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Human embryonic stem cells Image: Wikipedia
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Issue no. 10, 2011 Published: Mar 18, 2011 |
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Europe rules against stem cell patents | Scotland approves major tidal power scheme | New study gives dark energy a boost | Laser beam could nudge space junk away | Revealed: US spy operation that manipulates social media | Agricultural research 'urgently needs more women' | How to spot a fake whisky using its signature |
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| Europe rules against stem cell patents |
Stem cell researchers in Europe are reeling after the Court of Justice
of the European Communities issued an opinion last week questioning the
ethics of their work and threatening to ban them from patenting
procedures that involve human embryonic stem cell lines. Some scientists
fear that the opinion could also prompt European countries to tighten
their legislation on such research, or ban it altogether.
The lengthy legal debate was sparked by Bruestle's 1991 patent of a
technique to generate nerve cells from established human embryonic stem
cell lines. The environmental group Greenpeace challenged the patent in
2004, arguing that the destruction of human embryos involved in deriving
the cell lines was 'contrary to public order' and breached guidelines
set out in the European Patent Convention.
In 2006, Germany's federal patent court in Munich ruled in Greenpeace's
favour, so Bruestle appealed to the Federal Court of Justice in
Karlsruhe. That court in turn referred the case to the European court.
Judge Yves Bot, the case's adjudicator, concluded on 10 March that even
if they do not involve the direct destruction of embryos, techniques
involving human embryonic stem cell lines are not patentable because
they are tantamount to making industrial use of human embryos, which
'would be contrary to ethics and public policy'.
Bot's opinion will now be considered by the 13 judges in the European
court's Grand Chamber. A final decision is expected in about two months.
And although the final decision will not be binding on Germany's federal
court, it is likely to sway the German decision. |
| Nature
Mar 16, 2011 |
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| Scotland approves major tidal power scheme |
A major tidal energy project is to be built in the Sound of Islay off
the west coast of Scotland. The Scottish government has approved plans
for 10 tidal turbines, which will generate enough electricity to power
more than 5,000 homes.
Scottish Power Renewables is behind the scheme. It put forward plans to
install the turbines in the waters off Islay, which offer strong tidal
flows and shelter from storms. The required grid capacity to handle the
array is also available in the area.
Scottish Power Renewables said the Islay project is the world's first
tidal array. But it could soon be dwarfed by the much larger scheme
planned for the Pentland Firth, where there are proposals for 1,600
megawatts of production in the coming years, compared to Islay's
10-megawatt array. The scheme will use Hammerfest Strom tidal turbines,
which have been operating as a generating prototype in Norwegian waters
for more than six years, and are being tested in Orkney ahead of work
starting on the project next year.
Scotland and the UK generally are seen as world leaders in tidal energy
research, but the US and Canada are both investing heavily in the field.
The Scottish government has a target to meet 80% of electricity demand
from renewables by 2020. |
| BBC News
Mar 17, 2011 |
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| New study gives dark energy a boost |
New evidence bolsters the case that 'dark energy' is uniformly
accelerating the expansion of the universe, refuting one of the
alternative models. The new study, which measures the present-day
expansion of the universe to unprecedented accuracy, also suggests that
the cosmos may be slightly older than previously calculated.
The team used the Hubble Space Telescope's new infrared camera to refine
the Hubble constant - a number that indicates the current rate at which
galaxies are receding from one another due to cosmic expansion. By
precisely measuring the distance to various celestial objects and then
gauging the speed at which they are receding from each other, the team
measured a Hubble constant of 73.8 km per second per megaparsec. The
value has an uncertainty of only 3.3% the researchers report. That
margin of error is about 30% better than the previous value, reported in
2008. Although the Hubble constant measures only the current rate of
cosmic expansion, the new value implies that the universe is about 75m
years older than the previous estimate of 13.75bn years.
The finding also places new restrictions on one alternative to 'dark
energy' as the driving force behind accelerated cosmic expansion. In the
alternative scenario, Earth would sit at the centre of a vast void a few
billion light-years. That configuration would produce an optical
illusion making it appear as if the universe's expansion is
accelerating. But such a setup would require a significantly lower value
of the Hubble constant than the researchers have now measured. In
combination with data about radiation left over from the Big Bang, the
new results also suggest that dark energy is what physicists call the
'cosmological constant', a constant density of energy residing in the
vacuum of space, suggested by Einstein but later abandoned. |
| Science News / Astrophysical Journal
Mar 16, 2011 |
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| Laser beam could nudge space junk away |
Satellites in orbit around the Earth are at risk of collision with
space-based objects, which have either been discarded by space missions
or created in satellite collisions. But now a team of researchers at
NASA believes it may have found a relatively cheap solution for dealing
with this 'space junk' - aim a medium-powered laser into space and nudge
any objects on a collision course out of harm's way.
