Monday, December 22, 2008

Transparent RAM

This report covers the fabrication of a fully transparent resistive random access memory (TRRAM) device based on an ITO (indium tin oxide)/ZnO/ITO capacitor structure and its resistive switching characteristics. The fabricated TRRAM has a transmittance of 81% (including the substrate) in the visible region and an excellent switching behavior under 3 V.




The retention measurement suggests that the memory property of the TRRAM device could be maintained for more than 10 years. We believe that the TRRAM device presented in this work could be a milestone of future see-through electronic devices. ©2008 American Institute of Physics. Jung Won Seo, Jae-Woo Park, Keong Su Lim, Ji-Hwan Yang, and Sang Jung Kang, School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). [link]

2.5 Inch SSD



Shortly on the heels of Toshiba’s propping up of SanDisk to gain some leverage in the SSD market against giant Samsung, Toshiba has announced that it will be bringing a new lineup of NAND-flash-based solid state drives to market in the first quarter of 2009. Claiming the industry’s first 2.5-inch 512GB SSD, based on 43 nanometer Multi-Level Cell NAND, Toshiba Semiconductor VP Kiyoshi Kobayashi stated “This new 43nm SSD family balances value/performance characteristics for its targeted consumer applications, through use of MLC NAND and an advanced controller architecture.”
The drives maximum sequential read speed is 240MB ps, with a maximum sequential write speed of 200MBps. Mass production isnt supposed to begin until the second quarter of 09.

More here

Record your Dreams

Opens the way for people to communicate directly from their mind

Image: Letters and reconstructions

TOKYO - Japanese researchers have reproduced images of things people were looking at by analyzing brain scans, opening the way for people to communicate directly from their mind.

They hope their study, published in the U.S. journal Neuron, will lead to helping people with speech problems or doctors studying mental disorders, although there are privacy issues if it gets to the stage where someone can read a sleeping person's dreams.

"When we want to convey a message, we need to move our body, for example by speaking or by tapping a keyboard," said Yukiyasu Kamitani, the project's head researcher from the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International, a private institute based in Kyoto, Japan.

"But if we can get information directly from the brain, it will be possible to communicate directly by imagining what we want to say, without having to move," Kamitani said in a telephone interview with Reuters.

Such technology might one day open the way to communication for people who cannot speak or help visualize hallucinations to assist doctors diagnosing mental disorders, Kamitani added.

When we see, light is converted into electric signals by the retina, at the back of the eye, then processed by the brain's visual cortex.

Researchers from the five institutions involved in the research used a medical brain scanner to look at activity patterns in the visual cortex.

Kamitani's team calibrated a computer program by scanning two volunteers staring at over 400 different still images in black, white and grey.

Then, the volunteers were shown different black-and-white geometric figures and letters of the alphabet.

Their computer program was able to reproduce the figures and letters that the volunteers had seen, although more blurry than the originals.

"In this experiment, we reconstructed images of what people actually saw, but the brain's visual cortex is said to be active even when just imagining something," Kamitani said.


The next step for the team is to study how to visualize images inside people's minds, he said.

"We want to know how our subjective experiences and dreams are expressed inside our brains," Kamitani said, adding that the study might lead to producing images of dreams.

If the team does manage that there were potential privacy issues and strong safeguards would be needed, he said.

"As accuracy rises, it is possible that information that people want to keep private could also be visualized while they are sleeping."


Reasons for seasons

GRAPHIC: Why do we have seasons?
Earth's tilt affects seasons. In this graphic, distances and sizes are not to scale.

The seasons are a powerful force in our lives. They affect the activities we do, the foods we crave, the clothes we wear — and quite often, the moods we are in. The seasons officially changed once again Sunday, with winter beginning in the Northern Hemisphere and summer starting in the south.

What is it that causes the change in seasons?

The ability to predict the seasons — by tracking the rising and setting points of the sun throughout the year — was key to survival in ancient times. Babylonians, the Maya and other cultures developed complex systems for monitoring seasonal shifts. But it took centuries more to unravel the science behind the seasons.

Nicolai Copernicus (1473-1543) radically changed our understanding of astronomy when he proposed that the sun, not Earth, was the center of the solar system. This led to our modern understanding of the relationship between the sun and Earth.

We now know that Earth orbits the sun elliptically and, at the same time, spins on an axis that is tilted relative to its plane of orbit. This means that different hemispheres are exposed to different amounts of sunlight throughout the year. Because the sun is our source of light, energy and heat, the changing intensity and concentration of its rays give rise to the seasons of winter, spring, summer and fall.

Solstices and equinoxes
The seasons are marked by solstices and equinoxes — astronomical terms that relate to Earth’s tilt.

The solstices mark the points at which the poles are tilted at their maximum toward or away from the sun. This is when the difference between the daylight hours and the nighttime hours is most acute. The solstices occur each year on June 20 or 21 and Dec. 21 or 22, and represent the official start of the summer and winter seasons.

The vernal equinox and autumnal equinox herald the beginning of spring and fall, respectively. At these times of the year, the sun appears to be directly over Earth’s equator, and the lengths of the day and the night are equal over most of the planet.

On March 20 or 21 of each year, the Northern Hemisphere is reaching the vernal equinox and enjoying the signs of spring. At the same time, the winds are turning cold in the Southern Hemisphere as the autumnal equinox sets in.

The year's other equinox occurs on Sept. 22 or 23, when summer fades to fall in the north, and winter’s chill starts giving way to spring in the south.

From year to year, there is always some variability in the equinoxes and solstices because of the way Earth's changing tilt matches up with its orbit around the sun. This year, the precise moment of the December solstice came at 7:04 a.m. ET Sunday.

Effect on climate
Here’s how the seasonal change affects the weather: Around the time of the June solstice, the North Pole is tilted toward the sun and the Northern Hemisphere is starting to enjoy summer. The density of the solar radiation is higher because it's coming from directly overhead — in other words, the sun's rays are concentrated over a smaller surface area. The days are longer, too, meaning that more radiation is absorbed in northern climes during the 24-hour cycle. Another factor that may come into play is that the radiation takes a somewhat shorter path through the energy-absorbing atmosphere before striking the earth.

At the same time that the Northern Hemisphere is entering summer, the South Pole is tilted away from the sun, and the Southern Hemisphere is starting to feel the cold of winter. The sun’s glancing rays are spread over a greater surface area and must travel through more of the atmosphere before reaching the earth. There are also fewer hours of daylight in a 24-hour period.

The situations are reversed in December, when it’s the Southern Hemisphere that basks in the most direct rays of the sun, while the Northern Hemisphere receives less dense solar radiation for shorter periods of time.

Although the solstices represent the pinnacles of summer and winter with respect to the intensity of the sun’s rays, they do not represent the warmest or coldest days. This is because temperature depends not only on the amount of heat the atmosphere receives from the sun, but also on the amount of heat it loses due to the absorption of this heat by the ground and ocean. It is not until the ground and oceans absorb enough heat to reach equilibrium with the temperature of the atmosphere that we feel the coldest days of winter or hottest days of summer.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Sensor detects cancer toxins

CHICAGO - U.S. scientists have developed a tiny sensor that can detect small amounts of cancer-causing toxins or trace the effectiveness of cancer drugs inside living cells.

