Monday, February 18, 2013

Forget about leprechauns, engineers are catching rainbows

Feb. 15, 2013 ? University at Buffalo engineers have created a more efficient way to catch rainbows, an advancement in photonics that could lead to technological breakthroughs in solar energy, stealth technology and other areas of research.

Qiaoqiang Gan, PhD, an assistant professor of electrical engineering at UB, and a team of graduate students described their work in a paper called "Rainbow Trapping in Hyperbolic Metamaterial Waveguide," published Feb. 13 in the online journal Scientific Reports.

They developed a "hyperbolic metamaterial waveguide," which is essentially an advanced microchip made of alternate ultra-thin films of metal and semiconductors and/or insulators. The waveguide halts and ultimately absorbs each frequency of light, at slightly different places in a vertical direction, to catch a "rainbow" of wavelengths.

Gan is a researcher within UB's new Center of Excellence in Materials Informatics.

"Electromagnetic absorbers have been studied for many years, especially for military radar systems," Gan said. "Right now, researchers are developing compact light absorbers based on optically thick semiconductors or carbon nanotubes. However, it is still challenging to realize the perfect absorber in ultra-thin films with tunable absorption band.

"We are developing ultra-thin films that will slow the light and therefore allow much more efficient absorption, which will address the long existing challenge."

Light is made of photons that, because they move extremely fast (i.e., at the speed of light), are difficult to tame. In their initial attempts to slow light, researchers relied upon cryogenic gases. But because cryogenic gases are very cold -- roughly 240 degrees below zero Fahrenheit -- they are difficult to work with outside a laboratory.

Before joining UB, Gan helped pioneer a way to slow light without cryogenic gases. He and other researchers at Lehigh University made nano-scale-sized grooves in metallic surfaces at different depths, a process that altered the optical properties of the metal. While the grooves worked, they had limitations. For example, the energy of the incident light cannot be transferred onto the metal surface efficiently, which hampered its use for practical applications, Gan said.

The hyperbolic metamaterial waveguide solves that problem because it is a large area of patterned film that can collect the incident light efficiently. It is referred to as an artificial medium with subwavelength features whose frequency surface is hyperboloid, which allows it to capture a wide range of wavelengths in different frequencies including visible, near-infrared, mid-infrared, terahertz and microwaves.

It could lead to advancements in an array of fields.

For example, in electronics there is a phenomenon known as crosstalk, in which a signal transmitted on one circuit or channel creates an undesired effect in another circuit or channel. The on-chip absorber could potentially prevent this.

The on-chip absorber may also be applied to solar panels and other energy-harvesting devices. It could be especially useful in mid-infrared spectral regions as thermal absorber for devices that recycle heat after sundown, Gan said.

Technology such as the Stealth bomber involves materials that make planes, ships and other devices invisible to radar, infrared, sonar and other detection methods. Because the on-chip absorber has the potential to absorb different wavelengths at a multitude of frequencies, it could be useful as a stealth coating material.

Additional authors of the paper include Haifeng Hu, Dengxin Ji, Xie Zeng and Kai Liu, all PhD candidates in UB's Department of Electrical Engineering. The work was sponsored by the National Science Foundation and UB's electrical engineering department.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University at Buffalo. The original article was written by Cory Nealon.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Haifeng Hu, Dengxin Ji, Xie Zeng, Kai Liu, Qiaoqiang Gan. Rainbow Trapping in Hyperbolic Metamaterial Waveguide. Scientific Reports, 2013; 3 DOI: 10.1038/srep01249

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/physics/~3/HvucdTTaR9w/130217085259.htm

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Obama in Florida for golfing weekend

PALM CITY, Fla. -

Faced with a long weekend in an empty White House, President Barack Obama figured he needed a getaway, too, so he put together a golf outing with some buddies.

Not at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland or at Fort Belvoir in Virginia, two Washington-area military posts where he's a regular on their courses.

Instead, he went south, to Florida, to spend the long President's Day weekend staying and playing at the Floridian, an exclusive and secluded yacht and golf club on the state's Treasure Coast. He arrived Friday night after a speech in Chicago and wasn't expected to be seen again in public ? including by the members of the news media traveling with him ? until he returns to Washington on Monday.

"At this time, there are no public events scheduled or plans for the president to leave the grounds of the golf club," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Saturday.

Call it a weekend with the boys, presidential style.

RELATED: Jets escort plane from vacation site

Eyebrows might have been raised at the thought of the president, any president, high-tailing it out of Washington, without his family, for some "me time" hundreds of miles away from the Oval Office. First lady Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha are on an annual ski vacation out West.

