‘Quantum Accelerometer’ Tracks Location Without GPS
GPS technology is so ubiquitous now that it can be hard to remember a day when you couldn’t just take out your phone and find out exactly where you are in the world. However, that’s actually a very recent development and one that could be denied to us in the future. GPS relies on a network of satellites that could be damaged, blocked, or destroyed. You also can’t get a good GPS lock when you’re underground or around tall buildings. There may be an alternative, though. Imperial College London and engineering firm M Squared have developed a new “quantum accelerometer” that can provide precise locations without any external system.
Navigation with accelerometers is possible and has been for some time. There’s an accelerometer in your phone that tracks movement and orientation. However, it’s impractical to use this technology for navigation on a large scale. An accelerometer measures movement, so you can use it to find out where you are if you have a good point of reference. Microsoft released an indoor navigation app called Path Guide on Android several years ago that does this. The problem is that accelerometers aren’t perfect — they lose an inch here and there, and those errors compound over time until you don’t know where you are.
The quantum accelerometer from Imperial College London could solve that problem because it’s stupendously accurate. While the device is nominally portable, it’s not exactly compact or simple to use. Quantum mechanics tells us that all matter has a wave property, but that’s very difficult to observe in daily life. Ultra-cool atoms display their wave properties more prominently, and that’s the key to the quantum accelerometer.
Imperial College London used a powerful laser system from M Squared to cool a cloud of atoms to very low temperatures until the wave aspect is visible. As the atoms fall through the accelerometer chamber, the wave property is affected by movement. The researchers used a laser interferometer to monitor the perturbations in quantum waves, allowing the system to track movement with high precision.
S0, the accelerometer knows when it moves with a high degree of accuracy, and it, therefore, knows where it is at all times based on where it started. Currently, the system measures movement on a single axis, but it should be possible to scale the design up to measure all three axes and three rotational directions for full navigation.
The team says the device as it exists now could be implemented on ships or trains to navigate without access to GPS. However, it’s far too large to fit in your phone for now. The lasers just make it too big. Maybe one day you’ll have a quantum accelerometer in your pocket, but not any time soon.
Continue reading
MIT Creates Zoomable Lens Without Any Moving Parts
The science of optics has revealed the scale and detail of the universe for centuries. With the right piece of glass, you can look at a distant galaxy or the wiggling flagella on a single bacteria. But lenses need to focus — they need to move. Engineers at MIT have developed a "metalens" that could change the way we build cameras and telescopes.
Intel Wants to Enable UEFI Updates Without Reboots
Intel's Seamless Update could enable firmware patches without requiring reboots.
Report: Intel Trying to Secure TSMC 3nm Without Riling up Apple
Intel is reportedly entering into talks with TSMC to try to secure some of its 3nm capacity, which is currently allowed to Apple.
Electric Chopsticks Make Food Taste Saltier Without Using Salt
The chopsticks may help diners continue to enjoy their favorite flavors without risking sodium overconsumption.