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Ultra-heat resistant computer storage can operate at Venus-like temperatures and may be used in extreme conditions such as nuclear plants and even for future NASA missions.
Imagine sensors and other devices functioning flawlessly inside nuclear reactors, during deep-sea oil exploration, or even on the scorching surface of Venus! The key to this new memory's ...
NASA's new electronics can survive the heat of Venus The integrated circuits withstood temperatures over 730 Kelvin for hundreds of continuous hours. Michelle Starr Feb. 8, 2017 9:24 p.m. PT ...
The development of electronic devices in extreme environments requires non-volatile memory devices such as SSDs that can operate stably at high temperatures. However, conventional non-volatile ...
However, two teams of researchers have developed a type of flash memory that's capable of retaining data at temperatures that make an afternoon on Venus look cold in comparison.
The sensory hairs of the Venus flytrap contain a heat sensor that warns the plant of bush fires. It reacts to rapid temperature jumps, as researchers have discovered. The Venus flytrap can survive ...
NASA 's Glenn Research Center team has developed extremely durable silicon carbide semiconductor integrated circuits that are tough enough to withstand the harsh conditions on Venus' surface far ...
The chip was then placed into the GEER —the Glenn Extreme Environments Rig, a machine that can maintain Venus-like temperature and pressure for hundreds of hours at a time.
A research team has developed a liquid metal-based electronic logic device that mimics the intelligent prey-capture mechanism of Venus flytraps. Exhibiting memory and counting properties, the ...