University of Calgary chemistry professor David Cramb is a step closer to helping solve a complex problem in nanotechnology: the impact nanoparticles have on human health and the environment.
Monthly Archives: March 2010
SPTS Starts on a High with Q4 2009 Orders up Nearly 150%
SPP Process Technology Systems Ltd. (SPTS), a subsidiary of Sumitomo Precision Products Co., Ltd. (SPP), today announced bookings of nearly $35 million during the fourth quarter of 2009 from the entities acquired last year from Aviza, Inc.
Nano ePrint Partners With Novalia to Deliver Printed Electronic Greeting Cards for Tigerprint
Nano ePrint Ltd, a pioneer in planar nano-electronics, has announced that it is developing all-printed electronic greeting cards in collaboration with Novalia Ltd, to a specification provided by Hallmark subsidiary Tigerprint Ltd.
Trapping sunlight with silicon nanowires
Solar cells made from silicon are projected to be a prominent factor in future renewable green energy equations, but so far the promise has far exceeded the reality. While there are now silicon photovoltaics that can convert sunlight into electricity at impressive 20 percent efficiencies, the cost of this solar power is prohibitive for large-scale use. Researchers with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), however, are developing a new approach that could substantially reduce these costs.
Nanophotonic avalanche photodetector uses light for communication between computer chips
IBM scientists today unveiled a significant step towards replacing electrical signals that communicate via copper wires between computer chips with tiny silicon circuits that communicate using pulses of light.
‘Microrings’ could nix wires for communications in homes, offices
Purdue University researchers have developed a miniature device capable of converting ultrafast laser pulses into bursts of radio-frequency signals, a step toward making wires obsolete for communications in the homes and offices of the future.
specification
what is the mean for RB DIA 20 material can your pls answer me this question
Body Scanners protect Civil Liberties of Airline Passengers; despite concerns of Muslim critics
And so it begins... A Fatwa was issued last month worldwide directing all Muslims to resist the body scanner at airports. And we've just had the first test case, at an airport in the United Kingdom.
From The Times On-line, March 3:
A Muslim woman was barred from boarding a flight after she refused to undergo a full body scan for religious reasons.
The passenger was passing through security at Manchester Airport when she was selected at random for a full-body scanner.
She was warned that she would be stopped from boarding the plane but she decided to forfeit her ticket to Pakistan rather than submit to the scan. Her female travelling companion also declined to step into the scanner, citing “medical reasons” for her refusal.
The pair were attempting to fly to Islamabad in Pakistan.
The scanners have been in use for one month at Manchester and London Heathrow. The pair are the very first to refuse the use of the search method.
The X-ray machines allow security officials to check for concealed weapons but they also afford clear outlines of passengers’ genitals. They are due to be introduced in all airports by the end of the year.
Leftist civil liberties groups are fiercely rejecting the scanners. Yet pro-civil liberties groups on the Right see this as a right of American and British passengers to be safe and secure from the threat of Islamic Terrorism.
From the aptly named blog Bare Naked Islam:
It isn't Islamaphobia when they are trying to kill you!
It’s about time the Brits got tough on Muslims... We should demand body scanners in every public building in America.
I side with the pro-security civil liberties advocates on this. From a libertarian view, such security measures are entirely consistent with a personal liberty standpoint. These are public, not private facilities. If the government in the UK were directing private facilities to install scanners, that would be an entirely different situation. After all, the women do have alternative and one might say "more traditional" means of transportation to Islamabad, such as the train, bus or even carriage.
Winds of Change: How Black Holes May Shape Galaxies

For years, astronomers have known that a supermassive black hole grows in parallel with its host galaxy. And, it has long been suspected that material blown away from a black hole -- as opposed to the fraction of material that falls into it -- alters the evolution of its host galaxy.
A key question is whether such "black hole blowback" typically delivers enough power to have a significant impact. Powerful relativistic jets shot away from the biggest supermassive black holes in large, central galaxies in clusters like Perseus are seen to shape their host galaxies, but these are rare. What about less powerful, less focused galaxy-scale winds that should be much more common?
