Ancestor of all hammerhead sharks appeared about 20 million years ago

Washington, May 19 (ANI): The ancestor of all hammerhead sharks probably appeared abruptly in Earth”s oceans about 20 million years ago and was as big as some contemporary hammerheads, according to a new study led by the University of Colorado at Boulder.

But once the hammerhead evolved, it underwent divergent evolution in different directions, with some species becoming larger, some smaller, and the distinctive hammer-like head of the fish changing in size and shape, said CU-Boulder Professor Andrew Martin of the ecology and evolutionary biology department.

Sporting wide, flattened heads known as cephalofoils with eyeballs bulging at each end, hammerhead sharks are among the most recognizable fish in the world. The bizarre creatures range in length from about 3 feet up to 18 feet and cruise warm waters around the world, Martin said.

In the new study, scientists focused on the DNA of eight species of hammerhead sharks to build family “gene trees” going back thousands to millions of generations. In addition to showing that small hammerheads evolved from a large ancestor, the team showed that the “signature” cephalofoils of hammerheads underwent divergent evolution in different lineages over time, likely due to selective environmental pressures, said Martin.

The team used both mitochondrial DNA passed from mother to offspring and nuclear DNA — which is commonly used in forensic identification — to track gene mutations. The researchers targeted four mitochondrial genes and three nuclear genes, which they amplified and sequenced for the study.

Martin said: “These techniques allowed us to see the whole organism evolving through time. Our study indicates the big hammerheads probably evolved into smaller hammerheads, and that smaller hammerheads evolved independently twice.”

The researchers sampled hammerheads from across the globe — including the waters of the southeast United States now under siege by the Gulf oil spill — as well as Australia, Panama, Hawaii, Trinidad and South Africa. Most of the hammerhead DNA was obtained at local markets, where the peddling of sharks and other fish is common practice.

The team sequenced the DNA of the sharks, constructing a “phylogenetic” tree that shows how all of the species are related and when each species originated, said Martin. The hammerhead ancestor probably lived in the Miocene epoch about 20 million years ago.

The team found that two divergent lineages of small sharks about 3 to 4 feet long originated independently at separate times in the past. One of the species, the winghead shark, now lives in the warm waters north of Australia and the other, the bonnethead shark, inhabits the Caribbean and tropical eastern Pacific Ocean.

One reason for the “incredible shrinking shark” over the eons may be the process of neoteny — the ability of some adult sharks to retain juvenile traits — or their ability to achieve sexual maturity at earlier ages, Martin said. “As the sharks became smaller, they may have begun investing more energy into reproductive activities instead of growth.”

While the cephalofoils appear to provide “lift” to large hammerheads as they cruise through the water — much like the wing of an airplane — smaller hammerheads don”t appear to gain an advantage in lift, but may gain other attributes. “It looks like they sacrifice locomotion advantages for prey detection and visualization,” he said.

Another advantage hammerheads may gain from larger cephalofoils is an increased number of electrical sensors in their flattened noses and heads that can detect extremely weak electrical emissions from molecules associated with potential prey. “Hammerheads appear to be able to triangulate on their prey, which is remarkable,” said Martin.

Small sharks are highly variable in the size and shape of their cephalofoils, said Martin. The winghead shark, for example, has a laterally expanded head that is about half the size of its roughly 4-foot body length. At the other end of the spectrum is the bonnethead shark, about 3 feet long but which has the smallest cephalofoil of all hammerhead species — a protrusion that resembles the head of a shovel, Martin said.

While hammerhead sharks appear intimidating, attacks on humans are extremely rare, said Martin. Hammerheads have relatively small mouths facing downward that are used to grab food like fish, shellfish, shrimp, squid, octopuses and stingrays. “If you see a hammerhead, I”d say grab your camera and jump into the water,” said Martin.

“Hammerheads are special fish, and there is nothing that remotely resembles them anywhere on the planet,” said Martin. Unfortunately, hammerheads — like most shark species — are on the decline.

A paper on the subject was published in this month”s issue of Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. (ANI)

Immigration rise may explain drop in violent crimes

Washington, May 15 (ANI): During the 1990s, immigration reached record highs and crime rates fell more precipitously than at any time in U.S. history. And cities with the largest increases in immigration between 1990 and 2000 experienced the largest decreases in rates of homicide and robbery, a University of Colorado at Boulder researcher found.

Tim Wadsworth, an assistant professor of sociology, has tested the hypothesis, famously advanced by Harvard sociologist Robert J. Sampson, that the rise in immigration could be related to the drop in crime rates.

