Science

In the 2008 movie Iron Man, fictional MIT alumnus Tony Stark develops a suit of armor equipped with superhuman strength, flight, and an array of weapons. But it looks like real-life MIT researchers have one-upped Stark, thanks to new radar technology that will allow U.S. troops in combat to see through walls.

In recent tests held at MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory, the radar successfully showed humans moving behind solid concrete, which could give the military a powerful advantage in urban combat situations. In the video below, the Lincoln Lab team shows how the radar can detect images moving behind solid concrete and cinder-block walls.

The researchers’ device combines two rows of antenna — eight receiving elements on top, 13 transmitting ones below — with computing equipment connected to a movable cart. Rather than using visible light to look through walls, which is ineffective, or x-ray, which is too dangerous, the radar system uses microwave technology about as powerful as a traditional cellular phone.

From ExtremeTech:

Basically, it works just like a normal radar system: 44 antennae send out S-band microwaves (2-4GHz, about 10cm peak to peak). Most of these microwaves — 99.4% — bounce off the solid concrete wall. The 0.6% that make it through bounce off any objects on the other side, and then come back through the wall, losing another 99.4% of the waves. By the time the microwaves return to the array, the signal is just 0.0025% of its original strength.

While the system does have limits – it can’t detect beyond walls eight inches thick – the Lincoln Labs team envisions a radar unit mounted on a military vehicle and providing real-time video through walls as far as 60 feet away at a rate of 10.8 frames per second.

This technology has potential beyond military implications – such as police or emergency-response teams – but the team’s current focus is giving the U.S. military an immense advantage in combat situations.

Project Leader Gregory Charvat told Fox News:

“If you’re in a high-risk combat situation, you don’t want one image every 20 minutes, and you don’t want to have to stand right next to a potentially dangerous building.”

“This is meant for the urban war fighter … those situations where it’s very stressful and it’d be great to know what’s behind that wall.”

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Credit: http://www.mit.edu/~kimo/gelsight/

A handheld device created by researchers in MIT’s Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences lets (relatively) unencumbered users achieve resolutions that were previously only possible with large and expensive lab equipment. The device uses GelSight, which is basically a slab of synthetic rubber that is coated on one side with metal-flecked paint. When an object is pressed against the device, the paint-coated side distorts. Cameras mounted on the opposite side photograph the results, and computers analyze the images.

According to research affiliate Micah Kimo Johnson’s website:

Complete information is recorded in a single frame; therefore we can record video of the changing deformation of the skin, and then generate an animation of the changing surface. The GelSight sensor has no moving parts (other than the elastomer slab), uses inexpensive materials, and can be made into a portable device that can be used ‘in the field’ to record surface shape and texture.

Interested? Check out the video below.

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Emile Bruneau, a postdoc in the Saxelab Social Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, has long been interested in group identity. What informs our opinion of others?” he asks. “And how does experience change the way people think about others’ actions and thoughts?” Recently Bruneau’s research has led him to focus on empathy.

“You could think of empathy as stepping into someone else’s shoes and seeing through their perspective,” he says, “but an equally valid definition of empathy might be stepping in their shoes and thinking from your own perspective.”

Learn more about Bruneau’s empathy research and experiments in the video below, which was produced by students in the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences.

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A couple weeks ago, the New York Times and other papers reported that Andrew Weaver, a climate modeler at the University of Victoria, had filed a lawsuit against Tim Ball, a former professor of geography at the University of Winnipeg, who in numerous articles and speeches has resisted linking man-made emissions to global warming. According to Weaver, Ball published one particular article in January that described Weaver as lacking basic knowledge about climate science and wrongly stated that Weaver would not participate in the next Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change due to concerns about his credibility. Weaver is suing Ball for libel.

This isn’t the first time we at Slice have heard about climate scientists suing one another, and we wondered how this news reverberated in the field. We contacted Texas A&M Professor of Meteorology and Texas State Climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon ’84, SM ’87, PhD ’90 to find out.

Slice: How do you think stories about tension between climate scientists and skeptics impact public understanding of climate change?

Nielsen-Gammon: I think such stories do very little directly for public understanding of climate change, but that’s not such a bad thing.  Climate change science is an enormous subject, involving about a dozen scientific disciplines.  It takes your typical very smart person about six years of specialized training in a single subdiscipline before his or her opinion regarding the validity of a new scientific paper in just that particular subdiscipline becomes worth listening to.  The idea that the public will someday be sufficiently educated in the science to critically evaluate competing claims about climate change is completely foolish.

Instead, the public could stand to learn a lot more about science as a social and intellectual institution and scientists as human beings participating in that institution.  Except for those attending rare schools such as MIT, most college graduates will have only the vaguest notion of what their professors do with the rest of their time when they’re not teaching.  Surveys show that people’s trust in scientists remains high, but they probably have very little idea what to trust about science and scientists and what not to trust.

