The Bluefin 21 Artemis autonomous underwater vehicle is hoisted back on board the Australian vessel the Ocean Shield after a successful buoyancy test in the southern Indian Ocean. The AUV will likely be deployed as part of the continuing search for the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370. (U.S. navy/Reuters)


More acoustic blips picked up by a sensor towed by a ship off western Australia could finally help silence the conjecture surrounding the missing Malaysia Airlines jet. But triangulating the co-ordinates for Flight MH370’s black box data recorder is just the surface phase of a much deeper mission.


A Towed Pinger Locator used to detect black box recorders sits on the wharf at naval base HMAS Stirling in Perth, Australia. The device has been used on the Australian warship Ocean Shield to aid in the search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370. (Rob Griffith/Associated Press)

The next challenge would begin thousands of metres below if, as investigators hope, a black box is indeed emitting "pings" from a wreck site on the ocean floor.

"The most reasonable option from there is side-scan sonar," said Jim Gibson, general manager of Phoenix International, which is assisting the U.S. navy on the search for the missing Boeing 777 in the south Indian Ocean.

The sonar technology maps the seabed using soundwave echoes that are digitized into a computer image.

"If you have an untrained eye, you might take a look at something on that sonar trace and say, ‘How can you tell that’s manmade?’ because it looks like a black dot or a rock. But it could be the wing of an airplane," Gibson said.


The above graphic shows the Australian ship Ocean Shield dragging a towed pinger locator, which is used to detect acoustic beacons being sent from a possible black box pinger. (Duk Han Lee/CBC)

Phoenix International, which also helped recover debris from Air France Flight 447 and the Space Shuttle Challenger, has several submersibles at its disposal to find the Malaysian plane, which vanished on March 9 carrying more than 200 people on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

"In this particular case, if — and that's a big if — they find a high probability area, they would in all likelihood use the Artemis," Gibson said.
Search zone as large as L.A.

The yellow, torpedo-shaped Bluefin 21 model of the Artemis AUV (autonomous underwater vehicles) underwent buoyancy testing last week by the Royal Australian Navy’s Ocean Shield ship.




 Once deployed, the unmanned Bluefin 21 would have to search a 1,300-square-kilometre swath of ocean floor, an area equivalent to the size of Los Angeles. Covering a search zone that immense could take two months.

The sub takes pictures and has a depth rating of 6,000 metres; the possible black box sending beacons from Flight MH370 is suspected to be about 4,500 metres deep.

The purpose of the pilotless AUVs is to establish a "degree of confidence" as to the location of a debris field, Gibson explained, but the Bluefin 21 would not be able to remove objects and bring them back to the surface.

For the physical extraction phase, a remote-operated vehicle (ROV) resembling a backhoe loading cab with clampers would take the next dive.

A strong candidate to deploy would be Phoenix International’s Remora class of ROV, said Tom Dettweiler, who worked for eight years as a senior project manager for Odyssey Marine Exploration’s shipwrecks team.
'Some of the most fragile things have been brought back like little porcelain statuettes, and they were totally intact.'- Tom Dettweiler, Odyssey Marine Exploration

The Remora was used to inspect the Titanic site in 2001 and was also used to find wreckage from Adam Air Flight 574, a domestic passenger plane that crashed into the Makassar Strait near Indonesia in 2007.

The 900-kilogram ROV is equipped with a heavy-lift system and has video capabilities.

"They have manipulators on the front, which are almost like a mechanical version of a human arm," Dettweiler said. "There are joints, a shoulder, an elbow, a wrist, and some kind of grasper on the end."


A map shows the search area being searched in the hunt for the missing Malaysia Airlines jet. (CBC News)

An operator can move the arm remotely, Dettweiler said. Once the operator watching a screen has the ROV positioned before the black box, he or she can close the gripper from inside the control suite.

"Slowly, so you don’t squash it," Dettweiler said. "In my experience, some of the most fragile things have been brought back like little porcelain statuettes, and they were totally intact."
Vessel can slice into fuselage

The ROV would be tethered to a larger naval ship via a fibre optic "umbilical cord" that also powers it, allowing the underwater vessel to explore the ocean depths for days at a time.


Once at the bottom, it would be able to remove, cut, slice and tear away fuselage from a wrecked plane in order to reach the pinger. The cylindrical pingers on black box recorders typically weigh seven to 10 kilograms. The vessels are able to lift items weighing more than 360 kilograms.

