Radar study targeting wind events at NASA, Air Force launch facilities – UAH News (press release)

Corey Amiot has focused on improving lead times for warnings of high wind events.

Phillip Gentry | UAH

Rockets rolling to their launch towers at both the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida (and the people who work on them) may soon be a little bit safer, thanks to research in the Atmospheric Science Department at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH).

Funded by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center and the U.S. Air Force's 45th Weather Squadron (45WS), research by UAH graduate student Corey Amiot has focused on improving lead times for warnings of high wind events that threaten the Florida launch complexes.

Now, Amiot's task is to verify the extended warning times (up to 40 minutes in advance of a high speed wind event) and then to figure out how to reduce the number of false alarms.

"I'm looking at thunderstorm downbursts, when a convective storm begins to collapse and spread out at the surface," Amiot said.

His primary tool is storm data collected by the dual-polarization C-band weather radar operated by the 45WS from its station 26.5 miles southwest of the launch facilities. He also uses data from 29 weather stations scattered across the NASA and Air Force facilities.

"I have those towers as ground truth," Amiot said, "and a way to identify which storms produced wind gusts on the ground."

Early results from this research were presented recently at an American Meteorological Society meeting in Seattle.

NASA and the Air Force want Amiot to improve predictions of ground wind in excess of 35 knots (just over 40 mph), the point at which strong wind warnings are issued and personnel are required to take safety measures. Wind that speed or faster could be hazardous to people working outdoors and might put some hardware at risk.

Amiot used the dual-polarization radar data from 14 high-wind producing warm-season thunderstorms to look for patterns and possible signatures of upcoming changes in each storm. Dual-polarization radar sends out both vertical and horizontal radar waves. By comparing the signals returned by both, researchers can look inside a storm and see water droplets, small ice particles and larger ice that might indicate the presence of graupel or hail.

"A storm updraft lifts liquid water above the freezing level, where it forms ice," Amiot said. "This is very important to downburst formation. When the ice melts it cools the surrounding air, which will accelerate the downburst."

Focusing on multi-cell storms, Amiot identified four distinct radar signatures found in 85 to 92 percent of the 14 storms that generated high wind events.

"This is a good step forward," he said. "Now I need to expand the sample size so I can identify other radar signatures in addition to the four I've identified so far."

View original post here:

Radar study targeting wind events at NASA, Air Force launch facilities - UAH News (press release)

Nanotechnology congress & Expo

Tracks & Sessions

Track Content: Nanomedicine & Nanobiotechnology

Nanomedicine can be defined as medical application of nanotechnology. Nanomedicine ranges from the medical applications ofnanomaterialsand biological devices,Nano electronicdevices & biosensors and possible future applications of molecular nanotechnology. Nanomaterials can be functionalised to interface with biological molecules & structures as the size of nanomaterials is comparable to most biological molecules and structures. Nanomaterials can be useful for both in vivo and in vitro biomedical research and applications and integration of nanomaterials with biology has led to the development of advanced diagnostic devices, physical therapy applications, analytical tools, contrast agents and drug delivery vehicles.Nanomedicinestrives for delivering valuable set of research tools & clinically useful devices and its industry sales reached $16 billion in 2015, with an average of $3.8 billion investment in nanotechnology R&D every year and increase of 45% per year global funding for emerging nanotechnology.

Related Conferences:

20thannual Nanotech 2017 Conference & Expo, Washington DC, USA. 2017 International Conference on Nanotechnology, Montreal, Canada. 12th IEEE Nanotechnology Materials and Devices Conference (NMDC 2017), Singapore. 12th IEEE International Conference on Nano/Micro Engineered and Molecular Systems(IEEE-NEMS 2017), Los Angeles, California, USA. The 11th IEEE international Conference on Nano/ Molecular Medicine and Engineering. 7th International Conference on Manipulation, Manufacturing and Measurement on the Nanoscale, Chongqing, China. MARSS-17 (International Conference on Manipulation, Automation and Robotics at Small Scales). NANOfIM 2017 (Nanotechnology for Instrumentation and Measurement Workshop). 3rd International Conference on Nanomaterials: Fundamentals and Applications (NFA 2017), Slovakia, Europe. 7th FEZA Conference on Zeolites - Materials with Engineered Properties, Bulgaria, Europe

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 2:Advanced Nanomaterials- production, synthesis and processing

Track Content:

Nanotechnology has found a vast number of applications in many areas and its market grown at a rapid pace in recent years. This resulted in new horizons in materials science and many exciting new developments. The supply of new Nanomaterials, form the prerequisite for any further progress in this new area of science and technology. Nanomaterials feature specific properties that are characteristic of these materials, and which are based on surface and quantum effects. The control of composition, size, shape, and morphology of nanomaterials is an essential foundation for the development and application of Nanomaterials and Nano scale devices.

Related Conferences:

5th International Conference on Multifunctional, Hybrid and Nanomaterials, Portugal, Europe. Non-Invasive Delivery of Macromolecules Conference 2017, Carlsbad, USA. 2nd International Conference on Materials Science, Agartala, India. 8th International Conference on Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology (AMN8), Queenstown, New Zealand. International Conference on Nanotechnology research at San Antonio, Texas, USA. 4th World Congress and Expo on Nanotechnology and Materials Science, Barcelona, Spain. 2nd International Nanotechnology Conference & Expo, DUBAI, UAE. NanoWorld Conference (NWC-2017), Boston, USA. Nanotech France 2017 International Conference and Exhibition, Paris, France. 2017 International Conference on Materials Engineering and Nano Sciences, Singapore

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 3:Nano-Electronic Devices and Micro/Nano systems

Track Content:

Nano-electronics hold a few responses for how we may build the capacities of gadgets while we lessen their weight and control utilization. Enhancing show screens on gadgets. This includes lessening power utilization while diminishing the weight and thickness of the screens. Specialists are adding to a kind of memory chip with an anticipated thickness of one terabyte of memory for each square crawl or more prominent. Lessening the measure of transistors utilized as a part of coordinated circuits

Related Conferences:

8thInternational Conference on Nanotechnology: Fundamentals and Applications (ICNFA'17), Rome, Italy. NANOTEXNOLOGY 2017, Thessaloniki, Greece. 2nd International Conference on Design, Materials and Manufacturing (ICDMM 2017), Beijing, China. International Conference on Innovative and Smart Materials 2017 (ICISM 2017), Singapore. ICMENS 2017 International Conference on Materials Engineering and Nano Sciences, Singapore. ICNMS 2017 5th International Conference on Nano and Materials Science, San Diego, California, United States. ICAMR 2017 The 7th International Conference on Advanced Materials, Hong Kong, China. 2nd International Conference on Green Composite Materials (ICGCM 2017), Hong Kong, China. 2nd International Conference on Nanotechnology and Nanomaterials in Energy(ICNNE 2017), Lyon, France

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 4:Micro/ Nano-fabrication, Nano patterning, Nano Lithography & Nano Imprinting

Track Content:

Nano-fabrication is the configuration and production of gadgets with measurements measured in nanometers. One nanometer is 10 - 9 meters, or a million of a millimeter. Nanofabrication is of enthusiasm to PC engineers since it opens the way to super-high-thickness microchip s and memory chip s. It has been recommended that every information bit could be put away in a solitary iota. Conveying this further, a solitary molecule may even have the capacity to speak to a byte or expression of information. Nanofabrication has additionally gotten the consideration of the restorative business, the military, and the avionic business

Related Conferences:

International Conference on Frontiers of Characterization and Metrology for Nanoelectronics (FCMN), Monterey, California, United States. IEEE 17th International Conference on Nanotechnology, Pittsburgh, PA, United States. ICNN 2017 : 19th International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Rome, Italy. International Conference on Nanotechnology for Renewable Materials, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. EuroNanoForum 2017, Valletta, Malta. International Conference on Advances in Biological Systems and Materials Science in NanoWorld, Varanasi, India. New Tools and Approaches for Nanomaterial Safety Assessment, Malaga, Spain. International Conference on Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology, Queenstown, New Zealand. nano tech 2017, Tokyo, Japan

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 5:Graphene and Applications

Track Content:

Researchers and companies consider the graphene, carbon sheets that are only one atom thick viable to be used as material in several fields. Potential applications include Fuel cells, Optoelectronics, Bio-micro robotics, Lower cost solar cells, Transistors, water desalination, sensors etc.

Related Conferences:

Nanomaterials for Applications in Energy Technology, Ventura, CA, USA. NANOTEK 2017, Hamburg, Germany. 10th International Conference and Exhibition on Pharmaceutics & Novel Drug Delivery Systems, London, UK. International Conference on Smart Materials & Structures, Orlando, FL, USA. World Congress and Expo on Nanotechnology and Nanoengineering, Dubai, UAE. Graphene 2017, Barcelona, Spain. The International Conference on Surfaces, Coatings and Interfaces, Incheon, South Korea. International Conference on Nanomedicine, Drug Delivery, and Tissue Engineering (NDDTE'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Conference on Nanotechnology and Environmental Issues (ICNEI'17), Barcelona, Spain

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 6:Computation, Simulation & Modeling of Nanostructures, Nano systems & devices

Track Content:

Functional Nano-scale structures frequently involve quite dissimilar materials which are difficult to characterize experimentally and ultimately be assembled, controlled, and utilized by manipulating quantities at the macro-scale a combination of features which puts unprecedented demands on theory, modelling and simulation.

Related Conferences:

International Conference on Nanotechnology Modeling and Simulation (ICNMS'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Conference on Nanobiotechnology (ICNB'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Conference on Nanomaterials, Nanodevices, Fabrication and Characterization (ICNNFC'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Workshop on Computational Nanotechnology, Windermere, UK. International Conference on Nanotechnology: Fundamentals and Applications (ICNFA'17),Rome, Italy. Nano-Mechanical Interfaces, Hong Kong, P R China. Emerging Materials and Nanotechnology, Toronto, Canada. Nanoporous Materials & Their Applications, Andover, NH, USA. International Conference & Exhibition on Advanced & Nano Materials (ICANM 2017), Toronto, Canada. International Conference of Theoretical and Applied Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (TANN'17), Toronto, Canada. 2nd International Conference on Nanotechnology and Materials Science (NANOMS2017), Suzhou, China. Global Conference on Nanotechnology and Materials Science, Las Vegas, USA

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 7:Bio-Nanomaterials and biomedical devices, applications

Track Content:

The science and innovation of Nanomaterials has made awesome energy and desires in the most recent couple of years. The following decade is liable to witness significant steps in the arrangement, characterisation and abuse of Nanoparticles, Nanowires, Nanotubes, Nanorods, Nanocrystals, Nanounits and their congregations.

Related Conferences:

International Conference on Frontiers of Characterization and Metrology for Nanoelectronics (FCMN), Monterey, California, United States. IEEE 17th International Conference on Nanotechnology, Pittsburgh, PA, United States. ICNN 2017 : 19th International Conference on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology, Rome, Italy. International Conference on Nanotechnology for Renewable Materials, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. EuroNanoForum 2017, Valletta, Malta. International Conference on Advances in Biological Systems and Materials Science in NanoWorld, Varanasi, India. New Tools and Approaches for Nanomaterial Safety Assessment, Malaga, Spain. International Conference on Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology, Queenstown, New Zealand. nano tech 2017, Tokyo, Japan

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 8:Nano photonics, Nano Imaging, Spectroscopy & plasmonic devices

Track Content:

Nanophotonics is an enabling technology which concerns with application of photonics at nanoscale dimensions, where field enhancement effects which result in new optical phenomena offering superior performance or completely new functionalities in photonic devices and encompasses a wide variety of topics, including metamaterials, plasmonics, high resolution imaging, quantum nanophotonics, functional photonic materials.This technology potential to impact across a wide range of photonics products such as high efficiency solar cells to ultra-secure communications to personalized health monitoring devices

Related Conferences:

International Conference on Nanotechnology Modeling and Simulation (ICNMS'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Conference on Nanobiotechnology (ICNB'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Conference on Nanomaterials, Nanodevices, Fabrication and Characterization (ICNNFC'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Workshop on Computational Nanotechnology, Windermere, UK. International Conference on Nanotechnology: Fundamentals and Applications (ICNFA'17), Rome, Italy. Nano-Mechanical Interfaces, Hong Kong, P R China. Emerging Materials and Nanotechnology, Toronto, Canada. Nanoporous Materials & Their Applications, Andover, NH, USA. International Conference & Exhibition on Advanced & Nano Materials (ICANM 2017), Toronto, Canada. International Conference of Theoretical and Applied Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (TANN'17), Toronto, Canada. 2nd International Conference on Nanotechnology and Materials Science (NANOMS2017), Suzhou, China. Global Conference on Nanotechnology and Materials Science, Las Vegas, USA

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 9:Nanotechnology & Energy

Track Content:

Research into hydride materials for vitality applications commonly concentrates on upgrading gravimetric capacity thickness and particle transport of the materials. Then again, the necessities for stationary applications, for example, power devices can be essentially diverse and manageable to a more extensive class of potential materials. Various geophysical and social weights are driving a movement from fossil fills to renewable and practical vitality sources. To impact this change, we should make the materials that will bolster new vitality advances. Sun oriented vitality is the most extreme need to create photovoltaic cells that are productive and financially savvy.

Related Conferences:

Nanomaterials for Applications in Energy Technology, Ventura, CA, USA. NANOTEK 2017, Hamburg, Germany. 10th International Conference and Exhibition on Pharmaceutics & Novel Drug Delivery Systems, London, UK. International Conference on Smart Materials & Structures, Orlando, FL, USA. World Congress and Expo on Nanotechnology and Nanoengineering, Dubai, UAE. Graphene 2017, Barcelona, Spain. The International Conference on Surfaces, Coatings and Interfaces, Incheon, South Korea. International Conference on Nanomedicine, Drug Delivery, and Tissue Engineering (NDDTE'17), Barcelona, Spain. International Conference on Nanotechnology and Environmental Issues (ICNEI'17), Barcelona, Spain

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 10:Nanotechnology Environmental effects and Industrial safety

Track Content:

As nanotechnology is advancing, so is the extension for its business development. The extensive variety of potential items and applications gives nanotechnology its tremendous development prospects. It has been estimated that the worldwide nanotechnology industry will develop to reach US$ 75.8 Billion by 2020. In such a situation, tremendous open door lies for industry members to tap the quickly developing business sector. Significant contributions are expected to environmental and climate protection from Nanotechnological products, processes and applications are expected to by saving raw materials, energy and water as well as by reducing greenhouse gases and hazardous wastes. Usage of nano materials promises certain environmental benefits and sustainability effects

Related Conferences:

5th International Conference on Multifunctional, Hybrid and Nanomaterials, Portugal, Europe. Non-Invasive Delivery of Macromolecules Conference 2017, Carlsbad, USA. 2nd International Conference on Materials Science, Agartala, India. 8th International Conference on Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology (AMN8), Queenstown, New Zealand. International Conference on Nanotechnology research at San Antonio, Texas, USA. 4th World Congress and Expo on Nanotechnology and Materials Science, Barcelona, Spain. 2nd International Nanotechnology Conference & Expo, DUBAI, UAE. NanoWorld Conference (NWC-2017), Boston, USA. Nanotech France 2017 International Conference and Exhibition, Paris, France. 2017 International Conference on Materials Engineering and Nano Sciences, Singapore

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 11:Future prospects of Nanotechnologies and commercial viability

Track Content:

Nanoscience and Molecular Nanotechnology is the new outskirts of science and innovation in Europe and around the globe, working at the size of individual particles. Top researchers and in addition policymakers overall acclaim the advantages it would convey to the whole society and economy: a large portion of them demand the key part research would play in the quality creation procedure to create exploitable arrangement of innovations by the European business prompting a decision of remarkable applications, items, markets and productive income sources.

Related Conferences:

20thannual Nanotech 2017 Conference & Expo, Washington DC, USA. 2017 International Conference on Nanotechnology, Montreal, Canada. 12th IEEE Nanotechnology Materials and Devices Conference (NMDC 2017), Singapore. 12th IEEE International Conference on Nano/Micro Engineered and Molecular Systems(IEEE-NEMS 2017), Los Angeles, California, USA. 11th IEEE international Conference on Nano/Molecular Medicine and Engineering. 7th International Conference on Manipulation, Manufacturing and Measurement on the Nanoscale, Chongqing, China. MARSS-17 (International Conference on Manipulation, Automation and Robotics at Small Scales). NANOfIM 2017 (Nanotechnology for Instrumentation and Measurement Workshop). 3rd International Conference on Nanomaterials: Fundamentals and Applications (NFA 2017), Slovakia, Europe. 7th FEZA Conference on Zeolites - Materials with Engineered Properties, Bulgaria, Europe

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

Track 12:Nanometrology

Track Content:

Nanoscience and Molecular Nanotechnology is the new outskirts of science and innovation in Europe and around the globe, working at the size of individual particles. Top researchers and in addition policymakers overall acclaim the advantages it would convey to the whole society and economy: a large portion of them demand the key part research would play in the quality creation procedure to create exploitable arrangement of innovations by the European business prompting a decision of remarkable applications, items, markets and productive income sources.

Related Conferences:

8thInternational Conference on Nanotechnology: Fundamentals and Applications (ICNFA'17), Rome, Italy. NANOTEXNOLOGY 2017, Thessaloniki, Greece. 2nd International Conference on Design, Materials and Manufacturing (ICDMM 2017), Beijing, China. International Conference on Innovative and Smart Materials 2016 (ICISM 2016), Singapore. ICMENS 2017 International Conference on Materials Engineering and Nano Sciences, Singapore. ICNMS 2017 5th International Conference on Nano and Materials Science, San Diego, California, United States. ICAMR 2017 The 7th International Conference on Advanced Materials, Hong Kong, China. 2nd International Conference on Green Composite Materials (ICGCM 2017), Hong Kong, China. 2nd International Conference on Nanotechnology and Nanomaterials in Energy (ICNNE 2017), Lyon, France.

Related Nanotechnology Associations:

The innovative and emerging nanotechnologies have significantly reshaped the manufacturing, biotechnology, electronic, environmental and pharmaceutical markets. In-depth market analysis of these technologies as well as trends, forecasts and profiles of major players from different analytical reports from various analysts prove how valuable the growth of nanotechnology has become. Efficiency of nanotechnology has led to great discoveries in prescription drug products, photonics and has had a great environmental impact in the water treatment and decreasing the amount of pollutants that deplete the environment

Conference Series Ltd Conferences has taken the initiative to gather the world class experts both from academic and industry in a common platform at its Nanotechnology Conferences to share their recent research finding to the world and enlighten other esteemed delegates on latest trends in the field of nanotechnology. Nanoscience 2017 is second in its series of annual scientific events aimed to provide an opportunity for the delegates to meet, interact and exchange new ideas in the various areas of Nanotechnology.

Nanoscience-2017is an exciting opportunity to showcase the new technology, the new products of your company, the service your industry may offer to a broad international audience. It covers a lot of topics and it will be a nice platform to showcase their recent researches on Nanotechnology, Material Science and other interesting topics.

.INTENDED AUDIENCE:

Nanotechnology refers to a wide range of technologies conducted on functional systems at the nanometer scale. It can be said that nanotechnology is the ability that can be projected to construct items either using the bottom-up approach or using the top-down approach, whereby top-down nanotechnology is considered to be the most well-established form of nanotechnology. In the year 2015, Information and communication technology industry held the major share in the nanotechnology market accounting for almost 55% and followed by energy with a share of 25% during the forecast period of 2016 to 2025.

