Neptune – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Sat, 11 Apr 2020 06:22:23 +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 Neptune – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 The Resilience of the Voyagers | Jupiter Extras 70 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/141047/the-resilience-of-the-voyagers-jupiter-extras-70/ Sun, 12 Apr 2020 11:00:00 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=141047 Show Notes: extras.show/70

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Show Notes: extras.show/70

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Voyager 1 & Insect Gears| SciByte 102 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/43267/voyager-1-insect-gears-scibyte-102/ Tue, 17 Sep 2013 20:42:02 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=43267 We take a look at Voyager 1’s journey, a possible HIV vaccine, gears in nature, Curiosity news.

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We take a look at Voyager 1’s journey, a possible HIV vaccine, gears in nature, Curiosity news, and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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— Show Notes: —

Voyager 1’s Journey

  • NASA says that the Voyager 1 spacecraft is in interstellar space and actually made the transition about a year ago
  • There is however a bit of an argument on the semantics of whether Voyager 1 is still inside or outside of our Solar System
  • Also Viewer Submission
  • Website Email Form from : Nick Tanin
  • \”Edge of the Solar System?\”
  • There is no one simple definition of where the \’edge of the solar system\’ is
  • The heliosphere is a region of space dominated by the Sun, a sort of bubble of charged particles in the space surrounding the Solar System.
  • Although electrically neutral atoms from the extrasolar volume can penetrate this bubble, virtually all of the material in the heliosphere emanates from the Sun itself.
  • Some scientists define that as the edge of the solar system, while others define it at the outer boundary of the Oort cloud
  • The Oort cloud is a hypothesized spherical cloud of predominantly icy planetesimals that may lie roughly 50,000 AU, or nearly a light-year, from the Sun
  • This places the cloud at nearly a quarter of the distance to Proxima Centauri, the nearest star to the Sun
  • The outer Oort cloud is only loosely bound to the Solar System, and thus is easily affected by the gravitational pull both of passing stars and of the Milky Way itself
  • Shift in the Magnetic Field
  • Solar plasma produces a distinctive magnetic field because it all comes from the same source
  • Scientists expected that the field would shift in interstellar space, where particles flit around in all directions
  • Because of this, scientists thought would be the key signature of interstellar space: a shift in the direction of the magnetic field
  • Without a Shift in the Magnetic Field
  • Since there was no clear change in the magnetic fields, scientists determined they needed to look at the properties of the plasma instead
  • The Sun’s heliosphere is filled with ionized plasma from the Sun, outside that bubble, the plasma comes from the explosions of other stars millions of years ago
  • The main tell-tail difference between the two is that interstellar plasma is denser.
  • The real instrument that was designed to make the measurements on the plasma quit working in the 1980’s
  • Instead they used the plasma wave instrument, located on the 10-meter long antennas on Voyager 1 and a massive Coronal Mass Ejection from the Sun
  • All Scientists Never Agree
  • Some scientists, including a few holdouts on the Voyager team, have written a paper demonstrating how plasma could become dense enough within the heliosphere to produce the measurements seen
  • Several well-publicized studies made that claim the team lacked evidence of what they thought would be the key signature of interstellar space: a shift in the direction of the magnetic field
  • Solar plasma produces a distinctive magnetic field because it all comes from the same source
  • Scientists expected that the field would shift in interstellar space, where particles flit around in all directions
  • Getting The Data
  • Voyager 1 is 18.7 billion km [11.6 billion miles] from the sun, or about 125 astronomical units
  • Voyager mission controllers still talk to or receive data from Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 every day
  • Emitted signals are currently very dim, at about 23 watts, the power of a refrigerator light bulb and takes more than 17 hours for a radio signal to travel from the spacecraft
  • By the time the signals get to Earth, they are a fraction of a billion-billionth of a watt
  • The signal strength is so incredibly weak that it takes both a 230-foot and a 110-foot-diameter antenna to receive our highest resolution data
  • Data from Voyager 1′s instruments are transmitted to Earth typically at 160 bits per second and the signals from Voyager 1 takes about 17 hours to travel to Earth.
  • After the data are transmitted to JPL and processed by the science teams, Voyager data are made publicly available
  • What the Data Says
  • Other astrophysicists say the evidence is overwhelming that Voyager 1 has crossed the heliopause, but acknowledge that they have to determine why the magnetic field direction didn’t shift
