Science & TechnologyS


Info

Cornell researchers grow a realistic bio-engineered human ear

Bio  Ear
© Lindsay France/Cornell University PhotographyBio-Engin-Ear Lawrence Bonassar displays his 3-D printed ear.
Researchers at Cornell University have managed to fabricate a bioengineered human ear that looks and acts like a natural one. They hope to be able to give children with a rare congenital ear deformity a new, 3-D printed ear that's specifically tailored to fit them.

Children with microtia are born with a deformed or missing external ear, sometimes without even an ear opening. Although they can have a fully-formed inner ear, it's difficult for them to hear without the external structure to direct sound, to say nothing of the psychological impact of having a prominently visible deformity. Typically, treatment for microtia involves multiple surgeries over several months or years, often using cartilage from the child's ribcage.

There are many drawbacks to this approach, including a limited supply of cartilage that can be taken and complications that occur at the site where it's harvested from. Scientists have long been looking for a way to engineer new tissue for reconstruction, but previous attempts at bioengineered ears lost their shape over time or the cells within them died.

Over three months of observation, Cornell researchers found that their 3-D printed ear was more flexible and longer-lasting than other bioengineered ears. Using 3-D printing also would allow them to mimic the normal anatomy of the patient's ear, since children with microtia usually only have deformities on one side.

Blackbox

Earthquake catastrophes and fatalities projected to rise in populous 21st century?

"Predicted population increases in this century can be expected to translate into more people dying from earthquakes. There will be more individual earthquakes with very large death tolls as well as more people dying during earthquakes than ever before, according to a newly published study led by U.S. Geological Survey engineering geologist Thomas L. Holzer."

Holzer and his USGS coauthor James Savage studied earthquakes with death tolls of more than 50,000, which they define as catastrophic, and reported global death tolls from roughly 1500 A.D. to the present. Comparing those events to estimates of world population, they found that the number of catastrophic earthquakes has increased as population has grown. After statistically correlating the number of catastrophic earthquakes in each century with world population, they were able to use new (2011) 21st-century population projections by the United Nations to project that approximately 21 catastrophic earthquakes will occur in the 21st century, a tripling of the seven that occurred in the 20th century. They also predict that total deaths in the century could more than double to approximately 3.5 million people if world population grows to 10.1 billion by 2100 from 6.1 billion in 2000.

"This prediction need not be a prophesy: the National Earthquake Hazard Reduction Program (NEHRP) in the U.S. can be a model for how science can inform engineering designs that are adopted into life-saving building codes in earthquake-prone regions," said USGS Associate Director for Natural Hazards David Applegate. "I also cannot stress enough the value of educated citizens - those who understand the natural hazards of this planet and are empowered to take action to reduce their risk."

Four catastrophic earthquakes have already struck since the beginning of the 21st century, including the 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake (and tsunami) and 2010 Haiti earthquake that each may have killed over 200,000 people. The study explains this increase in lethal earthquakes. It is not that we are having more earthquakes; it is that more people are living in seismically vulnerable buildings in the world's earthquake zones.

Fireball

Was the 1954 mysterious explosion over Melrose caused by jets or a meteor?

fireball, meteor
Today, I wrote a story about a mysterious explosion over Melrose in 1954 that shattered windows, cracked ceilings, and caused a local panic that seemed to echo what happened in Chelyabinsk, Russia last week.

The Globe wrote three stories at the time, each asserting that the pressure wave that led 200 people to swarm the Melrose fire station was caused by several airplanes breaking the sound barrier while flying too close to the ground.

But readers have questions about whether, technologically speaking, that could be the case. Steve Smith, an aviation buff, wrote in an e-mail that aircraft of the time were technologically incapable of breaking the sound barrier.

Smith wrote:
"In 1954 the United States had 2 aircraft in service that might be doing formation flying over land, the Lockheed P80 Shooting Star and the North American F86 Sabre. We also had some naval variants, such as the F9F Panther and Cougar. The first aircraft that could break mach-1 in level flight was the North American F100 super-sabre, but that didn't happen until some time in 1957 and only as a test aircraft.

All these aircraft were incapable of exceeding the speed of sound at the time. Some rocket plane testing in the west did exceed the Mach 1, perhaps Chuck Yeager and the Bell X-1 comes to mind."

Info

Dolphins call each other by name

Dolphins
© Getty Images
Bottlenose dolphins call out the specific names of loved ones when they become separated, a study finds.

Other than humans, the dolphins are the only animals known to do this, according to the study, published in the latest Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The big difference with bottlenose dolphins is that these communications consist of whistles, not words.

Earlier research found that bottlenose dolphins name themselves, with dolphins having a "signature whistle" that encodes other information. It would be somewhat like a human shouting, "Hey everybody! I'm an adult healthy male named George, and I mean you no harm!"

The new finding is that bottlenose dolphins also say the names of certain other dolphins.

"Animals produced copies when they were separated from a close associate and this supports our belief that dolphins copy another animal's signature whistle when they want to reunite with that specific individual," lead author Stephanie King of the University of St. Andrews Sea Mammal Research Unit told Discovery News.