The nanotechnology market can be segmented by type, application, end-user and geography exclusively. The market is categorized in to various categories such as nanocomposites, nanofibers, nanoceramics, nanomagnetics and more based on the types of nanotechnology commercially available. Every single type of nanotechnology differs greatly and the composition is different with different technical specifications. The crucial user segments include electronics & semiconductors, biotechnology, textile, military, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, food, automobiles and others. Increasing importance on renewable and sustainable energy sector with the use of low cost materials fuels the growth of nanotechnology

The importance can also be measured by the increasing research expenditures worldwide: In 1998 governments all over the world spent around $600 million on research and development in nanotechnologies; in 2002, this expenditure totalled $2.1 billion; and in 2006 investments of nearly $6 billion were expected. European spending in development nanotechnology is similar to that of the US and Japan.

Nanotechnology in Austria

Gross domestic expenditure on research and development in Austria is well above the EU average. Investment from foreign companies in R&D in Austria has been rising for years and is at an extremely high level, while domestic industry has doubled expenditure on R&D over the last 10 years. There are many successfully exported Austrian products and services such as:

A Rich Scientific Heritage

In 1943 the Austrian Paul Eisler invented the printed circuit board, a device that supports and connects electrical components and which today is found in almost every electronic device. Today the Austrian company AT & S is the largest printed circuit board manufacturer in Europe and India and significantly involved in China. The company from Leoben has a top global position in the highest technology segment, HDI Microvia printed boards which are predominantly used in mobile devices. The group also operates successfully in the research and development of modern automotive circuit boards as well as in the industrial and medical technology sectors.

Solid Research Principles

Austrian scientists are today considered among the very best in the world in the field of quantum computer research. The two theoretical physicists from Innsbruck, Peter Zoller and Hans Briegel, along with the experimental physicist from Vienna, are among the worlds most cited experts in the field. The framework for developing new technologies is exceptionally favourable in Austria. The breadth of the Austrian research landscape is breathtaking: from traditional, principle-based research right through to cutting-edge areas of applied science. Operations research is often found in innovative SMEs.

Micro Technology and Nanotechnology

Micro technology and nanoscience represent highly promising technologies of the future and are given considerable weight in Austria, particularly as regards solid state electronics and materials science. The most important nanotechnology products and areas of application include Pigments and other additives for varnishes and plastics, Processors, Surface coatings (e.g. tiles, bathtubs, worktops), Manufacture of dental filling materials and Medical application of nanoparticles for new types of diagnosis and therapy. There are currently around 100 Austrian companies applying their knowledge of nanotechnology, while countless companies are active in areas where nanotechnology will play a key role in the future, such as microelectronics, optics, medical technology, sensor technology, materials science, pharmaceutical industry, automotive industry, textile industry, aviation and space travel.

In order to promote nanosciences and nanotechnologies in Austria specifically, the Austrian Council for Research and Technology Development (RFT), recommended setting up an Austrian NANO Initiative as early as 2002. In 2004, this initiative was established as a multi-annual funding program - aiming at increased networking, creating critical masses, making nanosciences and nanotechnologies utilizable for the economy and for society, and providing an adequate number of qualified technical staff. The Austrian NANO Initiative capitalizes on this variety as one of the strengths of their program and by intensive networking of science and industry enables the development of highly innovative state-of-the-art products with new physical or chemical properties.

The Austrian NANO Initiative places an emphasis on expanding the research competence by additional education and training opportunities, as well as by targeted funding of small and medium-sized enterprises. It funds innovative high technology at the interface between basic and application-oriented research and uses national potential for targeted internationalization, networking, and qualification measures. The Nano scale Sciences and Nanotechnologies (NANO) Initiative is a multi-annual funding program in Austria, which coordinates on national and regional levels and is supported by several Ministries, Federal provinces, and funding institutions under the overall control of the Federal Ministry of Transport, Innovation and Technology (BMVIT). Managed by the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) on behalf of the BMVIT, the focus and structure of the Austrian NANO Initiative were developed in cooperation with scientists, entrepreneurs, and stakeholders.

In the first period of the Austrian NANO Initiative (2004-2006), an overall public budget of 35 million was provided for highly innovative research and technology development projects. Seven outstanding RTD Project Clusters are currently funded, after undergoing an international peer review, and more than 100 industry partners and research organizations all over Austria participate in these successful NANO Clusters. The Clusters are encouraged to further enlarge their consortia by adding new projects.The Austrian NANO Initiative also provides funds for exploring innovative ideas as well as for conceiving, organizing and carrying out events.

Nanotechnology-related education and training in Austria

The Austrian NANO Initiative is providing funds to build up and expand the human resources required to ensure the qualitative and quantitative growth of NANO in Austria. Funding is provided for education and training measures for positive development within the higher education sector (universities, universities of applied sciences), the vocational training sector, and the general-education secondary school sector, as well as for the support of enterprises involving nanosciences and nanotechnologies.

Austrian businesses expect a significant deployment of nano products and production technologies by 2010. In addition to the projected increase in nano production, intensified fundamental nano research is expected. Two main developments can be extrapolated from this: The demand for highly qualified personnel for R&D positions will increase steeply, as will the demand for engineering personnel (graduates of vocational upper secondary schools, universities for applied sciences, and research universities). The latter need is based on the interest in projects that transfer research into marketable applications and products, as well as the demand for deployment of nano-related process innovations. Additional administrative and economic skills will become increasingly important for key personnel.

As in the business sector,nano-related employment in educational institutionsis expected to increase significantly until 2010. Programs with a nano-related research focus, as well as applied nano-related study programs, are currently being planned or developed for establishment during the next few years. Comparison of supply and demand for nano-relevant education and training programs shows mainly regional imbalances.

Distinct changes on the educational level are expected up until 2010 for nano-related job profiles. University graduates will slightly decrease from 70% to 60%, and graduates from universities of applied sciences will double to approximately 20%. Nano education at the (upper) secondary level is expected to reach and remain static at 15% by 2010. For nano-related topics, education and training are dominated mainly by universities, with well-developed centers in Vienna, Styria, Upper Austria, and the Tyrol. Presently, most programs focus on advanced students as well as students preparing master's theses and PhD dissertations, and on postdoctoral programs.

NanoScience 2016

Read the original post:

Nanotechnology congress & Expo

No research possible without the help of nanotechnology – The Hindu

Professor S. Subbiah, Vice Chancellor of Alagappa University said nanotechnology was emerging as the sixth revolution in the current era as no research was possible without the help of the technology, which played a crucial role in almost all fields of science.

Addressing a two-day national seminar on Nano materials for specialised applications, organised by the department of Nano Science and Technology here on Thursday, he said after the Biotechnology revolution of 1990s, nano technology was becoming very popular nowadays.

The technology helped to produce nano-materials that were more durable, effective and economical, he said adding no research is possible without the help of nano technology because today it plays a crucial role in almost all fields of science.

Nano mission project

Pointing out that 90 % of the nano-based products and patents have come from China, Germany, France, Japan, Switzerland, South Korea and USA, he said India has invested huge amount through the Nano mission project to bring in developments in the spheres of agriculture, textile technology, medicine, electronics and aerospace.

Vijayamohanan K Pillai, Director, CSIR-CECRI, in his inaugural address, highlighted the recent advances of nano science and technology in the fields of biotechnology, environmental remediation, sensors and semiconductors.

The multifunctional application of nano material in industries played a great role in improving the economy of the country, he said.

Prof R Renganathan, UGC-Emeritus Fellow, School of Chemistry, Bharathidasan University, Tiruchi, in his address, emphasised the need for fabricating nano-materials that could pave the way for making novel nano-devices with significantly improved performance.

Nanotechnology is expected to be one of the next drivers of technology-based business and economic growth, and emphasized the need for product-based research from laboratory to end users.

Awareness

Professor K. Gurunathan, Head, Department of Nano Science and Technology said the objective of the seminar was to create awareness on the significance of nanotechnology applications in various fields.

Read the rest here:

No research possible without the help of nanotechnology - The Hindu

Nanotechnology in the Food Industry: A Short Review – Food Safety Magazine

Nanotechnology | February/March 2017

By A. Wallace Hayes, Ph.D., and Saura C. Sahu, Ph.D.

The benefits of nanotechnology for the food industry are many and are expected to grow with time. This new, rapidly developing technology impacts every aspect of the food system from cultivation to food production to processing, packaging, transportation, shelf life and bioavailability of nutrients. Commercial applications of nanomaterials will continue to impact the food industry because of their unique and novel properties. Human exposure to nanomaterials, as a result, is increasing and will continue to increase with time. Therefore, the health impact of nanomaterials in food is of public interest and concern. Public acceptance of food and food-related products containing nanomaterials will depend on their safety. Consequently, a uniform international regulatory framework for nanotechnology in food is necessary.

Introduction The National Nanotechnology Initiative in the U.S. defines nanotechnology as the understanding and control of matter at a nanoscale where unique phenomena enable novel applications. Nanomaterials are further defined as substances between 1 and 100 nm in size showing physical, chemical and biological properties that are not found in bulk samples of the same material.[1] Their extremely small size and high surface area are associated with their greater strength, stability and chemical and biological activities. Therefore, nanotechnology enables development of novel materials with a wide range of potential applications. Nanomaterials are used in a variety of consumer, medical, commercial and industrial products.[1] Because nanotechnology is an emerging, rapidly developing technology, very limited information about it is currently available.

