Showing posts with label World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

A team of MIT researchers has used a novel material that's just a few atoms thick to create devices that can harness or emit light. This proof-of-concept could lead to ultrathin, lightweight, and flexible photovoltaic cells, light emitting diodes (LEDs), and other optoelectronic devices, they say.Two-dimensional material shows promise for optoelectronics

Their report is one of three papers by different groups describing similar results with this material, published in the March 9 issue of Nature Nanotechnology. The MIT research was carried out by Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, the Mitsui Career Development Associate Professor of Physics, graduate students Britton Baugher and Yafang Yang, and postdoc Hugh Churchill.

The material they used, called tungsten diselenide (WSe2), is part of a class of single-molecule-thick materials under investigation for possible use in new optoelectronic devices—ones that can manipulate the interactions of light and electricity. In these experiments, the MIT researchers were able to use the material to produce diodes, the basic building block of modern electronics.

Typically, diodes (which allow electrons to flow in only one direction) are made by "doping," which is a process of injecting other atoms into the crystal structure of a host material. By using different materials for this irreversible process, it is possible to make either of the two basic kinds of semiconducting materials, p-type or n-type.

But with the new material, either p-type or n-type functions can be obtained just by bringing the vanishingly thin film into very close proximity with an adjacent metal electrode, and tuning the voltage in this electrode from positive to negative. That means the material can easily and instantly be switched from one type to the other, which is rarely the case with conventional semiconductors.

In their experiments, the MIT team produced a device with a sheet of WSe2 material that was electrically doped half n-type and half p-type, creating a working diode that has properties "very close to the ideal," Jarillo-Herrero says.

By making diodes, it is possible to produce all three basic optoelectronic devices—photodetectors, photovoltaic cells, and LEDs; the MIT team has demonstrated all three, Jarillo-Herrero says. While these are proof-of-concept devices, and not designed for scaling up, the successful demonstration could point the way toward a wide range of potential uses, he says.

"It's known how to make very large-area materials" of this type, Churchill says. While further work will be required, he says, "there's no reason you wouldn't be able to do it on an industrial scale."

In principle, Jarillo-Herrero says, because this material can be engineered to produce different values of a key property called bandgap, it should be possible to make LEDs that produce any color—something that is difficult to do with conventional materials. And because the material is so thin, transparent, and lightweight, devices such as solar cells or displays could potentially be built into building or vehicle windows, or even incorporated into clothing, he says.

While selenium is not as abundant as silicon or other promising materials for electronics, the thinness of these sheets is a big advantage, Churchill points out: "It's thousands or tens of thousands of times thinner" than conventional diode materials, "so you'd use thousands of times less material" to make devices of a given size.

In addition to the diodes the team has produced, the team has also used the same methods to make p-type and n-type transistors and other electronic components, Jarillo-Herrero says. Such transistors could have a significant advantage in speed and power consumption because they are so thin, he says.

Published at PHYS.ORG

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

How will the 2014 World Cup ball swerve?


There are now only a few months to go until the biggest sporting event of 2014 – the FIFA World Cup in Brazil – and questions are being asked. Will the stadiums be ready? Are the airports ready for the crowds?

But one matter rises above all others – and may have an impact on the destiny of the cup itself: how will the ball move through the air?

The words "Love me or Lose me" appear beside Adidas's new World Cup football – the Brazuca – on billboards the world over. They implore the reader to accept the football for what it is and may be a subtle nod to the controversy which dogged the Brazuca's ancestors: the Jabulani and Teamgeist.

Since 1970, every World Cup football has been made by Adidas, an ideal opportunity to showcase their latest developments in ball design and technology. In 2006 they took a radical departure from the norm with the Teamgeist. Traditionally, a football is constructed from 32 panels stitched together by hand. The Teamgeist had 14 panels which were glued together with heat (thermally bonded), resulting in a ball more "marble-like" than previous generations.

The change was not only aesthetic. Players using the ball complained of erratic behaviour in flight. For the next World Cup (South Africa, 2010) Adidas had considerably redesigned the ball – the Jabulani – which had only eight thermally bonded panels. Unfortunately, the criticism of the ball was, if anything, louder than it had been four years earlier. Many coaches and players compared the Jabulani to a beach ball which swerves unpredictably.

