Missoula educators on ice: A trip to the Arctic for chemistry professor, teacher – The Missoulian

When the Canadian icebreaker CCGS Louis S. St-Laurent pushes off from the Nunavut coast in September, it will have two Missoula educators on board.

University of Montana professor Michael DeGrandpre and Big Sky High School chemistry teacher Dave Jones will be working in tandem on the complex issues of climate change and ocean acidification.

Jones was awarded a research fellowship from PolarTREC, a teacher research and exploration program that, according to its website, is designed to invigorate polar science education and understanding by bringing educators and polar researchers together.

PolarTREC links high school teachers to active researchers and, as Jones notes, brings real world research back to the classroom, and shows them why pH and solution chemistry matters.

DeGrandpres work revolves around ocean acidification. When carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is absorbed by the ocean, it makes seawater more acidic, which can dissolve the shells of oysters, crabs and other creatures and can kill coral reefs. Working on the Louis S. St. Laurent is important to gather data points about the rapidly changing ocean chemistry.

Scientists are really motivated, and its a crucial place to be, DeGrandpre said.

Changes in the Arctic can drastically shift the weather dynamics in the entire northern hemisphere.

The weird weather were having is probably driven by ice loss, DeGrandpre said. The change in the northern oceans can shift where the jet stream flows over Montana, causing massive, strange changes thousands of miles from the source.

For anyone who has sat through a chemistry lecture, these kinds of world-changing discoveries can feel very far away. But for Jones, the experience will be invaluable in his teaching.

The ability to have an experience like this, he said, is the essence of'' learning. Being "engaged with and meeting other researchers can provide vibrancy to the classes he teaches.

And maybe that vibrancy will challenge someone to change the world.

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James Harden, Chris Paul already making strides in chemistry during offseason – ClutchPoints (blog)

New teammates James Harden and Chris Paul have already started making all the strides to put themselves among the best backcourts in the NBA, working on their chemistry this early in the offseason.

The two played in the same team in the Drew League, a tradition of Hardens, but one Paul had not been a part of during his six years as an L.A. Clipper, despite being right in his backyard. This disposition has shown Pauls effort to take this chemistry past the workouts and into the hardwood, to see just how two ball-dominant players can glue together in the backcourt.

Harden and Paul have communicated daily and even worked out together, trying to jell from early on and bring an already established sense of substance to this brand new team, which has let go of more than half of last years faces to make this partnership happen.

In any relationship or partnership, you need to have communication, Harden toldBen Golliver of Sports Illustrateds The Crossover. Youve got to know that person. Me and Chris have communicated every single day. Weve worked out several times already, just to build that relationship, that togetherness before training camp hits. Once it starts, well be rolling already.

General manager Daryl Morey admitted than acquiring Paul wasnt a matter of his vision of the two fitting together, but rather trusting that two elite-caliber players will figure it out among each other in order to win.

Generally, when youre looking at long-term acquisitions of top-10 players in the league, its better to not be too selective and then work out the best way to create synergy second, Morey said.

Both Paul and Harden know the great gap in talent shown in this past postseason, as the Golden State Warriors swept their way to the NBA Finals and closed out a 16-1 run to an eventual championship, making a task to dethrone them a rather direct, but challenging one.

Theyre really, really talented, but the chemistry that theyve built the last few years is what makes everything mesh, Morey added. Adding Chris, its going to take some time, but were trying to get ahead of the game right now in the summer. Its chemistry and talent (together), thats when youve got something special.

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Elizabeth Olsen’s Guide to Screen Chemistry – Vulture

Photo: The Weinstein Company, Neon and Marvel

To hear Elizabeth Olsen tell it, good acting usually requires a good scene partner. Its harder for me to do it on my own! she told Vulture recently in Los Angeles. Its a lot easier when youve got someone there with you.Of course, most critics would argue that Olsen is a fine actress no matter who her co-star is: Since hopping onto Hollywoods radar in 2011s Martha Marcy May Marlene, shes been one of the most in-demand young women in acting. Still, since she so often stars in two-handers or, even in the massive Marvel movies, drills down and find something intimate with a fellow superhero Vulture decided to give her a chemistry test. What has she learned from working with some of her most notable scene partners, such as Jeremy Renner (with whom she co-stars in multiple Marvel films as well as this weekends Wind River), Ingrid Goes Wests Aubrey Plaza (their films out August 11) , and her Marvel beau Paul Bettany?

You just want to feel like you trust the actors youre around, Olsen said, so you can forget about all those people watching you and just be present.

Jeremy RennerAvengers: Age of Ultron (2015)Captain America: Civil War (2016)Wind River (2017)Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

In part because of their long-running Marvel contracts, Olsen has started working with Jeremy Renner on a near-annual basis. Still, the first day they filmed together on Avengers: Age of Ultron, she worried about what she had gotten herself into. I was intimidated by him because of his dryness and because he doesnt sugarcoat things, said Olsen, adding with a laugh, Hes not overly friendly.

Added to the Marvel cinematic universe in that film as the telekinetic Wanda Maximoff (also known as the Scarlet Witch), Olsen had segued from low-budget indies to one of the biggest tentpoles imaginable. As she tried to keep up on that daunting first day in Italy, while ushering hundreds of extras into an airship alongside Renners Hawkeye, Olsen began to panic. My character had these powers I was trying to figure out for the first time, she said, and I was like, What the hell am I doing here?

Fortunately, Renner came to her rescue. I asked him, This is really overwhelming what do you even focus on? And he started talking about his characters family, and how that roots him into something tangible, said Olsen. Thats exactly what you should be doing, and I should have already known that before starting: that you need to find something tangible in these moments of chaos.

Renners ability to stay grounded came in handy when shooting Wind River, in which Olsen plays an FBI agent who comes to rely on Renners Alaskan game-tracker to solve a murder. He really is incredibly present on-screen, said Olsen. Hes there for you. Sometimes when you work with people, youre acting with them, but theyre just thinking about what theyre gonna do next. Thats a really annoying feeling on the other end, and Im sure I might have done that at some point as well! But with Jeremy, we both know that we both have to be present for the rope to stay taut.

And now that Olsen has come to appreciate Renners no-bullshit attitude, she can play around with it. Its fun to poke at him a bit so that he knows you see him, she said. Like an I have your number sort of thing. We dont really need someone to be fluffy with us.

Aubrey PlazaIngrid Goes West (2017)

Its the young actresss lot in life: Since so many movies are geared toward men, there arent many opportunities to play more than just the love interest or the single significant female character. Thats why Olsen is so excited about her upcoming comedy Ingrid Goes West, which marks the first time in years that shes gotten to co-lead a movie with another woman, Aubrey Plaza.

Its sad that its so rare, because its some of the most fun youll have working, says Olsen. Im sure it could be the worst if youre paired with someone whos not a girls girl, but working with Aubrey on this was just so great.

In the film from first-time director Matt Spicer, Plaza plays the titular Ingrid, who moves to Venice, California, to befriend social-media influencer Taylor Sloane (Olsen), the object of her Instagram obsession. A wiser woman might cotton on to Ingrids unhealthy interest in her, but the narcissistic Taylor enjoys being adored. Shes not a complete idiot, but shes thinking so much about her image and how shes coming across that she doesnt realize, laughed Olsen. Anything Ingrid says where someone else would think, Thats weird, Taylor thinks is a compliment.

Since Plaza hails from improv-heavy projects such as Parks and Recreation, Olsen was initially curious if their acting styles would mesh. I would have said a year ago that I hate improvising and Im scared of doing it, she said. I felt like there was a pressure to be funny, but if you get rid of that, you realize that improvising is just trying to be, in some weird way, as interested in the character as you are in yourself.

Improvising also requires you to listen to your co-star, and Olsen says she hit it off with Plaza so fast that the two actresses immediately began pushing their characters further and further, just to see what hilarious remark the other would come up with. A lot of it was just trying to throw the other one off, or make the other one uncomfortable in some way, said Olsen. Both of us would get disgusted by some of the things that we came up with you dont want to admit that you understand these people so well that you can improvise anything theyd say.

Now, though, Olsen is chomping at the bit to explore more of her comic chemistry with other actors, and recently shot the indie Kodachrome opposite Jason Sudeikis. After Ingrid Goes West, I was like, Put me in any movie with a comedian! she said. I just think its so much fun.

