77 place 21

382 Ensuring a bright future for diamond electronics and sensors

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 11/05/2024 11:38 EDT

Ensuring a bright future for diamond electronics and sensors

To expand the potential use of diamond in semiconductor and quantum technologies, researchers are developing improved processes for growing the material at lower temperatures that won't damage the silicon in computer chips. These advances include insights into creating protective hydrogen layers on quantum diamonds without damaging crucial properties like nitrogen-vacancy centers.

To see detailed statistics for the news please log in »

Read the original

Add your comment
You must be logged in with Facebook to read and write comments.

A newsletter a day!

You may get 10 most important news around midday in daily newsletter. Press the button and we will send you the most important news only, no spam attached.

or register

LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!

News from the same source
ScienceDaily ScienceDaily
Silicon Valley
George Avalos @ Silicon Valley 1 place · 02/07/2106 01:28 EDT

Newark apartment complex bought for much less than prior value

An East Bay apartment complex has been bought at a price that's well below its prior value. Read more

0

🔮
30.06.2026 ♑︎ Today promises to be a busy and emotionally fulfilling day for Capricorn, with positive experiences... Read more ›
Silicon Valley
George Avalos @ Silicon Valley 2 place · 02/07/2106 01:28 EDT

PG&E buys San Jose building to bolster South Bay operations

A PG&E Corp. unit has bought a San Jose building in a move to bolster the utility's South Bay operations. Read more

0

CoinDesk
Krisztian Sandor @ CoinDesk 1 place · today 17:00 EDT

Phantom doubles down on perpetual futures with hire of Hyperliquid market builders

The crypto wallet is doubling down on perpetual futures after hiring the builders behind one of Hyperliquid's highest-profile market experiments. Read more

0 newcommer

Slashdot
BeauHD @ Slashdot 1 place · today 17:00 EDT

California Bill To Preserve Online Games Fails Committee Vote

California's Protect Our Games Act, which would require publishers to warn players before shutting down paid online games and offer refunds or continued access, failed to advance after a state Senate committee vote. Four state senators voted in favor, three voted against, and four abstained. Engadget reports: The committee unanimously voted in favor of granting the bill reconsideration, meaning it could come back before this group of state senators. Assemblymember... Read more

0 newcommer

Gizmodo
Isaiah Colbert @ Gizmodo 1 place · today 17:00 EDT

‘MarriageToxin’ Proves Rom‑Com Anime Can Hit Just as Hard for Adults

Bones Film's take on Joumyaku and Mizuki Yoda's shonen romp turns modern dating chaos into an irresistibly charming, riotous battle anime you can't help but love. Read more

0 newcommer

Gizmodo
Webb Wright @ Gizmodo 2 place · today 17:00 EDT

Anthropic Wants You to Know Its New AI Model Is Definitely Not Too Dangerous to Release

Claude Sonnet 5 delivers impressive agentic capabilities at a relatively low cost. It’s also really bad at cybersecurity—probably for the reason you’d expect. Read more

0 newcommer

SlashGear
SlashGear 1 place · today 16:45 EDT

Factory Vs Aftermarket Tow Hitches: How Different Are They Really?

Depending on your towing needs, it might be worth getting a factory tow package, but many drivers are well-served by an aftermarket hitch. Which do you need? Read more

0 fresh

Gizmodo
Passant Rabie @ Gizmodo · today 16:40 EDT

Bad News for SpaceX: Bigger Isn’t Always Better

A new report examines whether super-heavy launch vehicles will ultimately be a bust for the space industry. Read more

0 fresh

Ars Technica
Ryan Whitwam @ Ars Technica 2 place · today 16:38 EDT

Google kills Tenor GIF API, forcing changes at X, Discord, and more

Tenor still connects to Google apps, but other platforms must look elsewhere for GIFs. Read more

0 newcommer

Digital Trends
Varun Mirchandani @ Digital Trends 1 place · today 16:35 EDT

OASIS Smart ring hides a trackpad and it lets you whisper-control your computer

OASIS has unveiled the OASIS 1 smart ring, featuring a built-in microphone and miniature trackpad that lets users whisper text instead of typing. Read more

0 fresh

GSMArena.com
GSMArena.com 1 place · today 16:33 EDT

Samsung ultimately refuses BOE panels for the Galaxy S27, new report says

Last month we heard that Samsung was in talks with China’s BOE for the supply of OLED panels for the upcoming Galaxy S27, and BOE's displays were allegedly $5 cheaper than what Samsung Display could supply. So it seemed pretty inevitable that BOE would get the deal and the vanilla S27 would ship with the Chinese panels. Well, not so fast. A plot twist has emerged today. Apparently Samsung has... Read more

0 fresh

Habr
grelikt @ Habr 1 place · today 16:32 EDT

redb.Route — уходим от MassTransit, идём к Apache Camel: Kafka, Scatter‑Gather и транзакции

Серия: redb ecosystem / redb.Route deep-diveОчередная статья из цикла про redb.Route — наш Apache Camel под .NET. Если вы только подключились, вот предыдущие на Хабре:redb.Route — Apache Camel для .NET, который мы написали потому что выхода другого не было — с чего всё началось;redb.Route изнутри: четыре in‑memory канала и Exchange, который их связывает;redb.Route 3.0.1 — плоская навигация по DSL, рефакторинг CRTP и тихий null;Apache Camel под .NET, разбор по косточкам:... Read more

0 fresh

SlashGear
SlashGear 2 place · today 16:30 EDT

We Tried The New Siri Beta - Has Apple Finally Delivered On Its Promises?

