Contact Us
Subject Guides
Databases
Library Search
Library
Engineering
The University of Auckland Library
Blog Stats
Posts - 976
Articles - 0
Comments - 0
Trackbacks - 0
Home
Archives
Contact
Login
All Library Blogs
Recent Comments
Archives
May, 2013 (20)
April, 2013 (22)
March, 2013 (21)
February, 2013 (19)
January, 2013 (26)
December, 2012 (21)
November, 2012 (22)
October, 2012 (25)
September, 2012 (12)
August, 2012 (25)
July, 2012 (23)
June, 2012 (19)
May, 2012 (25)
April, 2012 (21)
March, 2012 (22)
February, 2012 (17)
January, 2012 (15)
December, 2011 (17)
November, 2011 (22)
October, 2011 (21)
September, 2011 (14)
August, 2011 (25)
July, 2011 (19)
June, 2011 (23)
May, 2011 (24)
April, 2011 (23)
March, 2011 (28)
February, 2011 (17)
January, 2011 (16)
December, 2010 (30)
November, 2010 (22)
October, 2010 (19)
September, 2010 (16)
August, 2010 (22)
July, 2010 (30)
June, 2010 (24)
May, 2010 (25)
April, 2010 (26)
March, 2010 (26)
February, 2010 (16)
January, 2010 (17)
December, 2009 (20)
November, 2009 (18)
October, 2009 (19)
September, 2009 (2)
August, 2009 (4)
July, 2009 (2)
June, 2009 (2)
May, 2009 (4)
April, 2009 (3)
March, 2009 (3)
January, 2009 (2)
December, 2008 (2)
November, 2008 (3)
October, 2008 (1)
September, 2008 (1)
August, 2008 (13)
Post Categories
Christmas 2009
Christmas 2010
Hotsites - New & Notable Sites for Engineering
Feeds
RSS
ATOM
<< The 15 Most Valuable College Majors
|
Home
|
Bioalchemy: turning sludge into clear water >>
Analyzing energy potential
“Sensors, radio transmitters and GPS modules all feature low power consumption. All it takes is a few milliwatts to run them. Energy from the environment – from sources such as light or vibrations – may be enough to meet these requirements. A new measurement device can determine whether or not the energy potential is high enough” Read more at
http://www.fraunhofer.de/en/press/research-news/2012/may/analyzing-energy-potential.html
Print
posted @ Tuesday, June 05, 2012 9:53 AM
Comments have been closed on this topic.