Wadsworth noticed Sampson”s argument in a 2006 New York Times op-ed piece. As Wadsworth recalled, “My reaction was that this is really interesting, and it”s a very testable question.”

New research supports Sampson”s hypothesis, Wadsworth reports in the June edition of Social Science Quarterly.

“Cities that experienced greater growth in immigrant or new-immigrant populations between 1990 and 2000 tended to demonstrate sharper decreases in homicide and robbery,” Wadsworth writes. “The suggestion that high levels of immigration may have been partially responsible for the drop in crime during the 1990s seems plausible.”

Drawing from the FBI”s Uniform Crime Reports and U.S. Census data, Wadsworth analyzed 459 cities with populations of at least 50,000. Wadsworth measured immigrant populations in two ways: those who are foreign-born and those who immigrated within the previous five years.

Wadsworth focused on medium and large cities because about 80 percent of violent crime takes place there. Wadsworth said distinguishing legal and illegal immigration is difficult, as the U.S. Census does not track those numbers, but he notes that immigrant citizens and non-citizens often live together in the same communities.

He tracked crime statistics for homicide and robbery because they tend to be reported more consistently than other crimes. Robberies are usually committed by strangers — which increases the reporting rate — and “homicides are difficult to hide,” he said.

Wadsworth”s findings contradict much of the public rhetoric about the relationship between immigration and crime. As the Arizona Republic reported this month, violent crime in that state”s border towns has remained essentially flat during the past decade even as drug-trade violence on the other side of the border has burgeoned.

The presumed link between immigration and crime has a long history in the United States and overseas. Wadsworth said such sentiments are often expressed on Internet blogs and elsewhere.

Wadsworth contends that looking at crime statistics at a single point in time can”t explain the cause of crime rates.

Using such snapshots in time, Wadsworth finds that cities with larger foreign-born and new-immigrant populations do have higher rates of violent crime. But many factors — including economic conditions — influence crime rates.

If higher rates of immigration were boosting crime rates, one would expect long-term studies to show crime rising and falling over time with the influx and exodus of immigrants. Instead, Wadsworth found the opposite.

Using long-term analyses, Wadsworth noted, cities that experienced the largest growth in the proportion of foreign-born and newly arrived immigrant populations experienced larger decreases in violent crime between 1990 and 2000. That finding, Wadsworth wrote, “suggests that Sampson may be right — that immigration may be partly responsible for the decrease in violent crime.”

Wadsworth”s research suggests that, controlling for a variety of other factors, growth in the new immigrant population was responsible, on average, for 9.3 percent of the decline in homicide rates, and that growth in total immigration was, on average, responsible for 22.2 percent of the decrease in robbery rates.

Exactly why growth in immigration is accompanying decreases in violent crime is hard to determine with city-level data. Some have suggested that immigrant communities are often characterized by extended family networks, lower levels of divorce, and cultural and religious beliefs that facilitate community integration. Wadsworth notes that “criminologists have long known that these factors provide buffers against crime.”

“From the late 1800s to the present, the association between immigration and crime has been a center point of anti-immigrant discourse and public policy,” Wadsworth writes. “Although there has been scant empirical research to support such claims, they have persisted with little debate.” (ANI)

Indian trial for inhalable measles vaccine offers hope for other diseases

Washington, May 6 (ANI): A dry powder, inhalable vaccine developed for measles prevention and slated for human clinical trials later this year in India, could also help pave the way for the inexpensive treatment of a range of other illnesses, say researchers.

The vaccine, developed by a team led by Professor Robert Sievers, from University of Colorado at Boulder, involves mixing ‘supercritical’ carbon dioxide with a weakened form of the measles virus.

The process produces microscopic bubbles and droplets that are dried to make the inhalable powder, which is dispensed into the mouths of patients using a small, cylindrical plastic sack with an opening like the neck of a plastic water bottle.

“One of our primary goals of this project is to get rid of needles and syringes, because they frighten some people, they hurt, they can transmit diseases and there are issues with needle disposal,” Sievers said.

With the new technology, the inhaled powder is sent directly into the lungs, a good target since measles attacks through the respiratory tract, said Sievers.

Phase One of the clinical trials to test the safety and efficacy of the measles inhalant product are slated to start this summer in Pune, India, and will involve about 180 people, said Sievers.

Phase Two of the India clinical trials are expected to involve a larger number of patients.

Sievers will give a presentation on the subject at the Eighth European Conference on Supercritical Fluid Applications to be held May 9-12 in Graz, Austria. (ANI)

Greenland ice sheet losing mass on northwest coast

Washington, March 24 (ANI): A new international study has found that ice loss from the Greenland ice sheet, which has been increasing during the past decade over its southern region, is now moving up its northwest coast.

