Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Researchers design nanometer-scale material that can speed up, squeeze light

Apr. 29, 2013 ? In a process one researcher compares to squeezing an elephant through a pinhole, researchers at Missouri University of Science and Technology have designed a way to engineer atoms capable of funneling light through ultra-small channels.

Their research is the latest in a series of recent findings related to how light and matter interact at the atomic scale, and it is the first to demonstrate that the material -- a specially designed "meta-atom" of gold and silicon oxide -- can transmit light through a wide bandwidth and at a speed approaching infinity. The meta-atoms' broadband capability could lead to advances in optical devices, which currently rely on a single frequency to transmit light, the researchers say.

"These meta-atoms can be integrated as building blocks for unconventional optical components with exotic electromagnetic properties over a wide frequency range," write Dr. Jie Gao and Dr. Xiaodong Yang, assistant professors of mechanical engineering at Missouri S&T, and Dr. Lei Sun, a visiting scholar at the university. The researchers describe their atomic-scale design in the latest issue of the journal Physical Review B.

The researchers created mathematical models of the meta-atom, a material 100 nanometers wide and 25 nanometers tall that combined gold and silicon oxide in stairstep fashion. A nanometer is one billionth of a meter and visible only with the aid of a high-power electron microscope.

In their simulations, the researchers stacked 10 of the meta-atoms, then shot light through them at various frequencies. They found that when light encountered the material in a range between 540 terahertz and 590 terahertz, it "stretched" into a nearly straight line and achieved an "effective permittivity" known as epsilon-near-zero.

Effective permittivity refers to the ratio of light's speed through air to its speed as it passes through a material. When light travels through glass, for instance, its effective permittivity is 2.25. Through air or the vacuum of outer space, the ratio is one. That ratio is what is typically referred to as the speed of light.

As light passes through the engineered meta-atoms described by Gao and Yang, however, its effective permittivity reaches a near-zero ratio. In other words, through the medium of these specially designed materials, light actually travels faster than the speed of light. It travels "infinitely fast" through this medium, Yang says.

The meta-atoms also stretch the light. Other materials, such as glass, typically compress optical waves, causing diffraction.

This stretching phenomenon means that "waves of light could tunnel through very small holes," Yang says. "It is like squeezing an elephant through an ultra-small channel."

The wavelength of light encountering a single meta-atom is 500 nanometers from peak to peak, or five times the length of Gao and Yang's specially designed meta-atoms, which are 100 nanometers in length. While the Missouri S&T team has yet to fabricate actual meta-atoms, they say their research shows that the materials could be built and used for optical communications, image processing, energy redirecting and other emerging fields, such as adaptive optics.

Last year, Albert Polman at the FOM Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics in Amsterdam and Nader Engheta, an electrical engineer at the University of Pennsylvania, developed a tiny waveguide device in which light waves of a single wavelength also achieved epsilon-near-zero. But the Missouri S&T researchers' work is the first to demonstrate epsilon-near-zero in a broadband of 50 terahertz.

"The design is practical and realistic, with the potential to fabricate actual meta-atoms," says Gao. Adds Yang: "With this research, we filled the gap from the theoretical to the practical."

Through a process known as electron-beam deposition, the researchers have built a thin-film wafer from 13 stacked meta-atoms. But those materials were uniform in composition rather than arranged in the stairstep fashion of their modeled meta-atoms.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Missouri University of Science and Technology. The original article was written by Andrew Careaga.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Lei Sun, Jie Gao, Xiaodong Yang. Broadband epsilon-near-zero metamaterials with steplike metal-dielectric multilayer structures. Physical Review B, 2013; 87 (16) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.87.165134

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/RFnsUhSDhLc/130429094646.htm

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Contactually Puts Its SME Contacts Platform ?On Steroids' With Major New Update

Screen Shot 2013-04-25 at 18.12.14You're familiar with the scenario of not being able to keeping up with some of your best contacts because there are probably now plenty of them? Small businesses have that same problem, and they aren't about to employ heavy lifting CRM to solve that simple problem. Contactually, which has previously raised money form Point Nine Capital, Boston Seed and 500 Startups, is going to try to address this with a major new iteration of the platform it launched in 2011.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/cbYiEi1hQpE/

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CSN: O's extra-inning winning streak ends at 17

BALTIMORE ? For more than a year, the Orioles won extra inning games. Seventeen in a row.

