| |

|
|
Issue no. 30, 2008 Published: Sep 26, 2008 |
|
Ultrasmooth mirror could herald birth of a new microscope | Can rubber ducks help track a melting glacier? | Campaign against software patents kicks off | UN forecasts boom in 'green jobs' | Lift could take passengers straight into space | Scientists develop cheap fast water contamination test | Heavyweights team up on photo data standard | Invention: Bat-style footstep detector |
|
| Ultrasmooth mirror could herald birth of a new microscope |
A microscope that studies the most delicate materials by bouncing helium
atoms off their surfaces could be made within a year, thanks to the
development of the world's smoothest mirror. That is the claim from
researchers at the Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain, who have
created the mirror by depositing a few atom-thick layers of lead onto an
almost perfectly smooth silicon surface at 114 kelvin (-159 °C).
The atomic microscope would allow the surface of biological samples, for
example, to be probed in a way that is impossible with other
state-of-the-art microscopes. Electron microscopes can produce highly
magnified images, but they have serious drawbacks. The samples must
conduct electricity; electrons penetrate into the sample, leading to an
image that doesn't accurately represent the surface; and, worst of all,
the very-high-energy electron beams can obliterate the precious samples.
An atomic microscope with a low-energy beam of helium atoms could get
around these problems. Neutral helium can bounce off any surface and the
beam would be deflected by the electrons at the very edge of the sample,
giving a true image of the surface. But an atomic microscope demands a
focused beam of helium atoms, which requires a mirror that reflects the
beam with very little scattering of the atoms. The new flat mirror is
atomically smooth, even after it has warmed up to room temperature, and
it can reflect 15% of incoming helium atoms. |
| Nature / Advanced Materials
Sep 24, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| Can rubber ducks help track a melting glacier? |
To help figure out what is happening inside the fastest-moving Greenland
glacier, a US rocket scientist sent 90 rubber ducks into the ice, hoping
someone finds them if they emerge in Baffin Bay. The common yellow
plastic bath toys are one part of a sophisticated experiment to
determine why glaciers speed up in the summer in their march to the sea,
said Alberto Behar of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.
The Jakobshavn Glacier is very likely the source of the iceberg that
sank the Titanic in 1912 and researchers focus on it because it
discharges nearly 7% of all the ice coming off Greenland. As the planet
warms, its melting ice sheet could make oceans rise this century.
Scientists do not know how melting water moves through the ice. One
theory is that the summer sun melts ice on the top glacial surface,
creating pools that flow into tubular holes in the glacier called
moulins. The moulins can carry some water all the way to the underside
of the glacier, where it acts as a lubricant to speed the movement of
ice toward the coast. But because it cannot be seen, no one really knows
what occurs. That is where the rubber ducks come in, along with a probe
about the size of a football loaded with a GPS transmitter and
instruments that can tell much about the glacier's innards. The ducks,
if they are found and if somebody e-mails the discovery, would tell
scientists where the water ends up. |
| Reuters
Sep 21, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| Campaign against software patents kicks off |
A global petition designed to raise awareness of software patents was
launched this week as part of the World Day against Software Patents.
Currently in draft format, the petition includes information about how
software patents can affect business, research and development.
The Stop Software Patents organisation is asking interested parties to
comment, and anyone who signs the petition now will be asked to fill in
an amended version at a later date. The effort is supported by a
coalition of more than 80 software companies, associations and
developers in a bid to put an end to patents being awarded to software.
'Insufficient economic evidence supports an application of the patent
system on software. But most studies hint that software patent regimes
restrain innovation,' the coalition argues. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 22, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| UN forecasts boom in 'green jobs' |
The UN says millions of new jobs will be created worldwide over the next
few decades by the development of alternative energy technologies. More
than a million people already work in biofuels, but a UN report says
that could rise by 12 million by 2030. It says 'green jobs' depend on a
shift of subsidies from oil and natural gas to wind, solar, and
geothermal power. New jobs could also include the expansion of recycling
and making environmentally friendly vehicles.
The report, 'Green Jobs: Towards Decent Work in a Sustainable,
Low-Carbon World', was commissioned and funded by the UN's Environment
Programme (UNEP). It says the manufacture, installation and maintenance
of solar panels should add 6.3 million jobs by 2030, while wind power
should add more than two million jobs.
