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Photograph: Pétur Gauti, Flickr.com

 
Issue no. 33, 2010
Published: Oct 22, 2010

Moon crash kicks up ice, silver and mercury
UN urged to freeze climate geo-engineering projects
Kitchen sink experiment simulates exotic white holes
New method yields more rice with less water: Oxfam
Planet hunters no longer blinded by the light
Miniature batteries smaller than grains of salt

Moon crash kicks up ice, silver and mercury
A rocket sent crashing into the Moon last year kicked up several hundred kilograms of water, silver, mercury and other surprising chemicals. The US space agency NASA sent the rocket to the permanently shadowed moon crater Cabeus last October to see what would, literally, pop up.

Several reports published in Science show some surprising findings, including a large amount of water in the form of ice, carbon monoxide, ammonia and the silvery metals.

During the mission, called LCROSS for Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, the rocket was sent crashing into the dark and freezing crater and instruments on the satellite measured the spectra of light in the dust kicked up.

Researchers at the NASA Ames Research Center estimated that 5.6% of the total mass inside Cabeus crater is made up of frozen water. The rocket impact created a crater about 25 to 30 metres wide, sending up an estimated 4,000 to 6,000 kg of debris, dust and vapour.

The silver may just be tiny particles, not in a form that could be mined, the researchers said, and the large amount of mercury was an unpleasant surprise as its toxicity could present a challenge for human exploration.
ABC News / Reuters    Oct 21, 2010 back to top

UN urged to freeze climate geo-engineering projects
The UN should impose a moratorium on 'geo-engineering' projects such as artificial volcanoes and vast cloud-seeding schemes to fight climate change, green groups say, fearing they could harm nature and mankind.

The risks were too great because the impacts of manipulating nature on a vast scale were not fully known, the groups said at a major UN meeting in Nagoya, Japan aimed at combating increasing losses of plant and animal species. An important cause for the rapid losses in nature is climate change, the UN says, raising the urgency for the world to do whatever it can to curb global warming and prevent extreme droughts, floods and rising sea levels.

Some countries regard geo-engineering projects as a way to control climate change by cutting the amount of sunlight hitting the earth or soaking up excess greenhouse gas emissions, particularly CO2. But critics say geo-engineering is a way for some governments and companies to get out of taking steps to slash planet-warming emissions.

The UN climate panel says a review of geo-engineering will be part of its next report in 2013. Some of the geo-engineering schemes proposed include ocean fertilization, solar reflectors in space, artificial volcanoes, and carbon capture and storage.
Reuters    Oct 21, 2010 back to top

Kitchen sink experiment simulates exotic white holes
Expensive particle colliders are not the only way to explore far-out physics. It seems that water gushing from a tap and hitting a sink behaves like a white hole. A black hole is a dense concentration of mass surrounded by an extremely powerful gravitational field. Nothing that falls within a certain radius surrounding it, known as the event horizon, escapes. A white hole is the opposite: its event horizon allows things to escape but prevents anything from entering. However, so far white holes only exist in theory, so cannot be studied observationally.

When water hits the bottom of a sink, it flows outwards in all directions. At a certain distance from the point where the water hits the sink, the outgoing liquid rapidly decelerates and piles up before continuing its outward flow, creating a ring-like ridge. Physicists have previously suspected that any ripples that might arise beyond the ridge and travel towards it should not be able to get past the ridge. This is because at the ridge the water flows outwards at the maximum speed that ripples could travel inwards, so the ripples would make no forward progress. This makes the ridge behave like a white hole event horizon.

Now this has been experimentally confirmed by researchers at the University of Nice in France. The team let a stream of viscous oil hits an empty aquarium. When they placed the tip of a needle in the path of the oil as it spread out from the collision point, it generated a v-shaped disturbance. The angle of the v depended on the relative speeds of the fluid and any ripples on its surface. When the team measured it, they found that the two speeds are indeed equal, preventing ripples flowing in and creating something akin to a white hole event horizon.

They also found that between the collision point and the ridge, the oil flowed faster than the ripple speed, causing any ripples arising there to be swiftly carried outwards - just as things inside a white hole should get spat out.
New Scientist / arxiv.org/abs/1010.1701    Oct 19, 2010 back to top

New method yields more rice with less water: Oxfam
Rice farmers could boost their yields by 50% with a new method that uses less water according to development group Oxfam, as climate change and drought threaten the staple crop.

Growing rice - considered the major calorie source for around half the world's population - is water-intensive, accounting for as much as one-third of the planet's annual freshwater use. Rice farmers normally rely on flooding their fields to keep seeds covered in water throughout the growing season.

But the new method, known as the System of Rice Intensification, or SRI, involves planting seedlings farther apart, keeping fields moist instead of flooding them, transplanting seedlings to fields earlier and weeding manually, Oxfam said in a report.

Farmers using SRI in parts of Africa, Southeast Asia and India have been able to produce as much as 50% more rice with less water, and often with less labour, said the report. Oxfam's goal is to encourage rice- producing countries to convert 25% of rice cultivation to SRI by 2025.
Reuters    Oct 20, 2010 back to top

Planet hunters no longer blinded by the light
Using new optics technology developed at the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory, an international team of astronomers has obtained images of a planet on a much closer orbit around its parent star than any other extrasolar planet previously found.

The discovery is a result of an international collaboration among the Steward Observatory, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, the European Southern Observatory, Leiden University in the Netherlands and Germany's Max-Planck-Institute for Astronomy.

Installed on the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope, or VLT, atop Paranal Mountain in Chile, the new technology enabled the astronomers to confirm the existence and orbital movement of Beta Pictoris b, a planet about seven to 10 times the mass of Jupiter, around its parent star, Beta Pictoris, 63 light years away.

At the core of the system is a small piece of glass with a highly complex pattern inscribed into its surface. Called an Apodizing Phase Plate, or APP, the device blocks out the starlight in a very defined way, allowing planets to show up in the image whose signals were previously drowned out by the star's glare.

The breakthrough, which may allow observers to even block out starlight completely with further refinements, was made possible through highly complex mathematical modelling.
PhysOrg.com / Astrophysical Journal Letters    Oct 14, 2010 back to top

Miniature batteries smaller than grains of salt
They may be as small as grains of salt, but new batteries being developed by scientists from the University of California in Los Angeles still pack the power of their larger kin.

The key to these tiny batteries, which could eventually power everything from microrobots to medical implants, is their architecture. The scientists start with a field of tiny nanowires. Then they deposited layers of nano-sized lithium aluminosilicate to those nanowires, creating a three-dimensional structure.

Most batteries today have a two-dimensional structure. Expanding up, instead of just out, means the battery can hold more energy in a smaller space. The textured surface also increases the surface area of the battery, making it easier to pass power between the battery's components and an electrolyte, the conductive material that allows current to flow.

Batteries that are the size of a grain of salt - or smaller - could power sensors that detect viruses, chemicals and more. Eventually these microscopic batteries will power microscopic robots as well. Although the design is promising, the researchers have yet to construct this tiny battery. The anode and the cathode of the battery have already been built, but the pieces still need to be assembled and tested.
MSNBC / Discovery Channel    Oct 21, 2010 back to top
 
         
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