Paul BettanyAvengers: Age of Ultron (2015)Captain America: Civil War (2016)Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

Sometimes when youre on a movie with a lot of money and a lot of people helping you, the stars can kind of lean into the whole Im an ac-tor thing, said Olsen, mockingly enunciating that last syllable. Fortunately, theres an absence of thespian ego when working with Paul Bettany, whose Marvel character Vision has now become Olsens primary scene partner.

Being on set with him is a lot lighter, she said. We might talk about wire work and feeling uncomfortable getting swung all over the place, but then we would make these sarcastic jokes with each other: Oh, if only people knew how difficult our lives are! Were on a big movie being paid well to do something we love to do. Its so hard. Theres always that sense of perspective when Im working with him.

That levity comes in handy when portraying one of the Marvel series most unusual relationships: Though they were pitted against each other in Captain America: Civil War, android Vision and witchy Wanda have a bond thats hard to break. I think its a really strange and touching relationship, said Olsen. Even though hes a robot, they have this Romeo-and-Juliet kind of arc, or even a will-they-wont-they kind of thing.

So will they? In the comic books, Vision and Wanda get together, but in the Marvel movies that have come out so far, Olsen and Bettany shared significantly loaded scenes without any sort of romantic consummation. According to Olsen, though, a potential love connection has been in the works ever since Vision lifted Wanda out of some wreckage in the Joss Whedon-directed Age of Ultron. If you picked up on their chemistry even in that brief scene, it was by design.

Joss obviously didnt write the one were working on now, but I remember on Age of Ultron, he said, Hopefully, Marvel will continue this. Since then, Ive definitely made it a point to keep that thread, and I know Paul has as well, she said. And while Olsen wont confirm exactly where things go in the still-shooting Avengers: Infinity War, the poster and secret trailer seem to bring Wanda and Vision even closer. I do think its exciting to have that payoff, said Olsen. Sometimes you
look at an older Marvel movie and you can see the actors trying to tilt towards a story in the future but maybe the writers and creators didnt want to go down that road. Luckily, with [Infinity War], we got that through-line.

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Clarifiying complex chemical processes with quantum computers – Phys.Org

Future quantum computers will be able to calculate the reaction mechanism of the enzyme nitrogenase. The image shows the active centre of the enzyme and a mathematical formula that is central for the calculation. Credit: Visualisations: ETH Zurich

Science and the IT industry have high hopes for quantum computing, but descriptions of possible applications tend to be vague. Researchers at ETH Zurich have now come up with a concrete example that demonstrates what quantum computers will actually be able to achieve in the future.

Specialists expect nothing less than a technological revolution from quantum computers, which they hope will soon allow them to solve problems that are currently too complex for classical supercomputers. Commonly discussed areas of application include data encryption and decryption, as well as special problems in the fields of physics, quantum chemistry and materials research.

But when it comes to concrete questions that only quantum computers can answer, experts have remained relatively vague. Researchers from ETH Zurich and Microsoft Research are now presenting a specific application for the first time in the scientific journal PNAS: evaluating a complex chemical reaction. Based on this example, the scientists show that quantum computers can indeed deliver scientifically relevant results.

A team of researchers led by ETH professors Markus Reiher and Matthias Troyer used simulations to demonstrate how a complex chemical reaction could be calculated with the help of a quantum computer. To accomplish this, the quantum computer must be of a "moderate size", says Matthias Troyer, who is Professor for Computational Physics at ETH Zurich and currently works for Microsoft. The mechanism of this reaction would be nearly impossible to assess with a classical supercomputer alone especially if the results are to be sufficiently precise.

One of the most complex enzymes

The researchers chose a particularly complex biochemical reaction as the example for their study: thanks to a special enzyme known as a nitrogenase, certain microorganisms are able to split atmospheric nitrogen molecules in order to create chemical compounds with single nitrogen atoms. It is still unknown how exactly the nitrogenase reaction works. "This is one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in chemistry," says Markus Reiher, Professor for Theoretical Chemistry at ETH Zurich.

Computers that are available today are able to calculate the behaviour of simple molecules quite precisely. However, this is nearly impossible for the nitrogenase enzyme and its active centre, which is simply too complex, explains Reiher.

In this context, complexity is a reflection of how many electrons interact with each other within the molecule over relatively long distances. The more electrons a researcher needs to take into account, the more sophisticated the computations. "Existing methods and classical supercomputers can be used to assess molecules with about 50 strongly interacting electrons at most," says Reiher. However, there is a significantly greater number of such electrons at the active centre of a nitrogenase enzyme. Because with classical computers the effort required to evaluate a molecule doubles with each additional electron, an unrealistic amount of computational power is needed.

Another computer architecture

As demonstrated by the ETH researchers, hypothetical quantum computers with just 100 to 200 quantum bits (qubits) will potentially be able to compute complex subproblems within a few days. The results of these computations could then be used to determine the reaction mechanism of nitrogenase step by step.

That quantum computers are capable of solving such challenging tasks at all is partially the result of the fact that they are structured differently to classical computers. Rather than requiring twice as many bits to assess each additional electron, quantum computers simply need one more qubit.

However, it remains to be seen when such "moderately large" quantum computers will be available. The currently existing experimental quantum computers use on the order of 20 rudimentary qubits respectively. It will take at least another five years, or more likely ten, before we have quantum computers with processors of more than 100 high quality qubits, estimates Reiher.

Mass production and networking

Researchers emphasise the fact that quantum computers cannot handle all tasks, so they will serve as a supplement to classical computers, rather than replacing them. "The future will be shaped by the interplay between classical computers and quantum computers," says Troyer.

With regard to the nitrogenase reaction, quantum computers will be able to calculate how the electrons are distributed within a specific molecular structure. However, classical computers will still need to tell quantum computers which structures are of particular interest and should therefore be calculated. "Quantum computers need to be thought of more like a co-processor capable of taking over particular tasks from classical computers, thus allowing them to become more efficient," says Reiher.

Explaining the mechanism of the nitrogenase reaction will also require more than just information about the electron distribution in a single molecular structure; indeed, this distribution needs to be determined in thousands of structures. Each computation takes several days. "In order for quantum computers to be of use in solving these kinds of problems, they will first need to be mass produced, thereby allowing computations to take place on multiple computers at the same time," says Troyer.

Explore further: Developing quantum algorithms for optimization problems

More information: Markus Reiher et al. Elucidating reaction mechanisms on quantum computers, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2017). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1619152114

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John DeShazier: Saints linemates Larry Warford, Zach Strief already developing chemistry – NewOrleansSaints.com

Theres a hint of pride in Zach Striefs voice when he describes himself and Larry Warford as offensive line nerds.

Not that Strief isnt accustomed to studious teammates. But the veteran right tackle has found a kindred spirit in the New Orleans Saints free agent right guard, a meticulousness that delves to a depth that perhaps few understand, or care to understand, how to explore.

I think were very into the intricacies and I think theres a lot of guys that have beliefs on techniques and how to do things, Strief said. We were legitimately excited (Friday) because we took better first steps on a naked (bootleg). Legitimately, like, high-fived each other. Its kind of weird.

Its just fun having somebody else there who can offer a different viewpoint on body mechanics and offensive line play, Warford said. It is kind of nerdy. Just (talking about) motion, what muscles are engaged, if inefficiencies are happening on a certain play, being able to diagnose whats going on and trace it back to whats leading back to mistakes.

Its a fresh dynamic for Strief.

For much of the first 11 years of his NFL career, when he looked to his immediate left, there stood Jahri Evans, one of Striefs 2006 draft classmates. Evans, a six-time Pro Bowler and five-time All-Pro, became the second-most decorated offensive lineman in franchise history and earned franchise-wide respect.

But when the Saints signed Warford in free agency, the separation from Evans was solidified. Warford (6 feet 3, 317 pounds and entering his fifth season) seamlessly has adapted to playing alongside Strief after spending his first four seasons with Detroit.

With Zach, its real easy to transition into this offense, Warford said. Hes been in there for so long, he knows everything thats going on. He knows how he and Jah used to set and hes explained that to me.

Hed tell me how to incorporate how I play a little bit into what hes used to, and vice versa. Weve been bouncing opinions back and forth on each other and its going real smooth, as smooth as I could have hoped. With Zach, this transition has been real easy for me.

