2007 Physics Nobel Prize For Giant Magnetoresistance 111
A number of readers made sure we are aware that the 2007 Nobel Prize in physics has been awarded to Albert Fert and Peter Grunberg for simultaneously and independently discovering giant magnetoresistance. This property has allowed the explosion of disk-space growth and is cited as being one of the first nanotechnology breakthroughs. From the announcement: "Very weak magnetic changes give rise to major differences in electrical resistance in a GMR system. A system of this kind is the perfect tool for reading data from hard disks when information registered magnetically has to be converted to electric current."
Due to my screenwrap... (Score:2, Funny)
I first read the title as 2007 Physics Nobel Prize For Giant and thought "cool!"
Onward ->
Just as it seems we're about to move away from purely Mechanical Memory [slashdot.org] we find ways to make it better.
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Just as it seems we're about to move away from purely Mechanical Memory we find ways to make it better.
Just as? GMR was first discovered in 1988 and has already been used in modern HDDs. Chances are, you are using an HDD right now that has GMR-based technology in it.
As far as moving away from 'purely mechanical memory' -- I think a lot of you guys and your "SSDs are going to change everything! Real soon now!(tm)" aren't thinking of the bigger picture. I think that magnetic HDDs will continue to dominate storage for at least another decade or more for one important reason: no one has figured out a way to
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Of course, I know nothing. I'm just guessing.
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Yes, right now there's a problem on the supply side. It turns out that Apple is one of the larges
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The MP3 player industry, maybe. In the PC market, Apple doesn't have the buying power to squeeze its supplier
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Actually, while that is true, the reality is, Apple buys parts in huge quantities. Sure IBM could laugh them off, but think of their other customers as well - they have Microsoft, Sony/Toshiba and Nintendo as
Actually, IBM's response to Steve was "Siooma" (Score:1)
(I read that in the Secret Diary Of Sam Palmisano. Admittedly, it doesn't get a lot of traffic.)
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Just as it seems we're about to move away from purely Mechanical Memory [slashdot.org] we find ways to make it better.
The development of spintronics allows many things, not just the hard drive read heads we've all had for the last 10 years. There are a couple of problems with flash, and if researchers can get the sizes down, these can be fixed with MRAM, magnetic memory based on spintronics again.
Also, these are the applications we know about; as with any branch of physics, you have to give the physicists more than 20 years to figure out the physics, and then give the engineers some more time to explore what they can
Magnetoresistance (Score:4, Funny)
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Pr0n (Score:3, Funny)
Huh? I don't understand (Score:1)
Makes you wonder how different today is from how it was envisioned 40 years ago. With 2TB of drive space in my house, things like this could help us move toward dreams like the Star Trek holodeck and other things that will require galactic size storage systems. I'm ready for it.
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The Nobel committee gives prizes not based on whether it benefits the average prole, but whether it advanced the knowledge of physics, chemistry and so on.
BTW: it does benefit you, unless you don't use a sizeable hard drive. The huge hard drives that are available lately are because of this discovery.
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Stuart Parkin and two groups of colleagues at IBM's Almaden Research Center, San Jose, Calif, quickly recognized its potential, both as an important new scientific discovery in magnetic materials and one that might be used in sensors even more sensitive than MR heads.
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I agree with you on a 50%. See,
Smaller storage => lesser energy consumption => more trees saved => benefits for all mankind.
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thanks (Score:3, Insightful)
Thanks... maybe (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes... Pity it's still a shock sensitive, slow, electromechanical device rather than a high speed, rugged, solid state removable cartridge. Seriously, though, isn't it time we started moving away from mechanical storage?
Re:Thanks... maybe (Score:5, Insightful)
Technology and economics aside, a paradigm shift would be helpful. As the OLPC's XO demonstrates, you can easily build a useful computer that doesn't have a hard disk. It just won't run all the bloatware that we're all so dependent on. OLPC's second-biggest accomplishment might be to force everyone to rethink the way our overpowered computers are designed.
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Of _course_ you can build a computer without a HD. You can even build a computer without any kind of flash AND hd. Just put something on a floppy, and boot from it.
What uses space nowadays aint "bloatware", but the increase in media.
Yeah, back in the days you could get a few seconds of sampled sound. Later you got pictures. Later you got videos. Then 3D-Scenes.
Modern storage requirement isnt dictated by inefficient programming, but by the amount of media needed to be stored.
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RIAA lawsuit (Score:2)
oblig. (Score:5, Funny)
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Under the "obligatory" heading...
I, for one, welcome our new, magnetoresistant giant overlords.
