Aerospace
NASA's Van Allen Probes were launched in August 2012 to study the Van Allen belts - gigantic radiation belts surrounding Earth, which can swell dramatically in response to incoming...
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Ask the Expert

Dan Sanchez on How to Improve Extruded Components
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Improving extruded components requires careful attention to a number of factors, including dimensional tolerance, material selection, and processing. Trelleborg’s Dan Sanchez provides detailed insights into each of these considerations to help you advance your device innovations while reducing costs and speeding time to market.

Inside Story

Inside Story: Trends in Packaging and Sterilization
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Eurofins Medical Device Testing (MDT) provides a full scope of testing services. In this interview, Eurofins’ experts, Sunny Modi, PhD, Director of Package Testing; and Elizabeth Sydnor, Director of Microbiology; answer common questions on medical device packaging and sterilization.