Said Strief: I think more than anything, theres just differences in how theyre moving. I felt like I could overlap Jah in play sometimes on the backside. His release from certain blocks was different, hes a different type of player.

Larry is so explosive, I feel like Im behind him half the time. So thats pushed me a lot to get going, get out of the stance and get moving because hes gone quicker than Jah was. Theyre just different types of players and I think that stuff will come. But I think its already going well. I think were already getting a good feel for each other.

So good is the chemistry, Warford said, that the two nearly have reached the point where they dont have to speak in order to have an understanding of how best to coordinate on a given play.

Cohesion-wise, were way ahead of where I would have thought we would be, Strief said. We do no doubt, in meetings all the time well get, like, all excited about a step. Like, You see that? You see that step? Its like, Thats good. Hes like, Thats nice. Its really weird.

Its a weird relationship but were both really into it. Were not going to run into any issues. I think were already getting to a point here where communication is easier, we dont have to be as descriptive. I think were seeing things.

The realization that they were on the same page came early.

I realized it pretty quick, just from the first day, Warford said. I think he was talking to Landon (Turner) about something, about engaging his hips and how he should go about doing it, and it was exactly how Id been taught. From there, I was like, Let me stand by this guy. It went on from there.

I call him Yoda. Just his vast understanding about our position from the ground up, in and out. Its on another level. I love talking about it, so I just call him Yoda.

His meticulous teammate doesnt mind at all.

Larry referred to me as Yoda, and I thought that was a nice compliment, Strief said. Thats nerdy.

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Cedar Rapids Rampage United boosted by year-round chemistry in 9-win PLA campaign – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Aug 1, 2017 at 11:45 am | Print View

CEDAR RAPIDS For the second year in a row, the outdoor soccer season ended one step from the championship match for the Cedar Rapids Rampage United.

While Saturdays 2-1 Premier League of America tournament semifinal loss to Carpathia FC again denied the second-year club a shot at a league title, it would be difficult to deny that significant advancements were made on the field.

From when we started last year to the end of this very last game, we improved a lot, Rampage United Coach Hewerton Moreira said. (We went) from a season that obviously nobody really knew us last season to be one of the most respected teams in the PLA.

Last year, Cedar Rapids finished 5-2-4 with a semifinal loss to RWB Adria. The club moved to Kingston Stadium for the 2017 season and stormed through the first two months with an 8-0 record, which included four shutouts and a 29-4 scoring advantage.

While a July 21 loss at eventual PLA champion Milwaukee ended the Cedar Rapids unbeaten streak, the Rampage United entered the tournament with a 9-1 record and a West Division title.

Much like the Milwaukee loss, Cedar Rapids was undone by a goal in the 90th minute by Carpathia.

Sometimes sports is not fair, Moreira said. It is not every time that the best team wins. I strongly believe that we had the best team in the league, but unfortunately we were unable to pull it out.

Team captain Gordy Gurson led the team with 11 goals, while former Cedar Rapids Washington, Cedar Valley Christian and Drake player Kenan Malicevic tallied six in seven games.

With the outdoor season in the rearview mirror, the franchises focus shifts to the upcoming Major Arena Soccer League indoor campaign. For Moreira, who will turn 38 on Halloween, that means a significant shift in responsibilities from coach-only with the outdoor team to indoor player-coach.

Im going to play. I miss playing, Moreira said. For me, Im getting a little older and I need my rest a little bit longer than the other players, but I absolutely look to play. Starting today, Im already starting to get back in shape in order to be focused on the indoor season.

The club has submitted a contract proposal for Moreira to resume both roles, where he was quite productive last season. The Brazil native played all 20 games and was second on the team in goals (22) and assists (14). As a coach, Moreira led the squad to 12 victories, a seven-win improvement from the 2015-16 expansion season.

Moreira credits the year-round chemistry that developed by virtue of the franchise having a summer outdoor team and a winter indoor team.

I really wish, for the sake of the level of the MASL, it would be perfect to have every team have an outdoor season, Moreira said. Thats when you engage your players. Thats when you continue to have players in shape. You have players building chemistry. For the Cedar Rapids Rampage, to add the Rampage United, really helps the squad be stronger for the indoor season.

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My Chemical Romances A Summoning: How the Bands Vision Came to Life – Variety

My Chemical Romances reunion tour, kicking off March 20 in Australia and running through October, is among the most coveted tickets of the upcoming concert season and it comes with little marketing and zero publicity. Instead, the band reintroduced itself by way of a one-off show at Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium in Dec. 2019, and revealed its tour dates a month later via a short film titled A Summoning.

The 13-minute-long video was directed by Kristian Mercado and produced by Joanna Shaw and Audrey Ellis Fox who collaborated with the band to bring its vision to life.

Mercado first met frontman Gerard Way backstage at the Shrine, describing the encounter as a crazy vibe namely due to the presence of writer Grant Morrison. As Mercado recalls: Seeing him backstage I was like, Woah! Alright, Gerard, you roll in a really interesting way and its kind of cool. And I think him being so multi-faceted, I clicked with him quickly on that. I respect that he has so many talents being able to be the rock star, but also a writer, an illustrator, toy designer. He has so much creativity that cross pollinates.

The band had an initial storyboard for A Summoning which created the narrative. The whole concept came from the band, says Ellis Fox. They were involved in every aspect approving a production designer; with casting and approving the lead; location; all the Easter eggs that the fans went crazy over, those were all placed by the band. And then Kris and I were able to do our own spin on things. Usually with music videos you sort of talk to the band through a label. But this was direct.

For Shaw, whose production company Unicorns & Unicorns got involved through Warner Records, MCRs label, via her longtime friendship with VP of creative services Devin Sarno, seeing the band live and feeling the family vibe among the MCR team, was music to my ears, she says. We work with so many people in this industry who are not as willing to be open and inviting of people into their world.

Once the initial meetings at the Shrine were successful and the band felt comfortable bringing Unicorns & Unicorns on board, everything came together very quickly. It was this huge project and we were prepping over Christmas, so I was the casting director as well as the location scout and location manager, says Ellis Fox. This script was particularly complex. [The band] and Brian Schecter wrote a story about a boy summoned by My Chemical Romance who not only has to escape his own reality, but also the many alternate universes of My Chemical Romances past, finally encountering the band in present day in the empty Forum. Kris did an incredible job putting his own spin on the creative and modernizing My Chemical Romances history.

For them, music as a visual landscape was a really important thing, adds Mercado of the three-day shoot. So I could see, at least from a top-line perspective, how we built this story. It was essentially a young mans journey through the catalog of music and kind of in a visual sense. We were able to pull imagery from what felt like a decade of their music history. so it becomes a cool journey through nostalgia. Youre able to revisit that iconic imagery and iconic themes, but through a new lens.

The video logged over a million views on YouTube and has spawned a slew of reaction videos, from fans sharing their opinions to deciphering those many Easter eggs in the film. Says Shaw:Its almost like the reinvention of the music video because what a video used to do is promote a song. I feel like this was a super creative way to tell people, Were back, were going on tour.'

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Researchers find out how bromine fits into Venusian chemistry – Phys.Org

July 3, 2017 Night on Venus in infrared from orbiting Akatsuki. Credit: NASA

Bromine species, and hydrogen bromide (HBr) in particular, could play an important part in the photochemistry of the lower atmosphere of Venus. This conclusion was made by researchers from MIPT and the Space Research Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences after comparing the data of Earth-based observations of Venus with the predictions of a photochemical model. The paper detailing their study was published in the journal Icarus.

Since the 1960s, space agencies have launched numerous space probes to Venus. Because 17 out of 24 successful missions were launched by the Soviet Union, scientists have nicknamed it "the Russian planet." Back in the mid-20th century, sci-fi writers imagined Venus as a habitable planet covered entirely by ocean, expecting that it would welcome future generations of Earthlings. But Venus had many surprises in store for its would-be colonists. The first Soviet probes that attempted to land on Venus were crushed by immense pressures in the lower atmosphere before they could reach the surface of the planet. Eventually, it became clear that Venus has a unique atmosphere, which is very dense near the surface and harbors terrific winds at higher altitudes. They blow at many times the speed of the planet's rotation. The new study advances the understanding of the inner workings of this highly complex world.