At some point, the magic was going to end. Wednesday was the day.

After watching Josh Stinson serve up four home runs to put them in a hole, the Orioles clawed their way back into the game with Toronto, but finally lost it 6-5 in 11 innings before 14,981 at Oriole Park.

Stinson was recalled before the game and sent to Norfolk afterward. The Orioles bullpen was chewed up, and the most dependable of all the relievers, Jim Johnson suffered a loss.

?That's the type of baseball we play. It's just one of those things. We play a lot of close games and I wouldn't expect anything to change in that department,? Johnson said.

The Orioles (12-9) closed out a most successful home stand by winning two of three from the Blue Jays, Dodgers and Rays. The 6-3 record gave them an acceptable 9-6 mark against American League East opponents.

?I thought we played pretty well for the most part. It would have been nice to close today, but they got us today, but I think it was a pretty decent homestand overall,? Nate McLouth said.

Now, the Orioles head west for a season-long 11-game road trip to Oakland, Seattle and Los Angeles.

They?ll be there without Stinson and with another reliever, perhaps Zach Clark, who?s been starting for Norfolk.

Three of the homers allowed by Stinson were solo shots to Rajai Davis, Edwin Encarnacion and Jose Bautista. The first was a two-run shot by J.P. Arencibia in the second.

By the time Stinson left with two outs in the sixth, the Orioles trailed 5-2, but they scored three runs in the seventh to tie it.

?They came back and that's what I've been told about these guys. They never quit and they keep going. So they got us back to 5-5 and made it interesting for a couple innings. It was exciting,? Stinson said.

The Orioles had won 17 straight extra-inning games, their last 16 in 2012, and the first of this season. Only the 1959-60 Pittsburgh Pirates, who won 21 consecutive, won more.

?It's not something I dwell on. I know our guys don't. But I understand how it's noteworthy," manager Buck Showalter said.

In the 11th, Arencibia and Munenori Kawasaki singled with two outs off Johnson (1-2), who had won and saved the previous two games of the series..

Johnson hit Brett Lawrie with a pitch to load the bases and walked Macier Izturis on four pitches to score Arencibia with the go-ahead run for Toronto (9-13).

Esmil Rogers (1-1) pitched the 10th and got the win. Manny Machado tried to score on J.J. Hardy?s single in the bottom of the 10th, but was thrown out, and the game went to the 11th.

Casey Janssen pitched the 11th for his sixth save.

In 22 1/3 previous major league innings, Stinson allowed two home runs. He tripled that total on Wednesday.

Stinson retired the first three batters, and took a 1-0 lead into the second. Nate McLouth and Adam Jones doubled off Brandon Morrow in the second, and it was their last hit until the seventh.

Arencibia?s two-run shot to center, his eighth, came with one out in the second. Davis hit his first with one out in the second while Encarnacion and Bautista hit theirs leading off the fourth and sixth. It was Encarnacion?s fourth and Bautista?s fifth.

Stinson was hooked with two outs in the sixth. He allowed five runs on five hits in 5 2/3 innings. He walked one and struck out three.

The Orioles scored a run without a hit in the third. McLouth walked with one out. Machado grounded to third and Lawrie threw it wildly to first. McLouth advanced to third. Nick Markakis grounded to short, but? Machado slid hard enough into second baseman Emilio Bonifacio that he prevented any chance of a double play.

In the seventh, the Orioles finally showed some life. Nolan Reimold walked with one out. Ryan Flaherty doubled to right to score Reimold and Aaron Loup replaced Morrow.

McLouth singled to score Flaherty, and after McLouth stole his fifth base of the season, Machado tripled to right, and score was tied at 5.

?We didn?t play a bad game by any means. Their hits came with some damage. We weren?t quite able to push that last one across a couple of times,? McLouth said.

NOTES: The four home runs allowed by Stinson were the most by any Orioles pitcher making his debut.

-Machado?s triple was the first of the year for the Orioles.

-Brian Matusz has not allowed any of the 10 runners he inherited this season to score. He?s stranded all 24 he inherited since he became a reliever last August.