Led by the Denmark Technical Institute’s National Space Institute in Copenhagen and involving the University of Colorado at Boulder, the study indicated the ice-loss acceleration began moving up the northwest coast of Greenland starting in late 2005.

The team drew their conclusions by comparing data from NASA’s Gravity and Recovery Climate Experiment satellite system, or GRACE, with continuous GPS measurements made from long-term sites on bedrock on the edges of the ice sheet.

The data from the GPS and GRACE provided the researchers with monthly averages of crustal uplift caused by ice-mass loss.

The team combined the uplift measured by GRACE over United Kingdom-sized chunks of Greenland while the GPS receivers monitor crustal uplift on scales of just tens of miles.

“Our results show that the ice loss, which has been well documented over southern portions of Greenland, is now spreading up along the northwest coast,” said Shfaqat Abbas Khan, lead author on a research paper that will appear in Geophysical Research Letters.

The team found that uplift rates near the Thule Air Base on Greenland’s northwest coast rose by roughly 1.5 inches, or about 4 centimeters, from October 2005 to August 2009.

Although the low resolution of GRACE – a swath of about 155 miles, or 250 kilometers across – is not precise enough to pinpoint the source of the ice loss, the fact that the ice sheet is losing mass nearer to the ice sheet margins suggests the flows of Greenland outlet glaciers there are increasing in velocity, said the study authors.

“When we look at the monthly values from GRACE, the ice mass loss has been very dramatic along the northwest coast of Greenland,” said CU-Boulder physics Professor and study co-author John Wahr, also a fellow at CU-Boulder”s Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences.

“This is a phenomenon that was undocumented before this study,” said Wahr.

“Our speculation is that some of the big glaciers in this region are sliding downhill faster and dumping more ice in the ocean,” he added.

“If this activity in northwest Greenland continues and really accelerates some of the major glaciers in the area – like the Humboldt Glacier and the Peterman Glacier – Greenland’s total ice loss could easily be increased by an additional 50 to 100 cubic kilometers within a few years,” said Khan. (ANI)

Arctic sea ice cover reaches minimum extent for 2009

Washington, September 18 (ANI): A new study has found that the Arctic sea ice cover appears to have reached its minimum extent for this year, the third-lowest recorded since satellites began measuring sea ice extent in 1979.

The study was carried out by researchers from to the University of Colorado at Boulder’s National Snow and Ice Data Center.

While this year’s September minimum extent was greater than each of the past two record-setting and near-record-setting low years, it is still significantly below the long-term average and well outside the range of natural climate variability, said NSIDC Research Scientist Walt Meier.

Most scientists believe the shrinking Arctic sea ice is tied to warming temperatures caused by an increase in human-produced greenhouse gases being pumped into Earth’s atmosphere.

Atmospheric circulation patterns helped the Arctic sea ice spread out in August to prevent another record-setting minimum, said Meier.

“But, most of the 2009 September Arctic sea ice is thin first- or second-year ice, rather than thicker, multi-year ice that used to dominate the region,” said Meier.

“The minimum 2009 sea-ice extent is still about 620,000 square miles below the average minimum extent measured between 1979 and 2000 — an area nearly equal to the size of Alaska,” he added.

“We are still seeing a downward trend that appears to be heading toward ice-free Arctic summers,” Meier said.

CU-Boulder’s NSIDC will provide more detailed information in early October with a full analysis of the 2009 Arctic ice conditions, including aspects of the melt season and conditions heading into the winter ice-growth season. (ANI)

Your bathroom showers are hazardous to health

Washington, September 15 (ANI): That invigorating relief and good cleansing from daily bathroom showers may bring along a face full of potentially pathogenic bacteria, warn researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Using high-tech instruments and lab methods, the researchers analysed roughly 50 showerheads from nine cities in seven states that included New York City, Chicago and Denver.

CU-Boulder Distinguished Professor Norman Pace, lead study author, says that about 30 percent of the devices were found to harbour significant levels of Mycobacterium avium, a pathogen linked to pulmonary disease that most often infects people with compromised immune systems, but which can occasionally infect healthy people.

The study showed that some M. avium and related pathogens were clumped together in slimy “biofilms” that clung to the inside of showerheads at more than 100 times the “background” levels of municipal water.

“If you are getting a face full of water when you first turn your shower on, that means you are probably getting a particularly high load of Mycobacterium avium, which may not be too healthy,” Pace said.

