#Synchronous Computer Operates on Water Droplets Infused with Magnetic nanoparticles The computer is nearly a decade in the making,
Then they carefully injected into the mix individual water droplets that had been infused with tiny magnetic nanoparticles.
Droplets of fat and water which can be produced on a large scaleliposomes have been used in several medical treatments.
when the researchers infused a single droplet of water with iodine-125 and deposited it on a thin layer of gold.
When the water evaporated, the iodine atoms bonded with the gold. The researchers inserted the tiny samplemaller than a dimento the microscope.
In an unmixable two-phase solution composed of an organic solvent (chloroform) and water, nanocrystals were immersed.
Nanocrystals do not dissolve in water; hence L-cysteine was added to transfer the nanocrystals in organic phase to water.
L-cysteine is a chiral molecule and it is used widely for phase transfers as a ligand.
and makes the material soluble in water. Hence, all the nanocrystals will be in water, irrespective of the cysteine chiral form.
When this solution was cooled and the phase transfer was interrupted at a specific point, a particular situation where the nanocrystal ensemble was divided equally between the phases that had nanocrystals both'left'and'right'-in different phases.
and capture the bacteria from a very complex microbial soup of the ocean.""The squid feeds the bacteria sugar and amino acids and in return,
however, and this makes it possible for scientists to understand the behaviour of fluids such as water at extremely small scales.
very similar to having oil separated from water. The new research shows how simple changes in the channel size can be used to create very small structures,
e have revealed the next piece of a puzzle that over time can lead to the controlled tailoring of liquids at extremely small scales. his knowledge opens the door to developing new devices that target other liquids, such as water-based solutions,
#Vibrations of Water-Carrying Nanotubes for Improved Water filtration Systems Together, unsafe drinking water and the inadequate supply of water for hygiene purposes contribute to almost 90%of all deaths from diarrheal diseases
--and effective water sanitation interventions are still challenging scientists and engineers. A new study published in Nature Nanotechnology proposes a novel nanotechnology-based strategy to improve water filtration.
The research project involves the minute vibrations of carbon nanotubes called"phonons, "which greatly enhance the diffusion of water through sanitation filters.
The project was the joint effort of a Tsinghua University-Tel aviv University research team and was led by Prof.
"Through phonon oscillations--vibrations of water-carrying nanotubes--water transport can be enhanced, and sanitation and desalination improved.
however, we witnessed three times the efficiency of water transport, and, of course, a great deal of energy saved."
such vibrations produce a 300%improvement in the rate of water diffusion by using computers to simulate the flow of water molecules flowing through nanotubes.
Wakes occur whenever something is traveling through a medium faster than the waves it creates--in the duck's case water waves, in the plane's case shock waves,
was made in the lab of Federico Capasso, the Robert L. Wallace Professor of Applied Physics and Vinton Hayes Senior Research Fellow in Electrical engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of engineering and Applied science (SEAS)."
Capasso's team designed a faster-than-light running wave of charge along a one-dimensional metamaterial--like a powerboat speeding across a lake.
or cameras,"said co-lead author Antonio Ambrosio of SEAS and the Italian Research Council (CNR)."
"This research addresses a particularly elegant and innovative problem in physics which connects different physical phenomena, from water wakes to sonic booms,
and Cherenkov radiation,"said Patrice Genevet, a lead author, formerly of SEAS, currently affiliated with the Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology y
Large-scale graphene can be used for applications such as water desalination membranes and flexible electronics. raphene is more conductive than any metal we know of,
said UC San diego Nanoengineering Ph d. candidate Aliaksandr (Alex) Zaretski. t has been known for years that graphene is useful as a water desalination membrane.
push large quantities of salt water through and the salt will be rejected on the basis of size
Companies can originate in any school including, for example, Jacobs School of engineering, Rady School of management, Scripps institute of oceanography, or the Medical school.
One way is to use electricity that is produced to split the liquid water. This process is called electrolysis.