  • The data shows that Voyager 1 in certainly in a new region at the edge of the solar system where things are changing rapidly
  • The data is also changing in ways that the team didn’t expect
  • After further review, the Voyager team generally accepts the August 2012 date as the date of interstellar arrival
  • The charged particle and plasma changes were what would have been expected during a crossing of the heliopause
  • Coronal Mass Ejection Data
  • A CME erupted from the Sun in March 2012, and eventually arrived at Voyager 1′s location 13 months later, in April 2013
  • Because of the CME, the plasma around the spacecraft began to vibrate like a violin string.
  • The pitch of the oscillations helped scientists determine the density of the plasma
  • Those particular oscillations meant the spacecraft was bathed in plasma more than 40 times denser than what they had encountered in the outer layer of the heliosphere
  • The plasma wave science team reviewed its data and found an earlier, fainter set of oscillations in October and November 2012 from other CMEs
  • Extrapolation of measured plasma densities from both events, the team determined Voyager 1 first entered interstellar space in August 2012
  • Sounds of \’Interstellar Space\’
  • YouTube | Voyager Captures Sounds of Interstellar Space | NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  • The graphic shows the frequency of the waves, which indicate the density of the plasma.
  • Colors indicate the intensity of the waves, or how \”loud\” they are, with red indicating the loudest waves and blue the weakest.
  • The soundtrack reproduces the amplitude and frequency of the plasma waves as \”heard\” by Voyager 1.
  • The waves detected by the instrument antennas can be simply amplified and played through a speaker
  • This helped the Voyager science team calculate the density of interstellar plasma
  • The Future of Voyager 1
  • While Voyager 1 will keep going, we will not always be able to communicate with it, as we do now
  • NASA estimates that Voyager 1 has enough plutonium fuel to keep all its instruments powered for another seven years
  • Moving outward from the sun at about 3.5 AU per year there are estimates of how long it will be before it reaches various locations
  • In 2025 all instruments will be turned off, and the science team will be able to operate the spacecraft for about 10 years after that to just get engineering data
  • It will take 300 years to reach the Oort cloud
  • Scientists do not know when Voyager 1 will reach the undisturbed part of interstellar space where there is no influence from our Sun
  • They also are not certain when Voyager 2 is expected to cross into interstellar space, but they believe it is not very far behind.
  • In the year 40,272 AD, Voyager 1 will come within 1.7 light years of an obscure star in the constellation Ursa Minor
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Voyager Captures Sounds of Interstellar Space | NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  • YouTube | Voyager Welcomed To Interstellar Space | VideoFromSpace
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Messages To Voyager: Welcome to Interstellar Space | UniverseToday.com
  • [Listen to the Sounds of Interstellar Space, Recorded by Voyager 1] | UniverseToday.com(https://www.universetoday.com/104719/listen-to-the-sounds-of-interstellar-space-recorded-by-voyager-1/)
  • Voyager 1 spacecraft reaches interstellar space, study confirms | phys.org
  • It\’s Official: Voyager 1 Is Now In Interstellar Space
  • At last, Voyager 1 slips into interstellar space | Atom & Cosmos | Science News
  • Voyager 1 Probe Captures 1st-Ever Sounds of Interstellar Space (Video) | Space.com
  • Heliosphere | Wikipeida
  • Oort Cloud | Wikipeida

— NEWS BYTE —

HIV/AIDS Vaccine

  • An HIV/AIDS vaccine candidate being developed by researchers at Oregon Health & Science University
  • The Vaccine
  • The promising vaccine is being tested through the use of a non-human primate form of HIV simian immunodeficiency virus, or SIV, which causes AIDS in monkeys
  • In fact SIV is roughly 100x more deadly that HIV
  • It involves the use of cytomegalovirus, or CMV, a common virus already carried by a large percentage of the population
  • The researchers discovered that pairing a modified CMV virus with SIV had a unique effect
  • The modified version of CMV engineered to express SIV proteins generates and indefinitely maintains so-called \”effector memory\” that are capable of searching out and destroying SIV-infected cells
  • The Testing
  • About 50 percent of monkeys given highly pathogenic SIV after being vaccinated with this vaccine became infected with SIV but over time eliminated all trace of SIV from the body
  • The vaccine mobilized a T-cell response that was able to overtake the SIV invaders in 50 percent of the cases treated
  • In fact, testing suggests SIV was banished from the host
  • The lab is now investigating the possible reasons why only a subset of the animals treated had a positive response in hopes that the effectiveness of the vaccine candidate can be further boosted
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • AIDS vaccine candidate appears to completely clear virus from the body | MdicalXress.com

— VIEWER FEEDBACK —

Natural Insect Gears

  • Michael Thalleen ‏@ThalleenM | Check This Out!
  • Natural Insect Gears
  • Answer
  • To the best of our knowledge, the mechanical gear was invented sometime around 300 B.C.E. by Greek mechanics who lived in Alexandria
  • Issus coleoptratus, planthopper, have an intricate gearing system that locks their back legs together, allowing both appendages to rotate at the exact same instant, causing the tiny creatures jump forward.
  • The finding, is believed to be the first functional gearing system ever discovered in nature
  • Gearing
  • The reason for the gearing, they say, is coordination, to jump both of the insect’s hind legs must push forward at the exact same time
  • The skeleton is used to solve a complex problem that the brain and nervous system can’t
  • The gears are located at the top of the insects’ hind legs and include 10 to 12 tapered teeth, each about 80 micrometers wide (or 80 millionths of a meter).
  • In all the planthoppers studied, the same number of teeth were present on each hind leg, and the gears locked together neatly
  • Scientists used electron microscopes and high-speed video capture to discover the existence of the gearing and figure out its exact function.
  • They jump at speeds as high as 8.7 miles per hour, and 50,000 teeth per second
  • They cock their back legs into a jumping position, then pushed forward, with each moving within 30 microseconds (30 millionths of a second)
  • No \’Gears\’ in Adults
  • Adults of the same insect species don’t have any gearing-as the juveniles grow up and their skin molts away
  • The adult legs are synchronized by an alternate mechanism
  • Adults are bigger and heavier, Burrows say, so perhaps leg-to-leg friction syncs motions without the need for gear teeth
  • It is hypothesize that this could be explained by the fragility of the gearing, if one tooth breaks, it limits the effectiveness of the design
  • That weakness isn’t such a big problem for the juveniles, who repeatedly molt and grow new gears before adulthood
  • However for the mature Issus, replacing the teeth would be impossible
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Working Gears Evolved in Plant-Hopping Insect | SciAmerican
  • Image Animation of the Gears in Action | blogs.smithsonianmag.com
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Young insect legs have real meshing gears | Zoology | ScienceNews.org
  • This Insect Has The Only Mechanical Gears Ever Found in Nature | blogs.smithsonianmag.com

— CURIOSITY UPDATE —

SCIENCE CALENDAR

Looking back

  • September, 23 1846 : 167 years ago : Neptune Discovered : The German astronomer Johan G. Galle discovered Neptune after only an hour of searching, within one degree of the position that had been computed by Urbain-Jean-Joseph Le Verrier. Independently of the English astronomer John C. Adams, Le Verrier had calculated the size and position of a previously unknown planet, which he assumed influenced the irregular orbit of Uranus, and he asked Galle to look for it.

Looking up this week

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Breath Analysis & Large Structures | SciByte 77 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/30191/breath-analysis-large-structures-scibyte-77/ Tue, 15 Jan 2013 22:10:25 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=30191 We take a look at analysing your breath, large structures on a universal scale, inflatable space station modules, and more!

