“How Glowing Soil Can Help Find Land Mines”
Article in the “Smithsonian Magazine”:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/how-glowing-soil-can-help-find-land-mines-180962918/
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Article in the “Smithsonian Magazine”:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/how-glowing-soil-can-help-find-land-mines-180962918/
More in:
Prof. Agranat lecture at the Univenture 2015 Workshop in the Tel-Aviv University.
Prof. Aharon Agranat - Madua Lectures 2014
From Discovery to Invention and from Invention to Technological Innovation.pdf
Our skin may contain millions of tiny "antennas" in the form of microscopic sweat ducts, say researchers in Israel. In experiments, they found evidence that signals produced by bouncing electromagnetic waves off the tiny tubes might reveal a person's physical and emotional state from a distance. Read more at New Scientist.
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Aharon Agranat's wife wears the earrings he crafted for her with pride. The jewel in each stud is a pale green man-made crystal— potassium lithium tantalate niobate— concocted by Agranat, a 48-year-old Israeli physicist. The crystal, KLTN for short, may also revolutionize fiber optics and change the way you use the Web, transmit data, or phone loved ones. Read more at Discovery Magazine.
Internet inventor Vinton Cerf explains to Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig "What is Electroholography" (PBS 2001)