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        Senate Committee passes nanotech bill

        from the gathering-influential-supporters dept.
        Legislation to advance nanotechnology research and development advanced toward full Senate consideration, unanimously passing the Senate Commerce Committee on Sept. 19: Senate Committee Passes Nanotech Bill. For earlier coverage of the recent Senate scrutiny of nanotechnology, see Nanodot post of Sept. 18, 2002, the written opening statements of hearing witnesses, and Nanotechnology bill introduced in Senate.

        Nanosphere Inc. Awarded Two NIH Grants

        from the Nanoparticles-for-diagnosis dept.
        Wendy Emanuel writes with a September 17, 2002 press release from Nanosphere Inc. announcing Nanosphere Inc. Awarded Two NIH Grants to Assess Genetic Risk Factors for Cancer and Hypercoagulation Disorders. The work to be financed by $1.5 million in NIH funds features the company's ultra sensitive detection platform using "nanoparticle probe technology in conjunction with a proprietary bio-molecular detection system".

        Nanomedicine Vol. I in paperback

        from the Great-deals dept.
        Robert A. Freitas Jr., author of Nanomedicine, writes to announce that Nanomedicine, Vol. I: Basic Capabilities is now available in a paperback edition. See listing at Amazon for Vol. I, paperback. Also, Nanomedicine, Vol. IIA: Biocompatibility will be published in February 2003 in hardback by Landes Bioscience (pre-order Vol. IIA).

        Gold nanostructures of six atoms

        from the every-atom-in-its-place dept.
        Gina Miller writes "University of California, Irvine scientists used a scanning tunneling microscope to build chains of gold atoms, one atom at a time, from one to 20 atoms long, and to measure the electrical conductivity of the chains: UCI gold chain study gets to heart of matter. The electronic properties of the gold nanostructure changed dramatically as the first few atoms were added and could share electrons. But by six atoms, the electrical conductivity of the chain was very similar to that of bulk gold, implying functional gold structures could be built with as few as six atoms."

        The research article "Development of One-Dimensional Band Structure in Artificial Gold Chains" by N. Nilius, T. M. Wallis, and W. Ho appeared in the September 13, 2002 issue of Science.

        Nanotechnology IP Agreement

        from the moving-it-out-of-the-lab dept.
        Jerry Soderquist writes that an August 2002 press release by Nanotech Capital, LLC announced that the North Carolina based nanotechnology intellectual property management and development company has just signed an agreement with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The agreement is the first agreement that the Oak Ridge Laboratory has for the commercialization of nanotechnology research conducted at the Oak Ridge facility.

        Cancer immunotherapy advance

        from the Until-we-get-medical-nanobots dept.
        WillWare writes "A novel and promising cancer treatment was mentioned Friday night on 20/20. A young guy with advanced skin melanoma was treated by taking lymphocytes from a tumor biopsy, culturing them in a laboratory to produce large populations of lymphocytes, and transfusing these back into the patient. This work was done by Steven Rosenberg at the National Cancer Institute. Here are some URLs:"

        "t would be interesting if a vestigial organ like the appendix could be re-engineered to do the work that these researchers are currently doing in the lab."

        Individual genome sequencing via nanotechnology

        from the Know-thyself dept.
        Gina Miller writes "A small British company Solexa is developing a dense single molecule array, based on nanotechnology, that allows simultaneous analysis of hundreds of millions of individual molecules. It expects to apply this technology to sequencing an individual human genome much more quickly and cheaply than can be done with current methods: Cambridge University Spinoff Devises Array for Swift, Cheap Resequencing. The arrays could also be applied to studying interactions between other large sets of molecules."

        Recent movie flubs nanotech

        from the Bots-in-the-blood dept.
        Mr_Farlops writes "Scott Burnell, UPI's science journalist, skillfully (Well, I think it was skillful.) attempts to clear up some of the nanotechnology inaccuracies in the new movie, "Ballistic: Ecks v. Sever.""

        Foresight Molecular Nanotechnology Conference

        from the There's-still-room dept.
        Openings are still available for the 10th Foresight Conference on Molecular Nanotechnology and the Tutorials preceding the Conference. To register, the secure Web form may be used through Thursday October 3. The print and fax form may be used through Friday October 4. After Oct 4 registration must be done on site, beginning Thursday, October 10, at the Hyatt Regency Bethesda at One Bethesda Metro Center in Bethesda, MD.

        More flexible optical tweezers

        from the Picking-and-placing dept.
        Ravi Pandya writes "From Nature, September 12 2002 'Self-healing tweezers' (free registration required):"

        The development of optical tweezers for the manipulation of objects at micrometre and submicrometre scales has opened up many new possibilities across the physical and biological sciences. The use of self-reconstructing 'Bessel beams' now extends their potential to allow the simultaneous manipulation of many different objects by a single set of tweezers….

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