Big Money For Big Science - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS

Feb 3, 2013 - Last week, the European Commission selected two Europe-wide ... Clearly the European awards last week are on the scale of big science...
1 downloads 0 Views 43KB Size
FROM THE EDITOR

CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS 1155—16th St., N.W., Washington, DC 20036 (202) 872-4600 or (800) 227-5558 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: A. Maureen Rouhi DEPUTY EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Josh Fischman MANAGING EDITOR: Robin M. Giroux EDITOR-AT-LARGE: Rudy M. Baum SENIOR ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER: Marvel A. Wills NEWS William G. Schulz, Editor BUSINESS Michael McCoy, Assistant Managing Editor NORTHEAST: (732) 906-8300 Melody M. Bomgardner (Senior Editor), Lisa M. Jarvis (Senior Editor), Rick Mullin (Senior Editor), Marc S. Reisch (Senior Correspondent), Alexander H. Tullo (Senior Correspondent), Rachel Eskenazi (Administrative Assistant). HONG KONG: 852 9093 8445 Jean-François Tremblay (Senior Correspondent). HOUSTON: (281) 486-3900 Ann M. Thayer (Senior Correspondent). LONDON: 44 1494 564 316 Alex Scott (Senior Editor) GOVERNMENT & POLICY Susan R. Morrissey, Assistant Managing Editor Britt E. Erickson (Senior Editor), Glenn Hess (Senior Editor), Cheryl Hogue (Senior Correspondent), Jeff Johnson (Senior Correspondent), Andrea L. Widener (Associate Editor) SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY/EDUCATION BOSTON: (617) 395-4163 Amanda Yarnell, Assistant Managing Editor, (973) 922-0175 Bethany Halford (Senior Editor). WASHINGTON: Stuart A. Borman (Deputy Assistant Managing Editor), Celia Henry Arnaud (Senior Editor), Carmen Drahl (Senior Editor), Stephen K. Ritter (Senior Correspondent),Lauren K. Wolf (Associate Editor). BERLIN: 49 30 2123 3740 Sarah Everts (Senior Editor). CHICAGO: (847) 679-1156 Mitch Jacoby (Senior Correspondent) WEST COAST: (925) 485-1034 Jyllian Kemsley (Senior Editor), (206) 595-4788 Deirdre Lockwood (Contributing Editor), (510) 390-6180 Elizabeth K. Wilson (Senior Editor). JOURNAL NEWS & COMMUNITY: (626) 765-6767 Michael Torrice (Senior Editor) ACS NEWS & SPECIAL FEATURES Sophie L. Rovner, Assistant Managing Editor Linda Wang (Senior Editor). DALLAS: (972) 529-4351 Susan J. Ainsworth (Senior Editor) EDITING & PRODUCTION Kimberly R. Dunham, Assistant Managing Editor Craig Bettenhausen (Assistant Editor), Emily Bones (Assistant Editor), Sophia L. Cai (Associate Editor), Nader Heidari (Assistant Editor), Arlene Goldberg-Gist, Senior Editor Jeff A. Huber (Associate Editor), Gail M. Mortenson (Associate Editor) ART & DESIGN Robert Bryson, Design Director Robin L. Braverman (Senior Art Director) Yang H. Ku (Senior Associate Designer) C&EN ONLINE Rachel Sheremeta Pepling, Editor Tchad K. Blair (Visual Designer), Luis A. Carrillo (Production Manager), Ty A. Finocchiaro (Web Associate), Pamela Rigden Snead (Web Products Manager) PRODUCTION & IMAGING Renee L. Zerby, Manager Production & Classifieds Tim Bauer (Lead Digital Production Specialist), Shelly E. Savage, Richard C. Smith, and Steven J. Lovasz (Digital Production Associates) SALES & MARKETING Elaine Facciolli Jarrett (Marketing Manager) Wendy Wise (Marketing Manager) Angela Yeo (Associate Marketing Manager) ADVISORY BOARD Gary D. Allred, Paul T. Anastas, Sherwood L. Boehlert, Paul J. Bracher, Yves J. Chabal, Seth M. Cohen, Kendrew H. Colton, Brian D. Coppola, Christopher C. Cummins, Joseph M. DeSimone, Michelle M. Francl, Donald Hilvert, Rohit Khanna, John LaMattina, Abraham M. Lenhoff, Scott P. Lockledge, Michael W. Major, Michael A. Marletta, Cheryl A. Martin, Stephen A. Munk, Michael O. Okoroafor, Nick Roelofs, Melanie Sanford, John M. Schwab, Michael Strem, Linette M. Watkins, Christopher Welch, Frank D. Wicks, Vicki Wysocki, David Zimmermann Published by the AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY Madeleine Jacobs, Executive Director & CEO Brian Crawford, President, Publications Division EDITORIAL BOARD: Stephanie L. Brock (Chair); ACS Board of Directors Chair: William F. Carroll Jr.; ACS President: Marinda Li Wu; Leah McEwen, John N. Russell Jr., Nicole S. Sampson, Peter J. Stang Copyright 2013, American Chemical Society Canadian GST Reg. No. R127571347 Volume 91, Number 5