He pointed out that research at National Jewish Hospital in Denver indicated that increases in pulmonary infections in the US in recent decades from so-called “non-tuberculosis” mycobacteria species, such as M. avium, could be attributed to people taking more showers and fewer baths.

He said that water spurting from showerheads could distribute pathogen-filled droplets that suspend themselves in the air, and could easily be inhaled into the deepest parts of the lungs.

“There have been some precedents for concern regarding pathogens and showerheads. But until this study we did not know just how much concern,” said Pace.

In Denver, according to the researcher, one showerhead with high loads of Mycobacterium gordonae was cleaned with a bleach solution in an attempt to eradicate it, but tests conducted several months later showed that the bleach treatment ironically caused a three-fold increase in the pathogen, indicating a general resistance of mycobacteria species to chlorine.

Ask Pace whether it is dangerous to take showers, and he says: “Probably not, if your immune system is not compromised in some way. But it’s like anything else-there is a risk associated with it.”

He stresses that plastic showerheads appear to “load up” with more pathogen-enriched biofilms, and thus metal showerheads may be a good alternative.

“There are lessons to be learned here in terms of how we handle and monitor water. Water monitoring in this country is frankly archaic. The tools now exist to monitor it far more accurately and far less expensively that what is routinely being done today,” said Pace.

A research article on his study has been published in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

Teen pregnancy ‘a symptom, not cause, of psychological stress’

Washington, July 28 (ANI): Teenage mothers suffer a lot of psychological stress in their lives, however, a new research has shown that the distress comes before the pregnancy, not because of it.

“Psychological distress does not appear to be caused by teen childbearing, nor does it cause teen childbearing, except apparently among girls from poor households,” said Stefanie Mollborn, Ph.D., an assistant professor of sociology at the Institute of Behavioral Science of the University of Colorado at Boulder.

The study has been published in the September issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior.

To reach the conclusion, researchers used data from two large long-term U.S. surveys that followed thousands of teen girls and women.

Participants responded to items on symptoms associated with depression, such as how often they found things that did not usually bother them to be bothersome, how easily they could shake off feeling blue or whether they had trouble concentrating.

The researchers did not use the term “depression,” which is a clinical diagnosis.

Only the combination of poverty and existing distress was a good predictor of teen pregnancy.

“Psychologically distressed girls are at risk for teen childbearing and vice versa, even if the two things usually do not cause each other,” Mollborn said.

“This could help educators and clinicians identify at-risk adolescents,” Mollborn added.

Looking for symptoms of depression or distress should be part of normal health screening for all teenagers, said Diane Merritt, M.D., director of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

“Talking to teenagers about their sexuality and responsible behavior is key,” she said.
ne of the best ways to prevent teen pregnancy is for teens to have long-term goals and good self-esteem, Merritt added. (ANI)

Brain’s immune system may cause chronic seizures

Washington, July 7 (ANI): A new study has revealed that chronic seizures caused by traumatic head injuries might occur due to chemicals released by the brain’s immune system attempting to repair the injured site.

Researchers from University of Colorado at Boulder have revealed that micro-glial cells may play a major role in seizures.

They found that glial cells, which are supportive cells that also constitute a major part of the brain’s immune system, cluster within areas in the brain when a severe brain injury has occurred.

“When there has been serious damage to the brain, such as a head injury or infection, the immune system is activated and tries to counteract the damage and repair it,” said CU-Boulder psychology and neuroscience Professor Daniel Barth.

“These glial cells migrate to the damaged area and release chemicals called cytokines that, unfortunately, also profoundly increase the excitability of the neurons that they are near.

“In our new study, we showed for the first time that glial cells moving in and secreting these cytokines cause the neurons in the area to become excitable enough to cause seizures,” he added.

Barth hopes that the findings may help prevent one of the most common forms of adult epilepsy, called acquired epilepsy, which is often found in people who have suffered a brain injury or infection.

He said if the brain’s initial immunity reaction could be temporarily shut down, this could prevent the development of acquired epilepsy.

“So instead of giving anti-seizure drugs, which have no effect in preventing or subsequently treating post-traumatic epilepsy, we could give some anti-immune drugs which may actually stop the process of developing epilepsy in the first place,” Barth added.

The study appears in the journal Brain. (ANI)

Earth’s highest microbial life found around volcanic vents in Atacama Desert

Washington, June 20 (ANI): A team of scientists has found that the highest microbial life on Earth appears to be in South America, around vents near the rim of the Socompa volcano, which sits on the border between Argentina and Chile in the Atacama Desert.

