Issue no. 18, 2006 Published: May 19, 2006 |
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Economists claim carbon cuts won't break the world's bank |
Europe's new nuclear reactors will not be 9/11-proof |
Fake chip research shocks China |
Algae tested to fight warming, grow fuel |
'Fly-by-wireless' plane takes to the air |
LEDs move into the ultraviolet |
Smokeless rockets launching soon? |
Patent filing: Human cannonballs |
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| Economists claim carbon cuts won't break the world's bank |
Transforming the world's energy industry to stop the flood of greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere might actually be quite cheap. Measures such
as the Kyoto Protocol are often said to be too expensive. But according
to a suite of new economic models, the costs of stabilising CO2 levels
could be tiny. In some cases, the right policies for limiting carbon
emissions could even lead to an increase in global wealth.
The Innovation Modelling Comparison Project is a two-year effort
involving eleven different models that represent the latest thinking on
the problem. The results are striking. Nine of the models predict that
stabilising CO2 levels at 450 parts per million, widely seen as the most
ambitious target worth discussing, would set back global GDP by less
than 0.5% or so by 2100. In each scenario, the regulation of
greenhouse-gas emissions persuades the private sector to shift
investment into low-carbon technologies, which then become competitive
with traditional energy sources.
In some cases, this shift in investment stimulates growth and actually
boosts overall wealth. Two models suggest that stabilisation policies
would give an added boost to global GDP of up to 1.7% over 100 years.
They assume such climate policies will bring about side benefits, such
as increased investment in new technologies. |
| Nature
May 17, 2006 |
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| Europe's new nuclear reactors will not be 9/11-proof |
New nuclear reactors planned to be built across Europe are not designed
to withstand a 9/11-style aircraft attack by terrorists, a leaked report
has revealed. The European pressurised water reactor (EPR) is capable of
resisting an accidental crash by a five-tonne military fighter, says the
French nuclear power company, EDF. But only by extrapolation does it
argue that the reactor will also withstand the impact of a 250-tonne
commercial airliner flown deliberately into it.
Because the reactors are designed to withstand a military jet crash, the
report contends, they will also withstand the hardest parts of a
passenger airline - its engines. It also claims that terrorists would
have difficulty steering an aircraft towards a reactor at a low enough
angle. But EDF does not give any absolute guarantees.
The leaking of the document has provoked a fierce controversy in France.
A French anti-nuclear activist was detained by police for 14 hours this
week in connection with the leaked report. The French green movement
responded by distributing the document as widely as possible, making it
available on a dozen websites. So far, EDF has declined to comment. |
| New Scientist
May 18, 2006 |
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| Fake chip research shocks China |
A top Chinese academic has been fired after it emerged he faked research
into computer chips that aimed at ending the nation's reliance on
foreign suppliers. Chinese officials would not say if Chen Jin, the
former head of Shanghai Jiao Tong University's Microelectronics School,
will face criminal charges.
The scandal comes as China tries to boost its home-grown technologies.
According to reports, Chen used chips made by another firm to fool
university and government inspectors. China's Xinhua state news agency
said that the Hanxin digital signal processing chips were not based on
research carried out by Chen. Nor could the chips carry out the
functions, such as reading fingerprints or playing MP3 files, that they
were supposed to, it reported.
Chen would now have to pay back state funding, Xinhua quoted the Science
and Technology Ministry, and the State Development and Reform Commission
as saying. The Financial Times estimated that Chen and his team had
received funding worth some 114m yuan (EUR 11.11m). |
| BBC News
May 15, 2006 |
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| Algae tested to fight warming, grow fuel |
How's this for a green idea: Remove carbon dioxide, a gas that many
scientists tie to global warming, by having algae turn it into clean
fuel? The state of New York along with independent power producer NRG
Energy and GreenFuel Technologies will be testing the technology.
In a partnership announced Tuesday, the New York State Energy Research
and Development Authority is funding the project, which will test
GreenFuel's CO2 recycling technology at NRG's coal-fired power plant.