"We're more interested here in seeing what an "average"-sized supermassive black hole can do to its galaxy, not the few, really big ones in the biggest galaxies," said Dan Evans of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who presented these results at the High Energy Astrophysics Division of the American Astronomical Society meeting in Kona, Hawaii.
Evans and his colleagues used Chandra for five days to observe NGC 1068, one of the nearest and brightest galaxies containing a rapidly growing supermassive black hole. This black hole is only about twice as massive as the one in the center of our Galaxy, which is considered to be a rather ordinary size.
The X-ray images and spectra obtained using Chandra's High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer showed that a strong wind is being driven away from the center of NGC 1068 at a rate of about a million miles per hour. This wind is likely generated as surrounding gas is accelerated and heated as it swirls toward the black hole. A portion of the gas is pulled into the black hole, but some of it is blown away. High energy X-rays produced by the gas near the black hole heat the ouflowing gas, causing it to glow at lower X-ray energies.
This study by Evans and colleagues represents the first X-ray observation that is deep enough to make a high quality map of the cone-shaped volume lit up by the black hole and its winds. By combining measurement of the velocity of the clouds with estimates of the density of the gas, Evans and his colleagues showed that each year several times the mass of the Sun is being deposited out to large distances, about 3,000 light years from the black hole. The wind may carry enough energy to heat the surrounding gas and suppress extra star formation.
"We have shown that even these middle-of-the-road black holes can pack a punch," said Evans. "I think the upshot is that these black holes are anything but ordinary."
Further studies of other nearby galaxies will examine the impact of other AGN outflows, leading to improvements in our understanding of the evolution of both galaxies and black holes.
"In the future, our own Galaxy's black hole may undergo similar activity, helping to shut down the growth of new stars in the central region of the Milky Way," said Evans.
These new results provide a key comparison to previous work performed at Georgia State University and the Catholic University of America with the Hubble Space Telescope's STIS instrument.
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory controls Chandra's science and flight operations from Cambridge, Mass.
More information, including images and other multimedia, can be found at:
- NASA Mars Orbiter Speeds Past Data Milestone
- Seeing Eye-to-Eye on How to Fly
- Chilean Quake May Have Shortened Earth Days
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NASA Mars Orbiter Speeds Past Data Milestone

That 100 trillion bits of information is more data than in 35 hours of uncompressed high-definition video. It's also more than three times the amount of data from all other deep-space missions combined -- not just the ones to Mars, but every mission that has flown past the orbit of Earth's moon.
"What is most impressive about all these data is not the sheer quantity, but the quality of what they tell us about our neighbor planet," said Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Project Scientist Rich Zurek, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "The data from the orbiter's six instruments have given us a much deeper understanding of the diversity of environments on Mars today and how they have changed over time."
The spacecraft entered orbit around Mars on March 10, 2006, following an Aug. 12, 2005, launch from Florida. It completed its primary science phase in 2008 and continues investigations of Mars' surface, subsurface and atmosphere.
The orbiter sports a dish antenna 3 meters (10 feet) in diameter and uses it to pour data Earthward at up to 6 megabits per second. Its science instruments are three cameras, a spectrometer for identifying minerals, a ground-penetrating radar and an atmosphere sounder.
The capability to return enormous volumes of data enables these instruments to view Mars at unprecedented spatial resolutions. Half the planet has been covered at 6 meters (20 feet) per pixel, and nearly 1 percent of the planet has been observed at about 30 centimeters (1 foot) per pixel, sharp enough to discern objects the size of a desk. The radar, provided by Italy, has looked beneath the surface in 6,500 observing strips, sampling about half the planet.
Among the mission's major findings is that the action of water on and near the surface of Mars occurred for hundreds of millions of years. This activity was at least regional and possibly global in extent, though possibly intermittent. The spacecraft has also observed that signatures of a variety of watery environments, some acidic, some alkaline, increase the possibility that there are places on Mars that could reveal evidence of past life, if it ever existed.
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, is the spacecraft development and integration contractor for the project and built the spacecraft.
The Shallow Radar instrument was provided by the Italian Space Agency, and its operations are led by the InfoCom Department, University of Rome "La Sapienza." Thales Alenia Space Italia, in Rome, is the Italian Space Agency's prime contractor for the radar instrument. Astro Aerospace of Carpinteria, Calif., a business unit of Los Angeles-based Northrop Grumman Corp., developed the instrument's antenna as a subcontractor to Thales Alenia Space Italia.
