Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Laser refrigerator cools to 4 degrees above absolute zero



Koji Usami holding the semiconductor nanomembrane inside its holder
Koji Usami holding the semiconductor nanomembrane inside its holder
Researchers at the Niels Bohr Institute have succeeded in using a new form of laser cooling method to cool a two and a half square millimeter semiconducting gallium arsenide (GaAs) membrane with a thickness of 160 nm from room temperature to four degrees above absolute zero - the temperature of liquid helium.
In conventional laser cooling, an illuminated object is cooled when its motion drives a Doppler shift in light which reflects from the object. This would happen when an incoming photon is reflected along the axis of motion of the object. The transfer of energy from the object to the reflected light cools the object.
What happens if the incoming light is strong enough to move the object by radiation pressure (or some other influence)? In that case, not only is the Doppler effect still in evidence, but the light-driven motion of the object changes the size of the Doppler effect depending on those motions. Now, if the object is a mirror forming one end of an optical cavity, the motion will also change the resonant frequency of the cavity. This is called optical cavity back reaction, and can result in highly complex nonlinearly coupled vibrational behavior.
In this study, the Niels Bohr Institute group reports the first experimental realization of cavity cooling of mechanical modes in a semiconductor nanomembrane with the cooling mechanism involving both the internal electronic degrees of freedom and the externally tunable cavity resonance. Thermal stress due to non-radiative relaxation of electron-hole pairs optically generated in the semiconductor material of the membrane is the primary interaction which leads to membrane cooling.
Changing the distance between the membrane and the mirror can be accomplished through numerous pathways - moving the mirror, changing the laser intensity and/or wavelength, generating thermal vibrations in the membrane, as well as many higher-order effects.
The experimental group found in this study a complex interplay between all of these factors which can be controlled so as to cool the temperature of the membrane fluctuations. The dependence of the membrane dynamics on the frequency of the laser light suggests that the excitation of electron-hole pairs by the laser light passing through the membrane is responsible for the optomechanical force.
This is a new optomechanical mechanism, which is central to the new discovery. The paradox is that even though the membrane as a whole is gaining energy, specific vibrational modes of the membrane are losing energy faster than it is being added. Future development may extend this new mode of laser cooling to allow access of the quantum regime for macroscopic objects.
Quantum physics is the wheat to the bread of our live-a-day world. In recent years, the flour particles have been getting larger, as we grow more able to study single-quantum macroscopic quantum phenomena. Accessing the quantum regime is quite difficult for large objects, and hence new cooling methods are of continuing interest. A new form of laser cooling offers great promise for studying the macroscopic quantum regime.
For most of the past 80 years, quantum mechanical effects appeared unimportant to daily living, with the one exception of electronics, which most people realized has something to do with subatomic physics in several guises. We now realize that quantum physics is the wheat to the bread of our live-a-day world, but the notion that a pile of wheat can alone make a loaf of bread seems as unlikely as an ordinary beam of light suddenly revealing to our unaided eyes that it is composed of photons. Generally the importance of individual quanta does not appear to reach into our macroscopic world.
There have, however, been more and more demonstration of macroscopic quantum phenomena in recent years. Physicists have demonstrated an increasing ability to maintain entanglement, perhaps the most spooky of quantum effects, of large numbers of quanta as well as entangling macroscopic objects. They have shown us macroscopic mechanical Schrodinger's cats, and have produced light by shaking a mirror, thereby promoting photons from the quantum vacuum. We have learned to get a sharp view of quantum motion by not observing a mechanical oscillator until ready to record a picture. (Continuous observation keeps collapsing the quantum state, thereby removing many interesting quantum phenomena.)
Admittedly, most of the macroscopic quantum demonstration experiments have taken place on scales of tens of microns, but such objects still possess billions or trillions of atoms. But several recent experiments have demonstrated quantum behavior in millimeter sized objects.

