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Nanoneedles and Nanodots...

Scanning electron mictographs of a uniform array of conical Polysilicon nanoneedles, with a < 100nm tip diameter, 600nm base diameter, 5 micron length and 2 micron pitch (Courtesy ACS Nano).


Topics: Biology, Nanotechnology, Photolithography, Quantum Dots


Biocompatible silicon nanoneedles, which can efficiently deliver nucleic acids and nanoparticles into biological cells without damaging them, have been developed by an international team of researchers. The porous needles are capable of delivering these drugs into live cells that are normally difficult to penetrate, and the technique could help damaged organs and nerves to repair themselves, and could also act as intracellular pH sensors.

The researchers, based at Imperial College London and the Houston Methodist Research Institute in Texas, made their nanoneedles using photolithography techniques. The structures can be patterned onto standard silicon chips in different ways, and the length and width of the needles can also be adjusted. Because they are porous, they can be made to take up a significantly greater amount of nucleic acid, nanoparticles and other therapeutics. Importantly, the porous silicon from which they are made is biocompatible – unlike ordinary silicon – and it clears the body in about two days, without leaving behind any toxic residue.

The plasma membrane and "endo-lysosomal compartment" of a cell are major biological barriers that limit the therapeutic efficiency of many drug-delivery vehicles by preventing nanostructures from entering the cells. According to team member Ennio Tasciotti from the Department of Nanomedicine at the Houston Methodist Research Institute, the new nanoeedles can "successfully deliver nucleic acids into cells, bypassing their plasma membrane and endo-lysosomal compartments without damaging the cell".

Physics World: Silicon 'nanoneedles' deliver nanodots and nucleic acids, Belle Dumé

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The Calendar...

Image Source: ACGHS.org


Topics: Anniversary, Calendar Quirk, Diversity in Science, Mother's Day (originally posted 7 May)


Given time, you may notice the calendar repeats itself quite literally every six years - date and day of the date.

Today (7 May), I lost my mother six years ago. I'm currently in the process of moving to another apartment. I've gained appreciation for the expression "tote that barge; lift that bail!" as engineering and science textbooks can be quite hefty!

Staying busy will keep me focused on the task at hand. A few things I'll never forget:

The impressive explosion I made with my chemistry set wasn't enough to discourage me from science. I did notice however, my mother and father made sure to buy erector sets, electronics kits, a microscope, a telescope, tool boxes...i.e., things that couldn't blow up! I also noticed the absence of the chemistry set in about two years.

You can never forget the loss of your parent, no matter how hard you might try. The next day, I saw the reboot of Star Trek: Mr. Spock lost his mother in spectacular fashion. I at least didn't lose my planet to a vengeful Romulan (not much of a spoiler since it's out on DVD).

I don't think its for humans to forget, just remember and honor the sacrifices made to make you successful in wherever you are in life.

For her sacrifices, for her love, I am grateful to have been her son. I will always love her.

I'll be unpacking from the move, so hopefully I'll get back online Monday. Enjoy the following related posts:

#P4TC:
Dear Mrs. Flynt...January 17, 2014
Mother's Day (repost)...May 12, 2013
Identity Crisis...August 15, 2012

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10th Annual GLYPH Comics Awards 2015

Friday May 15, 2015
at 6:00pm - 9:00pm in EDT

The African American Museum in Philadelphia

701 Arch St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106
Free Admission for Reception only
 
 We will honor comic book excellence by presenting the Glyph Comics Awards, which recognizes the best in comics made either by, for, or about African-descended people. While the recipients of these awards are not exclusively authors and artists of African descent, the Glyph Comics Awards does its best to honor and recognize those creators making great contributions to the African image in graphic novels, comic strips, and comic books. By doing so, we hope to encourage more diverse and high-quality work across the board and to inspire new creators to add their voices to the field.