As it turns out, it isn't at all uncommon for a president to go on vacation on his own.

And, Obama has gone off alone in the past.

During the weekend, the president, a sports enthusiast and avid golfer, planned to practice his putting technique on the club's private, 18-hole course, which opened in 1996, according to golfnow.com, and is owned by Jim Crane, a Houston businessman who also owns Major League Baseball's Astros.

Crane has made political contributions to Republican and Democratic candidates, including $35,800 last year to a joint fundraising committee for Obama and the Democratic Party, and $2,300 to Obama in 2007, according to Federal Election Commission records.

Members of the club and their guests have access to one of eight cottages, a 68-slip deep water marina, the club's 61-foot Viking yacht, a 24-foot Hurricane Deck Boat and the club's private helicopter service with two on-site helipads along the St. Lucie River.

Obama official portrait The White House arranged for reporters traveling with the president to stay at a hotel in Port St. Lucie, about a 25-minute drive away.

Obama's longtime friend from Chicago, Eric Whitaker, joined him on the flight from Chicago to Florida. The two have played golf together in the past. Another regular member of Obama's golf foursomes is White House trip director Marvin Nicholson, who also traveled with the president on Friday.

The White House was expected to release the names of those who played golf with the president on Saturday later in the day.

At least one instructor to some top professional golfers out the word that he'd be on the green with Obama in the afternoon.

"I will be with POTUS this afternoon, playing 9 holes and some practice time," Butch Harmon, Tiger Woods' former swing coach, said in a text message to The Associated Press. POTUS is an acronym for president of the United States.

Harmon was Woods' coach when he turned pro and reached what many believe to be the peak of his game in the early 2000s. He also was Greg Norman's coach when he was No. 1 in the world in the 1990s. Harmon has taught such top golfers as Phil Mickelson and Ernie Els, and annually ranks No. 1 on magazine lists of golf's best teachers.

Crane, meanwhile, was scheduled to play a round of golf with Obama on Sunday, according to a report on the website for Major League Baseball. Crane said he was at the club to welcome Obama when he arrived Friday night.

"Looks like I might get to play with him a little bit tomorrow, and we're looking forward to that," Crane said Saturday as he addressed the Astros before a team workout, according to mlb.com. "He came in late last night and was very cordial. His staff is great and it's very exciting. I mean, when do you get the president staying in your place?"

Source: http://www.news4jax.com/Obama-in-Florida-for-weekend-with-the-boys/-/475982/18578918/-/mxtmstz/-/index.html

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Dan D'Addona: Liz Ellis, Hope College women's basketball shooting for redemption vs. Calvin College

A month later, Hope College point guard Liz Ellis still is shaking her head after a dismal shooting performance in a Jan. 12 loss at Calvin College.

Ellis went just 3-for-20 from the field as the Flying Dutch, ranked No. 3 by the NCAA Division III coaches, lost their only game of the season. They get a second crack at their second-ranked rival today at DeVos Fieldhouse.

?There were points of the game where we didn?t have a good flow offensively, and I think I tried to do too much to create things,? Ellis said. ?I dribbled too much or took too many shots.?

Several times, Ellis had the ball at the top of the key with the shot clock winding down and she drove head-down to the basket. It is difficult to get those past Calvin All-American Carissa Verkaik (Holland Christian), who alters many shots she doesn?t block.

If Verkaik wasn?t the one in there, Julia Hilbrands and Breanna Verkaik are tall and good post defenders, too.

Hope has to have a different offensive game plan in the rematch, which tips off at 3 p.m. at DeVos Fieldhouse. Hope is 23-1 and 14-1 in the Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association.

A win for the Flying Dutch will give them a tie with the Knights (22-1, 15-0 MIAA) for the league championship and force a coin toss to see who will host the MIAA Tournament.

?We put Liz in some terrible positions in that game,? Hope coach Brian Morehouse said. ?We asked her to bail us out with the shot clock running down several times. They know how good she is. They didn?t want her to beat them, so they challenged every shot. Those are big kids coming to challenge every shot.?

Ellis has struggled each game at Calvin?s Van Noord Arena ??and she isn?t alone. Hope struggles to hit outside shots in that building and has since it was built. The team?s leading scorer Courtney Kust went 1-for-10 in the loss.

On the flip side, Verkaik, the reigning Division III Player of the Year, hasn?t ever won at DeVos Fieldhouse in her four years.

?It is always great to play at home in front of your home fans,? Ellis said. ?They help us create a positive energy even when things are going wrong. We have a great community that always shows up. In reality, it shouldn?t change how we play, whether we are on the road or here. We are obviously a little more comfortable playing at home.?

