New technology can 'cool' laptops
London, Oct 30 (ANI): Heating up of your laptop will soon be a thing of the past, for researchers have developed a new technology that could help keep it cool.
Jairo Sinova, physics professor at Texas A and M University, and his colleagues have explained that with laptops getting increasingly powerful and their sizes getting smaller, they are excessively heating up, which tends to become a headache.
"The crux of the problem is the way information is processed. Laptops and some other devices use flows of electric charge to process information, but they also produce heat," Nature quoted Sinova as saying.
"Theoretically, excessive heat may melt the laptop," he adds.
"This also wastes a considerable amount of energy," said Sinova.
And his research could find a new approach towards an alternative way to process information.
"Our research looks at the spin of electrons, tiny particles that naked eyes cannot detect. The directions they spin can be used to record and process information," he said.
He said that for processing information, it is necessary to create information, transmit the information and read the information, but it is not yet know how these are done.
"The device we designed injects the electrons with spin pointing in a particular direction according to the information we want to process, and then we transmit the electrons to another place in the device but with the spin still surviving, and finally we are able to measure the spin direction via a voltage that they produce," explained Sinova.
The biggest challenge to creating a spin-based device is the distance that the spins will survive in a particular direction.
"Transmission is no problem. You can think for comparison that if the old devices could only transmit the information to several hundred feet away, with our device, information can be easily transmitted to hundreds of miles away. It is very efficient," he said.
"This new device, as the only all-semiconductor spin-based device for possible information processing, has a lot of real practical potential," he says. "One huge thing is that it is operational at room temperature, which nobody has been able to achieve until now. It may bring in a new and much more efficient way to process information," he added.
The study has been published in the renowned journal Nature Physics. (ANI)
-
LPG Crunch: Karnataka Brings New SOPs, Makes PNG Registration Mandatory for Businesses -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 30 March 2026: Check Fresh 24K, 22K, 18K Gold And Silver Prices In City -
Opinion Poll For Kerala Assembly Election 2026: Ldf Strength In Kannur And Kasaragod -
Tamil Nadu Polls 2026: Vijay Reveals Rs 645 Crore Assets, Rs 266 Crore in Banks; Know All His Declaration -
Mumbai Metro Line 9 Set for April 3 Launch, Dahisar-Mira Bhayandar to Get Direct Boost -
Trump Hints At Breakthrough With Iran Amid War Escalation, Calls Recent Move A ‘Sign Of Respect’ -
Rahul Arunoday Banerjee Autopsy Report: Actor Was Underwater For Over An Hour, Sand Found In Lungs -
West Bengal Assembly elections: Election Commission transfers heads of 173 police stations -
Delhi Weather Brings Relief: IMD Issues Yellow Alert For Rain, Thunderstorms And Gusty Winds; Check Forecast -
Tamil Nadu Elections 2026: Vijay Files Nomination Same Day as MK Stalin, Sets Up Symbolic Political Face-Off -
Too Close To Call? 57 Key Seats Could Decide West Bengal Election 2026 As TMC And BJP Gear Up For Tight Battle -
Kim Jong Un Oversees New Solid-Fuel Missile Engine Test, Claims Capability To Reach US Mainland












Click it and Unblock the Notifications