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Cleaning Heavily Polluted Water At A Fraction Of The Cost




A European research project has succeeded in developing a water treatment system for industrial oil polluted water at a tenth of the cost of other commercially available tertiary treatments, leaving water so clean it can be pumped safely back out to sea without endangering flora or fauna.


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Two million hours of science
After over a quarter of a century, the doors of the world's first synchrotron radiation source have closed. Its contribution to materials science in the past and the future should not be underestimated.
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OSA's ISP Launches With Research On Breathing Disorders And Congenital Heart Defects
Two groups of researchers, one in the United States and one in Australia, are announcing the development of new optical techniques for visualizing the invisible processes at work in several human diseases.
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How to make a 3cm RF transmitter
Hi Everyone,

I've got an idea and would really appreciate some help in figuring out if it's possible at the moment.

I'm looking to make a small (possibly 3 cm) transmitter that transmits its location to a receiver that has fixed coordinates. The receiver would then be able to collect and display the transmitter's x,y,z coordinates.

Not sure which radio frequency would be best, although I'll be using this for relatively small distances (10-20 meters).

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Over-use Of Organic Fertilizers In Agriculture Could Poison Soils, Study Finds
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Dr. Michael W. Deem, John W. Cox Professor in Biochemical and Genetic Engineering and Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University, 1-14-08
Genetics, modularity, mutation rate, horizontal gene transfer. Dr. Deem's specialty is statistical mechanics, specifically the computer simulation of complex molecular systems. He works in the areas of evolution, immunology, and materials. Dr. Deem has developed methods to quantify vaccine effectiveness and antigenic distance for influenza, methods to sculpt the immune system to mitigate immunodominance in dengue fever, a physical theory of the competition that allows HIV to escape from the immune system, and the first exact solution of a mathematical model of evolution that accounts for cross-species genetic exchange. Dr. Deem's recent study, published in the December 2007 'Physical Review Letters', found that genetic modularity arises spontaneously because of the selective pressure of a changing environment and the existence of horizontal gene transfer.
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