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Thread: Duke the menace

  1. #61
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    Re: Duke the menace

    Retinal implants could restore partial vision

    In lab tests on rat retinas, a photovoltaic chip helps display images through special goggles
    By Rachel Ehrenberg
    Web edition : 4:09 pm


    Specialized goggles that send information to solar cell–like chips implanted in the eyes may one day help some blind people seeThe new implants, which have been tested in rat retinas in a dish, would require less invasive surgery than similar devices now being tested and offer a higher-resolution view of the world.

    The new system, reported online May 13 in Nature Photonics, still needs work before being tested in people. But one day it may return partial sight to people suffering from conditions such as retinitis pigmentosa, an inherited disease that can lead to night blindness and tunnel vision, or macular degeneration, in which sharp central vision is lost but peripheral vision remains.

    In those conditions, vision suffers when light-detecting cells at the back of the inner eye are damaged, even though the nerve cells that send visual information to the brain may remain intact.

    No current treatments can restore vision for such retinal damage, says Lotfi Merabet, an eye specialist at Massachusetts Eye and Ear in Boston. The new work “is certainly very promising,” he says.

    Developing the implants took many years and many scientists, says study coauthor James Loudin, an electrical engineer at Stanford University. “The sheer number of new technologies that had to be developed — it’s amazing,” he says.

    For starters, there are the goggles. A miniature video camera sits on the nosepiece, watching the world. Information from the camera streams to a portable computer about the size of a smartphone. This computer processes the video images, which are projected into the eyes by near-infrared lasers on the insides of the goggle lenses. The laser hits slender photovoltaic chips implanted beneath the retinas, which convert the light into electrical current, stimulating nerve cells that send information to the brain.

    Other labs have also designed retinal prostheses; one has been approved for use in Europe, and another is in clinical trials. But these systems transmit information and power via coils and wiring that have to be surgically implanted along with the retinal chip. Most of the hardware for the new prosthetics is in the goggles, so only the thin solar cell–like chip needs to be implanted. And because the new chip has three photodiodes per pixel rather than one, the image resolution should be better than that of other devices.

    The team was concerned that the laser light, which is far brighter than the light that working eyes see on a sunny day, would generate potentially damaging heat, says Loudin. But tests show that the heat is one-hundredth of the established ocular safety limit.

    With that issue resolved, the researchers are now testing the system on living rats.


    A system being tested in rats may partially restore sight for some blind people. A handheld computer processes images from a video camera that sits on specialized goggles. Lasers inside the goggles send that information to photovoltaic chips implanted in the eye, stimulating nerve cells that send information to the brain. The person then perceives the images seen by the camera. Credit: James Loudin/Nature Photonics

  2. #62
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    Re: Duke the menace

    Hey Duke,

    That is some really great info on the Maya wall calendar. Keep up the excellent work!


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  3. #63
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    Re: Duke the menace

    Thanks F$. Things that I see on the Sciences News page and post to share with you.

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    Re: Duke the menace


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    Re: Duke the menace


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    Re: Duke the menace

    Nice setup


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    Re: Duke the menace

    At ISEF, fusion is hot

    South Carolina teen makes finals with directed neutron source

    By Devin Powell
    Web edition : 10:34 am


    PITTSBURGH — Ben Bartlett, a 17-year-old from Lexington, S.C., built a portable nuclear fusion reactor in his parents’ house and earned himself a trip to Pittsburgh where he has a chance to take home one of the top awards later this week at the world’s largest precollege science fair.

    Nevadan Taylor Wilson won last year’s Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for a similar reactor that detected radioactive materials by spraying out subatomic particles called neutrons. Bartlett’s project goes a step further by training the neutrons to move in one direction. That directionality could be useful for fashioning intense neutron beams used in treating some kinds of advanced cancers.

    “One of the reasons why neutron therapy is only administered in a few locations is because it’s so hard to get the necessary concentration of neutrons in beams. The method of directionalization I’ve come up with … should have widespread applications in neutron therapy or any application requiring a high neutron flux,” says Bartlett, a junior at Lexington High School.

    At this year’s fair, Bartlett and more than 1,500 other students are vying for over $3 million in awards, including a top award of $75,000 to be announced on May 18. The annual event is sponsored by the Intel Foundation and administered by the Society for Science & the Public, which publishes Science News.

    Bartlett is not the first person to achieve fusion. He’s the 34th outside government and industry, he says. Neither is he the youngest. That record belongs to Wilson, who built his reactor at age 14. Would-be “fusioneers” — such as Mike Kovalchick of York, Pa., another competitor at the science fair — often start with plans posted online by the Open Source Fusor Research Consortium.

    At the heart of Bartlett’s $2,800 machine, a long shiny windowed tube that emits a pink glow when switched on, is a suspended ball of deuterium plasma. Deuterium gas injected into the chamber and stripped of its electrons crashes into the plasma. Colliding particles don’t have enough energy to overcome their natural repulsion, but a quantum mechanical effect called tunneling kicks in and allows them to sometimes fuse into helium, spitting out neutrons in the process.

