Rabu, 11 Agustus 2010

ScienceDaily Technology Headlines

for Wednesday, August 11, 2010

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Electron transport: Study of electron orbits in multilayer graphene finds unexpected energy gaps (August 11, 2010) -- Researchers have taken one more step toward understanding the unique and often unexpected properties of graphene, a two-dimensional carbon material that has attracted interest because of its potential applications in future generations of electronic devices. ... > full story

Optical imaging technique for angioplasty (August 11, 2010) -- A new optical imaging technique holds the potential to greatly improve angioplasty, a surgery commonly performed to treat patients with a partially or completely blocked coronary artery that restricts blood flow to the heart. ... > full story

Motion-tracking technology reduces injuries for older adults (August 11, 2010) -- Motion-tracking technology provides images and detailed data that helps patients, physicians and therapists better visualize movements as patients exercise. The visual feedback allows physicians and therapists to monitor recovery and adapt treatment plans, as well as give the patient a better picture of movements that can be dangerous, reducing the chance of future injuries and re-hospitalization. ... > full story

New sensor technology to make it easier and safer for spacecraft to rendezvous and dock to International Space Station (August 11, 2010) -- It was a perfect STORRM. On Tuesday, July 20, NASA and its industry partners, Lockheed Martin Space Systems and Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., successfully demonstrated a new sensor technology that will make it easier and safer for spacecraft to rendezvous and dock to the International Space Station. ... > full story

Buried silver nanoparticles improve organic transistors (August 10, 2010) -- Out of sight is not out of mind for a group of Hong Kong researchers who have demonstrated that burying a layer of silver nanoparticles improves the performance of their organic electronic devices without requiring complex processing. ... > full story

Neurochip technology developed: Advances to further brain research of diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's (August 10, 2010) -- Scientists who proved it is possible to cultivate a network of brain cells that reconnect on a silicon chip -- or the brain on a microchip -- have been involved in the development of new technology that monitors brain cell activity at a resolution never achieved before. ... > full story

World's tiniest mirror (August 10, 2010) -- Just as the path of photons of light can be directed by a mirror, atoms possessing a magnetic moment can be controlled using a magnetic mirror. New research investigates the feasibility of using magnetic domain walls to direct and ultimately trap individual atoms in a cloud of ultracold atoms. ... > full story

College undergrads study ineffectively on computers, study finds: Students transfer bad study habits from paper to screen (August 10, 2010) -- Despite the prevalence of technology on college campuses, a new study indicates that computers alone can't keep students from falling into the same old weak study habits. ... > full story

Plastic computer memory device that utilizes electron spin to read and write data: Alternative to traditional semiconductors (August 10, 2010) -- Researchers have demonstrated the first plastic computer memory device that utilizes the spin of electrons to read and write data. An alternative to traditional microelectronics, so-called "spintronics" could store more data in less space, process data faster, and consume less power. ... > full story

New strategy to fix a broken heart: Scaffold supports stem cell-derived cardiac muscle cells (August 10, 2010) -- Engineers and physicians have built a scaffold that supports the growth and integration of stem cell-derived cardiac muscle cells. The scaffold supports the growth of cardiac cells in the lab and encourages blood vessel growth in living animals. ... > full story

Cold atoms image microwave fields (August 10, 2010) -- Microwaves are an essential part of modern communication technology. Mobile phones and laptops, for example, are equipped with integrated microwave circuits for wireless communication. Sophisticated techniques for measurement and characterization of microwave fields are an essential tool for the development of such circuits. A novel technique allows for the direct and complete imaging of microwave magnetic fields with high spatial resolution. ... > full story

Brain's wiring: More like the Internet than a pyramid? (August 10, 2010) -- Neuroscientists have traced circuits in part of the rat brain and find no sign of a top-down hierarchy. The distributed network of the Internet may be a better model, they say. ... > full story

EEG predicts response to medication for schizophrenia (August 10, 2010) -- Engineering and health sciences researchers have applied machine learning to EEG patterns and successfully predicted how patients with schizophrenia would respond to clozapine therapy. ... > full story

Help from the dark side: Using 'dark channel' fluorescence, scientists can explain how biochemical substances carry out their function (August 10, 2010) -- By using X-ray absorption spectroscopy, researchers in Germany have observed the moving of electric charges from solute to solvent (electron transfer). They can even make assertions on the temporal sequence of this process. As one example, they can find out how solute biochemical substances carry out their microscopic functions in their natural environment at room temperature and normal pressure. Until recently, studying such systems by soft X-ray radiation has not been possible. ... > full story

Turning down the noise in graphene (August 9, 2010) -- Researchers have developed the first model of signal-to-noise-ratios for low frequency noises in graphene on silica. Their results show noise patterns that run just the opposite of noise patterns in other electronic materials. ... > full story

Fresh insight into the origins of Planet Earth (August 9, 2010) -- For the first time, an international team of researchers has incorporated extensive geochemical data on the formation of Earth into a model -- with surprising results: more models can be used for the process of Earth's accretion than previously assumed. ... > full story

