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Monday, 14 June 2010

Reinventing the wheel -- naturally


June 14, 2010 Reinventing the wheel -- naturallyEnlarge



This is a fanciful rendering of Leonardo da Vinci's Vetruvian Man as a wheel. Credit: Adrian Bejan
  
Humans did not invent the wheel. Nature did. While the evolution from the Neolithic solid stone wheel with a single hole for an axle to the sleek wheels of today's racing bikes can be seen as the result of human ingenuity, it also represents how animals, including humans, have come to move more efficiently and quicker over millions of years on Earth, according to a Duke University engineer.

Adrian Bejan, professor of at Duke's Pratt School of Engineering, argues that just as the design of wheels became lighter with fewer spokes over time, and better at distributing the stresses of hitting the ground, animals have evolved as well to move better on Earth. In essence, over millions of years, animals such as humans developed the fewest "spokes," or legs, as the most efficient method for carrying an increasing body weight and height more easily.

"This prediction of how wheels should emerge in time is confirmed by the evolution of wheel technology," Bejan said. "For example, during the development of the carriage, solid disks were slowly replaced by wheels with tens of spokes."

The advantage of spokes is that they distribute stresses uniformly while being lighter and stronger than a solid wheel. "In contrast with the spoke, the solid wheel of was stressed unevenly, with a high concentration of stresses near the contact with the ground, and zero stresses on the upper side," Bejan said. "The wheel was large and heavy, and most of its volume did not support the load that the
vehicle posed on the axle.

"If you view animal movement as a 'rolling' body, two legs, swinging back and forth, perform the same function of an entire wheel-rim assembly," Bejan said. "They also do it most efficiently - like one wheel with two spokes with the stresses flowing unobstructed and uniformly through each spoke. The animal body is both wheel and vehicle for horizontal movement."

Bejan's analysis was published early online in the American Journal of Physics. His research is supported by the National Science Foundation and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

"An animal leg is shaped like a column because it facilitates the flow of stresses between two points - like the foot and hip joint, or paw and shoulder," Bejan said. "In the example of the Neolithic stone wheel, the flow of stresses is between the ground and the whole wheel."


Bejan believes that the constructal theory of design in nature (www.constructal.org), which he started describing in 1996, predicts these changes in the wheel and animal movement. The theory states that for a design (an animal, a river basin) to persist in time, it must evolve to move more freely through its environment.

Since animal locomotion is basically a falling-forward process, Bejan argues that an increase in height predicts an increase in speed. For a centipede, each leg represents a point of contact with ground, which limits the upward movement of the animal. As animals have fewer contacts with ground, they can rise up higher with each stride.

"The constructal theory shows us this forward-falling movement is dictated by the natural phenomenon, which is required for the minimal amount of effort expended for a certain distance traveled," Bejan said.

An earlier analysis by Bejan showed that larger human swimmers are faster because the wave they create while swimming is larger and thus carries them forward faster.

While wheel-like movement evolved naturally, it also describes what Bejan likes to call "nature's gear box." Humans have two basic speeds, Bejan said - walking and running. A running human gets taller, or higher off the ground, with each stride, which increases his speed.

A horse has three speeds - walk, trot and gallop.

"The horse increases its speed by increasing the height from which it falls during each cycle," Bejan said. "Then, from the trot to the gallop, the body movement changes abruptly such that the height of jump increases stepwise for each stride. Nature developed not only wheel-like movement but also mechanisms for changing speeds."

Provided by Duke University (news : web)

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Sunday, 13 June 2010

Intel in Malaysia for the long haul

By B.K. SIDHU
bksidhu@thestar.com.my

MD: The chipmaker only moving a unit back to US, not shutting any plants

KUALA LUMPUR: Intel, world’s largest chipmaker, is committed to remain in Malaysia even though the rationalisation of its operations will lead to the moving of its assembly and test development (ATD) unit back to Arizona in the United States.

“The wafer fabrication and assembly lines must be close to each other, as there is a need for a lot of interaction because we need to respond to market trends and consumers fairly quickly,” Intel Malaysia managing director Atul Bhargava said.

“Being in different time zones (makes it difficult and that is why) we are moving the unit back to the US. Intel continually optimises its resourcing and business model in line with evolving business needs,’’ he said.

