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Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, NBC News Digital science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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  • 14
    Oct
    2011
    1:14pm, EDT

    Wireless bike brake works most of the time

    Angelika Klein

    Computer scientist Holger Hermanns presents the wireless bicycle brake at Saarland University.

    By John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

    Researchers have developed a wireless bike brake that works almost all the time, a proof-of-concept idea that could open the door to wireless brakes on planes and trains.

    A wireless bike brake is just what it sounds like — instead of a cable snaking down the frame to stop the wheels from spinning when a lever is pulled, the stop signal is sent wirelessly.

    What's more, the signal is sent by clenching the rubber grip on the handle bar instead of pulling a lever. A pressure sensor in the rubber activates the signal, which is sent via radio waves to a receiver on the bike's fork that activates a disk brake.

    The set-up works 99.999999999997 percent of the time, according to Holger Hermanns, a computer scientist at Saarland University in Germany, who designed and measured the performance of the brake.

    "This implies that out of a trillion braking attempts, we have three failures," he said in a news release. "That is not perfect, but acceptable." 

    Brakes of any sort are never 100 percent fail-safe, but relying on the same type of fickle wireless technology your laptop uses to connect to the Internet or your cell phone to make calls seems risky.

    Nevertheless, wireless systems are trending in the direction of implementation in areas where failure isn't an option, such as stopping trains and airplanes.

    Concrete plans for wireless brakes on European trains already exist, according to Hermanns. But testing wireless brakes on a train is a complex and risky proposition. That's why he built the wireless bike brake.

    "The wireless bicycle brake gives us the necessary playground to optimize these methods for operation in much more complex systems," he said.

    The researchers tested the effectiveness with the same algorithms used for aircraft and chemical factories, where failure also is much more serious than a bike that loses its brakes.

    While trains and planes of the future could indeed stop with the application of wireless brakes, for now Hermanns says he is looking for engineers to optimize the system for bikes.

    More on bicycles and technology:

    • Japanese robot goes bike riding
    • Green wheel turns pedal bike into electric hog
    • The era of e-bikes is upon us
    • Special powder fuels electric bike

     


    John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com.

     

    Next-gen nuclear plants could provide carbon-free energy, but the painfully slow process of approving better, safer reactors — not to mention real anxiety over meltdowns and waste — threaten to derail projects before they can be built.

     

    79 comments

    Until someone jams the signal or another bike using the same frequency tries to stop or unstop and the bikes get confused and uh oh accident.

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    Explore related topics: science, wireless, bicycle, innovation, transportation, featured
  • 23
    Sep
    2010
    7:14pm, EDT

    Animation in a micro-Wonderland

    Watch on YouTube
    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Like Alice in Lewis Carroll's classic tale, the heroine of an animated short titled "Dot" has to fight her way through a small-scale Wonderland. But this Wonderland is no mere literary creation. Rather, it's a stop-action stage that draws upon the latest in technology, including a smart phone, a take-anywhere microscope and a 3-D printer. The Nokia N8 smart phone was equipped with a CellScope diagnostic-quality microscope to make the movie, frame by frame. The 3-D printer created half-inch-tall (9-millimeter-tall) plastic figurines of Dot, a girl who finds her world of coins, pins and pencil shavings collapsing around her.

    Dot was created at Aardman Animations (which has produced the "Wallace and Gromit" films and other animated goodies), and she's already won recognition from Guinness World Records as the "smallest stop-motion animation character in a film." Let's see ... if a 9-millimeter-tall character wins an Academy Award, how tiny would the Oscar be?

    More wonderlands on the Web:


    • Nobel Intent: Photo tour of the Large Hadron Collider
    • Alphadesigner: Mapping stereotypes (via GeekPress)
    • Nat'l Geographic: Auroral shows | More auroras on SpaceWeather

    Tip o' the Log to Discovery News' Tracy Staedter Check out my other postings on Cosmic Log, and connect with me via Twitter (@b0yle) or Facebook.
    .

     

    2 comments

    Creativity at its smallest.

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    Explore related topics: technology, science, wireless, video, whimsy, daily-dose

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John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News. From climate change and mass extinctions to human evolution and deep space, his writing explores life on Earth and its place in the universe. He was a staff writer at the Environmental News Network for several years and has contributed to National Geographic News for more than a decade.

Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

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