Big Money For Big Science U.S. SCIENTISTS whose research funds

are in limbo every time Congress is late in passing a budget may want to move to Europe, especially if their areas of research are the human brain or graphene. Last week, the European Commission selected two Europe-wide initiatives—“Graphene” and “The Human Brain Project” (HBP)—that will each receive sustained funding of around 1 billion euros ($1.35 billion) disbursed over a period of 10 years. For comparison, the Manhattan Project, the U.S. effort to produce the first atomic bomb, cost a total of $2 billion ($23.5 billion in 2012 dollars) from inception to completion (1939–46). Building the Large Hadron Collider, near Geneva, cost $4.75 billion over a decade (1998–2008). Last summer, the particle accelerator verified the elusive subatomic particle responsible for mass, aka the Higgs boson. Clearly the European awards last week are on the scale of big science. Since their discovery, the single-atomthick planar sheets of sp2-bonded carbons called graphene have captured the imagination of researchers worldwide. The material is the thinnest imaginable, C&EN’s Mitch Jacoby noted in a story about the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics (C&EN, Oct. 11, 2010, page 8). The award went to Andre K. Geim and Konstantin S. Novoselov, both of the University of Manchester, in England, for their discovery of the material. Graphene is “exceptionally strong and stiff yet stretchable, exhibits outstanding thermal and electronic properties, and is chemically inert,” according to Jacoby. “As a result … graphene has quickly become a top choice for advanced computing applications, digital displays and various types of flexible electronics, and advanced composite materials.” Now, the two Nobel Laureates join “Graphene,” one of the European Commission’s two Future & Emerging Technologies flagship projects. The team consists of 126 groups in 17 European countries and is coordinated by Jari Kinaret, a physics professor at Chalmers University, in Gothenburg, Sweden. It aims to develop graphene-based breakthrough technologies for communication, transport, energy, and sensing. Graphene “will revolutionize multiple industries and create economic growth and new jobs,” the European Commission says.

HBP, the second flagship, marries neuroscience and computing technology. It aims to re-create the human brain in a supercomputer and bring to the model all that is known about the most complex of human organs in hopes of learning its relation to the mind. The project will develop informatics, simulation, and supercomputing capabilities to collect data from all over the world and integrate the data in brain models and simulations. “The ultimate goal is to allow neuroscientists to connect the dots from genes, molecules, and cells to human cognition and behavior,” HBP says. The HBP group consists of 80 research institutions, including some in North America and Japan. It will be coordinated by Henry Markram, a neuroscience professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne. By incorporating clinical data in computer models of the brain, the team will study the mechanisms of brain diseases and hopes to find ways to diagnose and then cure brain diseases. The team also aims to make new robots and computing systems based on the brain’s circuitry, HBP says. “The new systems will use detailed knowledge of the brain to address critical problems facing future computing technology: energy efficiency, reliability, and the huge difficulties in programming very complex systems.” In the U.S., meanwhile, researchers dependent on federal grants are still uncertain about their 2013 funding because Congress has not passed the fiscal 2013 budget. U.S. scientists have long clamored for multiyear funding of research such as the kind the European Commission awarded last week to the flagship projects. Recently, the President’s Council of Advisors on Science & Technology added to the call for more stable funding. “Unpredictable budgets cause profound problems for science,” reported Andrea Widener (C&EN, Jan. 28, page 28). “Science at its core is a long-term endeavor.” Congratulations to those who are part of the European flagship projects! For the next 10 years, they can concentrate on advancing science rather than searching for funds.

Editor-in-chief

Views expressed on this page are those of the author and not necessarily those of ACS. WWW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG

3

FEBRUARY 4, 2013