The newfound creatures, at a height of almost 19,850 feet (6,050 meters) above sea level, are the highest-altitude microbial communities known, Steve Schmidt, a microbiologist at the University of Colorado at Boulder, US, told National Geographic News.

Schmidt and his team usually study the places where glaciers have retreated, to discover which microbes move in first to colonize the newly exposed soil.

Their work has implications for climate change and the search for life on other planets-on Mars, for example, the edges of ice fields are among the more likely places to search for microbial life.

But then, he said, “people in my lab became intrigued: Is there an altitudinal limit to life?”

Like other “extreme” microbes living on volcanoes deep underwater, the new microbes were found around vents near the rim of the Socompa volcano.

“Most of the landscape that high up is barren,” said Schmidt.

But at the vents, steady emissions of water, carbon dioxide (CO2), and methane support 30-foot-wide (9-meter-wide) oases of moss and microbial communities.

“There’s as much diversity of life as in garden soil,” Schmidt said of the newly discovered zones. “Next to it, there’s nothing,” he added.

The microbes are likely not active all the time, as soil temperatures may fluctuate in a single day from zero to 150 degrees Fahrenheit (-17.7 to 65.5 degrees Celsius). (ANI)

Study turns back clock on origins of life on Earth

Study turns back clock on origins of life on EarthA heavy bombardment by asteroids the size of Ireland was not enough to wipe out life on Earth 3.9 billion years ago, researchers said on Wednesday in a finding that turns back the clock of life by 500 million years.

Many scientists had thought the violent pelting by massive asteroids during the period known as the Late Heavy Bombardment would have melted the Earth’s crust and vaporized any life on the planet.

But new three-dimensional computer models developed by a team at the University of Colorado at Boulder shows much of Earth’s crust, and the microbes living on it, could have survived and may even have thrived.

“These new results push back the possible beginnings of life on Earth to well before the bombardment period 3.9 billion years ago,” said Oleg Abramov, a researcher at the university whose study appears in the journal Nature.

“It opens up the possibility that life emerged as far back as 4.4 billion years ago, about the time the first oceans are thought to have formed,” Abramov said in a statement.

To study this period, Abramov and colleague Stephen Mojzsis used data from moon rocks, meteorite samples and the dented surfaces of neighboring planets to develop a three-dimensional model of this period of bombardment.

“What we did was recreate the Late Heavy Bombardment on a computer,” Abramov said, adding that the simulation randomly “smacked the Earth” with giant asteroids.

The team then looked at the impact that would have had on the Earth’s temperature in the so-called geophysical habitable zone — a zone representing the top 2.5 miles (4 km) of the Earth’s crust.

Based on these models, Abramov said this sustained period of impacts would have killed any life on the Earth’s surface, but not all life on Earth, as many had assumed.

“We find it is essentially impossible to sterilize the entire habitable zone of the Earth by this kind of bombardment,” Abramov said in a telephone interview.

“Certainly, the surface of the Earth was sterilized repeatedly,” he said.

But he said hydrothermal vents below the surface of the Earth may have offered sanctuaries for certain heat-loving microbes, and may have even provided a kind of incubator for life.

He said many scientists had thought that a cataclysmic bombardment event would have sterilized the planet and life would have had to start anew.

“The important thing about these results is they push back the possible beginnings of life as we know it,” he said.

“Exactly when life originated on Earth is a hotly debated topic,” said Michael New, an astrobiologist at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which sponsored the research.

“These findings are significant because they indicated life could have begun well before the Late Heavy Bombardment, during the so-called Hadean Eon of Earth’s history 3.8 billion to 4.5 billion years ago,” New said in a statement.

Asteroids may have boosted life on Earth 3.9 billion years ago

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A new study has indicated that the bombardment of Earth by asteroids 3.9 billion years ago may have enhanced early life rather then wipe it out.

The study, by University of Colorado at Boulder researchers, determined that the bombardment of Earth nearly 4 billion years ago by asteroids as large as the US state of Kansas would not have had the firepower to extinguish potential early life on the planet and may even have given it a boost.

Impact evidence from lunar samples, meteorites and the pockmarked surfaces of the inner planets paints a picture of a violent environment in the solar system during the Hadean Eon 4.5 to 3.8 billion years ago, particularly through a cataclysmic event known as the Late Heavy Bombardment about 3.9 million years ago.

Although many believe the bombardment would have sterilized Earth, the new study shows it would have melted only a fraction of Earth’s crust, and that microbes could well have survived in subsurface habitats, insulated from the destruction.

