Nano Brain Like Transistor Controls Nanobots
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhzR7p0xVNry6aRRvu1iES7wBOYs5WQrjFHLopODBHHY4HEnec6cQ7dnYpc4B02reQBB0Dt4ufwN2Wg9YK6a66yyDX1XQetS6Fjc1VmArI4TVmcIGD6QU8_qiKznePBvOtM1gE3Wm_rcqg/s320/nanobrain.jpg)
Recently, scientists Anirban Bandyopadhyay and Somobrata Acharya from the National Institute of Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan, have built the first ultra-tiny, ultra-powerful "brains" for nanobots.
The brains - just two billionths of a meter across - act as tiny computer transistors. But instead of carrying out just one operation at a time, like a normal transistor, the new devices can simultaneously perform 16 operations at once. In other words, the devices use parallel processing - like the human brain - rather than serial processing - like a normal computer. The researchers call this ability "one-to-many" communication.
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