Plant inspired solar cells to revolutionise energy storage



Plant inspired solar cells to revolutionise energy storage
(Representative image)
NEW YORK: A new technology developed by scientists at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) can store solar energy for up to several weeks; an advance that could change the way scientists think about designing solar cells.

The materials in most of today's residential rooftop solar panels can store energy from the sun for only a few microseconds at a time.

The new design is inspired by the way that plants generate energy through photosynthesis.

"In photosynthesis, plants that are exposed to sunlight use carefully organised nanoscale structures within their cells to rapidly separate charges, pulling electrons away from the positively charged molecule that is left behind, and keeping positive and negative charges separated," said senior study author Sarah Tolbert.

"That separation is the key to making the process so efficient," Tolbert said.

To capture energy from sunlight, conventional rooftop solar cells use silicon, a fairly expensive material.

On the other hand, plastic solar cells which are cheaper - are relatively inefficient, because the separated positive and negative electric charges often recombine before they can become electrical energy.

"Modern plastic solar cells don't have well-defined structures like plants do. But this new system pulls charges apart and keeps them separated for days, or even weeks," Tolbert said.

"Once you make the right structure, you can vastly improve the retention of energy," she added.

The two components that make the UCLA developed system work are a polymer donor and a nano-scale fullerene acceptor.

The polymer donor absorbs sunlight and passes electrons to the fullerene acceptor. The process generates electrical energy.

The plastic materials, called organic photovoltaics, are typically organised like a plate of cooked pasta a disorganised mass of long, skinny polymer 'spaghetti' with random fullerene 'meatballs.'

But this arrangement makes it difficult to get current out of the cell because the electrons sometimes hop back to the polymer spaghetti and are lost.

The UCLA technology arranges the elements more neatly like small bundles of uncooked spaghetti with precisely placed meatballs.

Some fullerene meatballs are designed to sit inside the spaghetti bundles, but others are forced to stay on the outside.

The fullerenes inside the structure take electrons from the polymers and toss them to the outside fullerene, which can effectively keep the electrons away from the polymer for weeks.

"When the charges never come back together, the system works far better," another senior author Benjamin Schwartz said.

In the new system, the materials self-assemble just by being placed in close proximity.

The new design is also more environment-friendly than current technology, because the materials can assemble in water instead of more toxic organic solutions that are widely used today, the researchers said.

The findings were published in the journal Science.

Mars Orbiter Mission enters 100th orbit around Mars



Mars Orbiter Mission enters 100th orbit around Mars
Mars Orbiter Mission entered the 100th orbit around the Red Planet on Monday.
MUMBAI: India's Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) entered its 100th orbit around the Red Planet on Monday.

According to Isro, the spacecraft will take about three-and-a-half days to complete the orbit that will end on Thursday.

Launched on November 5, 2013, Rs 450-crore MOM entered the Martian orbit on September 24, 2014.

Isro stated that the spacecraft, which entered a communication blackout period on June 8, is gradually emerging out of that phase and has begun transmitting data to ground stations. The pause took place because the Sun came between Earth and Mars, which happens once in 26 months.

The current elliptical orbit of the spacecraft has a periareon (the point nearest to the Mars surface) of 474km and an apoareion (the farthest point) of 71,132km.

The five payloads on board were last operated in May 2015 and their performance was satisfactory. The Mars Colour Camera has so far taken 405 images. The remaining four payloads will be gradually reactivated in the coming weeks.

Isro chairman A S Kiran Kumar told the media last week in New Delhi that data from the other four payloads was being reviewed and analyzed and will be made public "in due course".

The spacecraft was designed for a mission life of six months in Mars orbit and this was completed on March 24, 2015. With this the primary objectives of MOM have been realized.

A new Isro app called Sakaar, launched last week, allows Android mobile users to have a 3-D view of MOM and its various aspects as well as some of the other Isro missions. 
COMMENT-
WHY PAKISTAN  NOT IN SPACE RACE?BECAUSE CHINA WILL NOT GIVE THAT TECHNOLOGY TO A TERRORIST STATE 
[ATOMIC TECH WAS GIVEN BY C.I.A.
ROCKET TECH GIVEN BY NORTH KOREA AND CHINA] 


No Comparison With Indian Space Technology | Pakistani General ...
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No Comparison With Indian Space Technology | Pakistani General
india vs pakistan comparison 2015

