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19 Jun 15:56

Students advancing a future with carbon-free fusion

by Peter Dunn | Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering

This summer, nuclear fusion researchers at MIT and Germany’s Max Planck Institute will learn more about what’s going on inside their reactors, thanks in part to the accomplishments of two first-year Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering (NSE) doctoral students.

Adam Kuang and Alex Creely work in separate groups at MIT’s interdisciplinary Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC), helping advance the worldwide quest to harness fusion’s enormous potential as a low-cost, carbon-free energy source fueled by safe and readily available materials.

Their contributions will help address two of fusion’s grand challenges: plasma turbulence, which affects the ability to create a self-sustaining “burning plasma” that produces more energy than it consumes, and the need to confine the plasma while safely extracting heat for electricity generation.

Both young men have chosen to work in fusion research because it combines fascinatingly knotty technical challenges with the pursuit of an historic technological breakthrough. Creely, who earned his BS in mechanical engineering at Princeton University, explains, “Fusion is the most promising solution to the world’s challenges in energy and climate change. And working on fusion is the most worthwhile thing I can do to make a difference.”

Or, as Kuang puts it, “we’re here to chase a dream — very few people today have a chance to do that.”

Kuang became intrigued by fusion’s promise while earning undergraduate degrees in mechanical engineering and physics at Canterbury University in New Zealand. He chose MIT NSE for his graduate work because of its close engineering-physics ties, and he now works on plasma boundaries and materials interactions with Senior Research Scientist Brian LaBombard.

“One of the big problems is how to keep something hot, a 100-million-degree plasma, away from things that don’t like to be hot, like reactor walls,” explains Kuang. “Ideally there would be a perfect step function at the plasma’s edge, but there’s always leakage, so you have to find ways to manage it and keep it from destroying the machine.”

Kuang and research supervisor Dan Brunner spent the past academic year upgrading a multifunction metrology device originally designed by LaBombard for the PSFC’s Alcator C-Mod fusion experiment. They replaced its hydraulic mechanism with a linear electric drive that will allow faster, more precise, and more accurate temperature measurements, with reduced risk of probe damage. “It will tell us a lot more about what’s happening at the edge of the plasma,” he says.

Creely works in a group under NSE Associate Professor Anne White on one of the PSFC’s growing number of international collaborations, focused on correlation electron cyclotron emission (CECE) measurements of electron temperature through radiation. The diagnostic tool he built with fellow grad student Choongki Sung will be installed at the Max Planck Institute’s ASDEX-Upgrade fusion facility near Munich, where Creely and White will spend several weeks integrating it with density diagnostics. 

“Being able to measure temperature turbulence and density turbulence with the same system, which we haven’t been able to do before, is very relevant. It should help build understanding of how they’re coupled,” notes Creely.

That understanding may help address the substantial gap between theoretical predictions of plasma behavior and observed results — a process that appeals to Creely’s enjoyment of experimental work, which was a prime motivator for him to join PSFC. He’s also spent time performing advanced analysis on existing turbulence data, extracting new insights into thermal diffusivity that he presented at this spring’s international Transport Task Force workshop.

Both students intend to work in the fusion community after earning their doctorates. “Exactly what that will mean is anybody’s guess,” says Kuang. “But just providing some contribution to making fusion work, even if it takes until I’m 90, would feel like a justification — that’s what drives everyone.”

Meanwhile, both are reveling in the collegial culture of MIT and the PSFC. “It’s cooperative — people are very open to helping, suggesting different tools you can use,” says Creely. He praises White’s accessibility and research acumen, as well as her interest in her students’ advancement, noting, “She really helped me get my materials together for my workshop presentation.”

Kuang calls it “invigorating — the weekly science meetings are a very fun environment, and it feels like you can open any door and people will talk to you. I’ll stop in to ask [LaBombard] a quick question and walk out two hours later with material to keep me busy for a week.”

18 Jun 19:16

Photo



18 Jun 19:15

petermorwood: hcolleen: obsessivegirlfan: mcjawsh: urbanpitch...





















petermorwood:

hcolleen:

obsessivegirlfan:

mcjawsh:

urbanpitch:

cigarpervdad:

boredpanda:

Fonts That Designers Love To Hate

LOL

Bless this post

obsessivegirlfan

Oh, but it’s SO true.