GreenFuel will use a mini-bioreactor system to assess the technical and
economic viability of its technology, which would use algae to consume
CO2 emitted by the power plant. The algae could then be converted into
biofuel. GreenFuel said it expects its bioreactors will be able to be
retrofitted to existing sources with minimal impact on existing
generation operations. |
| MSNBC / Reuters
May 17, 2006 |
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| 'Fly-by-wireless' plane takes to the air |
A plane with no wires or mechanical connections between its engine,
navigation system and onboard computers - only a wireless network - has
been built and flown by engineers at Minho University in Portugal.
The 3-metre-long uncrewed plane 'AIVA' relies entirely upon a Bluetooth
wireless network to relay messages back and forth between critical
systems - a technique dubbed 'fly-by-wireless'. Tests flights carried
out in Portugal have shown that the system works well.
Many modern planes already use electronic wires, instead of the
mechanical links and cables found in older planes, to connect
components. This is a lighter and more compact way to control these
systems. However, wireless links could be susceptible to electromagnetic
interference or even jamming, and it could be more difficult to build in
back-up wireless connections.
But the researchers say they are working on this. Bluetooth is already
fairly resistant to disruption as it is designed to guarantee a certain
minimum data stream will always get through, they say. |
| New Scientist
May 16, 2006 |
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| LEDs move into the ultraviolet |
Physicists at NTT Basic Research Laboratories in Atsugi, Japan, have
made a diode that emits light at the shortest wavelength ever. The
device is made from aluminium nitride and emits deep in the ultraviolet
part of the spectrum at 210 nanometres.
The work represents an important step towards the development of very
low-wavelength light emitters that could find use in a wide variety of
applications, including medicine, photolithography and to destroy
bacteria in contaminated water.
A light-emitting diode (LED) generally consists of a junction between
two types of semiconducting materials: an 'n-type' layer in which
current is carried by mobile electrons and a 'p-type' layer where the
carriers are positively charged holes. The electrons and holes recombine
at the junction to emit light.
The researchers made their LED by sandwiching an undoped layer of
aluminium nitride between n- and p-type layers. When current is passed
through the structure, it emits ultraviolet light with a wavelength of
210 nm. |
| PhysicsWeb / Nature
May 17, 2006 |
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| Smokeless rockets launching soon? |
Only time and money separate the current state of rocket propulsion
science from the engine rooms of Star Trek's Starfleet, according to
James Woodward, a history professor at California State University in
Fullerton. He presented his research into Mach-Lorentz thrusters
Wednesday at the Future in Review conference.
Mach-Lorentz thrusters (MLTs) are based on Mach's principle, which
suggests that all particles in the universe have an effect on each
other, and the work of Hendrik Lorentz, who conducted research into the
movement of charged particles in a magnetic field. Woodward has
constructed an engine that takes advantage of the fact that objects
produce energy when their mass changes slightly.
Woodward used capacitors to change the mass of an object and then
applied a current to that mass. That produces a small amount of thrust.
Increasing the voltage and frequency of the current increases the
strength of the thrust, to the point where the engine could be used to
adjust the orbit of a satellite, or push a rocket into space. |
| CNET News
May 17, 2006 |
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| Patent filing: Human cannonballs |
The old circus trick of firing a person from a cannon is being
considered by the US Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
as a way to get special forces, police officers and fire fighters onto
the roofs of tall buildings in a hurry.
A ramp with side rails would be placed on the ground near the target
building at an angle of about 80°. A person would then sit in a chair,
like a pilot's ejection seat, attached to the ramp. Compressed air from
a cylinder underneath would be rapidly released to shoot the chair up
the ramp's guide rails. At the top the chair would come to an instant
halt, leaving the person to fly up and over the edge of the roof, to
hopefully land safely on top of the building.
Of course, the trick is to get the trajectory just right. But the DARPA
patent suggests a computer could automatically devise the correct angle
and speed of ascent. It also claims that a 4-metre-tall launcher could
put a man on the top of a 5 storey building in less than 2 seconds. |
| New Scientist
May 16, 2006 |
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