2015年12月30日星期三

Share:Sonar Glove May Allow People to 'See' Underwater With Their Hands

PHOTO: Researchers say this glove - shown here in a photo from its website - uses a combination of sonar technology and water jets that can help users find objects underwater.

Forget goggles. Researchers are working on a device that would allow users to "see" with their hands thanks to sonar technology.
Called an IrukaTact, the device was inspired by dolphin sonar and uses tiny jets to let a user know when they are close to the object. Iruka means dolphin in Japanese.
The device was created at Tsukuba University in Japan by PhD candidates Aisen Caro Chacin and Takeshi Oozu.

The information retrieved by the sonar technology is then transmitted to the user with tiny jets, according to the researchers. The closer a person is to an object the more water pressure they feel, possibly allowing them to find objects even in murky conditions.
"It extends the sense of touch to feel the topography of a sunken floor," Chacin wrote online about the device. "[It's] in parallel to the wearer’s hand in order to perceive objects under cloudy waters where sight is no longer useful."
Chacin said the device might able to help during underwater search and recovery missions. She and Oozu developed the project after presenting an early design at the Ars Electronica Festival for Art and Electronics in September of this year.
By GILLIAN MOHNEY  
  • Story source: http://abcn.ws/1IDdYBF

    2015年12月26日星期六

    SciencePG:$100 Deduction in Some Featured Journals



    Science Publishing Group decides to adjust the article processing charges of some journals from December 15, 2015 to May 31, 2016 so as to help authors publish more papers. You honorable authors can enjoy $100 deduction in 20 Featured journals for papers submitted during this period.
    20 Featured journals are listed below:
    American Journal of Life Sciences
    International Journal of Nutrition and Food Sciences
    International Journal of Economics, Finance and Management Sciences
    Science Journal of Public Health
    American Journal of Modern Physics
    International Journal of Materials Science and Applications
    American Journal of Theoretical and Applied Statistics
    Applied and Computational Mathematics
    American Journal of Nursing Science
    Journal of Food and Nutrition Sciences
    American Journal of Environmental Protection
    International Journal of Energy and Power Engineering
    Science Research
    International Journal of Science, Technology and Society
    Education Journal
    Journal of Plant Sciences
    American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry
    American Journal of Clinical and Experimental Medicine
    International Journal of Language and Linguistics
    American Journal of Health Research
    You can learn more about other journals here:
    http://www.sciencepublishinggroup.com/journal/journallist
    Information Source:http://bit.ly/1RFHp8I

    2015年12月23日星期三

    Share: Crow cameras give a bird’s eye view of tool-making in the wild

    Call it a GoCro. Cameras mounted on the tails of wild New Caledonian crows have caught these renowned tool-makers in the act of creating the hooked foraging implements from plants.
    New Caledonian crows are the only non-human animals to make hooked tools in the wild. Why they do so is something of a mystery. “The answer to that lies most probably in the ecology of the place and the ecology of these birds,” says Christian Rutz at the University of St Andrews, UK.
    Filming their natural behaviour may help us get to the bottom of it.
    Back in 2007, Rutz and colleagues equipped crows with video cameras to film their behaviour in the wild. They were able to transmit live pictures, but the range was short, so they had to follow the birds around and the signal would sometimes cut out.
    Now Rutz and colleagues have followed the behaviour of 10 crows in a new study with a better camera setup. This enabled them to record about an hour of footage for each bird. They found only four of them used tools during the recording sessions.
    It’s unclear whether some crows don’t use tools at all, or if they just didn’t in the time recorded. “I think that’s a very interesting lead for future research,” says Rutz.
    ......
    Read full story from the source: http://bit.ly/1U49sfZ

    2015年12月22日星期二

    A Contrasting Result About the Etiologies of Non-traumatic Coma in A Referral Hospital in Ethiopia

    Toxic and metabolic causes were identified to be the commonest causes of coma in a hospital in a developing country.
    By Ermias Greffie                          From Clinical Medicine Research
    Toxic and metabolic causes were identified to be the commonest causes of coma in a hospital in a developing country. The chance of survival was very low once a patient was admitted in the hospital with any sort of non-traumatic coma. This was the result of a poor medical infrastructure, including ICU care to support these critically ill patients.