What food technologists and engineers are doing to improve the safety of our food supply seems limited only by ones imagination, and nanotechnology opens the door to a whole new array of products (Figure 1). Fresh fruits, vegetables, meat and poultry products are potential vehicles for the transmission of human pathogens leading to foodborne disease outbreaks,[2] which draw public attention to food safety. Therefore, there is a need to develop new antimicrobials to ensure food safety. Because of the antimicrobial properties of nanomaterials, nanotechnology offers great potential for novel antimicrobial agents for the food and food-related industries. The use of nano-antimicrobial agents added directly to foods or through antimicrobial packaging is an effective approach. As a result, the use of nanotechnology by the food and food-related industries is expected to increase, impacting the food system at all stages from food production to processing, packaging, transportation, storage, security, safety and quality.[3,4]

Food Ingredients for Color, Texture and Flavor The food industry is beginning to use nanotechnology to develop nanoscale ingredients to improve color, texture and flavor of food.[5,6] The nanoparticles TiO2 and SiO2[7,8] and amorphous silica[8,9] are used as food additives. TiO2 is used as a coloring in the powdered sugar coating on doughnuts.

Food Production and Packaging Nanomaterials used for food packaging provide many benefits such as improved mechanical barriers, detection of microbial contamination and potentially enhanced bioavailability of nutrients. This is perhaps the most common application of nanotechnology in food and food-related industries.[10] A number of nanocomposites, polymers containing nanoparticles, are used by the food industry for food packaging and food contact materials.[11] The use of ZnO and MgO nanoparticles for food packaging has been reported.[7] Amorphous silica is used in food and in food containers and packaging.[5,8,9] Engineered water nanostructures generated as aerosols are very effective at killing foodborne pathogens such as Escherichia coli, Listeria and Salmonella on steel food production surfaces.[12] Such food contact substances containing nanomaterials have the potential of migrating from food packaging into food, so this technology still must demonstrate regulatory compliance before it gains wide-spread acceptance in the industry.

Nutrients and Dietary Supplements Nanomaterials are used as ingredients and additives (e.g., vitamins, antimicrobials, antioxidants) in nutrients and health supplements for enhanced absorption and bioavailability.[13]

Food Storage The antimicrobial properties of nanomaterials enable them to preserve food during storage and transport.[5,14,15] Nanosensors can be used for a variety of applications. Commercial use of nanosensors has been reported to check storage conditions[14] and during food transport in refrigerated trucks for temperature control.[15]

Food Nanosensors Nanomaterials are used as sensors to detect contamination and regulate the food environment. They can detect microbial and other food contaminants. Therefore, they are used as sensors in food production and at packaging plants. They can monitor the condition of food during transport and storage.[14,15] They can detect nutrient deficiency in edible plants, and dispensers containing nutrients can deliver them to plants when needed. Therefore, nanomaterials can be used as nanosensors and nanotracers with almost unlimited potential by the food industry.[16]

Food Safety Consumers are exposed to nanomaterials by consumption of food and beverages containing these extremely small particles of large reactive surface area of unknown safety. Once absorbed in the gastrointestinal system, they may bioaccumulate in various organs of the body, leading to potentially adverse effects. Thus, application of nanotechnology by the food industry is of public concern. Public acceptance of food and food products containing nanomaterials depends on their perceived safety. An editorial entitled Nanofood for Thought in the journal Nature Nanotechnology says, The food industry will only reap the benefits of nanotechnology if issues related to safety are addressed and companies are more open about what they are doing.[17]

In March 2009, the scientific committee of the European Food Safety Agency published an opinion on nanoscience and nanotechnology regarding food and animal feed safety.[18] A guidance document on how to assess potential risks associated with certain food-related uses of nanotechnology followed in May 2011, providing practical recommendations to regulators on how to assess applications from industry to use engineered nanomaterials in food additives, enzymes, flavorings, food contact materials, novel foods, food supplements, feed additives and pesticides. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a draft guidance for industry use of nanomaterials in animal feed.[19] However, more research is required to determine the impact of nanomaterials in food on human health to ensure public safety and improve public communication of the safe use of such materials in our food supply. Some test methods for nanomaterial safety assessment have been reported.[20,21] However, no internationally accepted standard protocols for toxicity testing of nanomaterials in food or feed are currently available. Such protocols are in the development stage by organizations such as the International Alliance for Nano Environment, Human Health and Safety Harmonization[22] and the U.S. National Research Council.[23] A uniform international regulatory framework for the evaluation of nanotechnology is a necessity for both food and animal feed.

Conclusions The benefits of nanotechnology use by the food industry are many and expected to grow. This new, rapidly developing technology impacts every aspect of the food system from production to processing, packaging, transportation, shelf life and bioavailability. Commercial applications of nanomaterials in the food industry will grow because of their unique and novel properties. Human exposure to nanomaterials will continue to increase. Therefore, the health impact of nanomaterials in food is of prime public concern. The ability to quantify the nanomaterial throughout the food life cycle is critical for manufacturing consistency, safety and potential benefits of the consumer product. Public acceptance of food and food-related products containing nanomaterials will depend on their safety. A uniform international regulatory framework for nanotechnology in food is a must.

The views presented in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of FDA.

A. Wallace Hayes, Ph.D., is a visiting scientist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Saura C. Sahu, Ph.D., is a research chemist at FDAs Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.

References 1. http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d10549.pdf. 2. Berger, CN et al. 2010. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables as Vehicles for the Transmission of Human Pathogens. Environ Microbiol 12:23852397. 3. Cushen, M et al. 2012. Nanotechnologies in the Food Industry: Recent Developments, Risks and Regulation. Trends Food Sci Technol 24:3046. 4. Berekaa, MM. 2015. Nanotechnology in Food Industry: Advances in Food Processing, Packaging and Food Safety: A Review. Int J Curr Microbiol App Sci 4(5):345357. 5. Kessler, R. 2011. Engineered Nanoparticles in Consumer Products: Understanding a New Ingredient. Environ Health Perspect 119(3):A120A125. 6. Morris, VJ et al. 2011. Atomic Force Microscopy as a Nanoscience Tool in Rational Food Design. J Sci Food Agric 91:21172125. 7. Gerloff, K et al. 2009. Cytotoxicity and Oxidative DNA Damage by Nanoparticles in Human Intestinal Caco-2 Cells. Nanotoxicol 3(4):355364. 8. Uboldi, C et al. 2012. Amorphous Silica Nanoparticles Do Not Induce Cytotoxicity, Cell Transformation or Genotoxicity in Balb/3T3 Mouse Fibroblasts. Mutat Res 745(1-2):1120. 9. Oberdorster, G et al. 2005. Nanotoxicology; An Emerging Discipline Evolving from Studies of Ultrafine Particles. Environ Health Perspect 113:823839. 10. Bradley, EL et al. 2011. Applications of Nanomaterial in Food Packaging with a Consideration of Opportunities for Developing Countries. Trends Food Sci Technol 22:604610. 11. Llorens, A et al. 2012. Metallic-Based Micro- and Nanocomposites in Food Contact Materials and Active Food Packaging. Trends Food Sci Technol 24:1920. 12. Pyrgiotakis, G et al. 2015. Inactivation of Foodborne Microorganisms Using Engineered Water Nanostructures (EWNS). Environ Sci Technol 49(6):37373745. 13. Chaudhry, Q et al. 2008. Applications and Implications of Nanotechnologies for the Food Sector. Food Addit Contam 25(3):241258. 14. Bouwmeester, H et al. 2009. Review of Health Safety Aspects of Nanotechnologies in Food Production. Regul Toxicol Pharmacol 53:5262. 15. Buzby, JC. 2010. Nanotechnology for Food Applications: More Questions Than Answers. J Consumer Affairs 44(3):528545. 16. Moraru, CI et al. 2003. Nanotechnology: A New Frontier in Food Science. Food Technol 57:2429. 17. Nature Nanotechnology. 2010. Nanofood for Thought. Nature Nanotechnol 5:89. 18. http://www.efsa.europa.eu/en/topics/topic/nanotechnology. 19. http://www.regulations.gov. 20. Handy, RD and BJ Shaw. 2007. Toxic Effects of Nanoparticles and Nanomaterials: Implications for Public Health, Risk Assessment and the Public Perception of Nanotechnology. Health Risk Society 9(2):125144. 21. iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1742-6596/617/1/012032/pdf. 22. Maynard, AD et al. 2006. Safe Handling of Nanotechnology. Nature 444:267269. 23. National Research Council. Toxicity Testing in the 21st Century: A Vision and a Strategy (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2007).

On January 4th, 2011 President Obama signed the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) which updates the Food, Drugs and Cosmetics Act of 1938, as well as other regulations related to food safety

The rest is here:

Nanotechnology in the Food Industry: A Short Review - Food Safety Magazine

Smarter MRI Diagnosis with Nano MRI Lamp – R & D Magazine

A research team led by CHEON Jinwoo at the Center for Nanomedicine, within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS), developed the Nano MRI Lamp: A new technology platform that tunes the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signals "ON" only in the presence of the targeted disease. Published inNature Materials, this study can overcome the limitations of existing MRI contrast agents.

MRI is an increasingly popular non-invasive technique for diagnosis and, importantly, does not use harmful radiation. Some tissues show a natural contrast on MRI, but for some specific types of imaging, patients are administered a MRI contrast agent to enhance the difference between the target area and the rest of the body. "Typical MRI contrast agents, like gadolinium, are injected in an "ON" state and distributed across the whole biological system with relatively large background signal," explains Director Cheon. "We found a new principle to switch the MRI contrast agent "ON" only in the location of the target." IBS scientists discovered how to switch the signal ON/OFF by using the Nano MRI Lamp.

The Nano MRI Lamp technology consists of two magnetic materials: A quencher (magnetic nanoparticle) and an enhancer (MRI contrast agent). The switch is due to the distance between the two. When the two materials are at a critical distance, farther than 7 nanometers (nm), the MRI signal is "ON", whereas when they are placed closer than 7 nm, the MRI signal is "OFF". The researchers named this phenomenon Magnetic REsonance Tuning (MRET), which is analogous to the powerful optical sensing technique called Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET).

