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The Hobby of Energy Secretary Steven Chu

quanminoan writes "Nobel Laureate and US Secretary of Energy Steven Chu has continued to publish even while in federal office. While previous research topics include gravitational redshift, Chu has coauthored a paper entitled 'Subnanometre single-molecule localization registration and distance measurements' which discusses a way to optically image objects as small as 0.5 nm — a major step down from the previous limit of 10 nm. Chu does this in his free time, claiming 'I just consider it my equivalent of ... vegging out in front of the TV.'"

3 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. His equivalent of TV is publishing papers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ouch, the feeling of terrible inadequacy, laziness and lack of accomplishment. :P

  2. Re:Beats him whinging about Americans being spoile by Myji+Humoz · · Score: 5, Informative

    Americans aren't spoiled compared to most other Westerners? If you actually read the article, he said "The American public ... just like your teenage kids, aren't acting in a way that they should act" with respect to climate change. He seems correct, and I would say that it's a welcome change from PR spinning and political doublespeak.

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    Signatures are the new names.
  3. Re:He should continue doing useful work... by Artifakt · · Score: 4, Informative

    Except the Dept was really created to control nuclear applications, both for reactors and bombmaking. It wouldn't have become a Cabinet level post with armed agent personnel without the Nuclear side.

    Here's their mission statement. I've highlighted the Nukestuff:

    The Department of Energy's overarching mission is to advance the national, economic, and energy security of the United States; to promote scientific and technological innovation in support of that mission; and to ensure the environmental cleanup of the national nuclear weapons complex. The Department's strategic goals to achieve the mission are designed to deliver results along five strategic themes:
    Energy Security: Promoting America's energy security through reliable, clean, and affordable energy
    Nuclear Security: Ensuring America's nuclear security
            Scientific Discovery and Innovation: Strengthening U.S. scientific discovery, economic competitiveness, and improving quality of life through innovations in science and technology
    Environmental Responsibility: Protecting the environment by providing a responsible resolution to the environmental legacy of nuclear weapons production
            Management Excellence: Enabling the mission through sound management

    You'll notice that Nuclear related technologies are explicitly mentioned three times, and that, while energy security is about 'reliable, clean and affordable energy', and presumably economic security is referenced again by that 'affordable' bit, there's also the phrase national security as a separable clause.

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    Who is John Cabal?