Posts Tagged: ‘Science’

March 28, 2012

Citizen’s Radiation Reader (updated)

From our friends at the Department of Homeland Security – who in July of last year were awarded their very first patent:

No matter how many plastic cards currently crowd your wallet, one day you may wish to make room for one more. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS)’s Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) has developed a miniaturized version of a dosimeter, a portable device used for measuring exposure to ionizing radiation, which can provide life-saving early detection in the unlikely event of a nuclear accident or dirty bomb.

Dubbed the Citizen’s Dosimeter, this high-tech plastic card would be as convenient and affordable as a subway card, with the capability to measure the amount of radiation on a person or in a given area. The National Urban Security Technologies Laboratory (or NUSTL, pronounced new STEEL) located in New York City and managed by DHS S&T, has been awarded a patent that covers the development of radiation dosimetry technologies – DHS’s first patent. …

These aren’t mini-Geiger counters – they’re like the badges worn by employees at nuke plants, which are used to measure if you’ve been exposed to ionizing radiation.

Here’s a more reader friendly story about it:

“The purpose of personal dosimetry is to avoid potential long-term health effects from radiation exposure,” DHS physicist Gladys Klemic told Homeland1.

Klemic said the patented device has a unique combination of features, including a wide sensitivity range (10 mrad — 1,000 rad), the ability to store cumulative dose information, a re-usable field readout capability in a familiar credit card format and low cost.

Most current large-scale radiation worker dosimetry programs require users to return their dosimeters to a laboratory for processing. “This new DHS device would allow users to periodically check their own dose in strategically positioned card readers,” Klemic said.

And the only image we could find of the pre-prototype Citizen Dosimeter:

Citizen's Dosimeter

Photo DHS: Dosimeters are prepared for testing at a DHS calibration laboratory in Illinois. Dosimeters are mounted on a Lucite block to simulate backscatter from the human body.

And for you gearheads: the official paperwork of United States Patent #7,420,187.

Update: In the news right now.

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

March 27, 2012

“Dueling Banjos” on Tesla Coils

Funny.

Found here, via Digg.

Posted by Thom

Tags: , ,

March 27, 2012

NASA’s Van Gogh-ish Time-Lapse Animations of Ocean Currents

Oh, wow. This is simply stunning:

NASA Ocean Currents

This visualization shows ocean surface currents around the world during the period from June 2005 through Decmeber 2007. The visualization does not include a narration or annotations; the goal was to use ocean flow data to create a simple, visceral experience.

We can’t figure out how to embed the video here, galdangit. But please do go. It is really something else. (This should take you right to a good big-screen view. You’ll have to give it a little time to load.)

Found here.

Posted by Thom

Tags:

March 16, 2012

Scientists: Woman = Male Brain Fart

The mere presence of a woman can actually make a man stupid:

Researchers have begun to explore the cognitive impairment that men experience before and after interacting with women.

More:

A more recent study suggests that this cognitive impairment takes hold even when men simply anticipate interacting with a woman who they know very little about.

Uncle John has just stood up to make a vigorous defense of his gender. And…here comes Mrs. Uncle John. Uncle John has just started making funny shapes with his fingers and giggling…

|pic|

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

March 12, 2012

A Teen’s Legos in Space

We don’t know about you, but we think the most amazing thing about this is that he got the camera to keep Space Shuttle Lego in the center of the frame, and caught some truly dramatic shots. Wow.

See Romanian teenager Oaida Raul’s blog for the whole story.

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

March 9, 2012

Species Attached to Clothes Invade Antarctica

Crazy story about the last continent:

For the study, ecologist Steven Chown at the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa and colleagues vacuumed the clothes, footwear, bags, and gear of approximately 2 percent of people who visited during the Antarctic summer from late 2007 to early 2008. That amounted to 853 scientists, tourists, and accompanying support workers and ships’ crew members…

“Endless hours were spent vacuum-cleaning clothes and gear. … If one is doing so on a ship underway on a rough ocean, it can take a strong stomach,” Chown recalled.

The results revealed more than 2,600 seeds and other detachable plant structures, or propagules, had hitched a ride to Antarctica on these visitors.

Weird.

More here. and here. And look at this, on natural and native Antarctic plant life:

There are no trees or shrubs, and only two species of flowering plants, Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis) are found, occurring on the South Orkney Islands, the South Shetland Islands and along the western Antarctic Peninsula. The vegetation is predominantly made up of lower plant groups (mosses, liverworts, lichens and fungi) which are specially adapted to surviving in extreme environments, in particular, tolerating low temperatures and dehydration.

|pic|

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

February 22, 2012

Japanese Space Elevator by 2050?

Sign us up:

It may be possible to travel to space in an elevator as early as 2050, a major construction company has announced.

Obayashi Corp., headquartered in Tokyo, on Monday unveiled a project to build a gigantic elevator that would transport passengers to a station 36,000 kilometers above the Earth.

Space Elevator

It’ll take 7-1/2 days to get to the terminal. Better not have Yanni playing in that elevator…

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

February 15, 2012

Spray-On Antenna

Yes we can:

It sounds like a particularly suspicious late-night infomercial: Spray your way to a better wireless signal! Improve your range! Save battery! Transmit over great distances under water!

But Chamtech’s spray-on antenna is a real product with some impressive claims. It can be sprayed on almost any surface, even trees and orange barrels. It doesn’t suck up power. It works in a mysterious nanotech way.

Orange-barrels?

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

February 13, 2012

“Science Behind Ponytail Revealed”

Can cancer be far behind?

 Physicists have come up with an equation that explains and predicts the shape of a ponytail.

The report in Physical Review Letters journal could help scientists better understand natural materials, such as wool and fur.

The researchers add that mullets remained a complete mystery…

* Pic.

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,

February 11, 2012

Library of Mars Sand Dune Images

Went here:

I have been spending some far too much time this past day looking intently at at the absolutely phenomenal sub-meter resolution images taken by the HiRES camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which are freely available for download. The full-resolution JPEG2000 files are whoppers: Some of them easily scale 250MB and half a gigapixel, so if you need an excuse to buy a new computer, this is it.

Ended up here:

High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment: “Explore Mars, one giant image at a time.”

And found things like this. (Click to enlarge.)

Mars Dunes

Many, many more mindblowing shots at the link. Happy Saturday…

Posted by Thom

Tags: ,










The full name of the Simpsons character Krusty the Klown is Herschel Schmoeckel Krustofski.

View More Running Feet