First programmable nanowire circuits for nanoprocessors

Researchers at Harvard and MITRE have produced the world’s first programmable nanoprocessor

Improving upon self-assembly

A new technique is reported to use templates to build synthetic molecules the size of proteins by precisely stringing together smaller molecules using an approach based upon the vernier scale.

Conference on DNA Computing and Molecular Programming

The Seventeenth International Conference on DNA Computing and Molecular Programming will be held 19-23 September, 2011 at Caltech in Pasadena, California.

Molecular machine switches magnetic state at room temperature

Irradiation with two wavelengths of visible light switches the position of a nitrogen atom close to a nickel ion, and in the process switches the magnetic state of the nickel ion.

Advance could speed RNA nanotechnology

RNA nanostructures chemically modified to be resistant to degradation retain 3D structure and biological activity.

Twisted electron beams could lead to manipulating individual atoms and electrons

Nanofabricated holograms with lines a few nanomaters apart can twist electron beams and should make possible electron microscopes that will provide better images of nanostructures and may be able to manipulate atoms and electrons.

Scaling up from atomic assembly and individual nanodevices to macroscopic systems

51 years after Richard Feynman envisioned nanoscience in his famous address, “Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” four extraordinary researchers joined in a roundtable discussion of the future of nanoscience.

Update and summary of potential applications of medical nanorobotics

Robert A. Freitas Jr. has made available his chapter on nanorobotics from the book The Future of Aging.

Proteins designed 'from scratch' function in living cells

A significant fraction of small protein sequences designed only to fold into stable structures can substitute for missing natural proteins.

One-molecule robot to be presented at January's TEDxCaltech conference

A one-molecule robot capable of following a trail of chemical breadcrumbs will be presented at TEDxCaltech-Feynman’s Vision: The Next 50 Years.

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