“These new results push back the possible beginnings of life on Earth to well before the bombardment period 3.9 billion years ago,” said CU-Boulder Research Associate Oleg Abramov.

“It opens up the possibility that life emerged as far back as 4.4 billion years ago, about the time the first oceans are thought to have formed,” he added.

The researchers used data from Apollo moon rocks, impact records from the moon, Mars and Mercury, and previous theoretical studies to build three-dimensional computer models that replicate the bombardment.

Abramov and CU-Boulder geological sciences Professor Stephen Mojzsis plugged in asteroid size, frequency and distribution estimates into their simulations to chart the damage to the Earth during the Late Heavy Bombardment, which is thought to have lasted for 20 million to 200 million years.

The 3-D models allowed Abramov and Mojzsis to monitor temperatures beneath individual craters to assess heating and cooling of the crust following large impacts in order to evaluate habitability.

The study indicated that less than 25 percent of Earth’s crust would have melted during such a bombardment.

“Even under the most extreme conditions we imposed, Earth would not have been completely sterilized by the bombardment,” said Abramov.

Instead, hydrothermal vents may have provided sanctuaries for extreme, heat-loving microbes known as “hyperthermophilic bacteria” following bombardments, said Mojzsis.

Even if life had not emerged by 3.9 billion years ago, such underground havens could still have provided a “crucible” for life’s origin on Earth, Mojzsis added. (ANI)

Super-sensors to measure ‘signature’ of inflationary universe

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Scientists have built super-sensitive microwave sensors that would help provide evidence in support of the “inflation theory” of the cosmos, which says the universe expanded rapidly from a subatomic volume.

The new detectors, built at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), were made for a potentially ground-breaking experiment by a collaboration involving NIST, Princeton University, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the University of Chicago.

This is part of a long-standing project at NIST’s Boulder campus plays a critical role in the study of the cosmic microwave background (CMB)-the faint afterglow of the Big Bang that still fills the universe.

This project previously built superconducting amplifiers and cameras for CMB experiments at the South Pole, in balloon-borne observatories, and on the Atacama Plateau in Chile.

The new experiment will begin approximately a year from now on the Chilean desert and will consist of placing a large array of powerful NIST sensors on a telescope mounted in a converted shipping container.

The detectors will look for subtle fingerprints in the CMB from primordial gravitational waves-ripples in the fabric of space-time from the violent birth of the universe more than 13 billion years ago.

Such waves are believed to have left a faint but unique imprint on the direction of the CMB’s electric field, called the “B-mode polarization.”

These waves-never before confirmed through measurements-are potentially detectable today, if sensitive enough equipment is used.

If found, these waves would be the clearest evidence yet in support of the “inflation theory,” which suggests that all of the currently observable universe expanded rapidly from a subatomic volume, leaving in its wake the telltale cosmic background of gravitational waves.

“The B-mode polarization is the most significant piece of evidence related to inflation that has yet to be observed,” said Ki Won Yoon, a NIST postdoctoral scholar.

“A detection of primordial gravitational waves through CMB polarization would go a long way toward putting the inflation theory on firm ground,” Yoon added.

The data also could provide scientists with insights into different string theory models of the universe and other “unified” theories of physics.

The new NIST detectors may also have applications closer to home, such as in reducing glare in advanced terahertz imaging systems for detecting weapons and contraband. (ANI)

New technique shrinks size of circuitry used in nanotechnology devices

Washington, April 17 (ANI): A University of Colorado at Boulder team, US, has developed a new method of shrinking the size of circuitry used in nanotechnology devices like computer chips and solar cells by using two separate colors of light.

Like current methods in the nanoengineering field, one color of light inscribes a pattern on a substrate, according to CU-Boulder Assistant Professor Robert McLeod of the electrical, computer and energy engineering department.

But, the new system developed by McLeod’s team uses a second color to “erase” the edges of the pattern, resulting in much smaller structures.

“The team used tightly focused beams of blue light to record lines and dots thousands of times smaller than the width of a human hair into patterned lithography on a substrate,” said McLeod.

The researchers then “chopped off the edges” of the lines using a halo of ultraviolet light, trimming the width of the lines significantly.

“We are essentially drawing a line with a marker on a nanotechnology scale and then erasing its edges,” said McLeod.

The method offers potential new approaches in the search for ways to shrink transistor circuitry, a process that drives the global electronic market that is pursuing smaller, more powerful microchips, he added.

For the project, McLeod and his team used a tabletop laser to project tightly focused beams of visible blue light onto liquid molecules known as monomers.

A chemical reaction initiated a bonding of the monomers into a plastic-like polymer solid.

