Friday, June 24, 2011

Nanoscale Characterization of Energy Generation from Piezoelectric Thin Films

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adfm.201190041/abstract

  • by Madhu Bhaskaran,
  • Sharath Sriram,
  • Simon Ruffell,
  • Arnan Mitchell
  • Advanced Functional Materials

    Volume 21, Issue 12, pages 2251–2257, June 21, 2011


  • Quantitative results demonstrate that nanopatterning yields an improved materials platform for integrated micrometer-scale energy-harvesting systems.

    We report on the use of nanoindentation to characterize in situ the voltage and current generation of piezoelectric thin films. This work presents the controlled observation of nanoscale piezoelectric voltage and current generation, allowing accurate quantification and mapping of force function variations. We characterize both continuous thin films and lithographically patterned nano­islands with constrained interaction area. The influence of size on energy generation parameters is reported, demonstrating that nanoislands can exhibit more effective current generation than continuous films. This quantitative finding suggests that further research into the impact of nanoscale patterning of piezoelectric thin films may yield an improved materials platform for integrated microscale energy scavenging systems.

    Genesis' legacy: Discovery Adds Mystery to Earth's Genesis

    by Mike Wall, SPACE.com Senior Writer
    Date: 23 June 2011 Time: 02:01 PM ET

    http://www.space.com/12059-earth-formation-sun-building-blocks-nebula.html

    Earth and the other rocky planets aren't made out of the solar system's original starting material, two new studies reveal.

    Scientists examined solar particles snagged in space by NASA's Genesis probe, whose return capsule crash-landed on Earth in 2004. These salvaged samples show that the sun's basic building blocks differ significantly from those of Earth, the moon and other denizens of the inner solar system, researchers said.

    Nearly 4.6 billion years ago, the results suggest, some process altered many of the tiny pieces that eventually coalesced into the rocky planets, after the sun had already formed.

    "From any kind of consensus view, or longer historical view, this is a surprising result," said Kevin McKeegan of UCLA, lead author of one of the studies. "And it's just one more example of how the Earth is not the center of everything." [The Solar System To Scale (Infographic)]

    Salvaging the samples

    The Genesis spacecraft launched in 2001 and set up shop about 900,000 miles (1.5 million kilometers) from Earth. It spent more than two years grabbing bits of the solar wind, the million-mph stream of charged particles blowing from the sun.

    The idea was to give scientists an in-depth look at the sun's composition, which in turn could help them better understand the formation and evolution of the solar system.

    To that end, Genesis sent its sample-loaded return capsule back to Earth in September 2004. But things didn't go well; the capsule's parachute failed to deploy, and it smashed into the Utah dirt at 190 mph (306 kph).

    While some of Genesis' samples were destroyed in the crash, others were salvageable, as the two new studies show. Two different research teams looked at the solar wind particles' oxygen and nitrogen — the most abundant elements found in Earth's crust and atmosphere, respectively.

    And they did so with a great deal of care, knowing that the crash had limited their supplies of pristine solar material.

    "The stakes were raised on the samples that did survive well," McKeegan told SPACE.com. "There wasn't as much to go around."

    Analzying oxygen

    McKeegan and his team measured the abundance of solar wind oxygen isotopes. Isotopes are versions of an element that have different numbers of neutrons in their atomic nuclei. Oxygen has three stable isotopes: oxygen-16 (eight neutrons), oxygen-17 (nine neutrons) and oxygen-18 (ten neutrons).

    The researchers found that the sun has significantly more oxygen-16, relative to the other two isotopes, than Earth. Some process enriched the stuff that formed our planet — and the other rocky bodies in the inner solar system — with oxygen-17 and oxygen-18 by about 7 percent. [Amazing New Sun Photos From Space]

    While scientists don't yet know for sure how this happened, they have some ideas. The leading contender, McKeegan said, may be a process called "isotopic self-shielding."

    About 4.6 billion years ago, the planets had not yet coalesced out of the solar nebula, a thick cloud of dust and gas. Much of the oxygen in this cloud was probably bound up in gaseous carbon monoxide (CO) molecules.

    But the oxygen didn't stay bound up forever. High-energy ultraviolet light from the newly formed sun (or nearby stars) blasted into the cloud, breaking apart the CO. The liberated oxygen quickly glommed onto other atoms, forming molecues that eventually became the rocky building blocks of planets.

    Photons of slightly different energy were required to chop up the CO molecules, depending on which oxygen isotope they contained. Oxygen-16 is far more common than either of the other two, so there would have been much more of this substance throughout the solar nebula, researchers said.

    The result, the self-shielding theory goes, is that many of the photons needed to break up the oxygen-16 CO were "used up," or absorbed, on the edges of the solar nebula, leaving much of the stuff in the cloud's interior intact.

