Experience low power, high security, and reliable performance with PolarFire® Core & SoC FPGAs. A maker recently engineered ...
Back in 2024, Renesas first released the RA0E1, an ultra-low-power Cortex-M23 MCU designed for cost-sensitive applications, followed by the RA0E2, with ...
If you happen to be in the market for a small artificial sun, you may be interested to know that for about $1300, you can get a tennis-ball-sized LED array that outputs 120,000 lumens.
Researchers in Spain have developed a dual-condenser air-to-water heat pump that shifts domestic hot water production to daylight hours, maximizing PV self-consumption. The prototype boosted solar ...
Green Matters on MSN
Man Built a Tennis Ball-Sized 'Artificial Sun' and Switched It on in a Dark Forest
'I've never seen a light like this before. That is wild,' YouTuber Mathew Perks said.
BMV080 is a low-power, low-cost PM1, PM2.5, and PM10 sensor module with I2C and SPI interfaces that sells for just $29.90.
Tech Xplore on MSN
Tiny thermometers offer on-chip temperature monitoring for processors
The semiconductor chips driving modern-day computer processors are covered in billions of individual transistors, each of ...
Taste The Code on MSN
Carbon monoxide sensor setup in Home Assistant done the right way
In this video, I'm making a carbon monoxide monitor for my home using an MQ7 carbon monoxide sensor, a DHT11 temperature and humidity sensor, and a NodeMCU microcontroller board. This sensor is ...
Light aircraft often use a heading indicator as a way to know where they’re going. Retired instrumentation engineer [Don Welch] recreated a heading indicator of his own, using cheap ...
After decades of intense research, surprises in the realm of semiconductors—materials used in microchips to control ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Thermometer smaller than ant’s antenna detects computer chip’s temperature in seconds
Researchers at Penn State in the US have developed a microscopic, 2D-material-based thermometer designed ...
A team including Anirban Chowdhury (left) and Dipanjan Sen (right) developed an incredibly tiny thermometer that can be integrated directly onto computer chips.
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