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  2. How microchips could help detect prostate cancer | Department of…

    https://www.eng.cam.ac.uk/news/how-microchips-could-help-detect-prostate-cancer
    Quicklinks. Search form. Search this site. How microchips could help detect prostate cancer. ... How microchips could help detect prostate cancer. Professor of Electronic Engineering Andrew Flewitt is working with researchers at the Cancer Research UK
  3. https://www.enterprise.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/wp/v2/tags/1098

    https://www.enterprise.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/wp/v2/tags/1098
    {"id":1098,"count":1,"description":"","link":"https://www.enterprise.cam.ac.uk/tag/microchips/","name":"microchips","slug":"microchips","taxonomy":"post_tag","meta":[],"yoast_head":"n.
  4. Microchip shortage a popular read - News & insight - Cambridge…

    https://www.jbs.cam.ac.uk/2022/microchip-shortage-a-popular-read/
    Microchip short…. Microchip shortage a popular read. 11 March 2022. Share:The article at a glance.
  5. microchip – Centre for Risk Studies Viewpoints

    https://risk-studies-viewpoint.blog.jbs.cam.ac.uk/tag/microchip/
    . Chipmageddon: New security vulnerability in modern CPUs could enable the mother of all data breaches.. by Jennifer Copic | posted in: Viewpoints | 1. As users continue to demand faster performance from computers, chip designers have baked in a
  6. Microchips

    www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/125/now/microchips.html
    Nanoscale magnetic dots inside the magnetic microchip. Each dot communicates with its neighbours through magnetic fields. ... 10 billion of these dots could fit inside a single microchip.
  7. Microchips

    www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/125/noflash/now/microchips.html
    Nanoscale magnetic dots inside the magnetic microchip. Each dot communicates with its neighbours through magnetic fields. ... 10 billion of these dots could fit inside a single microchip.
  8. Microchips

    www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/125/now/microchips2.html
    Small Objects of attraction. Having understood the physics behind these minute magnetic particles, it soon became apparent to Russell that they could be used as logic gates for a microprocessor. The team has already demonstrated the capability of
  9. Microchips

    www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/125/noflash/now/microchips2.html
    Small Objects of attraction. Having understood the physics behind these minute magnetic particles, it soon became apparent to Russell that they could be used as logic gates for a microprocessor. The team has already demonstrated the capability of
  10. Home Objects Trade Literature Dashboard Login E-mail address*…

    https://collections.whipplemuseum.cam.ac.uk/objects/14891/
    Stamp 3 (bottom left) = 32p, image depicts “MICROCHIP x 600”. ... The stamp designs depict various images at different magnification levels, including a snowflake (x10), a blue fly (x5), a microchip (x600), and blood cells (x500).
  11. Professor Teng Long. Semiconductors, also known as microchips, are a key component in nearly every electrical device from mobile phones and medical equipment to electric vehicles.
  12. Computer Science | Downing College Cambridge

    https://www.dow.cam.ac.uk/current-students/information-new-undergraduates/undergraduates-reading-lists/computer-science
    Reading lists for new students.
  13. ridgepaper.dvi

    https://api.newton.ac.uk/website/v0/events/preprints/NI13028
    surface of silicon wafers during the manufacture of microchips (see, for example, Kim et al.
  14. THE CAVENDISH LABORATORY Physics at Work 2015 Exhibitors List ...

    https://outreach.phy.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/booklet2015.pdf
    The FET is the basis of all modern microchips and a modern computer has several million FETs processing the information. ... Using polymer FETs, flexible microchips can be produced at very low cost so it has big advantages in high volume applications.
  15. THE CAVENDISH LABORATORY Physics at Work 2016 1 Exhibitors ...

    https://outreach.phy.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/booklet2016.pdf
    THE CAVENDISH LABORATORY. Physics at Work 2016. 1. Exhibitors List 2017 (in route order). 1. Semiconductor Physics Research Group. 4 2. The Tech Partnership. 8 3. Atomic, Mesoscopic and Optical Physics Group (AMOP). 14 4. Atomic Weapons Establishment
  16. Prospective Undergraduates | Department of Engineering

    https://www.eng.cam.ac.uk/undergraduates/prospective-undergraduates-0
    Prospective Undergraduates. Why Engineering? Engineers are involved in the design and manufacture of nearly everything, from cars to computers, from web pages to widgets, from microchips to motorways.
  17. Topping out for new engineering hub | Department of Engineering

    https://www.eng.cam.ac.uk/news/topping-out-new-engineering-hub
    Technology we take for granted, including: Concorde ‘droop’ nose design, the microchips developed by ARM that now power 90% of the world’s mobile phones, and the pregnancy test.
  18. 10156_21043_105581.DOC

    https://www.np.phy.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/optexp06-pitplasmons.pdf
    White light, ranging from 490nm to 1.7µm, produced by a microchip laser and nonlinear photonic crystal fibre was focused onto the nanostructured samples by a 300mm focal length lens, producing
  19. Research news | Department of Engineering

    https://www.eng.cam.ac.uk/research/research-news
    Technology we take for granted, including: Concorde ‘droop’ nose design, the microchips developed by ARM that now power 90% of the world’s mobile phones, and the pregnancy test.
  20. 10156_21043_105581.DOC

    https://www.np.phy.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/optexp06-klarite.pdf
    White light, ranging from 490nm to 1.7µm, produced by a microchip laser and nonlinear photonic crystal fibre was focused onto the nanostructured samples by a 300mm focal length lens, producing
  21. The important difference between features and benefits – Cambridge…

    https://www.enterprise.cam.ac.uk/wp-json/oembed/1.0/embed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.enterprise.cam.ac.uk%2Fthe-important-difference-between-features-and-benefits%2F&format=xml
    microchip-image-featured.jpg 365 360 To make a research discovery appealing to industry, scientists must learn the difference between its features and it potential benefits.

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