Category science

Portrait of the Science Writer as a Young Woman

A friend was going through some old papers and came across an article in the Kansas City Star about a local kid who made good by winning an internship at The Economist. Yup, that’s my smiling face! I was giddy! I couldn’t have asked for a more amazing introduction to writing about science.

So how am I doing with those interest and goals mentioned in the piece? Well, I’m definitely writing about solid-state lighting and foldable displays. I don’t have a book about the periodic table in the works, but I still like the idea. The big disappointment is that I’m not actually an astronaut right now. Yeah. That’s a dream that’s never going to die.

Recent Stories: Cyborgs, Solar, and Data Storage

This post is a roundup of the stories I’ve written over the past few weeks.

Without doing it consciously, I’ve totally carved out a cyborg beat. The most recent story is about a neural implant that is wirelessly controlled and wirelessly powered. The researchers, led by Brian Otis at the University of Washington, hope to implant this in humans someday, but have so far just demonstrated the sensor on a moth.

Another cool human-computer interface story I did was about a Microsoft Research project that uses muscle electrodes to interact with a computer. The main researcher, Desney Tan, is really trying to make muscle sensors cheap and easy to use so that the group’s prototype can eventually turn into something commercial. An awesome video of the technology, where a person plays Guitar Hero without the guitar, is here .

For The Economist, I wrote an update on a project by Babak Parviz at the University of Washington. Parviz is building a bionic eye by adding electro-optic devices to a contact lens.

Side note: all of the above researchers know each other and are either currently collaborating or have worked together on projects in the past.

I’ve also written one story about solar energy, a more efficient photovoltaic that uses nanopatterns to trap light better. The really interesting thing about this research is the physics behind it. These nanopatterns convert three-dimensional waves of light into two-dimensional waves that are confined to the surface of a metal. This process makes sunlight easier to turn into usable energy. The key to this 3D to 2D conversion is a quasiparticle called a surface plasmon. I have a little crush on plasmons (ever since grad school!), so I’ll be writing more about these in the future. Stay tuned!

Another piece I wrote was about researchers at Rice who use graphite–the same stuff that’s in pencils–to make a new type of chip-based memory that can hold more data than flash.

I covered research from NIST in which scientists developed a technique to scale up quantum computers, hopefully making them more practical.

And finally, I wrote about Intel’s announcement of an optical cable that the company would like to eventually replace the slow and heavy copper wires that people use to connect their computers, televisions, peripherals, etc. together. (For some background and more info on this topic, check out a post I wrote a while back.)

How Intelligent Design Skips Scientific Steps

Just a having a hunch about the way things work isn’t enough to get it into a text book or curriculum. Hunches must go through a rigorous process in which they are tested and debated by the scientific community. Intelligent design just doesn’t have the evidence to make it through this process. Here’s a brief explanation by Kenneth Miller on why Intelligent Design shouldn’t be allowed in classrooms:

(Via @Grrlscientist blog)

Superconductor Levitation

This one’s from the e-vaults. I spent my first year of grad school making up undergraduate physics classes because I came in with a chemistry degree. One of those requirements was a laboratory class where we did things like measure the resistance of materials as a function of temperature. It wasn’t as dull as most of the labs because we got to play around with a Yttrium-Barium-Copper (YBC) superconductor. At liquid nitrogen temperatures-−321 °F–YBC was able to levitate a magnet. Fun! Below are two little videos of superconductor levitation:

The magnet spins above the superconductor, wrapped in masking tape and sitting in a well of liquid nitrogen. The wires are for measuring resistance and reading the temperature of the superconductor.

Exaflops on Beams of Light

A colleague of mine, Katie Bourzac, has written a post about the future of supercomputing according to IBM. Yes, the future is light. Essentially, the only way to find enough bandwidth to transport all the data required for future supercomputers is to use photons in waveguides, not electrons in wires.

The problem, however, is that it’s far to expensive to stick today’s lasers, detectors, modulators, amplifiers, etc. into computers. These devices are used to send data through the optical fiber that connects the world to the Web, but they are made of materials that are relatively expensive like indium gallium arsenide and others. There’s good news, though, for those who love supercomputers (and really, even if you don’t know you do, you totally do): there are a number of companies, including IBM and Intel, that are looking at using silicon–the same material found in electronics everywhere– for photonic devices.

If you know anything about bandgaps and optical properties of materials, you know that using silicon for photonics sounds a little crazy, but within the past five years, researchers have come up with engineering work-arounds that have made silicon feasible . And because silicon is at the heart of the electronics industry, and there’s a whole manufacturing infrastructure built around it, huge quantities of electronics can be churned out relatively quickly. Soon, photonic devices made of silicon could be churned out just as fast, and at such volume that their prices plummet. That’s when they can be integrated into computers and eventually chips.

It’ll take some time–some say at least a decade–but the gears have already been set in motion. Intel, for example, is pushing its photonics research into the market.  The company recently announced Light Peak, an optical cable that attaches a personal computer to peripherals, shuttling data at 10 gigabits per second. The first versions will contain old-school optics made with expensive materials. But Mario Paniccia, head of Intel’s Photonics Technology Lab hopes that Light Peak will be the Trojan horse to get photonics into the electronics industry; future versions will likely use silicon photonic parts.

