Issue no. 10, 2008 Published: Apr 04, 2008 |
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'Artificial cell' can make its own genes |
Physicists find new material for storing hydrogen |
IBM develops natural disaster 'magic potion' |
Researchers enlist laptops in quake research |
Matrix-style virtual worlds 'a few years away' |
Researchers compress music files 1000 times smaller than MP3s |
Europe-wide radio net in aliens search |
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| 'Artificial cell' can make its own genes |
An 'artificial cell' capable of synthesising genes and making them into
proteins has been developed by researchers at MIT in the US. The
artificial cell resembles a computer chip. It is made from layers of
rubber, forming a solid chip shot through with a network of tiny
passages and chambers. After building separate gene synthesis and
protein expressions chips, the researchers have now successfully
integrated the two into a single system.
The first part of the device synthesises the genes using enzymes to join
together DNA strands from a pool of short templates. The finished genes
are then copied to produce many versions of the final product. Cycles of
heating and cooling control the enzymes carrying out the reactions. Once
the genes have been made, a series of tiny pumps mixes them with the
enzymes and cell extracts needed to make proteins.
First, a set of enzymes must convert the DNA of the genes into RNA. This
RNA is then mixed with extracts from bacterial cells containing amino
acids from which proteins are made, and ribosomes, the cell structures
that 'read' RNA and assemble the amino acids into finished protein. In
test runs, the artificial cell was used to make a fluorescent protein
from jellyfish. Other proteins can also be designed with a fluorescent
portion. |
| New Scientist
Apr 01, 2008 |
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| Physicists find new material for storing hydrogen |
Physicists in the US may have found a promising new class of material
that can absorb and store large amounts of hydrogen. A low-cost,
high-capacity hydrogen-storage medium is essential for the
commercialization of hydrogen fuel-cell technologies in the future.
Researcher at the University of Virginia report on transition
metal-ethylene complexes with promising hydrogen-storage properties.
They measured around 12% by weight of hydrogen uptake in the metal-based
composites. This is significantly higher than the target of 5.4wt% set
by the US Department of Energy to support the development of
hydrogen-powered vehicles
The researchers now plan to scale up the nanogram quantities of
materials that they have studied. |
| PhysicsWorld / Phys. Rev. Lett.
Mar 31, 2008 |
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| IBM develops natural disaster 'magic potion' |
IBM scientists say they have come up with algorithms that will help
model and manage natural disasters, including wildfires, floods and
diseases. Experts from IBM's Global Business Services have worked with
scientists in India and the US to provide government bodies, relief
agencies and companies with tools to mitigate and manage natural
disasters.
IBM said that its mathematicians have created the equivalent of a 'magic
potion' that helps speed up and simplify complex tasks, assisting with
the effective allocation of resources. Tasks include the ability to
determine the fastest means of delivering relief, detecting fraud in
health insurance claims, the automation of complex risk decisions for
international financial institutions, and detecting patterns in medical
data for new insights and breakthroughs.
IBM said that the same algorithms can be used to manage floods and
famines in India, helping the country to tackle disaster risk reduction
and disaster management. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 02, 2008 |
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| Researchers enlist laptops in quake research |
Researchers at the University of California Riverside are asking PC
users to help with earthquake research. The university's Earth Sciences
department has launched a network computing project which enlists
consumer notebooks to detect seismic activity.
The Quake Catcher Network will link the laptops to a central server by
way of the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing service.
Each laptop will use its internal accelerometer to monitor motion and
report possible quakes. The aim of the project is to create a large grid
of laptops that can report earthquakes in areas without dedicated
large-scale seismographs.
With a dense grid of detectors in place, an early warning can be sent
through the internet to neighbouring cities should an earthquake strike,
which will give people 10-20 seconds to prepare themselves before the
seismic waves reach them, according to the researchers. |
| VNUnet UK
Apr 03, 2008 |
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| Matrix-style virtual worlds 'a few years away' |
Are supercomputers on the verge of creating Matrix-style simulated
realities? Undergoing the Graphics Turing Test, a human judge viewing
and interacting with an artificially generated world should be unable to
reliably distinguish it from reality.
The key to passing the Graphics Turing Test, says Michael McGuigan at
Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York, is to marry that
photorealism with software that can render images in real-time – defined
as a refresh rate of 30 frames per second.
McGuigan tested the ability of the Blue Gene/L supercomputer – to
generate such an artificial world. He studied the supercomputer's
ability to mimic the interplay of light with objects – an important
component of any virtual world with ambitions to mimic reality. He found
that conventional ray-tracing software could run 822 times faster on the
Blue Gene/L than on a standard computer, even though the software was
not optimised for the parallel processors of a supercomputer. This
allowed it to convincingly mimic natural lighting in real time.
However, the speed with which Blue Gene/L renders the images still falls
short. But supercomputers capable of passing the Graphics Turing Test
may be just years away, according to McGuigan. |
| New Scientist
Apr 03, 2008 |
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| Researchers compress music files 1000 times smaller than MP3s |
University of Rochester researchers on Tuesday said they have come up
with a way to reproduce music into a computer file that's 1,000 times
smaller than a comparable high-quality MP3 file. The researchers
demonstrated their methods by encoding a 20-second clarinet solo in less
than a single kilobyte.
The technique involved re-creates the clarinet solo in the same way that
a player piano re-creates a piano piece from a roll of punched paper.
But in addition to re-creating the notes, it also re-creates the way in
which the player played the notes.
The researchers programmed a computer to model clarinet fingering,
breath pressure, and lip pressure and to use that information to affect
the sound described by their model of a virtual clarinet. By using its
programmed knowledge of clarinets and clarinet players, the approach
avoids having to sample music thousands of times a second, which
generates a lot of data and makes music files large.
The researchers think the technology could lead to more expressive
electronic and computer-generated music that it could be extended to
generate vocals and voices more naturally. |
| InformationWeek
Apr 01, 2008 |
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| Europe-wide radio net in aliens search |
Scientists are finalising plans to link radio wave detectors in five
countries and create a device sensitive enough to pick up signals from
worlds the other side of the galaxy.
By connecting banks of detectors in fields across Britain, France, the
Netherlands, Sweden and Germany, astronomers aim to create a radio
telescope that will have the accuracy of a machine the size of Europe.
They believe it could solve some of the universe's most important
secrets - including the discovery of radio broadcasts from intelligent
extraterrestrials.
This system works by collecting radio waves over a range of frequencies.
These can then be analysed using arrays of computers which can identify
patterns from the data streaming from our detectors.
The project - known as Lofar (low frequency array) - was launched in the
Netherlands several years ago, but has attracted the attention of other
European astronomers. All have agreed to build their own banks of
detectors, which can then be linked to those in the Netherlands. |
| EJC MediaNews / Guardian
Mar 31, 2008 |
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