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No Magnets, No Drones: How China Controls the Future of Warfare
Drones have fundamentally transformed modern warfare, but the entire drone supply chain depends on rare earth magnets processed almost exclusively by China.
The Williston site houses two automated mobile skid-mounted Inserma pre-processing units that separate magnet assemblies from end-of-life hard disk drives in approximately three seconds per drive, ...
Honey's provenance and authenticity has long been a sticky business, with claims difficult to prove and test for. As demand for cleaner labels drives its popularity, how are producers proving their ...
Verdict on MSN
US Iran war: Will helium shortages risk major disruption to quantum computing companies?
Over a third of world’s helium supply originates from the Gulf state of Qatar where drone attacks have already shut down a key LNG manufacturing facility for which helium is a by-product.
Have you ever wondered what really goes on behind the scenes at airports? Beyond the bustling terminals and departure gates lies a fascinating world of hidden ...
When we think of powerful magnets used in particle accelerators or for NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance), we often envision bulky machines, sometimes the size of buildings. But in an extraordinary ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Palm-sized magnet rivals world’s most powerful coils for first time, hits 42 tesla
Researchers at ETH Zürich have built the most powerful miniature superconducting magnets ever demonstrated, ...
A team of physicists has experimentally confirmed a long-predicted sequence of exotic magnetic phases in an atomically thin ...
The electronic and magnetic properties of two-dimensional materials both have strong potential for technological applications. Researchers have long assumed that they are distinct phenomena, but ...
To enable more accurate estimation of connectivity, we propose a data-driven and theoretically grounded framework for optimally designing perturbation inputs, based on formulating the neural model as ...
Researchers at the University of Illinois have discovered a surprising mathematical connection between two areas of condensed-matter physics that were long considered separate. The electronic and ...
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