If the beam was focused in one place, it inscribed a small solid dot. If the beam was moving the focus through the material, it created a thin thread, or line.

The researchers then added a second ultraviolet laser focused into a halo, or donut, which surrounded the blue light.

The special monomer formulation was designed to be inhibited by the UV light, shutting down its transformation from a liquid to a solid.

This “halo of inhibition” prevented the edges of the spot or line from developing, resulting in a much finer final structure.

According to McLeod, the new technology has the potential to lead to the construction of a variety of nanotechnology devices, including “nanomotors”.

“We now have a set of new tools. We believe this is a new way to do nanotechnology,” he said. (ANI)

Rocket launches may need regulation to prevent ozone depletion

Washington, April 1 (ANI): A new study by researchers in California and Colorado has suggested that the global market for rocket launches may require more stringent regulation in order to prevent significant damage to Earth’s stratospheric ozone layer in the decades to come.

The study, which includes the University of Colorado at Boulder and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, provides a market analysis for estimating future ozone layer depletion based on the expected growth of the space industry and known impacts of rocket launches.

Future ozone losses from unregulated rocket launches will eventually exceed ozone losses due to chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, which stimulated the 1987 Montreal Protocol banning ozone-depleting chemicals, according to Martin Ross, chief study author from The Aerospace Corporation in Los Angeles.

“As the rocket launch market grows, so will ozone-destroying rocket emissions,” said Professor Darin Toohey of CU-Boulder’s atmospheric and oceanic sciences department.

“If left unregulated, rocket launches by the year 2050 could result in more ozone destruction than was ever realized by CFCs,” he added.

Since some proposed space efforts would require frequent launches of large rockets over extended periods, the new study was designed to bring attention to the issue in hopes of sparking additional research, explained Ross.

“In the policy world, uncertainty often leads to unnecessary regulation,” he said. “We are suggesting this could be avoided with a more robust understanding of how rockets affect the ozone layer,” he added.

According to Toohey, current global rocket launches deplete the ozone layer by no more than a few hundredths of 1 percent annually.

But, as the space industry grows and other ozone-depleting chemicals decline in the Earth’s stratosphere, the issue of ozone depletion from rocket launches is expected to move to the forefront.

Highly reactive trace-gas molecules known as radicals dominate stratospheric ozone destruction, and a single radical in the stratosphere can destroy up to 10,000 ozone molecules before being deactivated and removed from the stratosphere.

“Microscopic particles, including soot and aluminum oxide particles emitted by rocket engines, provide chemically active surface areas that increase the rate such radicals “leak” from their reservoirs and contribute to ozone destruction,” said Toohey.

“Today, just a handful of NASA space shuttle launches release more ozone-depleting substances in the stratosphere than the entire annual use of CFC-based medical inhalers used to treat asthma and other diseases in the United States and which are now banned,” said Toohey.

“The Montreal Protocol has left out the space industry, which could have been included,” he added. (ANI)

Earth’s highest known microbial ecosystems being fueled by volcanic gases

Washington, March 4 (ANI): A new study has shown that the emission of water, carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane from small volcanic vents near the rim of the 19,850-foot-high Socompa volcano in the Andes Mountains, is helping to sustain complex microbial ecosystems.

The study, by a research team at the University of Colorado at Boulder, US, shows that gases rising from deep within the Earth are fueling the world’s highest-known microbial ecosystems.

CU-Boulder Professor Steve Schmidt has likened the physical environment of the Socompa volcano summit, including the thin atmosphere, intense ultraviolet radiation and harsh climate, to the physical characteristics of Mars, where the hunt for microbial life is under way by NASA.

“The microbial communities atop Socompa, which straddles Argentina and Chile high in the Atacama Desert, are in a more extreme environment and not as well understood as microbes living in hydrothermal vents in deep oceans,” he said.

The Socompa microbial communities are located adjacent to several patches of green, carpet-like plant communities, primarily mosses and liverworts, discovered in the 1980s by Stephan Halloy of Conservation International in La Paz, Bolivia, a co-author on the new CU-Boulder study.

“These sites are unique little oases in the vast, barren landscape of the Atacama Desert and are supported by gases from deep within the Earth,” said Schmidt, a professor in the ecology and evolutionary biology department, University of Colorado.

“Scientists just haven’t been looking for microorganisms at these elevations, and when we did, we discovered some strange types found nowhere else on Earth,” he added.

The team used a sophisticated technique that involves extracting DNA from the soil to pinpoint new groups of microbes, using polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, to amplify and identify them, providing a snapshot of the microbial diversity on Socompa.