The report raised concerns for those involved in the manufacture of
biofuels - fuels made from renewable sources such as plants or
plant-derived material. 'Much of the employment on sugarcane and palm
oil plantations in countries like Brazil, Colombia, Malaysia and
Indonesia is marked by poor pay and dangerous working conditions,' it
said. 'There is also concern that large-scale biofuels production might
drive large numbers of people off their land in future years,' it said. |
| BBC News
Sep 24, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| Lift could take passengers straight into space |
Japanese scientists are attempting to build a lift that will take
passengers 100,000km into space. The project could see the realisation
of a vision that has inspired science fiction writers for generations.
The lift's carriages, which will themselves require new feats of
engineering, would move up and down 32,000km-long cables. Those cables
would need to be stronger and lighter than any material ever woven. They
would be anchored to the ground and disappear into the sky, eventually
reaching a satellite docking station orbiting above the Earth.
Scientists hope that as well as carrying human passengers, the carriages
could also haul huge, solar-powered generators that could power homes
and businesses back on Earth. It could also remove barrels of nuclear
waste, dumping them into space.
Japan's promise to spend 6.3 billion on the project has sparked swift
reaction from other quarters: several competing space lift projects are
now believed to be under way, with NASA among those involved. An
international conference is to be held in Japan in November, aiming to
draw up a detailed timetable for the machine's production. One of the
biggest challenges is to develop a fabric for the lift's cables. It must
be extremely light while also resilient enough to resist the various
matter that it will be struck by in space. It is expected that an answer
will be found in carbon nanotubes. |
| Daily Telegraph
Sep 22, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| Scientists develop cheap fast water contamination test |
Natural disasters such as tsunamis often leave local water sources
tainted with harmful bacteria, and existing tests for contamination take
as long as three days to produce a result.
Now a USD 30,00 test that takes just half an hour has been developed at
Australia's Environmental Biotechnology Cooperative Research Centre near
Sydney. Antibodies attached to tiny magnets are added to the water so
when bacteria in the sample bind to the antibodies, they can be
concentrated with a magnet.
The sample is then injected into a 'bubble pack' containing chemicals
that break open the bacteria, allowing their RNA to escape. An enzyme
specially modified to work at close to room temperature then amplifies
the RNA so that it can be detected by an electrochemical sensor even if
very few bacteria are present. |
| New Scientist
Sep 23, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| Heavyweights team up on photo data standard |
Some of the largest names in photography hardware and software are
teaming up on a new project to create a standard image metadata system.
The Metadata Working Group has put forward the first specifications for
the embedding of metadata within image files. Founding members include
Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, Sony, Canon and Nokia.
The goal of the programme is to create a standard system for the data,
which can then be used by image editing and indexing software to
organise and classify individual photos based on criteria such as
location, date and subject. The metadata system is of special importance
to professional photographers whose photo archives will often include
thousands of images. However, as family photo albums continue to go
digital, metadata will also become increasingly important to the home
consumer market.
The first specifications offer guidelines to companies on how to store
and read metadata, as well as methods for dealing with overlapping
standards. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 25, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
| Invention: Bat-style footstep detector |
Security services interested in automatically spotting people who may be
security risks are also interested in systems that listen out for
footsteps. It should be possible to estimate someone's speed, footwear
and perhaps build from the sound of their steps. But detecting footsteps
is harder than you may think. Any airborne sounds of footsteps are
quickly drowned out by noise from the wind, while the ground vibrations
are so distorted by materials they pass through that they are impossible
to detect more than a few metres away.
Both those problems can be avoided at a stroke, says James Sabatier, a
physicist at the University of Mississippi, if you listen for the
ultrasonic signals associated with footsteps. Ultrasonic microphones are
not as badly affected by wind noise, says Sabatier. He also proposes an
ultrasonic sonar system that broadcasts a signal and listens for Doppler
shifts that indicate echoes from a moving pair of feet. The strategy is
also used by bats to detect the flutter of insect wings.
In addition to footsteps, Sabatier points out that the movement of a
walking person's arms towards and away from the ultrasonic source should
produce the same effect. The inventors hope to interest groups involved
in various security applications such as border control. |
| New Scientist
Sep 24, 2008 |
back to top
|
|
|