Myfab Lund

Myfab Lund or Lund Nano Lab (LNL) is a cleanroom facility with a world-class expertise in epitaxial growth and processing of semiconductor nanowires. The laboratory is one of the essential resources for NanoLund researchers, but it is open for other academic and industrial users. The Myfab Lund staff supports its customers with the cleanroom and safety training, equipment support and technology development. The laboratory is actively used in several courses for undergraduate and graduate students thus linking education with fundamental/applied research and industry.

We welcome all users to access the equipment for fundamental research and development in the fields of materials science, nanotechnology, microelectronics, life science and quantum technology. Myfab Lund is staffed with metrology, equipment and process experts who are available to train and guide you. We also educate students enrolled at Lund University and participate in outreach activities for the local community and society. Myfab Lund has been a member of Myfab, the Swedish Research Infrastructure for Micro and Nano Fabrication since 2016.

Highlights

Semi-conductor technology from Chalmers on board first Arctic weather satellite

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Peter Modh
/ Categories: Myfab Chalmers

With only 125 kilos in weight - and as small as the size of a dishwasher - the first Arctic Weather Satellite, AWS, has successfully been launched with the mission to provide better weather forecasts for the Arctics, a region severely affected by climate change. The small satellite is equipped with a 19-channel cross-track microwave radiometer using semi-conductor technology fabricated at Chalmers University of Technology.  

The new Arctic weather satellite, AWS, was lofted into orbit on 16 August at 20:56 CEST aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, just north of Los Angeles. About six hours later, the KSAT ground station in Svalbard, Norway, received the all-important signal indicating the satellite’s safe arrival in orbit.

With a mission to collect important data on moisture and temperature levels in the Earth's atmosphere, and measure the amount of ice in clouds, the satellite is sent off to enhance our understanding of the weather conditions at the poles. The clouds, and what happens inside them, are important parameters when trying to predict climate change.
 

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