colin nederkoorn

Text Post

New York Makes First Award: A BIG LASER!

Who doesn’t love lasers? Let me know if you’ll make it to the party on the 6th!

awesomefoundation:

Awesome NY have made their first selection!  It was tough NY - you completely blew us away with amazing incredibly brilliant ideas.

But - this month, for our inaugural grant, we’ve picked a LASER TWEEZER that makes amoebas eat bacteria. 

Awesomeness to the MAX.

No - really, its a laser tractor beam that prods amoebas.  We’ve awarded January’s $1000 grant to Ben Dubin-Thaler’s Cell Motion BioBus.

We’ll be celebrating with Ben at the First AF-NY Award Ceremony on Monday February 8 at 8 pm, at the Apple Bar, Waverly at Greene. Come and join us for a beer, meet the NY Micro Trustees - and we’re working on getting the BioBus there too.  Beyond Awesome.

More on the BioBus:

The BioBus is a mobile science laboratory. Students on board explore the world around them with research-grade microscopes, and make their own discoveries under the guidance of professional scientists.  The BioBus has proven to be an innovative, effective, and attention getting vehicle for science education. Ben has been named “New Yorker of the Week” by New York One and have been recognized in regional, national, and international press for this innovative approach to bridging the “science achievement gap.” A laser tractor beam will be an awe-inspiring addition to the BioBus’ repertoire of excitement generating yet sophisticated tools and experiments.

We’ll let Ben do the talking, here’s his original proposal:

“How many projects are part lightsaber and part Magic School Bus combined into an awesome science adventure? First, I will build a laser tractor beam on board my BioBus. Then, during normal BioBus school visits, students and teachers from underfunded schools in the Bronx and across the country will perform their own experiments by poking, prodding, and perturbing cells using the tractor beam. I will document and publish the construction process in an open-source science education journal, allowing schools and science nerds around the world to build tractor beams of their own.

Every time someone uses the laser tractor beam to hold a bacterium still while they produce a movie of cell division, and then feeds those bacteria to a ravenous amoeba, they will have no other choice but to blurt out, “Awesome!” With extensive experience building laser tractor beams and as founder of the BioBus mobile science lab, I am the only person in the world prepared to do something this awesome.

I started the Cell Motion BioBus two years ago after finishing my Ph.D. at Columbia University. While at Columbia, I built two different laser tractor beam systems (a.k.a. laser tweezers) for my research on cell move, one of which is currently used in the undergraduate physics lab. After graduating with honors and building the BioBus, over 10,000 students at 50 schools across NYC and the country have come aboard our hands-on, high-tech, microscope lab and computer classroom. I’ve been told the introductory video on the BioBus website, http://www.biobus.org, is pretty awesome, so you might be interested in checking that out. Do-it-yourself experiments like building an economical laser tractor beam is possible because of breakthroughs in inexpensive, powerful diode lasers (e.g. skylasers.com).”

Ben will also publish also publish his protocol for building a cheap laser tractor beam via the open-source PASTE project journal.

via awesomefoundation
Posted on Friday, January 29, 2010. Tagged with: awesome foundationlaserbiobus
24
Notes
  1. archaeoterra reblogged this from weliveinthefuture
  2. kikebar reblogged this from weliveinthefuture
  3. nabo64 liked this
  4. ohnokirtymo reblogged this from weliveinthefuture and added:
    awesomeness of this.
  5. robinjp reblogged this from weliveinthefuture
  6. acardona liked this
  7. decouvrir liked this
  8. hoon liked this
  9. fuckyeahinvisibility reblogged this from weliveinthefuture and added:
    Magic School Bus?
  10. makmalkomputersmks18 liked this
  11. marcbernaldez reblogged this from go and added:
    hop on the magic school bus! to add to this, i am not the biggest fan of microscopy.
  12. coruscating reblogged this from weliveinthefuture
  13. ohyesjess liked this
  14. nepok liked this
  15. go reblogged this from weliveinthefuture and added:
    weliveinthefuture writes:
  16. howlhowl liked this
  17. toyshadows liked this
  18. weliveinthefuture reblogged this from awesomefoundation and added:
    Awesome Foundation NY...awarded January’s $1000 grant...Ben...
  19. colinnederkoorn reblogged this from awesomefoundation and added:
    Who doesn’t love lasers? Let me know if you’ll...6th! awesomefoundation:
  20. kthread liked this
  21. pith reblogged this from awesomefoundation
  22. clockworkgarden liked this
  23. bonesarecoralmade liked this
  24. awesomefoundation posted this
colin nederkoorn I'm Colin Nederkoorn, the product manager at ChallengePost, a marketplace for challenges based in New York City.
I blog in longer form about product management and software design.
I take pictures, I'm a foodie and I've ridden a bike really far.

If you want to reach me, try twitter, linked in or facebook
Previous Next