Apple promised a much smarter Siri back in 2024. The latest beta suggests it's finally catching up, so we put it to the test to see what's changed. Read more

0 fresh

Silicon Canals
Silicon Canals Editorial Team @ Silicon Canals 1 place · today 16:30 EDT

A new study modeling six of history’s deadliest heatwaves found that conditions had already crossed the threshold for human survival, and every single one of those events stayed below the wet bulb temperature long treated as the line between danger and death

For roughly two decades, a single number has anchored scientific and policy discussions about the upper limits of human heat tolerance: 35 degrees Celsius on the wet-bulb thermometer. Above this threshold, the theory holds, the body’s primary cooling mechanism — the evaporation of sweat from the skin — becomes physically incapable of removing heat fast ... Read more Read more

0 fresh

The most popular news from the same source for the last week
ScienceDaily ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/23/2026 21:21 EDT

Scientists found that one tiny genetic change can completely alter how a coronavirus behaves in different species. Comparing SARS-CoV-2 with a closely related bat-only virus, they showed that a single amino-acid difference affects whether the immune system fights back or gets suppressed. This may help explain how some animal viruses make the leap to humans and become far more dangerous. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 00:45 EDT

A study of nearly 300 people across northern Britain found that vitamin D levels often stay low all year in groups most at risk. Surprisingly, summer sunshine did not significantly boost vitamin D levels among older adults or people from minoritized ethnic backgrounds. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 02:05 EDT

A groundbreaking superconducting X-ray spectrometer has begun operation at BESSY II, giving Europe its first TES-based system and boosting photon detection efficiency by up to 1,000 times. The advance enables scientists to explore atomically thin materials, nanostructures, and ultra-dilute samples with remarkable speed and sensitivity. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 05:12 EDT

A new study suggests early humans were using fire in South Africa’s Wonderwerk Cave as far back as 1.79 million years ago. Researchers found burned bones deep inside the cave, where natural wildfires could not have reached, indicating that fire was likely carried in and maintained by human ancestors. The discovery pushes back the timeline for fire use and reveals surprisingly sophisticated behavior long before humans could create fire on... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 08:00 EDT

A hidden population of South African leopards has revealed a remarkable evolutionary story. Researchers analyzing entire leopard genomes discovered that the Cape Floristic Region’s leopards are not only much smaller than most African leopards, but also genetically distinct after being isolated for roughly 20,000 years. Surprisingly, despite their small population, they have retained much of their genetic diversity. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 09:01 EDT

Scientists have uncovered a surprising new twist in what happens when cells die. As dying cells break apart, they leave behind tiny “footprints of death” packed with newly discovered particles that help guide the immune system to clean up the remains. But researchers found that influenza viruses can exploit this process, hiding inside these microscopic packages and potentially using them to spread to nearby cells. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 09:30 EDT

Scientists have discovered a tiny group of neurons in an ancient brain region that acts like a built-in focus filter, helping the brain ignore distractions and zero in on what matters most. When researchers temporarily switched off these neurons in mice, the animals became unusually distractible—similar to what is seen in ADHD—but regained normal focus as soon as the neurons were reactivated. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily 3 place · 06/24/2026 10:49 EDT

What if consciousness isn’t limited to brains like ours? Philosophers Eric Schwitzgebel and Jeremy Pober argue that consciousness could arise in many different forms of life, even in beings built from radically different materials than those found on Earth. Drawing on the vastness of the universe and the likely existence of countless alien civilizations, they suggest it would be surprisingly Earth-centric to assume that only Earth-like biology can support conscious... Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/24/2026 23:22 EDT

A Pacific-wide tsunami triggered by a magnitude 8.8 Kamchatka earthquake gave scientists their first detailed satellite view of a major tsunami in motion. The observations revealed unexpected wave behavior and helped uncover a larger earthquake rupture than earlier models predicted. Read more

0

ScienceDaily
ScienceDaily · 06/25/2026 00:25 EDT

Osteopenia is a common but often overlooked condition that causes bones to become less dense and more fragile. Because it develops silently, many people only discover they have it after a fracture or bone scan. Aging, menopause, poor diet, and inactivity can all contribute to bone loss. Fortunately, exercise, adequate calcium and vitamin D, and other healthy habits can slow or even partially reverse the decline. Read more

0

Most popular sources

  • You see 902 news out of 902.
  • Sources 61 out of 61.
ScienceDaily 0%
Tech Wire Asia 0%
ArcticStartup 0%
Sifted 0%
Irish Tech News 0%
View sources »

LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!

30.06.2026 17:10
Last update: 17:05 EDT.
News rating updated: 00:01.

What is Times42?

Times42 brings you the most popular news from tech news portals in real-time chart.
Read about us in FAQ section.


Times42 © 2026