Assanas are no better than running around the track


With the UN-backed International Yoga Day on Sunday, which apparently has made into the Guinness Book of records for its sheer numbers, Indians who are proud of the country’s ancient past can be gratified that the world has seen it. The day was indeed unprecedented because such a public display of people stretching and bending in large numbers in world capitals was new.
That India, or rather the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was the force behind this global spectacle will certainly make a lot of Indians proud. It was him, who had urged the UN General Assembly in 2014 to set aside a day for yoga. Subsequently, India’s resolution on the proposal drew the largest ever number of cosponsors in the General Assembly. Leading the show in Dehli on Sunday, he said: “I believe that from the 21st of June, through the International Day of Yoga, it is not just the beginning of a day but the beginning of a new age through which we will achieve greater heights of peace, good will and train the human spirit.”
Most of the mainstream media went into an overdrive with anchors, experts, celebrities and politicians claiming how great Yoga is. Most of them said its practice kept them fit, while hardcore fans claimed that it was effective against a lot of illnesses from cancer to hypertension. What was however, unanswered in the excitement and hype, was how different it was from other forms of exercises in terms of results. Barring the personal testimonies of its diehard fans, many of whom also believed that ancient India was the repository of even modern scientific and technological knowledge, the mainstream media hardly presented any scientific evidence to demonstrate the superiority of Yoga. Neither were there any counter-views. It was a one-sided revelry that bolstered the Indian fantasy of a super power.
PTI image.
PTI image.
Not that Yoga is not beneficial. Nobody says that. People feel good and healthy doing it. But a lot of others, who do regular exercises also feel the same. Those who run, cycle and do weight training also vouch for the “high”, the rush of endorphins, they get. There may be several more millions engaged in exercises such as walking, running, cycling, stretching and weight training than those practising Yoga and reaping equal or better benefits - but they don’t make a single cohort because there is no brand that unifies them as Yoga does and there is no allure of spirituality and “5000 years” of heritage behind what they do.
Here’s where scientific enquiry must play an important part. Other than being a good exercise, does it really have the healing powers as many claim. The best way to answer these claims are Randomised Control Trials (RCT) than personal testimonies. RCTs, which are the gold standard for clinical trials, in simplest terms means a study (with random sampling) in which people receiving treatment (Yoga, in this case), called treatment group, are compared with those who don’t receive it, called control group. (To know if Yoga is better than other forms of exercises, the treatment group should be Yoga practitioners and the control group, people who are doing other exercises.)
Although a lot of RCTs have been done for Yoga, for the tall therapeutic claims its apostles make, the body of work is quite limited. And importantly, the results are far from impressive. At best, the trials show nothing more than some benign, positive signs. It’s impossible to do a meta-analysis in a media column, but let’s take a look at some of the RCTs published in reputed, peer-reviewed journals.
One of the common ailments that Yoga seems to help is lower back pain. A lot of people vouch for it, but what has scientific studies say? According to this RCT in the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA), it’s not more effective than stretching exercises. In fact, the study says:”Yoga classes were more effective than a self-care book, but not more effective than stretching classes, in improving function and reducing symptoms due to chronic low back pain, with benefits lasting at least several months.”
Asthma is another common illness that Yoga apparently alleviates. Does it really help? Take a look at this 2014 study in the journal “Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology”, which took into account the results of 14 RCTs. And the result? “Yoga cannot be considered a routine intervention for asthmatic patients at this point. It can be considered an ancillary intervention or an alternative to breathing exercises for asthma patients interested in complementary interventions.”
What it practically says is that Yoga doesn’t hurt, but it doesn’t help either. A Cochrane (a global medical research network that academics and medical practitioners rely on) review in 2013 was even more direct, when it said that “no conclusive evidence in this review supports or refutes the efficacy of such intervention in the treatment of adult patients with asthma.”
It doesn’t help in arthritis, another great reason to practice Yoga for many, either. This German study, which analysed eight RCTs, in Oxford Rheumatology journal finds no reason to suggest even ancillary use of Yoga for osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia, the common arthritic diseases.
Now, the bigger claim - cancer. This study  published in The Journal of Clinical Oncology in 2007 did find that Yoga improved emotional well-being and mood among breast cancer survivors, not their survival rate or treatment effectiveness. However, the huge limitation of the study is that it compared people doing yoga with people not doing it, not with people doing some other form of exercise.
So, the summary of the story is that there is no conclusive evidence that demonstrates Yoga’s health benefits or its superiority over other forms of structured exercises. As this Scientific American article notes, any form of regular exercise gives one a high, makes one feel physically and mentally good, and less stressful.
There’s no denying the fact that Yoga is popular all over the world, but what drives it is its commercialisation and the sex-appeal as a spiritual-lifestyle fad. In the US alone, it’s a 27 billion dollar industry and its popular image is that of a slender and taut female, as this Huffington Post article notes”. The yoga body is Gwyneth Paltrow's body -- the elongated feminine form.” How true!
Therefore, the numbers of people and countries that made some Indians proud on Sunday doesn’t mean much because, it’s a free brand of pop-spirituality and exercise that thousands of entrepreneurs cash in on. India’s call for a UN day for the brand is great news for them, because it means free publicity and more money. Mobilising people to the streets to do those fancy stretches (unlike in India where people with ungainly paunches were struggling) is in their interest.
If it’s about real numbers and relevance to contemporary India, what the country should celebrate is the UN’s World Toilet Day, because we have nearly two-third of the world’s open defecators and half of our fellow citizens do it openly, often shamelessly in groups. By revelling in reflected glory of the global popularity of Yoga, we are not only escaping to an imaginary past to cover up our failures, but are also indulging in yet another round of delusional cultural revivalism for political reasons.