One efficient solution is to link a current silicon solar cell to a battery which is capable of splitting the liquid water;
but also splits the water, acting as a form of solar fuel cell. The research team at FOM and TU/e found their desired candidate in Gap,
Gap is also able to extract oxygen from the water so you then actually have a fuel cell in
and extract a variety of contaminants from soil and water. Ferdinand Brandl and Nicolas Bertrand, the two lead authors, are former postdocs in the laboratory of Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor at MIT Koch Institute
When they learned that UV LIGHT was used to disinfect water in certain treatment plants, they began to ask a different question. e thought
or hormones from water, because we saw that the particles aggregate once you irradiate them with UV LIGHT. trap for ater-fearingpollutionthe researchers synthesized polymers from polyethylene glycol,
and dispersed evenly in water. But when exposed to UV LIGHT, the stabilizing outer shell of the particles is shed,
#Coral-Like Nanoplates Help Remove Toxic Heavy metals from Water A new material that mimics coral could help remove toxic heavy metals like mercury from the ocean,
Toxic heavy metal ions like mercury, lead and arsenic are released into the water through human activity, including manufacturing and industrial processes.
One major source of toxic metal contamination is the ocean. When mercury pollutes the water
plants and animals absorb it. The mercury builds up in the food chain, ultimately resulting in toxic fish.
with the aim of adsorbing mercury from water. Aluminium oxide has previously been used to remove pollutants,
"Adsorption is an easy way to remove pollutants from water, so developing new products that can do this is a big challenge in environmental remediation,
"The researchers tested the coral-like nanoplates on removing mercury from water. They found that the coral-like structure removed around 2. 5 times more mercury from water than the traditional aluminium oxide nanoparticles."
"We are excited very about the results, which provide a good example for the production of coral-like adsorbents,
#New Technique Probes the Sea floor Using Ocean's Weak Seismic Waves A technology developed by Stanford scientists for passively probing the seafloor using weak seismic waves generated by the ocean could revolutionize offshore oil and natural gas extraction
The pulses bounce off the seafloor and geological formations beneath then journey back to the surface,
Environmental groups and marine biologists have expressed concerns about the use of air guns for contributing to noise pollution in the ocean that can disturb
It exploits naturally occurring seismic waves generated by Earth's oceans that are several orders of magnitude weaker than those produced by earthquakes.
Ambient seismicity As ocean waves collide with one another, they create pressures on the sea floor, where they generate seismic waves that then propagate in every direction.
Scientists have known about this"ambient seismic field"for nearly a century, but it was only recently that they understood ways to harness it."
or ASNT, uses sensors embedded in the seafloor. The sensors, which are installed typically by robotic submersibles,
and arranged into parallel rows that can span several kilometers of the seafloor. Another cable connects the sensor array to a platform in order to collect data in real time.
and Ekofisk oil fields in the North sea that are capable of recording ambient seismic waves. The proof-of-concept experiment has been successful,
#Saturas Successfully Conducts Field trials of Embedded Stem Water Sensor The field tests were conducted on peach and citrus trees at the Hula Valley Orchards Experimental Farm.
The results were consistent with the stem water potential measurement using manual measurement tools and successfully demonstrated continuous measurement of the water status in the tree.
Based on the research of Dr. Moshe Meron Saturas has developed a miniature stem water potential (SWP) sensor that is embedded in the trunks of trees vines and plants.
SWP is recognized a scientifically highly accurate parameter for determining water status in crops but today SWP can only be measured in a labor-intensive procedure.
The Saturas sensor provides accurate information for optimized irrigation to reduce water consumption with no stress to the plants and increases fruit production and quality.
The Saturas sensing system tailors irrigation to the crop's real-time water needs resulting in more efficient water use
The sounder high-spectral resolution infrared technology measures the three-dimensional structure of atmospheric temperatures, water vapor and trace gases.
#Portable, Autonomous Device Analyzes Trace elements in Water, Air and Upper atmosphere Researchers from Arizona State university School of Earth and Space exploration have combined their sensors,
allows researchers to do things such as detect microbes in water, soil and the upper atmosphere. The machine,
the technology was intended originally for deployment on an Autonomous Underwater Vehicle platform as part of a project to map the dynamic microbial diversity in the world oceans.
After four years of development and millions of dollars from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the National Science Foundation and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, the instrument is now operational.
It is being used at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute and the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project to detect microbial contaminants in water more rapidly,
with better accuracy and lower limits of detection. The device employs emulsion droplet technology, which means that the aqueous sample comes into the instrument
lander or orbiter to seek out extant DNA in the water on Mars, the oceans of Europa,
pressure and water vapor similar to data collected by weather balloons but on a global scale using a technique called GPS Radio Occultation (GPS-RO).
