Energy and Environment
More auto news. A Stanford researcher has found that although diesel cars obtain 25 to 35 percent better mileage and emit less carbon dioxide than similar gasoline cars, they can emit 25 to 400 times more soot per kilometer. The warming due to soot may more than offset the cooling due to reduced carbon dioxide emissions over several decades. Laws that favor diesel cars over standard gasoline, therefore, may be doing more harm than good.
For the latter part of the 20th century, much of what we knew about plasma fusion came out of Princeton's Plasma Physics Laboratory. There the massive Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor worked for 15 years, forcing hydrogen atoms together in crazy strong magnetic fields in the search for a sustainable fusion reaction. I wrote a paper about this back in the late 1980s in UC Santa Barbara's terrific History of the Nuclear Age. Anyhow, the Tokamak was taken offline in 1997, and Princeton says it has now successfully dismantled and removed the leviathan. Just to give you an idea about the machine's intensity, it was the first to produce more than 10 million watts of fusion power. And in 1995, TFTR attained a world-record temperature of 510 million degrees centigrade -- more than 25 times that at the center of the sun.
Incidentally, if you ever wondered what Tokamak means, it's not --- as I once thought --- some Native American name or word. It's actually Russian shorthand describing the squished donut shape of the magnets. To(roidal'naya) kam(era s) ak(sial'nym magnitnym polem), or toroidal chamber with axial magnetic field. Now you know.
Researchers have found that plant-eating insects use a form of molecular code-breaking to protect themselves against repellants employed by their dinner. Scientists in Illinois have detailed how corn earworms (Helicoverpa zea) intercept defensive chemical signals used by their hosts and then produce detoxifying agents to partially counter the threat against them.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 2002 to Jimmy Carter, for his "decades of untiring effort to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development."
By 2005, 130 million cell phones will be thrown out each year, according to a new study funded in part by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Counting the phones, batteries and chargers, that comes to 65,000 tons a year, most of which will end up in landfills or being incinerated. And that has environmentalists freaked. "This is becoming a very serious problem, because the amount of cell phone waste is growing tremendously," said Eric Most, a director at Inform, the group which issued the report. "These chemicals accumulate and persist in the environment. They get in the plants, soil, water, and then move up the stream to humans." One approach to countering the increase that seems to have general support is a "take-back" program, in which phone manufacturers must agree to take-back old phones when consumers upgrade. Another plan sure to be DOA: Limiting waste by standardizing design elements so consumers have fewer reasons to buy new phones. "If we had had a government standard in the beginning," one industry rep told the New York Times, "we'd still all be speaking on analog phones. And that means no e-mail, no text messaging, no Caller ID. Competition equals innovation in this case."
Ice meteors are falling from the sky in growing numbers. And while some skeptics still think the phenomenon a hoax or the result of ice from planes passing overhead, a Spanish scientist says they are neither. Though he doesn't know precisely how the meteors form, Jesus Martinez-Frias, director of planetary geography at Spain's Astrobiology Center in Madrid, notes that their results can be dramatic. The falling ice blocks tend to weigh upwards of 20 pounds and have smashed in cars, destroyed roofs and caused general mayhem where they land. But Martinez-Frias says he isn't concerned so much about the terrestrial damage they can cause, but the atmospheric damage he believes they portend. "I'm not worried that a block of ice might fall on your head ... but that great blocks of ice are forming where they shouldn't exist," he said. "Components of the atmosphere, like ozone and water, are changing in different levels of the atmosphere. ... We think these signs could be evidence of climate change," he told Reuters.
As if Afghanistan didn't have enough woes, the country has just lost its main agricultural insurance policy: two stores of carefully selected and maintained seeds representing the biodiversity of the nation's native crops. The seeds were ruined when looters broke into a storage facility where they were kept and made off with the airtight jars that held them. The seeds themselves were tossed on the ground, and have now been so jumbled together that they are virtually worthless. "It's like having a library of books with no titles on them," says Geoffrey Hawtin, director general of the International Plant Genetic Resources Institute in Rome. "All of the [traits you prize] are there, but you no longer know where to look for them."
Today a program called Reef Check at UCLA's Institute of the Environment released the results of a massive, five-year volunteer-run survey of the planet's coral reefs -- what may be the world's most comprehensive ecological study to date. Unfortunately the study reveals that the reefs around the world are in serious decline, and that the
">situation is only getting worse. Overfishing has affected 95 percent of the more than 1,107 coral reefs monitored since 1997; at least four species of reef fish, hunted as food or for aquariums, face extinction, according to the study. So how do you monitor the coral reefs, which make up less than .09% of the area of the world's oceans and are spread around the globe? Volunteers, lots of them. Reef Check scientists taught teams of sea-worthy volunteers -- from recreational divers to village fisherman -- about reef ecology and scientific monitoring. About 5,000 scientists and volunteers contributed. According to Reef Check's founder, Gregor Hodgson, of the reefs surveyed, just one, near Madagascar, could be considered pristine. "What we have seen is coral reefs have been damaged more in the last 20 years than they have in the last 1,000," Hodgson said. "Suddenly, the pressures of overfishing and damaging types of fishing -- dynamiting fish and poisoning fish, particularly in Southeast Asia -- have taken off."
PCs aren't known for being great friends of the environment. Chip making uses toxic chemicals, wastes water, and pollutes both water and air. Computers and components fill up landfills and add heavy doses of lead to the solid waste stream. NEC Solutions America says it's taking a step toward a more environmentally friendly computer with the PowerMate eco --- the first all-in-one, fanless ecological PC. The PowerMate eco has a 15-inch flat panel screen that contain none of the boron found in traditional CRT monitors and radiates less heat than its tubular counterparts; its motherboard is made with lead-free solder; it uses laptop components and has a "boxless" design; it has no fan; and it is made of a 100 percent recyclable plastic. The desktop is targeted at high density computing locations where noise, heat and desktop real estate are big concerns --- like call centers, hospitals, reception desks and financial trading rooms.
Live near the ocean? Ever wonder why your air is so clean, while the poor saps inland keep dying from smog? Reuters reports salty sea spray actually scrubs out air pollution. According to an article published in the journal Science, some of the spray rises high into the atmosphere and helps create raindrops, which drag pollution back down to earth (they also make you wet when it rains.) "The idea that larger salt particles can seed clouds and enhance rainfall is not new but it was not combined with actual observation," says Daniel Rosenfeld, who conducted the experiment.
It's hard to imagine that in what may be Big Oil's political-clout highwater mark, anyone is talking about alternative fuel cars. But Wired does a
marathon out-take in this month's issue, delving deep behind the Oil Curtain in a mission to GM's Detroit headquarters. The magazine takes yet another look at the possibility that hydrogen fuel cell cars will appear in our lifetime. Wired even has the humility to point out where its previously breathless boosterism may have been a wee bit premature.
Taiwanese researchers say they've crafted a win-win situation in the discovery that sewage sludge can be used to bulk up construction bricks. The bio-bricks contain up to 30 percent sludge, which can come from either industrial slurry or the, er, human waste stream. Because the bricks are kiln-fired at 900C, all bacteria and viruses are destroyed. Plus the process seals in any heavy metals that might be present. Best of all, the researchers say, the bricks don't smell at all. The team behind the discovery admits that people might need some convincing to live in such intimate contact with their past meals, noting that legal approval and public acceptance remain to be sought.