Science & TechnologyS


Einstein

Near-Perfect Particle Measurement Achieved

Atom
© DreamstimeAn atom consists of a nucleus of protons and neutrons, with electrons orbiting around.
The mind-bending laws of quantum mechanics say we can't observe the smallest particles without affecting them. Physicists have now caused the smallest-ever disturbance while making a quantum measurement - in fact, almost the minimum thought to be possible.

This disturbance is called back-action, and it is one of the hallmarks of quantum mechanics, which governs the actions of the very small. It arises from the supposition that before a measurement is made, particles exist in a sort of limbo state, being neither here nor there while retaining the possibility of either.

Once an observer intervenes, the particle is forced to "choose" a state, to settle on one possibility, eliminating the other options. Thus, the state of the particle is altered by the act of measuring it.

"The atom changes because you are looking," explained physicist Peter Maunz of Duke University.

Meteor

Dinosaurs killed by meteor, new fossil discovery proves

dinosaur
A horn belonging to the Triceratops family appears to indicate that the dinosaurs were wiped out by a meteor.

Archaeologists have unearthed a single 45cm-long fossilised browhorn belonging to a group of herbivores that included the famous Triceratops, at a geological site in the south-east of Montana, US.

While this is, in itself, not an unusual find, it is the placement of the fossil in the rock that is most important.

The fossil was found just 13cm below the layer of rock known as the Cretaceous-Tertiary - the point in rock formation that marks the extinction of the dinosaurs.

Meteor

The Greatest Mysteries of the Asteroid Belt

Image
© Unknown
Beyond the orbit of Mars, but not as far as Jupiter, lurk the many hundreds of thousands of rocky bodies collectively known as the asteroid belt.

Many solar systems are thought to contain such belts, and science fiction movies and television shows often present these bands as rock-clogged expanses that would challenge any celestial navigator. It may be so, in other systems, but in our asteroid belt, the rocky bodies are actually quite far apart from each other.

Humankind will soon be getting an inside look at this often overlooked bit of celestial real estate, courtesy of NASA's Dawn mission. On Saturday, July 16, after a four-year journey, the Dawn spacecraft will reach Vesta, the second-largest body in the belt. [Photos: Asteroid Vesta and NASA's Dawn]

Info

The Mole Loses Its Mysterious Second Thumb

Image
© C. Mitgutsch et al., Bio. Lett (2011)Deep digger. Extra digits give Iberian moles the wide paws they need to shovel dirt during their forays underground.
Moles get two big thumbs-up for their digging skills. These tunneling mammals sport what looks like a sixth digit on each front paw, a seeming exception to the rule limiting land vertebrates to 10 fingers. Now, a new study of embryonic moles shows that this doppelganger thumb is no thumb at all, but a co-opted wrist bone that starts to elongate relatively late in development.

Although not as famous as the panda's similar extra thumb, a heavy tool for grasping bamboo, the mole's sixth digit is an evolutionary curiosity. This thumb, a solid piece of bone on the outside of the hand that can wiggle but not bend, certainly seems useful. The extra bone widens the mole's paws, presumably making them better for scooping dirt. Primitive mole species less inclined to tunnel-building tend to have stubbier second thumbs. Whether the extra digits are useful, most land vertebrates, with the exception of rare polydactyl humans, cats, and other animals, stick to a maximum of five digits per hand or paw.

To unearth whether the mole is an evolutionary rule-breaker, Marcelo Sánchez, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Zürich in Switzerland, and colleagues went back to the thumb's beginnings. The team compared the stubby and fingerless limbs of embryonic Iberian moles (Talpa occidentalis) with the limbs of closely related shrew embryos, looking for molecular clues to early digit growth. One such clue, a gene called Sox9 that often turns on before bone growth, clearly identified the would-be digit as a finger impostor. Sox9 didn't kick into gear at the site of the future second thumb until the mole embryos were 18 days old, after the gene's activity had peaked in the true fingers. "It forms like a finger forms but later," Sánchez says.

Megaphone

Coke cans focus sound waves

Pepsi scrambles taste-test response

Focused sound waves aren't just the domain of children fooling around with long-distance microphones. They're also important in ultrasound machines, and in biomedical laboratories, for "acoustic actuators" using sound to sort cells.

Sound focusing has its limits, however - the diffraction limit, roughly one wavelength of the sound being focused. A 20 KHz tone has a wavelength of around 1.7cm in air, which is one of the reasons that ultrasound pictures look fuzzy and indistinct to the untrained eye. To improve the focus beyond the diffraction limit, you need expensive acoustic lenses - or an array of Coca-Cola cans.

In an experiment reported at Nature News, a French researcher has built a "superlens" out of a 7x7 array of soft drink cans with the tabs removed.

