Keck Observatory – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 22 Feb 2016 02:45:41 +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 Keck Observatory – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Marijuana & “Exo-Earth” | SciByte 127 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/55667/marijuana-exo-earth-scibyte-127/ Tue, 22 Apr 2014 21:15:11 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=55667 We take a look at marijuana\’s effect on the brain, an \”Earth-like\” exoplanet, the brains distraction controls, a possible new moon for Saturn, spacecraft updates, Curiosity news, and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week. Direct Download: MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | HD Video | Video […]

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We take a look at marijuana\’s effect on the brain, an \”Earth-like\” exoplanet, the brains distraction controls, a possible new moon for Saturn, spacecraft updates, Curiosity news, and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | HD Video | Video | Torrent | YouTube

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Show Notes:

Marijuana’s and Changes to the Brain

  • Young adults who used marijuana only recreationally showed significant abnormalities in two key brain regions that are important in emotion and motivation
  • The Study
  • This is the first study to show casual use of marijuana is related to major brain changes
  • Through different methods of neuroimaging, scientists examined the brains of young adults ages 18 to 25, from Boston-area colleges; 20 who smoked marijuana and 20 who didn\’t. Each group had nine males and 11 females
  • The users underwent a psychiatric interview to confirm they were not dependent on marijuana
  • The changes in brain structures indicate the marijuana users\’ brains are adapting to low-level exposure to marijuana
  • Results
  • The degree of brain abnormalities in these regions is directly related to the number of joints a person smoked per week, the more joints a person smoked, the more abnormal the shape, volume and density of the brain regions
  • Some of these people only used marijuana to get high once or twice a week thinking a little recreational use shouldn\’t cause a problem; however, data directly says this is not the case
  • Scientists examined the nucleus accumbens and the amygdala-key regions for emotion and motivation, and associated with addiction-in the brains of casual marijuana users and non-users
  • Researchers analyzed three measures: volume, shape and density of grey matter to obtain a comprehensive view of how each region was affected.
  • Both these regions in recreational pot users were abnormally altered for at least two of these structural measures and the degree of those alterations was directly related to how much marijuana the subjects used
  • What is Means
  • The study results fit with animal studies that show when rats are given tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) their brains rewire and form many new connections. THC is the mind-altering ingredient found in marijuana
  • Think when people are in the process of becoming addicted, their brains from these new connections
  • In animals, these new connections indicate the brain is adapting to the unnatural level of reward and stimulation from marijuana. These connections make other natural rewards less satisfying
  • The brain changes suggest that structural changes to the brain are an important early result of casual drug use
  • Researchers did not know the THC content of the marijuana, which can range from 5 to 9 percent or even higher, the THC content is much higher today than the marijuana during the 1960s and 1970s, which was often about 1 to 3 percent
  • Further Reading / In the News

— NEWS BYTE —

Another Earth-sized Exo-Planet

  • The first Earth-sized exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of another star has been confirmed by observations with both the W. M. Keck Observatory and the Gemini Observatory
  • The initial discovery, made by NASA\’s Kepler Space Telescope, is one of a handful of smaller planets found by Kepler and verified using large ground-based telescopes
  • The System
  • The host star, Kepler-186, is an M1-type dwarf star relatively close to our solar system, at about 500 light years and is in the constellation of Cygnus
  • The star is very dim, being over half a million times fainter than the faintest stars we can see with the naked eye and is cooler than the Sun
  • Five small planets have been found orbiting this star, four of which are in very short-period orbits and are very hot
  • This Earth-sized planet, one of five orbiting this star, which is cooler than the Sun, resides in a temperate region where water could exist in liquid form
  • Observations
  • Neither Kepler (nor any telescope) is currently able to directly spot an exoplanet of this size and proximity to its host star all they can do is eliminate essentially all other possibilities so that the validity of these planets is really the only viable option
  • With such a small host star, the team employed a technique that eliminated the possibility that either a background star or a stellar companion could be mimicking what Kepler detected
  • Differential Speckle Survey Instrument (DSSI)
  • The team obtained extremely high spatial resolution observations from the eight-meter Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii using a technique called speckle imaging, as well as adaptive optics (AO) observations from the ten-meter Keck II telescope
  • The Gemini \”speckle\” data directly imaged the system to within about 400 million miles (about 4 AU, approximately equal to the orbit of Jupiter in our solar system) of the host star and confirmed that there were no other stellar size objects orbiting within this radius from the star
  • It works on a principle that utilizes multiple short exposures of an object to capture and remove the noise introduced by atmospheric turbulence producing images with extreme detail
  • The System
  • Kenny MacLeod ‏@siabost9deas
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Kepler-186f : First Earth-size Planet Discovered in the Habitable Zone of Another Star [HD] | The Mars Underground
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • First potentially habitable Earth-sized planet confirmed: It may have liquid water | Phys.org

