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IBM Research - Zurich

No place for ET to hide: Plans unveiled for most powerful telescope in human history

dailymail.co.uk — Scanning the sky 10,000 times faster and with 50 times the sensitivity of any other telescope, it will be able to detect weak signals that could in... View in Crawl 4

No place for ET to hide: Plans unveiled for most powerful telescope in human history

Itsy-bitsy structure in shape of Olympic rings created

futureoftech.msnbc.msn.com — What is lauded as the "smallest possible" five-ringed structure has been created and imaged by a team of European scientists who are clea... View in Crawl 4

Scientists Create the Smallest Possible Five-Ringed Molecule, Photograph It, and Call It Olympicene

popsci.com — In an attempt to make casual daydreamers feel even worse, Richards and a team of chemists from the RSC, University of Warwick, and IBM Research–Zur... View in Crawl 4

Scientists Create the Smallest Possible Five-Ringed Molecule, Photograph It, and Call It Olympicene

IBM Pushes Atomic Force Microscopy to Its Limits - IEEE Spectrum

spectrum.ieee.org — IBM solidifies its AFM technique in probing and manipulating molecules down to its atomic structure View in Crawl 4

Enertipp Impulse: Energieübertragung über grosse Distanzen

img.mp28.ch — Forschungskooperation des IBM Forschungslaboratoriums und der ABB verfolgt neue Ansätze zur Minderung der Verluste View in Crawl 4

Seeing Olympicene

huffingtonpost.com — Imagine that a molecule of olympicene were magnified to the size of an orange. If that same orange were magnified by an equivalent factor, it would... View in Crawl 4

Short Sharp Science: New monkey species already looks scared

newscientist.com — A New Scientist Blog View in Crawl 4

Short Sharp Science: Sports fever comes to chemistry

newscientist.com — Called olympicene, this molecule is related to graphene and is based around five hexagonal carbon rings. The structure was entered into the online ... View in Crawl 4

Olympicene: Newly synthesised molecule is smallest-ever version of Olympics logo

dailymail.co.uk — It's an astonishing demonstration of how precisely synthetic chemistry can be controlled - made in a laboratory after a scientist doodled the ... View in Crawl 4

Photo-finish for Olympicene

rsc.org — UK chemists have synthesised and imaged a molecule that closely resembles the Olympic rings. While the molecule shows promise for applications in e... View in Crawl 4

'Olympic rings' molecule imaged

bbc.co.uk — Researchers release the first microscope image of Olympicene, a molecule that resembles the five rings of the Olympics logo. View in Crawl 4

Olympian feat: Chemists synthesize smallest five-ringed molecule

latimes.com — In honor of the upcoming Summer Olympics , British scientists have synthesized and IBM scientists in Switzerland have imaged the smallest possible ... View in Crawl 4

Square Kilometre Array to be built in South Africa and Australia - Times LIVE

timeslive.co.za — South Africa and Australia will share the location for the world's most powerful radio telescope, the Square Kilometre Array's scientific... View in Crawl 4

Square Kilometre Array to be built in South Africa and Australia - Times LIVE

SKA project drives first ‘extreme Big Data’ computing systems - E & T Magazine

eandt.theiet.org — ASTRON and IBM have embarked on a 32.9M project to develop the computer systems needed to support the SKA radio telescope. View in Crawl 4

SKA project drives first ‘extreme Big Data’ computing systems - E & T Magazine

IBM Marks 60 Years of Magnetic Tape Innovation

eweek.com — This year marks the 60th anniversary of IBM's magnetic tape innovation that solved the brittle tape dilemma and catapulted data storage from p... View in Crawl 4

IBM Marks 60 Years of Magnetic Tape Innovation
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About

IBM has maintained a research laboratory in Switzerland since 1956, located on its own campus in Rüschlikon near Zurich since 1962. As the European branch of IBM Research, the mission of the IBM Research - Zurich lab — in addition to pursuing cutting-edge research for tomorrow’s information technology — is to cultivate close relationships with academic and industrial partners, be one of the premier places to work for world-class researchers, to promote women in IT and science, and to help drive Europe’s innovation agenda.Rueschlikon
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