The finding, reported on Sunday in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, offers a new tool for tracking specific chemicals in the body.

"We made a very small nanosensor that can detect cancer-causing molecules or important therapeutic drugs inside of a single living cell," said Michael Strano of Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, who worked on the study.

"It's much smaller than a living cell in your body," Strano said in a telephone interview. "It's so small it can be placed into environments that aren't accessible with larger sensors."

Strano said the sensors are made up of thin filaments of carbon molecules known as carbon nanotubes.

Several teams are using nanomaterials -- thousands of times smaller than the width of a human hair -- to develop new ways to deliver drugs in the body or improve diagnosis of disease.

For its sensors, Strano's team wrapped carefully shaped carbon nanotubes with DNA, which offers a binding site for DNA-damaging agents inside cells.

The sensors give off a fluorescent light that can be detected in the near-infrared light spectrum. Because human tissues do not light up in this spectrum, the nanotubes stand out.

Strano said the light signal changes when the sensors interact with DNA inside cells. These changes can help them identify specific molecules.

"It's a way of fingerprinting chemistry," Strano said.

Because the sensors are coated in DNA, Strano said they can be safely injected into living cells.

"Eventually the cell eats the protein off the coating and it essentially spits it out," he said.

He said the most immediate use of the technology will be as a very powerful tool for scientists to study the effects of very small amounts of a chemical.

But it could eventually be used as a new way to image the human body.

"It's a new tool. There is nothing else like it."

Roads are power stations

AN ENVIRONMENTALLY friendly road that positively welcomes heavy traffic may sound odd, but by placing piezoelectric crystals under the asphalt that convert vibration into electricity, Israeli engineers hope to harvest energy from passing vehicles.

Developer Haim Abramovich at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa says the crystals can produce up to 400 kilowatts from a 1-kilometre stretch of four-lane highway. His spin-out company, Innowattech, also based inHaifa, will begin testing the system on a 100-metre stretch of road in northern Israel in January.

Installing the technology need not produce unnecessary greenhouse gases, says Abramovich: "We're advocating that the system be fitted to roads only during routine maintenance, so there's no extra digging."

'Mind-reading' software

Pictures you are observing can now be recreated with software that uses nothing but scans of your brain. It is the first "mind reading" technology to create such images from scratch, rather than picking them out from a pool of possible images.

Earlier this year Jack Gallant and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, showed that they could tell which of a set of images someone was looking at from a brain scan.

To do this, they created software that compared the subject's brain activity while looking at an image with that captured while they were looking at "training" photographs. The program then picked the most likely match from a set of previously unseen pictures.

Now Yukiyasu Kamitani at ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Kyoto, Japan has gone a step further: his team has used an image of brain activity taken in a functional MRI scanner to recreate a black-and-white image from scratch.

"By analysing the brain signals when someone is seeing an image, we can reconstruct that image," says Kamitani.

This means that the mind reading isn't limited to a selection of existing images, but could potentially be used to "read off" anything that someone was thinking of, without prior knowledge of what that might be.

"It's absolutely amazing, it really is a very significant step forward," says John-Dylan Haynes of the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany.

Dream catcher

Kamitani starts by getting someone to look at a selection of images made up of black and white squares on a 10 by 10 square grid, while having their brain scanned. Software then finds patterns in brain activity that correspond to certain pixels being blacked out. It uses this to record a signature pattern of brain activity for each pixel.

The person then sits in the scanner and is shown fresh patterns. Another piece of software then matches these against the list to reconstruct the pixels on a 10 by 10 grid.

The quality of images that were recreated is quite crude. However, the word "neuron" and several numbers and shapes that people were indeed being shown (see image, top right) could be observed in the reconstructed images. It is an important proof of principle, says Haynes.

As fMRI technology improves, Kamitani adds that an image could potentially be split into many more pixels, producing much higher quality images, and even colour images.

The next step is to find out if it is possible to image things that people are thinking of - as well as what they are looking at - Haynes says it may be possible to "make a videotape of a dream".

Ethical concerns

Haynes also raises the prospect of "neural marketing", where advertisers might one day be able to read the thoughts of passers by and use the results to target adverts. "This [new research] specifically doesn't lead to this - but the whole spirit in which this is done is in line with brain reading and the applications that come with that," he says.

"If you have a technique that allows you to read out what people are thinking we need clearer ethical guidelines about when and how you are able to do this," he says. "A lot of people want their minds to be read - take for example a paralysed person. They want us to read their thoughts," he says. "But it shouldn't be possible to do this for commercial purposes."

Kamitani is well aware of the negative potential of the technology. "If the image quality improves, it could have a very serious impact on our privacy and other issues. We will have to discuss with many people - not just scientists - how to apply this technology," he says.

Journal reference: Neuron

Water behave as black holes

WHAT does a drop of water have in common with a black hole and an atom? Well, levitating water droplets can now simulate the dynamics of both cosmological and subatomic objects.

Spinning water could be used to mimic black hole behaviour (Image: Richard Hill and Laurence Eaves, University of Nottingham)

Richard Hill and Laurence Eaves at the University of Nottingham, UK, turned to water droplets because the surface tension that holds the drops together can be used to model other forces. For example, the event horizon of a black hole is sometimes thought of as a "stretched" membrane with a surface tension. Similar forces also prevent atoms from flying apart.

The team levitated the droplets using an effect called diamagnetism: when an external magnetic field was applied to the droplets, they created their own opposing magnetic field, initiating a repulsive force strong enough to counteract gravity. To set the droplets spinning, they implanted two tiny electrodes, which generated an electric field.

They found that once a droplet with a diameter of 1 centimetre reached about 3 revolutions per second, its shape, when viewed from above, became triangular, an effect never seen before in the lab (Physical Review Letters, DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.101.234501).

"The breakthrough in this work is the ability to reproduce, in a simple table-top experiment, 100 years of theoretical work in fluid dynamics," says Vitor Cardoso of the University of Mississippi.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Contacts lens



The University of Washington's Babak Parviz has created a prototype "bionic" contact lens that creates a display over the wearer's visual field, so images, maps, data, etc., appear to float in midair. The lens works using tiny LEDs, which are powered by solar cells, and a radio-frequency receiver.

Solar Panels



There are countless ways to manufacture solar panels, but there's only one metric that counts: how the cost of solar power compares with that of electricity from fossil fuels. Until energy from the sun can beat energy from coal at the marketplace, solar will remain a niche player, adorning the rooftops of those who care more for their green reputation than for their bottom lines. Enter Nanosolar, a San Jose-based start-up that manufactures thin-film solar panels. Unlike the bulky silicon panels that dominate the solar market, Nanosolar thin-film technology is light and extremely cheap to make. The key is the manufacturing process: while silicon panels need to be baked in batches, Nanosolar's thin-film panels roll off the assembly line, as if from a printing press.

The invisible



Scientists at UC Berkeley have taken a major step toward making Harry Potter's disguise of choice a reality. They've engineered two new materials — one using a fishnet of metal layers, the other using tiny silver wires — that neither absorb nor reflect light, causing it instead to bend backward. The principle at work is refraction, which is what makes a straw appear bent in a glass of water.

