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Can Magnets Really Damage Electronics? What You Need To KnowAt some point, you've probably heard the stern warning: Never put magnets near your electronics! It's advice so ingrained in tech culture that it feels like a law of physics. But is it true?
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Interesting Engineering on MSNFirst-ever spotted magnetism may pave way for faster electronic memory devicesThis new form of magnetism is made of two forms: ferromagnetism and antiferromagnetism. Ferromagnetism is found in fridge ...
The magnetic state offers a new way to make spintronic memory devices that work faster and use less energy than electronic ...
Our digital age has a voracious appetite for rare earth elements – scarce metals found in small quantities but essential for ...
China's rare earth exports surged by 23 per cent in May compared to the previous month, reaching their highest level in a ...
Researchers from the Universities of Hamburg and Kiel in Germany have demonstrated for the first time that atoms can be move ...
As the digital world demands greater data storage and faster access times, magnetic memory technologies have emerged as a ...
Chinese customs are holding up some shipments of lower-performance rare earth magnets used in appliances and consumer electronics because of confusion over how to apply Beijing's export curbs, ...
Graphite, long thought mundane, hides a shocking secret — it can become a superconducting magnet when cooled and configured ...
MP Materials, operator of the Mountain Pass mine in California’s Mojave Desert, is ramping up supplies of the critical ingredients and magnets used in autos, electronics and military hardware as ...
The United States allowed its rare earth metals industry to move to China and could now face severe economic disruption as ...
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