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Secret of Giant Magneto resistance (Score:2)
FYI: Nobel prize $ amounts this year... (Score:4, Informative)
So in the end, each scientist nets about $750K USD, unless I dropped a decimal point somewhere.
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After getting tax-exempt status and easing their investment rules, the fund began
Patent? (Score:4, Interesting)
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rj
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You can't patent the effect, but a USPTO search gives 77 patents on an assortment of devices (including one suggesting that you should sputter radon atoms into the disc surface - holy radioactive storage, Batman!) exploiting it, and US patent 6441661 (assigned to Fujitsu) looks as if it's on GMR magnetic sensors in general.
Does anyone have tools for traversing the graph of patents under reference in both directions? Key patents would tend to show up at the top of lists sorted by number of citations, but I
compare this to string theory and cosmology (Score:5, Insightful)
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Nah, it's just a scheduling thing (Score:2)
It's an algorithm to deal with competing requests. The german portion of the algorithm attempts to write everywhere immediately, while the french portion hides behind a bad sector and then surrenders . . .
hawk
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Re:compare this to string theory and cosmology (Score:4, Insightful)
By the way, it's a fallacy to think that if not for Big Particle Physics, condensed matter physics would be enormously more fruitful. If the money wasn't going to accelerators, that doesn't mean it would be going to condensed matter physicists instead; it might just go to biologists.
And just dumping money on condensed matter doesn't guarantee breakthroughs. There are already far more condensed matter physicists than particle physicists; if you try to buy even more of them, you're necessarily going to start scraping the bottom of the talent barrel, and you get diminishing returns. Unless you're arguing that the money should go to existing condensed matter physicists without expanding the talent pool, to fund work that they currently can't afford to do. Well, I don't buy that either: the guys most likely to make breakthroughs are almost certainly already well funded.
Disclosure: I did my PhD in condensed matter.
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I am actually disgusted by the quest of absolute and religiosity by the 80-90% of humans who actually do not have a scientific mind.
I don't know quite what you mean by that, but what does that have to do with particle vs. condensed matter physics?
And particle physicists and especially cosmologists exploit that shamefully.
Many non scientists are simply very interested in the fundamental building blocks of matter, the origins and fate of the universe, etc. This is not a failing, or an absence of a "scientific mind". It's not "exploitation" to teach people about things they're interested in.
How can you explain standard model to someone whose mind blocks on the concept of electron spin ?
It's not really harder to explain the basics of particle physics to such a person than it is to explain how gi
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My point is that astrophysicists, cosmologists and the like exploit the desire of a non-scientific public for dreams and answers about nature.
How can you honestly explain the standard model without explaining first quantum mechanics, second quantification and relativity ? And how can you do this without first explaining electromagnetism and classical mechanics ? And how can you this beyond (and including) Galileo's theories without eleme
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Could you read my whole comment before taking out the first sentence ?
I did. The first sentence made no sense to me. I replied to the rest.
My point is that astrophysicists, cosmologists and the like exploit the desire of a non-scientific public for dreams and answers about nature.
How is that "exploitation"? The public is interested in these things, so are the scientists, what is the problem?
How can you honestly explain the standard model without explaining first quantum mechanics, second quantification and relativity ?
You can get pretty far without explaining any of those things. You don't need any of that to understand that there are different types of particles, different types of interactions, and what some of their physical properties are. We're not talking about deriving the spin-statistics theorem here.
For an approach that impli
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"exploitation" in the sense that some people make a fortune selling books about it
It's not exploitation to sell someone a book on the subject they're interested in. Geesh.
and in securing funding at the national and european level.
Again, boo hoo. They get funding for studying subjects that physicists and the lay public are interested in. This has nothing to do with "exploitation", it just has to do with the fact that you, personally, would rather see the money go elsewhere.
When you brutally explain to people that there are different kind of particles, you are just doing what I said : taxonomy.
Don't give me that Rutherford "stamp collecting" crap. There's nothing wrong with taxonomy. And you can introduce dynamics, not just taxonomy. You don't need to explai
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then please explain why science enrollment is going down
I don't know why science enrollment is going down, but what you're saying is essentially, "My idea is right because I can't think of an alternative", which is an attitude unbecoming a scientist.
I think the "common view" which you dismissed is far more likely to be a valid factor than your proposal.
and it obviously does not work since it only appeals to the non-scientifically minded, the others smelling a rat in the material
That is not at all obvious. I would contend the exact opposite: popular science books inspire students to go into science who otherwise wouldn't.
The current remedy is to present pretty pictures of science to the youth, and it obviously does not work since it only appeals to the non-scientifically minded, the others smelling a rat in the material.
You seem to be under the impression that pop-science books hav
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I agree that by symmetry you can deduce the existence of the displacment current, but from that how do you deduce the existence of electromagnetic waves without writing down and solving Maxwell's equations ?
