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Issue no. 7, 2011 Published: Feb 18, 2011 |
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Scientists build first 'antilaser' | Genetic engineering brings cloned crops closer | Foreshocks may warn that a big quake is coming | Machine turns plastic bags into fuel | Global warming: Science or sensation? | Can Google searches predict Oscar winners? |
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| Scientists build first 'antilaser' |
The laser - a 50-year-old invention now used in everything from CDs to
laser pointers - has met its match in the 'antilaser', the first device
capable of trapping and cancelling out laser beams. While such a device
would seem most fitting in a science fiction movie, its real-world
application will likely be in next-generation, optical computers, which
will be powered by light in addition to electrons.
While a laser takes in electrical energy and emits light in a very
narrow frequency range, the antilaser takes in laser light and
transforms it into heat energy. But it could be easily converted into
electrical energy, according to researchers from Yale University, who
developed the antilaser.
Conventional lasers use a so-called 'gain medium', such as a
semiconductor material, to produce a focused beam of light waves. The
new device uses silicon as an absorbent 'loss-medium' that traps light
waves, which bounce around until they are converted into heat. The most
obvious use of the device is in computing. Instead of having chips with
transistors and silicon, these new computers will use both light and
electrical energy. Ultimately, the technology could find its way in
radiology, according to the researchers. |
| Reuters / Science
Feb 17, 2011 |
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| Genetic engineering brings cloned crops closer |
The production of exact genetic replicas of important food crops has
come a step closer. By combining mutations that abolish the shuffling of
genes during sexual reproduction, researchers have found a way to force
sexually reproducing plants to clone themselves through seeds.
The new method has so far only been tested in the model plant
Arabidopsis thaliana, but researchers at the French National Institute
for Agricultural Research in Versailles are working to extend the
findings to crops. Such an advance could allow farmers to propagate
their own crops, rather than buying seed each year. It would also speed
up the time it takes for companies to generate new plant breeds.
Many of the hardiest, most productive crops are hybrids of two
genetically disparate cultivars. But the beneficial combination of genes
that makes the hybrids so robust disappears in the next generation
because the genes are shuffled into new combinations during sexual
reproduction. |
| Nature News / Science
Feb 17, 2011 |
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| Foreshocks may warn that a big quake is coming |
Advance warning is the ultimate prize for earthquake studies. Now, for
the first time, one study offers tantalising evidence that it may be
possible to build such a system to warn of some impending large quakes
about an hour before they strike.
The finding comes from an analysis of the seismic record from the
lead-up to a devastating earthquake that hit Turkey in 1999. This
revealed that foreshocks rippled away from the source of the rupture in
the 45 minutes before the quake - the first time that foreshocks have
been conclusively linked to a major earthquake.
A team of French and Turkish geologists studied seismograms recorded
before the Izmit earthquake, which killed some 17,000 people. In one
recording, the team saw five small shocks in the final 20 minutes before
the event, each characterised by a signature sequence of two types of
waves, called P-waves and S-waves. In each of the five small shocks, a
P-wave was followed 2.4 seconds later by a higher-amplitude S-wave.
P-waves are sometimes known as primary waves, because they travel faster
through the Earth and so are the first to arrive at monitoring stations.
The strongest of the shocks was also recorded at other nearby stations.
By performing the same calculations on those records, the researchers
could work out exactly where the shocks originated. This turned out to
be within a few hundred metres of the focus of the Izmit quake itself,
suggesting that the quake and the shocks were linked. |
| New Scientist / Science
Feb 17, 2011 |
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| Machine turns plastic bags into fuel |
A Japanese inventor has created a machine suitable for home use that can
turn plastic waste into fuel. The plastic in bags, bottles, caps and
other packaging products is made from oil. Akinori Ito's machine turns
it back to its original form via a carbon-negative process.
The device heats up the plastic, traps the vapours in a system of pipes
and water chambers that cool the vapours and condense them back into
crude oil. The crude is suitable for use in generators and some types of
stoves. It can be further refined into gasoline. The machine can convert
a kilogram of plastic waste into a litter of oil using a kilowatt-hour of
energy. The current system costs USD 10,000, but Ito hopes the price
will fall as demand and production rise.
Ito's machine is not the first to convert waste plastic into fuel, but
the first one that is built for home use. Other solutions are larger,
such as the Envion Oil Generator, which is capable of processing 10,000
tons of plastic waste annually. Each ton of waste translates to three to
five barrels of crude oil that can be further refined to commercial
fuels such as gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. A demonstration plant
opened in Washington in 2009.
While burning the oil created by these machines releases CO2 into the
atmosphere, they are solutions to the growing piles of waste plastic.
According to Envion, about 50m tons of plastic waste is generated each
year. If all that was converted back to oil, it would also help reduce
reliance on foreign oil, the company says. |
| MSNBC
Feb 15, 2011 |
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| Global warming: Science or sensation? |
The debate over the veracity of global warming may be judged not by pure
science but rather, perception. Being in a warm room can make the idea
of global warming seem more likely. A new study by researchers at
Berkeley University and the University of Chicago finds that when people
feel warmer-either because they are out in the hot sun or because they
are in an overheated room-they believe in global warming more.
Participants in one study who were asked to answer a questionnaire
outdoors were more likely to report that global warming is a proven fact
the higher the outdoor temperature. To confirm that the feeling of
warmth is what sways participants' views, rather than the hot weather
itself as evidence of a warming planet, the researchers conducted the
same experiment indoors. They found that participants answering the
questionnaire in a heated cubicle were more likely to believe in global
warming, suggesting that it was the experience of heat, not the
information that it conveyed, that impacted people's beliefs.
The researchers then tested the idea that feeling warm allows people to
form a sharper image in their minds of a world becoming hotter, which in
turn intensifies people's beliefs in global warming. Participants in one
experiment indicated the sharpness or dullness with which they were
imagining hot arid landscapes by adjusting the clarity of photos. Those
in a heated cubicle made the images of hot and arid landscapes look much
sharper than did those who were in a room- temperature cubicle.
Moreover, showing people clearer images of these same hot landscapes led
them to believe in global warming more. |
| UC Berkeley / Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Feb 10, 2011 |
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| Can Google searches predict Oscar winners? |
Google has produced a new tool that attempts to use search trends to
predict the Oscar winners. Niv Efron, of Google's Insights for Search
team, says that the Best Picture winners from the last three years - The
Hurt Locker, Slumdog Millionaire and No Country for Old Men - have all
shown an upward trend in searches for at least four weeks before the
awards, along with high interest in the New York region.
Apply that pattern to this year's nominees, and The Social Network comes
out in front ahead of Black Swan and The King's Speech. So is the
Facebook biopic destined for Oscar success? 'We can't say for sure what
will happen this year, since searches can only reflect what people are
interested in, but it's fun to look for patterns that persist year after
year,' says Efron.
You can make your own predictions with Google's Oscar Search Trends
site, which provides data for every nominee in all of the awards - but
will they be right? Google has previously used search trends to
successfully predict flu outbreaks and make economic forecasts, so
perhaps the occupants of the Googleplex will join Hollywood's darlings
in celebrating come Oscar night on February 27th. |
| New Scientist
Feb 16, 2011 |
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