The new research is based on an ongoing analysis of soil samples collected during an expedition to Socompa several years ago.

“The research team also reported a new variety of microscopic mite in the bacterial colonies near Socompa’s rim, which appears to be the highest elevation that mites have ever been recorded on Earth,” Schmidt said.

According to Elizabeth Costello, a research associate in CU-Boulder’s chemistry and biochemistry department, small amounts of sunlight, water, methane and CO2 work in concert in the barren soils to fuel microbial life near the small volcanic vents, or fumaroles.

Such conditions “relieve the stress” on the high-elevation, arid soils enough to allow extreme life to get a toehold, Costello said.

“It’s as if these bacterial communities are living in tiny, volcanic greenhouses,” she added. (ANI)

Earth’s highest known microbial ecosystems being fueled by volcanic gases

Washington, March 4 (ANI): A new study has shown that the emission of water, carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane from small volcanic vents near the rim of the 19,850-foot-high Socompa volcano in the Andes Mountains, is helping to sustain complex microbial ecosystems.

The study, by a research team at the University of Colorado at Boulder, US, shows that gases rising from deep within the Earth are fueling the world’s highest-known microbial ecosystems.

CU-Boulder Professor Steve Schmidt has likened the physical environment of the Socompa volcano summit, including the thin atmosphere, intense ultraviolet radiation and harsh climate, to the physical characteristics of Mars, where the hunt for microbial life is under way by NASA.

“The microbial communities atop Socompa, which straddles Argentina and Chile high in the Atacama Desert, are in a more extreme environment and not as well understood as microbes living in hydrothermal vents in deep oceans,” he said.

The Socompa microbial communities are located adjacent to several patches of green, carpet-like plant communities, primarily mosses and liverworts, discovered in the 1980s by Stephan Halloy of Conservation International in La Paz, Bolivia, a co-author on the new CU-Boulder study.

“These sites are unique little oases in the vast, barren landscape of the Atacama Desert and are supported by gases from deep within the Earth,” said Schmidt, a professor in the ecology and evolutionary biology department, University of Colorado.

“Scientists just haven’t been looking for microorganisms at these elevations, and when we did, we discovered some strange types found nowhere else on Earth,” he added.

The team used a sophisticated technique that involves extracting DNA from the soil to pinpoint new groups of microbes, using polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, to amplify and identify them, providing a snapshot of the microbial diversity on Socompa.

The new research is based on an ongoing analysis of soil samples collected during an expedition to Socompa several years ago.

“The research team also reported a new variety of microscopic mite in the bacterial colonies near Socompa’s rim, which appears to be the highest elevation that mites have ever been recorded on Earth,” Schmidt said.

According to Elizabeth Costello, a research associate in CU-Boulder’s chemistry and biochemistry department, small amounts of sunlight, water, methane and CO2 work in concert in the barren soils to fuel microbial life near the small volcanic vents, or fumaroles.

Such conditions “relieve the stress” on the high-elevation, arid soils enough to allow extreme life to get a toehold, Costello said.

“It’s as if these bacterial communities are living in tiny, volcanic greenhouses,” she added. (ANI)

Childhood sleep problems persisting through adolescence may affect cognition

Washington, Mar 2 (ANI): Childhood sleep problems that persist through adolescence may adversely affect cognitive abilities, according to a new study.

The study led by Dr. Naomi Friedman, senior research associate at the Institute for Behavioral Genetics at the University of Colorado at Boulder, showed that children whose sleep problems persisted across development had poorer executive functioning at age 17, compared with those whose problems decreased to a greater extent.

Sleep problems as early as age 9, but particularly around age 13, showed significant associations with later executive functions.

During the study, the research team looked at specific sleep problems: nightmares, sleep talking, sleepwalking, bedwetting, sleeping less or more than most children during the day or night, trouble sleeping and being overtired.

Friedman said that the results showed that certain sleep problems in children might affect later executive functioning more than others.

“When we looked at each of the seven sleep problems separately, we found that changes in levels of ‘sleeping more than other children’ and ‘being overtired’ were the strongest predictors of later executive control, and developmental trajectories of nightmares and ‘trouble sleeping’ were the weakest predictors,” said Friedman.

Executive functions are cognitive-control mechanisms that help regulate thoughts and actions.

The authors note that an association of sleep problems with executive functioning may be particularly important, as executive functions are considered key mechanisms in many models of cognitive development and disorders like attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), substance abuse problems, mood problems and more general problems of externalising behaviour.

The study appears in the journal Sleep. (ANI)