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Stanford University News
New Technique Brings Flexible Electronics Closer to Reality
LOS ANGELES and STANFORD, Calif., Dec. 13, 2006 -- Researchers have devised a method for printing patterns of high-performance organic single-crystal transistors on surfaces such as silicon wafers and flexible plastic, which could enable fast, bendable electronics such as low-cost sensors on product packaging and "electronic paper" displays. "This work demonstrates for the first time that organic single crystals can be patterned over a large area without the need to laboriously handpick and fabricate transistors one at a time," said...
OSA Elects 2007 Vice President, Directors-at-Large
ROCHESTER, N.Y., Oct. 12, 2006 -- Thomas Baer, executive director of the Stanford Photonics Research Center at Stanford University, was elected 2007 vice president of the Optical Society of America (OSA) at its 90th annual meeting, held this week in Rochester. Also elected were new...
OSA Elects 2007 Vice President, Directors-at-Large
ROCHESTER, N.Y., Oct. 12, 2006 -- Thomas Baer, executive director of the Stanford Photonics Research Center at Stanford University, was elected 2007 vice president of the Optical Society of America (OSA) at its 90th annual meeting, held this week in Rochester. Also elected were new...
Brain on a Chip May be Closer to Reality
Mar 29, 2006 — STANFORD, Calif., March 29, 2006 -- Microchips that function like the brain or that "see" like eyes were once thought to be in the same futuristic category as flying cars and robot housekeepers. But at least one researcher thinks such "neuromorphic"...
'Western' Spintronics Program Launched
Mar 13, 2006 — STANFORD, Calif., March 13, 2006 -- The University of California (UCLA), the University of California-Santa Barbara (UCSB), the University of California-Berkeley and Stanford University are teaming up to launch the Western Institute of...
'Western' Spintronics Program Launched
Mar 13, 2006 — STANFORD, Calif., March 13, 2006 -- The University of California (UCLA), the University of California-Santa Barbara (UCSB), the University of California-Berkeley and Stanford University are teaming up to launch the Western Institute of...
Novel Camera Employs Microlenses
Jan 1, 2006 — Researchers at Stanford University in California have found that one lens may be good but that thousands of lenses are better for taking pictures. The group at Pat Hanrahan’s lab has developed and field-tested under a variety of conditions a...
'Light Field Camera' Banishes Fuzzy Photos
Nov 8, 2005 — STANFORD, Calif., Nov. 8 -- Computer scientists are bringing photographic technology into sharper focus. Ren Ng, a Stanford University computer science graduate student in the lab of Pat Hanrahan, the Canon USA professor in the school of...
Micron-Scale Modulator Is Based on Silicon
Nov 1, 2005 — In the Oct. 27 issue of Nature, scientists at Stanford University in Stanford, Calif., report the operation of a micron-scale optical modulator that is compatible with silicon CMOS fabrication techniques. The result is an important step in the...
Stanford Wins Robot Race
Oct 11, 2005 — PRIMM, Nev., Oct. 11 -- Stanley, a robotic Volkswagon Touareg built by Stanford University, beat other autonomous ground vehicles in the 2005 Grand Challenge race, sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Stanford...
Device Captures Deep-Tissue Brain Images
Aug 29, 2005 — WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 -- Researchers at Stanford University have demonstrated an optical technique that can capture micron-scale images from deep in the brains of live subjects. The method, called two-photon microendoscopy, combines a pair of powerful...
Picarro, Stanford Extend License
Jul 21, 2005 — SUNNVALE, Calif., June 21 -- Picarro Inc., a provider of photonic technology for life sciences, environmental monitoring and industrial process control markets, said it has reached an agreement with Stanford University to extend an exclusive...
Picarro, Stanford Share License
Jul 21, 2005 — SUNNVALE, Calif., June 21 -- Picarro Inc., a provider of photonic technology for life sciences, environmental monitoring and industrial process control markets, said it has reached an agreement with Stanford University to extend an exclusive...
A Snip in Time May Save Lives: Laser-Cut Nerves Regenerate
Jan 1, 2005 — Scientists at Stanford University in California, the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the University of Texas at Austin have demonstrated a femtosecond laser technique with potential in nerve regeneration research. In a study published...
Quantum-Dot Infrared Detector Displays Multispectral Operation
Dec 1, 2004 — In the Nov. 1 issue of Applied Physics Letters, engineers at Stanford University in California report the development of a two-color InGaAs quantum-dot infrared photodetector that operates at 5.5 and 9.2 µm at 77 K. Potential applications of the...
NSF Funds 6 Nanotech Research Centers
Sep 22, 2004 — ARLINGTON, Va., Sept. 22 -- The National Science Foundation (NSF) today announced awards of $69 million over five years to fund centers in nanoscale science and engineering at University of California at Berkeley (UC Berkeley), Stanford University...
Daily News Briefs
Sep 20, 2004 — Thomas M. Baer, CEO and chairman of Arcturus Bioscience Inc., a Mountain View, Calif., maker of laser microdissection instruments and reagents for the analysis of microscopic tissue samples, has been appointed a consulting professor in the...
Camera Sensors Boost Safety for Japanese Railway
Sep 1, 2004 — Passenger safety is a primary concern for railways and, although everyone is aware of the use of cameras for security, their use in train stations may not be as well-known. Cameras and monitors are put in place to help conductors see that passengers...
R2 Technology, Stanford to Work on CAD with 3-D Imaging
Jun 26, 2003 — SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., June 26 -- R2 Technology Inc., a developer of computer-aided detection (CAD) technology, and Stanford University's Department of Radiology said they are collaborating to accelerate efforts to develop CAD-enhanced products to...
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