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Science of squeezed oranges may help detection of failing bridges
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Jun 12, 2018

Paris suburban train overturns in landslide
Paris (AFP) June 12, 2018 - A suburban train overturned outside Paris on Tuesday after days of downpours caused an embankment to collapse, slightly injuring seven people including a pregnant woman.

The accident happened just before 5am (0300 GMT) as the RER commuter train was heading for Paris between Saint-Remy-les-Chevreuse and Courcelle-sur-Yvette southwest of the French capital.

A spokesman for Paris transport operator RATP said heavy rains caused the collapse of an embankment which led three carriages to derail and tip over. The line has been closed.

"Fortunately, there are only seven slightly injured," Transport Minister Elisabeth Borne told Franceinfo radio.

France has been battered by strong rains and winds for several weeks, with around half of the country under an orange storm warning until at least Wednesday morning.

"Wednesday should mark the end of hostilities to some extent," national forecaster Meteo France joked.

Last week four people were killed in flooding that has caused widespread damage.

Weather monitors counted 180,000 lightning strikes in France last month -- triple the 60,000 average.

The flood warnings mostly affect the northern half of the country, and several major roads in the Paris region were closed due to flooding Tuesday.

The Catholic pilgrimage site of Lourdes in southwest France has warned it is near the point of flooding due to the swelling of the neighbouring Gave du Pau river.

The site has been forced to shut the pools where pilgrims -- often sick people praying for a cure -- usually bathe.

In the northwest, the city of Nantes is seeing its wettest June on record with 138 millimetres (5.5 inches) of rain so far, according to Meteo France.

The 10th-century abbey at Chancelade in the southern Dordogne region has also been ravaged by flooding.

By studying the mechanics of a squeezed orange and its unique multilayered peel, scientists may be able to more accurately predict bridge failures or develop new ways to deliver medicine.

In a new study, published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists at the University of Central Florida characterized the mechanics of an orange peel's miniature jets.

When squeezed, an orange's jets expel a zesty perfume of oil, an attribute prized by chefs and bartenders -- and now, scientists.

"We study natural systems to mathematically characterize how creation works, and despite the ubiquity of citrus-fruit consumption, these jets had not been previously studied," Andrew Dickerson, an assistant professor of engineering at UCF, said in a news release. "Nature is our greatest inspiration for tackling real-world problems."

A hard, shiny outer layer protects the orange. A softer, spongier layer is found beneath. Within the bottom layer are microscopic reservoirs of oil.

When an orange is squeezed, the spongy layer absorbs energy. At a critical threshold, when enough energy has been absorbed, the pressure in the oil reserves causes tiny holes to be ripped open in the outer layer and a jet of oil to be released.

Tiny streams of oil exit the jets at 22 miles per hour, with an accelerating force of 5,000 Gs -- 1,000 times the force astronauts feels as they blast-off from Earth.

"There are several potential applications," said graduate student Nicholas Smith.

Scientists suggest a bridge could deploy a similar mechanism. A bridge could be designed so that when its materials degrade past a critical threshold, a color change is triggered.

"It would have an orange-like skin layer and when you were approaching material failure, you would get a preventative warning," Dickerson said.

The orange peel's mechanics could also inspire new drug delivery methods, the researchers said.

"For asthmatics, you could have a small slice of material which would aerosolize emergency medication that you currently find in expensive, multi-use inhalers," Smith said. "This approach may be less expensive and biodegradable."


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Puerto Rico morgue overflowing with unclaimed bodies
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Puerto Rico's morgue is overflowing with unclaimed bodies, the result of budget cutbacks in the US territory since last year's devastating Hurricane Maria. The bodies of 307 people are now being kept in the morgue and in four refrigerated containers in a nearby lot, the authorities said. "The situation in light of the high volume of pending cases, lack of space and specialized personnel requires immediate attention," legislator Juan Oscar Morales Rodriguez said on Twitter after inspecting the mo ... read more

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