The researchers tested the Nano MRI Lamp for cancer diagnosis. They detected the presence of an enzyme that can induce tumor metastasis, MMP-2 (matrix metalloproteinase-2) in mice with cancer. They connected the two magnetic materials with a linker that is naturally cleaved by MMP-2. Since the linker keeps the two materials close to each other, the MRI signal was "OFF". However, in the presence of the cancer, the linker is cleaved by MMP-2, which cause the two materials to be separated and the MRI signal switched "ON". Therefore, the MRI signal indicated the location of MMP-2, and the tumor. The scientists also found that the brightness of the MRI signal correlates with the concentration of MMP-2 in the cancerous tissue.

Most importantly, the Nano MRI Lamp remains switched off until it meets a biomarker associated with a specific disease, allowing higher sensitivity. "The current contrast agent is like using a flashlight during a sunny day: Its effect is limited. Instead, this new technology is like using a flash light at night and therefore more useful," explains Cheon.

Beyond cancer diagnosis, the Nano MRI Lamp can, in principle, be applied to investigate a variety of biological events, such as enzymolysis, pH variation, protein-protein interactions, etc. IBS scientists expect that it would be useful for both in vitro and in vivo diagnostics.

"Although we still have a long way to go, we established the principle and believe that the MRET and Nano MRI Lamp can serve as a novel sensing principle to augment the exploration of a wide range of biological systems," concludes Cheon. The research group is now working on developing safer and smarter multitasking contrast agents, which can simultaneously record and interpret multiple biological targets, and eventually allow a better understanding of biological processes and accurate diagnosis of diseases.

See original here:

Smarter MRI Diagnosis with Nano MRI Lamp - R & D Magazine

GF Machining Incorporates Surface Metrology for Nano-Texturing – ENGINEERING.com

The new partnership will provide GF Machining with access to Sensofar Metrology's S line of surface metrology systems. (Image courtesy of Sensofar Metrology.)

The addition of these systems is expected to assist in the development of advanced nano-texturing methods that can be used to produce specific surfaces that meet precise functional or specific esthetic requirements.

These nano-texturing methods utilize both micro- and nano-manufacturing technologies including ultrashort pulsed (ultrafast) laser and EDM.

The new metrology system will allow GF Machining Solutions to reverse engineer natural surface textures down to nano-feature level. It will also enable the company to chart the entire production process of artificial surfaces manufactured with these textures, from the micromachining of the mold to the degree of replication achieved in the molding process.

Carbon matting surface replicated using an ultrafast laser system. (Image courtesy of Sensofar Metrology.)

The S neox platform employs three complementary measurement techniques confocal, interferometry and focus variation (FV) in a single sensor head. This enables users to explore new micro- and nano-texturing approaches across a broad range of scales and structures. Measurement reports will fall within the 3D surface texture parameters defined by ISO 25178. The package for GF Machining will also include custom hardware and software.

GF Machining has employed FV 3D metrology systems before, but expects the new metrology system to provide more advanced surface texturing approaches.

The two companies will jointly demonstrate the new metrology systems at several trade events and workshops in the automotive, optical, medical, micromachining and semiconductor sectors. Additionally, any GF Machining-qualified Sensofar systems sold because of the strategic partnership will be delivered and supported through Sensofars existing global network of distribution and service channels.

For more information, visit the websites for GF Machining Solutions and Sensofar Metrology.

More:

GF Machining Incorporates Surface Metrology for Nano-Texturing - ENGINEERING.com

Research the Key to a Rich, Meaningful Undergraduate Photonics Education – Photonics.com

BioPhotonics Mar 2017

Aydogan Ozcan, UCLA

This is not only a great window of opportunity for all of us, but is also an important responsibility. To transform this exciting and timely opportunity into real impact to globally train and educate the next generations of photonics scientists and engineers, our community has to be proactive in the creation and significant expansion of undergraduate research opportunities in our labs. This will give these young minds firsthand experience in cutting-edge photonics research.

Through such undergraduate research and training programs in our institutions, we will generate transformative impact on the overall quality of undergraduate optics education by:

(1) Providing unique interdisciplinary and hands-on optics-related research experiences for undergraduate students, also shaping their scientific thinking and curiosity;

(2) Increasing the placement of undergraduate students in optics and photonics-related graduate programs, research labs and R&D efforts in the science and technology workforce; and

(3) Creating role models and resource centers for other institutions and universities for adapting similar optics-focused undergraduate research and training programs at a global scale.

The sophistication and technical depth of our scholarship and research projects can sometimes create challenges for us to find appropriate levels of projects to which undergraduate students can make meaningful contributions with their limited time commitment and background.

While this might initially look like a challenging problem for many of us, I can assure you through firsthand experience that undergraduate students, if trained through an appropriate lab infrastructure, can become extremely valuable members of a project team and make meaningful scholarly contributions that deserve co-authorship in resulting publications. In fact, several of my own undergraduate researchers have published more than 150 journal articles and conference proceedings with us over the last few years, and even served as first authors in several of these publications. Some of these very successful undergraduate researchers with several publications resulting from their work received prestigious fellowships and graduate scholarships despite the fact that they had rather low or modest GPAs. This taught me how classroom-based teaching can be quite different and, in some cases, mislead our judgment.

Such an exciting and productive research experience for these students also helped their retention in STEM-related fields. In fact, almost 100 percent of these students, after graduation, continued to either graduate school or science- and technology-related industry positions with a significant research background in optics.

The undergraduate research and training program in my lab also has been helping with diversity since a significant portion of these students have been women and from under-represented backgrounds. In addition to my personal experience, many research labs in photonics, such as professor Rebecca Richards-Kortums lab at Rice University, and in various other fields as well, have provided ample evidence over decades to the advantages of undergraduate research and training. These programs can lead to increased productivity for cutting-edge research and development, in addition to providing excellent opportunities for increasing diversity and retention rates in optics and photonics fields.

With this recent window of exciting opportunity created by the IYL, it is now the time to make this successful practice a widely embraced global culture in optics/photonics education and training at the undergraduate level.

Meet the author

Aydogan Ozcan is the Chancellors Professor at UCLA, an HHMI Professor with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, leading the bio- and nano-photonics laboratory at the UCLA School of Engineering, and the associate director of the California NanoSystems Institute. He is also a member of the BioPhotonics editorial advisory board; email: ozcan@ucla.edu.

The views expressed in Biopinion are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Photonics Media. To submit a Biopinion, send a few sentences outlining the proposed topic to marcia.stamell@photonics.com. Accepted submissions will be reviewed and edited for clarity, accuracy, length and conformity to Photonics Media style.

Visit link:

Research the Key to a Rich, Meaningful Undergraduate Photonics Education - Photonics.com

Moore’s Law And The History Of Comic Book Movies – Monkeys Fighting Robots (blog)

Back in 1965, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore made an observation that the number of transistors was doubling every year, thereby doubling the power of computers. Moores Law as it came to be known would prove even more accurate than he imagined. Since Moores observation, computing power continues to grow at an incredible rate. All this growing technology directly lead to the effects of Star Wars, Terminator 2, and the CG-heavy comic book movies of today.

No other genre benefits from computing power quite like superheromovies. Every year, Disney and Warner Brothers unleash a new effects-heavy, punch-fest starring a beloved character from comic book lore. The superhero trend went into overdrive in 2008 with Iron Man, but before that, Raimis Spider-Man conquered box offices with dazzling use of CG; before that Singers first two X-Men movies were on top. However, things get a little murkier before the arrival of X1 in 2000, and thats where the debate begins.

Some in geekdom believe Blade is the father of modern comic book movies; others argue its Tim Burtons Batman in 1989; still, others look back at Superman: The Movie. Im here to say that theyre all wrong and right! Ill explain.

Comic books were a pulp mainstay for decades. But up through the 1970s, there were only two movies to mention.

Superman and the Mole Men 1951 There wasnt going to be anyone else who broke the mold first. Superman was the most popular comic book of the time and already had a hit TV show. Superman and the Mole Men was an extension of the show, featuring George Reeves as the last son of Krypton.

Batman: The Movie 1966 In the 60s, campy Batman was all the rage. Adam West filled the cape and cowl and through the course of three seasons fought the greatest hits of Batmans rogues gallery. In 1966, much like the Superman movie of the 50s, Producers wisely created a feature length episode. In it, Penguin and the United Underworld are turning people into cubes.

You will believe a man can fly. If I had to pick an actual starting point for comic book movies as mainstream money-makers, it would undoubtedly be here. Richard Donners Superman was a mega-hit at the box office. The effects look dated now (40 years, hello!) but the innovations pioneered by Star Wars just a year before helped Donner create a dazzling comic book movie like never before.

In the 70s, anti-heroes like Batman and Wolverine werent as big a thing as today. Heroes were still meant to be the best of us, not psychologically disturbed or ferocious. Superman was still king of the comic book mountain in the minds of the masses, and there was no one else who could lift the weight of the comic book universe into the mainstream like the Man of Steel.

Total Number of Comic Book Movies Up Until December 31st, 1979: 3

The 80s were slow-going for comic book films. Superman carried the torch with three sequels, each drastically worse than the one before it. But two movies made an impact. One film served as a subtle nudge, while the other became the standard bearer.

Not a hit by any stretch of the imagination, Swamp Thing from director Wes Craven holds an important place in comic book movie history. Craven, a master of horror films, even while trying to win the mainstream hearts of Hollywood execs and keep away from his usual style, still added his signature to Swamp Thing. That macabre touch created a distinction from what was the norm and played into the growing popularity of anti-heroes.

