Archive for the ‘science’ category: Page 98
As a SciFri holiday tradition, we present highlights from the 28th first annual Ig Nobel Awards ceremony.
Nov 21, 2018
The microscope revolution that’s sweeping through materials science
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: particle physics, science
Scientists can’t study what they can’t measure — as David Muller knows only too well. An applied physicist, Muller has been grappling for years with the limitations of the best imaging tools available as he seeks to probe materials at the atomic scale.
One particularly vexing quarry has been ultra-thin layers of the material molybdenum disulfide, which show promise for building thin, flexible electronics. Muller and his colleagues at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, have spent years peering at MoS2 samples under an electron microscope to discern their atomic structures. The problem was seeing the sulfur atoms clearly, Muller says. Raising the energy of the electron beam would sharpen the image, but knock atoms out of the MoS2 sheet in the process. Anyone hoping to say something definitive about defects in the structure would have to guess. “It would take a lot of courage, and maybe half the time, you’d be right,” he says.
This July, Muller’s team reported a breakthrough. Using an ultra-sensitive detector that the researchers had created and a special method for reconstructing the data, they resolved features in MoS2 down to 0.39 angstroms, two and a half times better than a conventional electron microscope would achieve. (1 Å is one-tenth of a nanometre, and a common measure of atomic bond lengths.) At once, formerly fuzzy sulfur atoms now showed up clearly — and so did ‘holes’ where they were absent. Ordinary electron microscopy is “like flying propeller planes”, Muller says. “Now we have a jet.”
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Nov 18, 2018
Rocket Science in 60 Seconds: EM-1 and the Power Needed to Get to the Moon and Beyond
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: science, space travel
Click on photo to start video.
NASA’s Rocket Science in 60 Seconds gives you an inside look at work being done to explore deep space. In the latest episode you can hear Rob Stough, payload utilization manager for our NASA’s Space Launch System, talk about the power we needed to boost the rocket into space and send NASA’s Orion Spacecraft to the Moon. Watch: https://youtu.be/0VB9aI3xVFs
Nov 17, 2018
Eight science apps that turn your phone into a laboratory
Posted by Nicholi Avery in categories: mobile phones, science
Apps can turn your smartphone into a scientific instrument. These programs let you spot birds, identify stars, learn about the elements, and more.
Nov 17, 2018
How Can Science Help Reverse Blindness?
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, cyborgs, science, transhumanism
From bionic eyes to gene editing, how can we use science to bring back sight?
- By Everyday Einstein Sabrina Stierwalt on November 17, 2018
Nov 17, 2018
Science Is Getting Less Bang for Its Buck
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: policy, science
Perhaps this lack of response is in part because some scientists see acknowledging diminishing returns as betraying scientists’ collective self-interest. Most scientists strongly favor more research funding. They like to portray science in a positive light, emphasizing benefits and minimizing negatives. While understandable, the evidence is that science has slowed enormously per dollar or hour spent. That evidence demands a large-scale institutional response. It should be a major subject in public policy, and at grant agencies and universities. Better understanding the cause of this phenomenon is important, and identifying ways to reverse it is one of the greatest opportunities to improve our future.
Despite vast increases in the time and money spent on research, progress is barely keeping pace with the past. What went wrong?
Nov 16, 2018
What a massive database of retracted papers reveals about science publishing’s ‘death penalty’
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: law, science
Still, the data trove has enabled Science, working with Retraction Watch, to gain unusual insight into one of scientific publishing’s most consequential but shrouded practices. Our analysis of about 10,500 retracted journal articles shows the number of retractions has continued to grow, but it also challenges some worrying perceptions that continue today. The rise of retractions seems to reflect not so much an epidemic of fraud as a community trying to police itself.
Better editorial oversight, not more flawed papers, might explain a flood of retractions.
Nov 12, 2018
Quantum leap for mass as science redefines the kilogramme
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: science
Sealed in a vault beneath a duke’s former pleasure palace among the sycamore-streaked forests west of Paris sits an object the size of an apple that determines the weight of the world.
Forged against a backdrop of scientific and political upheaval following the French Revolution, a single, small cylinder of platinum-iridium alloy has laid largely undisturbed for nearly 130 years as the world’s benchmark for what, precisely, is a kilogramme.
The international prototype of the kilogramme, or “Le Grand K” as it is tenderly known, is one of science’s most hallowed relics, an analogue against which all other weights are compared and a totem of the metric system that accompanied the epoch of liberty, equality and fraternity.
Continue reading “Quantum leap for mass as science redefines the kilogramme” »
Nov 8, 2018
How science fared in the midterm elections
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: biotech/medical, engineering, government, science
This year, more candidates with degrees in science, medicine and engineering ran for Congress than ever before. Of the nearly two-dozen new candidates in this crop, at least seven won seats in the House of Representatives.
This year, scientists, doctors and engineers ran for office like never before. Here’s how they did.