Last year was my first year attending and I won the GLYPH Award for the "BEST COMIC STRIP or WEB COMIC" for my franchise THE ADIGUN OGUNSANWO™. I was in shock but enjoyed the accolades towards my work and the fact that it was given by an organization dedicated to promoting the hard work and creativity of Sci Fi and Fantasy creatives of the African diasporia.
ENJOY BSFS Peeps
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Dissapointed that I am not going this year, but next year looks bright. If you are in Philladelphia, and able to attend I HIGHLY suggest you check it out. The PRIME place to meet, greet, purchase, and feel the love of Black Comic Creators, AFRIcoz Play, Workshops and Seminars. Save them Duckets until....

Saturday May 16, 2015.

at 11:00am - 7:00pm in EDT

The Enterprise Center

4548 Market St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19139
$10.00 admission (Free for Youth 12 and under with paid Adult ticket)

The East Coast Black Age of Comics Convention, originally slated to be called the Pan-African Comic Convention (PAC-Con) or First World Komix Con (1st World Con), is an annual gathering of comic book artists, writers, their fans and retailers who are interested in discussing, buying and selling comic books, sci-fi, action figures and related material by and / or about Black superheroes / super-powered characters / adventures. In addition, the Convention also features panel discussions, self-publishing and graphic arts workshops for aspiring creators, and film screenings of works of veterans and amateurs alike.

Tentative workshops: Writing, Drawing, and the Business of Comics. Workshops are free to attendees with the price of admission. There will also be multiple panel discussions and an all-day marketplace to buy and sell comic books and related items.
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MINORITY REPORT
FOX MINORITY REPORT

By Tambay A. Obenson | Shadow and Act 

May 11, 2015 at 5:42PM

Fox has finalized its 2015/2016 lineup, ordering to series, a small screen version of the sci-fi movie based on the 1956 Philip K. Dick science fiction short story, "The Minority Report," which starred Tom Cruise, and was directed by Steven Spielberg.

Fox's TV series version will be set 10 years after the events of the film, which concluded with law enforcement’s Precrime division being disbanded. In the show, a female detective who is haunted by her past, teams up with a Precog that's still plagued by visions (similar to the movie, although the genders of each character have been swapped).

Meagan Good stars as the female detective - Lara Vega. Stark Sands will play the Precog.

They are joined in the series by Wilmer Valderrama, Daniel London, Laura Regan, Li Jun Li and Zhane Hall.

Max Borenstein ("Godzilla") wrote the pilot. Kevin Falls is the showrunner and an executive producer along with Justin Falvey and Darryl Frank. 

The pilot is from Amblin Television and Paramount Television in association with Twentieth Century Fox TV.

"Minority Report" will air on Monday nights after "Gotham," on Fox.

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Some projects resonate with me more than others. I assume it's the same way with most artists and authors. When one does, it shows up in my work, which may explain why this cover has a bit of a different look for me. More of an edge that was TOTALLY unplanned.
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Luckily for me, Amanda liked it in the first draft, even though it wasn't precisely what we had outlined in our project planning live chat.
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Behind Those Eyes is actually to be a second edition. New cover, revised text.
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So without further ado ...
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blurb:
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Two homeless men, a successful brother and sister, a woman falling in love, a man with family problems, a policeman and a whole lot of twists in this 'sliding doors' style novella.
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It’s a story about people and adversity, love, friendship and stigma.
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Will you work out what they have in common?
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reviews:
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5*  “In style this is one of those stories I used to seek out on the New Yorker website. It's rough, with a shot of reality and definitely makes you stop to think a lot ... her observations seem authentic and much more local.” 
~Ilze Powell on Goodreads.com
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5* “... Unable to put it down. I totally got the humanity of it too… a fantastic read with excellently true to life characters.”
~Hamble O’Mara on Amazon.co.uk
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5* “... For where some writers might choose this difficult topic to teach or preach you showed us the heart of the matter from the inside out and back again!”
~Paula Rose Michelson on Amazon.com
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5* “The highest point of this novella, for me, is that the author gives a voice to people who are mostly unheard, unseen, or rejected, silenced”
~Renata Barcelos on Amazon.co.uk 
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Be sure to find Amanda online to stay updated:
Onto wrapping up the next book :-D
Until next time ...
This post edited by Grammarly* ~ NOW FREE FOR CHROME USERS!
*Blurbs and quotes provided are not edited by WillowRaven, but posted as provided by author/publisher. 
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Accelerators...