Planetiq's microsatellite constellation, with an initial set of 12 satellites launching in 2016 and 2017, will deliver over 8 million observations per day of temperature, pressure and water vapor,
"The Earth's atmosphere is sampled radically under at present especially over the oceans which cover 70%of the Earth's surface.
and catches the pill in their hand, explains Carney, of Larchmont, New york. According to Heaney, of Oyster Bay, New york,
In the new procedure, the patient's breast will be placed in a warm water bath between an ultrasound transmitter and receiver.
In the summer of 2013, a plane carried Tan over the Straits of Malacca to Pekanbaru, the capital of Riau province, the largest palm-oil production region in Indonesia.
smoke can whip east across the Straits of Malacca and into both Singapore and Kuala lumpur (the capital of nearby Malaysia) collectively home to about seven million people.
a British Channel Islands-registered concern that aims to broaden internet access to the underserved. More than 600 satellites will initially be launched,
"The fact that we used patient-derived human pluripotent stem cells in our work represents a sea change in the field,
water or other spaces that are causes for health concerns. And it could aid in the detection of chemical weapons.
and they decided to collect samples from groundwater at a remediation site in Rifle, Colorado..
and are used often to purify water. Colleagues at the Department of energy Joint Genome Institute shotgun-sequenced the DNA of all the microbes in the filtered sample,
probing not only the acidic pools in abandoned mines and the contaminated groundwater at the Superfund cleanup site in Colorado,
with one end that was water-loving or hydrophilic and one that was water-fearing or hydrophobic.
A mixture of these molecules self-assembled into a vesicle, much like the coalescing of oil droplets in water,
with the hydrophobic ends pointing inward and the hydrophilic ends pointing outward. The result was millions of bubble-like structures, each 100 times smaller than the width of a human hair.
which involves shuttling tiny drops of water around on a series of small electrodes that looks like a miniature checkerboard.
and how that process can go wrong. he fact that we used patient-derived human pluripotent stem cells in our work represents a sea change in the field,
The new microneedle patch Microhyala is dissolvable in water. The tiny needles are made of hyaluronic acid,
Georgia Institute of technology Study Coating the inside of glass microtubes with a polymer hydrogel material dramatically alters the way capillary forces draw water into the tiny structures,
Capillary action draws water and other liquids into confined spaces such as tubes, straws, wicks and paper towels,
. But a chance observation by researchers at the Georgia Institute of technology will cause a recalculation of those predictions for conditions in which hydrogel films line the tubes carrying water-based liquids. ather than moving according to conventional expectations,
water-based liquids slip to a new location in the tube, get stuck, then slip again
the water propagates at a nearly constant speed into the hydrogel-coated capillary. This was very different from
When the opening of a thin glass tube is exposed to a droplet of water, the liquid begins to flow into the tube, pulled by a combination of surface tension in the liquid and adhesion between the liquid and the walls of the tube.
Leading the way is a meniscus, a curved surface of the water at the leading edge of the water column.
Water entering a tube coated on the inside with a dry hydrogel film must first wet the film
but with discrete steps in which the water meniscus first sticks and its motion remains arrested
This tick-slipprocess forces the water to move into the tube in a step-by-step motion. The flow rate measured by the researchers in the coated tube is three orders of magnitude less than the flow rate in an uncoated tube.
said Fedorov. hough there is some swelling of the hydrogel upon contact with water, the change in the tube diameter is negligible due to the small thickness of the hydrogel layer.
Water absorption by the hydrogels occurs only when the materials remain below a specific transition temperature.
the materials no longer absorb water, eliminating the tick-slipphenomenon in the microtubes and allowing them to behave like ordinary tubes.
This ability to turn the stick-slip behavior on and off with temperature could provide a new way to control the flow of water-based liquid in microfluidic devices,
John Burnett writes for West Hawaii Today that Iselle damage to Big Island ag crops is estimated at $53 million.
