TORONTO, ON, May 22, 2013 (Press-News.org) The University of Maryland has been chasing the Sikorsky Prize for the last five years. The prize will be presented to the first team to build a human powered helicopter that can climb 10 feet and stay airborne for 60 seconds. The University of Maryland team, also known as Team Gamera, has come within a whisper on several recent attempts.
George MacARTHUR has launched a campaign to challenge the University of Maryland.
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/godzilla-vs-gamera
www.godzillahovers.com
Contact: George MacARTHUR 705-878-9878
MacARTHUR vs. University of Maryland
Epic engineering battle on horizon.
2013-05-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Singapore Private Home Sales Drop Due to Cooling Measures in 1st Quarter 2013
2013-05-22
Amidst of all the decrease in revenue the construction industry is still optimistic and are continuously developing projects that will suits everyone. They are making sure that the development in their field will go pass the current hardships that the industry is experiencing.
Jones Lang La Salle was quoted for the drastic drop of the revenue in the classified home sales that is for the first quarter of 2013. The revenue plunge was forecasted already that once the cooling measure takes place the drop in returns will happen. This is due to the surplus from the previous ...
3D Model Marketplace CGTrader Looks For The Next 3D Printable Innovation
2013-05-22
"The next industrial revolution already has a name - 3D printing. 3D printing is affecting how products are created and consumed. In order to work, this technology needs professional-level 3D models, but there is a surprising gap between 3D printing industry and professional 3D designers. CGTrader aims to bridge this gap and help the 3D designer community take a plunge and start modeling for the exciting 3D printing technology. Professional 3D designers have the skills and creativity needed to bring the next big thing in 3D printing, and we aim to encourage them to ...
Vancouver, B.C. Pigeons Are Winning the War!
2013-05-22
Despite having installed more than 250,000 feet of bird spikes and a million feet of netting to keep pigeons off residential and commercial buildings in and around Vancouver, pigeon patrol expert Andrew MacBain from www.pigeonpatrol.ca says the pesky birds are winning the war.
"It's worse than ever," says the Surrey-based entrepreneur who has installed bird spikes and netting at BC Place, the BC Ferries terminals, BC Transit and other buildings throughout the Lower Mainland. "The pigeon population doubles every year."
The mushrooming pigeon population ...
UCSB study shows where scene context happens in our brain
2013-05-21
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– In a remote fishing community in Venezuela, a lone fisherman sits on a cliff overlooking the southern Caribbean Sea. This man –– the lookout –– is responsible for directing his comrades on the water, who are too close to their target to detect their next catch. Using abilities honed by years of scanning the water's surface, he can tell by shadows, ripples, and even the behavior of seabirds, where the fish are schooling, and what kind of fish they might be, without actually seeing the fish. This, in turn, changes where the boats go, and how the ...
WCS informs discussion of responses to a changing Arctic
2013-05-21
New York (May 20, 2013) – In two critical reports released at the Arctic Council Ministerial Meeting in Kiruna, Sweden on May 15th, the scientific expertise of the Wildlife Conservation Society helped inform an international body of senior government officials about changing conditions in the Arctic, and potential responses to those changes.
The scientific reports reviewed by the ministers are products of contributions from various experts, representing a range of knowledge and traditions—including indigenous perspectives.
The first report, entitled "Arctic Biodiversity ...
Abundance and distribution of Hawaiian coral species predicted by model
2013-05-21
Researchers from the University of Hawaii – Manoa (UHM) School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) developed species distribution models of the six dominant Hawaiian coral species around the main Hawaiian Islands including two species currently under consideration as threatened or endangered. They found the order of coral abundance (from highest to lowest) around the main Hawaiian Islands to be Porites lobata, Montipora patula, Pocillopora meandrina, Montipora capitata, Porites compressa, and Montipora flabellata.
Environmental factors (wave energy, shape ...
Soft matter offers new ways to study how ordered materials arrange themselves
2013-05-21
A fried breakfast food popular in Spain provided the inspiration for the development of doughnut-shaped droplets that may provide scientists with a new approach for studying fundamental issues in physics, mathematics and materials.
