Posts Tagged ‘biobus’

Summer Streets with New York Botanical Garden

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Things on the BioBus were simply floral during a NYBG street fair on Saturday, August 13, 2011. The fair was held to celebrate Farmers’ Market Week, and it is safe to say that there was a large variety of produce offered by both NYBG stands and the actual farmers’ market. There, the BioBus’ staff (comprised of Dr. Ben, Nikki, Juliana, & Jordan) bought some beautiful bouquets hosting a variety of flowers…most of which were immediately brutalized by one Juliana (an intern at the BioBus) via scalpel. These lovely dissected samples were not wasted though! No, every and each sliver was carefully placed under the BioBus’s stereo microscopes under high magnification. Many children learned about the reproductive aspects of those flowers: where the specific organs are located and how a flower is pollinated. Some even got a short description of a plant’s vascular tissue, by yours truly. All the while, each person was given a sheet of paper containing visual aids with labeled arrows to aid them in their search for the plant reproductive organs.

“He’s so amazed; he’s trying to look at every part of the flower,” exclaimed an enthused mother, whose son was preoccupied with a bright red specimen.

These sheets even had spaces laid out for everyone, mainly the children, to draw what he had seen! Everything that was viewed, from the original flowers to their magnified samples were messily recorded and pasted onto the bus itself, and there they stayed until the event’s end.

The festival was a great success; as a man on a loud speaker announced, people were caught groaning that they had to leave. That made me snort. It was a long couple of hours that were extremely enjoyable.

 

 

—Jordan Sutphen

The BioBus’ Third Annual Visit to the Gathering of the Vibes

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

From July 21st  to July 24th, 2011, the BioBus was busy attending the Gathering of the Vibes, a four day music festival in Bridgeport, Connecticut. It was a huge hit and as word spread about its powerful microscopes depicting an almost alien world of creatures, people flocked to sneak a peek. A local radio station interviewed Sarah Weisberg about the BioBus, and numerous listeners who heard it on their way to the festival couldn’t wait to see for themselves.

Every morning at 11:00 AM, Dr. Ben and his anxious helpers would visit the water during high tide and collect samples. The samples would be observed throughout the day utilizing the professional microscopes. They were extremely diverse: krill, snails, lipids, barnacles, baby starfish, sand worms, crabs, and hermit crabs were just a few of the organisms collected from the Long Island Sound that fascinated the spectators. Once the festival-goers were taught to use a microscope they would visit the white pail teeming with life and choose what to discover next. A young man stood in awe in front of the screen projecting the magnified barnacles and exclaimed it appeared to be another world—one of the many reactions to seeing organisms that, without a microscope, appeared to be little more than tiny moving specks. Those fascinated by the BioBus would often come back later with companions and introduce them to an unbelievable new way to look at ordinary animals. People of all ages realized that there was so much more in our world than what can be perceived through the naked eye.

 

—Juliana Castrillon

BioBus: Why the Green Roof?

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Any Joe Schmoe who has visited the BioBus has had ample opportunity to learn about its ecofriendly attributes. However, one that is relentlessly overlooked by visitors is the green garden that resides at the bus’ fore-roof! Sure each person knows it is there, but many just mentally mark it down as an environmental bio-trend before making googly eyes at the fact the engine runs on cooking oil instead of gasoline. However, the BioBus’ green roof is more than just some pro-environmental fashion statement. Like all aspects of the bus, it also has a purpose; it helps filter the air and water, stabilize the BioBus’ temperature, block UV radiation, and prevent damage to that area of the roof.

I know this may shock some; how could something as simple as a rooftop garden do all of that? “Well, that’s simple,” says BioBus intern Jordan, “That isn’t just some garden planted on top of a bus, it’s an entire population of organisms—each living, breathing, and regulating like any other!” Well, Jordan has hit a large point in saying this. Each one of those plants acts as any autotrophic organism (light-absorbing plant) does. When one draws water and air into itself, it filters both through its body, releasing clean air and water vapor. By absorbing the sun’s heat energy, a plant on top of the BioBus evaporates excess water to cool down not only itself, but the BioBus too. Just like your skin, a plant acts as a barrier between UV radiation from sunlight and the people inside the BioBus. The legion of plants on the BioBus’ roof also acts as a barrier from harsh weather conditions and protects the section of roof that the plants cover.

As you see, every part of the BioBus is in place for a reason. No space was wasted in its construction, and even the most unremarkable aspects of it are useful in some way. This time, we discovered the uses of the BioBus’ undermined green roof. Who knows what other mysterious objects with cool uses can be found on the BioBus? Visit soon and find out for yourself!

—Jordan Sutphen

BioBus—Divide, Embryo, Divide!

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Prof. Mark Allegro, at MBL in Woods Hole, decided to help the BioBus capture live cell division on film Wednesday, July 13, 2011!

The video can be viewed here:

 

http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=935012674942&oid=138412069508769&comments

 

This synchronized proliferation of cells is the beginning of life. In the video, what appears to be a round boundary starts out filled by two seemingly-large, but really microscopic, cells. This boundary, and its contained cells, is what make up an embryo, or the first sign of a living thing after an egg is fertilized. That ball is really just the beginnings of a baby…sea urchin. Well, that sea urchin must have some very proud parents, because the BioBus has decided to use it as an example depicting the early development of practically all organisms: “Look, that’s my developing urchin on TV!”