Image Source: Rob's capibara.com techblog

Topics: Accelerators, Particle Physics, Physics Humor, Semiconductor Technology, STEM

It's interesting most don't know how particle accelerators were "born" and how they affect our everyday lives. I happen to work in a semiconductor manufacturing facility - AKA a wafer "fab" (short for fabrication) facility. The accelerators I see often are called Ion implanters, which in device physics is how an impurity is introduced into a semiconductor's energy band gap - usually rather wide as it would appear in nature (Silicon, Germanium) otherwise, you wouldn't have your laptop or smartphone; your microwave, essentially everything electronic around us we normally take for granted.

Particle accelerators even have a fun history of their beginnings, or as you've probably experienced in a high school physics class - a Van de Graaff Generator. It's more fun if you (ahem, unlike me) have hair...

American Institute of Physics: History of Accelerators

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Promotional Shot of Michael B. Jordan as Johnnie Storm in the new reboot of FANTASTIC FOUR. out in August. I am amped-up to see this yo! The fact that Susan is adaoped,  Johnnie's father is old man Storm that is the director of the program that creates these heroes, and Ben Grim is not a product of Yancy Street in Brooklyn are all factors that peeks my intrest. I am not one to like european characters in blackface and still have my researve opinions about the STORM mega mix. But I still want to give my old fav Marvel characters a chance to burn out our OLD preconceived perceptions of this elemental group. Your opinions are welcomed. chat it up BSFS peeps.

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TV Director and creator of the Legend of the Mantamaji graphic novel series launched a 12 episode web series this week as a lead up to the Legend of the Mantamaji Live Action Short release.

The 12 episode series follows TV Director Eric Dean Seaton and his production team during three days of filming, as he creates a live action short based on the critically-acclaimed graphic novel series, “Legend of the Mantamaji.”

According to BlackGirlNerds.com's exclusive story on the release: “I wanted a fun and different way for people to see what the Mantamaji can do and what the story is about,” Seaton said. “The behind the scenes offers more information on the series, the passion behind the idea and what it takes to bring a graphic novel to life.”

The 1st episode is 4 minutes long, the other episodes are 2 minutes long and are published weekly leading up to the release of the Live Action Short.

From Alex Widen of Examiner.com: "The short aims to translate the beginning of the first volume of "Legend of the Mantamaji" to life, and it is here where having a creator with a vast knowledge of TV direction and production is key. The comic itself often doubled as an incredibly detailed storyboard in terms of action sequences, and the costume designs of both the heroes and villains work as both a two dimensional comic as well as practically created suits for a live action production.

"Legend of the Mantamaji" is the result of six years worth of effort from creator/writer Eric Dean Seaton, artist Brandon Palas, colorist Andrew Dalhouse, and letterer Deron Bennett. Across three graphic novels, it chronicles the story of arrogant New York district attorney Elijah Alexander who discovers he's the last of an ancient race of mystical warriors while also stumbling into the centuries long scheme of an ageless sorcerer who's manipulated both the public and organized crime. The graphic novels were released from October 2014 - February 2015 and can be easily purchased from the main website as well as other venues such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble. The series was nominated for a Glyph Award last month. The release of this short in the summer should increase the profile of this incredible work."

Watch the first episode of "Legend of the Mantamaji: Behind the Scenes" here:

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Europe To The Moon...