— TWO-BYTE NEWS —

The Brains Distraction Control

  • A new study to reveals that our brains rely on an active suppression mechanism to avoid being distracted by salient irrelevant information when we want to focus on a particular item or task
  • This discovery opens up the possibility that environmental and/or genetic factors may hinder or suppress a specific brain activity that the researchers have identified as helping us prevent distraction.
  • These results show clearly that this is only one part of the equation and that active suppression of the irrelevant objects is another important part
  • Psychologists say their discovery could help scientists and health care professionals better treat individuals with distraction-related attentional deficits
  • Distraction is a leading cause of injury and death in driving and other high-stakes environments
  • Disorders associated with attention deficits, such as ADHD and schizophrenia, may turn out to be due to difficulties in suppressing irrelevant objects rather than difficulty selecting relevant ones
  • Researchers are now turning their attention to understanding how we deal with distraction and why we can\’t suppress potentially distracting objects, whether some of us are better at doing so and why that is the case.
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • ADHD: Scientists discover brain\’s anti-distraction system | ScienceDaily

A New Moon for Saturn?

  • A bright clump spotted orbiting Saturn at the outermost edge of its A ring may be a brand new moon in the process of being born
  • The effects of this now 1,200-kilometer-long, 10-kilometer-wide arc of icy material were first seen in May 2012 traveling along the edge of the A ring
  • The arc is thought to be the result of gravitational perturbations caused by an as-yet unseen embedded object about a kilometer wide – possibly a miniature moon in the process of formation
  • The half-mile-wide object has been unofficially named “Peggy,” eventually it may coalesce into a slightly larger moon and move outward, establishing its own orbital path around Saturn
  • This is how many of Saturn’s other moons are thought to have formed much further back in the planet’s history
  • While it is possible that the bright perturbation is the result of an object’s breakup rather than formation, researchers are still looking forward to finding out more about its evolution.
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Is Saturn Making a New Moon? | UniverseToday.com
  • NASA Cassini Images May Reveal Birth of New Saturn Moon | NASA.gov
  • NASA Cassini Missiom Page

— SPACECRAFT UPDATE—

SpaceX Dragon Delivery Mission

New Horizons and Questions About Pluto

  • Compositional Model Theories
  • Two space researchers have published a paper where they describe three possible interior models of the former planet Pluto
  • The possibilities include: an undifferentiated rock/ice mixture, a differentiated rock/ice mixture, and an ocean covered with ice, the third possibility suggests the likelihood, they claim, of tectonic action on the dwarf planet
  • Scientists believe that Pluto came to exist as it does today, in part due to a collision billions of years ago that led also to the formation of its moon Charon
  • When celestial bodies collide, not only do they knock each other around, they produce heat—heat, the researchers suggest that could still be evident today
  • A theory that suggests that shortly after impact, Pluto and Charon were much closer together where the gravity attraction between them would have caused both to be egg shaped.
  • As time passed, melted ice from the impact would have created an icy crust on top of an ocean on Pluto
  • As Charon moved farther away, the attractive pull would have diminished, causing ice plates to form and crack against one another, a form of tectonics.
  • If that were the case, the two add, then in all likelihood, when New Horizons begins sending back images, they should see evidence of such tectonic action—plate edges thrust into the air
  • Pluto circles the sun in an elliptical orbit, thus sometimes it\’s much closer to the sun than other times, when near, it has a defined atmosphere, when far away however, its atmosphere actually freezes to its surface
  • Something that could hide ridges in the ice and thus evidence of both tectonic activity and an ocean beneath the crust of ice
  • New Horizons will arrive during a time when its atmosphere is frozen to the surface, it might be difficult to determine which of the three proposed models actually describes the relationship between its exterior and interior
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Research pair offer three possible models of Pluto ahead of New Horizons visit | Phys.org
  • New Horizons | NASA

