www.Top100Science.com - TOP 100 SCIENCE SITES
TOP 100 SCIENCE SITES
 Main  |  Add a Site  |  FREE Content for Your Web-site  |  Bookmark this site  |  Webmaster 
Updated Fri, March 23, 2012.
651.www.hhmi.org44500
652.www.unknowncountry.com44300
653.www.debunker.com44300
654.www.ncsm.city.nagoya.jp44300
655.www.infn.it44200
656.www.pps.jussieu.fr44100
657.www.servicedoc.info43900
658.www.ecoline.ru43900
659.www.galileonet.it43800
660.www.agropolis.fr43700
661.prl.aps.org43600
662.www.cite-sciences.fr43500
663.www.llnl.gov43300
664.www.hochschulkompass.de43200
665.www.ill.fr43200
666.tel.ccsd.cnrs.fr43100
667.www.archaeologie-online.de42500
668.www.cgiar.org42400
669.www.sino.uni-heidelberg.de42400
670.www.cbs.dk42300
671.www.biodiv.org42100
672.www.technovelgy.com42100
673.www.afssa.fr41600
674.www.curie.fr41300
675.www.cimne.upc.es41300
676.quake.wr.usgs.gov41200
677.www.iva.se41200
678.www.dmi.dk41200
679.www.worldweather.org41100
680.www.enea.it40700
681.www.bio.com40700
682.www.ba.infn.it40600
683.www.goes.noaa.gov40500
684.www.sciencepresse.qc.ca40500
685.www.humi.keio.ac.jp40500
686.www.dreammoods.com40100
687.www.gaw.ru40100
688.www.disclaimer.de39900
689.www.magnet.fsu.edu39800
690.www.jsbi.org39800
691.www.astronews.com39700
692.www.reverso.net39600
693.www.pasteur.fr39600
694.www.brgm.fr39600
695.www.sfi.dk39600
696.www.transnationale.org39500
697.www.inm.es39400
698.www.iu.hio.no39400
699.www.nioo.knaw.nl39400
700.www.beyonddiscovery.org39300
Pages:  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12 
 13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23 
 24  25  26  27 



Subscribe to RSS feed Subscribe to Feed Burner feed Add to Del.icio.us Add to Yahoo Add to Google Add to Reddit Add to Blink Add to Meneame Add to Fark Add to Newsvine

666. tel.ccsd.cnrs.fr

Rating: 43100 points*
*amount mentions of word 'tel.ccsd.cnrs.fr' on the other websites

