Press release here
Further info from Wired Magazine:
UCL students build low-cost, Arduino-powered, Lego atomic force microscope
Quote:
Research-grade AFMs typically cost $100,000 or more, and use custom hardware, however, the newly designed low-cost version could cost less than $500 to produce. The design brief for the student teams was to build a functional nanoscope, using only LEGO, Arduino microcontrollers, 3D-printed parts and consumer electronics. The event was co-sponsored by the LEGO Foundation, and involved active participation by Chinese high-school students, as potential users of such low-cost science tools. It took just five days for the student team to demonstrate the scanning functionality of their AFM, earning them the award for Best Technical Design. |
Further info from Wired Magazine:
UCL students build low-cost, Arduino-powered, Lego atomic force microscope
Quote:
The project isn't purely altruistic, however. Pyne is hoping that by spreading these low-cost open source microscopes to schools across a country like China, crucial information about the effects of pollution, for example, can be crowdsourced. The schools get low-cost access to high-tech scientific tools and researchers potentially get access to data uploaded by ranks of newly-inspired teenage scientists. |
via JREF Forum http://forums.randi.org/showthread.php?t=265877&goto=newpost
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