About 2020 Science
ABOUT THE BLOG:
2020 Science is personal blog about science and technology in the 21st century. Written by scientist and emerging technologies advisor Andrew Maynard it tackles some of the knottier questions raised by science and technology, such as “where is technology innovation taking us?”, “what is the role of science in society society?” and “how can science and technology be developed responsibly?”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Although I spent many years as a research scientist, a few years back I entered the alternative reality of science policy and communication. Still under the delusion that “science,” “policy” and “communication” are not mutually exclusive, this blog is a repository for my thoughts and reflections on the challenges of developing and using emerging science and technology for the betterment of society.
Currently serving as the Chief Science Adviser at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies, I am heavily involved in the development of responsible nanotechnologies. An author of over one hundred scientific publications, I spend much of my time these days placing science and technology in a social context for a broader audience. This includes briefing politicians, industry, environmentalists, journalists (and anyone else who will listen) on smart ways of addressing the challenges of emerging technologies.
Topics that pique my interest include nanotechnology, synthetic biology, science communication and engagement, twenty first century science policy, and socially responsible science (along the lines of Neal Lane’s “Civic Scientist”).
I have a degree in Physics from the University of Birmingham in the UK, and a PhD in physics from the University of Cambridge, UK. I am also the mastermind behind The Twinkie Guide To Nanotechnology – a sobering reminder of what happens when scientists forsake their roots!
A longer, but much more tedious resumé can be found here.
ABOUT THE IMAGES:
The images forming the header backdrop is of single walled carbon nanotubes. It was taken some years back while I was working on carbon nanotube aerosolization, characterization and exposure.
The material was formed using the High Pressure Carbon Monoxide (HiPCO) process, and is in its unprocessed state. The image is dominated by self-aligned bundles of carbon nanotubes (green), with some small-diameter bundles. The red dots are iron particles that act as the catalyst for nanotube growth in the HiPCO process – they are around 5 nm in diameter.
For the technically minded, the image was taken on an aging Philips EM 420 TEM, using a Gatan CCD. It was processed in ImageJ and Adobe Photoshop.
The panel displays currently shows a second TEM image of the same HiPCo material.
Andrew Maynard. September 2009







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