

New Light-Activated Micro-Motor 31
enkidu55 writes: "This link to Popular Science's website shows how a team of scientists in Germany have found that a certain polymer changes shape when hit with different wavelengths of light. They used this to stretch and compress a small spring sort of like the piston in a motor. Still pretty raw, but the potential is amazing."
such a good idea? (Score:5, Funny)
But I wonder if this could be the beginning of a dark future, both figuratively and literally. When we've used this technology to construct light-fuelled power plants, I imagine that each plant would be surrounded in shadow, as the light is sucked out of the air. As energy demands increase (as they tend to do as population and technology grow), more light will be used for fuel, and less will be left over for lighting the world, growing crops, &c.
We may end up in a literal Dark Age, a perpetual nighttime. We'll live entirely indoors, as lightproof tunnels are constructed between shielded communities, and scurry beneath an artificial sky, afraid of the night creatures beyond the walls. Let's take this one step at a time, and be very cautious about what we wish for; after all, it might come true. Something to think about.
Re:such a good idea? (Score:1)
Duh!
Re:such a good idea? (Score:2)
Just an OT on your sig: I was at 42 when they changed it from numerical to something silly. Almost got to the cap. Wonder if there still is one?
Back on topic: solar-cell covered Earth is the future. It's the first step toward solar preservation. The next step is a Dyson sphere [d.kth.se] , a shell around the sun with solar panels on the inside and batteries on the outside. It'll save as much as it can, and when the sun's due to explode it'll separate and move the pieces out of blast range, to be reused once things settle down.
The goal is to help make the universe last longer, by delaying entropy.
Re:such a good idea? (Score:1)
I sure hope the "solar-cell covered Earth" is not the future. Its one of the most ecologically devastating possibilities I can imagine.
a) Plating large areas of the Earth with solar cells would create a far more efficient green-house effect than green house gasses. Basically, green house gasses trap solar energy to heat the Earth by bouncing it back in when it is on its way back out. Solar cells trap solar energy even sooner by absorbing it and converting it to electricity which will eventually be (mostly) converted to heat. And the goal is to trap as much of that energy as possible. If we cover large areas of the Earth with solar cells, we will change the reflectivity unless the solar cells are carefully managed to absorb only what would have been absorbed by the ground and the passage back out of the atmosphere. But human nature says that that management will not occur. Instead, we would carefully strive to convert every bit of energy we could. We'd also likely have arguments over who could absorb how much in the same way we now argue over who can release how much gasses.
b) The localized weather effects would likely hit sooner and be even more devastating. I've heard many times statements along the lines of "just plate Arizona, New Mexico, and/or the California desert areas and you could provide much of the countries needs". Such irresponsible thinking seems to be rampant. Essentially, you'd be capturing the heat of those areas and shipping it to other parts of the country. The effects would be chaotic and very difficult to predict.
c) And for those who would say just put the cells in space and beam the power, now you're catching energy that would have never reached Earth and delivering it here to heat things up.
d) What about the toxic effects of mining, production, and eventual disposal?
No, solar cells are not a panacea.
Re:such a good idea? (Score:2)
You're thinking short-term. In the longer term, the Earth will be demolished when the sun explodes. What I wrote about was a partial solution for the waste that will create.
I am very little concerned about our environment because nanotechnology [foresight.org] is 10-20 years away (perhaps less) and with it we'll be able to clean up all of our messes.
It's like my friends, the day before the cleaning lady gets there the dirty dishes are overflowing in the sink. They know they can make a mess because "the future" will clean it up for them. Not a perfect analogy, but it's funny to visit them a day before their cleaning lady arrives.
Re:such a good idea? (Score:1)
Re:such a good idea? (Score:1)
karma, OT (Score:2)
how does the named karma level breakdown work (what are the names and point requirements for each name)? i had around 26 points, now my karma is 'excellent'.
Re:karma, OT (Score:2)
I'm not 100% sure, but I've seen "Bad", "Positive", and "Excellent." It would appear that:
I wish I had had the chance to hit the cap. It was a fun game. ;-)
Re:karma, OT (Score:2)
the breakpoints are:
-10 Terrible
-1 Bad
0 Neutral
12 Positive
25 Good
99999 Excellent
Or at least those are the values in the slashcode CVS, which we think are what Slashdot is running. The 50 cap is still in place, you just don't see it.
See also Taco's journal entry. [slashdot.org] There was also a discussion thread where Taco talked about it but since it was not associated with an article ("user created sid") the posts have since expired (two week threshold.)
Re:such a good idea? (Score:1)
Oh crap, the Germans are at it again! (Score:3, Funny)
Why just one molecule at a time? (Score:2)
Can light-activated shrink-wrap be far behind?
Re:Why just one molecule at a time? (Score:2, Funny)
Thought this sounded familiar (Score:3, Informative)
More info (Score:3, Informative)
Re:More info (Score:1)
Christmas List (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Christmas List (Score:1, Funny)
Gee, taking light and converting it... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Boy too bad instead of moving small springs we can't convert light into something immediately useful like electricity.
Written in Colorado at 10,500ft elevation in a home powered by solar electricity (8 of our panels are older than me and have lost less than 25% or so of their original capacity during the last 20 years.) Transmitted via two way Starband satellite internet.
DUPLICATE (Score:1, Informative)
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/0
Re:DUPLICATE (Score:1)
Re:DUPLICATE (Score:1)
Three words: (Score:2, Funny)
Self sustaining? (Score:2, Interesting)