New methods, new math speed detection of drug-resistant malaria (August 9, 2010) -- Researchers developed techniques to quickly identify evolution of drug resistance in strains of malaria. Their goal is to enable the medical community to react quickly to inevitable resistance and thereby save lives while increasing the lifespan of drugs used against the disease. ... > full story

Compact microscope a marvel: Matches performance of expensive lab gear in diagnosing TB (August 9, 2010) -- New research shows that a portable, battery-operated fluorescence microscope, which costs 0, stacks up nicely against devices that retail for as much as ,000 in diagnosing signs of tuberculosis. ... > full story

Prosthesis with information at its fingertips: Hand prosthesis that eases phantom pain (August 9, 2010) -- The pain of losing a body part is twofold, as patients not only suffer from wound pain. Often they are also affected by so called phantom pain. Unlike bodily wounds which will eventually heal, phantom pain often lasts for years and sometimes a lifetime. Now scientists in Germany have modified conventional hand prostheses in order to reduce phantom pain after an underarm amputation. ... > full story

Engineers use rocket science to make wastewater treatment sustainable (August 9, 2010) -- Engineers are developing a new sewage treatment process that would increase the production of two greenhouse gases -- nitrous oxide and methane -- and use those gases to power the treatment plant. Applying rocket technology, they hope to make the process energy neutral and emissions free. ... > full story

Robots created that develop emotions in interaction with humans (August 9, 2010) -- The first prototype robots capable of developing emotions as they interact with their human caregivers and expressing a whole range of emotions have been finalized by researchers. ... > full story

Kinked nanopores slow DNA passage for easier sequencing (August 9, 2010) -- In an innovation critical to improved DNA sequencing, a markedly slower transmission of DNA through nanopores has been achieved. ... > full story

Highly directional terahertz laser rays created: Semiconductor laser suitable for security screening, chemical sensing and astronomy (August 9, 2010) -- Scientists have demonstrated a new terahertz (THz) semiconductor laser that emits beams with a much smaller divergence than conventional THz laser sources. The advance opens the door to a wide range of applications in terahertz science and technology. Harvard has filed a broad patent on the invention. ... > full story

Spin ice used to examine exotic properties of magnetic systems (August 9, 2010) -- Spin ice can be used to examine exotic properties of magnetic systems. Surprising observations have been made by physicists using magnetic islands only micrometers in size that are placed on a periodic lattice with honeycomb symmetry. When a magnetic field is applied, the system selects an unexpectedly ordered state, hazarding the consequences of having the like poles of the magnets (all south or all north) close together which is energetically unfavorable. ... > full story

Scientists post lower speed limit for cell-signaling protein assembly (August 9, 2010) -- The apparently random self-assembly of molecular threads into the proteins that make the body work is far less frantic than previously thought, scientists say. That discovery could be a key to help unlock the nature of some diseases. How proteins spontaneously "fold" from wiggling chains of amino acids into a wide variety of functional -- or malfunctioning -- 3-D molecules is one of the biggest mysteries in biochemistry. ... > full story

Telemedicine for maintaining health of oil rig workers (August 9, 2010) -- Without hands-on access to doctors and hospitals, oil rig workers who become sick or injured increasingly rely on telemedicine "visits" with physicians and specialists on land, a trend explored in detail in a new article. ... > full story

Africa cell phone boom beneficial -- but schools, roads, power, water remain critical needs (August 9, 2010) -- Can Africa's cell-phone boom transform the impoverished continent? An economist has seen the impact firsthand in his native Kenya. New research has found, however, that cell phones alone can't drive economic development. They require a regulatory environment that fosters cell phone use, plus critical investments in complementary physical and human capital such as roads, power, water and schooling. ... > full story

Cricket Legend Bradman Stands Test of Time (August 9, 2010) -- The late Sir Donald Bradman has had his cricketing prowess put to the test by academics. And following a highly sophisticated mathematical analysis of the batting record of Sir Donald, experts found that Bradman retains his crown as the greatest batsman in history. ... > full story

Rushing too fast to online learning? Outcomes of Internet versus face-to-face instruction (August 8, 2010) -- A new study suggests simply putting traditional classes online may have negative consequences, especially for lower-performing and minority students. ... > full story

NASA's great observatories witness a galactic spectacle (August 8, 2010) -- A new image of two tangled galaxies has been released by NASA's Great Observatories. The Antennae galaxies, located about 62 million light-years from Earth, are shown in a new composite image from the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the Hubble Space Telescope, and the Spitzer Space Telescope. The Antennae galaxies take their name from the long, antenna-like arms seen in wide-angle views of the system. These features were produced in the collision. ... > full story

Mimicking the moon's surface in the basement (August 7, 2010) -- A team of scientists used an ion beam in a basement room at Los Alamos National Laboratory to simulate solar winds on the surface of the moon. The table-top simulation helped confirm that the moon is inherently dry. ... > full story

Timely technology sees tiny transitions (August 7, 2010) -- Scientists can detect the movements of single molecules by using fluorescent tags or by pulling them in delicate force measurements, but only for a few minutes. A new technique will allow them to track single molecules without modifying them -- and it works over longer timescales. ... > full story