"It’s probably bolted down to something inside the aircraft, but these things can cut into something no problem," said Paul Tidwell, a deep-ocean salvage expert most famous for finding the sunken Second World War-era Japanese submarine I-52 in 1995.




Tidwell, who has participated in dozens of deep-water recovery explorations in the past 25 years and also advised director James Cameron on lighting techniques for 1997’sTitanic, said it could take three or four hours for the submersible to return to the surface with any objects from 4,500 metres deep.

He notes there is worry about the battery on the pinger dying.

"They do tend to overbuild these things, so hopefully it can last a little longer," he said.
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Africa may be home to the next great wave of global economic growth and innovation.

With a GDP of around $2.83 trillion (including portions of the Middle East), Africa’s economic might is small compared to developed nations like the United States. However, favorable commodity prices, improved life expectancy, stabilizing governments and a strong trading partner in China are setting the region up for future success.

Technology companies have taken notice and are moving into the region. We wrote recently about Internet.org’s efforts to bring Internet access to developing regions like Africa (the organization recently shared plans for experimenting with solar-power drones). Here are three more ways the science and technology industries are exploring the continent.

Philips

In March, Philips, a CEA member, announced plans to open a research and innovation hub in Nairobi, Kenya. The Philips Innovation Hub will collaborate with local universities and other local organizations to tackle challenges like providing affordable healthcare.

Philips has already begun work developing and testing tools to combat pneumonia and using solar power and LED technology to provide lighting.

“We want to tap into the city’s vibrant R&D eco-system and contribute to the process of co-creating new solutions, new business models and meaningful partnerships to provide innovations that make an impact,” said JJ van Dongen, Senior Vice President & CEO Philips Africa.


Facebook

Rwanda is now home to SocialEDU, a pilot initiative from Facebook, which will provide students there with free access to a social learning experience. The social networking company is working with edX to integrate free education data with a mobile app that connects to Facebook.

Nokia, a CEA member, will provide affordable smarthphones, while Ericsson, also a CEA member, will provide support in reducing demand for bandwidth.

Students who participate in SocialEDU will free receive data plans and the ability to consume educational content from universities like Harvard, MIT and ETH Zurich.



DuPont
In South Africa, DuPont has opened a regional technology center, which will focus on helping Africa’s farmers tackle pests, disease and climate volatility. DuPont has already opened similar centers in Brazil, India and China.

The company plans to invest $5.8 million in the center by 2017. Their research will focus on the science of crop production and will include Africa’s first private insectary.

"We believe this technology center will be a catalyst for innovation and collaboration to help feed a growing population in Africa and around the world,” DuPont Chair and Chief Executive Officer Ellen Kullman was quoted as saying.































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We've seen all kinds of regenerative medicine transplants over the past few years, including windpipes and the larynx. Now, a research team at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina has reported that it implanted laboratory-grown vaginas in patients born with Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome: a rare genetic disorder that results in the vagina and uterus being underdeveloped or missing entirely.

Girls ranging in age from 13 to 18 underwent surgery during the trial and eight years after, the organs continue to show normal function. "This pilot study is the first to demonstrate that vaginal organs can be constructed in the lab and used successfully in humans," said Anthony Atala, M.D., who led the research team. "This may represent a new option for patients who require vaginal reconstructive surgeries."

The structures of the lab-grown organs were built using cells taken during a biopsy of each patient's external genitals. From there, cells were extracted, expanded and then hand-sewn into a vaginal shape, uniquely made for each person. After about six weeks, the organs were implanted during surgery, with the body gradually replacing the engineered structure with a new organ. What's life like for the patients? Well, they've reported normal sexual function following the procedure, with desire and pain-free intercourse now being part of their lives. Researchers say that the same procedure could be used to treat those with vaginal cancer or other injuries. NewScientist has an interview with one of the patients, which you can read here.



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Samsung released Developer Editions of the Galaxy SIII and S4, so it's not a huge surprise to see a similarly-equipped Galaxy S5 appear on the company's website. The listing reveals that a CDMA-capable version with Verizon branding will land at some point in the future, but fails to elaborate further. What we do know is that it'll be available in black with 16GB internal storage, and we'd guess that it won't be offered under subsidy -- but that's a small price to pay for an unlocked bootloader. There's no word on if AT&T will get a Developer Edition S5 of its very own, but we wouldn't be shocked if one popped up in the next few days.



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