    Figure: A comatose patient being treated in the ICU
    In a recent study by Dr. Mohamed A. Mohamed and his team etiologies of coma presenting without a focal neurologic deficit, mainly toxic and metabolic causes were the most common causes of non-traumatic coma, which was in contrast to most of the studies in both developed and interestingly other developing countries, which showed especially stroke to be the most common cause. In this study poisoning and metabolic coma due to organ failure was even more common than the expected infectious causes.
    The mortality rate of this study was in fact the highest among similar studies. Dr. Mohamed continues "It is so unfortunate given the fact that most of these patients had reversible causes of coma. This is most likely due to the lack of resources in developing countries like Ethiopia. This lack of resource was evident by lack of drugs like antidotes for organophosphate and dialysis. This has resulted in higher mortality in our set up since these etiologies of coma are most probably treated very well in developed countries. With the continuous development of the medical care in developing countries, this high mortality of coma may decrease in the future."
    Mohamed highlights "underlying medical illnesses like diabetes, hypertension, CKD and HIV were in fact not uncommon in these patients. Inadequate and/or lack of resource to treatment of these conditions might contribute to the development of conditions like uremia, which are not usually treated in developing countries"
    Finally, the team recommended that hospital service in developing countries should be well equipped to diagnose and treat this life-threatening medical illness.
    Authors:
    Mohamed A. Mohamed, Internist, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Nebiyu Bekele, neurologist, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Ermias Diro, PHD, Internist, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Ermias Shenkutie Greffie, Internist, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Timothy Landers, PHD, school of Nursing, The Ohio state University
    Helen Gebremedhin, Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Murad Mohamed, Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Habtewold Shibiru, Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Omer Abdu, Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar
    Tesfaye Yusuf, Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Gondar 
    Story source:http://bit.ly/1S7zyQH

    2015年12月14日星期一

    Stress Has a Link to Drug Usage Behavior but It Is Determined By the Type of Personality and Coping Strategies Applied

    Drug users perceive more stress in their life that make them vulnerable for such behavior to reduce stress. However this behavior is not the response observed uniformly in every individual.
    By Harish Kumar Sharma Dec. 14, 2015
    Drug users perceive more stress in their life that make them vulnerable for such behavior to reduce stress. However this behavior is not the response observed uniformly in every individual. The personality type and coping strategy are important determinants in this respect. Neuroticism makes drug users to perceive more stress even for trivial problems. Extravert drug users experience excitement through drug using behavior. Openness and conscientiousness similarly exposes the person to initiate this behavior. On other side drug using coping strategy helps to deny the presence of stress. Projection coping style let them to blame others for their problems.Drug users dependence on others get them regress in their response to stress.Similarly they apply isolation and turning against self lesser than non users.
    Dr. Harish Kumar Sharma in his recent paper stated that drug users and non users clearly were having difference in perceiving the stress in their life. Drug users perceive that they are experiencing more stress in their life. Drugs were considered the easy way to get relieve from the stress. Type of personality acts as a catalyst that enhances the drug usage behavior. In the paper, drug users were found more neurotic than non users. It means that they were more anxious, so take even simple problems of life severely stressful. It is possibly responsible for the difference in perception of stress in their life. Dr. Sharma further stated that drug users were more extroverts in personality. Extroverts are excitement seekers, less responsible and poor onmorality. Such personality characteristics increase the possibility of drug using behavior. In paper drug users were also higher on openness, means they were more impulsive, restless, optimistic and aggressive. Interestingly drug users were also found high on conscientiousness. It reflects that drug users plan their behavior more than non users. On all such observations, the personality type was a strong determinant of drug use behavior.
    Dr. Sharma further mentioned that drug users and non users also differ on coping strategies they applied. Denial is the easy way to ignore the presence of stress. So, in paper drug users were found applying denial more than non users. Drug users were found poor in applying intellectual strategies to resolve their stressful situation. Projection means blaming others for one’s problems. In paper, it was found that drug users blame more others for their problems. It was also found that drug users apply regression more than non users. It means they seek other’s help in stressful situation. Turning against self was also applied less by drug users. They criticize themselves very less.
    The paper is truly successful in pointing differences in drug users and non users on perception of stress, personality type and coping strategies in drug users and non users.
    Full story source:http://bit.ly/1Nmsa0C

    2015年12月11日星期五

    Rewilding the great white north


    Take a tour of Pleistocene Park in northeastern Siberia, where Russian ecologist Sergey Zimov and his son Nikita are studying how to rewild the Arctic. Introducing herbivores en masse to Siberia and northern Alaska, they believe, would bring back a lost biome—the mammoth steppe—and prevent permafrost from melting and releasing billions of tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. 