The temperature of the surface of Venus and its lower atmosphere is extremely high, around 460 degrees Celsius at the surface. The atmospheric pressure on Venus is 93 times that on Earth. Under these extreme conditions, peculiar compounds are formed and released into Venusian atmosphere, such as hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride. The discovery of these species on Venus a half-century ago was unexpected. That said, it would be reasonable to suppose then that hydrogen bromidethe next hydrogen halidecould also be found in Venusian atmosphere.

Vladimir Krasnopolsky and Denis Belyaev conducted their observations of Venus from one of the Mauna Kea observatories on the Big Island, Hawaii, at an elevation of 4.2 kilometers. The researchers used the three-meter telescope of NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF), coupled with CSHELL, a high-resolution spectrograph with a spectral resolving power of about 40,000. To search for hydrogen bromide on Venus, the researchers observed the strongest spectral lines of this molecular species, whose associated wave numbers are 2605.8 and 2606.2 units per centimeter, which corresponds to a wavelength of roughly 3.8 micrometers. By analyzing 101 spectra of Venus and searching for hydrogen bromide lines, the astrophysicists concluded that the abundance of this species relative to other molecules in the cloud tops at an altitude of 70 kilometers above the planet's surface does not exceed one part per billion.

"Retrieval of atmospheric parameters from spectroscopic data is far from trivial," says Vladimir Krasnopolsky, the head of the Laboratory of Applied Infrared Spectroscopy at MIPT. "It is possible to infer the temperature of the atmosphere at a given altitude from spectral line profiles and widths. As for the abundance of a given molecule relative to other atmospheric species, it can be determined by comparing the intensity of its spectral line to the intensities of lines of other molecules whose concentrations are known."

In 2012, Krasnopolsky created a photochemical model incorporating numerous components of the atmosphere of Venus. His model has now been updated to include the main photochemical processes involving bromine. According to the updated model, hydrogen bromide is roughly 300 times less abundant at 70 to 80 kilometers above the surface than at 60 kilometers due to its depletion by photolysis and reactions with atomic hydrogen and oxygen. Reanalysis of the observational data yielded an upper limit of between 20 and 70 parts per billion of hydrogen bromide below 60 kilometers. The relative abundances of various bromine species at different altitudes are shown in the figure below.

"Despite the low estimated bromine abundance, it could still be an important component of the atmosphere of Venus," says Denis Belyaev, a senior researcher at the Space Research Institute, RAS. "Thermodynamic calculations based on the chemical kinetic model of Vladimir Krasnopolsky indicate that hydrogen bromide is the dominant bromine species in the lower atmosphere."

Explore further: Mystery of rare volcanoes on Venus

More information: Vladimir A. Krasnopolsky et al, Search for HBr and bromine photochemistry on Venus, Icarus (2017). DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2017.04.016

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An international team of researchers has shown that the hot diffuse gas that fills the space between the galaxies has the same concentration of iron in all galaxy clusters that were studied in sufficient detail by the Japanese ...

An international research team, led by Chin-Fei Lee of the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA, Taiwan), has used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to detect complex organic ...

On the first day of the year 1801, Italian astronomer Gioacchino Giuseppe Maria Ubaldo Nicol Piazzi found a previously uncharted "tiny star" near the constellation of Taurus. The following night Piazzi again observed this ...

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Researchers find out how bromine fits into Venusian chemistry - Phys.Org

UB chemist awarded $2 million NIH grant for enzyme research – UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff – University at Buffalo Reporter

In the human body, proteins called enzymes help speed up chemical reactions that are vital for life. After you eat, enzymes help your body break down food and obtain energy. Enzymes are also responsible for helping your liver rid your body of toxins, as well as many other imperative functions.

Now, a UB research team is studying the details of how enzymes perform their job. The focus of the project is on understandingthe molecular interactions that enable enzymes to accelerate chemical reactions.

The new five-year $2 million Maximizing Investigators Research Award (MIRA) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), titled Studies on enzyme activation and novel modes of inhibition, will allow the researchers to investigate a variety of problems related to the mechanism of enzyme action and inhibition.

The chemicals in living cells are stable until they need to undergo one of the many enzyme-catalyzed reactions that support and propagate life, explains lead scientist John Richard, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Chemistry in the College of Arts and Sciences. Over the past century, scientists have made steady progress toward understanding the mechanism of action of enzymes, which are required to catalyze essentially every cellular reaction. This understanding has prompted advances on many fronts, including the development of interventions to cure metabolic diseases, the design of enzyme inhibitors with potential applications as drugs and the direct use of enzymes as therapeutic agents.

Richard has received funding from the NIH since 1988 to support research on a variety of topics related to enzyme mechanisms. The results from this research have added to a body of fundamental knowledge, which serves as the underpinning for translational research in the health sciences.

Professor Richard has made seminal contributions in the elucidation of enzymatic reaction mechanisms, notes David F. Watson, professor and chair of the Department of Chemistry. His receipt of a MIRA from the NIH is a testament to the impact of his scholarship. The funds will support the training of researchers and will further enhance our departments stature as a home for cutting-edge research in chemical biology.

Collaborators on project include Andrew Gulick, professor of structural biology in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, who will play the lead role in the determination of X-ray crystal structures for interesting enzyme complexes; Lynn Kamerlin, Distinguished University Professor at Uppsala University in Sweden, who will direct computational studies to model the utilization of substrate binding interactions in enzyme activation; and Hiroaki Suga, professor of organic chemistry at the University of Tokyo, who will develop libraries of cyclic peptides that show high specificity for inhibition of metabolic enzymes from parasitic compared with mammalian organisms.

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UB chemist awarded $2 million NIH grant for enzyme research - UB Now: News and views for UB faculty and staff - University at Buffalo Reporter

Old mattresses and a little chemistry help Syrian refugees grow food in the desert – Chemistry World

At the Zaatari camp in the middle of the Jordanian desert something remarkable is happening. Despite poor soil and a lack of water, beds of flowers, herbs and vegetables are adding patches of colour to the otherwise barren backdrop. Its the result of a project run by University of Sheffield scientists that is helping Syrian refugees grow fresh food, despite the deserts arid conditions.

All it took was the sprinkling of a little bit of chemical science to allow a whole load of flowers to bloom

Tony Ryan, University of Sheffield

Zaatari currently shelters almost 80,000 people and is the worlds largest camp for people displaced by Syrias devastating civil war. But with less than 20cm of rainfall each year, Zaataris ground is dry and infertile. The camps inhabitants, having left their old lives behind, rely on humanitarian aid to survive.

During a 2016 visit to Zaatari, Sheffield chemist Tony Ryan discussed recycling options with the UN officials running the camp. They took me into a big warehouse and said We havent got a clue what to do with these, recalls Ryan. He describes his mounting excitement as he realised the old mattresses were made of polyurethane. Ryan knew from his research on polymer foams that polyurethane makes a good support for plants. After taking a sample back to his Sheffield lab for safety testing, Ryan and his colleagues returned to Zaatari to launch the Desert Garden project.

Desert Garden trains people in hydroponics and provides them with materials they need to grow crops. Recycled mattress foam is used as a synthetic soil and nutrient solutions are used in place of solid fertilisers, which are banned at the camp. The technique allows people to grow plants using significantly less water than would otherwise be needed in the arid climate.

Many of Zaataris residents have arrived from Daraa, an agricultural region of Syria, explains Ryan. The camps 12km from the Syrian border and basically is full of Syrian farmers, he says. So we showed them how you might grow things using polyurethane and by the next time we came back, theyd built a hydroponic greenhouse.

The recruitment of native Arabic speakers, including Ryans colleague Moaed Al Meselmani, a soil scientist who is himself a Syrian refugee, helped spur the project on. It has migrated from University of Sheffield employees doing the training, to Syrian refugees teaching each other how to do it. And its really taken off now weve trained about 1000 people, says Ryan.

Empowered by the training, Zaataris residents have successfully combined the Sheffield scientists techniques with their own farming know-how. Now we learn more from them about how to grow things in foam than they ever learned from us, says Ryan. Theyve been growing things that weve never grown. To date there have been crops of lettuce, chillies, cabbage, cucumbers, courgettes, aubergines basically the whole salad and herb bar, says Ryan.

The Desert Garden appeal is currently seeking donations to help support the project. 10 will provide plants and nutrient solution for one family, while 25 provides enough fertiliser to grow 300kg of tomatoes. If the team can raise 250,000, theyll be able to train and equip 3000 refugees and make the project self-sustaining within three years.

