Designing Wireless Sensors To Be Dropped Into Volcanoes 126
Thorfinn.au writes with this quote from El Reg:
"Topflight engineers based in Newcastle have hit upon a radical plan for warning of volcanic eruptions. They intend to build a heatproof sensor unit which can be dropped into a volcano's caldera and wirelessly transmit data to monitoring stations despite being possibly immersed in molten rock. 'At the moment we have no way of accurately monitoring the situation inside a volcano and in fact most data collection actually goes on post-eruption. With an estimated 500 million people living in the shadow of a volcano this is clearly not ideal,' explains Dr. Alton Horsfall of Newcastle Uni's Centre for Extreme Environment Technology. 'We still have some way to go but using silicon carbide technology we hope to develop a wireless communication system that could accurately collect and transmit chemical data from the very depths of a volcano.'"
Why? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why? (Score:5, Funny)
On Slashdot?! Certainly you jest.
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On Slashdot?! Certainly you jest.
Female virgin. Idiot.
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It doesn't say that. It says he went on a date with her. And then that his marriage to her was elided from the canon preemptively.
So, really, you have to flash your table light at least a little for the protectors of the canon for this one.
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Yuh, like he wouldn't try to imply that even if it didn't happen.
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Clearly just the ugly ones. No sense in throwing the easy-on-the-eyes ones into a volcano, eh?
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* Guinness Guys Commercial Voice* BRILLIANT!
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You mean, if you blow yourself and a bunch of other denomination mosque goers with a shahid's belt, you end up with 72 uglies? Good to know!
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Naa, that's for the nuns to take care of. :)
Re:Why? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sooooo close to OT7, just one more!
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I'm sooooo close to OT7, just one more!
You don't have to farm, there's plenty in the AH.
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Well... [wikipedia.org]
So we at least won't run out of dolhins? (it's a good time to save them while trying to launch the probe apparently, as in "The Devil's Window")
Also, it might help unciver lost treasures Black Beard the pirate... ("Greed For a Pirate's Dream")
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Hey, at least it's less than a decade now, right? Right? (can't help but wonder who will build it though, not that Bridger is gone... ;( )
Maybe they can find proof of Lord Xenu's crimes (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Maybe they can find proof of Lord Xenu's crimes (Score:4, Informative)
LOL /came here to make some random Xenu comment //leaving satisfied
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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Its stories like this that make me laugh.
Scientology cries 'harassment' so often the cops are fed up, seems like only their lawyers care anymore.
Government Conspiracy (Score:2)
This is just the government trying to "pre-bug" those granite slabs right from the quarry.
Re:Government Conspiracy (Score:4, Funny)
Are you saying the government is taking us for granite? I've been saying that for years.
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Gneiss one.
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[Obligatory "full of schist" joke goes here.]
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You must have been stoned to come up with that. Shale on you!
I have those already (Score:2)
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Only a few? Why not all? ::rimshot::
I don't think so (Score:3, Informative)
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Not with advanced oven-mitt technologies! The precious, and every so finicky, electronic components will be as cool as cucumbers in a summer salad!
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If the package is heat-proof, then I suspect it's breaking some laws of physics.
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If you RTFA, they mentioned that they're going to be using a different-than-standard electronic technology based on silicon carbide rather than silicon. Silicon carbide does not decompose until 2730C, per Wikipedia, wereas the Wiki article you mention states that "most" magma is around 1300C or less.
What I wonder is if you make a conventional CPU out of SiC, you can operate it at a far higher clock because it won't melt itself, thus enabling high performance CPUs or perhaps 3D integration.
--PeterM
Re:I don't think so (Score:4, Insightful)
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TEGs require a cool side as well, so they won't work.
Even if you could solve the power problem (Score:2)
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They'll use a token ring [wikipedia.org].
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And maybe I've heard too much technobabble over the years, but doesn't molten rock have its own magnetic fields?
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What I wonder is if you make a conventional CPU out of SiC, you can operate it at a far higher clock because it won't melt itself, thus enabling high performance CPUs or perhaps 3D integration.
--PeterM
I'm not quite sure that I really want my laptop's CPU running at 2500C under load...
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Silicon carbide capacitors? Resistors? No copper or solder anywhere?
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See thats what I'm wondering. All this talk of SiC is hardly making me wonder how they missed the obvious details like these. Unless they thought they were too boring to mention. In which case they arent pandering to their audience... science nerds love that stuff.
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High power electronic components [wikipedia.org] are already made from/with SiC. Gallium nitride [wikipedia.org] has taken over the LED market from SiC, but it's still used. The problem with defects they note in the SiC article are probably too great to manage across a typical CPU-sized wafer.