The European Space Agency has been looking at what it takes to construct a moon outpost.
Credit: ESA/ Foster + Partners


Topics: European Space Agency, Humor, ISS, Moon Colony, Space Exploration


Living on our closest neighbor has some advantages. I've seen articles about how long-term radiation would alter our astronauts' brains on a trip to Mars, for example. There's a low probability of getting "super powers," e,g. the fictional "Fantastic Four," but an extreme likelihood of dying prematurely - a rather unpleasant outcome for the astronauts and their families. The International Space Station does have shielding, but its exposure to radiation is by far not as harsh as would be encountered by a crew on an interplanetary flight. We'll have to come up with some knew design configurations/materials for shielding, and being a mere 238,900 miles (384,400 km) from Earth is probably a good place to start. Although I must admit: the representative photo looks like a graphic from a "Doctor Who" episode (explain to your non-nerd friends if that completely went over their heads).

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado — The incoming leader of the European Space Agency is keen on establishing an international base on the moon as a next-step outpost beyond the International Space Station (ISS).

Johann-Dietrich Wörner expressed his enthusiasm for a moon colony at the Space Foundation’s National Space Symposium, a gathering of global, commercial, civil, military and "new space" experts that was held here from April 13 to April 16.

"It seems to be appropriate to propose a permanent moon station as the successor of ISS," Wörner said. This station should be international, "meaning that the different actors can contribute with their respective competencies and interests." [Living on the Moon: What It Would Be Like (Infographic)]

Space.com:
Europe's Next Space Chief Wants a Moon Colony on the Lunar Far Side,
Leonard David

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Liquid Nanolaser...

Image Source: Wienberg College of Arts and Sciences


Topics: Chemistry, Laser, Nanotechnology, Semiconductor Technology


EVANSTON, Ill. --- Northwestern University scientists have developed the first liquid nanoscale laser. And it’s tunable in real time, meaning you can quickly and simply produce different colors, a unique and useful feature. The laser technology could lead to practical applications, such as a new form of a “lab on a chip” for medical diagnostics.

To understand the concept, imagine a laser pointer whose color can be changed simply by changing the liquid inside it, instead of needing a different laser pointer for every desired color.

In addition to changing color in real time, the liquid nanolaser has additional advantages over other nanolasers: it is simple to make, inexpensive to produce and operates at room temperature.

Nanoscopic lasers -- first demonstrated in 2009 -- are only found in research labs today. They are, however, of great interest for advances in technology and for military applications.

“Our study allows us to think about new laser designs and what could be possible if they could actually be made,” said Teri W. Odom, who led the research. “My lab likes to go after new materials, new structures and new ways of putting them together to achieve things not yet imagined. We believe this work represents a conceptual and practical engineering advance for on-demand, reversible control of light from nanoscopic sources.”

Northwestern University: Northwest Scientists Develop First Liquid Nanolaser, Megan Fellman

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Omerta...

Image Source: Memes.com


Topics: #BlackLivesMatter, Baltimore, Commentary, Civil Rights, Economy


We are inheriting what we have sown in the wind. Charlotte, North Carolina; Sanford, Florida; Staten Island, New York; Ferguson, Missouri; Baltimore, Maryland: Angela Davis dropped the mike on this ages ago.

Last Wednesday was the 23rd anniversary of the Rodney King riots. There have been riots since then. There have been Rodney Kings, Trayvon Martins, Jordan Davis'...ad nauseum. My post last Tuesday was similar to my complaint of Occupy Wall Street: web sites are generally informative and entertaining. The Tea Party have that, and got some of their "believers/insane inmates" elected to public office. That trumps web sites, no matter how much smarter you are. The Bernie Sanders endorsement is a noted recent exception. Equivalently, the wanton violence as I stated was understandable, but neither strategic or politic. In Hegelian theory: thesis - antithesis - synthesis - King was "thesis"; Malcolm was "antithesis"; The Civil Rights and Voting Rights and Fair Housing Acts were the "synthesis." This dialectic logic is absent from any goal or strategies I see thus far. Now,"thug" is the new n-word as Stanford Honor Graduate and NFL champion Richard Sherman pointed out, and has sadly been misused by the powerful that should know better.