Beyond providing a bit of fresh food, the project offers a welcome distraction from the monotony of life in the camp. The [UN High Commissioner for Refugees] absolutely love what were doing because they always have bored farmers, says Ryan. They always have dirty mattresses, and growing things is really, really good for your mental health. It gives your life a purpose.

Ryan points out that the training is giving people skills that theyll be able to use for the rest of their lives and could potentially help them find work in horticulture. Theres a real opportunity here for livelihoods. If you do hydroponics well, you can use 90% less water for the same food production, he says. And in a country thats as water scarce as Jordan, thats a big advantage.

With enough donations, Ryan hopes that the project can be taken to all of the refugee camps in Jordan and then potentially to camps in other countries. And he says that the lessons learned in Zaatari could even help make hydroponic agriculture in Europe more sustainable.

All it took was the sprinkling of a little bit of chemical science to allow a whole load of flowers to bloom in a desolate place, says Ryan. And once wed shared our bit of chemistry with the Syrian refugees, they went off and ran with it.

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Old mattresses and a little chemistry help Syrian refugees grow food in the desert - Chemistry World

Chemical Weed Killer Is Compatible With Sustainability Certification In Californias Wine Industry – Forbes

Field of wild mustard in bloom at a vineyard in the spring, Sonoma Valley, California

After a recent post concerning sustainability, email arrived from people in and out of the wine business on the apparently thorny subject of glyphosate, the weed killer. Being neither expert on glyphosate nor on sustainability, a little research was in order.

In some vineyards crops are purposely allowed to flourish between rows, to crowd out certain weeds and to fix nitrogen in the soil. But other vineyards are treated differently; some use glyphosate, a broad-spectrum systemic herbicide, especially used against annual competing broadleaf weeds and grasses. Most know the weed killer by the trade name, Roundup. It kills weeds through foliage absorption when sprayed on the plants, which means it kills only plants which have already begun to grow and spread their leaves. Introduced by the chemical company Monsanto, Roundup has been available for agricultural crops since the 1970s; over that time, Monsanto has been a leader in developing genetically engineered agricultural crops which tolerate glyphosate spill off, but not grapevines.

The California Wine Institute (WI) made initial contact in a press release concerning the California Sustainable Winegrowing Alliance (CSWA), so when I asked for more information WI emailed that CSWA, approaches crop protection through the lens of Integrated Pest Management (IPM). An IPM approach combines biological, cultural, mechanical and chemical tools (minimally and only when needed) to minimize economic, environmental and human health risks when controlling pests, weeds and disease. IPM is the basis for both organic and sustainable approaches. WI also said it continues to monitor glyphosate and domestic and international activities.

In 2015 the World Health Organization (WHO) claimed glyphosate is a probable carcinogen. Based on the WHO information, in 2018 the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) listed the herbicide as a probable carcinogen. Also that year, a jury in the state awarded $289 million to a man who claimed Roundup was the probable cause of his cancer, and that Monsanto did not warn him. In January 2019, France banned Roundup 360.

The WI glyphosate information web site quotes Carl Winter, Ph.D. Professor, Food Toxicology University of California at Davis: An adult would have to drink more than 140 glasses of wine a day over 70 years containing the highest glyphosate level measured to reach the level that CaliforniasOEHHA has identified as No Significant Risk Level (NSRL).

Winters quote does not address the possibility, if any, of toxic build up of daily glyphosate taken in from a variety of food sources. California had established a requirement to display glyphosate warning signs on products, but OEHHA apparently had determined the warning is not necessary on wine labels, because, as WI explains it, the level that might be found in wine, if any, is insignificant compared to the NSRL.

In February, 2019 a story broke claiming after testing 15 different types of beer and five different types of wine, U.S. researchers found glyphosate traces in 19 out of the 20 beverages tested. The wine brand Sutter Home measured the highest glyphosate residue in the study: 51 parts per billion (51 micrograms/liter). The organic wine from Argentina, Inkarri Estate tested at 5.2 parts per billion (5.2 micrograms/liter).

CSWA accepts glyphosate use as part of a sustainable viticultural program; its 3rd Edition Code Workbook Chapter 6, which covers Pest (and Weed) Management, includes in its introduction: IPM is a sustainable approach to managing pests by combining biological, cultural, and chemical tools in a way that minimizes economic, health, and environmental risks.

Sections 6-17 to 6-20 of the workbook cover weed management. Use of Roundup is mentioned under How To Kill More Weeds With Less Herbicide and Tips On Chemical Weed Control.

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Chemical Weed Killer Is Compatible With Sustainability Certification In Californias Wine Industry - Forbes

Has the chemistry Nobel prize really become the biology prize? – Chemistry World

Not another chemistry Nobel going to biologists! How many times have you heard that complaint? But is there really anything in it?

Its sometimes said that the number of chemistry prizes awarded to work rooted in the life sciences at least nine of the prizes since 2000 simply shows how broad chemistry is: at the molecular scale, biology is chemistry. But does that argument stack up? A historian of chemistry and a mathematical chemist argue in a new paper that, not only have the chemistry Nobels indeed become more biological in recent decades, but also the prizes of that nature tend to reward work outside of the chemical mainstream, being much more closely tied to research in the life sciences itself. In effect, they say, the chemistry Nobels are being shared out between genuinely different disciplines.

The two researchers, Jeffrey Seeman of the University of Richmond in the US and Guillermo Restrepo of the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences in Leipzig, Germany, say that the chemistry Nobel has now mutated into what is effectively the Nobel prize in chemistry or life sciences. They call for this to be openly acknowledged, rather than disguised with a pretense that its all chemistry. Whats at stake here is not just a matter of justice about who gets the most prestigious of all scientific awards, but the de facto boundaries of chemistry as a discipline.

Seeman and Restrepo show that the proportion of chemistry Nobels awarded for achievements in the life sciences has grown fairly steadily from around one per decade in the early 20th century to four to five per decade since the 1980s.1 They quote geneticist Jan Lindsten and cell biologist Nils Ringertz, both of whom served on the the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine in the 1980s, who wrote that many chemistry laureates have made contributions which might equally well have been awarded a prize in physiology or medicine.

Chemistry Nobel laureate Roald Hoffmann of Cornell University in the US, has previously viewed this trend as a call to our profession to embrace the far and influential reach of chemistry. But does it really reflect what chemistry is up to today?

No one can doubt that biochemistry has been a part of chemistry since its earliest days: Antoine Lavoisier studied respiration and fermentation, Justus von Liebig studied metabolism, and fermentation was central to the chemical understanding of enzyme catalysis. But might the disciplines have now gone their separate ways, with distinct communities, journals and spheres of influence? To answer that question, Seeman and Restrepo analysed the papers in two journals throughout 2007, chosen to be representative of mainstream chemistry and biochemistry: Angewandte Chemie International Edition and the American Chemical Societys Biochemistry. They looked at the citations made in papers in the two journals to those in other journals, and vice versa, to get a picture of the web of intellectual relationships.

We found that the chemistry journal has a flow of knowledge mainly with other chemistry journals and very little with life sciences journals, says Restrepo. The same for the biochemistry journal: it was by far more related to life science journals than to chemistry ones.

In other words, says Restrepo, there is a core community of chemistry, that we detected using bibliometric methods, which is not that related to its sibling biochemistry. The kinds of biologically oriented papers that garner chemistry Nobels arent really a part of the chemistry literature at all, he says the two fields belong to intellectual territories that are quite distant from each other. This, he and Seeman say, is the organic result of how scientific communities form and maintain themselves and presumably reflects an unspoken perception that the questions and goals of the communities are different.

The researchers used similar bibliometric analysis to look at the influence of chemistry Nobel laureates, and found that most awards are quite polarised, either being cited almost exclusively in the physical (typically chemical) or the life sciences.

Disciplinary divisions are built into the way the Nobel awards operate. They are awarded by the Nobel Foundation under the auspices of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The Academy elects members each year who are assigned to one of 10 categories, such as physics, chemistry and the biosciences, and selects the Nobel committees from these members. It stands to reason, then, Restrepo says, that if the Academy elects more life scientists than chemists, and if the Nobel Committee for Chemistry becomes weighted more heavily in life scientists, then it is likely that more of the Nobel prizes in chemistry will be in the life sciences.