Tim Burtons Batman was a smash box office success, rocketing into the top earners of all time. Donners Superman knocked down the door into the mainstream. But Burtons Batman went in and beat the crap out of everyone. Batman was a hype phenomenon in the days before the Internet and sites like Monkeys Fighting Robots existed. Warner Brothers unleashed a torrent of marketing that consisted of an entire magazine devoted to the film before release. Similar to leaked photos the magazine highlighted allthings about the movie.

Number of Comic Book Feature Films: 9

Its in the 1990s when thingstake a radical leap. After the success of Batman, Hollywood was gearing up to turn every comic book they could get their hands on into a movie. There were four more Batman films, Dolph Lungren played The Punisher, and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles continued their transition from dark comic book to a lighthearted multimedia franchise. Again, two films set the stage for things to come.

Many viewers had no idea that The Crow was a graphic novel by James OBarr. Today, most remember the movie as the final film of Brandon Lee. The Crow is all 90s grunge-goth action movie awesome that holds up well today. Director Alex Proyas, who later created the sci-fi noir film Dark City, bathed The Crow in rain and darkness, with the dark atmospheres lifting when it serves the story. The Crow continued to lengthen the path of the anti-hero.

By the late 90s, comic book movies were either Batman movies or obscure comics and graphic novels made on an average budget. Like The Crow, only the most ardent geeks even knew Blade was a comic book, but the Wesley Snipes action movie was a sleeper hit that sliced and diced its way to a strong box office performance. Blade softened the goth style of The Crow and made it sleek with fitted leather armor and killer electronica soundtrack. Blades slick look, attitude, and sense of humor is something that continues to grow and involve in the majority of mainstream comic book movies.

Number of Comic Book Feature Films: 22

The first X-Men movie released in 2000 and Bryan Singers origin story for Marvels super-team was a wild success, breaking box office records like Burtons Batman 11 years earlier. Its here where I believe two things happened. Comic book movies as we knew them ended and comic book movies as we will come to know them began.

X-Men ended the era of practical comic book movies, as in, practical effects. Blade used CG to accent practical effects, while X-Men was a mix of practical and CG. And that use of CG, plus the way Singer presented the material, evolved into Raimis Spider-Man in 2003. Spidey, thenext big hit was a CG-heavy, joke-filled popcorn flick. Sound familiar? The borderline campy attitude of Sonys first Spider-Man created a new standard for comic book movies. Just five years later, Marvel would begin its reign at the box office with a CG-heavy, joke-filled Iron Man who is arguably also an anti-hero.

Since 2000, 77 comic book movies have seen release! We dont need to get into the specifics because everyone knows whats come and whats to come. But here are the numbers.

Number of Comic Book Feature Films the 2000s: 33

Number of Comic Book Feature Films in the 2010s: 44, so far

Like Moores Law and transistors, the number of comic book movies we can fit into a year has increased. Its leveled some, but continues to grow, and the comic book movie trend sees no end in site. Now consider that weve only talked about American comic book movies.Ghost in the Shell, a Japanese Manga (aka comic book) and Valerian, a French comic book, are on the way to the big screen.Oh, also dont forgetthat theres TV, but thats another article for another time. Moores Law will hold steady for technology. Maybe for comic book movies we can call it, Lees Law.

Original post:

Moore's Law And The History Of Comic Book Movies - Monkeys Fighting Robots (blog)

Cancer Breakthroughs 2020: Soon-Shiong’s research program gets new name – TribDem.com

WINDBER An international cancer research effort involving the Windber hospital and research center has been renamed to reduce confusion and better reflect its success, its founder announced.

We are renaming and branding Cancer MoonShot 2020 to Cancer Breakthroughs 2020, a name that elevates the importance and progress of our work to what it truly is breakthroughs, Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong said in a press release.

Soon-Shiongs nonprofit, Chan Soon-Shiong NantHealth Foundation, is the parent of Chan Soon-Shiong Medical Center at Windber and Chan Soon-Shiong Institute of Molecular Medicine at Windber.

Both are participating in the Cancer Breakthroughs 2020 collaboration of research organizations, hospitals and businesses.

We are extremely proud to play a role in Cancer Breakthroughs 2020, said Tom Kurtz, president and CEO of both Windber facilities.

The name is an accurate description of this action-oriented initiative.

The change will address confusion with other cancer moonshot programs Soon-Shiong said.

It may also help settle a lawsuit filed by the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, which has been using the Cancer Moon Shotstagline since 2012, the federal lawsuit says.

In addition to the MD Anderson Moon Shots, the federal government has its ownCancer Moonshot.

Two days after Soon-Shiong unveiled his former Cancer MoonShot 2020 in January 2016, then-President Barack Obamacredited his vice president, Joe Biden, with suggesting with a new moonshot, America can cure cancer.

In his State of the Union Address, Obama went on to announce a national Cancer Moonshot effort, putting Biden in charge of Mission Control.

Windbers research program is involved in the national Cancer Moonshot through its partnership with Walter Reed National Military Medical Centers John Murtha Cancer Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

Soon-Shiong says the Cancer Breakthroughs 2020 name is more appropriate.

With recent discoveries in molecular science and rapid advancements in supercomputing technology, we are now on the path that will forever change the way cancer is diagnosed and treated, he said in a press release.

It is no longer a dream no longer just an aspiration. It is the forging of real breakthroughs, long overdue in the fight against cancer, that are giving millions hope that will subdue cancer by harnessing the most powerful defense against this deadly disease ones own immune system.

Randy Griffith is a multimedia reporter for The Tribune-Democrat. He can be reached at 532-5057. Follow him on Twitter@PhotoGriffer57.

Read more from the original source:

Cancer Breakthroughs 2020: Soon-Shiong's research program gets new name - TribDem.com

The Possible’s Second Episode on Within Tackles Something Einstein Got Wrong – UploadVR

Virtual reality continues to be an incredible platform for creators to innovate when telling stories and there are plenty of groups taking advantage of this, large and small. Hulu has taken to the medium for news and comedy shows along with the Life brands shift into documentary-like VR content, but Within is an entity that was named entirely with VR storytelling in mind.

Continuing its trend of producing high-quality immersive content, Within unveiled a new episode of their science and engineering documentary series called The Possible.

Founded by filmmaker Chris Milk, Within collaborates with companies like Apple, NBC, Vice, and many more to create experiences across a collection of genres. The Possible, made with financial backing from GE, will place viewers face to face with cutting edge technology and discoveries across the life of the serial series. Its second episode is namedListening to the Universe and tackles something that Einstein actually got wrong:

A century ago, Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational wavesripples in spacetimebut believed they were so small that humans would never observe them.

More recently, an MIT physics professor did the math and concluded that Einstein was wrong. So he built the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), which measures almost infinitesimally small disturbances in spacetimesmaller than anything thats been measured before. And in 2016, LIGO succeeded, detecting gravitational waves from a massive, faraway collision between black holes.

Pakistani-American astrophysicist Nergis Mavalvala PhD is the MIT physics professor mentioned in the episodes summary and shes also known for herpioneering experiments on laser cooling of macroscopic objects and in the generation of squeezed quantum states of light.

If this new episode is any testament to the future stories, The Possible is going to be a very deep dive into science and tech and include collaborations with some of the greatest minds in the world. Listening to the Universe is available in the Within app for iOS, Android, Steam VR, Oculus Home, and PS VR and its available to watchon their website as well.

Tagged with: 360-degree video, Astro physics, documentary, Listening to the Universe, science, VR, Within

Link:

The Possible's Second Episode on Within Tackles Something Einstein Got Wrong - UploadVR

VR Ping Pong Review: No Table Needed But No Friends Allowed – UploadVR

Of all the sports that developers can shove the letters VR in front of or behind and quickly push out the door, ping pong seems the most susceptible. You just need a motion controller (or two) and youre pretty much good to go. No need to run around a pitch or cooperate with team members; its just you, your paddle, and your opponent.

With that in mind, it surprises me just how long its taken for a true ping pong game to appear on PlayStation VR (PSVR). But, four months on from launch, its finally arrived as a port of Reddolls VR Ping Pong, which initially launched last year on the HTC Vive. The results? Well, its ping pong in VR. It might not be the most ambitious use of the technology, but pulling on a headset certainly beats having to set up a giant table.

VR Ping Pong is one of those games that reminds you that the industry is in a similar phase to that which the wider gaming industry was going through around the time of the Nintendo Entertainment System. This isnt a flashy party game with power ups and special moves but something that wants to capture the nature of the sport as best as the technology can, like Nintendos Tennis or Baseball.

In both versions of the game, you use the headsets respective motion controllers to both wield your paddle and serve the ball, though this can also be done with just one controller if you so wish. Youre placed in a virtual stadium with a set of blocky characters seated and ready to applaud.

Playing against AI, I found VR Ping Pong to be pretty much as accurate and responsive a ping pong game as I, a sporadic player in real life, could ask for. After a while finding my feet (much of my time was spent in the games practice mode), I was able to competently return the ball with slight adjustments to the angle of the controller and force I was applying making a world of difference. In the heat of a match you can quick quickly forget about your real life surroundings and accept this virtual reality as the real one, so make sure you dont have anything placed nearby when playing.

Not every shot I hit went the way I thought it should, but the vast majority of mistakes and bugs came down to blips in my headsets tracking, which the game itself cant really be faulted for (although a foul system that detects irregular movement could certainly help).

What I do take issue with, however, is the lack of multiplayer. In 2017, releasing a ping pong game without even a basic online component really isnt acceptable, and it massively restricts the amount of value VR Ping Pong can offer. It single-handedly prevents this take on the sport being a definitive one for VR headsets; not allowing friends from all over the world to have a ping pong match as if they were in the same room is a missed opportunity. It could have been one of the better social experiences on PSVR.

There are, however, a decent batch of challenge modes that prove to be fun distractions from the main game. My favorite was a minigame in which pieces of the table that the ball bounced on would disappear, making matches progressively harder.

