Aug 312012
 


The findings were published in the journal . In their paper, the researchers demonstrated wireless power transfer to a millimeter-sized device implanted five centimeters inside the chest on the surface of the heart—a depth once thought out of reach for .

The paper’s senior author was Ada Poon, a professor of at Stanford. Sanghoek Kim and John Ho, both doctoral candidates in Poon’s lab, were first authors.

The engineers say the research is a major step toward a day when all implants are driven wirelessly. Beyond the heart, they believe such devices might include swallowable —so-called “pillcams” that travel the —permanent pacemakers and precision brain stimulators; virtually any where device size and power matter.

A revolution in the body

Implantable in the human body have revolutionized medicine. Hundreds of thousands if not millions of pacemakers, cochlear implants and drug pumps are today helping people live relatively normal lives, but these devices are not without engineering challenges.

First off, they require power, which means batteries, and batteries are bulky. In a device like a pacemaker, the battery alone accounts for as much as half the volume of the device it drives. Second, batteries have finite lives. New surgery is needed when they wane.

“Wireless power solves both challenges,” said Poon.

Last year, Poon made headlines when she demonstrated a wirelessly powered, self-propelled device capable of swimming through the . To get there she needed to overturn some long-held assumptions about delivery of wireless power through the human body.

Her device works by a combination inductive and radiative transmission of power. Both are types of electromagnetic transfer in which a transmitter sends radio waves to a coil of wire inside the body. The radio waves produce an electrical current in the coil sufficient to operate a small device.

There is an indirect relationship between the frequency of the transmitted radio waves and the size of the receive antenna. That is, to deliver a desired level of power, lower frequency waves require bigger coils. Higher frequency waves can work with smaller coils.

“For implantable medical devices, therefore, the goal is a high-frequency transmitter and a small receiver, but there is one big hurdle,” explained Kim.

Ignoring consensus

Existing mathematical models have held that high frequency radio waves do not penetrate far enough into human tissue, necessitating the use of low-frequency transmitters and large antennas—too large to be practical for implantable devices.

Ignoring the consensus, Poon proved the models wrong. Human tissue dissipates electric fields quickly, it is true, but radio waves can travel in a different way—as alternating waves of electric and magnetic fields. With the correct equations in hand, she discovered that high-frequency signals travel much deeper than anyone suspected.

“In fact, to achieve greater power efficiency, it is actually advantageous that human tissue is a very poor electrical conductor,” said Kim. “If it were a good conductor, it would absorb energy, create heating and prevent sufficient power from reaching the implant.”

According to their revised models, the researchers found that the maximum power transfer through human tissue occurs at about 1.7 billion cycles per second.

“In this high-frequency range, we can increase power transfer by about ten times over earlier devices,” said Ho, who honed the mathematical models.

The discovery meant that the team could shrink the receive antenna by a factor of ten as well, to a scale that makes wireless implantable devices feasible. At that the optimal frequency, a millimeter-radius coil is capable of harvesting more than 50 microwatts of power, well in excess of the needs of a recently demonstrated eight-microwatt .

Additional challenges

With the dimensional challenges solved, the team found themselves bound in by other engineering constraints. First, electronic medical devices must meet stringent health standards established by the IEEE, particularly with regard to tissue heating. Second, the team found that receive and transmit antennas had to be optimally oriented to achieve maximum efficiency. Differences in alignment of just a few degrees could produce troubling drops in power.

“This can’t happen medical devices,” said Poon. “As the human heart and body are in constant motion, solving this issue was critical to the success of our research.”

The team responded by designing an innovative slotted transmit antenna structure. It resembles a swastika, but delivers consistent efficiency regardless of orientation of the two antennas.

The new design serves additionally to focus the precisely at the point inside the body where the implanted device rests on the surface of the heart, increasing the electric field where it is needed most, but canceling it elsewhere. This helps reduce overall tissue heating to levels well within the IEEE standards. Poon has applied for a patent for the antenna structure.

Journal reference:

Applied Physics Letters
search and more info
website

Provided by

Stanford University
search and more info
website

<!–
–>


Article source: http://phys.org/news265640584.html

 Posted by  Comments Off
Aug 312012
 


The space agency said it plans to launch the nanosatellites this year. The devices are being built with off-the-shelf hardware, which is reducing the cost of each prototype to $3,500.

Nanosatellites are cube-shaped miniature satellites. They’re smaller and lighter than other satellites, measuring about 4 inches and weighing less than 4 pounds.

By going with commercial products, NASA said its engineers will launch the cheapest and easiest-to-build satellites ever to fly in space.

Out-of-the-box “smartphones already offer a wealth of capabilities needed for , including fast processors, versatile operating systems, multiple miniature sensors, high-resolution cameras, GPS receivers, and several radios,” the agency said online. The agency is using phones running ‘s operating system.

NASA said it has built two types of smartphone satellites. The nanosatellites are being operated by cellphones, which provide the operating system and the communications capabilities.

The mission of the first, the PhoneSat 1.0, is simply to stay alive in space. NASA said the PhoneSat 1.0, which runs on the HTC Nexus One phone, will take pictures of the Earth and send them back, along with information about its health.

‘s PhoneSat 2.0 will have a few more capabilities. This nanosatellite will run on the Samsung Nexus S smartphone, and it will include a two-way S-band radio so engineers can control it from Earth. It will also include to extend its mission duration, and it will include a .

The three satellites – two PhoneSat 1.0s and one PhoneSat 2.0 – are set to launch onboard the Orbital Sciences Corp.’s Antares rocket, which is expected to lift off from Wallops Island, Va., later this year.