Raspberry Pi goes on sale, online Pi stalls collapse


Interest as the US$35 Raspberry Pi goes on sale crashes websites selling the credit ca...
Interest as the US$35 Raspberry Pi goes on sale crashes websites selling the credit card-sized Linux home computer (Image: RS Components)
The Raspberry Pi went on sale just hours ago through UK electronics companies vendors Premier Farnell and RS Components, the latter quoting a price of GBP21.60 (US$34.43) for the enhanced-spec, credit card-sized Model B - the only one available for purchase today. I say "available" - unfortunately the websites of both vendors went down due to a high volume of traffic from hopefuls clamoring for their piece of the tiny Linux home computer.
"Been trying every 10 minutes from 6 am this morning [UK time] until now," said one disgruntled customer on the element14 forum, a community associated with Premier Farnell. However, not everyone was so unlucky, with users on the same forum reporting success in placing orders at the same website. The vendors are not alone in feeling the launch-day pressure, with the official Raspberry Pi Foundation website switching with a low-bandwidth static website while interest remains high.
Though widely reported as a product launch, some lucky Pi customers are reporting receipt of confirmation emails suggesting deliveries at the end of March. The Raspberry Pi Foundation admits that it has not yet received units from China. In view of this, "launch" sounds rather a strong word considering these are merely pre-orders.
At the time of writing both the Farnell and the RS Componenets websites seemed only to be allowing would-be Pi-owners to register interest, shelving (if only temporarily) the ability to purchase online. Though early batches will merely be sold through the two companies, it sounds as though they are soon to take over manufacturing as well as distribution (we previously reported on the financial difficulties faced by the Foundation in manufacturing the Raspberry Pi within the UK). The deal is good news for international customers, as both vendors have international supply chains, enabling overseas customers to (eventually) order from a local supplier.
 
Today's "launch" had looked likely earlier in the week when the Raspberry Pi Foundation had warned interested parties to look out for a big announcement at 6 a.m. UK-time on the morning of February 29.
Those interested in obtaining a Raspberry Pi are possibly best advised to keep on eye on the Raspberry Pi Foundation's website, who will doubtless update vendor information as required. For now, sales are limited to a maximum of one per customer. If that.

vites, quad-core Retina display tablet expected next week



Apple sent out invites today to an event next Wednesday at the Yerba Buena Center for the ...
Apple sent out invites today to an event next Wednesday at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, where it is expected to announce the iPad 3
A new iPad is on the horizon. Apple sent out invites today to an event next Wednesday at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, where it promises to "have something you really have to see. And touch." The event, set to go down at 10am, and is widely speculated to be the announcement of the iPad 3.

The iPad 3 is rumored to have an updated 2048 x 1536 "Retina" display, faster processor , LTE, and an 8-megapixel camera. The invite for the event also seems to imply that the iPad 3 may be button-less, with the photo on the invite showing either a button-free iPad or the tablet in landscape mode.
CNBC reported this morning on Twitter that the device would have a quad-core processor and 4G LTE. However, its source also indicated the announcement of the tablet would go down in NYC, a rumor which has already proven itself false.
Source: TUAW

Huawei calls its new Ascend D quad "the world's fastest smartphone"



Huawei Device has launched the Ascend D quad-core smartphone at MWC 2012, which is claimed...
Huawei Device has launched the Ascend D quad-core smartphone at MWC 2012, which is claimed to be fastest in the world
Quad-core smartphones are stealing the show at MWC 2012 in Barcelona, Spain this week. We've already seen LG's first model take center stage, with HTC's One Xsnapping at its heels, and now China's Huawei Device is hoping to trump the competition by launching what is claimed to the be the fastest smartphone in the world - the Huawei Ascend D quad.
Huawei is no stranger to claiming accolades for its products, having claimed theworld's thinnest crown for its Ascend P1 S smartphone at CES 2012 and launching the first Android 3.2 product last June. Now the company has crammed its own K3V2 quad-core 1.2 GHz/1.5 GHz processor into a smartphone that's just 8.9 mm thin to give the competition something to think about.
The 129 x 64 x 8.9-mm (5 x 2.5 x 0.35-inch) Huawei Ascend D quad also features a generous 1800 mAh battery that's claimed to be good for at least a full day's use, possibly two if the company's proprietary power management system - that's said to provide up to 30 percent energy savings and helps maintain low chip temperatures for better performance - has anything to say about it. The smartphone runs on Android 4.0 and benefits from a sunlight-friendly, 4.5-inch 1280 x 720 pixel resolution (at 330 ppi) touchscreen display, 8 GB of onboard storage with microSD expansion and 1 GB of system memory.
Of course, if you feature such impressive image capabilities you also need to cater for the other senses and the Dolby 5.1 Surround Sound and Audience earSmart voice technology (a voice processor that enhances clarity in noisy environments) should tick this particular box. There's an 8 megapixel backside-illuminated AF camera with dual LED flash at the rear capable of 1080p video capture, and a 1.3 megapixel cam at the front.
The Ascend D quad - along with an XL version housing a bigger battery - will be made available in China, Australia, Europe, Asia-Pacific, North and South America, and the Middle East in Q2 2012. A dual-core D1 series cousin is also set for April. Unfortunately, there's been no word on pricing.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Viewsonic reveals world's first Ice Cream Sandwich dual-SIM smartphones