These are the "chickens that have come home to roost" (Malcolm X quote) in America. The systematic dumbing down of American education is deliberate; the collective powers of critical thinking reduced to cliché, jingoism and sloganeering. Our stupidity is being engineered to devastating effects economically and nationally. We will soon not be able to compete globally.

What we're not asking since the greatest financial meltdown post the Great Depression is why we're testing our youth to the point educators feel they have to cheat to get them through, and, unlike Wall Street thugs - an appropriate label given the magnitude of the malfeasance, the teachers were convicted for their crimes; the Wall Street thugs were not.

SIX multinational companies control everything entertaining and informative - print media, the Internet, radio, music channels - that we see and hear, and thus think. The fact that the "successful" presidential candidate from either major party has to now raise a billion dollars to win a $400,000 job means our democratic republic is a broken memory; its only balm our participation.

What does ALL this have to do with Baltimore and Freddy Gray?

This: Every trade policy since 1980 has focused on one thing: increasing corporate profits. That has resulted in a pretty steady formula recited like a cult mantra: tax cuts. Locally, it siphons funds from municipalities that must gather funds by other means, usually by harassment of the poor and on the backs of the dwindling middle class. It is a policy devoid of any regard for not just ethnic underclasses, but citizens as a whole, exacerbating income inequality; turning the wage gap into an echoing canyon. When corporate taxes are either cut or deferred, everyone becomes members of the "taxed enough already" party, yet few realize their libertarian rants are being orchestrated by the same entities that benefit from it; the poor in rural and urban neighborhoods alike suffering the most from this dodge. Roads are not repaired; schools, teachers and public servants (like the police) are underfunded; factory jobs are shipped overseas (no need to educate for employment that's not there); housing and office buildings are shuttered; neighborhoods either fall to crack or meth respectively, irrespective of the dominant culture present. The "Corporations are People" predates Citizen's United, piggybacking on the 14th Amendment intended to establish the personhood of African Americans, using it arrogantly for themselves. Every effort is made to maximize profit over the commodity that replaced the barter system - monetary wealth, now in ones and zeros and socked away in foreign shores' tax havens. As human chattel/capital, we are all discarded. Our police have been militarized to "protect and serve" not citizens, but oligarchy; cutting taxes has turned the beat cop of my youth into Robocop: mechanized, weaponized; ruthlessly cold and methodical. We are all targets of opportunity; "trickle-down" economics having the acrid, ammonia smell of golden-flow.

The answer is: the conditions that created the neighborhood/hood that Freddie Gray lived in were the result of decisions made in boardrooms that if they had someone that looked like Freddie, she or he probably had to "go along to get along." Beyond that boardroom and their companies Affirmative Action goals, their exclusive neighborhoods are likely that, and homogeneous. During the South's "peculiar institution," it is fact that every white person could not afford to own even one slave. They were the beneficiaries of an apartheid system - slave codes cum black codes cum poll tax cum Jim Crow - supported by domestic terrorists in white sheets who at that particular dark time wanted to "take their country back" before the humiliating surrender at Appomattox. The hierarchy of capitalism-status quo-ethnic supremacy remains intact as a Moloch altar, even for those who will never partake of the inner sanctum of the temple's wealth, and it requires an underclass on which to lay blame for all ills and obedient serfs that can easily be duped by propaganda. Like the poor southerner, they are not "them" (blacks); but believe they could be like "them" (slave owners), without any evidence they would suddenly own a plantation; a work crew and overseers with whips - or in the modern case, a multinational corporation. It was an early version of "magical thinking" without the presence of knowledge they were no different than the people they were conditioned to disdain. After the Civil War, land grabs reminiscent of the promised "40 acres and a mule" allowed the zombie devotees of inequality to benefit from government largess. In that case, reparations met out did its work, and reinforced the system still in effect. Now of course, the "other" include Hispanics, LGBT, Women's Rights - any shell to shift on the table in the great game. Now of course, Freddie "broke his own back" - a LIE, the typical leak to the aforementioned concentrated media; the scripted attack on the dead like an act of social necrophilia. I held my breath baited Friday when the promised release of information on his death was instead turned over to the district attorney - I was pleasantly surprised. The second prisoner in the van along with Freddy will hopefully not also have his character assassinated on this side of the grave as this flagrant canard failed to deliver.

