Penn State researchers have developed a light-adaptive sensor inspired by the human eye that could help self-driving cars and robots maintain visual accuracy in changing lighting conditions.
The number of days before Google brings us new phones to obsess over are dwindling quickly. Assuming Google keeps to a familiar timeline for Pixel releases, the Pixel 11 series should arrive before ...
Vadzo Imaging introduces an OEM engineering program that combines precision configured NIR LED array boards with a portfolio ...
Vivo’s X300 Ultra, launched globally in May 2026, is the clearest sign yet that smartphone makers are no longer content to ...
For years, smartphone zoom meant watching fine detail dissolve into a watercolor smear the moment you pinched past 5x. That ...
The speed of light in a vacuum has been known as both a universal constant and a hard speed limit for all matter in the universe ever since Albert Einstein published his special theory of relativity ...
JinkoSolar has officially launched a lightweight module solution specifically designed for low-load-bearing roofs—the Jinko ‘Light Diamond’, high-strength module, based on its Tiger Neo 3.0 technology ...
Optical vortices—light beams carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM)—are characterized by helical wavefronts and phase singularities. While they have been widely studied in recent decades, two ...
Abstract: This article proposes a physically unclonable function (PUF) design method based on a magnetic sensor array, leveraging inherent process variations in sensor manufacturing as an entropy ...
New research from the University of New South Wales shows that PV module degradation varies widely with system design and location, driven by UV exposure, temperature, humidity, and atmospheric ...
In 2021, dermatologist David Ozog was on holiday with his family in the Bahamas, when his 18-year-old son had a massive stroke. The teenager was airlifted to Florida, and then to Chicago for surgery.