It showed last season when Hope lost bad at Calvin, then rallied to stun their rival at home ? without starting center Meredith Kussmaul who was on the bench with a torn knee ligament.

Ellis doesn?t mind thinking about it in the same way.

?I don?t mind going into the game being an underdog,? she said. ?We have nothing to lose. They are not unbeatable. We are a great team when we play together.?

The guard play of Brittany Berry and Megan Kelley should allow Ellis to take the pressure off of herself and spread the ball around. Berry went 5-for-5 from 3-point range in Hope?s win at Saint Mary?s on Wednesday. Kelley had nine points and had her best offensive game of the year at Calvin with 13 points.

?I need to remember we have a great team.? Ellis said.

It doesn?t surprise Morehouse that Ellis felt so bad about the Calvin loss.

?She had a bad game as fall as the ball going in the basket, but she didn?t have a bad game,? he said. ?I didn?t worry one bit about her shooting. I told her she can think about that game and feel bad about it if she thinks about all the games where she put us on her back.?

Ellis, last season?s MIAA Defensive Player of the Year, is choosing to remember that even with her poor shooting, Hope was within five points of the No. 2 team in the nation.

?It actually did give me a little bit of confidence, looking back, that we were that close and didn?t play our best game,? she said. ?Everyone was saying we hung with them ??maybe they hung with us.?

We will find out today which team is better today.

If Ellis can shoot the ball well and the Flying Dutch continue their staunch defensive effort, they will keep Verkaik and the Knights from finding out what it is like to win at DeVos Fieldhouse.

? Contact Assistant Sports Editor Dan D?Addona at daniel.daddona@hollandsentinel.com or (616) 546-4276. Follow him on Facebook at Holland Sentinel Sports and Twitter @DanDAddona.

Source: http://www.hollandsentinel.com/sports/x898133224/Dan-DAddona-Liz-Ellis-Hope-College-womens-basketball-shooting-for-redemption-vs-Calvin-College

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The real unemployment (Powerlineblog)

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

The Longform Guide to 1968

Every weekend, Longform shares a collection of great stories from its archive with Slate. For daily picks of new and classic nonfiction, check out Longform or follow @longform on Twitter. Have an iPad? Download Longform?s app to read the latest picks, plus features from dozens of other magazines, including Slate.

In the popular imagination, 1968 was marked by unusual turbulence and amazing music. Indeed, it began with the Battle of Khe Sanh and ended with the American debut of Led Zeppelin. Here are stories, speeches and transcripts that capture some of the magnificent craziness and creativity of that legendary year.

The My Lai Massacre
Seymour M. Hersh ? St. Louis Post-Dispatch ? November 1969

Dispatches revealing the March 1968 murder of 109 Vietnamese civilians during a search-and-destroy mission on a rumored Viet Gong stronghold, often referred to in military circles as Pinkville, actually the village of My Lai.

?I walked up and saw these guys doing strange things. They were doing it three ways. One: They were setting fire to the hootches and huts and waiting for people to come out and then shooting them up. Two: They were going into the hootches and shooting them up. Three: They were gathering people in groups and shooting them.

?As I walked in, you could see piles of people all through the village. ... all over. They were gathered up into large groups.

?I saw them shoot an M-79 (grenade launcher) into a group of people who were still alive. But it (the shooting) was mostly done with a machine gun. They were shooting women and children just like anybody else.?

Day 4: Lunar Orbits 4, 5 and 6
NASA ? December 1968

From the Apollo 8 flight journal.

?076:49:56 Collins: Apollo 8, this is Houston. Over.

?076:50:02 Anders: I say how about a little bit of that news you promised?

?076:50:05 Collins: Roger. We got the Interstellar Times here, the December 24 edition. Your TV program was a big success. It was viewed this morning by most of the nations of your neighboring planet, the Earth. It was carried live all over Europe, including even Moscow and East Berlin. Also in Japan and all of North and Central America, and parts of South America. We don't know yet how extensive the coverage was in Africa.
Are you copying me all right? Over.

?076:50:38 Borman: You are loud and clear.

?076:50:40 Collins: Good. San Diego welcomed home today the Pueblo crew in a big ceremony. They had a pretty rough time of it in the Korean prison. Christmas cease-fire is in effect in Vietnam, with only sporadic outbreaks of fighting. And if you haven't done your Christmas shopping by now, you better forget it.?

Two Minutes to Midnight: The Very Last Hurrah
Pete Hamill ? Village Voice ? June 1968

An eyewitness account of Robert Kennedy?s assassination.