— CURIOSITY UPDATE —

  • New Science Location
  • Scientists using NASA\’s Curiosity Mars rover are eyeing a rock layer surrounding the base of a small butte, called \”Mount Remarkable,\” as a target for investigating with tools on the rover\’s robotic arm
  • The butte stands about 16 feet (5 meters) high. Curiosity\’s science team refers to the rock layer surrounding the base of Mount Remarkable as the \”middle unit\” because its location is intermediate between rocks that form buttes in the area and lower-lying rocks that show a pattern of striations
  • Depending on what the mission scientists learn from a close-up look at the rock and identification of chemical elements in it, a site on this middle unit may become the third rock that Curiosity samples with its drill
  • Multimedia
  • Image Galleries at JPL and Curiosity Mulimedia
  • Social Media
  • Curiosity Rover @MarsCuriosity
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • NASA Mars Orbiter Spies Rover Near Martian Butte | mars.jpl.nasa.gov

SCIENCE CALENDAR

Looking back

  • April 25, 1990 : 24 years ago : Hubble Space Telescope : In 1990, the $2.5 billion Hubble Space Telescope was deployed in space from the Space Shuttle Discovery into an orbit 381 miles above Earth. It was the first major orbiting observatory, named in honour of American astronomer, Edwin Powell Hubble. It was seven years behind schedule and nearly $2 billion over budget. In orbit, the 94.5-in primary mirror was found to be flawed, giving blurred images and reduced ability to see distant stars. However, correcting optics were successfully installed in 25 Dec 1993. The telescope 43-ft x 14-ft telescope now provides images with a clarity otherwise impossible due to the effect of the earth\’s atmosphere. Instrument packages capture across the electromagnetic spectrum.

Looking up this week

  • Solar Eclipse
  • On April 29th, an annular solar eclipse occurs over a small D-shaped 500 kilometre wide region of Antarctica
  • 2014 has the minimum number of eclipses possible in one year, with four: two partial solars and two total lunars
  • This month’s solar eclipse is also a rarity in that it’s a non-central eclipse with one limit, where the center of the Moon’s shadow – known as the antumbra during an annular eclipse – will juuuust miss the Earth and instead pass scant kilometres above the Antarctic continent
  • Out of 3,956 annular eclipses occurring from 2000 BCE to 3000 AD, only 68 (1.7%) are of the non-central variety
  • An annular eclipse occurs when the Moon is too distant to cover the disk of the Sun, resulting in a bright “annulus” or “ring-of-fire” eclipse
  • Several southern Indian Ocean islands and all of Australia will still witness a fine partial solar eclipse from this event, a scattering of islands in the southern Indian Ocean will see a 55% eclipsed Sun.
  • In Australia, Perth will see a 55% eclipsed Sun and Sydney will be able to see a 50% partial eclipse low to the horizon in west at sunset
  • Don\’t Forget to Use Safe Viewing Practices
  • The safest way | Pinhole camera/projector and telescope — pinhole projector
  • Optical Filters | Eclipse glasses, welder\’s goggles rated at 14
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Safely See the Sun — Build a Shoebox Pinhole Camera | VideoFromSpace
  • YouTube | The April 29th, 2014 Annular Eclipse: Sims from Space | astroguyz
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Our Guide to the Bizzare April 29th Solar Eclipse UniverseToday.com

  • Keep an eye out for …

  • Fri, April 25 | Dawn | The thin crescent Moon is low in the E and left of Venus
  • Planets
  • Venus | \”Morning Star\” | Look to the E-SE as daylight approached
  • Mars | Just past opposition you can see it most of the night. In the evening is is in the SW with Spica below it, both will be at their highest point around local 12pm DST moving towards the NE as dawn approaches
  • Jupiter | Twilight | High in the SW sinking towards the W horizon as the night progresses
  • Saturn | End of Twilight | Highest in the S around 2am

  • Further Reading and Resources

  • Sky&Telescope
  • SpaceWeather.com
  • StarDate.org
  • For the Southern hemisphere: SpaceInfo.com.au
  • Constellations of the Southern Hemisphere : astronomyonline.org
  • Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealand : rasnz.org.nz
  • AstronomyNow
  • HeavensAbove

The post Marijuana & “Exo-Earth” | SciByte 127 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Habitable Planets & Plant Power | SciByte 32 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/16767/habitable-planets-plant-power-scibyte-32/ Tue, 07 Feb 2012 23:27:07 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=16767 A look at a planet orbiting another star that could harbor water, a fungus that chows down on polyurethane, turning plants into solar cells, science of massage, and tracking snow!