The technology of mobile devices simply reveals what used to exist as rumor and innuendo. Hence, states like Texas are moving to outlaw that 1st Amendment Right (they can apparently only count to and count the 2nd). Sadly related, the state possesses far more firepower than any anarchist. What the powerful fear is the vote; what they fear is civics knowledge propagated and acted upon; what they fear most is accountability and that any reparations - fairly distributed - goes not to merely a culture, but a number: 99%. Until there is a reckoning on this point of ignored history, until we can seize our rightful place in governing a democratic republic; until we can stop treating fellow humans as lesser beings, there will always be riots! Lastly, we need not spread "democracy and freedom" around the world, until we clean up our own house.

Amazon.com:
The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and American Capitalism,
Edward E. Baptist

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IceCube Neutrinos...

Image Source: Berkley Lab


Topics: Cosmic Rays, Neutrinos, Particle Physics, Quantum Mechanics


The IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole is a large array of photodetectors buried in ice. In 2013, the instrument reported signals from the highest energy neutrinos ever observed. Now, two teams of researchers have independently estimated the type, or flavor, of these neutrinos. As opposed to an earlier analysis, these new results are consistent with the neutrinos coming from cosmically large distances. Further work may begin to probe the physics going on at the neutrino sources.

APS: Synopsis: IceCube Neutrinos Pass Flavor Test, Michael Schirber
Site: IceCube Neutrino Observatory

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Bare Bones...



The Belle II detector and the upgraded accelerator SuperKEKB make up Japan’s new B factory for studying flavor physics and CP violation. Following some delays, the accelerator is set to start up next January, and full data-taking will begin in 2018.

KEK

Citation: Phys. Today 68, 4, 18 (2015); http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.2743

Topics: Fukushima Daiichi, Economy, Nuclear Physics, Nuclear Power, Research, Quantum Mechanics


Unfortunately, scientific advances costs money, along with the political will and cultivated, collective public vision to pursue it. This relates to something we're all subject to, lab and person alike: the cost of energy consumption. The National Ignition Facility or Lockheed's Skunk Works, if either or both are successful, could alleviate some concerns about power consumption of laboratories in general, and all of us in particular. If electrical power - used for heating and cooling homes and laboratories; directly related to the cost at the grocery store (the cost of the fuel truck is transferred to us by increasing prices), and the reason for "wars and rumors of wars": fossil fuels, could be generated by other means, then the human costs of commercial consumption of products and service; post-conflict warrior attrition - via death, PTSD and traumatic brain injury - would greatly decrease. We can only hope it's not opposed as vigorously as solar and renewable energy has been so far.

Getting the green light to restart accelerators and other large scientific facilities in Japan took up to three years following the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown in eastern Japan on 11 March 2011. (See Physics Today, November 2011, page 20, and November 2013, page 20.) Now tight budgets, bloated electricity prices, and a sprinkling of mishaps threaten to cripple science at the country’s world-class facilities.

