Thursday, November 21, 2013

Thursday, November 20, 2013

General Announcments:
  • If you notice anything missing or wrong, please comment below. I don't always have the whole picture -Grace
  • Mondays: Wear or bring comfortable clothes for PE. We will be up at the field.
Math:
  • 7th Grade:
    • Due Tue., 11/19:
    • Practice simplifying algebraic expressions by identifying, and combining like terms:
    •  Handout Practice 2.5B (odds)
    • All: New PoW due Mon., 11/25.
  • 8th Grade:
      Grace's Group
    • Quiz Friday, November 22 on linear equations. You should be able to do the following:
      • Identify the parts of y=mx+b
      • Graph an equation in this format
      • Write an equation in slope-intercept form given a slope and a point or given two points.
      John's Group
    • Due Wed., Nov 20:  Correct your quiz for + 1/3 credit
    • This week's PoW completed by Monday, 11/25
Humanities:
  • Final draft of letter due Friday.
Science:

Spanish:
  • 7th Grade:
    • earphones
  • 8th Grade:
      • earphones
    Atelier: 

    Moment of Zen:

    Organ designed by Leonardo daVinci over 500 years ago built and played for the first time recently. 

    Monday, November 18, 2013

    Monday, November 18, 2013

    General Announcments:
    • If you notice anything missing or wrong, please comment below. I don't always have the whole picture -Grace
    • Mondays: Wear or bring comfortable clothes for PE. We will be up at the field.
    Math:
    • 7th Grade:
      • Due Tue., 11/19:
      • Practice simplifying algebraic expressions by identifying, and combining like terms:
      •  Handout Practice 2.5B (odds)
      • All: New PoW due Mon., 11/25.
    • 8th Grade:
        Grace's Group
      • Due Tues., 11/19: Finish 2.3 Practice B, begun in class today 
      • John's Group
      • Due Wed., Nov 20:  Correct your quiz for + 1/3 credit
      • This week's PoW completed by Monday, 11/25
    Humanities:
    • Study for test Friday. Review packet due tomorrow.
    • Research one issue to change the world (due Friday)
    Science:
    • Due Friday, Nov 15
    • Your written summary (minimum 200 words, handwritten or typed) of the Process for making Rock candy
    • Use your outline given preapred in class to summarize the process and explain the reason(s) why sugar crystals developed on the skewer over time; include a colored illustration of this activity as part of your summary!:
    Spanish:
    • 7th Grade:
      • earphones
      • traduce
      • earphones
      • hoja de trabajo
    • 8th Grade:
      Moment of Zen:


      Urine-Powered Robots?

      From LiveScience:
      There's a new use for artificial hearts, and it involves a more taboo bodily fluid than blood.

      A device that mimics the squeezing action of the human heart has been used to pump urine into a microbial fuel cell, which could power robots that convert the waste into electricity.

      "In the future, we hope the robots might be used in city environments for remote sensing," where they could helpto monitor pollution, said study researcher Peter Walters, an industrial designer at the University of the West of England. "It could refuel from public lavatories, or urinals, " Walters said.

      Walters and colleagues at the University of Bristol have created four generations of these so-called EcoBots over the past decade. Previous versions of the robots ran off energy from rotten produce, dead flies, wastewater and sludge.

      Each is powered by a microbial fuel cell, containing live microorganisms like those found in the human gut or sewage treatment plants. The microbes digest the waste (or urine) and produce electrons, which can be harvested to produce electrical current, Walters said.

      The researchers have already proved the microbial fuel cells can use urine power to charge a mobile phone.

      Now, the team has developed a device, made of artificial muscles, that delivers real human urine to the robot's microbial power stations. The pump is constructed from smart materials, called shape memory alloys, which remember their shape after being deformed.

      Heating the artificial muscles with an electric current causes them to compress the soft center of the pump, forcing urine through an outlet that pumps it up to the height of the robot's fuel cells. Removing the heat allows the muscles to revert to their original shape, allowing more fluid to enter the pump — much as a heart relaxes to suck in more blood.

      Twenty-four of these fuel cells stacked together were able to produce enough electricity to charge a capacitor, which was used to trigger contractions of the artificial heart pump, the researchers report today (Nov. 8) in the journal Bioinspiration and Biomimetics.

      Whereas conventional motor-powered pumps tend to get clogged, the artificial muscle pump has larger internal orifices, Walters said.

      While the new pump does produce more electricity than it consumes (since some of the electricity comes from urine that's converted to electrons), it's still not extremely efficient. The researchers hope to improve the pump's efficiency for use in future generations of the EcoBot.