The migration will begin in the first quarter of 2011 and be completed by June the same year.

Atul Bhargava … ‘Our investment in Malaysia is growing every year.’
 
The affected workers, about 500 of them, at the plant in Kulim Hi-Tech Park will be absorbed into the group and redeployed for other job functions at the Kulim and Penang facilities.

“So we are not shutting down any plants. It is just that the ATD development needs to be closer home in the US,” he added.

Intel has been in Malaysia since 1972. It is the largest offshore facility outside the United States for the chipmaker. The company has so far invested US$3.9bil (RM13bil) in Malaysia.

Intel Malaysia comprises three campuses and employs more than 10,000 people.

Intel Penang is a key assembly and testing site, Intel Kulim assembles processor packaging and is an important operations centre for mobile modules, and Intel Kuala Lumpur includes a multimedia super-corridor development centre as well as a sales and marketing office.

Of the 10,000 people employed, 55% are involved in the manufacturing division, 25% in the design of products, and the balance 20% are in services (IT, shared and other service-related areas).

“We are fairly big in doing design work here and our plants are high-tech, so we really need knowledge workers as the job is not about pushing of buttons,’’ Atul said.

As Malaysia marches towards becoming a knowledge-based and innovation nation, it is necessary to have a workforce that is able to work towards achieving that goal.

“If there is one thing I could tell Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, it is that the need to change the human capital (development in the country),’’ Atul said.

He said improvements were needed in the systems adopted by local universities and they should strive to become the world’s Top 100.

They need to change the curriculum to be industry friendly and adopt newer methods of teaching. Only then can talent that can help the country in the innovation phase be created.

“I have been advocating the need to do it either organically or hook up with institutes like MIT; make that quantum leap, emulate, so that people will know us,’’ he said. (MIT refers to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States.)

Asked whether Intel would follow Western Digital and invest more to expand its operations in the country, Atul said: “Our investment in Malaysia is growing every year as we are here for the long haul.

“We have worked hard and diversified, we have the latest technology here, and we are committed to stay. But just like other companies we move around for the needs of our customers.”

(Western Digital recently announced it would invest about US$1.2bil in Penang.)

Atul said in whatever Intel did, it made sure there is benefit to the company, the country and the consumer.
 
Related Stories:

Intel: Closure will not affect commitment

Intel to close R&D unit in Kulim Hi-Tech Park

Namewee parodies World Cup fever in Malaysia

PETALING JAYA: Controversial rapper Wee Meng Chee, better known as Namewee, has composed a new music video to parody the World Cup football fever.

The clip was uploaded on both popular video sharing site YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/user/namewee and his personal blog several days ago.

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Official Fifa World Cup 2010 SongIn the song, Wee narrated how the country had never been shortlisted for the World Cup and how Malaysians had to resort to merely betting on the games and watching football matches in order to get a feel of participating in the tournament.

He also rapped about illegal bookies and wives and girlfriends of football fans complaining about being neglected due to the football matches.

The over four-minute long video also features a number of women clad in attractive sport outfits playing football.

In his blog, Wee said he had written the song to bring a different feel to Malaysia’s participation in the World Cup and urged everyone to work harder for sports.

In the video clip, he had also taken a dig at Malaysia’s performance in the last Thomas Cup badminton tournament and on “Datuk Lee’s” comments and reasoning behind it.

The Malaysian badminton team had lost to both Japan and Indonesia during the Thomas Cup.
The video, which recorded over 151,000 views so far, has attracted diverse comments from viewers, including praises and criticisms.

The 27-year-old Muar-born artiste first made headlines with his infamous Negarakuku YouTube music video in 2007, which he did while studying in a university in Taiwan.

The song had used the national anthem as the background to his rap.
He was subsequently questioned by the Bukit Aman Commercial Crimes headquarters for his song and asked to provide a translation of it in Bahasa Malaysia.

Since then, the rapper had also been criticised for hitting out at Tenaga Nasional Bhd after his home in Muar was hit by a blackout and for his views and sentiments on the Chinese independent school system.

He was reported to be planning and seeking government funding for a film.

Source: The Star, Monday June 14, 2010