KITV video news clip illustrates the devastation on the Island ag community. As officials assess the damage inflicted by Iselle,
it evident the Big Island agriculture industry has sustained a severe blow. Richard Ha, president of Hamakua Springs Country Farms
and minimize impact on water quality, according to the participants. Jenny Cross, Global Sustainability Director for Mohawk Industries maker of Smartstrand carpets that use renewable nylons explains:
farmers could find ways to use water, seed, and fertilizer more efficiently, lowering their costs enough to more than pay for the technology investment
Such investments led to the creation of water sensors and drones which help farmers, like Keith Larrabee, make effective decisions.
but the tides are said shifting Michael W. Macleod-Ball, acting director of the American Civil liberties Union Washington legislative office, told The New york times. or the first time,
or doused in water and will still work. Practically, the Foldscope can help doctors correctly diagnose deadly diseases such as malaria, schistosomiasis,
Recently, Prakash also developed a computer than runs on water droplets. The droplets are suspended in a magnetic field
#Ruptured pipeline spills 79k litres of oil along California coast A broken pipeline spilled 21,000 gallons (79,500 litres) of crude oil into the ocean before it was shut off Tuesday,
Authorities responding to reports of a foul smell near Refugio State Beach around noon found an 800-metre slick already formed in the ocean, Santa barbara County Fire Capt.
and into a storm drain that empties into the ocean. The pipeline was shut off about three hours later but by then the slick stretched 45 metres into the water.
The 60-centimetre pipeline is owned by Plains All American Pipeline, which said it shut down the flow of oil
and the culvert carrying the oil to the ocean was blocked.""Plains deeply regrets this release has occurred
Boats from the nonprofit collective Clean Seas also were providing help but were having trouble
because so much of the oil was so close to the shore, Coast guard spokeswoman Jennifer Williams said.
About 3, 200 litres of oil have been recovered from the water, Williams said. The accident occurred on the same stretch of coastline as a 1969 spill that at the time was the largest ever in U s. waters
and is credited for giving rise to the American environmental movement. Several hundred thousand gallons spilled from a blowout on an oil platform
It was surpassed later in size by 1989's Exxon valdez spill off Alaska and the 2010 Gulf oil spill off Louisiana.
#California oil spill 5 times bigger than first estimated A broken pipeline spilled 21,000 gallons (79,500 litres) of crude oil into the ocean before it was shut off Tuesday,
Authorities responding to reports of a foul smell near Refugio State Beach around noon found an 800-metre slick already formed in the ocean, Santa barbara County Fire Capt.
and into a storm drain that empties into the ocean. The pipeline was shut off about three hours later but by then the slick stretched 45 metres into the water.
The 60-centimetre pipeline is owned by Plains All American Pipeline, which said it shut down the flow of oil
and the culvert carrying the oil to the ocean was blocked.""Plains deeply regrets this release has occurred
Boats from the nonprofit collective Clean Seas also were providing help but were having trouble
because so much of the oil was so close to the shore, Coast guard spokeswoman Jennifer Williams said.
About 3, 200 litres of oil have been recovered from the water, Williams said. The accident occurred on the same stretch of coastline as a 1969 spill that at the time was the largest ever in U s. waters
and is credited for giving rise to the American environmental movement. Several hundred thousand gallons spilled from a blowout on an oil platform
It was surpassed later in size by 1989's Exxon valdez spill off Alaska and the 2010 Gulf oil spill off Louisiana.
and oleophobic paint that repels both water and oil, preventing the car from getting dirty.
It been proven effective against road spray, sleet, standing water, and even clumsy painters, providing an umbrella-like layer of protection to the LEAF paint job.
Even the most efficient car washes use hundreds of gallons of water to clean a single vehicle.
and insulated with concrete to prevent any leakage from entering local groundwater. Bacteria that naturally occur within cowsdigestive tracts are added to the manure,
and then recycled so local farmers can use it to water their crops. The by-product that remains at the end of the process,
president and CEO of GE Power & Water. he question is not whether to start down this path it about knowing how to get the most out of your digital transformation.
water comes throughn your basements, in a parking garage. Secondly, if this water gets to the steel reinforcementsn concrete we have all these steel rebarsf they corrode, the structure collapses.
It has taken Jonkers and his team three years to produce this self-healing prototype, needing to overcome the most obvious obstacle:
when water enters the concrete cracks. Once released, the bacteria consume the calcium lactate, causing a chemical reaction that creates limestone,
if the concrete cracks and water gets in. Concrete is extremely alkaline and the ealingbacteria must wait dormant for years before being activated by water.
Jonkers chose bacillus bacteria for the job, because they thrive in alkaline conditions and produce spores that can survive for decades without food
water enters and open the capsules. The bacteria then germinate, multiply and feed on the lactate,
Doubtless, some historical controversiesike the fights over the Keystone XL pipeline from Alberta oil sands to the US Gulf coast extensive petroleum infrastructureill remain,
Norsepower trials confirm fuel savings of 2. 6 percent using a single small Rotor Sail on a route in the North sea.
