Magnetic Memory Manipulated by Voltage, Not Just Heat

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amigafan

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"almost instantaneously"? Well that's not instantaneous enough for computing performance expected today :|

However if it uses less power than SRAM it will surely find it's purpose.
 
No, I don't see it saying almost instantaneously in the journal.

"The increasing voltage leads to more and more obvious change of Hc, but after switching-off the voltages each time, the DHc goes back to around zero instantaneously" (Wang et al. 2011)

 

amigafan

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[citation][nom]Pyree[/nom]No, I don't see it saying almost instantaneously in the journal."The increasing voltage leads to more and more obvious change of Hc, but after switching-off the voltages each time, the DHc goes back to around zero instantaneously" (Wang et al. 2011)[/citation]
"For example, the researchers demonstrate that the effect can be turned on and off almost instantaneously, whereas the changes should lag if heat is the cause."
 

ik242

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@amigafan, that was sentence from the this page article, written by THG journalist not by researchers.
 
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The key to perpetual motion is here... now if we can just figure out displacement in order to bypass inertia, then off to Xanadu we go =)
 

noblerabbit

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I wonder what the next ASUS chinese marketing slogans will be brought to the table with this. Either way, here is hoping to affordable 20TB storage by the end of next 2 or so years.
 

kajohn10

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Wait...they just figured this out? Are you kidding? Applying a voltage induces a current which will produce a magnetic field. Hmmm, wonder if I can apply this most SIMPLE and BASIC physics model to force something into a desired state...

OK, so the journal article is much more detailed and applies to specific materials and substrates...but this shouldn't come as a surprising find.
 

doron

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[citation][nom]kajohn10[/nom]Wait...they just figured this out? Are you kidding? Applying a voltage induces a current which will produce a magnetic field. Hmmm, wonder if I can apply this most SIMPLE and BASIC physics model to force something into a desired state...OK, so the journal article is much more detailed and applies to specific materials and substrates...but this shouldn't come as a surprising find.[/citation]

If it's so easy why won't you show them how it's done.
 
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