New way to turn electricity into light, using graphene | Printed Electronics World
When an airplane begins to move faster than the speed of sound, it creates a shockwave that produces a well-known "boom" of sound. Now, researchers at MIT and elsewhere have discovered a similar process in a sheet of graphene, in which a flow of electric current can, under certain circumstances, exceed the speed of slowed-down light and produce a kind of optical "boom": an intense, focused beam of light. This entirely new way of converting electricity into visible radiation is highly controllable, fast, and efficient, the researchers say, and could lead to a wide variety of new applications. The work is reported in the journal Nature Communications, in a paper by two MIT professors — Marin Soljačić, professor of physics; and John Joannopoulos, the Francis Wright Davis Professor of physics — as well as postdoc Ido Kaminer, and six others in Israel, Croatia, and Singapore.
Read more at: http://www.printedelectronicsworld.com/articles/9730/new-way-to-turn-electricity-into-light-using-graphene
J’ai la tristesse de vous faire part du décès de Madame Françoise AMBIAUX survenu le samedi 26 juillet 2025, à l'âge de 67 ans. Créatrice de ce blog , je tiens à remercier en son nom tous les internautes qui le consultait. Cet espace ne sera plus enrichi et alimenté suite à cette brutale disparition.