The post Habitable Planets & Plant Power | SciByte 32 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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We take a look at a planet orbiting another star that could harbor water, a fungus that chows down on polyurethane, turning plants into solar cells, science of massage, tracking snow, and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

Direct Download:

MP3 Download | Ogg Download | HD Video | Mobile Video | YouTube

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Support the Show:

   

Show Notes:

Habitable planet?

  • The low down
  • Scientists Used public data from the European Southern Observatory, new measurements from the W. M. Keck Observatory’s High Resolution Echelle Spectrograph and the new Carnegie Planet Finder Spectrograph at the Magellan II Telescope
  • They combined data from all three ground-based telescopes, dating back 10 years, and analyzed it with novel data-analysis methods to come up with a solid signal of a planet
  • The star in this case is a M-dwarf star much dimmer and redder than our own in a triple-star system with a different chemical makeup than our sun
  • Such stars can be rather unstable and any planets would tend to be tidally locked and could make it difficult for a planet to form
  • Even the interior of planets could be affected, as radioactive elements would determine whether a planet has a molten core or a solid one.
  • Significance
  • The planet discovered is about 4.5 times as massive as the Earth
  • It orbits once every 28 days or so; in our solar system, that would put it so scorchingly close to the sun that water would boil off.
  • But because most of its incoming light is in the infrared, a higher percentage of this incoming energy should be absorbed by the planet
  • The new planet receives 90 percent of the light that Earth receives.
  • The planet is expected to absorb about the same amount of energy from its star that the Earth absorbs from the Sun
  • This would allow surface temperatures similar to Earth and perhaps liquid water, but this extreme cannot be confirmed without further information on the planet’s atmosphere.
  • Astronomers aren’t sure what the planet’s composition is, because they have not been able to measure its size
  • It could be a either a rocky or a gas planet. I would need to have a radius between about 1.7 and 2.2 Earth radii to be a rocky world.
  • While the planet can’t be seen directly yet, it’s not impossible that we could glean additional details about the potentially habitable super-Earth such readings of its atmosphere with the next generation of ground or space telescopes
  • * Of Note*
  • Its parent star, is located a mere 22 light-years away from Earth, with only about 100 stars closer to us
  • The other stars in the system are pretty far away, but would be visible in the sky of the planet
  • The system has much lower abundances of heavy elements (elements heavier than hydrogen and helium), such as iron, carbon and silicon.
  • The detection of this planet, this nearby and this soon, implies that our galaxy must be teeming with billions of potentially habitable rocky planets
  • The unexpected is something planet hunters have learned to expect and in most cases, these surprises have tended to expand the possibilities for finding worlds
  • In addition planets coming out of Kepler are typically thousands of light-years away and we could never send a space probe out there,“ Vogt said. ”We’ve been explicitly focusing on very nearby stars, because with today’s technology, we could send a robotic probe out there, and within a few hundred years, it could be sending back pictures
  • Multimedia
  • IMAGE : Artist Rendition @ Space.com [Credit : Carnegie Institution for Science]]
  • IMAGE : Diagram of the planets orbiting the star @ Space.com [Credit : Carnegie Institution for Science]
  • IMAGE : GJ 667C triple system as seen from a telescope @ Physorg.com [Credit : Guillem Anglada-Escude]
  • IMAGE : The latest addition to a list of life-friendly exoplanets @ [Credit : Habitable Exoplanets Catalog/UPR Arecibo]
  • IMAGE : Artist depiction of the planet GJ667Cc and the three stars it orbits
    @
    [Credit : Carnegie Institution / UCSC]
  • Social Media
  • Twitter Exoplanet App @ExoplanetApp
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • New Study Shows How Trace Elements Affect Stars’ Habitable Zones
  • Newfound Alien Planet is Best Candidate Yet to Support Life, Scientists Say
  • New super-earth detected within the habitable zone of a nearby star
  • New super-Earth detected within the habitable zone of a nearby cool star
  • Potential ‘Goldilocks’ Planet Found
  • Super-Earth spotted in life-friendly zone
  • ScienceShot: Double-Star System Hosts Ancient World
  • New Planet Found: Could a Super-Earth plus Triple Stars Equal Life?
  • Cool sun could host habitable planet