How long before any font that comes pre-installed with an OS or word processing program is unacceptable for anything?

Here’s an interesting brief article about authors discussing their favourite fonts. In a couple of cases it reveals more about the author than I think they meant to give away.

18 Jun 19:08

4K Timelapse of the Calbuco Volcano Eruption

by Christopher Jobson

Last April, the Calbuco Volcano in southern Chile erupted for the first time in 40 years. Martin Heck from Timestorm Films was on site to film the entire thing and just released this phenomenal 4K timelapse. What a magnificent and terrifying view. (via Vimeo Staff Picks)

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18 Jun 16:18

Cracked Log Lamps by Duncan Meerding

by Christopher Jobson

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Tasmania-based furniture and lighting designer Duncan Meerding highlights the naturally occuring cracks in sustainably sourced logs by inserting warm yellow LEDs that illuminate each piece of wood from within. Meerding, who is legally blind, is fascinated by unusual light applications which he refers to as his “alternative sensory world.” Each cracked log lamp can be used as a stool, table, or simply a light accessory, and the pieces are available through a number of shops throughout Australia. Photos by Jan Dallas. (via My Modern Met, Inhabitat)

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18 Jun 16:17

4gifs: Soon. [video]



4gifs:

Soon. [video]

18 Jun 16:17

The Stunning Diversity and Detail of Vibrantly Colored New England Caterpillars

by Kate Sierzputowski

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“Gravity” Hyalophora cecropia on buttonbush

Samuel Jaffe is getting close and personal with subject matter found right in our backyards— the furry, florescent, grubby little creatures we often find inching along our trees and sidewalks. Jaffe is fascinated by local environments, and aims to share the information he has collected about these backyard ecosystems so we can become more in tune with what’s right below our feet or hiding in the grass.

Jaffe has cataloged dozens of caterpillars in different settings, each with a blackened background to highlight their unique textures, colors, and patterns. Caterpillars dangle off branches, clutch onto leaves, and even play on grapevines within his photographs. Catching his subjects at specific moments, Jaffe gives each a little pop of personality, showcasing their playfulness when left alone in nature.

Jaffe grew up in Eastern Massachusetts, inserting himself within his surroundings, wading through ponds, and exploring the wildlife around him. Over the last five years he began to raise and photograph many of the more interesting native caterpillars. The project has grown to include exhibits, shows, talks, and finally in 2013 the Caterpillar Lab, a passionate program showcasing the diversity of northeastern caterpillars through educational programs, the arts, and sciences. Jaffe’s work is currently on display at the Franklin Park Conservatory in Columbus, Ohio in the exhibit “Life on the Leaf Edge.” Prints are available in his online shop. (via The Life Neurotic with Steve’s Issues)

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“Red Boots” Apatelodes torrifacta on cherry / “Three Swallowtails” Papilio glaucus, polyxenes, and troilus

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“Turbulent Abstract” – Phosphila turbulenta on smilax

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“Anatomy of a Caterpillar” – Nadata gibbosa on oak

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“Orange Red Green” Eumorpha achemon on grapevine / “Wild Lettuce” Autographa precationis on wild lettuce

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“Life on the Leaf Edge” – Nerice bidentata on elm leaf

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“Life on the Leaf Edge” Cerura scitiscripta on willow leaf

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“The Fawn” Sphinx kalmiae on ash

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“Early Kingdom” Lytrosis unitaria

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“Emerald Deception” Chlorochlamys chloroleucaria on goldenrod / “Cut Flowers” Eupithecia Pug on blue vervain

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“Father of Monsters” Eumorpha typhon on arizona grape

17 Jun 15:31

Kinetic Hair Dryer Installations by Antoine Terrieux

by Christopher Jobson

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As part of an exhibition last December at the Maison Des Jonglages (House of Juggling) in La Courneuve, France, magician and juggler Antoine Terrieux created this series of kinetic artworks using different arrangements of hair dryers. The dryers were positioned in such a way as to create an updraft for a paper airplane to fly around, a spinning vortex of water vapor, and other unexpected configurations. Terrieux also incorporates hair dryers into his performances. (via La boite verte)

17 Jun 15:30

Photo



17 Jun 15:30

tastefullyoffensive: A Florida man snapped this photo of a...

