Using X-ray Radiography To Reveal Ancient Insects 67
1shooter writes "Researchers in France are using a synchrotron as a giant X-ray machine to peer into the insides of opaque amber to reveal insects dating from the age of dinosaurs. 'The European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France, produces an intense, high-energy light that can pierce just about any material, revealing its inner structure... From more than 600 blocks, they have identified nearly 360 fossil animals: wasps, flies, ants, spiders.' The process reveals detailed 3D images that can be used to make near-perfect enlarged scale models of the bugs using a 'plastic printer.'"
Didn't I see this... (Score:1, Redundant)
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Uh, how? (Score:2)
Re:Uh, how? (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe I'm old fashioned... (Score:1)
Maybe I'm old fashioned, but for that kind of investment, shouldn't they just get married already?
How many furlongs is that? (Score:5, Funny)
> flies, ants, spiders
Why so far away? They might get better resolution if they held the sample right up next to the machine.
Solomon Chang
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Also, the video in TFA is worth the time. What I'm wondering is, why the need for a synchrotron? Why not just any old X-ray machine?
Re:How many furlongs is that? (Score:5, Informative)
>why the need for a synchrotron?
Resolution. Details are shown at the micron level.
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Re:How many furlongs is that? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How many furlongs is that? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:How many furlongs is that? (Score:4, Funny)
"That's not a bug, it's a feature!"
- RG>
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- RG>
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Yes, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Of course they do. (Score:1)
You would not want windows in the way when you inject your cyclotron.
Kids these days.
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Once I was able to draw my eyes away from the, ahh, scientist, and I spotted the screensaver, I had an involuntary 20 minute panic.
Almost enough to make me support a certain Hawaiian lawsuit...
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Just an educated guess, they run Linux. (Score:4, Interesting)
HPC is pretty much Linux dominated and you need some serious horsepower to do 1000 angle sinogram backprojection of cm sized volumes with micron sized beams. A cubic cm would have 10E4 x 10E4 x 10E4 voxels, each with 10E3 angles. Hubba, hubba. They will also have to apply some kind of filtering to each sinogram and probably have to tweak that filter multiple times on lower resolution scans to get it right, and they want to do several a day. I've seen Microsoft clusters choke on networking problems for much less challenging work.
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dating? (Score:2, Funny)
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That's how they survived (unlike us nerds) to this very day.
Holotype (Score:5, Interesting)
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While the amber may be easy enough to sell in the local museum, I cannot shift the feeling that persuading parents to shell out for the millions of dollars of machinery needed to create a model from the insect contained within will be an uphill struggle.
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One thing I would like to see is the following. Even though I've never heard of it, it is possible that this has been thought of and/or patented. But if not, this
Next generation of machines (Score:1)
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If you think this stuff is cool, then LCLS and XFEL will blow you away when they come online. These are great times for accelerator physics, and great times for light sources (unless, of course, LHC destroys us all :S).
True, the LCLS and XFEL are going to be awesome, but I don't know how well accelerator physics will do. Admittedly, more countries seem into making their own synchrotron light facilities. But the LCLS wouldn't have been built if it weren't for the linac lying around that had been built ~40 years ago . And despite their uses in light sources, accelerator physics still seems to be greatly driven by HEP, not photon science. There isn't going to be a rush to build XFELs everywhere, since two mile long linacs
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It's true that acce
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Having the use of the SLC linac certainly made life easier for LCLS, but XFEL is being built on completely virgin ground. If (and it's more of an "if" than a lot of people want to admit) LCLS works, then the demand for X-FELs will be *huge*. There are rumours of a second being planned at SLAC, and one in the UK. These machines are very very cool, and stunningly useful for many other fields of research. I'd bet they won't be able to build these machines fast enough to satisfy demand!
I've never heard of that before, (specifically the second one at SLAC, would it use electron beams from the existing linac or a new one?). The only thing I've heard of is that there are talks of possibly turning PEP-II into a extremely low emittance synchrotron radiation source,a la PETRA, since there's basically not going to be any more accelerator based particle physics at SLAC. Are there really questions as to whether the LCLS will work (i.e., meet its stated design parameters), or do they center more
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The only thing I've heard of is that there are talks of possibly turning PEP-II into a extremely low emittance synchrotron radiation source,a la PETRA
Really?! I *work* there, and I've never heard anything like that!
Actually, this news, if true, reinforces my point. Light sources in general are in such demand, that there are plans to host up to four of them at one site (SSRL, LCLS, rumoured new Xray FEL, rumoured new PEPII based synchrotron)!
Are there really questions as to whether the LCLS will work (i.e., meet its stated design parameters), or do they center more around its actual utility?
Remember that Xray FELs have never been built before, and there is every chance that SLAC could discover some new physics that means that making LCLS actually lase impossibly difficult. They've already had a fe
Peer through opaque objects (Score:4, Funny)
Does anyone know where I can obtain one of these devices ?
I always thought they were just a novelty sold via mail order in Mad Magazines. Can't tell you how many times I've been disappointed. If this is the real deal then please
Yours for $3.99 + S&H (Score:3, Informative)
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Men around the world have been waiting for the ability to selectively see through any kind of materials!
Why does the goverment allow Kryptonians to hoard this technology? It is all a conspiracy, I tell you!
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They laughed! At ME!? I'll show these fools! (Score:3, Funny)
"The European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France, produces an intense, high-energy light that can pierce just about any material,"
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Does anyone know where I can obtain one of these devices ?
I always thought they were just a novelty sold via mail order in Mad Magazines. Can't tell you how many times I've been disappointed. If this is the real deal then please
I was thinking more along the lines of a small device for amplification by stimulated emission of radiation of that "high-energy light that can pierce just about any material", and having said contraption affixed to the pericerebral cartilaginous structure of a shark.
I expect that the project would cost around... one MILLION dollars!
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Have you tried Grenoble, France?
Why Now? (Score:1)
Jurassic Park (Score:1)
No particular intent behind my question...
From 600 blocks!!! (Score:2)
I'm sure the people in the 600 city blocks between the x-ray machine and the amber weren't too happy...
-b
New application (Score:5, Funny)
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Today must be redundant day today. (Score:1)
X-ray Radiography
into the insides
intense, high-energy
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into the insides - yeah that one is redundant
intense, high-energy - it's possible to have high intensity streams of low-energy photons, likewise low intensity streams of high-energy photons.
Re:Today must be redundant day today. (Score:5, Informative)
A 'plastic printer'.... (Score:1)
I'm Impressed (Score:2)
Six hundred blocks? That's, like, miles away!
They would clone dinosaurs from this... (Score:1)