    “Neutrons typically come out in all directions,” says Brenden Heidrich, a nuclear reactor physicist at Penn State. Guiding the particles in a single direction “would be very difficult to do,” he says, because neutrons are neutral — and thus ignore electromagnetic fields that can guide charged particles such as protons or electrons.

    Forming a beam typically means using shielding to block most of the radiating particles. A small hole in the shielding allows only particles moving in the right direction to escape.

    In search of a more efficient process, Bartlett figured out how to make neutrons that tend to travel in the right direction to begin with. A 140,000-volt difference from one end of the device to the other creates electric fields that change the speeds of the charged gas particles circulating within. Those moving toward the front of the tube accelerate, while those moving toward the back slow down.

    That speed difference shapes the pattern of neutrons that emerges after collisions. Bartlett’s calculations suggest that about twice as many neutrons should emerge from the front of his device as from the back. Theoretically, stronger fields that can create a larger speed difference could send all of the neutrons toward a single point, in true beamlike fashion.

    Vials of neutron-detecting fluid arrayed around the device bubbled in a pattern consistent with the math. To prove that that his device really works, though, the budding scientist will need to make some quantitative measurements, says Ronald Rogge, a physicist who works with neutrons at the National Research Council Canada’s Chalk River Laboratories in Ontario.

    “People have suggested they could get this kind of direction preference before,” but such effects tend to be very small, says Rogge.


    Ben Bartlett discusses his tabletop fusion project at the 2012 Intel International Science & Engineering Fair in Pittsburgh. Credit: Devin Powell

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    Re: Duke the menace



    Marmalade Skies

    Composite photograph courtesy NASA

    Astronaut Don Pettit recently created this psychedelic scene using a stationary camera aboard the International Space Station, about 240 miles (386 kilometers) above Earth.

    The digital composite includes 18 images stacked together to show star trails wheeling through Earth's "airglow"—light spawned by various chemical interactions in the upper atmosphere.



    Ghostly Eye

    Image courtesy Caltech/NASA

    A newly released image from NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) shows the ultraviolet glow of the Helix nebula, also called NGC 7293.

    The object is what's known as a planetary nebula, which is made from the gas and dust left over after a sunlike star dies. The dense core of the star, called a white dwarf, sits at the center of this eerie cosmic "eye."



    Glacial Tapestry

    Image courtesy Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon, USGS/NASA

    Seen in a false-color NASA satellite picture snapped in 2011, the Columbia glacier (deep blue) flows into a narrow inlet, which leads into Prince William Sound in southeastern Alaska. The region is rimmed by vegetation (green) and exposed bedrock (brown).

    The glacier has been rapidly retreating since 1980, according to NASA. Satellite images of the region—including this one—show that between 1986 and 2011, the extent of the ice shrunk by more than 12 miles (20 kilometers).



    Rings of Andromeda

    Image courtesy Caltech/NASA

    Blue-white rings create a cosmic bull's eye in this new ultraviolet picture of the Andromeda galaxy, the Milky Way's largest galactic neighbor, which sits about 2.5 million light-years away.

    Although the galaxy appears like a familiar spiral in visible light, the ultraviolet view—from NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)—shows the ring-like shapes also seen in infrared images.

    Astronomers think the rings are evidence that Andromeda collided with another neighbor, the galaxy M32, more than 200 million years ago.



    Lifting the Veil

    Photograph by Erick Montero, Your Shot

    Dark clouds drift across a waning gibbous moon on May 10, as seen in a picture snapped from San Jose, California and submitted to National Geographic's Your Shot.

    According to photographer Erick Montero, the region was too cloudy for people to see the previous week's supermoon—when the full moon coincided with the lunar orb's closest approach to Earth. But later views of the partially full moon were still "mysterious and surreal," he wrote with his submission.



    Aurora Falls

    Photograph by Fan Meng, My Shot

    A "waterfall" of soft green light drops from the heavens, as seen in a picture taken from the Aurora Sky Station in Abisko, Sweden, that was recently submitted to National Geographic's My Shot.



    Asteroid Slices

    Image courtesy University of Tennessee/NASA

    Seen under a polarizing microscope, different minerals appear in a variety of hues in three slices from meteorites—all of which were recently confirmed as parts of the giant asteroid Vesta.

    Two of the three space rocks fell to Earth in Antarctica, while the third landed in North Carolina. Their origins were determined based on new data from NASA's Dawn mission, which has been orbiting Vesta since July 2011.



    Birth Right?

    Image courtesy Gemini Observatory/NASA

    The dusty golden glow of the planetary nebula known as Sharpless 2-71 is seen in a newly released picture from the Gemini North observatory in Hawaii.

    Although the nebula was discovered in 1946, astronomers are still debating which star created the complex cloud of dust and gas. Some hold that the bright star at the center of the object is the one that shed shells of material as it swelled and died, forming the nebula.

    But the central star doesn't appear to radiate the right amounts of high-energy light to cause the surrounding gas to glow as intensely as we see today. This led other experts to suspect that a dimmer, bluer star—which does pump out enough high-energy radiation—might be the nebula's true parent.



    Photograph by Greg Parker, My Shot.

  9. #69
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    Re: Duke the menace

    Very nice Duke!!



  10. #70
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    Re: Duke the menace

    Very Kool Pics there....


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