They don't use Silicon Electronics (Score:2)
FTA:
According to Horsfall and his fellow nails-tough tech developers, their carbide electronics can keep working up to temperatures of 900C. This is actually sufficient to withstand immersion in some lavas/magmas, though by no means all.
Apparently they aren't using Silicon based electronics so they don't need to keep the sensor that cool (at least from a silicon point of view). But even if the electronics can handle it I'm still not entirely sure what they would use to power it all (Sodium Nickel Chloride battery typically work between 270 and 350C, other molten salt batteries used in missile systems typically operate between 400-550C).
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Even if the package is heat-proof, the electronics are going to fry [wikipedia.org].
What a chance to test layered aerogel.
You missed the point (Score:2)
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You need to make them out of Steel--or Bauxite.
Friendly trollish reminder (Score:2)
Bobby Jindal mocked volcano monitoring shortly before the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull and some other one in the US. No, can't find the name of the US one right now. But this was after Obama's first State of the Union Address.
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As much as I love poking fun at conservative politicians, the guy had a point. He was speaking out against volcano monitoring as part of an economic stimulus package, not as part of the general budget. He was using it as a valid example of how special interest groups (in this case, some researchers who happened to have contacts in a senator's office) had managed to earmark some of the stimulus for things that would do very little to increase consumer spending.
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Then he should have said so: "Whatever merit these earmarks might have, but it is irresponsible to promote funding for them on grounds of stimulus."
Instead, he trivialized the idea wholesale by saying [nytimes.com]:
WTF?
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BMW for instance would have shipped more parts ahead of time, so their factories did not need to close. Lots of folks would have done things like that, or made alternate plans for shipping goods.
Silicon Carbide? Not Calcium Magnesium Carbide? (Score:2)
- Professor Farnsworth [wikipedia.org]
Let's call it... (Score:5, Funny)
Next stop: Venus? (Score:5, Interesting)
Venus, with temperatures hot enough to melt lead, has proven a tough nut to crack for probes hoping to return information about its awesomely hellish surface. But if we're talking about a small probe that can transmit while bobbing around like a cork in a lake of liquid rock... well, mere "lead-melting" heat should be a walk in the park for that little critter.
Send a craft with a few hundred of these guys in its hold, drop 'em on the surface, and find out what's going on with our evil-twin-sister planet. I especially want to know what's going on with the Venusian highlands, where there seems to be a radar-reflecting "frost" of heavy metals [bbc.co.uk] coating the ground. Even if all these probes can tell us is how blisteringly hot it is, that's got to tell us *something* about the environment. Venus sounds like a metal-ore refinery, and I'd love for someone to decide that it's worth a few (hundred) billion bucks to go get some of that Unobtanium (or whatever) and bring it back to Earth.
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Science reporting at its best. I especially liked this quote:
It's not like we have pictures from the surface of Venus [mentallandscape.com] or anything...
That goes for your post as well. While Venus is a fascinating planet in many ways, and I too would like to see more probes sent to it, your post comes across as crackpottery:
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Being a space exploration fan. I'm surprised I haven't seen that site before. Thanks for the link. [ Already knew about the photos though. But his new versions are nice. ]
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Venus is 425 C (or so), and these are rated up to 900 C, so they absolutely should work on Venus.
Of course, this is not new. From a description of the Soviet Venera landers [mentallandscape.com] :
"By the time of Venera-13 and 14, a surprising amount of complex equipment was simply installed outside the pressure hull, exposed to the intensely hostile surface conditions. By this time, Soviet engineers had developed new heat-resistant materials and electronics that were comfortable in this working environment."
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Umm, ok... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, it would be cool for someone to decide that. Trouble is, it's almost certainly not true. Someone did the math here on Slashdot once before (in the context of mining Mars) and came to the conclusion that even if there were bricks of solid platinum lying about on the surface of Mars, it wouldn't be economically
SPECTRE's not gonna like this (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SPECTRE.jpg [wikipedia.org]
i'm skeptical... (Score:1)
i've seen amazing things, so i'm not going to say it's impossible... but landing on the moon is cake in comparison.
How do they transmit through several feet of rock? (Score:2)
I think the more interesting aspect of what they are proposing isn't so much that they're building a super-durable sensor rig that can withstand the heat of liquid magma, but rather how they propose to transmit through several feet of liquid hot rock. They must pack one hell of a powerful transmitter into the probe.
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Or an extremely sensitive receiver near the volcano edge. Perhaps using extremely low frequency signals to get through the dense molten/solid rock? Slow as hell bitrate though =(
Use sound! (Score:2)
Dude, come on (Score:2)
Sure, there absolutely is... in water. Doing the same thing in magma: not so well developed. All the tech we have for doing sonar and underwater comms would melt at these temperatures, and it's not clear what substitute materials you could use that would survive. This would require a major amount of engineering research to figure out, and I doubt anyone could stomach the cost.