Cassiopaea

Bright new supernova shines in Southern skies

2013aa
© Joseph BrimacombeNew supernova 2013aa, discovered by Stu Parker on February 13, 2013, is southwest of the spiral galaxy NGC 5643 in the southern constellation Lupus. This photo was taken three days later.
I live in the frozen north by choice, but occasionally I yearn for warmer places like Tucson and Key West. These feelings usually start in late February, when after nearly four months of winter, the season feels endless. Today I wish I could head down south for another reason - to see a very bright supernova in a galaxy in Lupus.

SN 2013aa popped off in the barred spiral galaxy NGC 5643 in the constellation Lupus the Wolf 34 million years ago, but no one knew its light was wiggling its way across the cosmos to Earth until New Zealand amateur astronomer Stu Parker nailed it during one of his regular supernovae hunts. Parker recorded it on Feb. 13, 2013. Since it was so far from the galaxy, he thought at first it was a hot pixel (electronic artifact) or an asteroid. Another look at the galaxy 5 minutes later confirmed it was really there.

Good thing. It turned out upon confirmation to be the brightest supernova he and his band of supernova hunters had ever discovered.

Radar

Hmm...NASA loses contact with space station

Image
© NASANASA said something went wrong during a computer software update on the station.
NASA says the International Space Station has lost contact with NASA controllers in Houston. Officials say the six crew members and station are fine and they expect to fix the problem soon.

NASA spokesman Josh Byerly said something went wrong around 9:45 a.m. EST Tuesday during a computer software update on the station. The outpost abruptly lost all communication, voice and command from Houston.

About an hour later, while flying over Russia, station commander Kevin Ford was able to briefly radio Moscow that all was well and they were working on the problem.

Byerly said the problem should be fixed today. Until then, astronauts can talk with Moscow control for a few minutes every 90 minutes.

Cloud Precipitation

Can cloud seeding preventing further flooding in Indonesia?

flood Jakarta Indonesia
© Enny Nuraheni/ReutersA boy plays in a flooded road in Jakarta. Indonesia has turned to cloud seeding to prevent further flooding.
Scientists claim rainfall has reduced since the project began, but experts call for more evidence

Indonesia is banking on an unusual strategy to prevent further flooding in its inundated capital Jakarta, and officials claim that they are already seeing positive results.

They are using 'cloud seeding' - a weather modification technology often resorted to during drought. The method involves injecting clouds with substances that encourage the formation of ice crystals heavy enough to fall, thereby speeding up the production of rain.

Rain is the last thing that Indonesia needs now, as it has been experiencing heavy rainfall since mid-January.

But Indonesian scientists believe that inducing rains to fall over the ocean before the rainclouds reach the city will help prevent further flooding in Jakarta.

Comet 2

Shoemaker-Levy 9: Comet's impact left its mark on Jupiter

Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 experienced one of the most spectacular ends that humans ever witnessed. Several months after its discovery, pieces of the comet smashed into the planet Jupiter. The collision produced scars that were visible from Earth in small telescopes.

"This is the first collision of two solar system bodies ever to be observed, and the effects of the comet impacts on Jupiter's atmosphere have been simply spectacular and beyond expectations," NASA wrote on a website describing the comet.
Image
© JPL/NASA/STScIJupiter vacuumed up the pieces of the disrupted comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 in 1994, but the impacts were a reminder of the danger faced by Earth.

Arrow Down

Designing life: Should babies be genetically engineered?

Twins
© LiveScience
New York - The increasing power and accessibility of genetic technology may one day give parents the option of modifying their unborn children, in order to spare offspring from disease or, conceivably, make them tall, well muscled, intelligent or otherwise blessed with desirable traits.

Would this change mean empowering parents to give their children the best start possible? Or would it mean designer babies who could face unforeseen genetic problems? Experts debated on Wednesday evening (Feb. 13) whether prenatal engineering should be banned in the United States.

Humans have already genetically modified animals and crops, said Sheldon Krimsky, a philosopher at Tufts University, who argued in favor of a ban on the same for human babies. "But in the hundreds of thousands of trails that failed, we simply discarded the results of the unwanted crop or animal."

People

Influential few predict behaviour of the many

Image
© Mauro MartinoThe complex behaviour of a network can be fully captured by tracking a few crucial nodes, here pictured in red.
To completely understand how a living organism works one would have to take it apart, the great physicist Niels Bohr once observed - but then the organism would certainly be dead1. In general, systems of high complexity, including living things but ranging from the Internet to social networks, are often impossible to track in all their details.

But what if you didn't have to? Network-theory researchers now have come up with some clever mathematics that reveals complex systems by tracking a selected few of their components.

Say, for example, that you wanted to find a biological marker that identifies people with a certain disease. You can track down all the genes that are expressed differently in people with the disease and assemble a network that shows their interactions, but how do you then pick out those that are specific to the illness?

The new work may help researchers to identify the key nodes in a network that determine the state of every other node, greatly simplifying the search.

To demonstrate their technique, Yang-Yu Liu of Northeastern University in Boston and his colleagues looked at the entire human metabolic network and found that concentrations of about 10% of the body's 2,763 metabolites could be used to determine the levels of all the rest.