Silicon photonics is a topic I’ve covered extensively for Technology Review. For the curious, here’s a link. I’ll continue to follow the work in the field because, from what I’ve seen, it’s the only way to keep pushing computation speeds. Also, it’s just so nerdy cool.

Nobel Given for Wrangling Photons

Often the Nobel Prize in physics is awarded to researchers who have devised some arcane theory that’s impossible for most people to comprehend. Not so this year.  The 2009 Nobel Prize in physics went to a trio of scientists who, in the 1960s, figured out how to harness light in revolutionary ways, laying the foundation for the modern information age.

Half of the prize goes to Charles K. Kao for figuring out why the optical fiber at the time limited the distance a photon could travel. The conventional wisdom at the time was that the fiber manufacturing process created impurities in the fiber through which light dissipated. Kao, however, theorized that the problem was the material. By proposing a purer form of glass, fuzed quartz, for optical fiber, he enabled engineers to extend distance light could travel in fiber from 20 meters to a kilometer.

Willard S. Boyle and George E. Smith, two Bell Labs researchers, share the other half of the prize. These two invented the CCD, a type of imaging chip found in digital cameras. The device takes advantage of the fact that electrons in a silicon crystal are jostled around when light hits it. The loose electrons are captured and counted, making up the pixels of an image.

Do Not Look At Laser With Remaining Eye

warning-laser-640

I was looking through the list of sessions at an upcoming optics conference in San Jose, Frontiers in Optics 2009, Laser Science XXV, and I came across a session called “Light in the Eye.” It reminded me of the funny(?) sign that my graduate advisor posted in our laser lab with a warning that resembled this one. The session is Tuesday, Oct 13, 2009, 1:30 PM – 3:30 PM, if anyone is interested.

Ruby Laser T-shirt

As I mentioned in the previous post, I’m designing t-shirts for AcademicFlair.com. It’s a great site, created by my friend Tina, where you can find awesomely geeky t-shirts, tote bags, Sigg bottles and more. Since I have an interest in lasers, I started there with my design ideas. I found a public domain image of the first laser ever made, which used a ruby crystal as the lasing medium. I thought it looked cool, so I imported it into Aviary, a sweet online image-editing tool, and made a few changes. The result:

RubyLaser

You can buy your Ruby T-shirt here!

Things a Boy Can Do With Chemistry

In college, I spent a fair amount of time in the chemistry section of the library, flipping through the armful of available books on the topic. The book I spent the most time with was for children, written in 1940 by Alfred Powell Morgan. It was called “Things a Boy Can Do With Chemistry,” and it struck me as unbelievably sexist.

So I did the reasonable thing and took the book out of commission for as long as possible, according to library lending rules. During my time with the book, I fumed about the hurdles a scientifically-inquisitive girl faced in the first half of the twentieth century. Oh, the injustice! Also, I scanned the cover and digitally altered “Boy” to “Girl” in a small act of solidarity with my scientific sisters. I had intentions of putting the “Girl” version on a t-shirt or tote bag, but it never happened.

Lately, I’ve been designing nerdy t-shirts for AcademicFlair.com, an awesome place to get all your geek-out gear. I was thinking of ideas, and “Things” came to mind. A modified version of the cover on a coffee mug or a 100% cotton tee could be fun.

things a boy can do with chemistry

things a girl can do with chemistry

Planetary Mashup

Using the Spitzer Space Telescope, astronomers have found a planetary collision 100 light-years away, near a star that goes by the name of HD 172555. Evidently, an object the size of the Moon smashed into one the size of Mercury. NASA has an awesome animation of the event below:



According to the Bad Astronomy Blog at Discover.com, astronomers found the collision when they were looking at spectra from HD 172555. In addition to hydrogen, helium, and the other usual suspects, the spectra showed evidence of an unusually large amount of amorphous silica, as in glass. From blogger/astronomer Phil Plait:

Glass? From a star?
The most likely explanation is that the glass is in the form of tektites, which are blobs of glassy material that form when something big hits something else big. The silica gets fused into glass. But that means that there was a pretty big impact that must have happened at that star, and that in turn means that two planet-sized objects must have had a very bad day. This was supported by the detection of other chemicals consistent with the aftermath of a massive collision.
The best fit to the data suggest that one object was planet-sized and the other Moon-sized, meaning the collision would have been at very high speed — several kilometers per second — and launched an unimaginable amount of material into space. Furthermore, it couldn’t have happened too long ago, or else the material would have dissipated and wouldn’t have been seen. It looks like this was a recent event, then, occurring maybe only a few thousand years ago!

I should note that while the animation is impressive, it’s somewhat misleading. Plait explains:

P.S. The animation above is cool, but not a perfect representation of what happened. For example, the shock wave ring travels around the planet as shown, but when the ring converges on the point opposite the collision point, there would be a huge explosion and a vast plume of material launched into space. No one ever puts that in their animations, and I think it would be very cool! I need to get people who create physics-based simulations to make one that’s accurate, so it can be used in situations like this.

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