ViewSonic is displaying four new dual-SIM Android smartphones at this year's Mobile World ...
ViewSonic is displaying four new dual-SIM Android smartphones at this year's Mobile World Congress in Spain, two of which will run on Android 4.0 at launch

ViewSonic has taken a new range of dual-SIM Android smartphones to Mobile World Congress 2012 in Barcelona, that includes the successor to last year's V350 smartphone - the ViewPhone 3. Two of the brand new phones will run on the latest flavor of Google's Android mobile operating platform, codenamed Ice Cream Sandwich. The company hasn't given away too much in the way of detail, but read on for what we do know.

Having a dual-SIM capable smartphone in your pocket is like having two separate phones in one handset, where each has its own number, can be programmed with its own voice call and message ringtone, and gets its own bill. One can be used strictly for business and the other saved for more personal matters. ViewSonic says that its new dual-SIM Android offerings come with SRS Tru Media audio enhancement, PicSel Smart Office and Ignition Remote Access pre-installed.
With PicSel Smart Office, users can edit Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents, and view and edit files in the cloud using services like DropBox or Google Docs. Many modern printers will also allow files to be printed direct from the smartphone wirelessly. Ignition Remote Access allows users to control a PC or Mac over Wi-Fi or 3G.
The ViewPhone 3 was first launched at CES last month and is now making its first appearance in Europe. When made available in late Q1 2012, it will be powered by a Qualcomm 800MHz processor, run on Android 2.3 (Gingerbread), and be GSM, EDGE and HSDPA network capable. It has a 3.5-inch, 480 x 320 resolution capacitive touchscreen display and a 5 megapixel AF camera and, apart from its estimated sale price of US$279, that's all the company has revealed for now.
The entry-level ViewPhone 4e will also have a 3.5-inch, HVGA resolution capacitive touch display and will run on Android 2.3 when it gets released in Europe during Q2 2012. It's been given a slower 650MHz processor and a somewhat less impressive 3 megapixel, fixed focus camera but bizarrely carries a higher recommended retail price than its slightly older sibling of less than US$399. ViewSonic does mention that it's only 10.3mm thick and comes with a built-in FM radio, though.
The first of the Ice Cream Sandwich dual-SIM smartphones is the ViewPhone 4s. It also comes with a 3.5-inch multi-touch display but has been treated to a "super clear" 960 x 640 resolution IPS panel at 326 ppi, with an 800:1 contrast ratio and 500 candela per square meter brightness - which should all add up to some very nice crisp image detail. Like the ViewPhone 3, this model gets a 5 megapixel AF camera at the rear but is also given a VGA quality cam at the front.
There's no official word on the processor or storage capacity for the 4s but the word online is that it will be powered by a 1GHz Cortex A9 and have 4GB of internal storage, with microSD expansion. The ViewPhone 4s is set for a Q2 launch in Europe for a recommended retail price of less than US$499.
There's very little detail available on the last of the new dual-SIM smartphones. All we've been told about the ViewPhone 5e is that it will have a 5-inch capacitive multi-touch display at 800 x 480 WVGA resolution, will run on Android 4.0 at launch and will have a recommended retail of under US$599 when it appears in Europe during Q3 2012.

