It's nearly 2am Wednesday morning and I'm finishing up a final presentation that I have to give for my Electronic Materials class at 4pm. To my credit, I did start this presentation earlier than usual. It has just taken me an extraordinary amount of time for me to understand the material that I'm presenting on. I'm presenting on a
spintronics concept. Very simply put, spintronics is electronics using magnetic materials and magnetic fields to manipulate current. I would like to point out that physics is probably one of my least favorite subjects because it just doesn't click with me. However, spintronics is mostly physics based. To make matters worse, it deals with two of my least favorite physics subjects: circuitry and magnetic fields. My article is even out of the
Applied Physics Letters. I totally did myself in :o)
I do have to admit, the topic is pretty interesting, albeit difficult for me to understand completely. This brings me to the reason why I was updating in the first place: magnetic anisotropy.
Don't know what it is? That's just it. It's part of that vague, smart-sounding science lingo that you use when you can't think of the answer to a test question and you want a shot at partial credit or if you really want to impress people at a party. Science types understand it for the most part, but does anyone know what it is exactly?
I can tell you, because now I know.
But I won't because my brain is pretty much done for tonight. After my presentation, I have a 1000-word paper left to write on the presentation (which should be cake now that I've written my presentation), and a rediculous amount of grading to finish by Thursday. Add to that moving into the new house. I will be very busy for the next couple of days.
Goodnight(morning?) all.
_l