The team propose using a laser of a few kilowatts to change the velocity
of an orbiting object just enough to move it out of the path of a
second, oncoming object. The change would occur simply by the momentum
of the photons in the beam. The scheme would involve continually
evaluating the chances of a collision between any two items of space
junk with a diameter of 5 cm or more, using radar data provided by the
US Space Surveillance Network. Objects on a collision course would then
be tracked by an optical telescope and, with one of the objects locked
on, the laser beam would be sent along the telescope's main optical path
into space.
Using a computer model, the researchers calculate that the risk of
slightly more than half of all potential collisions in low-Earth orbit
could be significantly reduced by using just one 5 kW commercially
available laser mounted on a 1.5 m telescope somewhere close to the
poles (since most of the objects are in roughly polar orbits). Likely to
cost no more than about USD 10m, including instrumentation for adaptive
optics, they say this approach could represent a much cheaper
alternative to the direct removal of space debris. |
| PhysicsWorld / arXiv
Mar 17, 2011 |
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| Revealed: US spy operation that manipulates social media |
The US military is developing software that will let it secretly
manipulate social media using fake online personas designed to influence
internet conversations and spread pro-American propaganda. A Californian
corporation has been awarded a contract with the US Central Command
(Centcom) to develop what is described as an 'online persona management
service' that will allow one serviceman or woman to control up to 10
separate identities at once.
The contract stipulates each persona must have a convincing background,
history and supporting details, and that up to 50 controllers must be
able to operate false identities from their workstations 'without fear
of being discovered by sophisticated adversaries'. The project has been
likened by web experts to China's attempts to control and restrict free
speech on the internet.
Centcom's contract requires the provision of one 'virtual private
server' in the US and eight appearing to be outside the US to give the
impression the fake personas are real people located in different parts
of the world. It calls for 'traffic mixing', blending the persona
controllers' internet usage with the usage of people outside Centcom in
a manner that must offer 'excellent cover and powerful deniability'.
Once developed the software could allow US service personnel, working
around the clock in one location, to respond to emerging online
conversations with a host of co-ordinated blogposts, tweets, retweets,
chatroom posts and other interventions. A Centcom spokesman said none of
the interventions were in English, as it would be unlawful to address US
audiences with such technology, and any English-language use of social
media by Centcom was always clearly attributed. The languages in which
the interventions are conducted include Arabic, Farsi, Urdu and Pashto. |
| The Guardian
Mar 17, 2011 |
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| Agricultural research 'urgently needs more women' |
There is an urgent need for more women in agricultural research,
particularly at PhD level and beyond, according to a report by the UN
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). The 2010-11 edition of The
State of Food and Agriculture, launched by the FAO this month, said that
female scientists are essential to efforts to increase the productivity
of farms run by women in developing countries.
Nienke Beintema, programme head of the Agricultural Science & Technology
Indicators (ASTI) initiative, which provided data for the FAO report,
said that the presence of more women in top decision-making and
management roles would help address the specific problems that women
farmers face, through shared understanding.
Unlike a man, the report said, a typical woman farmer has a smaller area
of land with fewer livestock; no access to bank credit; is unable to
open a bank account on her own; and is much less likely to use the
latest seed varieties and fertilisers. Beintema said that family support
is key to reaching higher positions in environments where everybody
expects women only to raise children. |
| SciDev
Mar 16, 2011 |
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| How to spot a fake whisky using its signature |
There's nothing like pouring yourself a glass of whisky: perhaps one of
the smoky, peaty wonders from the Isle of Islay, or maybe a fruity and
delicate Speyside malt. Maybe even a fiery bourbon from the US, in an
emergency. But on a few occasions each year for people who pour
themselves a glass of whisky, they get rather more than they bargained
for: a mouthful of methanol, mixed with chemicals and diluted with cold
tea that often leaves more than just a nasty hangover.
Now researchers from the University of Leicester are re-purposing
technology that is already being used to spot counterfeit medicines to
analyse the contents of liquids in bottles. The technique relies on
detecting the differences between the characteristics of light reflected
from the liquid inside the bottle or its label. A white light is shone
through the liquid and the spectrometer - originally designed for
astronomical research - analyses whether the signature matches that of
the genuine article or not.
The team believe the technology could also be applied to analyse liquids
in airports. But apart from the obvious issue of quality, there is
rather more at a stake here. Fake spirits can contain high levels of
methanol, a chemical that can cause liver damage, blindness, coma,
breathing difficulties and even death. In 2009 it was revealed that
radiocarbon dating can also be used to spot fake spirits by discovering
how much carbon-14 they contain. And liquid chromatography-mass
spectrometry has also been used to pinpoint the unique compounds present
in several delicious Trappist ales. |
| New Scientist
Mar 16, 2011 |
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