- AUTOSAR
- BEHAVIORAL CLONING
- Boids
- CELL PHONE VIRUSES AND SECURITY
- Chatterbot
- Content Srambling System
- COOPERATIVE LINUX
- CYBORG
- Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP)
- DeCSS
- Distributed Quota Enforcement for Spam
- DNA AND DNA COMPUTING IN SECURITY
- Earth Simulator
- Electronic money
- Elliptical Curve Cryptography
- Extensible Firmware Interface
- Ferroelectric Random Access Memory
- Holographic Versatile Disc
- Intel Virtualization Technology
- Interactive Television
- INTERPLANETARY INTERNET
- IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS)
- JAVA MANAGEMENT EXTENSION (JMX)
- MAGNATORESISTIVE RAM (MRAM)
- Mathematical markup languages
- MPEG-7
- NEW SENSOR TECHNOLOGY
- OpenRAN
- OVONIC UNIFIED MEMORY
- PLASMA PANEL DISPLAY
- Quantum dot cellular automaton
- QUANTUM DOT LASERS
- Real-time Transport Protocol
- Simultaneous Multithreading
- Simultaneous multithreading
- Software Radio
- SYMBIAN OS
- VoIP in Mobile Phones
- WIRELESS MESH NETWORKS
- ZFS Filesystem
Monday, June 28, 2010
CS & IT SEMINAR
ELECTRONICS SEMINAR TOPICS
- ADVANCED IC PACKAGING TECHNOLOGIES
- Asymmetric digital subscriber line(ADSL)
- Blu Ray Disc
- Blue Laser Could Lead to Autism Cure
- Bluetooth Based Smart Sensor Networks
- CELLULAR TECHNOLOGY
- CLUSTERING TECHNOLOGY
- Digital T.V
- Direct sequence code division multiple access (DS-CDMA)
- DLP Projector
- Dynode
- Efficient New Light Unfolds Like Paper
- Face Recognition Technology
- FLUORESCENT MULTILAYER DISC (FMD)
- HAVi
- Human Ear Inspires Universal Radio
- Hydrophone
- IDMA - Future of Wireless Technology
- Light Emitting Polymers
- Microbe-Powered 'Fart' Machine Stores Energy
- Microvia Technology
- MIDI
- Multimedia messaging Service
- OFDMA
- Organic LED
- Protein Memories for Computers
- Push Technology
- Quantum-dot Cellular Automata
- Single electron tunneling (SET) transistor
- Smart Dust
- Smart sensors
- Space Mouse
- Surface conduction Electron emitter Display (SED)
- Surface-conduction Electron-emitter Display (SED)
- Surround sound system
- Thermomechanical Data Storage
- Thin Displays
- Thought Translation Device
- Tunable lasers
- Ultra Conductors
- Virtual Keyboard
- Virtual Retinal Display
- VOICE MORPHING
- VoIP in Mobile Phones
- White LED
- Wibree
- Wireless LED
Sunday, September 27, 2009
High temperature superconductivity
SUPERCONDUCTIVITY is the ability of certain materials to conduct electric current with no resistance and extremely low losses. This ability to carry large amounts of currents can be applied to electric power devices such as motors and generators and to electricity transmission in power lines. For example, superconductors can carry as much as 100 times the electricity ordinary copper or aluminium wires of same size.
Scientists had been intrigued with the concept of superconductivity since its discovery in the early 1900’s, but the extreme low temperature the phenomenon required was a barrier to practical and low cost application. This all changed in 1986 when a new class of ceramic super conductors were discovered that ‘SUPERCONDUCTED’ at higher temperatures. The science of high temperature superconductivity (HTS) was born, and Along with it came the prospect for an elegant technology that promises to ‘supercharge’ the way energy is generated, delivered and used.
At the heart of high temperature superconductivity lies a promise for the near future. A promise for transmitting and using electricity with near perfect efficiency and much higher capacity, besides all this it also has a wide range of application like MRI scanning, maglev trains etc. This seminar shall discuss on the concepts of superconductivity, its classifications, its various properties and its applications.
‘We have completed the first electrical century ushered in by Thomas Edison . We are now entering a second electrical century, ushered in by High Temperature Superconductivity.’
E-paper
E-paper is a revolutionary material that can be used to make next generation electronic displays. It is portable reusable storage and display medium that look like paper but can be repeatedly written one thousands of times. These displays make the beginning of a new area for battery power information applications such as cell phones, pagers, watches and hand-held computers etc.
Two companies are carrying our pioneering works in the field of development of electronic ink and both have developed ingenious methods to produce electronic ink. One is E-ink, a company based at Cambridge, in U.S.A. The other company is Xerox doing research work at the Xerox’s palo Atto Research Centre. Both technologies being developed commercially for electronically configurable paper like displays rely on microscopic beads that change colour in response to the charges on nearby electrodes.
Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM)
Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) is a fiber-optic transmission technique. It involves the process of multiplexing many different wavelength signals onto a single fiber. So each fiber have a set of parallel optical channels each using slightly different light wavelengths. It employs light wavelengths to transmit data parallel-by-bit or serial-by-character. DWDM is a very crucial component of optical networks that will allow the transmission of data: voice, video-IP, ATM and SONET/SDH respectively, over the optical layer.