Seeman and Restrepo studied the disciplinary composition of the chemistry Nobel committees, and found a clear linear correlation between the proportion of awards in the life sciences per decade and the proportion of committee members from those backgrounds: both figures have increased steadily since the prizes began. In the last 70 years, the proportion of chemistry committee members from the life and biochemical sciences has been 4060%.

So what, if anything, is to be done? We are not suggesting that chemists should fight their own corner, but that they, and awarding institutions, should be aware of the territory of chemistry, its shape and reaches, says Restrepo.

Is the current structure of the Nobel prizes optimal for the future? the pair asks. The evidence is: certainly not. In a way, the Nobel Foundation and the Nobels prize-awarding bodies have produced a patchwork of change over the past several decades, a force-fit into the schema of Alfred Nobel. That strategy will not suffice forever.

With this in mind, they suggest several possible changes to the ways the Nobel awards operate. For example, it could include leading international representatives of the most active and most influential fields of chemistry in the Nobel Committee for Chemistry. The limit of three recipients each year could be relaxed to broaden the pool of laureates and the Foundation could publicly document the criteria and disciplinary boundaries for each of its prizes and for membership on the Nobel Committees.

Perhaps one of the suggestions they could easily implement is the use of bibliometric tools to keep track of the evolution of the disciplines and also as a tool to assist the selection of members of the committee, says Restrepo.

Robert Lefkowitz of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, who won the 2012 chemistry Nobel with Brian Kobilka for work on G-protein coupled receptors, doesnt buy it. I think it is an unproductive argument based on definitions, he says.

He points out that most standard definitions of chemistry include biochemistry as a branch. Is there anything in Alfred Nobels will that says the different branches need to be equally rewarded? he asks. It simply says instead that the prize should go to those whose discoveries have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind. If the Nobel committee decides that the greatest benefit has come disproportionately from biochemistry, and Lefkowtiz agrees that this has been so in recent years, then so be it. But I understand that these other chemists feel disenfranchised, he says. I would too.

In any event, he says, the choice is up to the Swedes, whereas Seeman and Restrepo seem to be saying that the prize is owned by all of us.

And while a common complaint is that the life sciences already have their own prize, Lefkowitz points out that it is actually a prize for physiology and medicine but when was the last time a physiologist or physician actually won it for work in those fields? Almost never, Lefkowitz says. It more often goes to biochemists than does the chemistry prize. Similar arguments rage in other disciplines too: some say particle physics is inordinately represented in the physics prize, for instance, while in the early 20th century the turf wars were more between phy
sics and chemistry as awards went to discoveries in radioactivity and atomic physics.

Seeman and Restrepo interacted extensively with members of the Nobel committee as they prepared their paper, in particular to clarify the procedures of the Nobel Foundation. They stress that the committee members were extremely responsive, cooperative and helpful. Protein chemist Gunnar von Heijne of Stockholm University, Sweden, current secretary of the chemistry Nobel committee, finds food for thought in the paper but doesnt think that the findings demand any more changes or soul-searching than are already happening.

It is certainly not true that the Nobel prize in chemistry has developed into a Nobel prize in life sciences, he says, speaking in a personal capacity. He thinks that the alleged intellectual separation of chemistry and biochemistry rests on circular reasoning: that biochemists tend to publish in pure biochemistry journals seems unsurprising, but doesnt in itself make biochemistry distinct from the rest of chemistry.

Von Heijne says that it is hard to implement changes to the Nobel Foundations procedures anyway. It is the statutes of the Nobel Foundation and, ultimately, the will of Alfred Nobel, that provide the basic framework for the Nobel prizes, [including] the prize areas. This basic framework cannot and probably should not be easily changed. He adds that the Nobel prizes rest on a finely tuned and slowly evolving system of rules and procedures, and major changes can easily create more problems than they solve.

On the suggestion that the Nobel committee should include the most active and influential scientists in each field, for example, he says that over the years that Ive served on the Nobel Committee, Ive become convinced that it is much easier for a rather close-knit group of scientists living in a far-off country to take the necessary detached view of the world of science that the responsibility of proposing Nobel prizes carries with it and to put in the months of work required every year than it would be for a committee of busy international high-flyers.

And increasing the number of laureates for a given prize would simply widen the arguments about where the cutoff lies, he says. In my own experience, the number of deserving individuals grows rapidly with the number of laureates included in a prize. There would be many more candidates of more or less equal merit to consider for a fourth slot than for the first, second or third slot.

While Restrepo says that one of the aims of the paper is to bring into the open some of the opacity of the Nobel prize process, von Heijne feels that too explicit and formulaic a selection process could create a straitjacket. If, for example, some formal and publicly stated definition of what counts as chemistry were to be drawn up, it would need to be constantly revised with every passing year indeed, it would be outdated even before it is decided. Von Heijne says that his own preference is to be inclusive and recognise the broad reach of chemistry in contemporary science and technology. Lefkowitz thinks that the chemistry Nobel actually has had some of the most creative and original committees in recent decades, for example making awards for work in microscopy or materials science. They surprise people year after year, he says.

So perhaps some fuzziness and secrecy is best after all. If the Nobel prizes were selected by algorithm, what would we have to argue about every October?

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Has the chemistry Nobel prize really become the biology prize? - Chemistry World

Chemical Plant Explosion in Spain Kills One and Prompts Order to Stay Inside – The New York Times

MADRID An explosion and fire at a petrochemical factory in Catalonia on Tuesday killed at least one person and injured several more, prompting officials to block roads, suspend rail service and order nearby residents to stay inside.

The shock waves from the initial blast were felt several miles from the factory, the authorities said, and the one fatality was reported in a building damaged by tremors.

The blast occurred at about 7 p.m. at a factory housing the Iqoxe company on the outskirts of Tarragona, a city whose metropolitan area includes several hundred thousand people.

The factory is Spains only producer of ethylene oxide, which can be transformed into ethylene glycol, a chemical that is used to help manufacture a wide range of products, including antifreeze, packaging film, plastic bottles and polyester fibers for clothing.

The explosion was reported in a part of the plant that opened last year, after an investment of about 10 million euros, according to local news reports.

The authorities offered no immediate explanation for the explosion. Firefighters struggled throughout the night to battle the blaze, declaring it under control at about midnight.

The order to stay inside was lifted about three hours after the explosion. Quim Torra, the regional president of Catalonia, Spains northeastern region, told local reporters that no toxic agent had been detected in the air and that people should not fear for their health.

Two of the injured were being treated Tuesday night for burn injuries, and their condition was described as critical. Nine were injured in all, and one person was reported missing, emergency officials said.

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Chemical Plant Explosion in Spain Kills One and Prompts Order to Stay Inside - The New York Times

Local scientist creates handheld ‘chemistry lab’ – myfox8.com

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GREENSBORO, N.C. -- There is a concept in capitalism called creative destruction.

The idea is, as new technologies and techniques are invented, old ones fade way. The car put the buggy maker out of business but we were all better off for it. And it looks as if a scientist at UNC Greensboro may be doing the same thing to sections of the laboratory business.

Taylor Mabe is a nano-scientist at UNCG who, along with his teammates at the Joint Nanoscience Center in Greensboro, has created a device you can hold in your hand that is, pretty much replacing an entire chemistry lab.

For years now, if we took a sample of blood or some other fluid from a person, wed have to send it off in a refrigerated box to a lab somewhere and it would take several days before the lab separated the serum from the rest of the blood and tested for whats in the blood. Not anymore.

So thats the cool part, says Mabe, showing us the device. The surface is just a metal most of the time, its gold and we can tether any kind of biological molecule on that surface. What biological molecule you stick on that surface determines which disease we can test for. So they could do this right in the doctors office.

Or, more importantly, in the field. If an emergency medical technician comes up on someone in distress, this device will tell them immediately if its a peanut allergy, a drug overdose whatever.

But thats only half the story.

The other half excited Justin Streuli, who is the director of the North Carolina Entrepreneurship Center at UNCG. Its a grant that UNCG and North Carolina A&T earned that will allow the schools to take their students' and facultys work and see if it is commercially viable.

Youve got this hypothesis of, 'Ive got this business idea, I think people are going to pay for this product, says Streuli. Well, how do you test this hypothesis? Well, you go out there and talk to the customers and ask them, Is this really a problem thats going to get solved? Theyve never had this kind of opportunity at UNCG, NC A&T before. Its a first for Greensboro.