The doughnut-shaped droplets, a shape known as toroidal, are formed from two dissimilar liquids using a simple rotating stage and an injection needle. About a millimeter in overall size, the droplets are produced individually, their shapes maintained by a surrounding springy material made of polymers. Droplets in this toroidal shape made of ...
Racial disparities in the surgical management of non-small cell lung cancer
2013-05-21
ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA – The surgical management of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in U.S. hospitals varies widely depending on the race of the patient, according to a new study.
"In most patients, the initial treatment for Stage I and Stage II NSCLC is surgery," said researcher Jayanth Adusumalli, MBBS, of the Creighton University Medical Center in Omaha, Nebraska. "In our study of more than 1,200,000 patients diagnosed with NSCLC in US hospitals between the years 2000 and 2010, we found statistically significant racial disparities in the surgical management of these ...
Delayed transfer to the ICU increases risk of death in hospital patients
2013-05-21
ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA ─ Delayed transfer to the intensive care unit (ICU) in hospitalized patients significantly increases the risk of dying in the hospital, according to a new study from researchers in Chicago.
"Early intervention improves outcomes for many of the conditions that are indications for inpatient transfer to the ICU. This suggests that delaying ICU transfer may increase the risk of death in these patients," said lead author Matthew Churpek, MD, MPH, of the University of Chicago Medical Center. "Using a vital sign-based early warning score, the Cardiac ...
Antibiotic therapy appears beneficial for patients with COPD
2013-05-21
ATS 2013, PHILADELPHIA ─ Extended use of a common antibiotic may prolong the time between hospitalizations for patients suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), according to a post-hoc analysis of a multicenter study which compared the hospitalization rates of patients treated with a 12-month course of azithromycin to the rates of those treated with placebo.
The results of the current analysis will be presented at the ATS 2013 International Conference.
"Preventing respiratory-related re-hospitalizations is a key component of COPD therapy, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
MS heroes unite in Phoenix for CMSC 2025!
Stretched in a cross pattern: Our neighboring galaxy is pulled in two axes
Scientists find the ‘meow-tation’ that gives cats their orange fur
New stem cell model sheds light on human amniotic sac development
Shorter radiation therapy after prostate surgery safe, study finds
Long-term survival in patients with low-risk cervical cancer after simple, modified, or radical hysterectomy
Hearing aid service models, technology, and patient outcomes
Researchers elucidate mechanism of auxin influx in plants
Scientists track down mutation that makes orange cats orange
Allen Institute launches CellScapes initiative to transform our understanding of how human cells build tissues and organs
Why rose petals curl: Hidden geometry of nature’s beauty uncovered
New study reveals how to reclaim space for civil society in times of democratic decline
South African study identifies two new breast cancer genes in black women
Focused ultrasound halts growth of debilitating brain lesions
Older adults are getting infected with HIV, but prevention focuses on young people
The “transformation” of PbSc0.5Ta0.5O3 ceramics: Tuning ordering degree for enhanced electrocaloric effect
The most extreme solar storm hit Earth in 12350 BC, scientists identify
Human activity reduces plant diversity hundreds of kilometres away
Korea University College of Medicine selected for ‘2025 Interdisciplinary Physician-Scientist Training Program’
“Virus exposure linked to Neurodegeneration” Professor Ok Sarah Shin's Team at Korea University College of Medicine Finds Clues to treat neurodegenerative diseases with Therapeutic Candidate “ALT001”
Implanting Ag nanoparticles in SiOC ceramic nanospheres for exceptional electromagnetic wave absorption and antibacterial performance
GRIT remaps the world’s rivers, branching into the unknown to aid global flood modelling
Cyberbullying in any form can be traumatizing for kids
Learning as an adventure: The lecture theatre in the spaceship
First machine learning model developed to calculate the volume of all glaciers on Earth
Researchers develop new metallic materials using data-driven frameworks and explainable AI
Seeing blood clots before they strike
Research reveals why next-generation engine noise grinds our gears
People with critical cardiovascular disease may benefit from palliative care
Recessive genes are subject to Darwinian selection
[Press-News.org] MacARTHUR vs. University of MarylandEpic engineering battle on horizon.