The 46th Mersenne Prime




A Mersenne number is a positive number that can be expressed in the form 2n-1. A Mersenne prime is a Mersenne number that is, well, prime. Searching for higher and higher Mersenne primes is the unofficial national sport of mathematicians. The 45th and 46th (right) Mersenne primes were found this year, the latter by a team at UCLA. It has almost 13 million digits.

Einstein's Fridge



That Albert Einstein guy had some pretty good ideas — relativity, the photoelectric effect, the "up" hairdo — but his contributions to the field of refrigerator theory have been sadly neglected. No longer. Scientists at Oxford University have resurrected an eco-friendly refrigerator design that Einstein and a collaborator patented in 1930. Instead of cooling the interior of the refrigerator with freon — a serious contributor to global warming — Einstein's design uses ammonia, butane and water. It also requires very little energy. Though Einstein's original refrigerator wasn't all that efficient, the Oxford researchers have tweaked his version and believe it could eventually compete in the marketplace. Then maybe we'll remember Einstein the way he wanted — as a guy who liked to keep things cool.

Made-in-Transit Packaging



Most fresh food comes with a "best before" date, but Amsterdam-based Canadian designer Agata Jaworska thinks it should be marked "ready by." Her concept: packaging in which food can keep growing during shipping to the supermarket so that it arrives ready to be harvested, in a state of optimum freshness.

Super Bike

You really need the mind of a Swiss engineer to come up with a vehicle that combines the lithe maneuverability of a motorcycle with the not-getting-rained-on-ability of a conventional automobile. In addition to looking as though it just fell out of a time machine from a distant and much cooler future, the MonoTracer furnishes its driver (and one passenger) with such luxuries as air-conditioning and windshield wipers, plus the safety of a cockpit made from Kevlar and carbon fiber and reinforced with an aluminum roll cage. The MonoTracer is also energy-efficient: its BMW engine, which goes from zero to 62 m.p.h. in 4.8 sec. (100 km/h), gets about 65 m.p.g. (28 km/L).



Super electric car

The Aptera is one of the first eco-friendly cars to get high mileage: the all-electric model gets 120 miles (193 km) per charge, and the hybrid gets 300 (483). Extra points for cool design and acceleration from zero to 60 (97 km/h) in under 10 seconds — living up to its name, Greek for "wingless flight."



A Camera For the Blind



Paradoxical as it sounds, the Touch Sight camera makes it possible for the visually impaired to take pictures. The photographer holds the camera up to his or her forehead, and a Braille-like screen on the back makes a raised image of whatever the lens sees.

The Large Hadron Collider

If someone invented a practical 200-m.p.g. automobile and that automobile got a flat tire, nobody would claim that the car itself was a failure. The same applies to the Large Hadron Collider, the world's biggest particle accelerator, which went online in September, ran for 10 days and then had to shut down at least until next spring because of an overheated wire. The mammoth machine will send protons wheeling in opposite directions at nearly the speed of light, then smash them together at 6,000 times a second to try to answer such deep questions as why mass exists and whether the universe has extra dimensions. If it takes a few extra months to find out, so what?



Friday, December 5, 2008

The Shadowless Skyscraper


Very tall buildings are a tough sell in Paris. The Parisians don't want their lovely low-rise city looking too much like Houston.
So Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron knew they'd have to win over skeptical neighbors to get their 50-story tower built.
Le Project Triangle, a combination office/hotel, is the first skyscraper to be approved since Paris lifted a 31-year-old ban on high-rise construction in the city center.
Using computer modeling, the designers of Beijing's "bird's nest" Olympic stadium came up with a building almost as startling: a slender glass-and-steel triangle, like a shark fin, that they say won't cast shadows on surrounding streets.
The pyramid is one of history's oldest building shapes, but a slim triangle? That's new.
Is it the shape of things to come?

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Memristors:Ground breaking circuit

Since the dawn of electronics, we’ve had only three types of circuit components — resistors, inductors, and capacitors.

1 May 2008—Anyone familiar with electronics knows the trinity of fundamental components: the resistor, the capacitor, and the inductor. In 1971, a University of California, Berkeley, engineer predicted that there should be a fourth element: a memory resistor,or memristor. But no one knew how to build one. Now, 37 years later, electronics have finally gotten small enough to reveal the secrets of that fourth element. The memristor, Hewlett-Packard researchers revealed today in the journal Nature, had been hiding in plain sight all along—within the electrical characteristics of certain nanoscale devices. They think the new element could pave the way for applications both near- and far-term, from nonvolatile RAM to realistic neural networks.

The memristor's story starts nearly four decades ago with a flash of insight by IEEE Fellow and nonlinear-circuit-theory pioneer Leon Chua. Examining the relationships between charge and flux in resistors,capacitors, and inductors in a 1971 paper, Chua postulated the existence of a fourth element called the memory resistor. Such a device, he figured, would provide a similar relationship between magnetic flux and charge that a resistor gives between voltage and current. In practice, that would mean it acted like a resistor whose value could vary according to the current passing through it and which would remember that value even after the current disappeared.

But the hypothetical device was mostly written off as a mathematical dalliance. Thirty years later, HP senior fellow Stanley Williams and his group were working on molecular electronics when they started to notice strange behavior in their devices. “They were doing really funky things, and we couldn't figure out what [was going on],” Williams says. Then his HP collaborator Greg Snider rediscovered Chua's work from 1971. “He said, ‘Hey guys, I don't know what we've got, but this is what we want,' ” Williams remembers. Williams spent several years reading and rereading Chua's papers. “It was several years of scratching my head and thinking about it.” Then Williams realized their molecular devices were really memristors. “It just hit me between the eyes.

The reason that the memristor is radically different from the other fundamental circuit elements is that,unlike them, it carries a memory of its past. When you turn off the voltage to the circuit, the memristor still remembers how much was applied before and for how long.That's an effect that can't be duplicated by any circuit combination of resistors, capacitors, and inductors,which is why the memristor qualifies as a fundamental circuit element.

The classic analogy for a resistor is a pipe through which water (electricity) runs. The width of the pipe is analogous to the resistance of the flow of current—the narrower the pipe, the greater the resistance. Normal resistors have an unchanging pipe size. A memristor, on the other hand, changes with the amount of water that gets pushed through. If you push water through the pipe in one direction, the pipe gets larger (less resistive).If you push the water in the other direction, the pipe gets smaller (more resistive). And the memristor remembers. When the water flow is turned off, the pipe size does not change.

Such a mechanism could technically be replicated using transistors and capacitors, but, Williams says, “it takes a lot of transistors and capacitors to do the job of a single memristor.”

The memristor's memory has consequences: the reason computers have to be rebooted every time they are turned on is that their logic circuits are incapable of holding their bits after the power is shut off. But because a memristor can remember voltages, a memristor-driven computer would arguably never need a reboot. “You could leave all your Word files and spreadsheets open, turn off your computer, and go get a cup of coffee or go on vacation for two weeks,” says Williams. “When you come back, you turn on your computer and everything is instantly on the screen exactly the way you left it.