And perfect for bringing the work Mabe and his team have done.

Were getting very good feedback, weve won several awards, he says.

What this means for all of us is not just a new device that might save our lives, but perhaps a job if and when they can start a company to produce the product. If they do, Mabe wants it to be right here.

This is where I grew up, I definitely have plans to stay here, he says. Hopefully a kid from little, bitty Walnut Cove can have his dream come true.

See his dream in action in this edition of the Buckley Report.

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Local scientist creates handheld 'chemistry lab' - myfox8.com

UWMadison chemist searches for ways to bioengineer proteins within cells – University of Wisconsin-Madison

Andrew Buller, professor of chemistry at the University of WisconsinMadison, wants to add more building blocks to the bodys protein-making kit.

In nature, there exist 20 of these building blocks, called amino acids, which make up the proteins that perform the work required to sustain life. Buller says scientists can create more, allowing them to expand the ways in which cells build proteins.

Andrew Buller

You could think of this as having a Lego kit with just 20 different pieces, Buller says. What could you build if you had more? We build these new Lego bricks and then teach biological systems how to make them too.

Over the past two decades, scientists have been adding new amino acids to proteins, but it has required relying on organic chemists to first produce them in the lab. Buller is working to set up a system so that any molecular biologist can create the amino acids they want in a cell, using enzymes and an off-the-shelf chemical. This will make it easier and less expensive for biochemists to create the new molecules they want to use for research and medicine, he says.

People have wanted to do this for a long time, but there are a lot of barriers, Buller says. We are addressing one of the biggest, which is that its really expensive and it takes a lot of training in two different areas. If we can make it cheaper and so that you need one skill set instead of two, then everybody else is going to be able to use this technology.

This is the basis for Bullers recent $2.2 million 2019 National Institutes of Health Directors New Innovator Award, which is part of the agencys High-Risk, High-Reward program designed to support innovative research with the potential for substantial contributions to the field. By eliminating some of the pressure to find funding for these kinds of projects, they allow researchers time to work, discover and create.

Bullers group will repurpose how enzymes use vitamin B6, which is crucial for amino acid synthesis, to perform new types of reactions.

Now we get to focus on the science, Buller says, adding that the research could spawn methods of cheaper drug development. I think this is an important challenge for scientists to work on. We want to lower the barriers, both in terms of cost and difficulty, to make it easier to make new kinds of molecules.

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Chemistry Dictionary, Terms & Definitions – Chemistry …

Thank you for visiting! Our website is a free online chemistry dictionary containing over 1,800 chemistry terms and definitions.

Everyone is invited to use our website and chemistry dictionary to help further their knowledge, students and teachers alike. To start browsing the dictionary, choose a letter to list all the terms starting with that letter. You can also search our dictionary using the search box provided.

Our collection of chemistry terms and definitions cover all areas, including: general chemistry science, organic chemistry, inorganic, biological, physical, environmental and analytical chemistry. Students of all study levels use our site to find solutions and help for their problems, questions and projects.

We also maintain a list of helpful periodic tables. There you will find the best interactive periodic tables on the net, along with many different printable versions.

Our chemistry dictionary terms and definitions have been taken from various public domain, GNU and government sources. We have done our best to verify the accuracy and quote the correct sources. Please contact us if you feel any of our terms or definitions need to be updated or corrected in any way. We appreciate the feedback!

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Researchers Just Proved Crystals Can Bend, Flipping Chemistry on Its Head – ScienceAlert

Researchers have shown that crystals can be so flexible they can be bent repeatedly and even tied up in knots, overhauling our current understanding of the structures, and challenging the very definition of a crystal.

As we learnt in school, crystals are brittle and inelastic - if you try to bend a crystal of rock salt or quartz, for example, it will break. But this new research shows that crystals can actually be made to bend, opening up a whole new class of materials that could revolutionise electronics and technology.

Scientists had previously made observations of crystals that could bend, but this is the first time researchers have examined the process at the atomic level, and determined that crystals really can be flexible while still retaining their traditional properties, flipping all current conventions around the structures on their head.

"Crystals are something we work with a lot they're typically grown in small blocks, are hard and brittle, and when struck or bent they crack or shatter," said one of the lead researchers, John McMurtrie, from Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Australia.

"While it has previously been observed that some crystals could bend, this is the first study to examine the process in detail.We found that the crystals exhibit traditional characteristics of not only hard matter, but soft matter like nylon."

You can see the flexible crystal below:

QUT

Crystals are brittle because of the way their molecules are arranged - they're highly organised structures that are made up of infinitely repeating molecular components. That means no matter which way you look at a crystal structure, it will look the same.

It's this property that makes them so useful in a range of modern technologies, from smartphones to computers. But it also makes them hard, and easy to break or shatter, so they're not as useful in emerging technologies, such as flexible electronics and optical devices.

But this new research has shown that it's possible to grow elastic crystals that can be bent over and over again, before quickly restoring their original shape, just like nylon.

The team was able to grow these elastic crystalsabout the width of a fishing line and up to 5 cm long.

Most importantly, these flexible crystals still retained all the traditional properties of crystals we rely on in our technology - essentially making them a brand new type of material altogether.

"The crystals that we have prepared fall outside the limits of what have traditionally been considered to be hard and soft matter," the lead researcherswrite over at The Conversation.

The researchers grew their flexible crystal from a common metal compound known as copper (II) acetylacetonate. The compound was first made in the late 1800s, but changing the way the molecules were arranged within the crystal gave it new flexible properties.

Using X-rays generated by the Australian Synchrotron, the team was able to study the molecular arrangement of the crystals as they were bent, showing that the individual molecules reversibly rotated to give the material its elasticity.

"Under strain the molecules in the crystal reversibly rotate and reorganise to allow the compression and expansion required for elasticity and still maintain the integrity of the crystal structure," said Jack Clegg, who led the collaborating team from the University of Queensland.

Once they understood how it works, the researchers were able to show that crystals made from six other structurally similar metal compounds were also flexible.

"This is an exciting prospect given that there are millions of different types of crystals already known and many more yet to be discovered," said McMurtrie.

"Bending the crystal changes its optical and magnetic properties, and our next step is to explore these optical and magnetic responses with a view to identifying applications in new technologies."

Now that we know how these flexible crystals work, the next challenge will be trying to figure out what this means for our current definition of a crystal - or if we've in fact discovered a new type of material altogether.

"For example, the loss of symmetry when a crystal is bent or twisted means it is no longer strictly a crystal by traditional definitions," Clegg and McMurtriewrite for The Conversation.

The discovery could also have big implications for technology - more flexible crystals could lead to new hybrid and smart materials that responds to changes in their environment

"Flexible crystals like these could lead to new hybrid materials for numerous applications, from components of planes and spacecraft to parts of motion or pressure sensors and electronic devices," said Clegg.

The research has been published inNature Chemistry.

Queensland University of Technologyis a sponsor of ScienceAlert. Find out more abouttheir research.

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Researchers Just Proved Crystals Can Bend, Flipping Chemistry on Its Head - ScienceAlert

Sam Darnold, new USC receivers look to form chemistry after … – LA Daily News

On a pivotal game-tying drive late in the third quarter of USCs 49-31 victory over Western Michigan on Saturday, the Trojans offense needed 17 yards for a first down.

So Sam Darnold found Deontay Burnett.

Burnett, who was lined up as the slot receiver, ran almost 15 yards along the right hash marks, draped by a defensive back, until he spotted an opening. Burnett said he then decided to alter his route, drifting over the middle of the field toward a slice of green grass. Darnold spotted him and delivered a throw.

The ball arrived a little low, but the junior receiver dove and scooped it up for a gain of 27 yards on third down. The adjustment on his route mirrored the one he made downfield in the final minutes of the Rose Bowl last January, snagging the tying touchdown.

Any time hes open, Darnold said, he knows when to slow down, knows when to speed up.

In USCs season opener, Darnold showed a continued chemistry with Burnett, who caught a game-high seven passes for 142 yards.

But he otherwise struggled to establish a similar rapport with a bevy of new targets.

Darnold, who completed 23 of 33 pass attempts for 289 yards, had four passes dropped and two more intercepted.

Two drops came on third down, one by redshirt freshman Tyler Vaughns when he was running a 10-yard out route in the first quarter and a second by redshirt junior Jalen Greene who was running a quick slant in the second quarter.

