Tech Xplore on MSN
Tiny silicon structures compute with heat, achieving 99% accurate matrix multiplication
MIT researchers have designed silicon structures that can perform calculations in an electronic device using excess heat ...
MIT engineers use heat-conducting silicon microstructures to perform matrix multiplication with >99% accuracy hinting at ...
VnExpress International on MSN
Vietnamese world-renowned mathematician leaves Yale for Asia's top-ranked university
Professor Vu Ha Van, a world-renowned Vietnamese mathematician, has officially joined the University of Hong Kong (HKU) after ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
MIT’s new heat-powered silicon chips achieve 99% accuracy in math calculations
Scientists in the US have created a tiny silicon chip that can perform mathematical ...
Professor Vu Ha Van, a globally acclaimed Vietnamese mathematician, has left Yale University to join the University of Hong ...
The saying “round pegs do not fit square holes” persists because it captures a deep engineering reality: inefficiency most ...
Morning Overview on MSN
MIT’s heat-powered silicon chips hit 99% accuracy in math tests
Engineers at MIT have turned one of computing’s biggest headaches, waste heat, into the main act. By sculpting “dust-sized” silicon structures that steer heat as precisely as electrical current, they ...
Intrinsic neural attractors and extrinsic environmental inputs jointly steer the dynamic trajectories of brain activity ...
Researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology have demonstrated a surprising new way to compute—by using heat instead of electricity. In a proof-of-concept study published in Physical Review ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
A mathematical framework for optimizing robotic joints
Consider the marvelous physics of the human knee. The largest hinge joint in the body, it has two rounded bones held together ...
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