Nokia 808 PureView packs a 41-megapixel camera


The Nokia 808 PureView is a new smartphone with an astounding 41-megapixel image sensor
The Nokia 808 PureView is a new smartphone with an astounding 41-megapixel image sensor
At this week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Nokia announced the 808 PureView, a smartphone with an astounding 41-megapixel image sensor. The Nokia 808 will be the first smartphone by Nokia to include its new PureView imaging technology, which combines a high-resolution sensor with Carl Zeiss optics and Nokia-developed algorithms.
Typically you might want a high megapixel camera in order to take photos that can be printed larger - what makes the Nokia 808 PureView special, however, it what it does with those pixels. The 808 uses a new pixel oversampling technology, that captures seven pixels of information and then condenses those into one single pixel. This reportedly results in an exceptionally sharp photo, and the ability to zoom in on any portion of a 5-megapixel picture without losing clarity in the image.
The technology also works on video, so you can shoot a full HD video at 30fps and 4x zoom. Nokia has made some untouched images taken with the camera available online (as a sizable download) so you can get a feel for the quality.
In addition to offering a decent lens and large image sensor, the camera also has a few other notable features. It can capture photos quickly (in less than a second), has a Xenon flash as well as an LED video light for shooting in dark places, and offers integration with services such as GetMe Rated (for having other people rate your photos) and Vimeo, for sharing your videos with the world. Nokia claims the phone can capture audio at CD-like quality, and the handset is also the first smartphone with built-in Dolby Headphone technology, so you can listen to tunes (or your videos) in Dolby Surround sound using any set of stereo headphones.
Besides the camera and sound, the rest of the specs for the handset are actually on the low end of things. The Nokia Belle phone has a 4-inch screen with a 640 x 360 resolution, a 1.3Ghz single-core processor, and 512Mb of RAM. The handset comes with 16GB of storage space, but supports microSD expansion up to 32GB.
The Nokia 808 PureView is expected to roll out in May for around US$605.
Source: Nokia

Adobe unveils Photoshop Touch for the iPad 2


Adobe Photoshop Touch contains some of Photoshops core features, as well as a few extras
Adobe Photoshop Touch contains some of Photoshops core features, as well as a few extras
Adobe Photoshop Touch is now available for the iPad 2. Adobe made the image-editing app official at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, and the app is already available to be downloaded from Apple's App Store.
The photo editing app contains some of Photoshop's core features, as well as a few unique features designed for creating content and sharing it from a tablet. As you might expect, users can apply effects to photos they have taken, touch up photos, as well as combine several photos into a layered image.
A "Scribble Selection Tool" within the app also allows users to erase objects with a scribbling gesture, exploiting Photoshop's "Refine Edge technology" to identify fiddly areas of images. The app also has both Facebook and Google image search, to help users find images quickly and share images they create with others.
In addition to Photoshop Touch, Adobe expects to release several other touch apps for the iPad in the coming months: Adobe Collage for mood boards, Adobe Debut for presenting and reviewing creative work, Adobe Ideas for sketching, Adobe Kuler for exploring color themes, and Adobe Proto for website and mobile app prototyping.
Adobe Photoshop Touch is available now from the App Store for US$9.99. Adobe has also made available a number of tutorials for the app to help you get started editing on your tablet.

Samsung's latest cameraphone sensor has backside illumination, zero shutter lag


Samsung has unveiled a new 1/3.2-inch 8-megapixel CMOS imager
Samsung has unveiled a new 1/3.2-inch 8-megapixel CMOS imager
Samsung has unveiled a new 1/3.2-inch 8-megapixel CMOS imager, the S5K3H7, which utilizes 1.4um backside illuminated (BSI) pixel technology for capturing photos in low-light situations. The sensor is designed to be used in high-end smartphones, and promises zero shutter lag, along with the ability to capture 1080p video at 30fps while using less power than the sensors that came before it.
The high-speed sensor can be used to specifically capture photos of fast-moving objects, such as players during a sports game or pets. The sensor can also capture 720p video at 120fps, and VGA-quality video at 240fps.
The imaging chips are set to go into production in the next few months. There's no word on what phones will ultimately include the sensors.
Source: Engadget

