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Showing posts with label science daily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science daily. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

SCIENCE & TECH: NANOROBOTICS: THE WORLD TINIEST ENGINE

Expanding polymer-coated gold nanoparticles.
Credit: Yi Ju/University of Cambridge NanoPhotonics
Researchers have developed the world's tiniest engine -- just a few billionths of a metre in size -- which uses light to power itself. The nanoscale engine, developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge, could form the basis of future nano-machines that can navigate in water, sense the environment around them, or even enter living cells to fight disease.
The prototype device is made of tiny charged particles of gold, bound together with temperature-responsive polymers in the form of a gel. When the 'nano-engine' is heated to a certain temperature with a laser, it stores large amounts of elastic energy in a fraction of a second, as the polymer coatings expel all the water from the gel and collapse. This has the effect of forcing the gold nanoparticles to bind together into tight clusters. But when the device is cooled, the polymers take on water and expand, and the gold nanoparticles are strongly and quickly pushed apart, like a spring. The results are reported in the journal PNAS.
"It's like an explosion," said Dr Tao Ding from Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory, and the paper's first author. "We have hundreds of gold balls flying apart in a millionth of a second when water molecules inflate the polymers around them."
"We know that light can heat up water to power steam engines," said study co-author Dr Ventsislav Valev, now based at the University of Bath. "But now we can use light to power a piston engine at the nanoscale."
Nano-machines have long been a dream of scientists and public alike, but since ways to actually make them move have yet to be developed, they have remained in the realm of science fiction. The new method developed by the Cambridge researchers is incredibly simple, but can be extremely fast and exert large forces.
The forces exerted by these tiny devices are several orders of magnitude larger than those for any other previously produced device, with a force per unit weight nearly a hundred times better than any motor or muscle. According to the researchers, the devices are also bio-compatible, cost-effective to manufacture, fast to respond, and energy efficient.
Professor Jeremy Baumberg from the Cavendish Laboratory, who led the research, has named the devices 'ANTs', or actuating nano-transducers. "Like real ants, they produce large forces for their weight. The challenge we now face is how to control that force for nano-machinery applications."
The research suggests how to turn Van de Waals energy -- the attraction between atoms and molecules -- into elastic energy of polymers and release it very quickly. "The whole process is like a nano-spring," said Baumberg. "The smart part here is we make use of Van de Waals attraction of heavy metal particles to set the springs (polymers) and water molecules to release them, which is very reversible and reproducible."
The team is currently working with Cambridge Enterprise, the University's commercialisation arm, and several other companies with the aim of commercialising this technology for microfluidics bio-applications.
The research is funded as part of a UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) investment in the Cambridge NanoPhotonics Centre, as well as the European Research Council (ERC).

SCIENCE DAILY: EARTH MAY BE HOME TO 1 TRILLION SPECIES

Rendering of bacterium. The Earth Microbiome Project -- a global multidisciplinary project to identify microscope organisms -- has so far cataloged less than 10 million species of the estimated one trillion living on Earth.
Credit: © decade3d / Fotolia

Sunday, May 1, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: PRISTINE INNER SOLAR SYSTEM RETURNS

Artist's impression of the unique object C/2014 S3 (PANSTARRS). Observations with ESO's Very Large Telescope, and the Canada France Hawai`i Telescope, show that this is the first object to be discovered that is on a long-period cometary orbit, but that has the characteristics of a pristine inner Solar System asteroid. It may provide important clues about how the Solar System formed. Because the object has spent most of its life away from the inner Solar System it suffered very few collisions, and its surface displays few or no craters. As it formed in the same region as the Earth did, it is mostly rocky, and therefore has only very limited cometary activity.
Credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser

Saturday, April 30, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: NEWLY DISCOVERED BABY TITANOSAUR

This is a comparison of an adult Rapetosaurus, a baby Rapetosaurus and a human.
Credit: Kristi Curry Rogers
Long-necked sauropod dinosaurs include the largest animals ever to walk on land, but they hatched from eggs no bigger than a soccer ball.

SCIENCE DAILY: LIZARDS SHARE SLEEP PATTERNS WITH HUMANS

Sleeping dragon (Pogona vitticeps)Image copyrightDr Stephan Junek, Max Planck Institute for Brain
Image captionA dozing Australian bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps)
Lizards share sleep patterns with humans, according to scientists.

SCIENCE DAILY: TIM PEAKE DRIVE REMOTE ROBOT ON EARTH FROM ORBIT

BridgetImage copyrightAIRBUS DS
Image caption
The rover known as Bridget enters the "cave" at the Airbus simulation "Mars yard"
UK astronaut Tim Peake has performed a challenging remote control experiment on the International Space Station.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: BEAGLE PROBE 'SEEN IN SHARPER VIEW'


Main comparison
Image captionA more definitive shape emerges in the newly processed images

Supporting evidence that the Beagle-2 probe is sitting intact on the surface of Mars has come from a new imaging technique developed by UCL scientists.

