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A new theory predicts the existence of an electronic device that works like a reverse transistor. With it you can make circuits, smaller, faster and with less energy. Almost 50 years of electronics separate us from the first discoveries on the theories based on the relationships between charge, current, magnetic flux and voltage disclosed by Leon Chua, a researcher at the University of California.
30 years later, in 2004, HP tested a new type of nonvolatile memory based on memristors— circuit elements much smaller than the transistors used in flash memory. Since then, memristors have been C Level Executive List incorporated into chips to simulate the way the human brain processes information. Now, a report by Sungsik Lee, a researcher at Pusan National University, and published by Emerging Technology From.

The Arxiv , studies the properties of active electronic components , such as transistors. An investigation that can have profound consequences for the future of electronics. In his analysis, he postulated the existence of a device to link these two quantities, which he called a memristor. Later, in 2004, researchers at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories announced that they had created a memristor, and that it had the extraordinary ability to store information without using energy.
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