VR Ping Pong is a likable take on the popular sport thats held back by its lack of multiplayer. Theres only so much fun you can have with the AI matches and minigames and, once youve had it, theres little reason to stick around.

Tagged with: PlayStation VR, VR Ping Pong

Read the original here:

VR Ping Pong Review: No Table Needed But No Friends Allowed - UploadVR

We Tried an Underwater VR Headset, and it Worked – UploadVR

In the space of just one year virtual reality has gone from a highly anticipated hobbyist kit, to a commercially available consumer product available atBest Buy. While the overwhelming majority of that is positive, one thing I do find myself missing is the days when one, or two innovators could blow our collective minds with a hacked together prototype. Thatwild west era when people with enough imagination, guts and duct tape could create something truly incredible has been overshadoweda bit as more and more money pours into the space. Last week I got to dive back into that time thanks to a new, very early prototype from two modern-day VR cowboys.

The product is so early that it doesnt even have a name, but its creators do. Stephen Greenwood and Allan Evans are the mad scientists who one day had the thought, I think we could make a VR headset that works underwater, and are now following through on that theory. Greenwood works in digital production for Discoveryand Evans is the CTO and co-founder of AvegantGlyph.

The duo invited UploadVRto try out theirunderwater HMD in an early-access demo and we got the whole thing on tape.

There were two experiences running on the underwater headset. The first was a space walk with soothing music played over bone-conduction, underwater headphones. The second was a coral reef complete with schools of fish that would swim right up to me. This experience was scored by David Bowies Space Oddity. Come to think of it that song makes more sense for the space experience, but the juxtaposition actually worked amazingly well.

Speaking to the headsets design, Greenwood explains that, Essentially its basically like a Google Cardboard headset but with a waterproof phonebasically we put lenses on a dive mask. It uses water as part of the working distance anda Samsung Galaxy Edge Phone.

What he means by working distance is that the unique lenses inside this HMD use the refraction of the water to properlyalign the images of each eye. VR images are warped and distorted using lenses and software to cost effectively offer a wide field of view with a commodity display. The lenses on this headset do some of that bending, but they depend on the water that leaksinto the headset to do the remaining work.

What this breaks down to is a mass of waterproof rubber and tape and a display that only truly works to render proper VR when youre underneath the water. Submerging yourself and watching a brand new world appear around you is an incredible experience and the weightlessness of the water provided a layer of immersion I didnt even know I wanted until now.

That transportive essence is what Greenwood thinks could be a key use case for the device going forward, stating that maybe someday when this is high fidelity enough you can go for a dive on the great barrier reef without ever leaving your city.

Ultimately though, for now this project is all about answering questions. It was our chance to explore some theories about VR underwater. Do you get motion sick when youre underwater? Do you get a sense of Zero-G? Can you do a space experienceIt also allows your mind to have a suspension of disbelief. So I think as crazy as it is yeah its worth trying, Greenwood said.

There is no positional tracking inside the device and audio is currently provided using third party conductive headphones that can be heard clearly underwater. However, Greenwood and Evans were very clear that this is an early, early prototype that could be described as pre-pre-alpha.

The inventive pair does not necessarily know just yet where their research and development into underwater VR will take them, but Greenwood can see it being used to create large-scale installations in pools or at the beach and could even be aligned with the sensory deprivation scene for floating.

In any case, it was exciting to see that not every question in VR needs a massive investment check to be answered. Some amazing experiencescan still be forged on a very small budget with a very big idea.

Just make sure you keep your eyes open.

Tagged with: experience, Headset, prototype, underwater, VR, water

Visit link:

We Tried an Underwater VR Headset, and it Worked - UploadVR

Let a Daredevil Talk You Through His Craziest Stunt Yet – Popular Mechanics

There are no shortage of videos by thrill-seeking urban explorers who seem to have a death wish. They'll sneak their way up skyscrapers or radio towers, and then take a few pictures at the top or upload a short video of highlights inevitably scored with some kind of dubstep. This video from Jame Kingston is a little different. Not only is it 26 minutes long and virtually unedited, but he talks way through his thought process out loud the whole time. It's terrifying and fascinating.

Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

The feat here, as Kingston explains in detail, was to climb up and then between a pair of cranes that extended between two buildings. His dream, insane as it may be, is to jump between two such cranes like in the James Bond movie Casino Royale but, perhaps thankfully, this particularly situation didn't present the opportunity. Still, his calm explanations of where he plans to put his foot next, and where he intends to hang is just mesmerizing.

Feats of daring and dexterity like this are obviously incredibly dangerous but they're also illegal, so under no circumstances should you ever attempt to break into a construction site and start climbing the equipment. You're liable to be arrested or worse. But even though that comes as common sense to most of us, it sure is interesting seeing inside the mind of someone who might disagree.

Source: James Kingston

Go here to see the original:

Let a Daredevil Talk You Through His Craziest Stunt Yet - Popular Mechanics

Woman who stuffed dead mom into suitcase says video confession was false – New York Post


New York Post
Woman who stuffed dead mom into suitcase says video confession was false
New York Post
... a clarification, Mack and her lawyer Yulius Benyamin Seran, say: Considering that contents of the video are fake (by design), recorded under a pressure of about one year ago where previously Tommy Schaefer has written the scenario of confession ...
Video confession from Heather Mack 'scripted by former lover'9news.com.au

all 8 news articles »

Original post:

Woman who stuffed dead mom into suitcase says video confession was false - New York Post

600 Miles in a Coffin-Shaped Bus, Campaigning Against Death Itself – New York Times


New York Times
600 Miles in a Coffin-Shaped Bus, Campaigning Against Death Itself
New York Times
I met scientists who were convinced of the possibility and necessity of converting our minds into code, of uploading them into machines. I visited a cryonics facility outside Phoenix, in which the severed heads of the faithful were stored in liquid ...

Read the original post:

600 Miles in a Coffin-Shaped Bus, Campaigning Against Death Itself - New York Times

What Will Next-Stage Digital Medicine Look Like? – KQED

On the health tech beat, you often meet, broadly, two types of people. First, there are lots of very smart people who think we have the know-how to achieve a kind of big-data, perpetual-monitoring, digital-health paradise or at least something better than we have now.

Then there are some other, equally smart folks whothink that particular vision is fueled bytoo muchSilicon Valley dreamin andtoo little attention tothe basics of health care access and smart policy.

Dr. Daniel Kraft is closer to the former category. Dr. Kraft put in an appearance on KQEDs Forum radio program recently to discuss cutting edge health tech. Kraft is the chair of medicine at Singularity University, a technology think tank,startup accelerator and educational organization that looks to leverage rapidly accelerating technologies to find solutions on a global scale.

Kraft and Forum host Michael Krasnytalked about the effects ofnew and prospective technologies,from virtual realitys impacton medical education to the Uberization of health care.Below are excerpts of Krafts answers, edited for length and clarity.

The Uberization of Health Care

Everyone is familiar with Uberas disruptive. But they couldnt have existed 10-plus years ago, without smartphones, GPS, online paymentsthey connected the dots.

We all want that ease and transparency of use that were used to with Uber. And were seeing that kind of mindset come not just to millennials but to older folks who want access to their clinical data and doctor. There are several companies that have launched apps where you press a button and a doctor will come to you within three hours. Uber itself did a pilot in New Yorkwhere you press a button and a nurse will come and give you a flu shot. This ease-of-access mindset is coming across in many parts of health care, including delivering your drugs, whether its by Uber, Lyft or drone.

The Potential of Digital Health Data

Were in this age of exponential data, but how do you make it useful to you as a consumer, patientand physician? A lot of digital devices get left in a drawer after a month or so; the trick is to make themengaging.

We practice sick care today, spending most of our time and money on folks who already have disease. But we can really move to more proactive, continuoushealth care using some of these tools.

In the future well have individualized check engine lights. Your information will be synthesized so that a warning light can say, Hey, time to come in for a checkup before you blow a gasket.

Digital Mental Health Tools

With some wearables and other technologieswe can now get a pulse on our behaviors. Right now Im wearing a couple of devices that track my sleep. I have a ring that can do this; I have a sensor on my mattress. Just getting insight into how you sleep can have a huge impact on health and wellness over the long term.

Its the same thing for depression and anxiety. Were seeing companies that can be a platform for mental health progression. For example, for bipolar patients, if youre depressed and not moving much and staying in the house, some of these new platforms allow you to access your care team and your family, so you can get a digital hug when you might need one.

Virtual and Augmented Reality

Physicians today spend twice as much time typing in their medical records than they do with patients. So one of the best applications is using Google Glass or a similar product sophysicians can see their patients and viewdata but have someone else act as a virtual scribe.

Were seeing now how Oculus Rift can help medical students learn anatomy, allowing them to fly through the heart or the brain. Were seeing ways to use VR to treat burn patients who have undergonepainful surgeries; theyre put into a cold environment where they get to throw snowballs, and it diminishestheir pain and their need for opiates. And kids with autism can now put on Google Glass and learn to recognize facial emotions.

Health Screening Tools

Part of the future will beto use new screening tools: app-based eye-tracking devices, blood-based diagnostics, brain scans that might pick up dementia 10 or 15 years early. There are drugs in development that might stop or reverse plaques when youre at stage 0, before you have symptoms.

Even with your 23andme data, primary care doctors could gain some insightswhen to screen you or what statin drugs may workbest for you, based on your pharmacogenomics. The challenge is a lot of this information doesnt flow to your physicians; theyre not incentivized to use it, and in some cases theyre dis-incentivized.

Health Care vs. Technology Care

Folks talk about robot physicians or the app taking over your medical care. I think its going to be more of a blend, not just AI but IA, intelligence augmentation. So in fields like radiology or dermatology or pathology, where clinicians are trained to see patterns, now machine learning can arguablydo that faster and better, and that can augment a primary care doctor in screening you for melanoma, for example.