    Story source:http://bit.ly/1QcowK5

    Serological Study of African Swine Fever in Traditional Pig Farms in Chad

    Authors: Bidjeh Kebkiba, Ban-Bo Bebanto Antipas, Nadjilem Digamtar, Tchari Doungous, Golwa Dinza, Maho Adnelie jeanne
    To cite this article:
    Bidjeh Kebkiba, Ban-Bo Bebanto Antipas, Nadjilem Digamtar, Tchari Doungous, Golwa Dinza, Maho Adnelie jeanne. Serological Study of African Swine Fever in Traditional Pig Farms in Chad. Animal and Veterinary Sciences. Vol. 3, No. 6, 2015, pp. 149-152. doi: 10.11648/j.avs.20150306.11

    Abstract: African swine fever (ASF) is an acute, highly contagious animal disease, affecting pigs and wild boars, warthogs, bush pigs and ticks(Ornithodoros), who are the likely vector. Its agent is a large double-stranded DNA virus of the genus Asfarvirus, the only representative of Asfarviridae family. Described for the first time in 1921 in East Africa (Kenya) by Montgomery, ASF has settled in the Iberian Peninsula. Since 1960, ASF has spread considerably in sub-Saharan Africa where it is endemic. ASF has emerged in Chad for the first time in October 2010 in the city of Bongor, capital of the region of Mayo-Kebbi-East, which is located about 250 km from Ndjamena. The city borders with northern Cameroon where the disease was reported in May 2010. The disease was introduced into the country from the far north in the Department of Mayo Danaye, Cameroon. Since 2010-2011, suspicions have become rare or no observed. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the presence or absence of ASF virus circulation in Chad in order to clarify the epidemiological situation of the disease in the country. To do this, a serological survey was conducted on different sites. The choice of these sites was based on the history of the disease in the country, where there has actually outbreaks of disease and on stamping out importance achieved during ASF episode of 2010-2011. A total of 275 Sera and 17 bloods on filter papers were collected and analyzed by indirect ELISA for antibodies directed to ASF virus. Out of 275 sera analyzed, 13 (4.72%) have had antibodies directed to ASF virus. No sample taken from filter papers was positive vis-à-vis ASF virus. The study identified 4.72% animals carrying ASF virus. Given these results, we can say that ASF virus still circulates in some areas of the country. The areas where sera were positive should be admitted to the extent control of ASF by implementing the strategy of stamping out. It would also be preferable to undertake another large-scale serological study coupled with active surveillance to show that indeed there is no circulation of ASF virus in the country.

    Keywords: Pigs, ELISA, Serology, African Swine Fever, Antibodies, Viruses, Serum
    Read full research paper in SciencePG:http://bit.ly/1W0rmAj

    2015年12月10日星期四

    New armored dinosaur had ears like a turtle

    New armored dinosaur had ears like a turtle
    Australia has a new dinosaur, a bulky, armor-encrusted beast named “Kunbarrasaurus ieversi,” Australian Geographic reports. The remarkably well-preserved fossil was actually unearthed in 1989, but in the past researchers classified it as a different species along with several other specimens. A new analysis, published yesterday in PeerJ, claims that the fossil belongs in its own genus and species. When researchers examined the inside of the beast’s skull using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), they saw a complicated airway and a bizarre inner ear structure with huge open spaces. The inner ear was so strange it actually reminded the researchers more of a turtle’s skull than a dinosaur’s.

    Story source:http://bit.ly/1XYxdMF

    2015年12月8日星期二

    Contribution of Plant Bio-regulators on boosting up the Seed Yield of Sesame in Bangladesh

    Sesame (Sesamum indicum L) seed yield is not enough as other oil crops due to lack of sufficient knowledge on management practices in Bangladesh. The tactic as foliar application of auxin: 1-Napthalene Acetic Acid (NAA) which promotes the yield.

    By Ma. Abubakar Siddik From Science Journal of Public Health
    Sesame (Sesamum indicum L) seed yield is not enough as other oil crops due to lack of sufficient knowledge on management practices in Bangladesh. The tactic as foliar application of auxin: 1-Napthalene Acetic Acid (NAA) which promotes the yield.

