From Morning Edition: N.J. Mom Puts Kids To Bed With Math

The U.S. ranks 25th out of 34 countries when it comes to kids’ math proficiency. One New Jersey parent wants to change that by overhauling the culture of math. An astrophysics graduate and mother of three kids, she started a ritual when each child was 2 years old: a little bedtime mathematical problem-solving that soon became a beloved routine. Parent friends began to bug her to send them kid-friendly math problems, too. Now Bedtime Math is gaining fans among children and math-shy parents around the country.

 

from Morning Edition

From Morning Edition: Penn State’s Wins Since 1998 Vacated, Hit With $60M Fine

The NCAA today handed down a series of penalties against Penn State University that include a ban from post-season football bowl games for four years, a $60 million fine, the loss of Joe Paterno’s victories from 1998-2011, and the loss of football scholarships, over its handling of a sex abuse scandal involving Jerry Sandusky, former assistant football coach. For more on this development, Steve Inskeep talks to NPR’s Joel Rose.

 

from Morning Edition

From Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now: For the First Time, X-Ray Video Looks Inside Live Working Batteries

Watching Batteries at Work Senior staff scientist Mike Toney and postdoc Johanna Nelson inspect the transmission X-ray microscope at SLAC’s Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource, a powerful device that takes nano-scale images of chemical reactions in batteries while they are running. Matt Beardsley/SLAC

Powerful X-ray images are showing for the first time what happens inside a working battery as it discharges power, and it could lead to improvements for a new type of battery that promises better storage capacity at a lower cost.

Electric cars and other technologies use lithium-ion batteries, which are useful in part because of their high energy density. Cheaper lithium-sulfur batteries could have even higher densities, but they stop working after only a few charge-discharge cycles. Researchers at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory are watching them work to determine how they could be improved.

SLAC postdoc Johanna Nelson used X-ray diffraction and transmission X-ray microscopy to capture nanoscale images of the battery’s components, a lithium anode and a sulfur-carbon cathode surrounded by an electrolyte. They captured images of sulfur particles before, during and after battery discharge, and found some unexpected results.

Previous research on these types of batteries showed the sulfur and lithium form certain compounds when they react, trapping the sulfur permanently in new compounds. Formation of these compounds, called polysulfides, can kill a battery in just 10 charge-discharge cycles – not nearly good enough for almost any tech, let alone something like an electric car. But this new research shows it may not be as bad as expected. Very few of these polysulfides actually went into the electrolyte, far less than other research had shown. This means it might not be too difficult to trap them at the cathode, preventing any from leaking into the electrolyte and harming the battery.

“If [scientists] really want to know what’s going on inside the battery, they can’t just use standard analysis. They need a technology that tells the whole story,” Nelson tells Stanford News.

The research appears in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

 

 

from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now

From MAKE: 15-Year-Old Maker Astronomically Improves Pancreatic Cancer Test

Maryland young maker Jack Andraka isn’t old enough to drive yet, but he’s just pioneered a new, improved test for diagnosing pancreatic cancer that is 90% accurate, 400 times more sensitive, and 26,000 times less expensive than existing methods. Andraka had gotten interested in pancreatic cancer, and knew that early detection is a challenge. He gleaned information on the topic from his “good friend Google,” and began his research. Yes, he even got in trouble in his science class for reading articles on carbon nanotubes instead of doing his classwork. When Andraka had solidified ideas for his novel paper sensor, he wrote out his procedure, timeline, and budget, and emailed 200 professors at research institutes. He got 199 rejections and one acceptance from Johns Hopkins: “If you send out enough emails, someone’s going to say yes.” Andraka was recently awarded the grand prize at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for his groundbreaking discoveries. [via Fast Company]

Watch Andraka talk about his improved test:

from MAKE