Fish

Jellyfish Swim for Their Supper

Jellyfish_1
© Gower Coast AdventuresTags that recorded depth and time attached to jellyfish off the Welsh coast revealed the animals actively swim up and down, rather than drifting.

Jellyfish actively swim high and low to catch food, rather than drift passively, according to a study of large barrel jellyfish off the Welsh coast. This behavior may explain some of gelatinous blobs' success.

"It is just another feature of jellyfish that is going to help them outcompete fish and take over from fish in disturbed ecosystems," said lead researcher Graeme Hays, a professor at Swansea University in Wales.

Since jellyfish and young fish both eat plankton (tiny floating plants and animals), jellyfish can quickly gain an advantage when some other disruption - such as overfishing, or a low-oxygen environment created by nutrient pollution - hurts fish populations.

In fact, in recent years, reports of swarms of jellyfish have suggested human-caused changes to ocean environments may be just what these creatures need to thrive.

Info

Dinosaurs Became Extinct in Single Blow, Fossil Suggests

Killer Rock
© NASA/JPLA meteor strike 65 million years ago likely wiped out the dinosaurs, with a new study suggesting the demise was a quick one.
A dinosaur horn is now pointing to a catastrophic end for the Age of Dinosaurs, not a gradual one as some researchers have claimed.

The leading culprit for the end of the Age of Dinosaurs is a catastrophic meteor strike about 65 million years ago. Although it is now widely accepted that a cosmic impact took place about then - a time known as the Cretaceous-Tertiary, or K-T boundary - it was unclear if the mass extinctions started gradually before the hit, perhaps due to volcanoes or other factors.

Helping drive this controversy was a zone spanning 10 feet (3 meters) wide in the earth right below the K-T boundary that purportedly lacked dinosaur fossils. A number of scientists have claimed this gap, seen in the western interior of North America, was evidence that dinosaurs might have died off well before any impact. Other researchers have contested the notion, suggesting this layer only appeared devoid of fossils because fossils can get easily destroyed over millions of years. Also, the placement of the K-T boundary can be uncertain, meaning that dinosaurs might have actually been found in this zone before but not reported as such.

Info

Blood Type Linked to Earlier Decline in Fertility

Blood Test
© Live Science

A woman's blood type may yield clues to her fertility, a new study suggests.

The results show that, of a group of women in their 30s who sought medical fertility help, those with blood type O were more likely than women with other blood types to have diminished ovarian reserve, meaning their ovaries had few eggs or had eggs unlikely to meet with success during in vitro fertilization procedures. Type O blood is the most common type in the United States.

"I don't want the message to be that women in the healthy population should be petrified that their blood type may predict compromised fertility," said study author Lubna Pal, who researches reproductive endocrinology at the Yale University School of Medicine.

But if the study's link is shown to hold up for other women, then the connection may provide a tool for earlier, more accurate fertility prognoses, Pal said.

The study was published online on June 26 in the journal Human Reproduction.

Magnet

Magnetism Prevents Memory Loss?

Magnetism Brain
© Photos.comTranscranial magnetic stimulation creates a magnetic field that can stimulate a current to flow in the brain.
Learning new skills or facts in quick succession could become less challenging with the help of magnetism, according to new research by American neurologists.

Dr. Edwin Robertson and Dr. Daniel Cohen from the Harvard Medical School's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston investigated whether it is possible to prevent interference between memory tasks.

"For the last 100 years, it has been appreciated that trying to learn facts and skills in quick succession can be a frustrating exercise," said Robertson in a press release.

"Because no sooner has a new memory been acquired than its retention is jeopardized by learning another fact or skill."

Robertson and Cohen recruited 88 students to learn a simple motor skill task and then a word list rapidly after. The following day, the students were tested and had already forgotten some of their new skills.

Info

New Dino Finding: Warm-Blooded, Nimble Beasts

Dino Bones
© Donald Henderson| Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta, CanadaResearchers studied tiny holes in dinosaur bones, including the femur of Centrosaurus apertus, a ceratopsian dinosaur.
Rather than plodding along Earth like slowpokes, dinosaurs likely were pretty active beasts, even more so than today's mammals, researchers have now found.

The finding, which was based on tiny holes that would've supplied blood and oxygen to dinosaur bones, supports the idea that at least some dinosaurs may have been warm-blooded, the researchers say.

"One of the big controversies among paleobiologists is whether dinosaurs were cold-blooded and sluggish or warm-blooded and active," study researcher Roger Seymour of the University of Adelaide said in a statement.

To find out, researchers began measuring nutrient foramen, or the tiny holes located in thigh bones. The holes supply blood to the living bone cells inside, with past research suggesting the size of the holes in human bones is related to the maximum rate that a person can be active during aerobic exercise.