*Bits.Atoms.Neurons.Genes*
Micro_Gestures at the Edge of Invisibility will be an On/Off line space for MFA artists in the Visual Arts Department at UCSD to explore and present works at the edge of invisibility, at the edge of the digital and biological, at the edge of micro-robotics and nano-art, from in-virtu to in-vivo works and back.
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Dr. Caleb
tiny, cheap video displays PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Saturday, 26 August 2006
Cornell researchers test carbon fiber to make tiny, cheap video displays

Engineers who develop microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) like to make their tiny machines out of silicon because it is cheap, plentiful and can be worked on with the tools already developed for making microelectronic circuits. There is just one problem: Silicon breaks too easily.

microscopic mirror oscillator
Thompson Lab/Cornell University
Carbon fiber rods supporting this tiny mirror can be made to bend up to 90 degrees millions of times without showing fatigue. The technology could be used to create a video projector on a chip.

For decades, researchers have been trying to make video displays using tiny mirrors mounted on silicon oscillators. But silicon won't oscillate fast enough and bend far enough.

"You need something incredibly stiff to oscillate at a resonant frequency of 60,000 times a second (the line-scanning rate of most video displays), but it also needs to bend a lot for adequate image size," explained Shahyaan Desai, a Cornell graduate student who has been working for more than three years to create a practical MEMS video display device.

So Desai and his Cornell colleagues have turned to carbon fiber, the same material used to reinforce auto and aircraft body parts, bicycle frames and fishing rods.

"Carbon fiber is twice as stiff as silicon but 10 times more flexible," said Desai.

He is first author of a paper with Michael Thompson, Cornell associate professor of materials science and engineering, and Anil Netravali, Cornell professor of fiber science, on using carbon fibers in MEMS, published in the July issue of the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering.

Carbon fibers are made of thin, narrow sheets of graphite that roll up and clump together to form fibers. For industrial uses the fibers are embedded in plastic to form composite materials that are stronger than steel, yet lighter. Desai's MEMS are made with the raw fibers.

Carbon fiber bending
Thompson Lab/Cornell University
Microscopic flash photography shows a carbon fiber 5 microns in diameter bending nearly 90 degrees while driven to oscillate at 33.4 kHz. The combined flexibility and durability of carbon fibers suggest many uses in microelectromechanical (MEMS) devices, including use as springs and as supports for vibrating objects.

Desai first showed that micrometer-scale carbon fibers can bend like tiny fishing rods by more than 90 degrees and can be made to vibrate billions of times without breaking down. "This is, to our knowledge, the first material to even approach such large deformation at high frequencies without observable fatigue," the researchers wrote in their paper.

"Carbon is normally a brittle material," Desai said, "but in the fiber form it resists breakage. We have some data implying that if it lasts three and a half days it's going to last forever."

Desai then built an optical scanner consisting of a tiny rectangular mirror measuring 400 by 500 microns, supported by two carbon-fiber hinges about 55 microns across. Made to oscillate at 2.5 kHz, the tiny mirror caused a laser beam to scan across a range of up to 180 degrees, corresponding to a 90-degree bend by the carbon fibers.

An oscillating mirror could be used to scan a laser beam across a screen, and an array of mirrors, one for each horizontal line, could produce an image in the same way that a moving electron beam creates an image on a television screen.

"It would be an incredibly cheap display," Desai said. And the entire device would be small enough to build into a cell phone to project an image on a wall.

Besides serving as oscillators, the researchers said, carbon fibers could be made into clock springs that either unwind slowly to power a micromachine over a period of time or unwind rapidly to provide a sudden burst of power, or used as micro-sized pendulums that could harvest energy from motion like a mechanical self-winding watch to make cell phones, PDAs and even watches that are powered by the user's movement.

http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Aug06/carbonFiberMEMS.ws.htmlWrite Comment (0 Comments)
 
The 10th Dimension PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Friday, 18 August 2006

incredibly hipnotic explanation of the 10 dimensions:

click here 

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sexed robots PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Tuesday, 13 June 2006
a bit problematic of course, but very amusing nonetheless...link
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 13 June 2006 )
 
Backs to the Future PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Tuesday, 13 June 2006

June 12, 2006

Backs to the Future
Aymara Language and Gesture Point to Mirror-Image View of Time

By Inga Kiderra

Tell an old Aymara speaker to “face the past!” and you just might get a blank stare in return – because he or she already does.

