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Posts Tagged ‘Notable Solvers’

InnoCentive.com: Our site is evolving!

forsolvers_becoming

I wanted to get a quick blog out today to share some big news: we have been working tirelessly for several months on redesigning our website – I’m pleased and excited to let you know our launch date is in sight, planned for later this summer!

The new site features improved flows, better and more content, and a complete new look & feel we think you’re going to love!

Solver Input: A couple weeks ago I sent an email to a large portion of our Solvers asking for help reviewing and testing aspects of the redesigned website and its content. We received more than two hundred responses within the first twenty-four hours.

Thank you to everyone who responded to the call!

With your input, we’re more excited than ever about the launch.

We’ll provide a more detailed summary of the changes as well as the launch date in a couple weeks.

Best,
JD

Oil Spill Challenge “Solution Revealed” #2: Barge Barrier

Daly

The days and weeks pass, and oil continues to blast upwards from the bottom of the Gulf. And as time marches on, we continue to receive submissions from you about how to stop the gushing oil and protect the coastline. Because of the importance and magnitude of this disaster, and because we want to keep you apprised of various InnoCentive activity around this Challenge, we are glad to share over the next several weeks the details of several key solutions and ideas we’ve received from you. Today’s post is a summary of a submission by Geoff Daly, who is a relatively new InnoCentive Solver.

This barrier solution is really an answer to Louisiana’s Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungessers request for protection of the Barrier Islands.

The floating Barge solution will protect the barrier Islands from being further contaminated by oils coming ashore. There are available between Baton Rouge and Slidell approximately thirty-two hundred and fifty river barges each at least hundred feet long. This number is more than sufficient to produce a barrier structure in front of all the Barrier Islands from nearly Dauphin Island extending west of Grand Island at a fixed position based on the 30-foot high tide mark. The barges—placed in a row nose-to-stern is nearly 73 miles long. And the barges are there now.

These resources can be immediately mobilized within hours, not days or months, and require no dredge and fill permits or forms from USACE.

Additionally, Saint-Gobain’s ChemFab division can fabricate the Teflon barrier material in continuous lengths (this material is used for huge roofing areas at airports and places UK Millennium Dome, and is rated for 250 MPH and 978 Lbs/in tensile.

We would solid-weld the barges together and anchor accordingly, then use skimmers cruising up and down to get the oil against the Teflon barrier all the way down 30 feet.

barges

Oil Spill Challenge “Solution Revealed” #1: “Hypalon” containment

ed-melcarek

The days and weeks pass, and oil continues to blast upwards from the bottom of the Gulf. And as time marches on, we continue to receive submissions from you about how to stop the gushing oil and protect the coastline. Because of the importance and magnitude of this disaster, and because we want to keep you apprised of various InnoCentive activity around this Challenge, we are glad to share during the coming weeks the details of several key solutions and ideas we’ve received from you. Today’s post is a summary of a submission by Ed Melcarek, who is a seven-time winning InnoCentive Solver.

This is a stopgap “band-aid” containment solution at the deep water well head. The oil is directed to the surface with a flexible structure resembling an inverted funnel.  This flexible structure is made of “Hypalon” fabric used in making inflatable watercraft, like Zodiacs. It is highly resilient to abrasion, tensile forces, and is inert to volatile hydrocarbons. The inverted funnel structure has ballast weight inside the outer rim pipe perimeter, and is lowered over the leaking wellhead on the ocean floor via a nylon rope tether.

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The Next Generation of Solvers?

Eric LarsonIntel recently announced the winners of its Science Talent Search – a science competition for pre-college students who compete for $1.25 Million in awards and scholarships.  The competition has been in existence for 66 years, with Intel assuming sponsorship in 1998 to shine a spotlight on the need to improve math and science education in the United States. 1600 students compete in the competition, with the field narrowing to 300 semi-finalists, then 40 finalists.  The winner, second and third place students receive scholarships of $100,000, $75,000 and $50,000 respectively.  Past winners have gone on to win some of the world’s most prestigious academic honors. Six former finalists have gone on to win the Nobel Prize; others have been awarded the Fields Medal, the National Medal of Science and MacArthur Foundation Fellowships.

Congratulations to this year’s winners – we hope to see you as registered Solvers in the near future!

Eric Larson, First Place, $100,000

Eric Larson enjoys tackling the tough questions, the kind that nobody else can answer. Perhaps it should come as no surprise then that Eric’s mathematical investigations led him to develop a complete description of fusion categories never before described. These fusion categories exhibit new types of behaviors and could have applications in theoretical physics and computer science.

Eric, a senior at South Eugene High School in Eugene, Oregon, is the recipient of several mathematics awards, including the silver medal at the 2007 International Math Olympiad in Hanoi, Vietnam. Additionally, the seventeen-year-old is an accomplished classical pianist and a four-time gold medalist at the Oregon Junior Bach Festival. Eric hopes to attend Harvard or MIT and pursue a career as a mathematical researcher or professor.

William Sun, Second Place, $75,000

In his biochemistry project, William Sun, 17, examined a recently discovered molecule, Golgicide A (GCA), as a potential drug to inhibit intracellular transport of disease. Specifically, William’s research demonstrates that, although GCA affects a specific gene which regulates intracellular transport, it has no effect on canine cells. Through cloning and genetic sequencing, William was able to identify a single amino acid difference in the canine gene versus other mammalian genes. When this canine gene was substituted for the corresponding human gene, intracellular pathways were interrupted. This discovery could lead to new approaches for preventing neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s.

First in his class at Parkway Central High School in Chesterfield, Missouri, William enjoys debate and piano, and is the general assembly president of the St. Louis area Model UN. He hopes to further his studies at Harvard or Yale.

Philip Streich, Third Place $50,000

Though nanotubes are known to be extremely strong and conductive, scientists have generally believed them to be insoluble and therefore impractical for real-world applications. Until, that is, Philip Streich, an 18-year-old from Platteville, Wisconsin, used light scattering theory and chemical solvents to prove otherwise. Philip’s research provides the first quantifiable evidence that nanotubes are thermodynamically soluble. Additionally, Philip was able to improve not only the thermodynamic solubility of carbon nanotubes, but also of graphene and cellulose nanocrystals. This work may lead to the development of revolutionary, ultra-strong materials and ultra-fast nanoelectronics.

Philip, who is home-schooled, was a member of the 2007 U.S. Physics Olympiad team and has won the National Physics Bowl twice. He is active in politics and has served as the elected Treasurer of the Grant County Democratic Party for the past two years. Philip plans to attend Harvard and pursue a career in research.

The InnoCentive Top 10 – Solver Countries

We get requests for information all the time, from the media to students doing college papers, about the makeup of our Solver community. And we find the data no less riveting than you do – In fact, I’m a self professed data junkie.  Looking recently at a set of top 10 lists (accurate as of 2/25/2009), I thought I would share some of this data.  Some of it may surprise you.  If you think this is interesting and would like to know more about our Solver or Seeker community, let me know in the comments.

Have fun and please feel free to respond here if you have questions, thoughts, or takeaways.

Enjoy!
Dwayne