Subscribe to GIZMORAMA
 
Subscribe to DEAL OF THE DAY
 


fiogf49gjkf0d
Gizmorama - January 21, 2015

Good Morning,


A Harvard-led research team has determined that sea level is rising quicker than estimated. If this continues we are going to be in deep.

Learn about this and more interesting stories from the scientific community in today's issue.

Until Next Time,
Erin


P.S. Did you miss an issue? You can read every issue from the Gophercentral library of newsletters on our exhaustive archives page. Thousands of issues, all of your favorite publications in chronological order. You can read AND comment. Just click GopherArchives

***

*-- Study shows sea level rising faster than estimated --*

BOSTON (UPI) - Over the last three decades, sea level rise has been accelerating more than previously estimated, according to new analysis by a Harvard-led research team. The study also found that sea level rise had been overestimated in the decades prior to 1990.

Before the 1990s and the maturation of satellite, GPS and other geolocation technologies, measuring changes in global sea levels was a task that relied mostly on tidal gauges scattered along the coastline.

But the information these tidal gauges returned was spotty, undermined by time gaps. Their locations were not evenly spread across the globe, leading to additional inaccuracies when averaging regional changes. Local influences like dikes, locks and dams had varying effects on the measurements.

As part of the new study, climate and data scientists reanalyzed tide gauge data using algorithms that accounted for local inaccuracies and other potential inconsistencies. They found that sea level rise from 1900 to 1990 was exaggerated by as much as 30 percent.

However, the same analysis -- bolstered, also, by satellite data -- suggests sea level rise has been underestimated since 1990.

"What this paper shows is that sea-level acceleration over the past century has been greater than had been estimated by others," explained researcher Eric Morrow, who recently earned a doctorate at Harvard's Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences. "It's a larger problem than we initially thought."

The new research was published this week in the journal Nature.


*-- Scientists build rice grain-sized laser powered by quantum dots --*

PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI) - Scientists at Princeton have built a tiny microwave laser (a "maser") the size of a rice grain. The laser is made of artificial atoms called quantum dots -- miniature bits of semiconductor material.

"It is basically as small as you can go with these single-electron devices," lead study author Jason Petta, an associate professor of physics at Princeton, said in a recent press release.

The primary goal of the engineering project was to see if they could coax two quantum dots into talking to each other. They succeeded, using light photons as their language.

The so-called quantum dots are minuscule bits of semiconductor material carved out of already infinitesimally thin nanowire. The dots are so small only a single electron can cross the dot at one time. To build their talking maser, researchers placed two quantum dots just six millimeters apart.

When the device is switched on, a single-file line of electrons is squeezed through the double quantum dot. The photons emitted in the microwave region of the spectrum cross from one dot to the other due to a difference in energy level between the two dots. After crossing the double quantum dot, they bounce off mirrors and are concentrated into beam of microwave light -- viola, a laser (or maser).

One difference between the double dot maser and traditional semiconductor lasers, Petta says, is that energy levels inside their mini laser can be adjusted to produce photons at different frequencies. The larger the discrepancy in energy levels between the two dots, the higher frequency light the double dot maser produces.

"In this paper the researchers dig down deep into the fundamental interaction between light and the moving electron," explained Claire Gmachl, Princeton's Eugene Higgins Professor of Electrical Engineering. Gmachl, who wasn't involved in the study, said the findings are important for the continued development of quantum computers.

"The double quantum dot allows them full control over the motion of even a single electron, and in return they show how the coherent microwave field is created and amplified," she added. "Learning to control these fundamental light-matter interaction processes will help in the future development of light sources."

The new study was published this week in the journal Science.

Missed an Issue? Visit the Gizmorama Archives