Chua deduced the existence of memristors from the mathematical relationships between the circuit elements.The four circuit quantities (charge, current, voltage,and magnetic flux) can be related to each other in six ways. Two quantities are covered by basic physical laws,and three are covered by known circuit elements (resistor, capacitor, and inductor), says Columbia University electrical engineering professor David Vallancourt. That leaves one possible relation unaccounted for. Based on this realization, Chua proposed the memristor purely for the mathematical aesthetics of it, as a class of circuit element based on a relationship between charge and flux.

Chua calls the HP work a paradigm shift; he likens the addition of the memristor to the circuit design arsenal to adding a new element to the periodic table: for one thing, “now all the EE textbooks need to be changed,” he says.

So why hadn't anyone seen memristance? Chua actually produced a memristor in the 1970s with an impractical combination of resistors, capacitors, inductors,and amplifiers as a proof of concept. But memristance as a property of a material was, until recently, too subtle to make use of. It is swamped by other effects,until you look at materials and devices that are mere nanometers in size.

No one was looking particularly hard for memristance,either. In the absence of an application, there was no need. No engineers were saying, “If we only had a memristor, we could do X,” says Vallancourt. In fact,Vallancourt, who has been teaching circuit design for years, had never heard of memristance before this week.

"now all the EE textbooks need to be changed"

But the smaller the scales of the devices scientists and engineers were working with got, the more the devices started behaving with the postulated memristor” effect, says Chua, who is now a senior professor at Berkeley.

There had been clues to the memristor's existence all along. “People have been reporting funny current voltage characteristics in the literature for 50 years,”Williams says. “I went to these old papers and looked at the figures and said, ‘Yup, they've got memristance, and they didn't know how to interpret it.' ”

“Without Chua's circuit equations, you can't make use of this device,” says Williams. “It's such a funky thing. People were using all the wrong circuit equations. It's like taking a washing machine motor and putting it into a gasoline-powered car and wondering why it won't run.”

Williams found an ideal memristor in titanium dioxide—the stuff of white paint and sunscreen. Like silicon, titanium dioxide (TiO2)is a semiconductor, and in its pure state it is highly resistive. However, it can be doped with other elements to make it very conductive. In TiO2, the dopants don't stay stationary in a high electric field; they tend to drift in the direction of the current. Such mobility is poison to a transistor, but it turns out that's exactly what makes a memristor work. Putting a bias voltage across a thin film of TiO2 semiconductor that has dopants only on one side causes them to move into the pure TiO2 on the other side and thus lowers the resistance. Running current in the other direction will then push the dopants back into place, increasing the TiO2's resistance.

HP Labs is now working out how to manufacture memristors from TiO2 and other materials and figuring out the physics behind them. They also have a circuit group working out how to integrate memristors and silicon circuits on the same chip. The HP group has a hybrid silicon CMOS memristor chip “sitting on a chip tester in our lab right now,” says Williams.

The implications for circuit design may be niche at the moment. “This will require a fair amount of work to exploit,” says Columbia's Vallancourt. Applications will have to be identified in which the memristor's unique characteristics offer possibilities not covered by today's components.

Williams is in talks with several neuroscience/engineering labs that are pursuing the goal of building devices that emulate neural systems.Chua says that synapses, the connections between neurons,have some memristive behavior. Therefore, a memristor would be the ideal electronic device to emulate a synapse.

By redesigning certain types of circuits to include memristors, Williams expects to obtain the same function with fewer components, making the circuit itself less expensive and significantly decreasing its power consumption. In fact, he hopes to combine memristors with traditional circuit-design elements to produce a device that does computation in a non-Boolean fashion.“We won't claim that we're going to build a brain, but we want something that will compute like a brain,”Williams says. They think they can abstract “the whole synapse idea” to do essentially analog computation in an efficient manner. “Some things that would take a digital computer forever to do,an analog computer would just breeze through,” he says.

The HP group is also looking at developing a memristor-based nonvolatile memory. “A memory based on memristors could be 1000 times faster than magnetic disks and use much less power,” Williams says, sounding like a kid in a candy store.

Chua agrees that nonvolatile memory is the most near-term application. “I'm very happy that this is a breakthrough,” he says. “The reality is that at the nanoscale, this effect becomes dominant, and you'll find it whether you like it or not. I'm glad I can point people in the right direction.”

The new component added to the basic components in the science of electronics.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Nanocloth is Never Wet

If you were to soak even your best raincoat underwater for two months it would be wet through at the end of the experience. But a new waterproof material developed by Swiss chemists would be as dry as the day it went in.
Lead researcher Stefan Seeger at the University of Zurich says the fabric, made from polyester fibres coated with millions of tiny silicone filaments, is the most water-repellent clothing-appropriate material ever created.
Drops of water stay as spherical balls on top of the fabric (see image, right) and a sheet of the material need only be tilted by 2 degrees from horizontal for them to roll off like marbles. A jet of water bounces off the fabric without leaving a trace (see second image).
Protective spikes
The secret to this incredible water resistance is the layer of silicone nanofilaments, which are highly chemically hydrophobic. The spiky structure of the 40-nanometre-wide filaments strengthens that effect, to create a coating that prevents water droplets from soaking through the coating to the polyester fibres underneath.
"The combination of the hydrophobic surface chemistry and the nanostructure of the coating results in the super-hydrophobic effect," Seeger explained to New Scientist. "The water comes to rest on the top of the nanofilaments like a fakir sitting on a bed of nails," he says.
A similar combination of water-repelling substances and tiny nanostructures is responsible for many natural examples of extreme water resistance, such as the surface of Lotus leaves.
The silicone nanofilaments also trap a layer of air between them, to create a permanent air layer. Similar layers - known as plastrons - are used by some insects and spiders to breathe underwater.
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi18xd0IE55eQhQ4BNiY6Ma5bH6qAcJV3RBeANI8lyT0L_I5ehbRgAWM4wMakruBkpMw_lCFpSqmQmFngk-idmhj-g0mc5eqquXXjdatCSy-axQ3nsmfiuxPPRMOn9Q7B6dYnVG3SCzTxMX/s400/XXXu0A2BZ_400x300.jpg
Self-cleaning suit
This fine layer of air ensures that water never comes into contact with the polyester fabric. It can be submerged in water for two months and still remain dry to the touch, says Seeger.
In addition, the plastron layer can also reduce drag when moving from water by up to 20% according to preliminary experiments conducted by Seeger. "This could be very interesting for athletic swimwear applications," he suggests, raising the possibility of future swimsuits that never get wet.
The new coating is produced in a one-step process, in which silicone in gas form condenses onto the fibres to form nanofilaments. The coating can also be added to other textiles, including wool, viscose and cotton, although polyester currently gives the best results.
Durable invention
Experiments also showed that the new coating is durable. Unlike some water-resistant coatings, it remains more-or-less intact when the fabric is rubbed vigorously, although it didn't survive an everyday washing machine cycle.
For Steven Bell, director of the Innovative Molecular Materials Group at Queen's University Belfast, it is this durability that represents the really exciting aspect of this work.
"Although the textiles did show some degradation in the mechanical abrasion tests, their performance was very impressive," he says. "The era of self-cleaning clothes may be closer than we think."
Journal reference: Advanced Functional Materials (DOI: 10.1002/adfm.200800755)

When did the Earth turn green?

Photosynthesis - the process by which organisms like plants convert light energy into chemical energy - may not have been around quite as long as previously thought.
That's the conclusion of a study of solidified oil that formed around 2.7 billion years ago in the Pilbara region of Western Australia.
The study, led by Birger Rasmussen of the Curtin University of Technology in Perth, means the planet had to wait another 550 million years for photosynthesis to get going, and that the oldest known eukaryotic (complex) cells are one billion years younger than previously thought.
"A lot of people will revisit their understanding of the late Archaean period in light of these results," says Woodward Fischer of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.
Oxygen surge
Photosynthesis converts carbon dioxide and water into carbohydrates and oxygen. The process is the most likely explanation for "the great oxidation" event 2.4 billion years ago, when oxygen in the atmosphere started to build up, paving the way for the evolution of complex life-forms like animals.
The oxygen surge is also considered to be the strongest clue to the timing of the evolution of photosynthesis. But until now it has conflicted with the fossil evidence.
Almost a decade ago, Jochen Brocks, then at the University of Sydney, found minute traces of organic molecules that could only have come from photosynthetic cyanobacteria in Pilbara shale (Science, vol 285, 1033). Other organic molecules were indicative of eukaryotic cells.
At the time, Brocks' analysis dated the so-called "molecular fossils" at 2.7 billion years ago.
Not so old
But the new evidence from the Rasmussen team suggests that what Brocks had found was actually molecular contaminants from a more recent era. Brocks is a co-author of the Rasmussen paper.
"The existing unambiguous fossil evidence for the timing of photosynthesis now moves to 2.15 billion years ago," says Rasmussen, referring to fossilised cyanobacteria that have been found in Canada's Belcher Islands.
Rasmussen, Brocks and their colleagues used a relatively new device called a NanoSIMS ion probe to monitor the types of carbon isotopes in solidified oil - the proposed source of Brocks' organic compounds - in the bits of rock left over from the original study.
"The oil had to have formed in the rock, but its isotopic signature was completely different to that of the microbial fossils, so we concluded that the microbial fossils were more recent contaminants," says Rasmussen.
Not done yet
Other paradoxes remain to be solved, however. Since Brocks' discovery a decade ago, "molecular fossils" of photosynthesis from before 2.4 billion years ago have turned up at other sites.
"We suspect that those studies will turn out to be flawed, too," says Rasmussen.
Journal reference: Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature07381
Evolution - Learn more about the struggle to survive in our comprehensive special report.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Opera’s new browser

Announced Tuesday at Comdex Fall 2001, the test, or “beta,” version of Opera 6.0 for Microsoft’s Windows operating system brings Opera up to speed with heavyweight competitors Microsoft and Netscape by allowing people to read Web pages written in non-Roman alphabets, including Chinese and Japanese.

“What we’re seeing is that the international market is getting bigger and bigger,” said Jon S. von Tetzchner, chief executive of the Oslo, Norway-based company. “To an extent, English was the ruling language on the Internet for a very long time, but it’s less so now. What we definitely will be seeing are more and more users from China, from all the Asian countries, and this applies to Eastern Europe as well. We see this as a possibility to get into those markets.”

The new browser version comes as Opera has enjoyed a burst of publicity courtesy of rival Microsoft, which launched a new version of its MSN Web portal last month that briefly locked out non-Microsoft browsers. Although Microsoft’s own Internet Explorer easily accessed MSN pages, other browsers–such as Opera, Mozilla, Amaya and some versions of Netscape–received error messages and recommended that people “upgrade” to Internet Explorer.

Microsoft has since moved to fix the error but not before the gaffe threw a media spotlight on rival browsers.

Industry analysts downplayed the significance of the 6.0 beta release, noting that the company’s bigger ambitions lay in providing browsers to smaller devices than the PC.

Although Netscape’s small browser efforts have stumbled with repeated delays, and Microsoft’s have met with resistance from operating system competitors, Opera has been moving aggressively to establish itself as the browser vender of choice for small devices.

This summer, the U.K.-based mobile software unit of Psion selected Opera as the browser for its handsets. That agreement came shortly after Opera took the wraps off its deal to supply IBM with small browsers. Before that, Opera released a browser for Symbian’s EPOC operating system for next-generation cell phones and other mobile Internet access devices.

“With the PC browsers, Opera is more there to establish a name in the industry. It’s not going to be an important revenue source in the future,” said Jon Mosberg, equity analyst at the Oslo branch of Stockholm, Sweden-based Enskilba Securities. “The greatest potential is in the mobile Internet…Symbian doesn’t want Microsoft to be the supplier of their browser because it could dictate the terms of using the software. That opens up an opportunity for a company that has a browser that runs well on the new devices.”

At the technical heart of Opera’s internationalization effort is its adoption of the Unicode Worldwide Character Set, a widely supported standard for expressing letters and other characters on computers. Opera’s support for Unicode came late because of the challenge of integrating it with Windows 95, Tetzchner said.

In other words
Opera is still hammering out its support for Arabic. Coming “as soon as possible” are browser interfaces written in non-English languages.

Also lagging behind Opera’s new browser for Windows are its counterparts for the Linux and Macintosh operating systems. Opera has yet to finalize its version 5.0 browser for the Mac. But the company promised a 6.0 beta for Linux “fairly quickly.”

Tetzchner said the Opera 6.0 beta was faster, used memory more efficiently, and had incremental improvements in its support for standards promulgated by the World Wide Web Consortium ( W3C).

The company has followed Netscape and Microsoft with new options for displaying windows, including a choice between single and multiple document interfaces, and a persistent bar for bookmarks and search. With the 6.0 beta, people can run multiple copies of Opera simultaneously, preserving different sets of e-mail, bookmarks and other preferences.

E-mail changes include the ability to import e-mail from Microsoft Outlook accounts and support for TLS ( Transport Layer Security) for POP and SMTP accounts. TLS is a security protocol under development by the Internet Engineering Task Force.

The browser also comes with a new default user interface.

In a feature reminiscent of information-gathering applications such as Atomica, Opera 6.0 offers Hotclick, which lets people select a word and pull down a definition or translation without leaving the page. To provide encyclopedia and translation content, Opera has formed a partnership with Terra Lycos. Other partners with Hotclick include search engine Google and e-commerce Web site Amazon.com.

Although Opera has enjoyed a loyal following among the Web cognoscenti, and particularly those with animosity toward Microsoft, the Norwegian browser has lagged far behind in distribution, partly because it persisted in charging for the browser long after Microsoft and Netscape opted to give theirs away.

Nearly a year ago, Opera began offering a free version of the browser that comes with advertising. Ad-free Opera costs $39.

That experiment has proved successful, Tetzchner said.

“Revenues have increased, so it’s working,” he said. “People see that it’s free, so more people use it. Then a number of those people want to get rid of the ads, or they just want to support us to make sure we are around.”

Paying users of Opera 5.x for Windows get a free upgrade to the 6.0 beta. Paid users of Opera 4.x get a discount of about half off the $39 fee.

Opera is planning to release the final 6.0 Windows browser by Christmas.

Nanotechnology

Such a small robot same as a housefly!How is it possible??

Well nanotechnology makes it possible..

I hope that the following information gives you the answer for the latest advancements in the decreasing of product size .

More on these type of technologies.......Click this.

Nanocoatings Boost Industrial Energy Efficiency

Friction is the bane of any machine. When moving parts are subject to friction, it takes more energy to move them, the machine doesn’t operate as efficiently, and the parts have a tendency to wear out over time.

A photograph of the process of coating a substrate (left) with AlMgB14 by pulsed laser deposition. The bright plume in the center of the photograph is an AlMgB14 plasma. The solid target is just to the right of the plume. (Credit: Image courtesy of DOE/Ames Laboratory)

But if you could manufacture parts that had tough, “slippery” surfaces, there’d be less friction, requiring less input energy and the parts would last longer. Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Ames Laboratory are collaborating with other research labs, universities, and industrial partners to develop just such a coating.

“If you consider a pump, like a water pump or a hydraulic pump, it has a turbine that moves the fluid,” said Bruce Cook, an Ames Laboratory scientist and co-principal investigator on the four-year, $3 million project. “When the rotor spins, there’s friction generated at the contacting surface between the vanes and the housing, or stator. This friction translates into additional torque needed to operate the pump, particularly at start-up. In addition, the friction results in a degradation of the surfaces, which reduces efficiency and the life of the pump. It takes extra energy to get the pump started, and you can’t run it at its optimum (higher speed) efficiency because it would wear out more quickly.”

(Right) A photograph of an AlMgB14 coating on a steel substrate. The substrate is the mottled structure on the left-hand side of the photo and the coating is the thin, darker strip running along the edge of the steel. (The blemishes on the steel are carbide inclusions) The coating has a thickness of approximately 2 to 3 microns (about 1 ten thousandths of an inch)

The coating Cook is investigating is a boron-aluminum-magnesium ceramic alloy he discovered with fellow Ames Laboratory researcher and Iowa State University professor of Materials Science and Engineering Alan Russell about eight years ago. Nicknamed BAM, the material exhibited exceptional hardness, and the research has expanded to include titanium-diboride alloys as well.

In many applications it is far more cost effective to apply the wear-resistant materials as a coating than to manufacture an entire part out of the ceramic. Fortunately, the BAM material is amenable to application as a hard, wear-resistant coating. Working with ISU materials scientist Alan Constant, the team is using a technique called pulsed laser deposition to deposit a thin layer of the alloy on hydraulic pump vanes and tungsten carbide cutting tools. Cook is working with Eaton Corporation, a leading manufacturer of fluid power equipment, using another, more commercial-scale technique known as magnetron sputtering to lay down a wear-resistant coating.

Pumps aren’t the only applications for the boride nanocoatings. The group is also working with Greenleaf Corporation, a leading industrial cutting tool maker, to put a longer lasting coating on cutting tools. If a tool cuts with reduced friction, less applied force is needed, which directly translates to a reduction in the energy required for the machining operation.

To test the coatings, the project team includes Peter J. Blau and Jun Qu at one of the nation’s leading friction and wear research facilities at DOE’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, or ORNL, in Tennessee. Initial tests show a decrease in friction relative to an uncoated surface of at least an order of magnitude with the AlMgB14-based coating. In preliminary tests, the coating also appears to outperform other coatings such as diamond-like carbon and TiB2.

In a separate, but somewhat related project, Cook is working with researchers from ORNL, Missouri University of Science and Technology, the University of Alberta, and private companies to develop coatings in high-pressure water jet cutting tools and severe service valves where parts are subject to abrasives and other extreme conditions.

“This is a great example of developing advanced materials with a direct correlation to saving energy,” Cook said. “Though the original discovery wasn’t by design, we’ve done a great deal of basic research in trying to figure out the molecular structure of these materials, what gives them these properties and how we can use this information to develop other, similar materials.”

Funding for both projects is provided by the DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. BAM is licensed to Newtech Ceramics, an Iowa based startup company located in Des Moines. The ISU Research Foundation provided nearly $60,000 in funding for development of material samples for marketing as part of the startup effort.

More here

Quantum Computer

Physicists in the USA and at the London Centre for Nanotechnology have found a way to extend the quantum lifetime of electrons by more than 5,000 per cent, as reported recently in Physical Review Letters. Electrons exhibit a property called ‘spin’ and work like tiny magnets which can point up, down or a quantum superposition of both.

Microwaves are used to control the spin state of electrons held in silicon. This spin state can be watched in real time by measuring the electric current flowing between the (grey) electrodes. (Credit: Image courtesy UCL)

The state of the spin can be used to store information and so by extending their life the research provides a significant step towards building a usable quantum computer.

“Silicon has dominated the computing industry for decades,” says Dr Gavin Morley, lead author of the paper. “The most sensitive way to see the quantum behaviour of electrons held in silicon chips uses electrical currents. Unfortunately, the problem has always been that these currents damage the quantum features under study, degrading their usefulness.”

Marshall Stoneham, Professor of Physics at UCL (University College London), commented: “Getting the answer from a quantum computation isn’t easy. This new work takes us closer to solving the problem by showing how we might read out the state of electron spins in a silicon-based quantum computer.”

To achieve the record quantum lifetime the team used a magnetic field twenty-five times stronger than those used in previous experiments. This powerful field also provided an additional advantage in the quest for practical quantum computing: it put the electron spins into a convenient starting state by aligning them all in one direction.

For more information, see the paper published in Physical Review Letters, November 14 2008, by G. W. Morley (London Center for Nanotechnology), D. R. McCamey (University of Utah), H. A. Seipel (University of Utah), L.-C. Brunel (National High Magnetic field Laboratory), J. van Tol (National High Magnetic field Laboratory) and C. Boehme (University of Utah).

Cold Atoms Could Replace Hot Gallium In Focused Ion Beams

Scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed a radical new method of focusing a stream of ions into a point as small as one nanometer (one billionth of a meter).

NIST researcher Jabez McClelland makes adjustments on the new magneto-optical trap ion source, capable of focusing beams of ions down to nanometer spots for use as a ‘nano-scalpel’ in advanced electronics processing. (Credit: Holmes, NIST)

Because of the versatility of their approach—it can be used with a wide range of ions tailored to the task at hand—it is expected to have broad application in nanotechnology both for carving smaller features on semiconductors than now are possible and for nondestructive imaging of nanoscale structures with finer resolution than currently possible with electron microscopes.

Researchers and manufacturers routinely use intense, focused beams of ions to carve nanometer-sized features into a wide variety of targets. In principle, ion beams also could produce better images of nanoscale surface features than conventional electron microscopy.

But the current technology for both applications is problematic. In the most widely used method, a metal-coated needle generates a narrowly focused beam of gallium ions. The high energies needed to focus gallium for milling tasks end up burying small amounts in the sample, contaminating the material. And because gallium ions are so heavy (comparatively speaking), if used to collect images they inadvertently damage the sample, blasting away some of its surface while it is being observed. Researchers have tried using other types of ions but were unable to produce the brightness or intensity necessary for the ion beam to cut into most materials.

The NIST team took a completely different approach to generating a focused ion beam that opens up the possibility for use of non-contaminating elements. Instead of starting with a sharp metal point, they generate a small “cloud” of atoms and then combine magnetic fields with laser light to trap and cool these atoms to extremely low temperatures. Another laser is used to ionize the atoms, and the charged particles are accelerated through a small hole to create a small but energetic beam of ions. Researchers have named the groundbreaking device “MOTIS,” for “Magneto-Optical Trap Ion Source.” (For more on MOTs, see “Bon MOT: Innovative Atom Trap Catches Highly Magnetic Atoms,” NIST Tech Beat Apr. 1, 2008.)