?Kennedy was lying on the floor, with black rosary beads in his hand, and blood on his fingers. His eyes were still open, and as his wife Ethel reached him, to kneel in an orange-and-white dress, his lips were moving. We heard nothing. Ethel smoothed his face, running ice cubes along his cheeks. There was a lot of shouting, and a strange chorus of high screaming. My notes showed that Kennedy was shot at 12.10 and was taken out of that grubby hole at 12.32. It seemed terribly longer.

?I don't remember how it fits into the sequence, but I do have one picture of Rosey Grier holding the gunman by his neck, choking life out of him.

??Rosey, Rosey, don't kill him. We want him alive. Don't kill him, Rosey, don't kill him.?

"?Kill the bastard, kill that sum of a bitch bastard,? a Mexican busboy yelled.

"?Don't kill him, Rosey.?

??Where's the doctor? Where in Christ's name is the doctor???

Astral Weeks
Lester Bangs ? November 1979

On Van Morrison?s grounbreaking album, which was released in November 1968.

?What this is about is a whole set of verbal tics?although many are bodily as well?-which are there for reason enough to go a long way toward defining his style. They're all over Astral Weeks: four rushed repeats of the phrases ?you breathe in, you breath out? and ?you turn around? in ?Beside You?; in ?Cyprus Avenue,? twelve ?way up on?s, ?baby? sung out thirteen times in a row sounding like someone running ecstatically downhill toward one's love, and the heartbreaking way he stretches ?one by one? in the third verse; most of all in ?Madame George? where he sings the word ?dry? and then ?your eye? twenty times in a twirling melodic arc so beautiful it steals your own breath, and then this occurs: ?And the love that loves the love that loves the love that loves the love that loves to love the love that loves to love the love that loves.?

?Van Morrison is interested, obsessed with how much musical or verbal information he can compress into a small space, and, almost, conversely, how far he can spread one note, word, sound, or picture. To capture one moment, be it a caress or a twitch. He repeats certain phrases to extremes that from anybody else would seem ridiculous, because he's waiting for a vision to unfold, trying as unobtrusively as possible to nudge it along. Sometimes he gives it to you through silence, by choking off the song in midflight: ?It's too late to stop now!??

The Anguish of a Team Divided
Jack Olsen ? Sports Illustrated ? July 1968

How the racism of white players and coaches ruined the NFL?s St. Louis Cardinals.

??A lot of people are prejudiced,? says Willis Crenshaw, ?on and off this ball club. We don't expect them to change how they feel. They're too old to change. But we want them to curtail it when it hurts the ball club. Look at President Johnson. I think he's prejudiced, but he's learned to curtail it. That's all we ask.?

?Says Bobby Williams: ?It's not that we want them to love us, but they can smooth things out a lot. It's not up to the Negroes, it's up to the whites. We're doing the best we can. We ask them not to treat us like little Greek gods, but just like people, flesh and blood people like them.?

?'We'll wait and see,? says the respected Ernie McMillan, who serves on the park board in his own St. Louis suburb. ?But it's important that everybody understands the issues. It isn't only that the St. Louis Cardinals lost a few ball games because of race prejudice. That's not the big loss. The big loss is this: we Negro players are automatic heroes in the Negro community, if only because we've got a certain amount of fame. People look up to us, turn to us for advice. We could be going back to the Negro community and telling them not to burn, not to riot, not to cause trouble. But what kind of hypocrites would we be to go back and tell the Negroes that a better day is coming, when that day isn't even in sight yet on the playing field???

The speech Martin Luther King Jr. delivered the day before he died.

?Like anybody, I would like to live a long life?longevity has its place. But I'm not concerned about that now. I just want to do God's will. (Yeah) And He's allowed me to go up to the mountain. (Go ahead) And I've looked over (Yes sir), and I've seen the Promised Land. (Go ahead) I may not get there with you. (Go ahead) But I want you to know tonight (Yes), that we, as a people, will get to the Promised Land. [Applause] (Go ahead, Go ahead) And so I'm happy tonight; I'm not worried about anything; I'm not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord. [Applause]?

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=03c2ecbfc920b5027a7b64835af618da

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Facebook bests German watchdog in court tiff over real names

Facebook bests German watchdog in real name case

After a German privacy watchdog ordered Facebook to allow the use of fake usernames "immediately," an appeals court has said nein. While the protection body in the tiny state of Schleswig-Holstein argued that Facebook's ban on pseudonyms breached the nation's privacy laws, an administrative court in the region ruled that those laws don't apply to the company, since its European HQ is located in less-stringent Ireland. Facebook argued that requiring the use of real names protects its users, but the regulator said it'll appeal the decision all the same -- thus prolonging the social network's long-running German headache.

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