    In a recent paper by author Md. AbubakarSiddik, the increase of sesame yield was obtained with plant bio-regulator, NAAother than the traditional system. Such increased was demonstrated through NAA and noticeably highlights the potential asimmediate time demanding solution in relation to use of fertilizer.
    “The use of 1-Napthalene Acetic Acid at the rate of 50 ppm as foliar spray during vegetative and pre flowering stage improvesmorpho-physiology, yield contributing characteristics and yield of sesame that can contribute to fulfill the demand of sesame seed along with inspiring the farmers to cultivate sesame with less use of inorganic fertizers and low cost.
    The author conducted the research for the partial fulfillment of his MS degree to improve the seed yield of sesame using variety BARI Til 4 with different levels of 1-Napthalene Acetic Acid at Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University, Dhaka.
    In the paper, M. A. Siddik shows how NAA progress morphological characteristics of sesame including: plant height, number of leaf and branch plant-1and with physiological attributes such as: shoot fresh and dry weight, root fresh and dry weight. The yield contributing characters and yield of sesame: number of pod plant-1, pod length and diameter, seed weight plant-1 and plot-1, 1000 seed weight and yield were improved by altering of morpho-physiological characteristics with NAA. In this way, foliar application or spraying of NAA will increase the yield of sesame not only in Bangladesh but also in the world.
    M. A. Siddik goes on to suggest that “ as a developing country and there is gradual decreasing trend of agricultural land along withlack of information of management practices to grow sesame in Bangladesh, therefore this research was done to create a new way to boost up the yield with plant Bio-regulators, NAA that is friendly to environment .
    Full story source:http://bit.ly/1ONjZfU