SCIENCE DAILY: NEW DINO DISCOVERED

Sarmientosaurus head posture, brain & eye (WitmerLab): Digital renderings of the skull and reconstructed brain endocast and eye of the new titanosaurian dinosaur species Sarmientosaurus musacchioi. At left is the skull rendered semi-transparent in left side view, showing the relative size and position of the brain endocast (in blue, pink, yellow, and red) and the inferred habitual head posture. At center is the isolated brain endocast in left side view, and at right is a left/front view of the skull showing the reconstructed eyeball and its associated musculature. Scale bar equals five centimeters.
Credit: WitmerLab, Ohio University

SCIENCE DAILY: THE DWARF PLANET

This artist's concept shows the distant dwarf planet Makemake and its newly discovered moon. Makemake and its moon, nicknamed MK 2, are more than 50 times farther away than Earth is from the sun.
Credit: NASA, ESA, and A. Parker (Southwest Research Institute)
Peering to the outskirts of our solar system, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has spotted a small, dark moon orbiting Makemake, the second brightest icy dwarf planet -- after Pluto -- in the Kuiper Belt.
The moon -- provisionally designated S/2015 (136472) 1 and nicknamed MK 2 -- is more than 1,300 times fainter than Makemake. MK 2 was seen approximately 13,000 miles from the dwarf planet, and its diameter is estimated to be 100 miles across. Makemake is 870 miles wide. The dwarf planet, discovered in 2005, is named for a creation deity of the Rapa Nui people of Easter Island.
The Kuiper Belt is a vast reservoir of leftover frozen material from the construction of our solar system 4.5 billion years ago and home to several dwarf planets. Some of these worlds have known satellites, but this is the first discovery of a companion object to Makemake. Makemake is one of five dwarf planets recognized by the International Astronomical Union.
The observations were made in April 2015 with Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3. Hubble's unique ability to see faint objects near bright ones, together with its sharp resolution, allowed astronomers to pluck out the moon from Makemake's glare. The discovery was announced today in a Minor Planet Electronic Circular.
The observing team used the same Hubble technique to observe the moon as they did for finding the small satellites of Pluto in 2005, 2011, and 2012. Several previous searches around Makemake had turned up empty. "Our preliminary estimates show that the moon's orbit seems to be edge-on, and that means that often when you look at the system you are going to miss the moon because it gets lost in the bright glare of Makemake," said Alex Parker of Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colorado, who led the image analysis for the observations.
A moon's discovery can provide valuable information on the dwarf-planet system. By measuring the moon's orbit, astronomers can calculate a mass for the system and gain insight into its evolution.
Uncovering the moon also reinforces the idea that most dwarf planets have satellites.
"Makemake is in the class of rare Pluto-like objects, so finding a companion is important," Parker said. "The discovery of this moon has given us an opportunity to study Makemake in far greater detail than we ever would have been able to without the companion."
Finding this moon only increases the parallels between Pluto and Makemake. Both objects are already known to be covered in frozen methane. As was done with Pluto, further study of the satellite will easily reveal the density of Makemake, a key result that will indicate if the bulk compositions of Pluto and Makemake are also similar. "This new discovery opens a new chapter in comparative planetology in the outer solar system," said team leader Marc Buie of the Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colorado.
The researchers will need more Hubble observations to make accurate measurements to determine if the moon's orbit is elliptical or circular. Preliminary estimates indicate that if the moon is in a circular orbit, it completes a circuit around Makemake in 12 days or longer.
Determining the shape of the moon's orbit will help settle the question of its origin. A tight circular orbit means that MK 2 is probably the product of a collision between Makemake and another Kuiper Belt Object. If the moon is in a wide, elongated orbit, it is more likely to be a captured object from the Kuiper Belt. Either event would have likely occurred several billion years ago, when the solar system was young.
The discovery may have solved one mystery about Makemake. Previous infrared studies of the dwarf planet revealed that while Makemake's surface is almost entirely bright and very cold, some areas appear warmer than other areas. Astronomers had suggested that this discrepancy may be due to the sun warming discrete dark patches on Makemake's surface. However, unless Makemake is in a special orientation, these dark patches should make the dwarf planet's brightness vary substantially as it rotates. But this amount of variability has never been observed.
These previous infrared data did not have sufficient resolution to separate Makemake from MK 2. The team's reanalysis, based on the new Hubble observations, suggests that much of the warmer surface detected previously in infrared light may, in reality, simply have been the dark surface of the companion MK 2.
There are several possibilities that could explain why the moon would have a charcoal-black surface, even though it is orbiting a dwarf planet that is as bright as fresh snow. One idea is that, unlike larger objects such as Makemake, MK 2 is small enough that it cannot gravitationally hold onto a bright, icy crust, which sublimates, changing from solid to gas, under sunlight. This would make the moon similar to comets and other Kuiper Belt Objects, many of which are covered with very dark material.
When Pluto's moon Charon was discovered in 1978, astronomers quickly calculated the mass of the system. Pluto's mass was hundreds of times smaller than the mass originally estimated when it was found in 1930. With Charon's discovery, astronomers suddenly knew something was fundamentally different about Pluto. "That's the kind of transformative measurement that having a satellite can enable," Parker said.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and the European Space Agency. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.

