Saturday, June 09, 2007
Friday, June 08, 2007
Unwired from Wired
Wired Science - Wired Blogs: "Wireless Energy Could Signal the End of Power Cords
By Brandon Keim EmailJune 07, 2007 | 1:15:36 PMCategories: Energy
Bulb Last year, MIT researcher Martin Soljacic caused quite a stir with his proposal for transmitting energy wirelessly, thus dispensing with the jungle of power cords that infest our tech-savvy dwellings.
In a paper published today in Science, Soljajic and colleagues describe their lighting of a 60-watt light bulb with energy sent across a seven-foot gap, proving that such a system is indeed possible.
Soljacic began his search for wireless transmission several years ago after being awakened by the beeping of his uncharged cell phone. 'It occurred to me that it would be so great if the thing took care of its own charging,' he said.
The system, dubbed WiTricity, takes advantage of the tendency of objects that resonate at the same frequency to pick up each other's vibes. Just as the strings on an acoustic guitar vibrate in the presence of notes played on another guitar, so energy can be sent between a transmitter and a receiver with the same electromagnetic resonance.
Soljacic contrasts WiTricity with a radio station's transmitter, which 'emits energy omnidirectionally. Your receiver gets a billionth of that -- the sound information is encoded in energy -- but that isn't good for energy transmission.'
"
How about a tip of the hat to Tesla? Since Soljacic is also Croatian, one would think he'd acknowledge his compatriot's pioneering work in this field...
By Brandon Keim EmailJune 07, 2007 | 1:15:36 PMCategories: Energy
Bulb Last year, MIT researcher Martin Soljacic caused quite a stir with his proposal for transmitting energy wirelessly, thus dispensing with the jungle of power cords that infest our tech-savvy dwellings.
In a paper published today in Science, Soljajic and colleagues describe their lighting of a 60-watt light bulb with energy sent across a seven-foot gap, proving that such a system is indeed possible.
Soljacic began his search for wireless transmission several years ago after being awakened by the beeping of his uncharged cell phone. 'It occurred to me that it would be so great if the thing took care of its own charging,' he said.
The system, dubbed WiTricity, takes advantage of the tendency of objects that resonate at the same frequency to pick up each other's vibes. Just as the strings on an acoustic guitar vibrate in the presence of notes played on another guitar, so energy can be sent between a transmitter and a receiver with the same electromagnetic resonance.
Soljacic contrasts WiTricity with a radio station's transmitter, which 'emits energy omnidirectionally. Your receiver gets a billionth of that -- the sound information is encoded in energy -- but that isn't good for energy transmission.'
"
How about a tip of the hat to Tesla? Since Soljacic is also Croatian, one would think he'd acknowledge his compatriot's pioneering work in this field...
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