Friday, January 13, 2012

IBM Brains Turn 12 Atoms Into World's Smallest Storage Bit








“We’re trying to answer a simple question,” said IBM Research physicist Andreas Heinrich in an interview. “How small can you make a magnetic structure and still make it useful for data storage?”

The answer the IBM scientists came upon was 12. This grouping of atoms, while dramatically reduced, still behaves in the same ways our memory drives do to grab and store information. They were able to accomplish this by using antiferromagnets. These magnets are much different that your traditional magnet. A ferromagnetized atom acts the same as the magnets you put on your refrigerator. If one atom in this magnet is polarized north, all its neighboring magnets will also be polarized north. Having this kind of polarization gives off a magnetic field, or that resistance you feel when you try to put two magnets together.

Antiferromagnetic atoms, however, do not act the same. If one neighbor is polarized north, its direct neighbor would be polarized south. This allows these magnets to sit much closer together, as it does not give off the same field. The downside to these magnets is that they are very difficult to deal with.

Because scientists need special tools to handle these atoms, you’re not going to see them in a store near you anytime soon. In fact, in order to use the tool at all, you must be in low temperatures, not suited for data centers. To operate at room temperature would mean upping the amount of atoms from 12 to 150. But this isn’t the goal for Heinrich. For him, it’s about showing the world what is possible.

“Here at IBM, most of all people are working on making products that are slightly better than the last one,” said Heinrich. “The work that I’m working on is not in that realm. We’re doing exploratory research.”

The research gives a glimpse of what the future may look like with more development and more research. It seems that other than our televisions, we are constantly trying to shrink down our products, make them smaller, more efficient. This includes data centers, with companies like Fusion-io bent on taking data centers from racks that could fill a room, to just one. But these innovations will take time, and Heinrich stresses that we should be focusing less on days, but rather on decades.

“We currently in our society are too focused on whats going to happen tomorrow,” he said. “We want to have a strong focus on what’s going to happen in 10 years.”


                                                                                              
                                                                                                  Source: http://venturebeat.com/

10 comments:

  1. I read somewhere that there will come a day when computers can no longer store anymore data and memory on them...or perhaps the sun will have exploded by then.

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  2. It's truly amazing how far we've come from the old room sized computers and storage units.

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  3. crazy mind blowing stuff here! + following x

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  4. Wow that is really cool! Great to see technology advancing!

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  5. It is amazing, but then how small is too small. Eventually they will prob just disappear completely and go all holographic or something.

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  6. Wow! One day things will be so small its amazing! (but then again one day atoms will be considered large and bulky!)

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  7. So it is interesting and very good written and see what they think about other people. ニュージーランドエタ

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