SOURCE: SCIENCE DAILY

SCIENCE DAILY: NEARVY MASSIVE STAR EXPLOSION 30 MILLION YEARS AGO EQUALED DETONATION OF 100 MILLION SUNS

A giant star that exploded 30 million years ago was one of the closest to Earth in recent years to go supernova, say astrophysicists at Southern Methodist University, Dallas. It was visible as a point of light in the night sky. This image of Supernova 2013ej shows the star at peak explosion.
Credit: Govinda Dhungana, SMU

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: MAMMAL-LIKE REPTILES SURVIVED WITH MAMMALS

Tritylodontids are the last known family of near-mammalian reptiles, before mammals with features such as advanced hearing evolved. Researchers have uncovered dozens of fossilized teeth in Kuwajima, Japan and identified this as a new species of tritylodontid. This suggests that tritylodontids co-existed with some of the earliest mammal species for millions of years.
Credit: Seishi Yamamoto/Hiroshige Matsuoka

Saturday, April 23, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: STUDY OF CHIMPANZEE EXPLORES EARLY ORIGINS OF HUMAN HAND DEXTERITY

A chimpanzee in Kibale National Park, Uganda, initiates a series of sensory assessments to evaluate the edibility of figs. Sensory assessment entailed manual palpation to discern softness (elastic deformation).
Credit: Photo by Alain Houle

SCIENCE DAILY: HOW SKELETAL STEM CELLS FORM THE BLUEPRINT OF THE FACE

A three-day-old zebrafish head skeleton with newly differentiated cartilage cells (magenta) emerges from a pool of skeletal progenitor cells (green).
Credit: Lindsey Barske/Crump Lab

SCIENCE DAILY: SENTINELS IN CONSTANT WATCH ON MIGHTY POLAR GLACIERS

NioghalvfjerdsfjordenImage copyrightCOPERNICUS/ESA/CPOM/LEEDS
Image captionNioghalvfjerdsfjorden flows off northeast Greenland
The EU's Sentinel satellite system has begun monitoring six mighty polar glaciers in near real-time.

Friday, April 22, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: WHERE THE BRAIN RECOGNIZES FACIAL EXPRESSIONS

Test subjects in an Ohio State University study were shown a series of photographs of different facial expressions. Researchers pinpointed an area of the brain that is specifically attuned to picking up key muscle movements (here, labeled AU for 'action units') that combine to express emotion.
Credit: Image courtesy of The Ohio State University

SCIENCE DAILY: MICROSCOPIC 'CLOCKS' TIME DISTANCE TO SOURCE OF GALACTIC COSMIC RAYS

Vast bubble in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy to the Milky Way visible from the Southern Hemisphere, was formed by the explosive death of one or more of the cluster of massive stars inside the bubble. Cosmic rays reaching Earth are created and accelerated by similar explosions.
Credit: Gemini South Telescope in Chile. Composite by Travis Rector of the University of Alaska Anchorage

Thursday, April 21, 2016

SCIENCE DAILY: AN EARTH-LIKE PLANET ONLY SIXTEEN LIGHT YEARS AWAY?

An artistic representation of Gliese 832 c against a stellar nebula background. A new paper says Gliese 832 might be home to another planet similar to this, but in the habitable zone. Credit: Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico, Arecibo, NASA/Hubble, Stellarium.
An artistic representation of Gliese 832 c against a stellar nebula background. A new paper says Gliese 832 might be home to another planet similar to this, but in the habitable zone. Credit: Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico, Arecibo, NASA/Hubble, Stellarium.
Earth may have a new neighbour, in the form of an Earth-like planet in a solar system only 16 light years away.

SCIENCE DAILY: CHAMELEON'S TONGUE GIVES UP SECRETS

The chameleon feeds by snapping out its long tongueImage copyrightSPL
Image captionThe chameleon feeds by snapping out its long tongue
Scientists have built a mathematical model to explain the secrets of the chameleon's extraordinary tongue.

SCIENCE DAILY: LARGE HADRON CAN BE 'WORLD'S LARGEST RAIN METER'

LHC diagram
Image captionThe LHC ring is 175m below the surface in places
The LHC is not just the world's most powerful particle accelerator, it could also be its biggest rain meter, scientists say.