What, if anything, went wrong? And will the same fate greet the new ball, the Brazuca, which has just six polyurethane panels? Many of the barbs aimed at the previous footballs commented on their unnatural lightness – hence the frequent comparisons to beach balls – but both the Teamgeist and Jabulani are just below the maximum mass limit of 445g (the lower limit is 420g).

Their radical design is different from a standard stitched football in two ways. First, fewer panels mean shorter seams. By my own measurements, a 32-panel football has a seam length of around 405cm, compared to 345cm on the Teamgeist and 203cm on the Jabulani. Second, thermal bonding created a much lower seam profile. A laser-scan of the surface of the Jabulani and a stitched football shows the stitched seam is more than twice as deep as the Jabulani's. The floating, beach ball-like behaviour of these footballs isn't because they are light, but because they are smooth.

As air flows over a smooth, sleek object, it hugs the surface until it has passed over it completely, creating very little drag. Air flowing over a ball behaves differently, it separates from the surface, creating an area of low pressure behind it – a wake. The low pressure region creates drag force and slows the ball. At low speeds, the air flow is smooth (laminar) and separates early, creating a large wake and relatively high drag force. As speed increases the air becomes more chaotic (turbulent) which helps it stick to the ball for longer, reducing the size of the wake and lowering drag force.

Crucially, the seams of a football disturb the air helping it to enter "low drag" at lower speeds. A perfectly smooth football would be unplayable; high levels of drag would radically alter the behaviour of the ball. In addition, at certain speeds a ball can experience smooth and chaotic air flow over different regions of its surface. The resulting asymmetrical wake creates a force imbalance, pushing the ball in a particular direction. While cricket and baseball players take advantage of this effect to create swing, in football the effect occurs at speeds too low to be useful.

The image below shows the drag behaviour of a 32-panel football, it enters low drag at around 60kmph, at which point the chaotic or smooth method of swerving is mostly unavailable. The swerve in football is generated by spinning the ball.

The kind of shots which caused trouble in 2006 and 2010 were flat, because the ball had very little spin. The ball seemed to move unpredictably, suddenly swerving and changing direction. Due to the balls' smoothness, chaotic or smooth airflow could occur at ball speeds experienced during shots and free kicks. In addition, low spin causes the forces acting on the ball to change direction rapidly and unpredictably, leading to unstable flight. This is equivalent to a particular pitch in baseball called the "knuckleball".

This effect can occur with other footballs but importantly, the increased smoothness of the Jabulani and Teamgeist made it occur more frequently, at speeds regularly experienced in play.

Will the new Brazuca behave in the same way? There are a couple of reasons why I don't expect the same amount of controversy at this World Cup. Although the Brazuca uses the same thermal bonding technology of previous generations, the seams are much deeper. This is obvious when handling the ball and a laser scan shows a depth of 1.56 mm, 50% deeper than our 32-panel ball and three times deeper than the Jabulani.

With six panels, the Brazuca has the fewest panels of any World Cup football. However, I measured the seam length to be 327cm, greater than the Jabulani. Each panel resembles a four-armed windmill and doesn't have the large regions of smoothness present on previous panel designs, which further avoids the chaotic or smooth airflow problem.

To complete the argument, the figure below shows the aerodynamic performance of a 32-panel football, a Brazuca and a Jabulani. Notice how the Brazuca behaves very similarly to the 32-panel football and how the Jabulani doesn't enter low drag until nearly 90kmph, making it prone to the chaotic or smooth behaviour described earlier.

It is interesting to note that the frenzied media reports regarding the odd behaviour of the Jabulani died down once the matches had begun in earnest. While players and coaches may well find something to complain about with the Brazuca, it is certainly not a beach ball.

Pulished at PHY.ORG
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Saturday, March 1, 2014

 
The U.S. Navy wants to deploy its first laser on a ship later this year and it plans to test an electromagnetic rail gun prototype aboard a vessel within two years.Lasers which designed to shoot down aerial drones and electric guns that fire projectiles at hypersonic speeds like "Star Wars" movie series .

Program manager for directed energy and electric weapon systems for the Naval Sea Systems Command, Capt. Mike Ziv said "It fundamentally changes the way we fight,"

The solid-state Laser Weapon System is designed to hit out "asymmetrical threats," such as aerial drones, speed boats and swarm boats etc.

The Navy also plans to test a newly designed electromagnetic rail gun prototype aboard a ship within two years.

Rail guns which have a ability to fire a projectile at six or seven times the speed of sound and cause damage.