Source: http://www.csnbaltimore.com/blog/orioles-talk/orioles-extra-inning-streak-ends-blue-jays-loss

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Study Finds Possible New Ally in Fight Against Diabetes

Researchers may have found a new helpmate in their search for a cure to diabetes. A new study in the journal Cell, published online on Thursday, has identified a particular hormone that appears to grow the very cells that are destroyed by the disease.

The hormone, which the scientists working on the study have dubbed betatrophin, encourages the pancreas to grow new beta cells. Beta cells are our body's primary manufacturers of insulin.

Here is some of the key information that emerged on Thursday regarding this new study into the effect of hormones on diabetes.

* People with diabetes lack the ability to make enough insulin, which helps the body process sugar. Without it, a person can eventually suffer from organ damage, kidney failure, and blindness, and can even lose a limb to the disease.

* As noted by Bloomberg News, this study was conducted in mice. In the mouse study, betatrophin increased the production of beta cells by more than 33 times.

* Douglas Melton, who is the co-director of the Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology at Harvard University, told Bloomberg and other media outlets on Thursday that humans have a hormone that is almost identical to the mouse version of betatrophin, and that preliminary examination appears to indicate that it performs the same function in the human body that it does in mice.

* Harvard has applied to be able to patent betatrophin, and major drug companies around the world are already taking notice of the work being done by Melton and his colleagues.

* Melton told USA Today that he and his fellow researchers next want to create an injectable form of the hormone and use it to treat diabetic mice.

* Some in the scientific community are reserving judgement on the significance of Melton's team's findings until research is done with humans. Dr. Peter Butler, who researches diabetes at the University of California-Los Angeles, told USA Today on Thursday that research needs to be presented that shows that manipulating betatrophin in the human body will cause the pancreas to begin producing beta cells as it does in mice.

* Other researchers familiar with the work insist that Melton's findings may lead to new avenues of research and perhaps even new treatments for the disease. Mary-Elizabeth Patti of the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston told NPR that she was certain that "this will stimulate a lot of work to look at the effects of this protein and rapidly investigate" its full potential.

* Betatrophin, if proven as an effective treatment, would be most effective for use in patients with Type 2 diabetes, according to Melton, due to differences between the Type 2 and Type 1 variations of the disease. Therapies for Type 1 diabetes may also be possible, he noted, but they would require different avenues of research into betatrophin.

Vanessa Evans is a musician and freelance writer based in Michigan, with a lifelong interest in health and nutrition issues.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/study-finds-possible-ally-fight-against-diabetes-220500302.html

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Samsung Electronics profit jumps ahead of Galaxy S4 debut

SEOUL (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd reported on Friday its sixth straight quarter of profit growth ahead of the debut of its latest Galaxy smartphone, the South Korean IT giant's biggest assault on rival Apple Inc yet.

By launching the Galaxy S4 in the United States on Saturday, Samsung is taking aim at Apple's home market at a time when the iPhone maker appears to have hit a snag. Earlier this week, Apple reported its first profit decline in more than a decade and indicated no major product releases until the fall.

Samsung is widely expected to resume posting record quarterly profits, after a hiatus in January-March, as the S4 is dispatched to 327 mobile carriers in 155 countries.

This week, Samsung has kicked off a massive advertising campaign for the S4 and set up mini stores at Best Buy locations to promote the smartphone. Initial orders have surprised on the upside, with the firm expecting a short-term supply crunch.

Early success of the S4 is crucial in determining the extent of the expected second-quarter record earnings for a company that gets more than 70 percent of its overall profit from mobile devices.

The new S4, which sports a host of software-enabled features, is seen as stealing a head-start on what's widely expected to be an upgraded iPhone later this year. But the Galaxy phone has drawn mixed reviews so far.

Profit from Samsung's mobile division jumped 56 percent to a record 6.51 trillion won in the first quarter, accounting for nearly three quarters of the firm's entire profit, the company said on Friday, before the stock market open.

Samsung, which doesn't provide smartphone sales figures, likely sold 68-70 million smartphones in the quarter ended March, up from 63 million in the previous quarter, according to five analysts.

By contrast, second-ranked Apple said on Tuesday it shipped 37.4 million iPhones in the March quarter, up from 35.1 million a year ago, but down sharply from 47.8 million in the previous quarter.