    By contrast, relatively more of the photons that could strip out oxygen-17 and oxygen-18 got through to the inner parts of the cloud, freeing these isotopes, which were eventually incorporated into the rocky planets. And that, according to the theory, is why the sun and Earth's oxygen isotope abundances are so different.

    "The result that we're publishing this week gives support to the self-shielding idea," McKeegan said. "But we don't know the answer yet."

    Nitrogen, too

    In a separate study, another research team led by Bernard Marty of Nancy University in France analyzed the nitrogen isotopes in Genesis' samples. (Nitrogen has two stable isotopes: nitrogen-14, which has seven neutrons, and nitrogen-15, which has eight.)

    Marty and his colleagues found an even more dramatic difference than McKeegan's group did: The solar wind has about 40 percent less nitrogen-15 (compared to nitrogen-14) than do samples taken from Earth's atmosphere.

    Previous studies had hinted that the sun's nitrogen might be very different from that of Earth, Mars and other rocky bodies in the inner solar system, Marty said. But the new study establishes this firmly.

    "Before Genesis and the present measurement of the N isotopic composition of the solar wind and by extension of the sun, it was not possible to understand the logic of such variations," Marty told SPACE.com in an email interview. "Now we understand that the starting composition, the solar nebula, was poor in 15N, so that variations among solar system objects are the result of mixing with a 15N-rich end-member."

    As to how this enrichment of nitrogen-15 could have happened, Marty as well suggests some type of self-shielding as a possible mechanism. But it's not a certainty.

    "This is a scenario that is consistent with present-day observations," he said. "We cannot eliminate yet the possibility that these 15N-rich compounds were imported from outer space as dust in the solar system."

    The new results also suggest that most nanodiamonds — tiny carbon specks that are a major component of stardust — likely formed in our own solar system, because they share similar nitrogen isotope ratios with the sun. Some scientists have regarded nanodiamonds as being primarily presolar, thinking they were ejected from other stellar systems by supernova explosions.

    Both studies appear in the June 23 issue of the journal Science.

    Genesis' legacy

    The two new studies should help scientists get a better understanding of the solar system's early days, researchers said.

    And the results should help rehabilitate the reputation of the $264 million Genesis mission, showing that the capsule crash didn't render it a failure, McKeegan said.

    "We managed to accomplish all the science that we set out to do, all the important stuff," he said. "The enduring image in everybody's mind — the picture of the crashed spacecraft in the desert — will be more of a footnote instead of the primary thing that people remember. That's my hope, anyway."

    You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter:
    @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

    The Great Royal House of Artsruni & Related

    Some amazing data concerning the Great Royal House of Artsruni

    1. Members of the Great Royal House of Artsruni on hereditary bases were keepers & watchers of recently renovated Akhtamar Church at the island of the Lake of Van as well as spiritual leaders, legacy and heritage keepers of Vaspurakan and the entire Great Armenia.

    2. Members of the Great Royal House of Artsruni on hereditary bases were keepers of Akhtamar church's Archives as well, which after 1915 events were partially evacuated to Cairo, Egypt. The person who evacuated Archives was killed later on by unknown persons in Cairo, Egypt and his property remained depository in the British Bank and up today remains unclaimed back from Armenia: probably due to very specific perception of such a cathegory as Honor by some honorable gentlemen from England.


    3. Members of the Great Royal House of Artsruni have been claiming decent from interesting ancient people, that means that they are relatives of many other interesting people in Europe and America. 


    The cultural heritage generated by the Great Royal House of Artsruni represents key foundation of the entire Armenian Civilization. Some British scholars discussed an idea that the Artsrunis derived their name from the Urartian word artsibini (eagle), which survived in Armenia as artsiv (արծիվ) . Rumors also tell that one of the hidden symbols of House of Artsruni is the Great Winged Cat of Van: Cats of Van are quite real interesting creatures inhabiting shrines of Lake of Van sometimes having different colored eyes and according to legends of Armenian People of Van understand Armenian Language quite well (and who knows, maybe they are specialists in other languages as well). Eventually the Great Eagle and the Great 'Winged' Cat even up today support the shield at the Coat of Arms of Republic of Armenia and one even smiles
    enigmatically from that shield.

    More details one can find in writings of Armenian scholar Movses Khorenatsi and other interesting people from England and other countries.

    Some people in Europe with too vast imagination like to make 'electromagnetic' parallels between Scandinavian Vanirs (for more details see Æsir–Vanir War, Norse mythology; The war ultimately resulted in the unification of the two tribes into a single tribe of gods with more interesting heritage and legacy) and Van Lake Legacy but that can be considered as an element of contemporary European mythology re-shaping.

