Growing electrification of marine propulsion systems implies a need to deliver denser circuits and more complex circuits ...
Devalla’s career reflects a commitment to using AI-enabled, cloud-based, and data-driven technologies to solve real-world ...
Fast Lane Only on MSN
2015 Koenigsegg Regera: First hypercar with direct-drive trickery
The 2015 Koenigsegg Regera arrived as a hypercar that refused to play by the usual rules, trading a conventional multi‑gear ...
Despite graduating from South Korea's most elite institutions, international students are facing a shrinking job market ...
Most of today's quantum computers rely on qubits with Josephson junctions that work for now but likely won't scale as needed ...
Researchers from the Faculty of Engineering at The University of Hong Kong (HKU) have made a significant discovery regarding ...
A multi-disciplinary team of researchers linked atomic-scale features to efficient heat-to-electricity conversion, offering ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
World’s first neuromorphic supercomputer nears reality with brain-inspired math
US researchers solve partial differential equations with neuromorphic hardware, taking us closer to world's first ...
14hon MSN
Replication efforts suggest 'smoking gun' evidence isn't enough to prove quantum computing claims
A group of scientists, including Sergey Frolov, professor of physics at the University of Pittsburgh, and co-authors from ...
20hon MSNOpinion
Chemistry is stuck in the dark ages – ‘chemputation’ can bring it into the digital world
Chemistry is often presented as one of the most advanced sciences, yet its day-to-day practice remains surprisingly manual.
Proton collisions at the LHC appear wildly chaotic, but new data reveal a surprising underlying order. The findings confirm that a basic rule of quantum mechanics holds true even in extreme particle ...
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