*— NEWS BYTE — *

Hungry Fungi

  • The low down
  • Polyurethane is a synthetic polymer developed in the 1940s
  • It is often used to replaces rubber, paint, wood, or metals and is found in a wide variety of applications, and has the advantages of strength, durability and elasticity
  • Some can be recycled into other products but the waste ends up in landfills as a non-biodegrade object because nothing we know of can metabolize and digest it
  • The chemical bond in it are so strong they do not degrade readily
  • Although it can be burned it releases harmful carbon monoxide and other toxic chemicals
  • Significance
  • Each year Yale University operates a Rainforest Expedition and Laboratory course, which includes an expedition to a tropical jungle in the spring recess and summer research on samples collected
  • The 2011 group discovered that the Pestalotiopsis microspora fungus found in Ecuador and will not only eat polyurethane, but can survive on a diet consisting solely of polyurethane
  • In addition it can do so in the oxygen starved regions inside landfills
  • Several other microorganisms have been found that can degrade solid and liquid polyurethane but only this newest discovery can entirely survive on it under both Oxygen rich and Oxygen starved environments
  • * Of Note*
  • It is suggested that similar fungi could be used to naturally degrade waste products, a process known as bioremediation.
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Amazon fungi found that eat polyurethane, even without oxygen @ Physorg.com
  • Amazonian Rainforest Fungus Eats Polyurethane, Potentially Solving a Big Landfill Problem @ PopSci.com

Solar panels you water?

  • The low down
  • Tiny structures inside plant walls carryout photosynthesis are called photo-system-I (PS-I).
  • Scientists at MIT harvested those structures, stabilized them and formed a layer on glass, similar to a conventional photovoltaic cell
  • The process successfully produced a current when exposed to light
  • However, this system needed a sophisticated lab to create and it’s efficiency was several magnitudes to low to be of practical use
  • Significance
  • The process has been simplified so that any lab can replicate it, allowing for researchers around the world making further improvements
  • So far the newer version is 10,000 times more efficient that the original system, although it still only converts 0.1% of sunlight into electricity
  • Once the system reaches 1–2% it will become useful because of the low cost and ease of process
  • Any raw plant material, could be put into centrifuges to concentrate the PS-I molecules
  • There are also tests going on to see if the needed concentrations would be achiecable with filtration
  • * Of Note*
  • The hope is that one day, in a remote or off-the-grid location one might be able to take a bag, mix in something green, paint it on a roof, and produce power
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube VIDEO Harnessing nature’s solar cells
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Photovoltaic panels made from plant material could become a cheap alternative to traditional solar cells @ PhysOrg.com
  • MIT researcher creates solar cell from grass clippings @ RenewableEnergyMagazine.com

The science of massage

  • The low down
  • Strenuous exercises can actually tear muscle fibers, although it’s considered normal and generally heals fine
  • It has been said that massages can help release lactic acid from sore muscles, but that’s not entirely true
  • Muscles do like massages, but for another reason
  • A study on the cellular effects of massages post-exercise found that it actually chances the chemical signals that have to do with inflammation and muscle repair
  • Significance
  • Researchers had 11 healthy young men cycle to exhaustion, then one leg on each man was randomly selected for a massage.
  • Tissue samples were taken of each leg 10 minutes and 2.5 hours after the massage
  • What they saw was a 30% difference in the levels of two key proteins, one reduces inflammation and the other generates cell growth
  • * Of Note*
  • Before this study there was very little scientific research for why massage actually works
  • The traditional mainstream medical field have often dismissed massages and therapy, but these results seem likely to affect that
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • How Massage Helps Heal Muscles and Relieve Pain @ Healthland.Time
  • Massage Doesn’t Just Feel Good—It Changes Gene Expression and Reduces Inflammation @ DiscoverMagazome/com
  • Massage’s Mystery Mechanism Unmasked @ ScienceMag.org

Watching the snow fall from space

  • The low down
  • Rain tends to be spherical like drops, snow however comes in many different shapes when it comes to tracking and measuring amounts the shape differences make a great deal of difference
  • GPM Core set to be launched in 2014
  • The GPM Core will be one of the first times instruments will be in space specifically looking at falling snow
  • Significance
  • Satellites are being launched into orbit that will study global snowfall precipitation with much better detail then ever before
  • For the first time we will know when where and how much snow falls on the earth, letting us better understand and predict extreme weather
  • Once scientists calculate all the carious types of snowflake shapes the satellite will then be able to detect them from orbit.
  • * Of Note*
  • This satellite system will provide new insights into storm structures and large-scale atmospheric processes, precipitation micro physics
  • It will also provide advanced understanding of climate sensitivity and feedback processes
  • It will also extended capabilities in monitoring and predicting hurricanes and other extreme weather events, and improve forecasting abilities for natural hazards, including floods, droughts and landslides.
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube VIDEO : NASA | Studying the Science of Falling Snow
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM)
  • GPM Spacecraft and Instruments
  • Getting to the Core of Earth’s Falling Snow@ UniverseToday.com

Honorable Mentions

First video of the far side of the moon

Colbert PSA for NASA

SPACECRAFT UPDATE

Curiosity rover

*— VIEWER FEEDBACK — *

Light speed travelling brothers : slepacus

SCIENCE CALENDER

Looking back

  • Feb 14, 1747: 265 years ago : Earth fails sobriety test : The Earth has a bit of a wobble to it’s gait British astronomer James Bradly published a paper on the Earths wobbling motion on its axis, coined as nutation (from Latin “nutare” to nod). Bradley first noticed the fluctuation during his studies of parallax at Molyneux’s observatory. Attributing it to the moon’s gravitational influence, he withheld any announcement until he had observed a full cycle of the motion of the moon’s nodes, taking about 18.6 years. During his career he also measured the diameter of Venus and was able to make calculations giving the speed of light.
  • Feb 12, 1941: 71 years ago : Sometimes mold is good? : The first injection of penicillin into a human test subject was conducted by Ernst Chain and Howard Walter Florey, who developed this antibiotic. The pair of scientist working on medical applications were made aware of a patient with septic scratches, blood poisoning and numerous abscesses. They were fearful of the side effects and chose a patient in terminal condition, within a day his temperature had dropped and his appetite returned. Alaxader Flemming, who discovered penicillin thought he had merely discovered an antiseptic and was convinced it could not last long enough in the human body to kill pathogenic bacteria and actually stopped studying it. Althought the use of bread with a blue mould (presumed to be Penicillium) as a means of treating suppurating wounds was a staple of folk medicine in Europe since the Middle Ages.
  • Feb 13, 1990 : 22 years ago : Time for the family photo’s : Voyager I , while heading out to the edge of the Solar System, began a four-hour series of photographs in a look backward which captured the Sun and six planets. An elongated large mozaic was later made by combining about 60 images. In this first “Family Portrait of the Planets”, the Sun appeared almost star-like and the planets were mere dots. Mercury was too close to the sun to photograph. Mars and Pluto, were too small to resolve. This first record of the Solar System from space may remain the only one for decades to follow. Voyager I had a unique lofty perspective, looking down on the plane in which the planets orbit. It had been steadily climbing since it passed Saturn in 1980, and reached an angle of 32 degrees high above the plane of the solar system.

Looking up this week

The post Habitable Planets & Plant Power | SciByte 32 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

]]> Habitable Planets & Chimps | SciByte 24 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/14756/habitable-planets-chimps-scibyte-24/ Tue, 06 Dec 2011 23:23:14 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=14756 We take a look at new extra-solar planet discoveries, chimps, supernova, Alzheimer's, Mars, Cables, updates on New Horizons spacecraft and Voyager 1!

The post Habitable Planets & Chimps | SciByte 24 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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We take a look at new extra-solar planet discoveries, chimps, supernova, Alzheimer’s, Mars, Cables, updates on New Horizons spacecraft and Voyager 1 and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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MP3 Download | Ogg Download | YouTube

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Support the Show:

Extra-solar Planets

Flinging Chimps

  • The low down
  • Chimps are the only other species besides humans that regularly throw things with a clear target in mind
  • Researchers studying such behavior have come to the conclusion that throwing feces, or any object really, is actually a sign of high ordered behavior
  • Watching chimps in action for several years and comparing their actions with scans of their brains to see if there were any correlations between those chimps that threw a lot and those that didn’t or whether they’re accuracy held any deeper meaning.
  • Chimps that both threw more and were more likely to hit their targets showed heightened development in the motor cortex
  • Better throwing chimps didn’t appear to posses any more physical prowess than other chimps
  • Significance
  • Language processing occurs in the left side, which also controls our right hands; and most people use their right hands to throw, as do chimpanzees.
  • Such findings led the term to suggest that the ability to throw is, a precursor to speech development.
  • Those chimps that could throw better appeared to be better communicators within their group
  • Why did these chimps learn to throw in a captive context? The chimp learns is as a form of communication.
  • Throwing stuff at someone else became a form of self expression
  • * Of Note*
  • While throwing at first might not seem demanding, coordinating it requires intensive, on-the-fly calculations.
  • An equation for throwing a ball, for example, would include the distance to a target, the ball’s heaviness and the thrower’s strength. A moving target makes it even harder
  • Social Media
  • Emory University @EmoryUniversity
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Researches find poop-throwing by chimps is a sign of intelligence @ PhysOrg.com
  • Poop-Throwing Chimps Provide Hints of Human Origins @ WiredScience.com
  • Philosophical Transactions
  • Emory University

*— NEWS BYTE — *

Supernova warning signs?

Alzheimer’s Research

  • The low down
  • One of the earliest known impairments caused by Alzheimer’s disease is the loss of sense of smell
  • There is currently no effective treatment or cure for the disease
  • Since the 1970s, loss of sense of smell has been identified as an early sign of this disease
  • Smell loss can be caused by a number of ailments, exposures or injuries
  • Significance
  • Researchers at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine have confirmed that the protein, called amyloid beta, causes the loss of sense of smell
  • Amyloid beta plaque accumulated first in parts of the brain associated with smell, well before accumulating in areas associated with cognition and coordination
  • Just a tiny amount of amyloid beta – too little to be seen on today’s brain scans – start this process
  • While losses in the olfactory system occurred, the rest of the mouse model brain, including the hippocampus, which is a center for memory, continued to act normally early in the disease stage
  • Mice were given a synthetic liver x-receptor agonist, a drug that clears amyloid beta from the brain
  • The sense of smell an be restored by removing a plaque-forming protein in a mouse model of the disease
  • After two weeks on the drug, the mice could process smells normally
  • After withdrawal of the drug for one week, impairments returned
  • Team are now following-up on these discoveries to determine how amyloid spreads throughout the brain, to learn methods to slow disease progression
  • * Of Note*
  • We could use the sense of smell to determine if someone may get Alzheimer’s disease
  • Use changes in sense of smell to begin treatments, instead of waiting until someone has issues learning and remembering
  • We can also use smell to see if therapies are working
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Reversing Early Sign of Alzheimer’s – Animal Experiment Successful, For A While @ Medical News Today
  • Early sign of Alzheimer’s reversed in lab @ Medical Xpress
  • Published in The Journal of Neuroscience
  • Research by Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine

Martian Glaciers

Spandex Cables

  • The low down
  • Japanese company Asahi Kasei Fibers, originally designed the elastic cable material, called Roboden, for wiring the soft, flexible skin of humanoid robots.
  • The new cable can stretch by a factor of 1.5
  • The cable material is made of an outer elastic shell with spiraled internal wiring that unspirals when pulled.
  • Multimedia
  • VIDEO @ YouTube – Worlds First Elastic Electric/Data/USB Cables – Roboden #DigInfo
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Spandex manufacturer makes elastic electrical cable (w/ video) @ PhysOrg](https://www.physorg.com/news/2011–12-spandex-elastic-electrical-cable-video.html)
  • Stretchable Cables, Designed for Robots, Handy for Humans @ Wired.com](https://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2011/12/stretchable-cables-designed-for-robots-handy-for-humans/)