For example, suppose a new study comes out, one of sufficiently general interest that it’s reported in the press.  An appropriate response for a scientist would be to suspend judgment on the study until the opportunity arises to read it carefully, or if the paper is somewhat farther afield the scientist might wait a couple of years to see whether others are able to build on the research or refute it.  Meanwhile, for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is that the person least able to comment objectively on the results (the lead author) receives most of the press attention, peer-reviewed science is normally presented to the public as fact, worthy of belief.  So in this example the public trust in scientists is higher than it ought to be.

If only the public actually understood scientists as fairly smart human beings driven by varying mixtures of ambition, curiosity, orneriness, self-confidence, and altruism.  If only they understood how scientific findings evolve from ideas to possibilities to working hypotheses to what passes for scientific facts, and could identify at what stage in that evolution a particular bit of scientific information is located.  Then they’d be able to begin to accurately evaluate scientific claims, not through an understanding of the science itself, but through an understanding of the context of the scientific claims.

In that regard, stories about scientific or quasi-scientific disputes are valuable because they give people insight into scientists as human beings with real emotions and conflicts.  As they remove scientists from the lofty and imaginary ideal of pure pursuit of knowledge, they bring scientists down to earth where people can start discovering that they can relate to individual scientists and understand their perspective.

Slice: When it comes to climate science, do you feel driven to both pursue research AND participate in national debate about climate change? If so, how do you balance the two?

Nielsen-Gammon: I’m sure I’d be happily squirreled away in my office if not for having become Texas State Climatologist in 2000.  This was before climate science had become so political, and I did not foresee what I was getting into.  Part of the mission of a state climatologist is to help make climate information available and understandable to the public and to policymakers so that they are able to make the best use of it.  So my job inherently involves outreach, helping people understand what climate science does or does not tell us about what’s going to happen in my state six months from now or what might happen to the Earth fifty years from now.

Texas has a traditionally oil-based economy, so there’s naturally a lot of resistance to the idea that fossil fuels are evil.  I think this has led a lot of people to tilt too far in the other direction and accept the argument that massive releases of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere are harmless.  Most people haven’t come to these opinions through extensive evaluations of the science, but rather through sources of opinion that they trust or from inferring the political motivations of those arguing one course of action or another.  To be effective in my own role, I have to stay away from the politics and serve as an apolitical source of scientific information.  I don’t go around arguing for this or that policy, but I do want people to understand the risks.

I think even most climate scientists don’t have a good understanding of climate science.  My own understanding has been helped a great deal by my blogging on weather and climate issues for the Houston Chronicle and by reading various other blogs.  I can better appreciate the wide variety of points of view on climate issues and can better recognize and avoid the framings that will excite half the audience and turn the other half off.

I wasn’t even a climate scientist when I became Texas State Climatologist.  Over the past decade, I’ve gone through a progression of learning about climate science, then dabbling in climate science, then doing more serious climate science, and now I’m finally at the point where I’m receiving significant external funding for climate research.  Because of my position, my climate-related research is of direct relevance to Texas: things like a more accurate understanding of the local climate record or the ability to drill down to a particular farm or neighborhood and determine the drought situation there.  My outreach helps guide my research and my research informs my outreach, so I think a natural balance develops.  There’s so much to do that I’m sort of lucky…I can focus on the questions and issues that are most interesting and rewarding.

Slice: What do you think is the single most effective thing we as a country could do to address the problems posed by man-made climate change?

Nielsen-Gammon: Acknowledging that potential problems exist would be a great start.  There’s a lot of scientific debate about how bad those problems might be, but much of the public has been completely fooled into thinking that the scientific debate is about whether or not there will be any problems at all.  There are some deep moral questions here, such as the tradeoff between environmental preservation and economic growth in our country and elsewhere in the world.  One side likes to pretend that preserving the environment will not hinder economic growth, while the other side likes to pretend that economic growth will not harm the environment.  Neither side is asking the tough questions.

Slice: In terms of climate research at Texas A & M, what projects are you most excited about?

Nielsen-Gammon: Texas A&M is host institution for the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, which sends drill ships throughout the world to recover cores from beneath the ocean and learn about past climates, past ecosystems, and the geologic evolution of the Earth.  Study of past climates is arguably the best way to understand what the climate system is capable of doing and how sensitive the climate system is to small changes in its drivers.  We know that at times the Earth has been quite a bit warmer and at other times quite a bit colder.  Being able to understand and simulate those past climates gives us some hope that we can say something definitive about future climates, since our future climate will be different from the one which we observe presently and we can’t just assume that everything will work the same in the future as it does now.

Dr. Nielsen-Gammon has been a professor of meteorology and a Texas state climatologist since 2000. Much of his current work involves air pollution meteorology. He has employed sophisticated techniques, such as Ensemble Kalman Filter data assimilation, to produce high-resolution simulations of the Houston/Galveston area for the purposes of photochemical modeling and policy development. He has developed conceptual models of ozone formation in the Houston area and is working on the integration of a variety of observational information to determine the spatial extent and magnitude of the Houston urban heat island.

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Credit: Charles River Laboratories

Despite the fact that many of us at Slice were out of the office for parts of last week (holiday obligations, travel, snow emergencies, weekends, etc), the news about MIT didn’t stop. Here are a few MIT-related items that surfaced in the final days of 2010.

Group IQ
Boston.com | December 19, 2010
“A striking study led by an MIT Sloan School of Management professor shows that teams of people display a collective intelligence that has surprisingly little to do with the intelligence of the team’s individual members.”
[Read More]

Nobel Laureate Diamond Fails to Win Senate Approval for Fed Seat
Businessweek | December 22, 2010
“Nobel laureate economist Peter Diamond failed to gain U.S. Senate approval for a Federal Reserve Board seat, signifying that earning his profession’s highest honor wasn’t enough to overcome congressional politics.”
[Read More]

Cambridge City Council questions timing of MIT meeting
Cambridge Chronicle – Wicked Local | December 22, 2010
“Some Cambridge city councilors have objected to the timing of a Planning Board presentation on proposed changes to Kendall Square. On Tuesday, MIT officials presented to the Planning Board their proposals to change parts of Kendall Square.”
[Read More]

Is it raining out? Ask your toothpaste
cnet news | December 22, 2010
“What if your toothpaste could tell you whether you needed to leave the house carrying an umbrella? Or how hot the day was going to be? Odd as it may sound, David Carr of MIT’s Media Lab is working on just such a prototype product, ‘Tastes Like Rain.’”
[Read More]

The evolutionary burst that made Earth oxygen-rich
New Scientist – News | December 23, 2010
“Lawrence David and Eric Alm from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology mapped the evolutionary history of 3983 gene families that occur in a wide range of modern species. They were able to show that 27 per cent of these gene families appeared in a short evolutionary burst which began about 3.3 billion years ago.”
[Read More]

US returns items taken from MIT researcher, ACLU says
The Boston Globe | December 26, 2010
[Read More]

In the laboratory, rats are upstaging mice
The Boston Globe | December 27, 2010
[Read More]

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Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering Jerome Milgram. Credit: Shane Godfrey

One month after the closure of the Macondo well–which, in the course of 50 days, spilled an estimated four million barrels of raw petroleum into the Gulf, MIT convened  a forum to review what happened and to discuss how to move ahead and learn from the experience. The event, which was co-sponsored by the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Center for Global Change Science and the MIT Energy Initiative, was timely and well attended. For those who couldn’t make it, here are a few notable (and potentially controversial…) points.

1. It could take months or even years for all of the oil–specifically the small droplets–to reach the ocean’s surface.

Eric Adams, senior lecturer of civil and environmental engineering, explained that smaller droplets of oil (many of which were intentionally reduced through BP’s use of chemical dispersants) will rise much more slowly than larger droplets of oil that have mixed with natural gas. A droplet that is one-third of a millimeter in diameter might rise to the surface in a few days. But a droplet with a diameter ten times smaller would rise a hundred times more slowly.

2. The government estimates that 3% of the spilled oil was collected from the sea surface, but Jerry Milgram, professor of mechanical engineering, thinks that number is closer to 1.5%.

Milgram partially attributed his lower projection to entrainment failure in the operating booms. Entrainment failure results when the velocity of the oil/water perpendicular to the boom wall becomes too high, causing the oil to flow under the boom wall.

3. Milgram also questions the value of collecting any oil from the sea surface.

“No matter which estimate of collected oil you choose, the beneficial effects were nearly insignificant, except for salaries paid to people doing the work,” said Milgram. “All the rest is PR.”

4. If anything like this ever happens again, people need to move beyond PR and actions driven by emotion.

Alex Slocum, professor of mechanical engineering, called for more openness and peer review in the pre-approval, assessment stage of oil well siting and deployment, and he said that if there’s ever another spill, people need to get in and help–or get out of the way. He said there was too much pandering and theatrics about who was in charge during the BP spill. “There is no time for touchy feely happy cutesy!” he said. “We have to get the job done and put aside any and all personal issues–peoples’ livelihoods and animals’ lives are at stake.”

5. Want to avoid disasters like this in the future? Tell your Congressperson.

An audience member told Slocum that he was frustrated with just about every aspect of the oil spill and cleanup and asked what he, as one concerned person, could do. Slocum said everyone who cares should contact their representative in Congress and tell him/her what they think. Then he turned and looked out at the audience and asked, “Do you know who your Congressperson is??” If you don’t, click here to find out: http://www.house.gov/zip/ZIP2Rep.html

You can watch the entire symposium on TechTV. It is broken into panels one, two, and three. View the first below:

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Newly discovered in Georgia. Photo: Courtesy University of Georgia.

Newly discovered in Georgia. Photo: Courtesy University of Georgia.

Jennifer Frazer SM ’04, a science writer living in Boulder, CO, set out to be a scientist, “but like many science writers, realized in horror that I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life in a windowless lab staring at racks of Eppendorf tubes filled with clear liquids.” You can benefit from her lab exit by reading the newest entry on the Slice of MIT blogroll–the Artful Amoeba, her commentary on the wonders of biological diversity.

A recent post, “How Many Salamanders Can Dance on the Head of a Pin,” describes the 2007 discovery of the tiny patch-nosed salamander (pictured). “What’s a Sea Pig” gives a short description, “a cross between a star-nosed mole, a naked mole rat, and a hallucinogen-induced, Cthulu-themed nightmare” then links the reader on to the real definition.

Read Frazer’s profile in Technology Review for her scientific journey, but, in brief, she earned degrees from Cornell in biology and plant pathology, then a master’s in science writing from MIT. She worked on a small newspaper in Wyoming, winning a 2007 AAAS Science Journalism Award for uncovering a poisonous lichen as the cause of mysterious elk deaths. You can hear her four-minute acceptance speech. These days she’s living in Boulder, where she works as a science writer for a large science nonprofit—and roams the countryside discovering amazing bits of life on Earth.

Want to add your commentary on personal or professional matters to the Slice of MIT blogroll? Just email your name, blog name, URL, and short description to sliceofmit@mit.edu.

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Richard Feynman

Richard Feynman

Physicist Richard Feynman ’39 was a Nobel laureate and a witty lecturer, which is saying a lot for a guy whose topics ranged from the superfluidity of supercooled liquid helium to particle physics. Undeniably brilliant, he was credited with pioneering the field of quantum computing and introducing the concept of nanotechnology. Though he died in 1988, his words have a new life.

Some of his lively lectures and chunks of his biography are available online in Scribd, which describes itself as the “largest social publishing company in the world—the website where more than 60 million people each month discover and share original writings and documents.” After a free sign in, you can join them.

The Meaning of It All,” three lectures given in 1963, comment on the impact of science outside of science. He teases apart issues that arise from science defined in three ways: as a method for finding things out, the resulting body of knowledge, and what is done with that knowledge.

In “There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom,” Feynman’s 1959 talk to the American Physical Society, he introduces the concept of nanotechnology.

What do you care what other people will think?” is an as told-to-chronicle of Feynman’s work on the presidential commission investigation into the 1986 Challenger disaster. This engaging personal narrative digs into the technical and management problems that triggered the tragedy.

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New ideas about home-based testing.

New ideas about home-based testing.

A bedroom closet is an unusual genetic research lab, but Katherine Aull ’08 is not your typical year-out-of-college grad. An applied biological sciences major, Aull initially worked as a research associate at the now-defunct Codon Devices, a Cambridge-based maker of synthetic DNA fragments. Now she has brought her work home literally–she’s examining her own genes in search of a genetic mutation that can be lethal.

Her investigations began after her father was diagnosed with hemochromatosis, a build-up of iron in the blood. He was successfully treated by regularly drawing blood. Aull wanted to know her own probability of the same illness so she’s assembled equipment from ordinary kitchen tools to a vintage thermal cycler, used to alternately heat and cool snippets of DNA. A cool short video embedded in the Boston Globe article shows how she performs the experiment.

Aull’s initial test shows that she does carry the problematic genes—but she will retest. Her dad, engineer Ken Aull, says she’s inherited at least one other thing from him: “She’s just a native engineer–taking science and striving to make it practical.”

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MIT Visiting Professor Dan Ariely's Door Game demonstrates people's tendency to not let go of options.

MIT Visiting Professor Dan Ariely's Door Game demonstrates people's tendency to not let go of options.

The book Predictably Irrational (HarperCollins, 2008) by MIT Visiting Professor of Behavioral Economics Dan Ariely explores how people repeatedly and predictably make the wrong decisions in many aspects of their lives. For example, Ariely’s research shows that people have difficulty dropping options, even if they clearly waste time or money. Don’t believe it? Play the doors game and find out how you fare.

Ariely’s book answers questions such as why people excitedly buy things they don’t really need, why self promises to diet and exercise are so often in vain, and why a headache may vanish after taking a 50-cent but not a five-cent aspirin. His Web site offers numerous games, videos, and demonstrations that explore and expose everyday, irrational behaviors. Check them out and see how irrational you are.

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