Tadeu

Guardians of the Galaxy





tastefullyoffensive:

A Florida man snapped this photo of a raccoon riding an alligator at the Ocala National Forest (full story). Photo by Richard Jones via WFTV.

17 Jun 15:30

The Picard Maneuver

by Doug

The Picard Maneuver

Happy Captain Picard Day!!!

17 Jun 15:30

jedavu: Unbelievable Places That Look Like They’re From Another...


Tianzi Mountains, China


Fly Geyser, Nevada, Usa


Dragonblood Trees, Socotra, Yemen


Pamukkale, Turkey


Glowworms Cave, New Zealand


Abraham Lake, Canada


Monte Roraima - Venezuela


Dallol Volcano, Ethiopia


Son Doong Cave, Vietnam


Giants Causeway In Northern Ireland

jedavu:

Unbelievable Places That Look Like They’re From Another Planet

Unbelievable Places That Look Like They’re From The Mushroom Kingdom

17 Jun 15:29

Planning

[10 years later] Man, why are people so comfortable handing Google and Facebook control over our nuclear weapons?
17 Jun 15:27

Lyrics

To me, trying to understand song lyrics feels like when I see text in a dream but it𝔰 hอᵣd t₀ ᵣeₐd aกd 𝒾 canٖt fཱྀcu༧༦࿐༄
16 Jun 12:49

The First Religion Devoted to Evolution

by Jon W. Phillips

The First Religion Devoted to Evolution

Julian Huxley (1887-1975) is remembered as one of the most eminent biologists and science writers of the 20th century. He's less well known for what he considered to be his true life's work: the establishment of a new religion he called "evolutionary humanism."

Read more...








16 Jun 12:46

‘Rock The Kasbah’ Trailer: Barry Levinson and Bill Murray Mix Music and Politics

by Germain Lussier

Rock the Kasbah trailer

In Rock the Kasbah, the talent on camera, behind the camera and in the story is all off the charts. Directed by Barry Levinson (Diner, Rain Man) and written by Mitch Glazer (Scrooged), it stars Bill Murray, Kate Hudson, Zooey Deschanel, Danny McBride, Scott Caan and Bruce Willis. Murray is a rock manager who gets stranded in Afganastan and meets an incredible singer who he decides to help get her voice out into the world. It’ll be released October 23 and the first trailer is now out. Watch the Rock the Kasbah trailer.

The trailer is in HD over on Apple. Here’s an embed.

Rock the Kasbah trailer

And here’s the poster too:

rock-the-kasbah-poster

With that cast and that creative team, I’d love to be more excited about this movie. Based on the trailer though, it seems like a weird tonal film, with political angles, entertainment angles, humor, drama and everything rolled into one. Those movies are usually the best kind of movies or the most disappointing, simply because so many things work. Levinson has obviously made this balancing act work before, in films like Wag the Dog or Good Morning, Vietnam. Maybe it works out again. He’s also swung and missed in the past. We’ll find out more on October 23.

Here’s the official description of Rock the Kasbah.

“Rock The Kasbah” is the story of Richie Lanz, a rock manager with a golden ear and a taste for talent, who has seen better times. When he takes his last remaining client on a USO tour of Afghanistan, she gets cold feet and leaves him penniless and without his passport in Kabul. While trying to find his way home, Richie befriends a band of misfits and discovers a young girl with an extraordinary voice.

Against all odds, Richie will take his last shot at creating an unlikely superstar.

The post ‘Rock The Kasbah’ Trailer: Barry Levinson and Bill Murray Mix Music and Politics appeared first on /Film.

16 Jun 12:46

Coming Distractions: See 2015 Bill Murray channel ’80s Bill Murray in the Rock The Kasbah trailer

by William Hughes

Younger readers who grew up with him as a kind of sad-eyed oracle may not know this, but Bill Murray once had something of a reputation as a comic actor. He’d sing, he’d yell, he’d move his face into expressions outside of “twinkle-eyed wisdom” and “wistful, sardonic loss.” It was a strange period in the dramatic actor’s life, and one that he appears to be revisiting in the trailer for Rock The Kasbah, his new movie with Wag The Dog director Barry Levinson.