Defense analyst at the Lexington Institute, Loren Thompson said "Lasers may lose their targets if it's raining, dusty, or if there's turbulence in the atmosphere, and the rail gun requires vast amount of electricity to launch the projectile."

The Navy's new destroyer, the Zumwalt, is the only ship which has enough electric power to run a rail gun and its gas turbine-powered generators can produce 78 megawatts of power.

The laser beam is invisible to the human eye and  operates on 30 kilowatts of electricity."You see the effect on what you are targeting but you don't see the actual beam," Ziv said.


4.4 Billion year old zircon crystal

This 4.4 billion-year-old microscopic zircon crystal is the oldest known piece of the Earth's crust. A magnified image of the crystal is pictured above. The crystal fragment was extracted from a remote rock outcrop in the Jack Hills region of Western Australia. Researchers led by University of Wisconsin-Madison geoscience Professor John Valley say data indicates the Earth's crust first formed at least 4.4 billion years ago, which is just 160 million years after the formation of our solar system.

Valley says in a release, "This confirms our view of how the Earth cooled and became habitable. This may also help us understand how other habitable planets would form."

The researchers used atom-probe tomography in conjunction with secondary ion mass spectrometry to establish the age and thermal history of the zircon by determining the mass of individual atoms of lead in the sample. The scientists say the lead was not randomly distributed in the zircon sample as expected. Instead the researchers found the lead atoms were clumped together in the zircon sample like "raisins in a pudding." The scientists say the clusters of lead atoms formed 1 billion years after crystallization of the zircon.

Valley says, "The zircon formed 4.4 billion years ago, and at 3.4 billion years, all the lead that existed at that time was concentrated in these hotspots. This allows us to read a new page of the thermal history recorded by these tiny zircon time capsules."

Valley told CNN that the Earth's surface formed a crust much more quickly than previously thought. He also says that steam from the atmosphere condensed to form oceans after the planet cooled enough to form a crust. He says there could have been life on Earth even when our planet was just 200 million years old.

The research paper, "Hadean age for a post-magma-ocean zircon confirmed by atom-probe tomography," was published here in Nature Geoscience.

Published at :Science, Space & Robots

Russia is preparing for the debut flight of a launch vehicle called Angara, its first new big rocket since the Soviet era.
Angara is built around common core boosters that burn environmentally friendly liquid oxygen and kerosene (like SpaceX’s Falcon rockets).

By adding additional liquid rocket boosters to the first stage, Angara’s lift capacity can be increased to handle heavy payloads, similar to SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy, which is currently under development.

Like the Falcon, Angara uses the same liquid fuel boosters throughout the rocket, not solid rocket motors like what United Launch Alliance adds to boost its Atlas and Delta rockets’ lift capacities.

Angara rockets will launch from Russia’s Plesetsk Cosmodrome, breaking Russia’s reliance on Kazakhstan, which took over the Baikonur Cosmodrome after the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991.
Angara rockets also can fly from Russia’s Vostochny Cosmodrome, which currently is under construction in the far eastern Amur region.
This week, a full-scale Angara engineering mockup was rolled out of the Plesetsk’s Integration and Test Facility and onto the launch pad for ground support systems testing.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, who toured the launch site on Wednesday, said the rocket was on track for a test flight in the second half of the year, RIA Novosti reported.

Published at : DNEWS

Wednesday, December 25, 2013



Should you be one of those people among our readers who celebrates the Christmas holiday,you might be interested in having a greener Christmas.
Did you know, for example, that it's greener to have a real Christmas tree than a plastic one, unless you keep the plastic tree many years? The real ones are more carbon neutral, you see. And they do smell rather lovely too.
But how will you light it? Nissan in Japan has thought of a novel idea--a Leaf-powered Christmas tree.
Okay, so it might not be practical for everyone, but it does work rather well in this particular Japanese shopping mall, Futako Tamagawa Rise in Tokyo. Modern LED Christmas lights use very little power, so the Leaf's battery should be more than enough to power the tree for quite some time.
If you chose to use a similar system in your home, the Leaf would work as a great energy storage system for electricity you've generated using solar power, for example, or simply low-cost energy you've accumulated during off-peak times.For Video Visit

Monday, November 11, 2013

Typhoon Haiyan one of the strongest storms on record this year, came ashore in the central Philippines,winds of 147 miles per hour and forced more than 700,000 people from their homes.
details
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2013/11/typhoon_haiyan.html