Samsung's first-quarter overall operating profit increased 54 percent from a year ago to 8.8 trillion won ($7.9 billion), broadly in line with its earlier estimate and almost on par with the fourth-quarter's record of 8.84 trillion won.

Shares in Samsung, valued at around $215 billion, have risen 2 percent in the past three months, beating a 21 percent decline in Apple and a 1 percent drop in the wider market.

(Reporting by Miyoung Kim; Editing by Ryan Woo)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/samsung-electronics-first-quarter-profit-jumps-ahead-galaxy-234822201--finance.html

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Stock index futures indicate higher open

LONDON (Reuters) - Stock index futures pointed to a higher open on Wall Street on Wednesday, with futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones and Nasdaq 100 futures all up 0.2 percent at 0455 EDT ( 0855 GMT).

U.S. stocks climbed on Tuesday in a broad rally, recovering from sharp declines sparked by a "bogus" Associated Press tweet about explosions at the White House.

Wednesday's diary sees U.S. weekly mortgage market index and durable goods figures. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew also testifies in front of Congress.

Apple Inc on Tuesday bowed to investors' demands to share more of its $145 billion cash pile, while posting its first quarterly profit decline in more than a decade after market close yesterday. The tech giant initially rose in extended trade, then retreated after the company's chief executive suggested there would be no new product in the market for a few months.

KFC parent Yum Brands Inc on Tuesday reported that quarterly profit fell less than Wall Street expected, despite a sharp drop in sales in its top China market, sending the company's shares up nearly 6 percent in after hours trade.

Cable operator Virgin Media posted a 54 percent rise in first quarter free cash flow and announced a series of major business deals on Wednesday, showing the attraction of a company that is about to be sold to Liberty Global.

AT&T Inc reported a net loss of cellphone subscribers in the first quarter as it lost market share to bigger rival Verizon Wireless, sending its shares down about 2 percent in after hours trade.

OPKO Health Inc will buy Israel-based biopharmaceutical company Prolor Biotech Inc in an all-stock deal valued at $480 million to expand its portfolio of specialty drugs.

European shares gained on Wednesday, building on the best session of the year so far on Tuesday. Good earnings reports helped the market higher, while disappointing data from Germany over the last two days has lent strength to the case for the European Central Bank to cut interest rates next week.

(Reporting by Alistair Smout; editing by Patrick Graham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-street-jumps-recovery-twitter-led-drop-012743441--sector.html

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Zinio Guest Post: Read A Digital Magazine; Save A Tree (or 104,000)

Earth Day should be everyday. If only the world would be a little more veggie, a bit more green, and read more digitally, we would be a much more sustainable and environmentally sound planet. And, we would save and sustain trees.

On a serious note, Zinio helps save more than 104,000 trees every month. And it contributes more wealth in terms of information and entertainment on our newsstand. We recognize we have a lot of magazines (over 5,500), but sometimes we look twice and realize we've aggregated more quality content in one arena or another than just about any source you can find. There's a lot of great writing and photography from a broad spectrum of journals from around the world. Zinio has something for everyone, whether it's the politics of global warming or just getting out and enjoying the natural world.

We?re celebrating in two ways this week. First, with a sale of over 100 titles at up to an additional 50 percent off www.zinio.com/reforest. And, we?ve created a content collection of some of our favorite magazines that support sustainable articles you can read for free here:

Sierra: It?s a lot more than the official magazine of the Sierra Club. Sierra is arguably the only magazine that can teach you how to fly. Its most recent issue features a series of stories on wind energy, including a piece on gear you can buy to harness the wind to literally fly. Get your wingsuit. What I love about Sierra digital are the great photos and the balance between caring for the environment and caring for the economy.

http://www.zinio.com/www/browse/product.jsp?rf=sch&productId=500618227

Green Ideas: The US market should have one of these. It?s a New Zealand-based magazine. But the practical and tactical content in Green Ideas are truly global. For me that, what digital publishing is all about: No borders. It?s A consumers? guide to living more sustainably ? loaded with ideas and practical advice for people who want to know more about the environment and minimize their impact on it.

