Xenophilia (True Strange Stuff)

Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist

Archive for June, 2006

All-Seeing Blimp on the Rise

Posted by Xeno on June 30, 2006

Ah, that probably explains the Phoenix UFO a few years ago.

The problem with the American military today is that it doesn’t have a giant, robotic airship, two-and-a-half times the size of the Goodyear blimp, that can watch over an entire city at once. Thankfully, the Pentagon’s isis_overlook.JPGway-out research arm, Darpa, is trying to fix that.The program is called ISIS, short for “Integrated Sensor Is Structure.” And the idea is to park an unmanned airship over a hot zone for a year, at nearly 65,000 feet in the sky. Up there, ISIS can spot enemy soldiers up to 180 miles away, target tanks and trucks, and watch out for incoming cruise missiles 350 miles in the distance — a “detailed, real-time picture of all movement on or above the battlefield,” one Darpa program manager says. During down times, ISIS might even serve as a cell tower in the sky, relaying communications to U.S. troops.

But to pull it all off, almost the entire hull of the ISIS ship would have to be turned into a phased-array radar antenna. And that is no mean task.

Posted in Technology, UFOs | Leave a Comment »

Gitmo: How many are innocent?

Posted by Xeno on June 30, 2006

Fark: “Man sits in Gitmo for 2 years because US cannot find any of his 4 witnesses. 3 days ago a British newspaper tried to find them, let’s see how they did…”

The Guardian found the witnesses in 3 days, and their comments show that at least one probably innocent man has been cheated out of freedom. Gitmo is in violation of the constitution and Bush and his cohorts should be tried for violating their oaths of office by allowing indefinite anonymous detentions.

Why hold innocent people? Because they need subjects for torture (aka interrogation) and brain experiments, obviously.

Posted in human rights, Politics | Leave a Comment »

Tropical Stonehenge may have been found

Posted by Xeno on June 30, 2006

Granite blocks are seen in Amapa, Brazil, on May 10, 2006. A grouping of 127 granite blocks along a grassy Amazon hilltop may be the vestiges of South America’s oldest astronomical observatory, according to archeologists who say the find challenges long-held assumptions about the region’s prehistory. The blocks, some standing as high as 3 meters (9 feet), are spaced at regular intervals around the hill like a crown some 30 meters (100-feet)in diameter, near the village of Calcoene just north of the equator near the coast of Amapa state,which borders with French Guyana in far northern Brazil.

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Posted in Archaeology | Leave a Comment »

Unusual Violin: Mysterious music phenomenon

Posted by Xeno on June 30, 2006

Mari Kimura is a New York based solo violinist that usually lectures at the acknowledged Juilliard School of 1-MariKimura.jpg Music. She is one of the extremely few people who can produce controlled subharmonic tones on violin. Kimura has developed this trait to a signature feature in her compositions and improvisations. The sounds she plays on violin are usually found in a cello.

“I have done this for ten years, and the researchers in US and Japan have tried to figure it out for as long. I don?t really know what it is I do, because I have an empirical approach to it. It all happens by the method of trial and error”, says Kimura. – more

Posted in Music, Physics | Leave a Comment »

Test Tube Meat Nears Dinner Table

Posted by Xeno on June 29, 2006

Professor of meat sciences? I guess you’d have no mad cow disease, no suffering animals, no hormones, anti-biotics,? yeah, I’d probably eat it.

What if the next burger you ate was created in a warm, nutrient-enriched soup swirling within a bioreactor?

Edible, lab-grown ground chuck that smells and tastes just like the real thing might take a place next to Quorn at supermarkets in just a few years, thanks to some determined meat researchers. Scientists routinely grow small quantities of muscle cells in petri dishes for experiments, but now for the first time a concentrated effort is testtubemeat2bc.jpgunder way to mass-produce meat in this manner.

Henk Haagsman, a professor of meat sciences at Utrecht University, and his Dutch colleagues are working on growing artificial pork meat out of pig stem cells. They hope to grow a form of minced meat suitable for burgers, sausages and pizza toppings within the next few years. … The technology to grow a juicy steak, however, is still a decade or so away. No one has yet figured out how to grow blood vessels within tissue.- more

Posted in Biology, Food, Technology | Leave a Comment »

Ultrasound may help regrow teeth

Posted by Xeno on June 29, 2006

smile.jpgHockey players, rejoice! A team of University of Alberta researchers has created technology to regrow teeth–the first time scientists have been able to reform human dental tissue. … Using low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS), Dr. Tarak El-Bialy from the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry and Dr. Jie Chen and Dr. Ying Tsui from the Faculty of Engineering have created a miniaturized system-on-a-chip that offers a non-invasive and novel way to stimulate jaw growth and dental tissue healing. … The wireless design of the ultrasound transducer means the miniscule device will be able to fit comfortably inside a patient’s mouth while packed in biocompatible materials. The unit will be easily mounted on an orthodontic or “braces” bracket or even a plastic removable crown. The wireless design of the ultrasound transducer means the miniscule device will be able to fit comfortably inside a patient’s mouth while packed in biocompatible materials. The unit will be easily mounted on an orthodontic or “braces” bracket or even a plastic removable crown.

Dr. El-Bialy first discovered new dental tissue was being formed after using ultrasound on rabbits. In one study, published in the American Journal of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, El Bialy used ultrasound on one rabbit incisor and left the other incisor alone. After seeing the surprising positive results, he moved onto humans and found similar results.more

This from Wikipedia:

Researchers at the University of Alberta have used LIPUS to gently massage teeth roots and jawbones to cause growth or regrowth, and have grown new teeth. As of June 2006, a large device has been licensed by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and Health Canada for use by dentists. A smaller device that fits on braces has also been developed. In order to regrow teeth, the tooth root must be massaged by the LIPUS device for 20 minutes each day for 4 months. It has been approved by both Canadian and American regulatory bodies and a market-ready model is currently being prepared. LIPUS is expected to be commercially available before the end of 2009.

According to Dr. Chen from the University of Alberta, LIPUS may also have medical/cosmetic benefits in allowing people to grow taller by stimulating bone growth.

This from Wiley InterScience:

Constant mechanical stress is essential for the maintenance of bone mass and strength, which is achieved through the cooperative functions of osteoblasts and osteoclasts. However, it has not been fully elucidated how these cell types mediate mechanical signals. Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) therapy is a recently developed method for application of mechanical stress, and is used clinically to promote bone fracture healing. …  J. Cell. Physiol. 211: 392-398, 2007. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Here is a specific mention of a frequency:

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been implicated in the regulation of dental pulp and dentine repair. Therapeutic ultrasound was shown to be effective for fracture repair. We investigated whether low frequency ultrasound influences the production of VEGF by odontoblast-like cells. Moreover, we examined the direct effects of VEGF on odontoblast-like cell proliferation. … Design. MDPC-23, an established odontoblast-like cell line, was exposed to increasing intensities of 30 kHz ultrasound using an ultrasonic tip probe. … After 24 h cell culture, WST-1 analysis of cell viability and number showed a dose-dependent decrease in the number of viable cells with increasing ultrasound power. However, the relative concentration of VEGF as analysed by ELISA and normalised to cell number was significantly increased in the culture supernatants indicating an ultrasound-induced stimulation of odontoblastic VEGF secretion. … Results … Low power ultrasound increased gene expression of all VEGF isoforms. Addition of recombinant VEGF to the cell cultures significantly stimulated cell proliferation. Gene expression of the VEGF receptors Flt1/VEGFR1 and KDR/VEGFR2 was detected in the MDPC-23, suggesting the possibility that VEGF may act on the odontoblast-like cells in an autocrine manner.

Humans can only hear up to about 20kHz. Anything above that, like the 30kHz in this study, is considered ultrasound. Just as with sound you can hear, sounds you can not hear can be at different volumes (intensities).  Sound is a pressure wave.  Intensity of sound can be expressed as “mW/cm2“, which is milliWatts per square centimeter.

Different intensities of pulsed ultrasound have distinct biological effects on bone mineralization in the process of bone fracture repair, even across a narrow range (e.g., 30-120 mW/cm2). The aim of our study was to elucidate the effect of low-intensity (30 mW/cm ) and high-intensity (120 mW/cm2) pulsed ultrasound on collagen metabolism – inist.fr

Here’s another study that used a different frequency.

Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) has distinct effects on biologic mineralization at intensities of <100 mW/cm2. Intensity-dependent differences in the pattern of accelerated mineralization may be due to different alterations in regulation of collagenous matrix formation. However, little is known about the influence of LIPUS on collagen metabolism in the context of mineralization processes. Therefore, we attempted to evaluate differential effects of two intensities of pulsed ultrasound (30 vs. 120 mW/cm2) on collagen post-translational modification and mineralization in osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells. Murine osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells were exposed to pulsed ultrasound (1.5-MHz, 200-ms burst sine wave at 1.0-kHz frequency, either 30 or 120 mW/cm2 SATA, for 20 min/day from Day 14 to Day 35 postconfluence).

In this case, they hit the sample with a 200 millisecond sine wave at 1.5 MHz,  1000 times per second?

I must be having a bone head moment, because I don’t get it.. there are 1000 milliseconds in a second, so you could only fit five 200ms bursts in each second, and they’d need some blank space too, so if you went on and off every 200ms, with your vibrations of 1.5MHz, you’d have a pulse rate of about 3 Hz, not 1.0 kHz (1000 Hz). Unless you have multiple sound sources, then they could overlap and you could get 1000 bursts of 200ms in each second.

Update: April 8, 2009:  These things always seem years away. This was said to be two years away in 1996, but nothing is ready yet. Here is a recent mention of it:

Ultrasound could ‘re-grow’ broken teeth in just 12 weeks

Professional Headshot of Tarek H. El-Bialyscientists revealed recently that teeth broken in an accident could soon be ‘regrown’ using an ultrasound machine half the size of a thumbnail.

The process could take just 12 weeks. Ultrasound is already used to help heal broken bones, now the technology is being applied to teeth. Nanotechnology, which can reduce electronic circuitry to one thousandth of the size of a human hair, has enabled scientists to develop an ultrasound device small enough to fit inside the mouth. A wafer-thin ultrasound chip, which is preprogrammed so that it turns on automatically, can be clipped onto the teeth. When it is on, ultrasound waves massage the gums to stimulate and increase blood flow to produce new tooth tissue.

The treatment takes just 20 minutes a day. The current version of the machine has a small handheld device which tells the patient when it is working. Dr Tarek El-Bialy, of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada, discovered the use of ultrasound to form new dental tissue from his research on rabbit incisors. He then moved on to humans and found similar results.

- dailymail.uk

Link to the Department of Dentistry where Dr. El-Bialy is working.

This team includes in addition to Dr. Tarek El-Bialy  (in the Orthodontic Graduate program and Biomedical Engineering), Drs. Jie Chen and Ying Tsui from the Electrical Engineering department. When it was published by Dr. Tarek El-Bialy at the American Journal of Orthodontics for the first time in History that new dental tissue can be reformed after the teeth are grown, this research team and patent was planned for.

Posted in Health | 10 Comments »

100% Undetectable Malware?

Posted by Xeno on June 29, 2006

A security researcher with expertise in rootkits has built a working prototype of new technology that is capable of creating malware that remains “100 percent undetectable,” even on Windows Vista x64 systems. …The technique effectively bypasses a crucial anti-rootkit policy change coming in Windows Vista that requires kernel-mode software to have a digital signature to load on x64-based systems.

The idea of a virtual machine rootkit isn’t entirely new. Researchers at Microsoft Research and the University of Michigan have created a VM-based rootkit called “SubVirt” that is nearly impossible to detect because its state cannot be accessed by security software running in the target system. …
“The idea behind Blue Pill is simple: your operating system swallows the Blue Pill and it awakes inside the Matrix controlled by the ultra thin Blue Pill hypervisor. This all happens on-the-fly (i.e. without restarting the system) and there is no performance penalty and all the devices,” she explained. – eweek

Coming soon: 100% undetectable monitoring of everything everyone does on a computer.

Posted in Technology | Leave a Comment »

Mystery of the Misplaced Marmoset

Posted by Xeno on June 29, 2006

Taking refuge in the Peninsula Humane Society/SPCA’s shelter in San Mateo is a marmoset, one of the world’s smallest primates indigenous to the rain forests of South and Central America.

The little critter was discovered Tuesday evening in the backyard of an East Palo Alto home.

A resident called authorities to report a stray monkey running across the back fence. – sfgate

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Posted in Cryptozoology, Strange | Leave a Comment »

Gravity Experiments and the Hollow Earth

Posted by Xeno on June 29, 2006

Someone who seems to be French / Canadian? read my hollow earth article a few years ago, where I suggested that someone get down a mile into a mine and take gravity measurements. It seems that has been done! But I don’t read French. Check out these photos of the mine, gravity graphs, etc. The experimenter seems to be saying that his data says the Earth is hollow.

“If the geologists, for their part, opted for the ferrous liquid, my experiment, in Timmins’s mine in the North East of Ontario in the Canadian Shield, show clearly that it would be rather about gas (space or air)…”

Posted in Earth | Leave a Comment »

Stolen Laptop with Military Data Found

Posted by Xeno on June 29, 2006

Since when is it possible to tell if data on a drive has been copied elsewhere?

A laptop computer and external drive containing personal data on more than 26 million veterans and active duty military personnel have been recovered, officials said Thursday…

FBI forensic experts conducted initial tests on the computer and external drive that showed nothing had been accessed” – cnn

Posted in Technology | Leave a Comment »

 
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