Computers no bigger than a snowflake


Tiny prototype computers, nicknamed 'smart dust', will be as small as a snowflake.

This next generation of computers is being developed at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Only a cubic millimetre in size,  the first prototypes - dubbed Michigan Micro Motes - will have tiny Central Processor Units (CPUs) and sensors to monitor temperature or movement.

Motes

'Smart dust' Image: Plainpicture/Lohfink

The 'smart dust' can send data via radio waves and will be able to run programs on a skeleton operating system whilst accessing equally small banks of RAM and flash memory.

There's no need for batteries to power the tiny machines - the motes are capable of scavenging energy from their surroundings. If a mote is near a source of light, it can even use a tiny solar panel.

Because they're so small, the nano-computers can be embedded in buildings and objects to provide constant updates on the surrounding environment.

There are potential medical benefits too.  Motes placed inside the body could monitor a patient's vital signs. In as-yet-unpublished research, the Michigan team has implanted a Micro Mote inside a mouse tumour so that it can report back on its growth.

Performing 100,000 operations on the mote's CPU using the same energy is feasible but the challenge remains - how to transmit more than one bit of information to the outside world.