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TZID:Australia/NSW
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DTSTART:20201004T030000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20200724T021836Z
UID:AE31DC1A-5D88-4884-95F6-B6E0CE427596
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/NSW:20200724T110000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/NSW:20200724T120000
DESCRIPTION:There is currently a strong movement worldwide toward portable\
 , battery operated\, wirelessly connected devices such as GPS receivers\, 
 cellular telephones and laptop computers and tablets. This new generation 
 of electronics enables vast new capability\, but also comes with new chall
 enges such as bandwidth limitations\, sensitivity to jamming and reduced a
 ccess to calibration. A new generation of miniature\, low-power\, low-cost
  precision instruments is being developed at NIST for use in such portable
  technologies. These include clocks\, magnetometers\, gyros and wavelength
  references\, all based on precision atomic spectroscopy and using emergin
 g new fabrication capabilities such as microelectromechanical systems and 
 photonics. This talk will describe the design\, fabrication and performanc
 e of these instruments\, as well as touch on several applications to which
  they are well-suited. Finally\, we will speculate on future opportunities
  for these types of devices such as compact instruments based on laser-coo
 led atoms and a broader view on highly accurate chip-scale measurements.\n
 \nCo-sponsored by: Prof. Subhas Mukhopadhyay\n\nSpeaker(s): Dr. John Kitch
 ing\, \n\nVia Zoom\, Sydney\, New South Wales\, Australia\, 2109
LOCATION:Via Zoom\, Sydney\, New South Wales\, Australia\, 2109
ORGANIZER:Subhas.Mukhopadhyay@mq.edu.au
SEQUENCE:3
SUMMARY:Chip-scale Atomic Devices: Miniature Precision Instruments using At
 oms\, Lasers and Silicon Micromachining
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/234023
X-ALT-DESC:Description: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;p&gt;There is currently a strong movement world
 wide toward portable\, battery operated\, wirelessly connected devices suc
 h as GPS receivers\, cellular telephones and laptop computers and tablets.
  This new generation of electronics enables vast new capability\, but also
  comes with new challenges such as bandwidth limitations\, sensitivity to 
 jamming and reduced access to calibration. A new generation of miniature\,
  low-power\, low-cost precision instruments is being developed at NIST for
  use in such portable technologies. These include clocks\, magnetometers\,
  gyros and wavelength references\, all based on precision atomic spectrosc
 opy and using emerging new fabrication capabilities such as microelectrome
 chanical systems and photonics. This talk will describe the design\, fabri
 cation and performance of these instruments\, as well as touch on several 
 applications to which they are well-suited. Finally\, we will speculate on
  future opportunities for these types of devices such as compact instrumen
 ts based on laser-cooled atoms and a broader view on highly accurate chip-
 scale measurements.&lt;/p&gt;
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