Before the triple disaster, about 30% of Japan’s power came from 54 nuclear plants. Since then, as plants have come up for routine maintenance, they’ve been turned off, and none has been turned back on, although a few have been approved to do so. For a while the country had a shortage of electricity. Now, other sources, mainly fossil fuels, have been arranged, but the costs have skyrocketed: Officials at KEK, Japan’s accelerator research institute, and at RIKEN and other science facilities report that the price of electricity has gone up by 30% or more. Electricity is a big chunk of their total operating costs, so they have been forced to reduce running times.

Masanori Yamauchi, the new KEK director, notes that SuperKEKB, the B factory set to start up this year, will consume twice as much power as its predecessor. And the price per kilowatt-hour has nearly doubled. “It has a serious impact to the running schedule of the new accelerator,” he says. Studying quantum mechanical phenomena requires collecting large statistics, he adds. “The power bill problem in Japan is very unfortunate for our physics program.”

Under Japanese law certain programs are largely shielded from the rising electricity costs. Those spared are SPring-8, the synchrotron light source; materials and life sciences neutron studies at the Japan Proton Accelerator Research Complex (J-PARC); and petascale computing in Kobe. Industry makes heavy use of them—about 20% in the case of SPring-8, for instance—whereas the affected facilities are used mainly by academic researchers.

Physics Today: Scientific facilities in Japan struggle on bare-bones schedules, Toni Feder

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http://consciouslifenews.com/scientists-turn-salt-water-drinking-water-solar-power/1184500/

By inexpensively turning salt water into drinking water using sustainable solar power, a team from MIT in the US has not only come up with a portable desalination system for use anywhere in the world that needs it, but it’s just won the 2015 Desal Prize – a competition run by USAID to encourage better solutions to water shortages in developing countries.

In order to win the $140,000 prize, entries had to demonstrate how their invention not only works well, but is cost-effective, environmentally sustainable, and energy efficient. And the MIT researchers teamed up with US-based manufacturing company, Jain Irrigation Systems, to do just that.

The team’s invention works by using solar panels to charge a cache of batteries that power an electrodialysis machine that removes salt from the water and makes it perfectly drinkable.David L. Chandler explains for MIT News:

“Electrodialysis works by passing a stream of water between two electrodes with opposite charges. Because the salt dissolved in water consists of positive and negative ions, the electrodes pull the ions out of the water, Winter says, leaving fresher water at the center of the flow. A series of membranes separate the freshwater stream from increasingly salty ones.”

Solar-powered desalination plants are nothing new, and officials are investigating potential in water-poor areas such as Chile and California right now, but the technology has so far been extremely expensive to both piece together and run. And this obviously makes it difficult for developing countries to adopt. The key to the MIT plant is the electrodialysis process, says Chandler.

Read the rest of the article…

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http://consciouslifenews.com/amazing-video-shows-control-arm-somebodys-elses-arm/1184616/

Source: TED; Conscious Life News

Very few of us know much about the brain and how it works, because up through high school, our schools don’t teach neuroscience. It’s because the equipment is too complex and too costly. This means you have to go to University for to study neuroscience. Greg Gage thinks that’s a shame, because one out of five of us will have a neurological disorder in our lifetime, and there currently are no cures for these diseases.

So Greg and his university lab mate, Tim Marzulu, created a company called Backyard Brains that specialized in making DIY neuroscience equipment and allows more people to do brain experimentation.

In this fun, kind of creepy demo, the neuroscientist and TED Senior Fellow uses a simple, inexpensive DIY kit to take away the free will of an audience member. It’s not a parlor trick; it actually works. You have to see it to believe it!

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Checking out You Tube to begin my research on what Smart watch to get. I am partially drawn towards the Samsung S Gear Watch. Simply because it is compatible with my Galaxy Note and Tab, I will be able to sinc everything. But the real reason is so I can LEAVE THE PHONE AT HOME or IN THE CAR, conduct business more effectivly with out ALL the electronic baggage. But Yo Y'all check them OUT here for now and then hit me here with your comments and feedback.

THANKS BSFS Peeps!

 

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