Qualitative and phenomenological physics indeed works to some extent (non-linearities, second order effects please ?), bu
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I am just saying "maybe all the efforts done to fight the hatred of science are going in the exactly wrong direction". This is sociological and psychological, hardly scientific indeed.
You are saying it, but you don't have any social or psychological EVIDENCE for it.
I agree that by symmetry you can deduce the existence of the displacment current, but from that how do you deduce the existence of electromagnetic waves without writing down and solving Maxwell's equations ?
You can't actually derive a linear wave equation without solving Maxwell's equations, but you can argue that if time-varying magnetic fields support electric fields and time-varying electric fields support magnetic fields, then there plausibly can be self-supporting wave solutions with the electric and magnetic fields continuously varying.
Qualitative and phenomenological physics indeed works to some extent (non-linearities,
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I am just saying "maybe all the efforts done to fight the hatred of science are going in the exactly wrong direction". This is sociological and psychological, hardly scientific indeed.
You are saying it, but you don't have any social or psychological EVIDENCE for it.
I agree that by symmetry you can deduce the existence of the displacment current, but from that how do you deduce the existence of electromagnetic waves without writing down and solving Maxwell's equations ?
You can't actually derive a linear wave equation without solving Maxwell's equations, but you can argue that if time-varying magnetic fields support electric fields and time-varying electric fields support magnetic fields, then there plausibly can be self-supporting wave solutions with the electric and magnetic fields continuously varying.
Qualitative and phenomenological physics indeed works to some extent (non-linearities, second order effects please ?), but I find it a shame to go back to middle-ages like thinking and teaching.
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I think the cause/effect of that little transaction goes the opposite way you imply.
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That's highly unlikely. If you are a prof. of physics, as you claim, then you know very well what it takes to obtain a Ph.D., and one of the most basic requirements is the ability to demonstrate a very complete understanding of the relevant field and the "big picture" as you put it. And that's just for the degree; there's no WAY someone could get a faculty appointmen
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In theoretical physics what we do is... theoretical. Get used to it. Oh, and conflating CERN and cosmology so much makes me seriously doubt your credentials. Most string theorists have a budget of their own salary plus a few grad students/post docs. CERN is largely examining the standard model (looking for a Higgs boson, for example) which is an incredibly well t
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This shows the US has got the best scientists.... (Score:1, Insightful)
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Just compare the achievements of those two geniuses with the recent discussion about the crackpots speculating about the metrics of the universe. Here we have a real, old-fashioned Nobel Prize : a simple and brilliant idea, an experimental demonstration, and practical applications,[...]
Well, Einstein never got the Nobel prize for the general theory of relativity. Just think about it for a second: He did not get the Nobel prize for the general theory of relativity!
I suggested the teachers in charge invited Fert but they answered that they do not understand a single thing about spin and ironically enough they wanted conferences about string theory and particle physics instead
Irony is definitely thick: particle physicist would say that spin simply has to do with the irreducible representations of the Lorentz group of the special theory of relativity. Then they would keep on going about iso-spin, susy, confomal invariance, etc... It is not unheard of Dirac equation being also used in the area of
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Not everybody will be amused (Score:3, Funny)
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Yes. First those pesky Germans invent MP3, and then they invent stuff to make hard drives even bigger. Guess which country will end up on the "supports terrorism and needs to be invaded (again)" list next.
Albert Fert? (Score:1)
Interesting analogy (Score:5, Interesting)
The BBC coverage of this story [bbc.co.uk] has a nice analogy :
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rj
A great magazine article... (Score:1)
Phisics Nobel Prize can't understand Vista ! (Score:1)
- Do you like computers ? (his works has big implication in computer hardware)
He replied
- I just use them, I can't say I like it. I have a new one with Windows Vista, and a don't understand everything, I need to adapt.
!!!
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The Vista source code will probably get the 2007 literature Nobel prize, "for its narrative mastery, which with great sensibility expresses the failures of mankind."
from theory to practice (Score:2, Informative)
But it was IBM's Almaden Research Lab - and a lot of blood, sweat, toil and materials science - that turned GMR into a commercial reality.
And then, some yrs later, IBM turned around and sold its whole disk drive division to Hitachi.
But I imagine they did so with something more than a gleam in their eye. And I doubt that gleam was flash memory.
Disk drives have become another brutal low/no margin business. In fact
alternative meaning (Score:2)
GMR and storage devices (Score:1)
Mobius Magnetic Drive (Score:1, Funny)
Can you say MIMHDD Mobius Inverting Magnetic Hyperdynamic Drive?