Nuclear physicists study 'magic' nature of tin (August 7, 2010) -- The metal tin lacks the value and prestige of gold, silver and platinum, but to nuclear physicists, tin is magic. Physicists recently reported studies on the metal tin that add knowledge to a concept known as magic numbers while perhaps helping scientists to explain how heavy elements are made in exploding stars. ... > full story

Selenium makes more efficient solar cells (August 6, 2010) -- By embedding the element selenium in zinc oxide, researchers have made a relatively inexpensive material that could be promising for solar power conversion by making more efficient use of the sun's energy. ... > full story

Reading zip codes of 3,500-year-old letters: Non-destructive X-ray scanning of archaeological finds (August 6, 2010) -- A researcher in Israel uses a hand-held device based on x-ray fluorescence, a device that can be found in many chemistry labs, to non-destructively ascertain the chemical composition of ancient tablets. Using an index that he's developed, he can determine the geographical origin of coins, ancient plasters, glass and tablets to investigate the secrets of ancient history. ... > full story

Robot climbs walls (August 6, 2010) -- Wielding two claws, a motor and a tail that swings like a grandfather clock's pendulum, a small robot named ROCR ("rocker") scrambles up a carpeted, 8-foot wall in just over 15 seconds -- the first such robot designed to climb efficiently and move like human rock climbers or apes swinging through trees. ... > full story

'Asynchronous telepsychiatry' found effective for assessing patients' mental health (August 6, 2010) -- A new study has found that psychiatrists can accurately assess a patient's mental health by viewing videotaped interviews that are sent to them for consultation and treatment recommendations. ... > full story

Artificial bee eye gives insight into insects’ visual world (August 6, 2010) -- Despite their tiny brains, bees have remarkable navigation capabilities based on their vision. Now scientists have recreated a light-weight imaging system mimicking a honeybee's field of view, which could change the way we build mobile robots and small flying vehicles. ... > full story

Nanofluidic 'multi-tool' separates and sizes nanoparticles (August 6, 2010) -- Researchers have engineered a nanoscale fluidic device that functions as a miniature "multi-tool" for working with nanoparticles-objects whose dimensions are measured in nanometers, or billionths of a meter. ... > full story

Quantum networks advance with entanglement of photons, solid-state qubits (August 5, 2010) -- A team of physicists has achieved the first-ever quantum entanglement of photons and solid-state materials. The work marks a key advance toward practical quantum networks, as the first experimental demonstration of a means by which solid-state quantum bits, or "qubits," can communicate with one another over long distances. ... > full story

Computer scientists build 'pedestrian remover' (August 5, 2010) -- Imagine encountering leashed dogs without dog walkers, or shoes filled just with ankles -- when scoping out potential apartments using Google Street View. These are the sorts of visual hiccups that an experimental computer vision system occasionally generates when it automatically removes individual pedestrians from images that populate Google Street View. ... > full story

Unprecedented look at oxide interfaces reveals unexpected structures on atomic scale (August 5, 2010) -- Thin layers of oxide materials and their interfaces have been observed in atomic resolution during growth for the first time by researchers, providing new insight into the complicated link between their structure and properties. ... > full story

Physicists use offshoot of string theory to describe puzzling behavior of superconductors (August 5, 2010) -- Physicists have now used the connection between quantum and gravitational mechanics, known as gauge/gravity duality to describe a specific physical phenomenon -- the behavior of a type of high-temperature superconductor, or a material that conducts electricity with no resistance. ... > full story

Seeing a stellar explosion in 3D (August 5, 2010) -- Astronomers using ESO's Very Large Telescope have for the first time obtained a three-dimensional view of the distribution of the innermost material expelled by a recently exploded star. The original blast was not only powerful, according to the new results. It was also more concentrated in one particular direction. This is a strong indication that the supernova must have been very turbulent, supporting the most recent computer models. ... > full story

Invisibility cloak advance: New findings promising for 'transformation optics' (August 5, 2010) -- Researchers have overcome a fundamental obstacle in using new "metamaterials" for radical advances in optical technologies, including ultra-powerful microscopes and computers and a possible invisibility cloak. ... > full story

Taking the twinkle out of the night sky: Breakthrough in adaptive optics (August 5, 2010) -- A team of astronomers has developed a technique that allows them to switch off star twinkling over a wide field of view, enabling Earth-based telescopes to obtain images as crisp as those taken with the Hubble Space Telescope -- and much more quickly. ... > full story

Fast forensic test can match suspects' DNA with crime samples in four hours (August 5, 2010) -- A newly developed test could make checking DNA from people arrested for crimes with DNA samples from crime scenes stored in forensic databases almost as easy as matching fingerprints. With the test, police could check on whether a person's DNA matches that found at past crime scenes while suspects are still being processed and before a decision on whether to release them on bail. ... > full story

Gaming for a cure: Computer gamers tackle protein folding (August 5, 2010) -- Computer scientists and biochemists two years ago launched an ambitious project harnessing the brainpower of computer gamers to solve medical problems. Results now show more than 55,000 players have played protein-folding Tetris, and beat the world's most powerful computers on problems that required radical moves, risks and long-term vision. ... > full story


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