100x Denser Chips Possible With Plasmonic Nanolithography
Roland Piquepaille writes "According to the semiconductor industry, maskless nanolithography is a flexible nanofabrication technique which suffers from low throughput. But now, engineers at the University of California at Berkeley have developed a new approach that involves 'flying' an array of plasmonic lenses just 20 nanometers above a rotating surface, it is possible to increase throughput by several orders of magnitude. The 'flying head' they've created looks like the stylus on the arm of an old-fashioned LP turntable. With this technique, the researchers were able to create line patterns only 80 nanometers wide at speeds up to 12 meters per second. The lead researcher said that by using 'this plasmonic nanolithography, we will be able to make current microprocessors more than 10 times smaller, but far more powerful' and that 'it could lead to ultra-high density disks that can hold 10 to 100 times more data than today's disks.'"
I solved it... http://crowlogic.net/zeta.pdf fucking pass it everywhere because the godddamn submission queue is filtering it, since its obviously not smart enough to understand the implications of this. In fact, spread that url to every place imaginable... make it ubiquitous acroess the web,academic sites, jurnals, etc. I tried to publish at arxiv.org but they have this fucking absurd "referral systtem". I dont have referrals because I am better than everyone, and the proof backs that up. http://crowlogic.net/zeta.pdf
This is so obvious. Why is this news?