    2015年12月3日星期四

    Genes for a longer, healthier life found

    Date:
    December 1, 2015
    Source:
    ETH Zurich
    Summary:
    Out of a 'haystack' of 40,000 genes from three different organisms, scientists have found genes that are involved in physical aging. If you influence only one of these genes, the healthy lifespan of laboratory animals is extended -- and possibly that of humans, too.
    DNA strand (stock image). Driven by the quest for eternal youth, humankind has spent centuries obsessed with the question of how it is exactly that we age. With advancements in molecular genetic methods in recent decades, the search for the genes involved in the ageing process has greatly accelerated.
    Credit: © abhijith3747 / Fotolia
    Driven by the quest for eternal youth, humankind has spent centuries obsessed with the question of how it is exactly that we age. With advancements in molecular genetic methods in recent decades, the search for the genes involved in the aging process has greatly accelerated.
    Until now, this was mostly limited to genes of individual model organisms such as the C. elegans nematode, which revealed that around one percent of its genes could influence life expectancy. However, researchers have long assumed that such genes arose in the course of evolution and in all living beings whose cells have a preserved a nucleus -- from yeast to humans.
    Combing through 40,000 genes
    Researchers at ETH Zurich and the JenAge consortium from Jena have now systematically gone through the genomes of three different organisms in search of the genes associated with the aging process that are present in all three species -- and thus derived from the genes of a common ancestor. Although they are found in different organisms, these so-called orthologous genes are closely related to each other, and they are all found in humans, too.
    In order to detect these genes, the researchers examined around 40,000 genes in the nematode C. elegans, zebra fish and mice. By screening them, the scientists wanted to determine which genes are regulated in an identical manner in all three organisms in each comparable aging stage -- young, mature and old; i.e. either are they upregulated or downregulated during aging.
    As a measure of gene activity, the researchers measured the amount of messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules found in the cells of these animals. mRNA is the transcript of a gene and the blueprint of a protein. When there are many copies of an mRNA of a specific gene, it is very active; the gene is upregulated. Fewer mRNA copies, to the contrary, are regarded as a sign of low activity, explains Professor Michael Ristow, coordinating author of the recently published study and Professor of Energy Metabolism at ETH Zurich.
    Out of this volume of information, the researchers used statistical models to establish an intersection of genes that were regulated in the same manner in the worms, fish and mice. This showed that the three organisms have only 30 genes in common that significantly influence the aging process.
    Reduce gene activity, live longer
    By conducting experiments in which the mRNA of the corresponding genes were selectively blocked, the researchers pinpointed their effect on the aging process in nematodes. With a dozen of these genes, blocking them extended the lifespan by at least five percent.
    One of these genes proved to be particularly influential: the bcat-1 gene. "When we blocked the effect of this gene, it significantly extended the mean lifespan of the nematode by up to 25 percent," says Ristow.
    The researchers were also able to explain how this gene works: the bcat-1 gene carries the code for the enzyme of the same name, which degrades so-called branched-chain amino acids. Naturally occurring in food protein building blocks, these include the amino acids L-leucine, L-isoleucine and L-valine.
    When the researchers inhibited the gene activity of bcat-1, the branched-chain amino acids accumulated in the tissue, triggering a molecular signalling cascade that increased longevity in the nematodes. Moreover, the timespan during which the worms remained healthy was extended. As a measure of vitality, the researchers measured the accumulation of aging pigments, the speed at which the creatures moved, and how often the nematodes successfully reproduced. All of these parameters improved when the scientists inhibited the activity of the bcat-1 gene.
    The scientists also achieved a life-extending effect when they mixed the three branched-chain amino acids into the nematodes' food. However, the effect was generally less pronounced because the bcat-1 gene was still active, which meant that the amino acids continued to be degraded and their life-extending effects could not develop as effectively.
    Conserved mechanism
    Ristow has no doubt that the same mechanism occurs in humans. "We looked only for the genes that are conserved in evolution and therefore exist in all organisms, including humans," he says.
    In the present study, he and his Jena colleagues from the Leibniz Institute on Aging, the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology, the Jena University Hospital and the Friedrich Schiller University purposefully opted not to study the impact on humans. But a follow-up study is already being planned. "However we cannot measure the life expectancy of humans for obvious reasons," says the ETH professor. Instead, the researchers plan to incorporate various health parameters such as cholesterol or blood sugar levels in their study to obtain indicators on the health status of their subjects.
    Health costs could be massively reduced
    Ristow says that the multiple branched-chain amino acids are already being used to treat liver damage and are also added to sport nutrition products. "However, the point is not for people to grow even older, but rather to stay healthy for longer," says the internist. The study will deliver important indicators on how the aging process could be influenced and how age-related diseases such as diabetes or high blood pressure could be prevented. In light of unfavourable demographics and steadily increasing life expectancy, it is important to extend the healthy life phase and not to reach an even higher age that is characterised by chronic diseases, argue the researchers. With such preventive measures, an elderly person could greatly improve their quality of life while at the same time cutting their healthcare costs by more than half.

    Story Source:
    The above post is reprinted from materials provided by ETH Zurich. The original item was written by Peter Rüegg. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
    From:http://bit.ly/1laFsEh

    2015年12月1日星期二

    Science Journal of Public Health

    Science Journal of Public Health
    ISSN Print: 2328-7942
    ISSN Online: 2328-7950
    Science Journal of Public Health (SJPH) , a peer-reviewed open access journal published bimonthly in English-language, provides a international forum for the presentation of research findings and scholarly exchange in the area of health and related fields. The journal has a special focus on the social determinants of health, the environmental, behavioral, epidemiology, health services research, nursing, social work, medicine, and occupational correlates of health and disease, and the impact of health policies, practices and interventions on the community. Although preference is given to manuscripts presenting the findings of original research, review and methodological pieces will also be considered.
    Science Journal of Public Health is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal featuring research articles of exceptional significance in all areas of health sciences. Subject areas may include, but are not limited to the following fields:
    Adolescent health
    Alcohol research and health
    Alternative therapies in health
    Alternative therapies in medicine
    Aquatic animal health
    Community dental health
    Community mental health
    Environmental geochemistry & health
    Environmental health
    Epidemiology and community health
    Ethnicity and health
    Health affairs
    Health & quality of life outcomes
    Health and social behavior
    Health and social work
    Health communication
    Health economics
    Health education
    Health nutrition
    Health physics
    Health policy and planning
    Health promotion
    Health psychology
    Health services
    Health technology assessment
    Health-system pharmacy
    Hygiene & environmental health
    Industrial health
    Nursing and health
    Occupational health psychology
    Paediatrics and child health
    Psychiatric & mental health nursing
    Public health
    Qualitative health
    Quality and safety in health care
    School health
    Sexual and reproductive health
    Telemedicine and e-health
    The world health organization
    Toxicology & environmental health
    Tropical medicine & health
    Urban health
    Women's health
    Zoonoses and public health
    Public health care awareness
    Public rules and regulations