tel.ccsd.cnrs.fr

TEL :: ACCUEIL

Google

© 2005-2012 www.Top100Science.com
Get ready for a world of nanotechnology
If the biggest technological leap since the Industrial Revolution is to benefit us all, governments and educators have work to doThe prefix "nano" is gaining an increasing presence in public consciousness, from invocations of the nanometre (nm) as a unit of measurement for our burgeoning silicon technology's tininess (as in Intel's latest 32nm processors), to the hubristically named iPod nano, which is a bit smaller than the others. The prominence of this word in our culture is set to rocket over the coming decades as more tightly defined "nanotechnology" becomes available – for example, Nokia is hoping to release a nanotech phone that it calls the Morph in 2015.A commonly accepted definition of nanotechnology is that it deals with devices smaller than 100nm in size. A nanometre is one billionth of a metre. A single atom is between a tenth to half a nanometre across; a million or more of them stacked on top of one another would equal the thickness of a piece of paper. Nanotech machines will use individual atoms and molecules as mechanical moving parts, and will enable us to take apart and rebuild just about anything atom by atom.If this sounds like science fiction, consider that you're carrying trillions of proofs of concept around inside you that could only be viewed with an electron microscope; every time your DNA is transcribed into RNA, or your muscle cells use fuel from food for movement, or your immune system fights off an infection, the work is done by nanomachines – devices built out of atoms and molecules which do mechanical work.In his book, Engines of Creation, K Eric Drexler reminded readers that every manmade and natural object around us is an arrangement of (mostly very common) atoms and molecules. The ability to arrange those molecules more regularly will allow us to build materials many times stronger and lighter than those used in engineering today. This could bring a space elevator within reach, allowing us to explore the solar system and exploit the resources of the planets and asteroids cheaply. In the body, nanomachines could fight disease, or even aging, one atom at a time, restoring them to the configurations characteristic of healthy tissue.An advanced nanotechnology would be capable of repairing the damage we have done to our environment, capturing carbon out of the air and salting it away under the earth, or using it to build the light, strong, diamond-like materials the nanotech-enabled human-scale technology will depend on. Ultimately, the most basic and useful elements we will need (carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, etc) can be harvested out of the air and dirt, and assembled into useful configurations with barely an hour of work. Nanotechnology has the potential to build a post-scarcity material economy – with the same implications we are so awkwardly working through in the post-scarcity information economy.Drexler didn't shy away from confronting the negative possibilities of uncontrolled nanotech development in his book, and he and other scientists, such as those at the Centre for Responsible Nanotechnology, attempt to raise public awareness of the coming developments, which will inevitably grow out of research into molecular biology and computing (specifically, artificial intelligence and computer-aided design).There are many terrifying possibilities for nanotechnology; military nanomachines could infiltrate human bodies and systematically tear them apart using the same principles medical nanomachines will use to repair them. An uncontrolled nanomachine designed to replicate itself could lead to the "grey goo" scenario that once panicked Prince Charles. Monopolistic practices on the part of the corporation or government that first produces a workable nanotechnology could hoard its benefits for one segment of the population, denying the rest of the world the massively increased prosperity it offers.The solutions will have to complement one another if this, the biggest technological leap forward since the Industrial Revolution, is to benefit everyone. The most important is collaboration and diplomacy; the democracies that lead the world in scientific research need to collaborate in development and come to agreements that will share benefits and severely restrict weaponisation. Nanotech treaties will have far greater import for the survival of mankind, and of Earth as an ecosystem, than any nuclear treaty. Even "rogue" states need to be included in these efforts, simply because the new technology will be so desirable that if they are not included, they will push forward with their own, more dangerous and less controlled research.The other aspect of preparation is education. The electorate need to be adequately informed to understand the debate that will take place and to put pressure on their leaders to choose the right paths. This means that formal science education in schools needs continued support from the ministers setting curriculums, and higher education and research needs support and funding so that we continue to have scientists and engineers capable of contributing to research and to public debate.We need a forum for discussing the implications and direction of technological change in a way that is open and comprehensible to the public, and whose conclusions and advice ministers take seriously and do not dismiss on ideological grounds. Drexler proposes that such a forum needs the credibility of due process present in a court of law, and the scientific reliability that stems from peer review. Most of all, we need politicians with the courage to resist the temptation to short-termism that comes with limited terms in office, who realise that the debates arising in the coming years will see them legislating the shape of the future.NanotechnologyScience policyThomas Barfieldguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
From the Roof, to a Battery, to the Grid
Storing energy for use when a cloudy day results in a drop of solar power production.
feeds.nytimes.com
Collecting Monkey Dung, in Context
In order to study the reproductive strategies, hormones and genetics of gelada monkeys, scientists in Ethiopia must first gather fecal samples.
feeds.nytimes.com
Wordplay: NumberPlay: The Ultimate Answer
How do you develop your intuition? One way may be to solve multiple versions of the same problem.
feeds.nytimes.com
Pamela Anderson poster for Peta urges vegetarianism, provocative style
Animal rights group launches campaign with former Baywatch star's bikini-clad body 'quartered by butcher'Is it art? Is it meat? Is it sexist? Whatever it is, the latest advertisement from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is eye-catching.The poster girl, the former Baywatch star and committed vegetarian Pamela Anderson, insisted that her decision to wear a bikini and portray her body as collection of cuts of meat, had not been a tough one."I decided to do this provocative style because there is so much competition for people's attention today, so Peta and I wanted to make sure the message couldn't be ignored," she said.Anderson shrugged off the suggestion that some people might gaze at the poster for carnal gratification rather than vegetarian epiphany."The butcher diagram is the perfect thing to parody, because it allows you to use your own body as a protest tool," she explained.Anderson will launch Peta's fresh effort to convert the UK to the benefits of vegetarianism, at an event outside the London Transport Museum, in Covent Garden, at 2pm on Sunday.Peta, in its work for animal rights over 30 years, has drawn attention to procedures in farming, laboratories, circuses and the clothing trade, and to wildlife issues, and cruelty in general. Some of its publicity campaigns have attracted controversy. A poster featuring the face of one of those convicted of killing "Baby  P" and linking cruelty to animals to cruelty to humans, was banned by the Advertising Standards Authority.Dan Mathews, Peta's senior vice president, said he had high hopes for the new campaign. "As Peta's 'weapon of mass distraction', Pamela has lured legions of pop culture junkies to Peta's website and sparked interest in animal issues in a very unique way," he said.Animal welfareProtestAnimal researchVegetarianismSam Jonesguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk