DNA – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 22 Feb 2016 02:47:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png DNA – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Hearing Fear & Mitochondrial DNA | SciByte 100 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/40152/hearing-fear-mitochondrial-dna-scibyte-100/ Tue, 09 Jul 2013 20:49:08 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=40152 We take a look at fear and hearing, legislation about embryos with three parents, a flashlight without batteries, spacecraft updates, and more!

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We take a look at fear and hearing, legislation about embryos with three parents, a flashlight without batteries, spacecraft updates, viewer feedback, Curiosity news, and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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Show Notes:

Sound and Fear

  • Researchers are looking into how our emotions can actually affect how we hear and process sound
  • The study showed that when certain types of sounds become associated in our brains with strong emotions, hearing similar sounds can evoke those same feelings
  • This phenomenon commonly seen in combat veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  • The Study
  • Now a pair of researchers has discovered how fear can actually increase or decrease the ability to discriminate among sounds depending on context
  • The study used emotional conditioning in mice to investigate how hearing acuity (the ability to distinguish between tones of different frequencies) can change following a traumatic event, known as emotional learning
  • In these experiments animals learn to distinguish between potentially dangerous and safe sounds-called \”emotional discrimination learning.\”
  • This type of conditioning tends to result in relatively poor learning, but they designed a series of learning tasks intended to create progressively greater emotional discrimination in the mice, varying the difficulty
  • What They Found
  • The researchers found that, as expected, fine emotional learning tasks produced greater learning specificity than tests in which the tones were farther apart in frequency
  • Animals presented with sounds that were very far apart generalize the fear that they developed to the danger tone over a whole range of frequencies
  • Animals presented with the two sounds that were very similar exhibited specialization of their emotional response
  • Pitch discrimination abilities were measured in the animals, the mice with more specific responses displayed much finer auditory acuity than the mice who were frightened by a broader range of frequencies
  • Sound, Fear, and the Brain
  • Another interesting finding of this study is that the effects of emotional learning on hearing perception were mediated by a specific brain region, the auditory cortex
  • The auditory cortex has been known as an important area responsible for auditory plasticity
  • Surprisingly researchers found that the auditory cortex did not play a role in emotional learning
  • The specificity of emotional learning is controlled by the amygdala and sub-cortical auditory areas
  • Research shows that amygdala performs a primary role in the processing of memory and emotional reactions
  • The researchers hypothesize is that the amygdala and cortex are modifying subcortical auditory processing areas.
  • The sensory cortex is responsible for the changes in frequency discrimination, but it\’s not necessary for developing specialized or generalized emotional responses
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Researchers discover link between fear, sound perception | MedicalXPress

— NEWS BYTE —

DNA Splicing

Student Develops No-Battery Flashlight

  • Ann Makosinski from Victoria, British Columbia, has an LED flashlight powered by body heat her flashlight has got her into the finalist ranks for the Google Science Fair
  • The Hollow Flashlight, which works according to the thermoelectric effect-creating electric voltage out of temperature difference
  • How it Works : The Basics
  • Thermoelectric effect is the direct conversion of temperature differences to electric voltage and vice-versa
  • At the atomic scale, an applied temperature gradient causes charge carriers in the material to diffuse from the hot side to the cold side
  • The flashlight Uses four Peltier tiles and the temperature difference between the palm of the hand and ambient air
  • It only needs a five degree temperature difference to work and produce up to 5.4 mW at 5 foot candles of brightness
  • Design
  • She bought Peltier tiles and tested them to see if they could produce sufficient power to light an LED
  • While power was not a problem, getting the needed voltage was, as the tiles did not generate enough of the voltage needed
  • Research and experiments on different designs for the circuit design lead to a circuit that could provide enough voltage when used with a recommended transformer
  • Final Design
  • The final design included mounting the Peltiers on a hollow aluminum tube which was inserted in a larger PVC pipe with an opening that allowed ambient air to cool the tube
  • The palm wrapped around a cutout in the PVC pipe and warmed the tiles.
  • The result was a bright light at 5 degree Celcius [sic] of Peltier differential
  • Materials for the flashlight project cost her $26
  • Google Science Fair
  • The top winner gets a $50,000 scholarship and trip to the Galapagos Islands
  • The prize ceremony takes place in September. Winners will be chosen in different age categories-13-14, 15-16, 17-18.
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | The Human Heat Powered Flashlight | smustube
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Student\’s flashlight works by body heat, not batteries | Phys.org

— TWO-BYTE NEWS —

Space Shuttle Atlantis

— SPACECRAFT UPDATE—

Voyager 1\’s Journey, It\’s Not There Yet

  • Voyager 1 is 11.6 billion miles (18.6 billion kilometers) from the Sun, poised to become Earth\’s first robotic mission to interstellar space
  • Data from the Voyager 1 spacecraft continues to provide new insight on the outskirts of our solar system
  • New Publications
  • In papers published in the journal Science, scientists have provided more clarity on the region they named the \”magnetic highway\” in December 2012.
  • The new Science papers focus on observations from the summer and fall of 2012 by LECP as well as Voyager 1\’s Cosmic Ray and Magnetometer instruments, with additional LECP data through April 2013.
  • Voyager has detected, for the first time, low-energy galactic cosmic rays, now that particles of the same energy from inside the bubble around our Sun disappeared
  • The most dramatic part was how quickly the solar-originating particles disappeared; they decreased in intensity by more than 1,000 times
  • Voyager\’s Low-Energy Charged Particle (LECP)
  • Voyager\’s Low-Energy Charged Particle (LECP) instrument, LECP detector, was designed at APL in the 1970s.
  • It includes a stepper motor that rotates the instrument through 45-degree steps every 192 seconds
  • It allows it to gather data in all directions and pick up something as dynamic as the solar wind and galactic particles
  • The device, designed and tested to work for 500,000 steps and last four years, has been working for nearly 36 years and well past 6 million steps
  • That\’s 12 times the number of steps and 9 times the number of years as of early July 2013
  • Important to remember
  • Voyager 1 may be months or years from leaving the solar system
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • At the solar system\’s edge, more surprises from Voyager | Phys.org
  • Voyager 1 Reaches Gateway to the Galaxy – News Watch | newswatch.NationalGeographic.com
  • News in Brief: Voyager 1 on fast track toward interstellar space | Science News
  • Voyager 1 Entered Weird Region In Space Last Summer | Popular Science

— VIEWER FEEDBACK —

Did You See This? | Radio Signals from Outside the Milky Way

  • Sent in From Nick Tanin
  • Four powerful radio pulses emanating from sources outside of the Milky Way, 5 billion to nearly 11 billion light years away, have been picked up by an international team of astronomers at the Parkes Radio Telescope in Australia
  • What Was Seen
  • These bursts gave off more energy in a millisecond than the sun does in 300,000 years
  • The bursts ranged from 5.5 to 10 billion light-years away, meaning it took the light from some of them 10 billion years to reach Earth. [The Big Bang occurred 13.8 billion years ago]
  • To determine whether the new signals came from inside or outside the Milky Way scientists studied how the radio waves were affected by the material they pass through
  • This technique allows these new objects to shed light on the components of space.
  • As radio waves travel in space, they are stretched and slowed by the ionized material through which they move
  • Using models, the team concluded that the fast radio bursts, FRBs, traveled billions of light-years – much farther than the edge of Earth\’s galaxy, and likely are located in another galaxy
  • Although the explosions were brief, the astronomers can pinpoint the bursts\’ locations pretty accurately
  • They are so bright and narrow that we can limit the size of the emission region at the source to just a few hundred kilometers
  • No corresponding object could be observed in optical, gamma or X-ray wavelengths, so the explosions\’ origins remain unknown to scientists
  • Additional observations were performed approximately a year after the FRBs were first spotted, looked at whether the objects continued to produce emission, but the signals appear to be non repeating
  • Efforts are ongoing at the moment to detect FRBs in close to real time, such that they can be followed up quickly
  • Have we Observed This Kind of Event Before?
  • Since there had been only one burst during the last observation seven years ago scientists had wondered if the reading was simply an artifact in the data
  • Now the four new blips may add weight to that observation
  • Possible Sources
  • Intersecting magnetic fields from two neutron stars, extremely dense city-size bodies packing the mass of the sun.
  • A special kind of supernova orbited by a neutron star could potentially produce radio bursts as the star\’s magnetic field interacts with the explosion of the supernova
  • Such combinations would be rare
  • The current leading explanation is that a giant burst from a magnetar, a highly magnetized type of neutron star
  • Are There Other Events Like This?
  • These newfound objects allowed the researchers to calculate that an FRB should occur once every 10 seconds
  • Telescopes capture radio waves from such a small fraction of the sky so one-time radio pulses have been hard to detect
  • Instruments lack the ultrafast time resolution required to pinpoint the short-lived bursts
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • News in Brief: Distant radio-wave pulses spotted | Atom & Cosmos | Science News
  • Mysterious Extragalactic Explosions Baffle Astronomers | Fast Radio Bursts | Space.com

— CURIOSITY UPDATE —

SCIENCE CALENDAR

Looking back

  • July 14, 1965 : 48 years ago : First Mars close-up photo : The Mariner 4 satellite sent a transmission of the first close-up photograph of Mars. It consisting of 8.3 dots per second of varying degrees of darkness. The transmission lasted for 8.5 hours and depicted the regions on Mars known as Cebrenia, Arcadia, and Amazonis. The satellite was 134 million miles away from earth and 10,500 miles from Mars. The 574-pound spacecraft had been launched at 9:22am on 28 Nov 1964, from Cape Canaveral, FL, by a two-stage Atlas-Agena D rocket. In addition to its camera with digital tape recorder (about 20 pictures), it carried instruments for studying cosmic dust, solar plasma, trapped radiation, cosmic rays, magnetic fields, radio occultation and celestial mechanics

Looking up this week

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He’s Dead Jim | J@N | 5.3.11 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/7776/osama-is-dead/ Tue, 03 May 2011 20:49:02 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=7776 How has the Internet reacted to Osama bin Laden's death? From conspiracy theories, humorous anecdotes and misquotes, to tech involved, we cover it all!

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A historic event took place over the weekend, with a shot heard ‘round the world. Osama bin Laden has been killed by US Navy Seals, and we’ve collected some of the geekier bits from around the internet to feed to your faces.

We’re not going to dwell on the coverage of the actual event, since every news outlet in the world is already doing that. Instead, we’re going to talk about how the internet has reacted to this historical event. From conspiracy theories to humorous anecdotes and misquotes, it’s been a mish-mash of humor and tragedy that will leave a mark on our world.

Show Feeds:

[ad#shownotes]

Show Notes:

THE NEWS:

Osama bin Laden killed
Conspiracies abound!* No ID by non-US sources
* Burial at sea (not an Islamic custom)
* Raid was not sanctioned by Pakistani government
* Top secret “Team 6”

A super-stealth chopper that was burned to the ground by US troops Pic 1 & Pic 2 (source)
* He’s been dead for almost a decade!
US seizes Osama’s hard drives
– Likely encrypted.
– If using AES-256, would take longer than the age of the universe to crack.
– US Gov has stated “hundred of people” are working to get to the data.

How the internet reacted to the news (PC Magazine)

TECH TO CATCH HIM:

It only took one tapped phone call
– And a crapload of investigation, tips from a detainee involved in the 9/11 attacks, and 8+ months of surveillance.
White House staff watched live video feed of the raid

DNA used to identify him
– CIA had DNA from Osama’s half-sister on file, who died in the US from cancer several years ago.

TECH TO ANNOUNCE:

Twitter announcement from WhiteHouse (1337!)

Pre-empted the final moments of Celebrity Apprentice
– Stab at Trump over birth certificate “conspiracy”? (FUNNY PIC) (ANOTHER PIC)
– Related: Press dinner speech highlights (hilarious video)
IT pro living in Pakistan accidentally live Tweeted the whole operation

[ad#shownotes]

PROLIFERATION OF FUNNIES:

Mis-quoted MLK
– Originated on Facebook, misquoted and is popping up all over the internet now

Late night comedian one-liner round-up

Internet funnies:
Pic — gamer face
Pic — sad but true
Pic — mission accomplished 1 // mission accomplished 2
Pic — location tracking
Pic — should have captured him
Pic — Fox News “accidentally” spells it wrong
Tweet — epic monster movie
Tweet — disney week
Tweet — hide & go seek
Tweet —
IE is next!

Download:

The post He’s Dead Jim | J@N | 5.3.11 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> World Changing Fail | J@N | 12.2.10 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/3851/world-changing-fail-jn-12210/ Thu, 02 Dec 2010 23:13:52 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=3851 Tonight is a smorgasbord of internet failures! We promised to talk about NASA’s “ground-breakingly awesome” announcement and boy we’ll do so!

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Tonight’s show is going to be a smorgasbord of internet failures of several types. We promised to talk to you about NASA’s “gigantic ground-breakingly awesome and totally not lame” announcement they had planned for today, and we’ll do so. Then we’ll tell you why it FAILED SO HARD.

And speaking of big announcements and failures, OnLive today announced their new “unlimited play” plan. Wah wah. But hey, yknow, we still think OnLive is rad, and we’re gonna tell you why. Then we’ll tell you about a major game-changer that’s landed in Star Trek Online, which we’ll spend our weekend playing with, AND we’ll tell you why this has the potential to change the landscape of online gaming in general.

Show Feeds:

Show Notes:

NASA’s BIG Announcement

  • They found microbes in a lake HERE ON EARTH that have arsenic in their protein structure in the place of phosphorous.
  • This is akin to the science-fiction theory that lifeforms could thrive replacing carbon with silicon due to their structural similarities on a molecular level.  Until now, only a theory with no evidence.
  • Kinda neat, but you have to be a MAJOR biology-nut to get wood over this. Totally over-hyped.
  • Plus, rumor from our audience says “they already discovered this a long time ago.”

On-Live’s BIG Announcement

  • An “unlimited” membership option called the PlayPack for $9.99/mo.
  • Goes well with the release of their microconsole that came out today.
  • Their game library is still sub-par.
  • AND this new option does NOT include new releases.
  • BUT, OnLive is still neat, and could seriously impact the future of online gaming, if they get a few things in line:  Additional titles, 1080p support.  Another major limitation that’s beyond their control for now, bandwidth requirements.

Star Trek Online’s BIG Announcement

  • The Foundry has launched into Open Beta!
  • It is a toolset that allows subscribers to the game to create their own missions for other players to experience.
  • It’s extremely robust. Actually more options than I assumed it would have, and therefore more confusing than I thought it would be.
  • FAIL:  It caused repeated server crashes, and has been brought offline for revision. No ETA on re-launching the feature.
  • WIN:  No other online game offers such a robust content creation toolset. This could revolutionize what players expect from future MMOGs.

Download:

The post World Changing Fail | J@N | 12.2.10 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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