“Because the lasers cool the atoms to a very low temperature, they’re not moving around in random directions very much. As a result, when we accelerate them the ions travel in a highly parallel beam, which is necessary for focusing them down to a very small spot,” explains Jabez McClelland of the NIST Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology.

The team was able to measure the tiny spread of the beam and show that it was indeed small enough to allow the beam to be focused to a spot size less than 1 nanometer. The initial demonstration used chromium atoms, establishing that other elements besides gallium can achieve the brightness and intensity to work as a focused ion beam “nano-scalpel.” The same technique, says McClelland, can be used with a wide variety of other atoms, which could be selected for special tasks such as milling nanoscale features without introducing contaminants, or to enhance contrast for ion beam microscopy.

Is nanotechnology a health timebomb?

Nanotechnology-based products are hitting the market without being properly assessed for safety - and that’s a risk too far.

The possible health and environmental effects of buckyballs and other nanostructures are largely unknown

But there are safety rules for all consumer products, aren’t there?

Yes, but because nanomaterials are often made using chemicals like silver and carbon that are considered safe when used on a macro scale, the commission says they are slipping under the regulatory net when used at the nanoscale - without any consideration of the potentially adverse physical or chemical effects their novel nanostructures may have on people, animals, and the environment.

What does the commission want?

The commission is calling for the European Union to extend its regulatory regime for chemicals (REACH) to properly assess nanomaterials and their unique properties.

In the UK, they want the Department of the Environment, Farming and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) to develop and undertake tests on products that contain nanomaterials, and develop gadgets that detect, for instance, nanomaterials like carbon nanotubes when they become airborne.

“We have no means of detecting buckyballs or nanotubes in the environment right now,” says John Lawton, the RCEP’s chairman.

Haven’t we been here before?

Yes. But since 2004 when the Royal Society and Royal Academy of Engineering first said that a programme of research was necessary to ensure the safety of nanotech products, the field has moved on in leaps and bounds.

“The rate of nanotechnology innovation now far outstrips our capacity to respond to the risks,” says Lawton.

The RCEP thinks the arrival of products in our high streets means it’s time to reiterate the need for safety tests - as the earlier call fell on deaf ears in government. It also wants to avoid polarising public opinion, as happened with genetic modification.

How many novel technologies are we talking about?

The number of patents filed on nanomaterials worldwide by 2006 reached 1600 - and that growth has continued exponentially. According to the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies in Washington, DC, there are at least 600 products on the global market that claim to contain a nanomaterial as a key ingredient, he adds.

What kind of products contain nanomaterials?

Well, the range is broad - and there could be health and environmental problems with any of them. They include sunscreens, cleaning products, anti-odour treatments for clothes, cosmetics, smart plastics, ceramics, self-cleaning glasses, composites, carbon-fibre-based textiles and other products containing nanotubes and buckyballs.

Which ones are causing concern?

All of them, to some extent. But the commission singled out two. “Nanosilver” - a bactericide which slows the formation of odour-forming bugs in clothes like socks, underpants and T-shirts.

The second is a textile comprising spun fibres made from carbon nanotubes that could save the clothing industry a fortune by making clothes that don’t need dyes - their thread diameter dictates their colour through refraction effects.

How might these products cause harm?

“Nanosilver is biocidal to a remarkable extent - it’s extremely toxic to microorganisms,” says Lawton. In fact, it will kill twice the number of bacteria that bleach can.

When flushed into water courses, no-one knows what could happen. It could stop the biochemical reactions that make your local sewage-processing plant work. Or it may damage aquatic life - buckyballs have already been shown to cause brain damage in fish.

There have been reports that the carbon fibres in clothing could produce asbestosis-like lung diseases, and that spilled nanotubes could damage ecosystems.

Why not just ban nanotech products?

The RCEP thinks the advantages to society of nanotechnologies are too great to lose. “On balance there are no grounds for a blanket ban,” says Lawton.

Instead, he simply wants a major increase in the amount of testing to assess risk - prioritising the materials that may present the greatest risk to the environment and human health.

“Research gaps need to be addressed urgently, especially given the long lead times involved in developing and putting in place testing arrangements that will inform regulatory and legislative processes,” he says.

Careers: A fresh start in the Alps

FOR a nation with a history of making complicated clockwork, it is no surprise that Switzerland is top of the heap when it comes to precision, high-tech research. The country boasts two Federal Institutes of Technology, the CERN particle physics laboratory and a major IBM research facility. It is also home to big names in pharmaceuticals such as Roche and Novartis - and who can forget its world-famous chocolate industry?

With British citizens able to work in Switzerland visa-free, annual salaries of up to £72,000 for experienced researchers and the option of skiing in your lunch break, it’s easy to see why Switzerland appeals to so many. So where can you make your mark?

Computing clout

IBM is one of many global companies that have research centres in Switzerland. Its Rüschlikon lab, just south of Zurich, attracts talent from all over the world: 80 per cent of the research staff come from abroad.

The lab is a leader in digital storage technology as well as semiconductor and optical electronics for computer networks. Plans to build a top-class nanotechnology research centre on the site are under way: it is scheduled to be completed in 2011.

The lab recruits from a range of disciplines, including physics, chemistry and maths, says Irene Holenweger Koeb of IBM human resources. It also has a thriving bioscience group working on the application of nanotechnology to the life sciences, among other areas. Most positions require a PhD, though the lab also employs around 100 undergraduates and graduates each year.

Paul Hurley, a researcher in IBM’s systems software group, enjoys the informality of his working environment: IBM encourages a relaxed office culture that includes meetings over lunch or coffee.

With so many of its employees not being Swiss nationals, the company offers ample support to help new employees acclimatise and has a policy of paying relocation expenses. “It’s important to us that new hires settle in easily,” says Koeb.

German lessons, paid for by IBM, bring together employees who are new to Zurich. The standard German taught is different from what Zurich natives speak, so although Hurley has attended the classes, he says it takes a bit more practice to pick up the “Swiss-isms”.

Raising the chocolate bar

Switzerland is known for its chocolate, but being Swiss is not a prerequisite for making it well. “In our company we have 44 nationalities and 18 languages,” says José Rubio of Lindt’s human resources department.

Scientists can find jobs in quality management, research and development and on the factory floor. Those working in R&D help develop new recipes and products, as well as designing and building new machines for making them. However, you might prefer to hone your skills in quality management, where you will have the pleasant task of testing the products to make sure they are up to the company’s high standards.

Foreign staff must speak at least one of the Swiss official tongues, says Rubio. Most positions require a good level of German, particularly important when working with Swiss colleagues on production lines, as many do not understand English.

Lindt draws many of its employees from two major higher-education institutions around Zurich: the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) and the Institute of Food and Beverage Innovation, part of the Zurich University of Applied Sciences. Enrolling at one of these can give young food scientists an edge in getting a job at Lindt or another Swiss food manufacturer.