And even if you could figure that out, the sonic envi
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And even if you could figure that out, the sonic environment within the magma lake has got to be terrible - weird thermal gradients, high background noise, the multipath effects you mention... it's a very hard problem.
As I said before, even though this is a hard problem, it has already been solved. I've conducted experiments doing real-time high speed underwater acoustic communication in extremely hostile shallow-water sonic environments filled with high background noise (ships), thermal gradients, and multipath. Actually, the distortion ca
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Yeah - good point. I was wondering the same thing. It's one thing to dunk a sensor into molten rock and have it continue to function. It's another to get it to transmit through the heat/density/whatever above it. Hmm. On the plus side if they have anything that can convert heat to electricity they'll have power to spare (though they'll need to setup some kind of a heat differential somehow as best I understand thermodyanmics).
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Is molten rock all that conductive or much of a dielectric? If not, then it wouldn't be much different than passing a radio wave through several layers of concrete (walls). This will be much easier than trying to transmit out from water, a conductive and very dielectric material.
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Molten rock can have almost any chemical composition, just like solidified rock. So the answer is "yes".
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Why allow it to be buried? Why not design it to float on the magma, antenna up, sensors down. It would be pretty easy to do, since magma is very dense.
Dolemite (Score:2)
Why not just send Bender? After all, he's 40% dolemite!
Go commercial, off-the-shelf (Score:2)
I'm convinced that D-link has been making wireless gear for this for years. I frequently find that this may be the only use for their wireless equipment.
+5 reps (Score:1)
Sandalphon (Score:2)
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Misleading summary (Score:5, Informative)
According to Horsfall and his fellow nails-tough tech developers, their carbide electronics can keep working up to temperatures of 900C. This is actually sufficient to withstand immersion in some lavas/magmas, though by no means all. In any case it's difficult to see how any wireless signal could be transmitted through molten minerals, so presumably the inventors are talking more about locating their kit in places within a caldera which - although extremely hot - are not enough so to actually melt rock.
The caldera [wikipedia.org] is not a synonym for lava puddles. They're talking about putting a sensor in the caldera where it can detect gasses. It's not likely to be floating, much less submerged, and in fact that would presumably interfere with the mission of detecting various gasses.
(I've only read the article, not the papers)
Fail... (Score:2)
I guess Sauron should have thought of this.
Different Doping? (Score:1)
I am curious if it is possible to use doping levels on the chips that would allow them to work at high temperatures while not necessarily working at room temperature.
Perhaps you could get with NASA. I bet they would need something similar for exploring Venus.
Britney Spears may be able to enlighten us on the subject. http://britneyspears.ac/lasers.htm [britneyspears.ac]
cooking sensors (Score:4, Interesting)
Turns out the customer was one of the research labs (LANL or something, I forget which). They were measuring nuclear reactions, and using these scopes because they had a particular kind of sensor, but the tests were destructive, and every time they ran the experiment (once a week), they vaporized a scope. I think they figured out a way to sell the customer the sensor without wrapping it in all the fancy scopey packaging.
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Or maybe sell them a few extra feet of wire for the probe...
Although, really, it sounds a bit apocryphal, like maybe you're misremembering it. Because I can't think of a situation where you'd want to have a scope that would be destroyed by the test, since to use a scope you need something to observe the scope, it being a scope, see...which means maybe what they weren't telling you is that a technician was being vaporized along with the scope, see...
(And at the point where we figure out what the real deal i
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Well, uh, your average ICE/DAS/Logic Analyzer has about 8 feet of wire between it and the mobo. 8 feet of excruciatingly calibrated wire that can cost thousands of dollars per ribbon cable.
But the thing here seems to be that they're using a scope. The point of a scope is it has a specialized visual readout (inimitably so in the 70s before the advent of LCD scopes, PC-based metrology, and networked everything). And I can't see a reason to do that in an environment where the scope could be damaged, since a
Hmm (Score:2)
Just make them with (Score:2)
where's the tag? (Score:1)
To late sensor (Score:2)
Great! Now we will have a "you're going to die in 30 seconds" sensor to go along with the "replace engine" indicator light in our cars!!
seaQuest did it (Score:2)
It's DOLOMITE, baby!!!!! (Score:2)
Did they consider the direction of the flow of molten rock? It will be like trying to drop a pea into a gushing fire hydrant.
If they want something that will survive being covered by lava, they could try tantalum hafnium carbide.
Or, alternatively, they could use dolomite.....
resillient (Score:2)
Token ring (Score:1)
One sensor to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
Would it be able to use a Token ring protocol?
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One sensor to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
Would it be able to use a Tolkien ring protocol?
FTFY