    2015年11月24日星期二

    Share:Editorial: America’s science legacy


    This video accompanies Science’s editorial, “America’s science legacy” by Neil deGrasse Tyson. In his editorial, Tyson celebrates the 150th Anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address but also reflects on how Lincoln set a course for science to impact the future wellbeing of the nation. Tyson shares his 272-word speech “The Seedbed,” inspired by the 1863 Gettysburg Address. Published earlier this year, it is an impassioned reminder of the importance of science to America’s future.    

    Full story source:http://bit.ly/1MzGQcd

    2015年11月22日星期日

    Comprehensive Approach to Research Writing and Publication

    Authors:
    Felix Kutsanedzie ,  Sylvester Achio ,  Edmund Ameko
    ISBN:
    978-1-940366-51-7
    Published Date:
    September, 2015
    Publisher:
    Description
    The main objective of this book is to help students, would-be-research fellows and lecturers to get a good grasp of the technicalities involved in the act of research writing and publishing. It starts with a chapter that introduces the readers to the various constituents of research proposal writing by explaining the various technical terms and how to handle them in practice.

    The book gives a comprehensive way of approaching the research reporting thus making it a must read book for all tertiary students preparing for the project report write ups, and detailed explanation on how to do reference both in-text and out-of-text for the APA format.

    The later chapters of this book concentrated things to do to get ones findings from a research disseminated to the targeted clientele of the research.
    If you like, read this book in SciencePG for free:http://bit.ly/1KCNcDv

    2015年11月20日星期五

    In electrifying advance, researchers create circuit within living plants

    Swedish researchers have assembled electronics inside the stems and leaves of rose cuttings.
    Swedish researchers have assembled electronics inside the stems and leaves of rose cuttings.
    Talk about flower power. Researchers have crafted flexible electronic circuits inside a rose. Eventually such circuitry may help farmers eavesdrop on their crops and even control when they ripen. The advance may even allow people to harness energy from trees and shrubs not by cutting them down and using them for fuel, but by plugging directly into their photosynthesis machinery.
    Flexible electronics are made from pliable organic materials. That makes them potentially compatible with tissues and has spurred research efforts to use them to diagnose and treat diseases. “Organic electronics is booming in the area of medical applications,” says Magnus Berggren, a materials scientist and electrical engineer at Linköping University, Norrköping, in Sweden and a leader in devising such medical applications.
    About 15 years ago one of Berggren’s plant biology colleagues asked whether it would be possible to place electronics inside trees in order to eavesdrop on the biochemical processes going on there. If so, perhaps they could control, for example, precisely when a tree flowers. “We thought it was a joke,” Berggren says. After all, he notes, biologists have made steady strides in genetic engineering techniques to control myriad biochemical functions in plants. However, genetically engineered plants have a much harder time being approved for release in Sweden than they do in the United States. “We felt those technologies were never going to make it into the forests and fields here,” Berggren says. So a couple of years ago he and his colleagues decided to give electronic plants a second look.
    Their idea was to use the plants’ own architecture and biology to help them assemble devices on the inside. To do so, they aimed to assemble polymer-based “wires” on the inside of a plant’s xylem, the tubelike channel that transports water up a plant’s stem to the leaves. They thought that if they could dissolve conducting polymer building blocks in water, perhaps plants could pull them up the channels and link them together into wires.
    Berggren and his colleagues tried more than a dozen different polymer electronic building blocks. They dissolved them in water, then placed roses—either with intact roots or cut at the stem—in the water to see whether the organics would be wicked upward. All of the building blocks either clogged the base of the stem or didn’t assemble into wires.
    Finally they tried an organic electronic building block called PEDOT-S:H. Each of these building blocks consists of a short, repeating chain of a conductive organic molecule with short arms coming off each link of the chain. Each of the arms sports a sulfur-containing group linked to a hydrogen atom. Berggren’s group found that when they placed them in the water, the rose stems readily pulled the short polymer chains up the xylem channels. The intact plants pulled the organics up through the roots as well, though much more slowly, Berggren says. Once inside, the chemistry in those channels pulled the hydrogen atoms off the short arms, a change that prompted the sulfur groups on neighboring chains to bind together. The upshot was that the myriad short polymer chains quickly linked themselves together into continuous strings as long as 10 centimeters. The researchers then added electronic probes to opposite ends of these strings, and found that they were, in fact, wires, conducting electricity all down the line.
    Once that worked, Berggren’s team added other electronic patches on the surface of their rose stems to create transistors that were able to switch the current in a wire on and off. As they report today in Science Advances, they went on to use a set of different techniques to show they could get leaves to take up organic electronics, essentially creating an array of pixels. By applying different voltages to the pixels, they could change their colors to create a living display.
    “It sounds really cool,” says Zhenan Bao, an organic electronics expert at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. Though after a quick read of the paper, Bao says she’s not clear what the application would be.
    Berggren says he, too, is just beginning to try to sort that out. One possibility, he says, is to embed electronic sensors in a few plants in a field to detect when they begin to release hormones that initiate the process of flowering or other changes in the plant. This could allow growers to better time watering and fertilizer applications to aid the plants. In time, he adds, it may even be possible to use plant electronics to speed or delay the onset of flowering to protect them from coming harsh weather. Finally, he says, perhaps in the distant future it may be possible to harness plants’ photosynthesis abilities to generate electricity directly, enabling us to reap the sun’s power without destroying the plants.  
    Story source:http://bit.ly/219riU4