- Seeing Eye-to-Eye on How to Fly
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View this site auto transport car shipping car transport Penta Auto Transport
Seeing Eye-to-Eye on How to Fly

NASA adopted many of these research techniques and many of the places in which to do it, like wind tunnels and entire research centers, from the NACA. Engine cowlings to cover propellers and a series of proven air foil shapes for aircraft wings--both of which reduced drag and improved speed and efficiency--were chief NACA contributions subsequently adopted by every aircraft of the day and improved upon over the decades.
This image shows NACA chief test pilot Melvin Cough outside a hangar at the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory. The test vehicle on the right is a Curtiss BF2C-1 Goshawk, which was used by the U.S. Navy in the early 1930s and featured retractable landing gear.
View my blog's last three great articles....
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APC 5000 UPS
i have a APC 5000 ups that is not working properly i have found that its batteries are not charging. what will be the solution?
mechanical & volumetric efficiancy calculation formula for root's blower
dear sir
i want to know how to calculate the volumetric and mechanical efficiancy of root's blower and also the gd square value of the rotor.
How do I reply to someone comment ?
dear all,
I am new subsciber,
tow days ago I posed a "Question" and received a reply from someone asking for more details, and I don't know how to post my reply to him, I don't find the "reply" bouton or any apropriate hypertext link
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hart communication
difine hart communication protocol and field bus protocol and its application
Science-based Chiropractic: An Oxymoron?
I spent 43 years in private practice as a “science-based” chiropractor and a critic of the chiropractic vertebral subluxation theory. I am often asked how I justified practicing as a chiropractor while renouncing the basic tenets of chiropractic. My answer has always been: I was able to offer manipulation in combination with physical therapy modalities as a treatment for mechanical-type back pain—a service that was not readily available in physiotherapy or in any other sub-specialty of medicine.
If I had it to do over again, however, I would study physical therapy rather than chiropractic. Considering the controversy that continues to surround the practice of chiropractic, I would not recommend that anyone spend the time, effort, and money required to earn a degree in chiropractic. Physical therapy, which is now beginning to include spinal manipulation in its treatment armamentarium, may offer better opportunity for those interested in manual therapy. Properly-limited, science-based chiropractors are now essentially competing with physical therapists who use manual therapy. Unfortunately, only a few chiropractors have renounced the vertebral subluxation theory, making it difficult to find a “good chiropractor.” I consider physical therapy to be more progressive and more evidence based. For this reason, I generally recommend the manipulative services of a physical therapist rather than a chiropractor.
There are some science-based chiropractors who use manipulation appropriately, but until the chiropractic profession abandons the implausible vertebral subluxation theory and is defined according to standards dictated by anatomy, physiology, and neurology, I would not describe it as a science-based profession.
Heretics and Science-Based Chiropractors
After my second year in chiropractic college, I came to the conclusion that the chiropractic subluxation theory was not a credible construct. In an effort to separate the good from the bad in the use of manipulation by chiropractors, I published my book Bonesetting, Chiropractic, and Cultism in 1963, renouncing the chiropractic vertebral subluxation theory and suggesting that chiropractors should limit their use of spinal manipulation to treatment of back pain. Over the years, I wrote many articles critical of chiropractic, always suggesting that the definition of chiropractic be changed in chiropractic colleges and state laws so that the next generation of chiropractors would be properly limited. Science-based chiropractors could be separated from their subluxation-based counterparts under a new degree, such as a “Doctor of Chiropractic Therapy” (DCT) or a “Chiropractic Manual Therapist” (CMT). I suggested that it would not be necessary for chiropractors to practice as “doctors”—they could practice as therapists offering non-surgical, drug-free treatment for back pain and related musculoskeletal problems, a new specialty combining use of manipulation with physical therapy modalities. Needless to say, this change never occurred and I was labeled a “chiropractic heretic”—or worse—by my colleagues.