MS Estraden operates in a continuous service between The netherlands and the UK, sailing through the North sea windy corridors at speeds of 16 knots.
#Weirdest Biofuel Ever Powers Strangest Car Ever The folks at Columbia University have come up with a loating enginethat runs on evaporating water
Eva, the first evaporation-powered car, rolls along, thanks to a moisture mill a turbine engine driven by water evaporating from wet paper strips lining its walls.
it could one day produce electricity from giant floating power generators that sit on bays or reservoirs,
or from huge rotating machines akin to wind turbines that sit above water The team is already predicting that a scaled-up version,
#Biomimicry Wave Energy Device Ready To Leave The Nest A new bio-inspired method of harvesting energy from the ocean has completed its shakedown on land,
The Biowave wave energy device was inspired by the way that kelp sways and pivots with the movement of ocean swell waves.
and the generator cranks electricity into an undersea cable for transmission to the shore. To pare down maintenance costs,
when extreme seas threaten to damage the equipment, the biowave floats are designed to collapse automatically onto the safety of the sea floor.
To get a feel for what going to happen when the device is deployed later this year, you can catch the biowave in action on Vimeo.
because the newer reserves cost more to develop, such as deep sea oil. They may get cheaper through market shifts,
drill in the deep ocean, buy an oil tanker or develop a coalmine. They can play on the edges, like shale gas, oil trading or mineral exploration,
#Google street view Now Monitors Urban Air pollution Wee come to rely on Google street view for everything from roads to hiking paths to coral reefs,
This fall, the partnership will take its next step by expanding mapping efforts to the San francisco bay Area
and Applied sciences (SEAS) and a co-lead author. Lewis is also a core faculty member of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard.
#Lasers have turned this metal super hydrophobic The ability to repel water has so many potential uses.
since water can't cling long enough to evaporate and leave behind residue; and it can prevent ice from forming.
and repels water. The material is much more slippery than Teflon, with the added benefit that the structures are part of the material
You also don't have to tip the surface for the water to roll off, like you do with Teflon."
the water actually gets bounced off. Then it lands on the surface again, gets bounced off again,
As the water bounces on the surface of the material, it will pick up and carry away with it any dust,
where water can be scarce and therefore precious. It could help clean, for instance, latrines with a minimum of water wastage."
"In these regions, collecting rain water is vital and using super-hydrophobic materials could increase the efficiency without the need to use large funnels with high-pitched angles to prevent water from sticking to the surface,
"Guo said.""A second application could be creating latrines that are cleaner and healthier to use."
"Yet another application could be the development of solar thermal collectors, which absorb solar energy in the form of heat and light,
which the researchers joined up to create a new molecule where one end was water-loving
and the other was water-fearing. These molecules self-assembled into a vesicle within which researchers inserted a core of solid insulin and enzymes,
which makes the water-loving NI molecules become water-fearing. Ultimately, this causes the vesicles to fall apart,
can simply be swallowed with water and although the price has not been announced, it's likely to be much cheaper than a pacemaker.
but does have a cargo bay similar to that of a pickup truck, which is just large enough to carry a small satellite.
The technology could be applied to large NASA data centers such as the Physical oceanography Distributed Active Archive Center,
which makes NASA's ocean and climate data accessible and meaningful. Memex would make PDF documents more easily searchable
The flight ended with a planned plunge into the ocean. The Waverider traveled more than 230 miles in six minutes
and water enters them, the water'awakens'the bacteria. Once active, the bacteria'eat'the calcium lactate
and secrete limestone which closes the cracks. A stock image of a pot hole is shown m
Professor Banfield and her colleagues sequenced the genomes of organisms found in ground water at a site beside the Colorado river in Rifle Colorado.
These new phyla were found from just one site using samples of groundwater in Colorado
rivers, oceans and even deep underground around the world. It comes after the same group of scientists identified nine new groups of Archaea,
Kingii emergency wristband inflates to save wearers from drowning Everyone knows it possible to drown in even shallow and calm waters,
which can pull a wearer towards the water surface. The wristband is said to be suitable for activities including swimming,
I developed Kingii as a way to promote the importance of water safety and, hopefully, end this type of tragedy once and for all,
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