Xperia P and Xperia U join Sony's NXT series


The Xperia U and Xperia P (pictured) join Sony's NXT series of Xperia smartphones
The Xperia U and Xperia P (pictured) join Sony's NXT series of Xperia smartphones
Sony Sony has chosen this year's Mobile World Congress to announce two new Android-powered additions to its Xperia NXT line: the Xperia P and Xperia U. The new devices slot in below the Xperia S announced at CES 2012 in Sony's NXT series, which is designed to allow easy connection to other devices, allowing the viewing of content from your phone on not only the smartphone's screen, but also a TV, laptop, or tablet.
The Xperia P has an aluminum unibody design, is powered by a 1 GHz dual-core processor and sports a 4-inch qHD (960 x 540) display incorporating Sony's "WhiteMagic" technology that adds that a white pixel to the standard red-green-blue (RGB) pixels. Sony claims this improves the brightness of the display while reducing power consumption of the backlight. The phone also has an 8-megapixel built-in camera with the ability to capture high-definition video and both 2D and 3D panoramic images. The handset also has NFC capabilities, and both HDMI and DLNA connectivity options.
The Xperia P with 4-inch qHD "WhiteMagic" display
A SmartDock will also be offered for the Xperia P that is designed to turn the phone into an entertainment hub. It allows users to connect the phone to a HDTV and navigate media stored on the phone using a TV remote control. It can also be used with a wireless keyboard and mouse to browse the Web, compose emails and watch online videos on a HDTV.
The Xperia P measures 122 x 59.5 x 10.5 mm (4.8 x 2.3 x 0.4 in) and weighs 120 g (4.2 oz).
The Xperia U is Sony's entry-level Xperia NXT handset and comes with a 3.5-inch 854 x 480 pixel display, 1 GHz dual-core processor, and a 5-megapixel camera capable of capturing high-definition video and 2D and 3D panoramic pictures. It also includes DLNA connectivity. The handset will be available in both white and black, with exchangeable colored caps for the bottom of the phone in pink and yellow.
The Xperia U has 3.5-inch 854 x 480 pixel display
The Xperia U measures 112 x 54 x 12 mm (4.8 x 2.1 x 0.5 in) and weighs 110 g (3.9 oz).
Both the Xperia P and Xperia U will launch globally in the second quarter of 2012 running Android 2.3 Gingerbread that will then be upgradable to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.
Source: Sony

Samsung provides extra scribbling space with announcment of Galaxy Note 10.1


Samsung announced the Galaxy Note 10.1 at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona
Samsung announced the Galaxy Note 10.1 at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona
Those looking for a little more screen real estate to scribble on than offered by the5.3-inch Galaxy Note now have the Galaxy Note 10.1. Unveiled at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week, the Galaxy Note 10.1 comes with Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and is a little more powerful than Samsung's Galaxy Tab 2 thanks to a 1.4 GHz dual-core processor vs the Tab's 1 GHz. It also has a 3-megapixel rear-facing camera, and a 2-megapixel forward-facing camera to the Tab 2's VGA snapper, and tops out storage-wise at 64 GB - double that of the Tab 2's maximum 32 GB storage capacity. It is also both slightly thinner and lighter than the newest Galaxy Tab.
Although it is sold separately, the S Pen is the Note's real stand-out feature. It is optimized to work along with the device's built-in applications including S Planner Calendar and S Planner Notes, as well as the Android version of Adobe's Photoshop Touch app, which comes bundled with the tablet as well. The pen was redesigned to work with the Note 10.1, and the tablet is more pressure-sensitive than its pint-sized brother and now features a virtual eraser, allowing users to do a little more with it than they can on the smaller Note. Samsung is looking to address the lack of third-party apps with S Pen support through the release of an official SDK.
Another stand-out feature of the Note 10.1 is its split-screen view, a feature that allows users some true multitasking with the ability to view two applications on the tablet's 10.1-inch, 1,280 x 800 pixel display at once. For instance, you could have a video streaming on one side of the screen while taking notes in S Note on the other.
Pricing and release information for the Galaxy Note 10.1 is yet to be announced.
Source: Samsung