    2015年11月18日星期三

    Physical, Thermal, and Spectroscopic Characterization of Biofield Energy Treated Potato Micropropagation Medium

    Authors: Mahendra Kumar Trivedi1, Alice Branton1, Dahryn Trivedi1, Gopal Nayak1, Khemraj Bairwa2, Snehasis Jana2, *

    Abstract: Potato Micropropagation Medium (PMM) is the growth medium used for in vitro micropropagation of potato tubers. The present study was intended to assess the effect of biofield energy treatment on the physical, thermal and spectroscopic properties of PMM. The study was attained in two groups i.e. control and treated. The control group was remained as untreated, while the treated group was received Mr. Trivedi’s biofield energy treatment. Finally, both the samples (control and treated) were evaluated using various analytical techniques such as X-ray diffractometry (XRD), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), thermogravimetric analysis- differential thermal analysis (TGA-DTA), UV-Vis spectrometry, and Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy. The XRD analysis showed the crystalline nature of both control and treated samples of PMM. The X-ray diffractogram showed the significant increase in the intensity of XRD peaks in treated sample as compared to the control. The XRD analysis revealed 6.64% increase in the average crystallite size of treated PMM with respect to the control. The DSC analysis showed about 8.66% decrease in the latent heat of fusion in treated sample with respect to the control. The TGA-DTA analysis exhibited about 4.71% increase in onset temperature of thermal degradation after biofield treatment with respect to the control, while the maximum thermal degradation temperature (Tmax) was also increased (5.06%) in treated sample with respect to the control. This increase in Tmax might be correlated with increased thermal stability of treated sample as compared to the control. The UV spectroscopic study showed the slight blue shift in λmax of treated sample with respect to the control. FT-IR spectrum of control PMM showed the peak at 3132 cm-1 (C-H stretching) that was observed at higher wavenumber i.e. at 3161 cm-1 in the treated sample. Other vibrational peaks in the treated sample were observed in the similar region as that of the control. Altogether, the XRD, DSC, TGA-DTA, UV-Vis, and FT-IR analysis suggest that Mr. Trivedi’s biofield energy treatment has the impact on physicochemical properties of PMM. This treated PMM might be more effective as a micropropagation medium as compared to the control.
    Keywords: Biofield Energy Treatment, Potato Micropropagation Medium, X-ray Diffraction, Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC), UV-vis Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy

    2015年11月6日星期五

    Share:NASA mission reveals speed of solar wind stripping Martian atmosphere

    Date:
    November 5, 2015
    Source:
    NASA
    Summary:
    NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission has identified the process that appears to have played a key role in the transition of the Martian climate from an early, warm and wet environment that might have supported surface life to the cold, arid planet Mars is today.
    Artist's rendering of a solar storm hitting Mars and stripping ions from the planet's upper atmosphere.
    Credit: NASA/GSFC
    NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission has identified the process that appears to have played a key role in the transition of the Martian climate from an early, warm and wet environment that might have supported surface life to the cold, arid planet Mars is today.
    MAVEN data have enabled researchers to determine the rate at which the Martian atmosphere currently is losing gas to space via stripping by the solar wind. The findings reveal that the erosion of Mars' atmosphere increases significantly during solar storms. The scientific results from the mission appear in the Nov. 5 issues of the journals Science and Geophysical Research Letters.
    "Mars appears to have had a thick atmosphere warm enough to support liquid water which is a key ingredient and medium for life as we currently know it," said John Grunsfeld, astronaut and associate administrator for the NASA Science Mission Directorate in Washington. "Understanding what happened to the Mars atmosphere will inform our knowledge of the dynamics and evolution of any planetary atmosphere. Learning what can cause changes to a planet's environment from one that could host microbes at the surface to one that doesn't is important to know, and is a key question that is being addressed in NASA's journey to Mars."
    MAVEN measurements indicate that the solar wind strips away gas at a rate of about 100 grams (equivalent to roughly 1/4 pound) every second. "Like the theft of a few coins from a cash register every day, the loss becomes significant over time," said Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN principal investigator at the University of Colorado, Boulder. "We've seen that the atmospheric erosion increases significantly during solar storms, so we think the loss rate was much higher billions of years ago when the sun was young and more active."
    In addition, a series of dramatic solar storms hit Mars' atmosphere in March 2015, and MAVEN found that the loss was accelerated. The combination of greater loss rates and increased solar storms in the past suggests that loss of atmosphere to space was likely a major process in changing the Martian climate.
    The solar wind is a stream of particles, mainly protons and electrons, flowing from the sun's atmosphere at a speed of about one million miles per hour. The magnetic field carried by the solar wind as it flows past Mars can generate an electric field, much as a turbine on Earth can be used to generate electricity. This electric field accelerates electrically charged gas atoms, called ions, in Mars' upper atmosphere and shoots them into space.
    MAVEN has been examining how solar wind and ultraviolet light strip gas from of the top of the planet's atmosphere. New results indicate that the loss is experienced in three different regions of the Red Planet: down the "tail," where the solar wind flows behind Mars, above the Martian poles in a "polar plume," and from an extended cloud of gas surrounding Mars. The science team determined that almost 75 percent of the escaping ions come from the tail region, and nearly 25 percent are from the plume region, with just a minor contribution from the extended cloud.
    Ancient regions on Mars bear signs of abundant water -- such as features resembling valleys carved by rivers and mineral deposits that only form in the presence of liquid water. These features have led scientists to think that billions of years ago, the atmosphere of Mars was much denser and warm enough to form rivers, lakes and perhaps even oceans of liquid water.
    Recently, researchers using NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter observed the seasonal appearance of hydrated salts indicating briny liquid water on Mars. However, the current Martian atmosphere is far too cold and thin to support long-lived or extensive amounts of liquid water on the planet's surface.
    "Solar-wind erosion is an important mechanism for atmospheric loss, and was important enough to account for significant change in the Martian climate," said Joe Grebowsky, MAVEN project scientist from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "MAVEN also is studying other loss processes -- such as loss due to impact of ions or escape of hydrogen atoms -- and these will only increase the importance of atmospheric escape."
    The goal of NASA's MAVEN mission, launched to Mars in November 2013, is to determine how much of the planet's atmosphere and water have been lost to space. It is the first such mission devoted to understanding how the sun might have influenced atmospheric changes on the Red Planet. MAVEN has been operating at Mars for just over a year and will complete its primary science mission on Nov. 16.
    To view an animation simulating the loss of atmosphere and water on Mars:
    For more information and images on Mars' lost atmosphere, visit:
    For more information about NASA's MAVEN mission, visit:

    Story Source:
    The above post is reprinted from materials provided by NASANote: Materials may be edited for content and length.

    Journal References:
    1. B. M. Jakosky. MAVEN Explores the Martian Upper Atmosphere.Science, 2015; 350 (6261): 643 DOI: 10.1126/science.aad3443
    2. Bruce M. Jakosky, Joseph M. Grebowsky, Janet G. Luhmann, David A. Brain. Initial results from the MAVEN mission to MarsGeophysical Research Letters, 2015; DOI: 10.1002/2015GL065271
    Full story source: http://bit.ly/1GOrguj