    Friday, June 17, 2011

    University of Northumbria: Scientists unveil the formula for a perfect tea


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2003784/Tea-Scientists-unveil-formula-perfect-brew.html

    By Daily Mail Reporter

    Last updated at 9:20 AM on 16th June 2011



    - Tea is best drunk 'six minutes after it has been made'
    - The optimum brewing time is two minutes and the ideal amount of milk is 10ml

    Many of us might think of it as an art, but apparently making the perfect mug of tea is all down to the science.

    A team of university researchers has devised a mathematical formula for the ideal brew which shows that it is best drunk exactly six minutes after being made.

    The optimum brewing time is two minutes and the ideal amount of milk is 10ml.

    The perfect drinking temperature of 60c is achieved six minutes later – but after 17 minutes and 30 seconds the tea will be past its best as it falls below 45c.

    Or, as the scientists at the University of Northumbria put it in their formula: TB + (H2O at 100 degrees centigrade) 2mins BT + C (10ml) 6mins BT = PC (at OT 60 degrees centigrade).

    If you’re wondering, TB means tea bag, BT is brewing time, C is milk, PC means perfect cuppa, and OT stands for optimum temperature.

    For the research, commissioned by a milk company, the team spent 180 hours in the lab testing brewing methods, and a panel of volunteers consumed 285 cups of tea.

    Senior lecturer Ian Brown, a food and nutrition expert in the university’s School of Life Sciences who led the research, said: ‘When enjoying a cup of tea, our palette requires a balance between bitterness and sweetness.

    ‘Our findings show that 10ml is the preferred amount of milk for our cuppas, due to its ability to balance natural bitterness and allow a smoother taste sensation.’

    The optimum temperature to drink tea is 60c, he said, and with the addition of milk the test mugs of tea reached that temperature after six minutes, two minutes faster than black tea.

    Mr Brown said: ‘Waiting six minutes for tea to reach 60 degrees centigrade avoids the risk of scalding, yet still allows us to enjoy the full flavours and aromas in our cuppa.

    ‘You might not expect to find toffee flavour in black tea, but by adding milk, toffee and vanilla flavours are intensified while the wood and grassy notes are reduced.’

    The research, for Cravendale Milk, also found that in Britain we drink 165million cups of tea a day, or 60.2billion a year.

    Thursday, June 16, 2011

    Golden Army, 1/Omega Noise & Advanced Science 'Fiction'

    It is not a new idea that 1/Omega Noise can pack within itself enormous amount of information, and actually being correctly integrated with a proper system can serve as information storage agent. From fantastic point of view of advanced science 'fiction' it can become an acting agent of creation of an Artificial Intelligence or be an agent of some Time and Space Extended Intelligence already dwelling in the realms of unknown fluctuations of the reality. It is hard to predict how a certain information being packed somehow into 1/Omega Noise can influence DNA molecule if been somehow transferred to it. Can it activate some accelerated regeneration processes of human tissues, grant physical immortality and endorse some first class properties? It is an Enigma up today.

    In particularly for smart kids with proper imagination more fantastic and funny properties of the 1/Omega Noise may look quite captivating if in an imaginary world one day it turns out that some sort of noise signal: a miraculous spark from room # 15 or zone # 51 can awaken the Golden Army awaiting in dormancy its true Master in the Banking Institutions Worldwide to take over the world, certainly for good and bright reasons.


    Monday, June 13, 2011

    Shakespeare Authorship & Odin

    I want to publicly share an idea concerning Authorship of Shakespeare which generally is not so active in circulation in the community engaged in the captivating Authorship Quest.

    We read a lot about the Northumberland Manuscript and the secret it hides, a secret which remained an enigma after Sir Francis’s departure metaphorically speaking through the gates of immortal at Highgate after successful refrigeration experiment with the chiken. But few accentuate at the interesting coincidence concerning the very word Shakespeare. The matter is that the Old Norse word Biflindi means Spear Shaker, Shield Shaker, while at the same time the word Biflindi is one of the Names of Odin leading God of Æsir (sources: Gylfaginning, Grímnismál (49), Óðins nöfn (6) ); in my view it is a very interesting coincidence. In my opinion a person who wrote under name Shakespeare and used that word as pseudonym had to have free access to the library of Sir Robert Bruce Cotton where he could learn much about such peculiarities of the Norse mythology . In that view the circle of people who had free access to that library was quite restricted and quite certain in England of the Shakespearean times, thus this idea in my view should assess the Authorship Quest activities, somehow.

    I have deep feelings that the key of the solution lies in the above mentioned coincidence, gentlemen.

    Respectfully with
    Expectations of successful Authorship Quest,
    H.A.

    And I am sorry for the shaggy English of representation of the idea as I am not a native speaker, you know.