The ETH in German-speaking Zurich has a sister institution, the Federal Institute of Technology in French-speaking Lausanne (EPFL). With over 250 research groups and 10,000 students and faculty, it emphasises interdisciplinary scientific research. “We have a strong neurosciences group,” says Mary Parlange of EPFL’s human resources department, who also cites robotics and plasma physics as some of its strengths. The institute’s technology transfer programmes ensure that useful tools and methods make it out of the lab and into industry.

EPFL also builds bridges to other institutions, maintaining close ties with the University of Lausanne and beyond. “We’re one of the leading collaborators at the nuclear facility ITER,” Parlange adds, referring to the fusion laboratory being built in France.

Paul Hurley from IBM became strongly attracted to Switzerland as a student at EPFL. “I was amazed at the salary that I could be offered as a PhD,” he says, adding that students in the UK sometimes have to “fend for themselves” in terms of funding. Jacques Giovanola, head of EPFL’s doctoral school, says that nearly 95 per cent of its PhD students have salaries secured by their supervisors.

Nanotechnology rules, OK!

More than 30 years ago, Richard Feynman amazed physicists with his vision of the future. ‘Consider the final question as to whether, ultimately - in the great future - we can arrange atoms the way we want; the very atoms, all the way down! What would happen if we could arrange atoms one by one the way we want them?’ Feynman was speaking at a meeting of the American Physical Society on 29 December 1959.

What has happened is that scientists have started indulging in microscopic graffiti. The instrument that makes this possible is the scanning tunnelling microscope - invented 11 years ago to produce images of surfaces showing the arrangement of individual atoms. In the past few years scientists have been using the extremely fine tip of the microscope to modify surfaces as well. The temptation to leave their mark in messages only a few atoms high is irresistible. …

DNA dirty tricks loom in future elections

The genetic make-up of a candidate in the next US presidential election could be exploited by an opponent to raise doubts about their health or personality. So say medical researcher Robert Green and medical lawyer George Annas, both at Boston University.

Anyone who wants a sample of a candidate’s DNA could probably get it from coffee cups or cutlery that the person has used, or perhaps even handshakes. Combine that with the fact that a well-funded campaign could now afford to pay for a whole-genome scan, and the divulging of a candidate’s genome becomes a genuine possibility, Green and Annas write in The New England Journal of Medicine (vol 359, p 2192).

Such an act is more likely to aid demagoguery than make reliable predictions, though: at present, little is known about the genetic roots of personality, while most genes associated with a disease only slightly bump up the risk of developing the condition.

“You could say truthfully that candidate A is at elevated risk for disease X, but that might increase his or her risk from 6 per cent to 6.5 per cent,” says Green. “That’s not really very meaningful.”

Unscrupulous opponents could nevertheless try to exploit the idea that the candidate’s “bad genes” make him or her a poor choice, however misleading such a statement might be to those who don’t understand such details.

George Church, a professor of genetics at Harvard Medical School in Boston, sees one possible benefit to set against such dangers. A dust-up over a presidential candidate’s genes could motivate the general public to learn more about genetics, he says.

Journal reference: New England Journal of Medicine, vol 359, p 2192

Tunnelling nanotubes: Life’s secret network

HAD Amin Rustom not messed up, he would not have stumbled upon one of the biggest discoveries in biology of recent times. It all began in 2000, when he saw something strange under his microscope. A very long, thin tube had formed between two of the rat cells that he was studying. It looked like nothing he had ever seen before.

http://www.newscientist.com/data/images/ns/cms/mg20026821.400/mg20026821.400-1_300.jpg

His supervisor, Hans-Hermann Gerdes, asked him to repeat the experiment. Rustom did, and saw nothing unusual. When Gerdes grilled him, Rustom admitted that the first time around he had not followed the standard protocol of swapping the liquid in which the cells were growing between observations. Gerdes made him redo the experiment, mistakes and all, and there they were again: long, delicate connections between cells. This was something new - a previously unknown way in which animal cells can communicate with each other.

Gerdes and Rustom, then at Heidelberg University in Germany, called the connections tunnelling nanotubes. Aware that they might be onto something significant, the duo slogged away to produce convincing evidence and eventually published a landmark paper in 2004 (Science, vol 303, p 1007).

A mere curiosity?

At the time, it was not clear whether these structures were anything more than a curiosity seen only in peculiar circumstances. Since their pioneering paper appeared, however, other groups have started finding nanotubes in all sorts of places, from nerve cells to heart cells. And far from being a mere curiosity, they seem to play a major role in anything from how our immune system responds to attacks to how damaged muscle is repaired after a heart attack.

They can also be hijacked: nanotubes may provide HIV with a network of secret tunnels that allow it to evade the immune system, while some cancers could be using nanotubes to subvert chemotherapy. Simply put, tunnelling nanotubes appear to be everywhere, in sickness and in health. “The field is very hot,” says Gerdes, now at the University of Bergen in Norway.

It has long been known that the interiors of neighbouring plant cells are sometimes directly connected by a network of nanotubular connections called plasmodesmata. However, nothing like them had ever been seen in animals. Animal cells were thought to communicate almost entirely by releasing chemicals that can be detected by receptors on the surface of other cells. This kind of communication can be very specific - nerve cells can extend over a metre to make connections with other cells - but it does not involve direct connections between the interiors of cells.

Quite different

The closest animal equivalents to plasmodesmata were thought to be gap junctions, which are like hollow rivets joining the membranes of adjacent cells. A channel through the middle of each gap junction directly connects the cell interiors, but the channel is very narrow - just 0.5 to 2 nanometres wide - and so only allows ions and small molecules to pass from one cell to another.

Nanotubes are something different. They are 50 to 200 nanometres thick, which is more than wide enough to allow proteins to pass through. What’s more, they can span distances of several cell diameters, wiggling around obstacles to connect the insides of two cells some distance apart. “This gives the organism a new way to communicate very selectively over long range,” says Gerdes.

It is a previously unknown way in which cells can communicate over a distance

Soon after they first saw nanotubes in rat cells, he and Rustom saw them forming between human kidney cells too. Using video microscopy, they watched adjacent cells reach out to each other with antenna-like projections, establish contact and then build the tubular connections. The connections were not just between pairs of cells. Cells can send out several nanotubes, forming an intricate and transient network of linked cells lasting anything from minutes to hours. Using fluorescent proteins, the team also discovered that relatively large cellular structures, or organelles, could move from one cell to another through the nanotubes.

Tube travelling

The first clue to how membrane nanotubes, as some researchers prefer to call them, might be used by cells came from the US. Simon Watkins of the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and his colleagues were studying dendritic cells, the sentinels for the immune system. When a dendritic cell detects an invader, it gets ready to sound the alarm. One sign of this activation is a change in calcium levels in the cell.

While Watkins was poking a dendritic cell with a micro-needle filled with bacterial toxins, he noticed a calcium fluctuation in a dendritic cell far away from the one that was touched. “Wow, that’s pretty cool,” thought Watkins. Information about the toxins was somehow being passed from the cell being poked to a distant cell. Nothing in his experience could explain the phenomenon.

When Watkins dived into the literature, he discovered Gerdes’s paper. His team then took another look at the dendritic cells. Sure enough, they found the cells were connected by a network of tunnelling nanotubes.

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