(c)2012 Los Angeles Times
Distributed by MCT Information Services

<!–
–>


Article source: http://phys.org/news265639114.html

 Posted by  Comments Off
Aug 312012
 


Comparing data from reef surveys during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s with present-day (2009) measurements of calcification rates in One Tree Island, a coral reef covering 13 square kilometers (5 square miles) in the southern part of the Great Barrier Reef, Silverman et al. show that the total calcification rates, i.e., the rate of calcification minus the rate of dissolution, in these coral communities have decreased by 44 percent over the past 40 years; the decrease appears to stem from a threefold reduction in calcification rates during nighttime.

The authors suggest that reduced calcification, particularly during nighttime, could be caused by boring and other erosional activities brought about by a change in the type or the number of boring organisms (e.g., ) that live on these coral reefs. Another possibility is that warming water temperatures and ocean acidification could be causing increased dissolution of over the past 40 years. The study is consistent with previous estimates and predictions of reduced calcification rates of coral communities in the .

More information: Carbon turnover rates in the One Tree Island reef: A 40 year perspective, Journal of Geophysical Research – Biogeosciences, doi:10.1029/2012JG001974, 2012 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2012JG001974

Provided by

American Geophysical Union
search and more info
website

<!–
–>


Article source: http://phys.org/news265639273.html

 Posted by  Comments Off
Aug 312012
 


Agricultural development and urbanization since the 1800s have not only claimed two-thirds of the natural Everglades (only 6,000 square kilometers (2,300 square miles) now exist in their natural form) but have also dramatically increased phosphorus levels in surface water, at times exceeding the acceptable limit of 10 micrograms per liter by severalfold.

Using a database containing more than 360,000 individual measurements of water quality from various sources between 1985 and 2007, the authors demonstrate that over the long term (about 13 years), phosphorus levels in surface waters have decreased by 5 percent during the dry season in several protected areas, as well as in . Yet on shorter timescales (approximately 4 to 5 years), the levels continue to increase in Everglades National Park. In fact, the highest were in the dry and wet seasons of 1999 and 2003, when levels reached 200 micrograms per liter. In 65 percent of the natural Everglades, in surface water remain above 10 micrograms per liter. The study shows that measures undertaken thus far have been insufficient in regulating phosphorus and in the surface waters of the Everglades. The authors emphasize the need to further increase the area of constructed wetlands that help regulate nutrient flow into the Everglades.

More information: Spatial and temporal phosphorus distribution changes in a large wetland ecosystem, Water Resources Research, doi:10.1029/2011WR011421

Journal reference:

Water Resources Research
search and more info
website

Provided by

American Geophysical Union
search and more info
website

<!–
–>


Article source: http://phys.org/news265640348.html

 Posted by  Comments Off

Rutgers team has ring prototype for touch authentication

Touchscreens are already designed to detect voltage changes from fingers touching and moving across the screen. They pick up those spikes, and software on the phone would read them as password-like data. Full details of their proposed approach can be seen in their research paper, “Distinguishing Users with Capacitive Touch Communication,” by Tam Vu, Akash Baid, Simon Gao, Marco Gruteser, Richard Howard, Janne Lindqvist, Predrag Spasojevic, and Jeffrey Walling. “We explore a novel form of wireless communication in which a [Read More]

Earthquake hazards map study finds deadly flaws, researcher suggests improvements

“Forecasting earthquakes involves many uncertainties, so we should inform the public of these uncertainties,” said Mian Liu, of MU’s department of geological sciences. “The public is accustomed to the uncertainties of weather forecasting, but foreseeing where and when earthquakes may strike is far more difficult. Too much reliance on earthquake hazard maps can have serious consequences. Two suggestions may improve this situation. First, we recommend a better communication of the uncertainties, which would allow citizens to make more informed decisions [Read More]

Old fractures caused rare 8.6 magnitude earthquake

One month after the earthquake, Satriano et al. revisited the Wharton Basin to reconstruct the rupture history of the events of 11 April to gain a better understanding of the general nature of these rare large within-plate earthquakes. They used a comparatively new tool known as back projection analysis, which tracks radiation that emanates as new locations along a rupture path become active. Calibrating the back projection analysis with aftershocks, which scientists use to calculate the travel time and distance [Read More]

Wetlands the primary source of Amazon Basin methane

During 27 flights split between November 2008 and May 2009 the authors measured 150 vertical profiles of the atmospheric methane concentration, spanning 500 to 4,000 meters (roughly 1,600 to 13,000 feet) altitude. During both sets of flights they collected atmospheric samples, and during the 2009 flights they also produced the first continuous measurement of Amazon basin methane, accurate to within 2 parts per billion and sampled at three-second intervals. Using isotopic analyses of the collected gas samples, the authors find [Read More]

District Court Orders Restoration of Weekend Early Voting in Ohio

Have there been enough big election law decisions this week? Apparently not, as earlier today a federal district court in Ohio has held that a change in the Ohio Revised Code that ends in-person early voting the Friday before election day (for all voters other than overseas military personnel) is unconstitutional and issued an injunction ordering that such voting be allowed through the weekend. Here are the decision, local Ohio coverage, and (as usual) early analysis from Election Law Blog’s [Read More]

Light beams offer bright future for lighter-weight cars

And passengers in the back seat could also tap into rays of visible or infrared light to watch films or listen to music transmitted through their overhead lighting. University of Warwick scientists are pioneering research into optical wireless – where data signals travel through light – and its use in cars. Their research was presented at the recent International Conference on Transparent Optical Networks held at the University. Optical wireless can use just a basic LED, such as those used [Read More]