Vaughns was among four receivers to make their college debut Saturday, including freshman Joseph Lewis, as well as redshirt freshmen Velus Jones and Trevon Sidney. Greene, a former quarterback, made his first start at receiver.

USC had an almost entirely new cast of receivers in the wake of the departures of JuJu Smith-Schuster and Darreus Rogers.

We know theres going to be some growing pains, Coach Clay Helton said Sunday during a teleconference with reporters. Any time that youre dealing with young people, when theyre making their first starts and first experiences, some things are going to go good and some things are not going to go so well. Its a learning experience.

Helton remained complimentary of Darnold, though the third-year sophomore passer and preseason Heisman Trophy favorite was held without a touchdown toss for the first time since his first start at Utah last September. He pointed to Darnolds composure.

He really trusted the guys around him and spread the ball around, Helton said.

Ten players caught passes from Darnold.

Where I was really proud of him, Helton added, was just his poise and his calmness, not to get frustrated when things werent going absolutely perfect.

At times, Darnolds timing with his receivers looked off. One deep throw in the second quarter fell just out of the grasp of Velus Jones, who had run about 30 yards along the right hashmarks and remained a step ahead of a defensive back. But he couldnt catch up to the throw. In other moments, the absence of Smith-Schuster and Rogers was pronounced. Darnold lofted a pass along the sideline toward Greene in the first quarter. Greene tried to reach over the helmet of the defensive back to bring in the pass, but dropped it. It was almost reminiscent of a play Rogers made on a winning drive over Colorado last October, the sequence occurring at almost the identical spot on the Coliseum field.

But Darnold expected improvement in time. Its a new group.

Just continue to get experience in games and practice and well be fine, he said.

Burnett offered a similar assessment.

I feel like the chemistry is there with the receivers, Burnett said. It just takes reps. Everybody is going to step up. Everybody has to step up. Were in good shape.

Quick hits

Tight end Daniel Imatorbhebhe was limited to mostly run blocking, Helton said, as he recovers from a sore hip flexor. Freshman safety Bubba Bolden has a bone bruise in his knee, an MRI showed. Safety Chris Hawkins is also day-to-day with an elbow sprain. USC opened as a 5-point favorite over Stanford.

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Sam Darnold, new USC receivers look to form chemistry after ... - LA Daily News

‘Mystery of Chemistry’ heads north – International Falls Journal

Another free program will soon be offered through the Arrowhead Library System in the Borderland area.

Mad Science of Minnesota Mystery of Chemistry will take place at 2:30 p.m. in the Northome Community Room on July 14.

The program will include an official mad scientist from Mad Science of Minnesota. Attendees will be able to watch as a series of experiments are conducted, including liquid changing into a rainbow of colors and the magic of Styrofoam melting.

The mad scientist will also mix up a gooey, foaming paste and an eerie, smoking genie in an ordinary water bottle. The event will be a fun and educational program for families and kids, said a press release.

Mad Science is the worlds leading science enrichment provider. Mad Science delivers unique hands-on science experiences for children that are as entertaining as they are educational. It encourages scientific literacy in children in an age when science is as vital as reading, writing and arithmetic.

For over 25 years, Mad Science has invested in research and development and continues to do so being the forefront of the industry, creating hands-on science programming for kids.

The Mystery of Chemistry program is most suitable for ages 4-12.

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'Mystery of Chemistry' heads north - International Falls Journal

Martin and Short bring their chemistry to the masses – San Francisco Chronicle

By Peter Hartlaub

Martin Short and honoree Steve Martin walk the red carpet at the 43rd AFI Life Achievement Award Gala honoring Martin at Dolby Theatre on June 4, 2015 in Hollywood.

Martin Short and honoree Steve Martin walk the red carpet at the 43rd AFI Life Achievement Award Gala honoring Martin at Dolby Theatre on June 4, 2015 in Hollywood.

Steve Martin (left) plays George and Martin Short plays Franck the flamboyant and officious wedding planner in "Father of the Bride."

Steve Martin (left) plays George and Martin Short plays Franck the flamboyant and officious wedding planner in "Father of the Bride."

Martin and Short bring their chemistry to the masses

Steve Martin and Martin Short are associated with a lot of locations far outside the Bay Area: Canada, Los Angeles, Live from New York

But when asked to share any memories provincial to San Francisco, both comedy legends come up with a long and poignant formative story from the mid-1960s. Martin drove up from L.A. and slept in his Volkswagen van as an 18-year-old, performing some of his first paid gigs in North Beach. And San Francisco was the first U.S. city that Canada-born Short visited, at age 15.

My sister Nora was a nurse in San Francisco, and my mother and I went down, Short says. They snuck me into the hungry i (nightclub). We saw Joan Rivers opening for Carmen McRae. It was the most exciting thing to be in San Francisco in 1965 and going to these hip clubs.

Martin and Short will return in spirit, if not the city limits on their latest comedy tour; a two amigos variety show that arrives at the Concord Pavilion on Friday, Aug. 11.

The comedians talked about their friendship during a phone interview last month. The conversation was stilted at times, in part because Short was calling from Ontario, Canada, and Martin from Santa Barbara. But their chemistry comes through, even on a three-way conference call.

Their first appearances on Saturday Night Live were nearly a decade apart, and Shorts early comedy roots (including SCTV in Canada in 1982-83) didnt offer much crossover with Martin, who had by the early 1980s become a Hollywood star.

They met in the spring of 1985, when Short went to Martins house to pick up a script for Three Amigos, a 1986 feature film comedy with Chevy Chase.

Lets put it this way. Maybe three weeks into the movie, I felt like I had a new friend that I really liked, Martin says. I didnt know if he liked me, but I liked him.

They maintained their friendship, appearing together in the Father of the Bride movies in the 1990s, and after that during random red carpets, charity benefits and late-night talk show guest spots. But their careers were often in different spheres, with Short pursuing stage and television projects such as Primetime Glick, and Martin starring in movies and touring with the bluegrass band the Steep Canyon Rangers.

A 2011 conversation between Short and Martin at the Just For Laughs festival in Montreal led to a tour, where the pair interviewed each other and took questions from the audience. Now their show has developed short gags, a video presentation, music and other random parts.

We just kept adding, Short says. The conversation ... certainly worked, and thats when we were reminded of our natural chemistry with each other. Then we just started adding bits and adding routines and adding ideas, and it just evolved into a kind of a hip variety show.

About 25 minutes of the two-hour show is musical, with Martin playing bluegrass, and Short showcasing one of his more underrated talents: his voice.

Martin says hes continually impressed with Short, who won a Tony Award for his work in the Neil Simon musical Little Me in 1999, and later played Leo Bloom in The Producers in Los Angeles.

I knew it, but I didnt know it, Martin says. Hes a terrific singer. I can only think of one other person whom I toured with, with the same kind of solidity, and that was Karen Carpenter.

Short and Martin have crossed the country several times together, but theyre eager to get the conversation back to San Francisco. Martin says San Francisco newspapers have always been good to me, mentioning a 1972 rave by Chronicle critic John Wasserman, when Martin was starting a career-boosting run at the Boarding House.

He was in San Francisco years before that, driving up as early as 1963.

I would drive up from L.A. to San Francisco, get the cheapest hotel possible, or live in my VW van, Martin says. I remember passing the Purple Onion (and hungry i). There would be Lenny Bruce playing there and Mort Sahl playing there, and whoever the Smothers Brothers playing there and the Kingston Trio.

Martin says one of his first paid comedy performances was at the Coffee Gallery in San Francisco, next door to former Beat Generation landmark Coffee and Confusion in North Beach. He offers a sober account of his performances there sometimes for a crowd of no one.

But with this pair, its never serious for long. Asked if these larger crowds on the Martin and Short tours shout out requests, the pair settle into a nice self-deprecating comic groove.

The show is very tight. Theres hardly any room for anyone to shout out anything. Were always talking, Martin says.

Particularly Bravo! Short quips.

Theres definitely no room for Bravo, Martin says.

Peter Hartlaub is The San Francisco Chronicles pop culture critic. Email: phartlaub@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @PeterHartlaub

Steve Martin and Martin Short: 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 11. $37.50-$183. Concord Pavilion, 2000 Kirker Pass Road, Concord. (925) 676-8742. http://www.livenation.com

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Martin and Short bring their chemistry to the masses - San Francisco Chronicle