New Horizons (Pluto spacecraft) – Update

Voyager 1 – Update

  • The low down
  • Launched : Sep 05, 1977
  • Speed : 10.5 mi/s [17 km/s]
  • Significance
  • NASA’s Voyager Hits New Region at Solar System Edge
  • It has entered a new region between our solar system and interstellar space
  • Voyager 1 is about 11 billion miles (18 billion kilometers) from the sun, it is not yet in interstellar space.
  • The data do not reveal exactly when Voyager 1 will make it past the edge of the solar atmosphere into interstellar space, but suggest it will be in a few months to a few years.
  • Social Media
  • Voyager 1 @NASAVoyager1
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Curiosity Rover | SciByte 22
  • NASA’s Voyager Hits New Region at Solar System Edge @ JPL.NASA

SCIENCE CALENDER

Looking back

  • Dec 11, 1911 – 100 years ago – Marie Curie’s second Nobel Prize : Marie Curie became the first person to be awarded a second Nobel prize. She had isolated radium by electrolyzing molten radium chloride. This second prize was for her individual achievements in Chemistry, whereas her first prize (1903) was a collaborative effort with her husband, Pierre, and Henri Becquerel in Physics for her contributions in the discovery of radium and polonium.
  • *Dec 7–11 1972 – 39 years ago – Last moon mission *: On Dec 7th Apollo 17, the sixth and last U.S. moon mission, blasted off from Cape Canaveral. On Dec 11th astronauts Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt landed on the moon for a three-day exploration, while Ronald E. Evans remained in orbit. Flight Commander Eugene Cernan was the last man on the moon. Typically the backup crew for an Appolo mission was to serve as the main crew 3 missions later, but with Appolo 17 scheduled as the last Moon mission there was heavy pressure to put a geologist to the crew (Schmitt.)
  • Dec 10, 1984 – 27 years ago – First Extrasolar Planet Discovery Announcement: The National Science Foundation reported the discovery of the first planet outside our solar system, orbiting a star 21 million light years from Earth. The object was found orbiting Van Biesbroeck 8, an extremely faint star about 21 light years from Earth. However, it seemed to abruptly vanish when later attempts to observe its gravitational pull on Van Biesbroeck 8 failed. It is currently unknown whether the object ever existed.

Looking up this week

  • Keep an eye out for …

  • Wednesday, Dec 7 : As darkness falls, Jupiter is to the upper right of the Moon.

  • –Saturday Dec 10 – Total Eclipse of the Moon–

  • The Moon is totally within the umbra of Earth’s shadow for 52 minutes. The partial stages before and after totality each last more than an hour.

  • At the instant of greatest eclipse (14:32 UT) the Moon lies at the zenith in the Pacific Ocean near Guam.

  • The exact hue (anything from bright orange to blood red is possible) depends on the unpredictable state of the atmosphere at the time of the eclipse. As Jack Horkheimer (1938–2010) of the Miami Space Transit Planetarium loved to say, “Only the shadow knows.”

  • Timeline

  • Partial Eclipse Begins – 4:45am PST / 12:45 GMT

  • Total Eclipse Begins – 6:45am PST / 14:06 GMT

  • Total Eclipse Maximum – 6:32am PST / 14:32 GMT

  • Total Eclipse Ends – 6:14am PST / 14:57 GMT

  • Partial Eclipse Ends – 8:17am PST / 16:17 GMT

  • What you can see

  • NASA

  • ShadowAndSubstance

  • United States & Canada : The western United States and Canada will witness a total lunar eclipse. The action begins around 4:45am PST when the red shadow of Earth first falls across the lunar disk. By 6:05am PST, the Moon will be fully engulfed in red light.

  • Europe : Seen as rising over eastern Europe

  • Asia and Australia : Visible from all of Asia and Australia

  • Austrailia and Japan : The eclipsed Moon hangs high in middle of the night

  • South America & Antarctica : Not able to see the eclipse

  • More on whats in the sky this week

  • Sky&Telescope

  • AstronomyNow

  • SpaceWeather.com

  • HeavensAbove

  • StarDate.org

The post Habitable Planets & Chimps | SciByte 24 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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