Today, the educational requirements for obtaining a degree in chiropractic have improved. Most chiropractic college applicants now have undergraduate degrees. But the basic definition of chiropractic has not changed. As currently defined by the North American Association of Chiropractic Colleges, “Chiropractic is concerned with the preservation and restoration of health, and focuses particular attention on the subluxation,” indicating that the majority of chiropractors may still adhere to a basic version of the subluxation theory. Few chiropractic college graduates may be able or willing to abandon a belief system they must depend upon for an income.
Filling a Need for Manual Therapy
At the present time, spinal manipulation is still not as readily available in medical practice as it should be, leaving an opening for the services of a good?albeit rare?science-based chiropractor who combines manipulation with physical therapy modalities. But it would be necessary for such a chiropractor to openly renounce the chiropractic vertebral subluxation theory (more of a belief than a theory) and publicly state that his or her practice is limited to care of musculoskeletal problems. Unfortunately, as indicated by the paradigm of the North American Association of Chiropractic Colleges, such chiropractors may be in the minority, even among recent graduates?at least in the United States.
High-velocity, low-amplitude (thrust type) spinal manipulation is not yet commonly used by physical therapists. For this reason, orthopedists and neurologists who are familiar with manual medicine are often willing to refer back-pain patients to a good chiropractor for manipulation as well as to steer patients away from subluxation-based chiropractors. Physicians can often locate good chiropractors by reading their office notes and by talking with their patients.
Most cases of back pain are self limiting, and spinal manipulation is not often more effective than other physical treatment modalities in affecting the final outcome. But in many cases, appropriate spinal manipulation may provide more immediate symptomatic relief than other forms of therapy. And in special cases, thrust-type manipulation may be the best way to restore mobility in spines stiffened by post-traumatic adhesions or locked by muscle spasm and binding vertebral joints. For this reason, benefit may outweigh risk when manipulation is used appropriately in the treatment of carefully selected cases of mechanical-type back pain. But there is no evidence to indicate that upper neck manipulation provides more benefit than risk, considering the risk of damage to vertebrobasilar arteries.
Use of manipulation combined with instruction, massage, physical therapy, and rehabilitation may be the best way to relieve mechanical back pain and keep the patient mobile until recovery is complete—provided, of course, that treatment is based on a correct diagnosis. A science-based chiropractor who works in concert with a patient’s physician can often provide such a treatment regimen—as opposed to solo subluxation-based chiropractors whose primary concerns are locating and correcting vertebral subluxations.
Separating the Good from the Bad
Since the vertebral subluxation theory continues to form the foundation of chiropractic, it seems unlikely that the chiropractic profession will ever abandon the belief that adjusting spinal joints will restore and maintain health. Many chiropractors who say that they reject D.D. Palmer’s subluxation theory simply come up with new terminology that identifies some kind of vertebral joint “dysfunction” that allegedly affects the nervous system, thus interfering with the body’s ability to heal itself. Failure of chiropractic colleges to reject such views and make the changes needed to develop chiropractic into a musculoskeletal back-pain specialty (with commensurate changes in state laws) may simply allow chiropractic to continue as an alternative healing method, such as homeopathy or acupuncture, permitting its practitioners to treat the gamut of human ailments as “primary care providers.” It may then be necessary to depend primarily upon physical therapists for appropriate use of manipulation based on credible research. Chiropractors who can no longer tolerate the controversy associated with chiropractic can retrain as physical therapists, making good use of their training in the use of manipulation. Forty-three states now grant physical therapists direct access to patients; that is, referral from a physician is not needed.
Although I am a critic of chiropractic, I would not hesitate to offer support to a good science-based chiropractor who has separated himself or herself from the herd by expressing views that oppose the implausible treatment methods that are so prevalent among chiropractors. When I was in practice as a chiropractor, I felt an obligation to speak out so that friends, patients, and health-care professionals would not assume that my approach represented chiropractic in general. I worried that a patient who was pleased with my services might assume that treatment by any other chiropractor would be the same. Unfortunately, chiropractic treatment based on the implausible vertebral subluxation theory may be so inconsistent that treatment for any condition may range from an atlas adjustment to a sacral adjustment, all purported to be effective in improving health by removing “nerve interference.” So far, apparently reluctant to bite the hand that feeds them, chiropractic associations in the United States have failed to publicly renounce the vertebral subluxation theory or to condemn the multitude of dubious treatment methods based on subluxation theory.