http://www.zinio.com/www/browse/product.jsp?rf=sch&productId=500668739

Whole Living: Think Martha Stewart goes green. Whole Living puts a bit of a glitzy spin on eating with a healthy approach, entertaining with a green approach and looking into the ?healthy circle? of upscale communities that are living closer to the earth.

http://www.zinio.com/www/browse/product.jsp?rf=sch&productId=253430564&sch=true

Green Source: Another great case for digital publishing. I discovered this magazine while I was looking for some design advice for a home improvement project. I found this, which is a brilliant looking journal for professionals. Green Source covers sustainable design, green building case studies for architects, engineers, designers, contractors and owners. It might sound boring on the surface. But it feels like you?re being invited into an exclusive club.

http://www.zinio.com/www/browse/issue.jsp?skuId=416242264&prnt=&offer=&categoryId

Outside: This pick might be a little popular but you simply can?t ignore the excellence, writing and sheer visual power of Outside. The only thing its readers are more passionate about than working out and extreme sports is the environment. http://www.zinio.com/www/browse/product.jsp?rf=sch&productId=216990576&sch=true

Source: http://www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/13423-zinio-guest-post-read-a-digital-magazine-save-a-tree-or-104-000

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Cycle Safe | scoilmhuirecoole.scoilnet.ie

The 4th , 5th and 6th classes completed a Cycle Safe programme ran by Westmeath Sports Partnership.
This programme assists young people in gaining the skills and knowledge to safely cycle and hopefully encourage them into the world of cycling as a mode of transport, and as a source of recreation and sport.

Cycling is an ideal form of transport for young people providing a healthy, cheap and
environmentally friendly way to get about. The children enjoyed the programme and are now more confident cyclists.

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Source: http://scoilmhuirecoole.scoilnet.ie/blog/2013/04/23/cycle-safe-2/

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

AT&T Q1 2013 earnings: $3.7 billion income on revenue of $31.4 billion

AT&T Q1 2013 earnings $37 billion income on revenue of $314 billion

AT&T just posted its earnings for the first quarter of 2013, and the market couldn't help but ding the company, which is now trading down in after hours markets. The business as a whole posted a net income of $3.7 billion, which is slightly up from $3.6 billion one year ago. Meanwhile, company revenues took a slight hit, which sit at $31.4 billion -- down 1.4 percent from the previous year. In terms of the company's wireless business, though, there's plenty of reason for optimism. The company was able to snag an additional 296,000 postpaid subscribers and put a solid 1.2 million people on smartphone plans during the quarter. For those keeping track, smartphone sales now account for 88 percent of AT&T's postpaid handsets. Unsurprisingly, the company is making more money than ever off of its data plans, which account for $5.1 billion of the company's business. As for the wireless segment as a whole, income is up 21 percent and AT&T is pulling in revenues of $16.6 billion with a 28 percent profit margin.

Encouraging signs were also revealed for U-verse, as the company's broadband service netted an additional 731,000 internet subscribers and 232,000 television subscribers during the quarter -- its best performance in two years -- for a grand total of 8.7 million subscribers. Naturally, one segment of Ma Bell's business isn't looking too hot, and that's the traditional wireline business, as revenues have fallen 10 percent from the previous year. Given the size of this segment, and the weakening demand for the service, it's easy to understand why investors might be slightly uneasy, even in light of all the encouraging news.

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Source: AT&T

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/_89FzC3DQTA/

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Before Midnight Poster: Arrived!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/before-midnight-poster-arrived/

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Gut Microbe Makes Diesel Biofuel

Reconfiguring the genetics of the food pathogen E. coli produces hydrocarbons indistinguishable from those burned in trucks


e coli in petri dish E. coli can now replicate the hydrocarbon molecules that burn predominantly in big trucks and other powerful moving machines. Image: Flickr/Carlos de Paz

Welding bits and pieces from various microbes and the camphor tree into the genetic code of Escherichia coli has allowed scientists to convince the stomach bug to produce hydrocarbons, rather than sickness or more E. coli. The gut microbe can now replicate the molecules, more commonly known as diesel, that burn predominantly in big trucks and other powerful moving machines.

