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ENN ENN ENN Environmental News Network -- Know Your Environment
04
Thu, Dec
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  • Coming soon: Oil spill-mapping swarms of flying drones

    Inspired by bird and insect behavior, engineers create software to enable teams of common UAVs to work together

    Thousands of ants converge to follow the most direct path from their colony to their food and back. A swarm of inexpensive, unmanned drones quickly map an offshore oil spill.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • New polymer additive could revolutionize plastics recycling

    When Geoffrey Coates, a professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Cornell University, gives a talk about plastics and recycling, he usually opens with this question: What percentage of the 78 million tons of plastic used for packaging – for example, a 2-liter bottle or a take-out food container – actually gets recycled and re-used in a similar way?

    The answer, just 2 percent. Sadly, nearly a third is leaked into the environment, around 14 percent is used in incineration and/or energy recovery, and a whopping 40 percent winds up in landfills.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • No, Cellphones Don't Cause Cancer. Probably

    The tin foil hat, while fashionable, is an ineffective way of keeping the government’s radio waves from infiltrating and manipulating your mind. In fact, the hat may boost certain radio frequencies, which is OK because there’s no such thing as mind-controlling waves anyway.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Tracking the Movement of Cyborg Cockroaches

    New research from North Carolina State University offers insights into how far and how fast cyborg cockroaches – or biobots – move when exploring new spaces. The work moves researchers closer to their goal of using biobots to explore collapsed buildings and other spaces in order to identify survivors.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Do You Look Like Your Name? People Can Match Names to Faces of Strangers With Surprising Accuracy

    Computers can also be programmed to match names and faces, study says

     

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Solar-Powered Water Wheels Prevented 1 Million Pounds of Trash From Entering Baltimore Harbor

    Meet Mr. Trash Wheel and Professor Trash Wheel—a pair of floating, solar and hydro-powered trash interceptors keeping Baltimore’s waters clean. These frankly adorable trash wheels can collect as much as 38,000 pounds of debris in a single day.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Light-Driven Reaction Converts Carbon Dioxide into Fuel

    Duke University researchers have developed tiny nanoparticles that help convert carbon dioxide into methane using only ultraviolet light as an energy source.

    Having found a catalyst that can do this important chemistry using ultraviolet light, the team now hopes to develop a version that would run on natural sunlight, a potential boon to alternative energy.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Diamond's 2-billion-year growth charts tectonic shift in early Earth's carbon cycle

    A study of tiny mineral ‘inclusions’ within diamonds from Botswana has shown that diamond crystals can take billions of years to grow. One diamond was found to contain silicate material that formed 2.3 billion years ago in its interior and a 250 million-year-old garnet crystal towards its outer rim, the largest age range ever detected in a single specimen. Analysis of the inclusions also suggests that the way that carbon is exchanged and deposited between the atmosphere, biosphere, oceans and geosphere may have changed significantly over the past 2.5 billion years.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Scientific team develops nano-sized hydrogen storage system to increase efficiency

    Lawrence Livermore scientists have collaborated with an interdisciplinary team of researchers, including colleagues from Sandia National Laboratories(link is external), to develop an efficient hydrogen storage system that could be a boon for hydrogen-powered vehicles.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA's Webb Telescope Team Prepares For Earsplitting Acoustic Test

    Inside NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland the James Webb Space Telescope team completed the environmental portion of vibration testing and prepared for the acoustic test on the telescope. 

    >> Read the Full Article

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