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We take a look at analyzing your breath, large structures on a universal scale, inflatable space station modules, spacecraft update, Curiosity news and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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Support the Show:

Show Notes:

Big on a Universal Scale

  • Image Credit: R. G. Clowes / UCLan
  • The low down
  • Quasars are the nuclei of galaxies from the early days of the universe that undergo periods of extremely high brightness that make them visible across huge distances that last 10–100 million years, which is brief on the astronomical time scale
  • Since 1982 it has been known that quasars tend to group together in clumps or ‘structures’ of surprisingly large sizes, forming large quasar groups or LQGs.
  • Significance
  • Using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, an international team of researchers has discovered a record-breaking cluster of quasars-young active galaxies at a mind blowing 4 billion years across
  • The Milky Way is a hundred thousand light-years across and is separated from its nearest neighbour, the Andromeda Galaxy, by 2.5 million light-years [~0.75 Megaparsecs (Mpc)]
  • The local supercluster of galaxies in which it’s located, the Virgo Cluster, is only a hundred million light-years wide
  • LQGs can be 650 million light-years [200 Mpc] or more across while Whole clusters of galaxies can be a mere 6.5 million light-years [2–3 Mpc]
  • While this elongated LQC has a typical dimension of 1.6 billion light-years [500 Mpc] with its longest dimension at 4 billion light years [1200 Mpc]
  • This would make it some 1600 times larger than the distance from the Milky Way to Andromeda
  • The LQG is so significant in size it also challenges the Cosmological Principle: the assumption that the universe, when viewed at a sufficiently large scale, looks the same no matter where you are observing it from.
  • Of Note
  • The modern theory of cosmology is based on the work of Albert Einstein, and depends on the assumption of the Cosmological Principle
  • The Principle is assumed but has never been demonstrated observationally ‘beyond reasonable doubt’.
  • Based on the Cosmological Principle and the modern theory of cosmology, calculations suggest that astrophysicists should not be able to find a structure larger than 1.2 million light-years [370 Mpc].
  • Recall that this elongated LQC has a typical dimension of 1.6 billion light-years [500 Mpc] with its longest dimension at 4 billion light years [1200 Mpc]
  • This discovery could mean that current mathematical descriptions of the universe has been oversimplified
  • It represents a serious difficulty and a serious increase in complexity
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Biggest Thing in Universe Found—Defies Scientific Theory | news.NationalGeographic.com
  • Astronomers discover the largest structure in the universe | Phys.org

— NEWS BYTE —

Inflatable Space Station Modules

  • On Jan 11 NASA announced they have awarded a $17.8 million contract to Bigelow to provide a new inflatable module for the ISS, making it the first privately built module to be added to the space station
  • The low down
  • According to the website Bigelow Aerospace’s Genesis I inflatable test module was inserted into orbit and is still functioning and “continuing to produce invaluable images, videos and data
  • A second Genesis module was launched in 2007 and it, too, is still functioning in orbit.
  • Previous information given out said the inflatable module for the space station would be used for adding additional storage and workspace, and certified to remain on-orbit for two years
  • Significance
  • The outer shell of their module is soft, as opposed to the rigid outer shell of current modules at the ISS, Bigelow’s inflatable modules are more resistant to micrometeoroid or orbital debris strikes it uses multiple layers of Vectran, a material which is twice as strong as Kevlar
  • NASA officials have said that BEAM could be on orbit about two years after getting an official go-ahead
  • The module will likely be launched by one of the agency’s commercial cargo suppliers, California-based SpaceX or Virginia-based Orbital Sciences Corp
  • Of Note
  • The company wants to launch and link up several of its larger expandable modules to create private space stations, which could be used by a variety of clients.
  • They are looking at a possible outpost on the moon that would use several modules, propulsion tanks, and power units that would be joined together in space and then flown down to the lunar surface.
  • Lunar dirt would be piled over the modules to protect against radiation, thermal extremes and micrometeorite strikes.
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Bigelow Inflatable Module Will be Added to Space Station | UniverseToday.com
  • NASA Buys Private Inflatable Room for Space Station | Space.com