Were seeing the ability to do triage with chatbots, whichyou might access from your phone and help you do the first steps. Ive got a few medical tricorders, inspired by Star Trek,with me. So at home or in yourpocket you can literally pull down advanced vital signs that synch up with your phone and connect to your clinicians, and AI agents can help you understand where you are in your baseline and the way things are moving.

We dont need to replace doctors, but maybe every visit doesnt need to require you to take off half a day of work, sit in the waiting room and fill out the same form. You might use your smartphone for a follow-up appointment to look at a wound from surgery, or to check on a suspicious skin lesion. As cost pressures go, well be seeing more and more payment for some of these telehealth platforms.

Pediatrics and Technology

Theres a lot of new tech coming for pregnant women and children. A connected otoscope can enable you to track kids with ear infections athome, so you dont have to drag them back to the doctor. Were seeing sensored cribs or infant ankle bracelets, sort of a Fitbit for babies, which can help reassure worried parents or enable a physician to send a child home earlier when theyre at risk of SIDS or asthma.

More onSingularity University and what it calls exponential medicine here.

Jon Brooks is the host and editor of KQEDs health and technology blog, Future of You. He is the former editor of KQEDs daily news blog, News Fix. A veteran blogger, he previously worked for Yahoo! in various news writing and editing roles. He was also the editor of EconomyBeat.org, which documented user-generated content about the financial crisis and recession. Jon is also a playwright whose work has been produced in San Francisco, New York, Italy, and around the U.S. He has written about film for his own blog and studied film at Boston University. He has an MFA in Creative Writing from Brooklyn College.

See the rest here:

What Will Next-Stage Digital Medicine Look Like? - KQED

Summa emergency medicine residency loses accreditation, health system put on probation – Crain’s Cleveland Business

Summa emergency medicine residency loses accreditation, health system put on probation
Crain's Cleveland Business
The emergency medicine residency program at Summa Health will lose its accreditation, and the system has been put on probation by the Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). The program's accreditation withdrawal is effective ...
Summa Health emergency medicine residency program put on probationBecker's Hospital Review

all 2 news articles »

Go here to see the original:

Summa emergency medicine residency loses accreditation, health system put on probation - Crain's Cleveland Business

At least five patients accidentally infected with HIV at traditional Chinese medicine hospital – The Independent

At least five people have been accidentally infected with HIV at a hospital in China after a doctorreused dirtyneedles during treatment.

The doctor at the Chinese medicine hospital inthe eastern city ofHangzhouisunder criminal investigation,according tothe local health authority.

The government statement said a"serious medical incident" had occurred at the Zhejiang Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, reported the South China Morning Post.

TheAIDS-causingvirus is believed to havespread when the doctor violated procedure by failing to dispose of syringes after use, transferring the infection from one HIV positive patient to at least five others.

Internet users in Chinareacted with shock to the news, stoking long-standingfears HIV could be spread by poor medical practice.

However,most media reports and social media postspublished in Chinese about the incident were swiftlycensored, according to AFP.

The health authority said it had learned of the five infections on 26 January, but did not disclose how many people might havebeen exposed to the virus in total, or what the original treatments were for.

The Independent has contacted the large hospital, whose websiteclaims it is "well known nationwide for its longest history and largest scale with the best technical capacity in Zhejiang Province", for comment.

Hangzhou, in Zhejiang province, is around 100 miles from Shanghai.

China had around 500,000 cases of HIV and AIDS at the end of 2014, according to a 2015 UN report, and the Chinese government has announced new efforts to contain the spread of the virus with a five-year plan.

In 1990,thousands of people contracted HIV amid an infected blood-selling scandal in the central Henan province.

View post:

At least five patients accidentally infected with HIV at traditional Chinese medicine hospital - The Independent

This travel medicine doctor is always on the go – The Boston Globe

Dr. Lin H. Chen consults a patient in her office at Mt. Auburn Hospital, where she is the director of the Travel Medicine Clinic.

Bitten by a spider in Peru? Suffering from high altitude sickness in Tanzania? Contracted a virus during a mass gathering like the Hajj? As globetrotters go to increasingly far-flung destinations, travel physicians like Dr. Lin H. Chen need to keep their pulse on remote destinations and the unique health risks they present. Travel medicine today is a lot more than just jabs from a needle for vaccinations its consulting with patients about health and safety measures, and taking precautions that cant always be neatly packed into a suitcase, says Chen, 56, director of the Travel Medicine Center at Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge. Chen never knows what types of cases she will see when she walks into the exam room last year, the infectious disease specialist discovered one of the first cases of Zika in New England. The Globe spoke with Chen about this rapidly evolving field of medicine.

When I discovered one of the first Zika cases in the state, it was a patient who arrived at the travel clinic after a trip to Costa Rica. He showed symptoms of fever, joint pain, and a dramatic rash. A test came back confirming Zika. Shortly after the diagnosis, the countrys health minister recognized that Zika was indeed spreading throughout the local population. This case was interesting because the traveler was a sentinel for the disease not yet confirmed for that location.

Advertisement

Travelers go to such exotic places and do fascinating things, whether backpacking, volunteering or working. Our patients might be running a marathon on every continent, participating in car rallies on the Silk Road, locating human trafficking victims, or observing elections abroad. Its fascinating to see the global connections, and its very satisfying when I confirm a diagnosis sometimes exotic, sometimes not in an ill traveler, and they improve with treatment.

Our travel medicine center is one of the GeoSentinel sites worldwide that participate in surveillance and monitoring of travel-related illnesses. My work is really interesting, intersecting so many different disciplines. Many questions arise that do not have clear-cut answers, and I enjoy the challenge of pulling scientific evidence from the different specialties to synthesize into practical clinical guidance.

I got involved with this field because I love to travel and I live vicariously through the travels of my patients. Ive been to all continents except for Africa and Antarctica. But even a travel physicians family can have inadvertent injuries and illness. We still have come down with the ubiquitous travel diarrhea, and one of my children even once fractured his elbow in Mexico. He tripped over a swimming noodle by the pool. So accidents can happen anywhere. Its good to always be prepared.

More:

This travel medicine doctor is always on the go - The Boston Globe

Three of my colleagues have killed themselves. Medicine’s dark secret can’t go on – The Sydney Morning Herald

A junior doctor in Sydney writes about the crushing pressure experienced by doctors in training.

In the year it has taken for me to complete my training as a junior doctor three of my colleagues have killed themselves.

These are just the ones I've heard about.

I've read articles that refer to suicide among doctors as "the profession's grubby little secret" but I'd rather call it exactly how it is the profession's shameful and disgusting open secret.

Medical training has long had its culture rooted in ideals of suffering. Not so much for the patients which is often sadly a given but for the doctors training inside it. Every generation always looks down on the generation training after it:no one ever had it as hard as them, and thus deserve to suffer just as much, if not more.

This dubious school of thought has long been acknowledged as standard practice. To be a good doctor you must work harder, stay later, know more, and never falter. Weakness in medicine is a failing and if you admit to struggling it's thought that you simply couldn't hack it. In the cut-throat, brutal culture of medicine,many junior doctors stay stoically mute in the face of daily, soul-destroying adversity. Inthese worst cases, their loudest gesture is deafeningly silent. The thought of years of knowledge and training being used for such purposes is not only sickening, it is heartbreakingly sad.

Extremely long hours, little financial remuneration (particularly while training), discouragement to claim overtime, and extreme shortage of training places leave many doctors of my generation feeling as if we don't have many options.

Colleagues compete with one another because it's how we have been conditioned to behave we all know one bad mistake or disagreement with an important superior is all that it takes to end a career you've already devoted seven-plus years of your life to,and you haven't even really started yet.

To not "specialise" is seen as a cop-out anyone who openly admits to wanting a more lifestyle-friendly medical career path is more often than not looked down upon. You're left feeling much of the time that whatever you do it's simply never going to be quite good enough.

When I asked my friends who are not doctors whether three people in their cohort had killed themselves in the past year, they looked horrified. There would be some kind of inquiry, they said, an investigation, some action. Some kind of introspective analysis into their workplace that tried to find some kind of answer for what had occurred. Doctors tend to receive an email from our management with a link to a counselling service, and then we go to work and pretend as if nothing has happened.

No doctor I know, particularly juniors trying to pass exams and get into training programs, would ever voluntarily seek help, because they are afraid of being labelled as weak or not coping.

Junior doctors are called the backbone of the medical profession, but at the same time it feels all too often as if we are its collective punching bag. We are told from day one we must always be extremely polite to nursing staff whom I have witnessed belittling interns and residents without consequence. We are expected to work well beyond our rostered hours. We are told we must pay thousands of dollars for courses and exams and further our knowledge but we are all too often humiliated by our seniors in high-stress environments because, for all the things we know, we can never know enough.

When I think about all the things I have learnt at the end of my training, one stands out very clearly. There is something rotten inside the medical profession that has been festering for a long time. There isno realistic cure. The statistics about doctor suicide and mental health have been clear for yearsand yet our responses and solutions feel perfunctory at best and shameful at worst.

Most junior doctors feel the same as me that things won't change and that there's no point in really trying.

I don't want to get "doctor suicide fatigue" where another death is not a tragedy but rather an unpleasant expectation. When a patient dies unexpectedly at my work there is an investigation and a debrief and somebody writes a report and steps are put in place to ensure this doesn't happen again. Where is this investigation when a doctor dies?

Junior doctors deserve better than what we are being given. It is time for the medical profession to look deep inside itself and fix the cancer that has been growing for far too long. If they don't, the cost is simply too high.

Lifeline 131 114

MensLine 1300 789 978

Beyondblue 1300 224 636

More:

Three of my colleagues have killed themselves. Medicine's dark secret can't go on - The Sydney Morning Herald