Today, chiropractic treatment in America is like Forrest Gump’s box of chocolates: “You never know what you’re gonna get.”
Why the Chiropractic Vertebral Subluxation Theory Is Implausible
Scientific consensus does not support the theory that nerve interference caused by vertebral misalignment is a cause of organic disease. Spinal nerves primarily supply musculoskeletal structures. Organ function is governed by the autonomic nervous system in concert with psychic, chemical, hormonal, and circulatory factors.
The vagus nerve is an autonomic (parasympathetic) cranial nerve that originates in the brain stem and passes down through the neck and thorax to the abdomen to supply organs along its path. Preganglionic autonomic fibers, which pass through spinal segments from T1 thru L2, terminate in sympathetic trunk and splanchnic ganglia located outside the spinal column. Autonomic cranial and sacral nerves pass through solid bony openings.
The vagus nerve along with autonomic ganglia and nerve plexuses provide overlapping sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve supply from many directions to assure continued function of the body’s organs, independent of spinal nerves. This is why a transverse spinal cord injury at the C4 or C5 level can paralyze musculoskeletal structures from the neck down while involuntary functions of organs continue. With this fail-safe mechanism in place, I don’t know of any reason to believe that slight misalignment of a single vertebra or an undetectable “vertebral subluxation complex” can be a cause of organic disease as suggested by the chiropractic vertebral subluxation theory.
Spinal nerves are commonly compressed by bony spurs and herniated discs. Even the most severe compression of a spinal nerve, which may cripple the supplied musculoskeletal structures, does not cause organic disease. The sphincter muscles involved in voluntary control of bladder and bowel functions are supplied primarily by spinal nerves and sympathetic fibers that are well protected in their passage through the solid bony openings that form the sacral foramina.
When there is disc protrusion into the spinal canal, or when there is a space-occupying mass in the spinal canal compressing cauda equina spinal nerves that travel down (from the conus medullaris at the lower border of the 2nd lumbar vertebra where the spinal cord ends) to exit lumbar and sacral foramina, loss of voluntary control of bladder and bowel muscles (most commonly urinary retention) signals a medical emergency that requires the immediate attention of a neurosurgeon.
Implausible Theory Fosters Implausible Treatment Methods
The implausibility of the chiropractic vertebral subluxation theory does not provide a foundation for a consistent, replicable treatment method. As a result, vertebral subluxation theory has fostered the development of a great variety of antithetical chiropractic treatment methods designed to “remove nerve interference,” many of which do not involve use of hands-on manipulation—such as healing touch or use of a spring-loaded stylus to tap vertebrae into alignment. Such treatment methods are unrelated to legitimate use of manual manipulation in the treatment of back pain and related musculoskeletal problems.
The chiropractic (undetectable) “vertebral subluxation complex” is not the same as a true vertebral misalignment, a true vertebral subluxation, or any one of a number of joint problems that cause mechanical-type symptoms (which can often be relieved by manipulating the spine) but are not alleged to be a cause of visceral disease.
Proper treatment hinges on a proper diagnosis, which, in my opinion, is never a “vertebral subluxation complex.”
Developer 2000
I've downloaded Oracle 8i in my PC and then downloaded Developer2000 in my PC. But I've failed to establish the link between back end and front end tool. One of my friend told me that I had to download the developer first and then the Oracle. Pls tell me how can I establish the link in current condi
Oversized Air-Conditioning Compressor
what are the problems with fitting in an oversized compressor on an Air conditioning system?
Recommendations to overcome surge in a pipeline?
HI,
can someone tell me that what is the most feasible and economical engineering practice to overcome surge pressures in a pipeline system...........???
Any Spider Solitare Players Out There?
I bought a Windows 7 laptop with the new Spider Solitare, and I don't like it. I play the four-suit game, and can usually win one out of ten on my XP-based desktop PC.
But the 7 version is awful. I run streaks of 25 or 30 losses at a time. When I clear out the statistics and start over, I c