New analysis of the language and gesture of South America’s indigenous Aymara people indicates a reverse concept of time.

Contrary to what had been thought a cognitive universal among humans – a spatial metaphor for chronology, based partly on our bodies’ orientation and locomotion, that places the future ahead of oneself and the past behind – the Amerindian group locates this imaginary abstraction the other way around: with the past ahead and the future behind.

click here for more...

-dr.c  

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 13 June 2006 )
 
new B.A.N.G. Lab Doctor PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Thursday, 04 May 2006

Under intense security and secrecy the B.A.N.G. Lab Director, Dr. Ricardo Dominguez, has been incubating our newest member Césaire Jose Carroll-Dominguez (Zé for short and around here at B.A.N.G. HQ - Dr. Zé).  We know that Dr. Zé is going to be a valuable contributor to our travels in-virtu & in-vivo, and we're looking forward to his report on his recent experience in-womb.
Much love & congratulations to Dr. Zé & the family...here is a pic of the new doctor already busy in his sensory deprivation tank.
-Dr. C
Dr. Ze




















 

 

 

 

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 13 June 2006 )
 
installation PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Friday, 03 March 2006

come see my installation this saturday (3/3/06) from 7 - 9 in CalIT2, reconfigurable studio #4. 
click here for directions.


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mapping the mis-men PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Friday, 20 January 2006
just read this article and happened to check out the location of this company. local as expected. with our new tool, Google Earth, maybe we should embark a military-industrial-scientific-media-entertainment-network mapping of the U.S.A or at least our local region. thoughts?
-dr. cWrite Comment (2 Comments)
Last Updated ( Friday, 20 January 2006 )
 
OBIT: Haut, of UFO fame, was 83 PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Tuesday, 20 December 2005
Haut, of UFO fame, was 83

Erin Taylor
Record Staff Writer

Though he wasn’t an alien fanatic, the man who helped found the International UFO Museum in Roswell always believed that whatever landed in a farmer’s field near the city in 1947 was “not of this earth,” his daughter Julie Shuster said.

Walter Haut, who was an Army lieutenant and spokesman for the Roswell Army Air Field the night of that discovery, died Thursday at the age of 83. Haut, along with Glenn Dennis and Max Littell, founded the International UFO Museum in 1991.

Haut issued a news release about the report of a recovered flying saucer on July 8, 1947, on orders from base commander Col. William Blanchard.

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 20 December 2005 )
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Stalin's half-man, half-ape super-warriors PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Tuesday, 20 December 2005
THE Soviet dictator Josef Stalin ordered the creation of Planet of the Apes-style warriors by crossing humans with apes, according to recently uncovered secret documentsWrite Comment (0 Comments)
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 20 December 2005 )
 
a new twist PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Thursday, 08 December 2005

Insurgents Using Chem Weapons - On Themselves?

This has to be the most bizarre twist in the WMD saga yet. Insurgents in Iraq could very well have chemical weapons. And they may be using them - on themselves.

insurgents_tweety.jpgThe story starts over a year ago with a Marine blogger in Iraq. On June 2nd 2004 "The Green Side" - we’ll get back to the signficance of this source later - describes suicidal attacks by insurgents in Fallujah: “We could not understand why they kept coming but they did.” The reason, it turned out, was drugs: “…these ‘holy warriors’ are taking drugs to get high before attacks. It true, as we pushed into the town in April many Marines came across drug paraphernalia (mostly heroin). Recently, we have gotten evidence of them using another drug BZ that makes them high and very aggressive.”


link

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 08 December 2005 )
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Science Toys PDF Print E-mail
Dr. Caleb's Blog
Thursday, 01 December 2005
this is a very cool site that has instructions for a bunch of science toys: http://sci-toys.com/index.htmlWrite Comment (0 Comments)
Last Updated ( Thursday, 01 December 2005 )
 
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