While the video made the division of these cells appear to only take a few seconds,  in reality the event was recorded over the span of an hour and was sped up for our enjoyment. If you pay close attention to the embryo, you will see that the cells making up the embryo keep getting smaller as they divide. They have to do this to divide as fast as they do. They cannot just stop to refill on cell juice (a.k.a. cytosol), or other parts just yet! So, they divide a few hundred more times until the cells are extremely numerous and tiny, then they reorganize themselves in specific shapes, and they grow in size by taking in nutrients.  The subsequent embryonic divisions and reorganization of cells actually precede the formation of something more universally recognizable: a fetus, or a baby.

 

—Jordan Sutphen

BioBus—Vegetable Oil Filter

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

It is true that the BioBus’ current engine runs on ecological fuel—fuel that harmless to the planet. It is also true that the bus can attain that fuel—vegetable oil—for free from any restaurant or fast food place. Don’t forget, though, that any oil that is donated to the BioBus is used, dirty oil! All of that dirty oil can’t get poured into the BioBus’ engine straightaway!

No, that oil contains copious amounts of food gunk, bacteria, water, and glycerin (a thick, colorless, and sweet-tasting liquid found in most beauty products) that would ruin any engine. Before using it, Dr. Ben has to separate the refuse from the vegetable oil.

Luckily, the BioBus owner has thought up an answer to this dilemma: a filter system. Said system, when I tried to research it, was a total mystery to me! In fact, Dr. Ben had to send me a diagram of the BioBus’ engine, only for me to stare at it blankly in confusion. Thusly, I asked Dr. Ben to explain to me just how the four-step filtration system works, and here’s how he put it:
“Step 1: When we suck grease out of any dumpster behind a restaurant, there is a strainer that filters large chunks (over 150 micrometers) of matter from the oil before it ever enters the bus.

Step 2: Between the dirty tank and the clean tank, there is a PRIMARY VEG FILTER that separates matter 30 micrometers or more—a marine-grade fuel filter.

Step 3: Between the clean tank and the valve assembly in the engine, the SECONDARY VEG FILTER separates water from the fuel, as well as anything 10 micrometers or larger—another marine-grade fuel filter

Step 4: There is a 10 micrometer water separating diesel fuel filter that is a normal part of the engine, which both the vegetable oil and the regular diesel fuel passes through—called the SECONDARY DIESEL FILTER.

Filters 1, 2, & 3 are ones that we put in, filter 4 is a regular part of the engine.”

His explanation, which was much easier to understand than the diagram was, gave me the impression that each filter is like different level of filtration. The first level is easiest to get through, because the stuff that gets stuck in it is the largest. Then, as the filters progress, more and more refuse is limited by the smaller filters. The vegetable oil at the end of the last filter is then guaranteed to be perfectly suitable for the engine!

 

—Jordan Sutphen

BioBus—Bus Of Learning (poem)

Monday, July 4th, 2011

You’re a golden bus of learning.

You’re main power source is the sun.

As your solar panels keep energy surging,

Your engine needs only oil to run.

 

Righteous is your main goal

To feed the interests of the young

To make their scientific education whole,

While at the same time letting them have fun.

 

With stunning computer screens throughout

Each one bright with microscopic images

You show these unaware louts

That life exists in many instances.

 

When they grow into successful scientists,

They will look back to this golden bus of learning

That helped them become such curious adventurists

That got the wheels in their bright minds turning.

 

—Jordan Sutphen

SciTech Education Camp—BioBus Style

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Monday, June 20, 2011 was a distinct day for the little scientist going to SciTech Education Camp, a summer camp hosted by the New York Junior League. On that day, they were scheduled for an entertaining visit by New York’s very own BioBus! As they came to class, they were greeted by bona fide volunteer scientists (Clare Walton from Rockefeller) who came to help both Dr. Ben Dubin-Thaler (BioBus founder) and Sarah Weisberg (Dr.Ben’s good friend and co-conspirator) with their lesson for the day.

So, at about 9:00 the kiddies arrived in pairs of two—holding hand as they navigated the roads of Manhattan—looking more like scientists than the actual ones in their stylish white lab coats. When they arrived with their minders, they were instantly greeted by Sarah Weisberg. She was the one who would be doing the teaching for the day! She ushered them to the street curb and started the lesson off with a tour of the BioBus’ exterior. Ms. Weisberg explained to them how the BioBus worked without being “plugged into a wall,” as some of the children put it, by pointing out some of its fascinating features, such as its solar panels and turbine. Then it was off to one of the lakes in Central Park, where the students collected samples of water, and a few creepy-crawlies, using high-tech standard equipment (pipettes and test tubes). They then went back to the BioBus to view their findings under some of the BioBus’ famous research-grade microscopes. There, the kids discovered that there were, in fact, organisms smaller than “ants!”

They saw demonstrations on how to use that equipment and then got to use it themselves! Many stared open-mouthed at a daphnia found in the water samples as they viewed its twitching body parts and beating heart! Some even believed they witnessed some unknown flagellated microorganism race across the microscope screen. The day was a long one for the little scientists though, so it was cut short when they left to return to their class on aching feet. Then, after the microscopes were packed up, the turbine was taken down, and everything was sorted out by Ben and Sarah, the bus took off and revved down the street—on to its next stop at its next gig: the local deli. Hey, scientists have to eat too.

—Jordan Sutphen