What Else is on Your Breath

  • Last time on SciByte
  • SciByte 46 | Mayan Calendar & Cancer Research | A breathalyzer that does more than find out how much you’ve had to drink [May 15, 2012]
  • The low down
  • Researchers have developed a test that can detect the presence of common infectious bacteria based just on the breath
  • The test measures the VOC, volatile organic compound, particles emitted in gasses, profiles that the bacteria create that are distinct those that the body, or other bacteria, give off
  • Significance
  • They conducted studies in lab mice that were infected with different types of common bacteria
  • Researchers used two different strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which can cause pneumonia, and one strain of Staphylococcus aureus, which can cause respiratory infections
  • The researchers tested the animals’ breath the next day by ionizing breath samples then then shooting them through a mass spectrometer to analyze concentrations of various VOCs in a process called secondary electrospray ionization mass spectrometry
  • The test identified the different bacterial infections as well as differentiated between healthy and infected
  • The team also located the difference between the two strains of P. aeruginosa
  • The speedy results of the test is appealing. And it could at least make it a good first step in detecting bacterial infections, with a follow-up culture coming later if deemed necessary-to detect drug-resistant TB, for example
  • This technique will have to be tested in large human trials before it can be used on a large scale in offices
  • Of Note
  • Similar breath tests have also been studied for detecting other ailments, such as diabetes and cancer
  • In addition it is thought that we will also be able to distinguish between bacterial, viral and fungal infections of the lung
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Breath Test Could Sniff Out Infections in Minutes | Observations, Scientific American Blog Network | blogs.scientificamerican.com

— TWO-BYTE NEWS —

One Way Trip to Mars

  • Last time on SciByte
  • SciByte 61 | ‘Tatooine’ Exoplanets & Eye’s | Martian Reality TV [September 4, 2012]
  • The low down
  • The Netherlands-based nonprofit Mars One, which hopes to put the first boots on the Red Planet in 2023, released its basic astronaut requirements on Jan 8
  • A televised global selection process will begin later this year.
  • Significance
  • Anyone who is at least 18 years old can apply to become a Mars colony pioneer
  • Important criteria, officials say, are intelligence, good mental and physical health and dedication to the project, as astronauts will undergo eight years of training before launch.
  • Even Well before the official Astronaut Selection Program, the project has already received more than 1,000 emails from individuals who desire to go to Mars
  • Of Note
  • Mars One plans to launch a series of robotic cargo missions between 2016 and 2021, which will build a habitable Red Planet outpost ahead of the arrival of the first four colonists in 2023.
  • More settlers will arrive every two years after that. There are no plans to return the pioneers to Earth
  • The project will be largely funded by staging a global reality-TV event
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube Mars One introduction film | MarsOneProject
  • YouTube Construction steps of Mars One settlement | MarsOneProject
  • YouTube Channel [Mars One
  • Social Media
  • Mars One @MarsOneProject
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Mars One Homepage
  • Mars Colonists Wanted to Explore Red Planet | Space.com

— SPACECRAFT UPDATE—

MoonKAM

  • The low down
  • The MoonKAM (Moon Knowledge Acquired by Middle School Students) took more than 115,000 total images of the lunar surface, and imaging targets were proposed by middle school students
  • Some of the final images taken by the GRAIL MoonKAM educational cameras on board Ebb and Flow, the twin spacecraft for the mission
  • The spacecraft had lowered their orbit to only about 6.8 miles [11 km] above the lunar surface. While these images aren’t of the highest of resolution, they provide a great sense of what it would be like to orbit close to the Moon
  • This footage was shot just three days prior to when the mission ended with the planned impacts on a rim of a crater near the lunar north pole.
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube Parting Moon Shots from NASA’s GRAIL mission | JPLnewsJPLnews
  • Social Media
  • GRAIL MoonKAM @GRAIL_MoonKAM
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • New Video Shows the GRAIL MoonKAM’s Final Looks at the Moon | UniverseToday.com

– CURIOSITY UPDATE –

SCIENCE CALENDAR

Looking back

  • Jan 21, 1979 : 34 years ago : Neptune : Pluto has a highly elliptical orbit, completing its journey around the Sun every 248 years. Pluto’s distance from the Sun varies, most of the time, Pluto is the farthest planet from the Sun, but every 497 years, for 20 years during its orbit, Pluto is closer to the Sun than Neptune. In reality Pluto is actually quite a distance “above” Neptune and orbits the Sun twice for every three orbits of Neptune. Pluto “crossed” Neptune’s orbit on January 21, 1979, and temporarily became the 8th planet from the sun. On February 11, Pluto moved farther from the Sun than Neptune, regaining its status as the most distant planet in the solar system. well planet at that time Image| Orbits of Pluto and Neptune
  • PLUTO TO BECOME MOST DISTANT PLANET | Feb 09, 1999
  • Pluto and Neptune: Collision? | imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov

Looking up this week

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