Synopses & Reviews
Nanotechnology, otherwise known as molecular engineering, will soon create effective machines as small as DNA. This capacity to manipulate matter to program matter with atomic precision will utterly change the economic, ecological, and cultural fabric of our lives. Nanotechnology: Molecular Speculations on Global Abundance, which is accessible to a broad audience while providing references to the technical literature, presents a wide range of potential applications of this new material technology. The first chapter introduces the basic concepts of molecular engineering and demonstrates that several mutually reinforcing trends in current research are leading directly into a world of surprisingly powerful molecular machines. Nine original essays on specific applications follow the introductory chapter. The first section presents applications of nanotechnology that interact directly with the molecular systems of the human body. The second presents applications that function, for the most part, outside the body. The final section details the mechanisms of a universal human-machine interface and the operation of an extremely high resolution display system.
Review
"BC Crandall's Nanotechnology is both shocking and authoritative - a feast for those who truly enjoy a glimpse of the future!" Greg Bear, author of Blood Music and Queen of Angels The MIT Press
Review
"In clear and compelling language, Nanotechnology describes the ideas and techniques that are creating a new domain of science and technology." Edward O. Wilson, Pellegrino University Professor, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University The MIT Press
Review
B.C. Crandall's Nanotechnology is both shocking and authoritative -- a feast for those who truly enjoy a glimpse of the future! The MIT Press
Review
In clear and compelling language, Nanotechnology describes the ideas and techniques that are creating a new domain of science and technology. < b=""> Greg Bear <> , author of < i=""> Blood Music <> and < i=""> Queen of Angels <>
Synopsis
Technology is becoming molecularly precise. Nanotechnology, otherwise known as molecular engineering, will soon create effective machines as small as DNA. This capacity to manipulate matter--to program matter--with atomic precision will utterly change the economic, ecological, and cultural fabric of our lives. This book, which is accessible to a broad audience while providing references to the technical literature, presents a wide range of potential applications of this new material technology.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [193]-207) and index.