"We wanted to make biofuels that could be used directly with existing engines to completely replace fossil fuels," explains biologist John Love of the University of Exeter in England, who led the research into fuels. "Our next step will be to try to develop a bacterium that could be deployed industrially." Love?s work was published April 22 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

That means harnessing E. coli's already high tolerance for harsh conditions, such as the high acidity and warmth of the human digestive tract. That hardiness also seems to be helping the bacterium survive its own production of such longer-chain hydrocarbons, which could have proved toxic to the microbes, in the way brewer's yeast cells are killed off by the alcohol they ferment. The engineered E. coli used genetic code from the insect pathogen Photorhabdus luminescens and from the cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme as well as soil microbe Bacillus subtilis to make the fuel molecules from fatty acids, along with a gene from the camphor tree?Cinamomum camphora?to cut the resulting hydrocarbon to the right length.

The E. coli are currently fed on sugar and yeast extract, which suggests that the resulting fuel would be expensive compared with the kind refined from oil found in the ground. "We are hopeful that we could change their diet to something less valuable to humanity," Love suggests. "For example, organic wastes from agriculture or even sewage."

Exactly how the E. coli microbes expel the diesel fuel molecules is unknown at this point. The researchers have found them floating in the growth medium, suggesting the microbes are somehow secreting the hydrocarbons from their cells once produced. "We don't know how they get there yet," Love admits. But that may solve a problem posed to other would-be biofuels produced in microbes; algal oils have proved difficult to extract cheaply and effectively from inside the algae themselves, among other challenges.

Besides a better grasp of the process itself, fine-tuning the genetic engineering may one day yield other useful hydrocarbons, such as jet fuel or even gasoline (a short-chained hydrocarbon). Similar work at the University of California, Berkeley, has tinkered with E. coli genetics to allow the bacteria to digest the inedible parts of plants known as cellulose and turn them into microbial diesel that can be used in place of fossil-fuel diesel or other useful hydrocarbons. And E. coli has been harnessed in the past to make specialty oils for cosmetics; the company Amyris makes the moisturizing oil known as squalane from E. coli fed sugarcane and grown in vats in Brazil. The synthetic biologists at Amyris have also coaxed yeast to produce the antimalarial drug artemisinin, a technology that is currently being commercialized with drugmaker Sanofi.

Regardless, industrial-scale fuel production from microbes remains a much tougher proposition than making specialty oils or medicines, given the low cost and high volumes required to compete with the fuels made from fossil sources. "Fuel is actually a lot cheaper than artemisinin, so it has to be made in significantly larger quantities," Love notes. "That in itself is a challenge."

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=4cddaf5a21b5a5d4dda63c21773cb607

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PFT: Several teams in top 12 look to move down

Tampa Bay Buccaneers v New Orleans SaintsGetty Images

It?s setting up to be a big season for Buccaneers quarterback Josh Freeman.

He?s on the last year of the deal he signed as a first-round pick in 2009 and his team just swung a big trade to raise expectations for a team that hasn?t made the playoffs since Freeman arrived. On top of all that, there were some mixed messages from coach Greg Schiano early in the offseason about his commitment to Freeman.

Schiano?s since said stronger things about the quarterback and Freeman says that he ?isn?t concerned? about what he calls a great relationship with the head coach. Freeman said the only thing that concerned him was taking the Bucs to the playoffs, whether or not he returns to the team in 2014.

?I give it all I got regardless,? Freeman said, via Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times. ?I love football, I love my teammates, I love winning. It doesn?t really change anything for me. Obviously I love being a Buccaneer. But at the same time, the job is to go out and find a way to win and worrying about any sort of external forces, contract, all this stuff, you can?t worry about that. It?s not going to help you play better. You?ve got to focus on the things that will help you go out on Sundays and win.?

Freeman?s had his ups and downs through his first four seasons, with last year?s strong middle ? 16 touchdowns and three interceptions during a 5-1 stretch that briefly had the Bucs in the playoff hunt ? surrounded by less impressive work on either side. Freeman wasn?t the reason they missed the playoffs, a terrible pass defense had plenty to do with that, but there?s no doubt they?ll need more from Freeman as well if they?re going to make the playoffs in 2013.

Should that happen, Freeman probably won?t wind up any more concerned about the other stuff than he is now.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/23/report-five-teams-in-top-12-want-to-move-down/related/

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