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Power advance heralds future of gadgets that can be recharged wirelessly
Associated Press
Article Launched: 06/07/2007 02:16:25 PM PDT

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers
made a 60-watt light bulb glow by sending it energy wirelessly - from
a device 7 feet away - potentially heralding a future in which cell
phones and other gadgets get their juice without having to be plugged
in.

The breakthrough, disclosed Thursday in Science Express, the online
publication of the journal Science, is being called "WiTricity" by the
scientists.

The concept of sending power wirelessly isn't new, but it has been
dismissed as inefficient because the electromagnetic energy generated
by the charging device radiates in all directions.

One advance was announced last fall, when MIT physics professor Marin
Soljacic said he had figured out how to use specially tuned waves that
don't radiate as much. The key is to get the recharging device and the
gadget that needs power on the same frequency, similar to how a radio
picks up only one station at a time.

Soljacic's team also stresses that this "magnetic coupling" has a low
range and is safe on humans and other living things.

The next step was to demonstrate the principle in experiments, which
is what was described in the new paper in Science. The MIT team said
it found success with the 60-watt light bulb that had "no physical
connection" with the power-generating appliance.

The research was funded by the Army Research Office, National Science
Foundation and the Department of Energy.


- Jim D.

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