Murray plays rock manager Richie Lanz, who ends up lost and penniless in Afghanistan after his last remaining client (Zooey Deschanel) ditches him during a tour. Forced to rely on his wits, he makes his way across the country while cracking wise, making friends, and singing an impromptu cover of “Smoke On The Water,” just like good old Nick the Lounge Singer would ...

16 Jun 12:46

Watch Bill Murray 'Rock the Kasbah' in his latest movie trailer

by feliks.garcia@gmail.com (Feliks Garcia)
'Welcome to the jungle!'
11 Jun 17:18

by Pie Comic

11 Jun 16:29

The Death Of The Von Neumann Architecture

11 Jun 16:29

Kaspersky Finds New Nation-State Attack—In Its Own Network

by Kim Zetter
Kaspersky Finds New Nation-State Attack—In Its Own Network

Kaspersky says the attackers became entrenched in its networks some time last year.

The post Kaspersky Finds New Nation-State Attack—In Its Own Network appeared first on WIRED.

11 Jun 16:27

Why Israel spied on Iran talks 'is not the question we should be asking'

by Natasha Bertrand

kaspersky

The global cybersecurity firm that uncovered sophisticated spyware in the computers of European hotels hosting the Iran nuclear talks has reported on the powerful Israeli-linked virus before.  

Interestingly, however, Kaspersky Lab — a Moscow-based firm — has only ever traced spyware with similar espionage capabilities as the "Duqu" code detailed to The Wall Street Journal.

"The use of Duqu by Israel against Iran is not the question we should be asking," Jeff Bardin, chief intelligence officer of Treadstone 71, told Business Insider. "The question should be why Kaspersky only finds code of this type by nation-states it does not consider friendly to Russia or those aligned to the West."

Kaspersky Lab is a leading cybersecurity firm that helps millions of people worldwide, including Americans, protect their data from cyber criminals. While the firm is often aggressive in its pursuit of foreign hackers, however, it tends to turn a blind eye to hackers operating inside Russia.

"Is it because there is no code of this type [Duqu] coming out of Russia?" Bardin asks, "Or is it because disclosing code of this type that is Russian made and in use against target nation-states would place Eugene Kaspersky at risk of countering his country's cyber espionage efforts and, at risk of incurring the wrath of Putin?"

The firm's billionaire founder and CEO, Eugene Kaspersky, used to work for the KGB and reportedly maintains relationships with former and current Russian intelligence officials. 

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (R) and Yevgeny Kaspersky

"Kaspersky releases this information as a political tool," Bardin said. "The absence of any photos of Kaspersky with Putin on the internet is itself evidence of direct alignment. Can you be a billionaire in Russia today without the direct scrutiny of Vladimir Putin?"

A Bloomberg analysis of Kapersky's work generally supports Bardin's suspicions: "While Kaspersky Lab has published a series of reports that examined alleged electronic espionage by the U.S., Israel, and the U.K., the company hasn’t pursued alleged Russian operations with the same vigor."

If anything, it appears that Kaspersky is at least partially aligned ideologically with the Kremlin — he has claimed in the past that some social networks have "too much freedom," hinting that government regulation might not be such a bad thing.

"Freedom is good," Wired quotes him as saying, referring to sites like Facebook. "But the bad guys — they can abuse this freedom to manipulate public opinion."

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why Putin is the most powerful man in the world

11 Jun 13:24

178. ATENA FARGHADANI: The right to draw

by Gav

178_atena

Atena Farghadani is a 28-year-old Iranian artist. She was recently sentenced to 12 years and 9 months in prison for drawing a cartoon.

This cartoon, that she posted on her Facebook page last year, depicts members of the Iranian parliament as animals. It was drawn in protest of new legislature in Iran that will restrict access to contraception and criminalise voluntary sterilisation. Atena’s charges include ‘spreading propaganda against the system’ and ‘insulting members of parliament through paintings’.

Last August, 12 members of the elite Revolutionary Guard came to Atena’s house, blindfolded her and took her to the infamous Evin Prison in Tehran. According to Amnesty International:

“While in prison last year, Atena flattened paper cups to use them as a surface to paint on. When the prison guards realised what she had been doing, they confiscated her paintings and stopped giving her paper cups. When Atena found some cups in the bathroom, she smuggled them into her cell. Soon after, she was beaten by prison guards, when she refused to strip naked for a full body search. Atena says that they knew about her taking the cups because they had installed cameras in the toilet and bathroom facilities – cameras detainees had been told were not operating.”

She was released in November and gave media interviews and posted a video on YouTube detailing her beatings, constant interrogations and humiliating body searches. She was then rearrested possibly in retaliation for speaking out and has been imprisoned ever since. In January, Atena went on a hunger strike to protest the horrible prison conditions. Her health suffered dramatically, and after losing consciousness and suffering a heart attack in February, she was forced to eat again.

The quote used in the comic is taken from the speech Atena gave at her trial. It has been translated into English by the Free Atena Facebook page. You can read the whole thing here.

Time is now against her, she has just two weeks to lodge an appeal. Michael Cavna, comic journalist for The Washington Post, has launched a campaign appealing to artists to help bring awareness to Atena’s case by creating their own artwork in support of Atena and using the hashtag #Draw4Atena. Can a bunch of artists and a hashtag really make a difference and put pressure on the Iranian Government to release Atena? Probably not. But just remember that Atena is currently in prison enduring horrible conditions, and if her appeal isn’t successful, she will be there for another twelve years. FOR DRAWING A CARTOON AND POSTING IT ON FACEBOOK. Don’t we owe it to her to at least try?

RELATED COMICS: Malala Yousafzai. Sophie Scholl. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

07 Jun 14:28

Designer Creates A Typeface To Simulate His Experience With Dyslexia

by Lauren Davis

Reading with dyslexia can be a frustrating experience, but explaining that experience can also be incredibly frustrating. So graphic designer Dan Britton created a typeface designed to replicate his emotional experience as a person with dyslexia reading text.

Read more...








06 Jun 18:19

Diamond Nights: Africa’s Oldest Trees Photographed Against Starry Night Skies by Beth Moon

by Christopher Jobson

DNVela

In this new series of striking images, San Francisco-based photographer Beth Moon (previously) captures some of the world’s oldest living trees against shimmering night skies in remote areas of Botswana, Namibia and South Africa. Titled Diamond Nights, the new photos were inspired in part by Moon’s interest in several new studies suggesting a relationship between starlight and cosmic radation on tree growth. Diamond Nights is a progression of Moon’s 15-year journey photographing ancient trees around the world. Moon shares about her process:

The majority of these photographs were created during moonless nights, shot with a wide angle lens and ISO of 3200 – 6400. The Milky Way, a ribbon of stars that stretches from horizon to horizon burns brightly in some of the images. Exposures up to 30 seconds allowed enough light to enter the lens without noticeable star movement. Each location required a lot of experimenting. and different lighting techniques. Sometimes a short burst of diffused light from a flashlight was sufficient, or bounced light from multiple flashlights was used for a softer more natural glow.

You can see many more shots in this online gallery, and read more about Moon’s work on the series on Feature Shoot.

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DNAndromeda

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05 Jun 16:50

Bruce Shapiro’s Mesmerizing Kinetic Sand Drawing Machines

by Christopher Jobson

In a 21st century take on the traditional Zen sand garden, artist Bruce Shapiro invented the Sisyphus Machine, an elaborate kinetic drawing machine that uses magnets to drag rolling steel marbles through a thin layer of sand to create complicated mandala-like patterns. Shapiro, who was once a practicing physician, has spent the better part of 25 years experimenting with computerized motion control and many of his Sisyphus Machines have been installed in locations around the world including a large device in Switzerland back in 2003 and at Questacon in Canberra, Australia in 2013. It appears the artist is currently working on a tabletop consumer version and if you’re interested you can sign up for his mailing list here. (via Core77, Fast Company)

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05 Jun 16:20

Photo

by villeashell


05 Jun 16:16

Reading your own code

by sharhalakis

by eric

05 Jun 16:16

bookoisseur: