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For the latter part of the 20th century, much of what we knew about plasma fusion came out of Princeton's Plasma Physics Laboratory. There the massive Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor worked for 15 years, forcing hydrogen atoms together in crazy strong magnetic fields in the search for a sustainable fusion reaction. I wrote a paper about this back in the late 1980s in UC Santa Barbara's terrific History of the Nuclear Age. Anyhow, the Tokamak was taken offline in 1997, and Princeton says it has now successfully dismantled and removed the leviathan. Just to give you an idea about the machine's intensity, it was the first to produce more than 10 million watts of fusion power. And in 1995, TFTR attained a world-record temperature of 510 million degrees centigrade -- more than 25 times that at the center of the sun.
Incidentally, if you ever wondered what Tokamak means, it's not --- as I once thought --- some Native American name or word. It's actually Russian shorthand describing the squished donut shape of the magnets. To(roidal'naya) kam(era s) ak(sial'nym magnitnym polem), or toroidal chamber with axial magnetic field. Now you know.
Researchers have discovered a gene mutation that causes a condition apparently identical to Huntington's Disease, helping explain why some people with the disorder do not have a separate mutation found in most cases. The finding may help reveal why some diseases, like Huntington's, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, destroy some brain cells while sparing others. "For all practical purposes this is Huntington's Disease, yet it's caused by a different mutation on a completely different chromosome," said Russell L. Margolis, M.D., associate professor of Psychiatry at Hopkins and director of the Johns Hopkins Laboratory of Genetic Neurobiology. "This is a rare version of an already rare disorder, but the mutation that causes it may not only help us better understand Huntington's Disease, but could boost our understanding of many other neurodegenerative disorders."
Researchers may have discovered the mechanism behind how prions ? pieces of protein molecules? can kill nerve cells in the brain and lead to some serious degenerative diseases. The key seems to lie in how one particular protein misfolds within an organelle inside the cell, transforming itself into a new agent and then poisoning the neuron in which it was made.
Pre-cells destined to become fat can be converted instead into true bone cells in
response to outside signals, say researchers at the University of California, San Francisco. The finding could pave the way for scientists to replenish lost bone cells in patients with conditions like osteoporosis, and to help repair bone defects. The new bone cells have all the hallmarks associated with mature bone formation, including production of bone proteins and calcification, the UCSF team says.
By 2005, 130 million cell phones will be thrown out each year, according to a new study funded in part by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Counting the phones, batteries and chargers, that comes to 65,000 tons a year, most of which will end up in landfills or being incinerated. And that has environmentalists freaked. "This is becoming a very serious problem, because the amount of cell phone waste is growing tremendously," said Eric Most, a director at Inform, the group which issued the report. "These chemicals accumulate and persist in the environment. They get in the plants, soil, water, and then move up the stream to humans." One approach to countering the increase that seems to have general support is a "take-back" program, in which phone manufacturers must agree to take-back old phones when consumers upgrade. Another plan sure to be DOA: Limiting waste by standardizing design elements so consumers have fewer reasons to buy new phones. "If we had had a government standard in the beginning," one industry rep told the New York Times, "we'd still all be speaking on analog phones. And that means no e-mail, no text messaging, no Caller ID. Competition equals innovation in this case."
Ice meteors are falling from the sky in growing numbers. And while some skeptics still think the phenomenon a hoax or the result of ice from planes passing overhead, a Spanish scientist says they are neither. Though he doesn't know precisely how the meteors form, Jesus Martinez-Frias, director of planetary geography at Spain's Astrobiology Center in Madrid, notes that their results can be dramatic. The falling ice blocks tend to weigh upwards of 20 pounds and have smashed in cars, destroyed roofs and caused general mayhem where they land. But Martinez-Frias says he isn't concerned so much about the terrestrial damage they can cause, but the atmospheric damage he believes they portend. "I'm not worried that a block of ice might fall on your head ... but that great blocks of ice are forming where they shouldn't exist," he said. "Components of the atmosphere, like ozone and water, are changing in different levels of the atmosphere. ... We think these signs could be evidence of climate change," he told Reuters.
This weekend I sank my teeth into some delicious beef ribs. But researchers at the Forsyth Institute say they've done one better ? they've sunk pork teeth into rat guts. The experiment involved taking seeded cells from immature teeth of six-month-old pigs and placing them in the intestines of rats (who no doubt were thrilled at the addition). Within 30 weeks, small tooth crowns made of enamel and dentin had formed. Within five years, the Forsythe team says, they hope to be able to harvest teeth of specific size and shape, and five years after that to regrow human teeth.