supernova – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 22 Feb 2016 02:44:27 +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 supernova – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Sleep Apnea & Heart Defect Treatments | SciByte 115 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/49562/sleep-apnea-heart-defect-treatments-scibyte-115/ Tue, 14 Jan 2014 21:11:04 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=49562 We take a look at breast-cancer therapy research, a new sleep apnea treatment, biomedical glue, spacecraft updates, and a little Curiosity news.

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We take a look at breast-cancer therapy research, a new sleep apnea treatment, biomedical glue, spacecraft updates, Curiosity news, and as always take a peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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— Book Pic: —

Breast-Cancer Therapy Research

  • A new breast-cancer therapy partially reverses the cancerous state in cultured breast tumor cells and prevents cancer development in mice, the therapy emerged from a sophisticated effort to reverse-engineer gene networks to identify genes that drive cancer
  • Current Treatment Options
  • To date the only way to stop cancer cells has been to kill them.
  • The treatments that accomplish that, including surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy, often damage healthy tissue, causing harsh side effects
  • Many women currently undergo surgery, chemotherapy and radiation as a precaution, who might never develop the disease
  • In addition some women with a high hereditary risk of breast cancer have chosen to undergo preemptive mastectomies.
  • A therapy that heals rather than kills cancerous tissue could potentially help all these patients, as well as men who develop the disease
  • Identifying Problem Genes
  • First they had to identify the culprit genes among the thousands that are active in a cell at any moment
  • When molecular biologists typically are looking for cancer-causing genes, they search for individual genes that become active as cancer develops, but because genes in cells work in complex networks
  • With this process however, cells that are not cancer-causing often get labeled as such as well
  • To improve the odds of finding the real culprits, a systems biology expert who has developed a sophisticated mathematical and computational method to reverse-engineer bacterial gene networks.
  • Computational Method
  • They were able to hone the computational network to work for the first time on the more complex gene networks of mice and humans
  • The refined method helped the scientists spot more than 100 genes that acted suspiciously just before milk-duct cells in the breast begin to overgrow
  • The team narrowed their list down to six genes that turn other genes on or off, and then narrowed it further to a single gene called HoxA1 that had the strongest statistical link to cancer
  • The HocA1 Gene
  • Researchers wanted to know if blocking the HoxA1 gene could reverse cancer in lab-grown cells, so they grew healthy mouse or human cells in a nutrient-rich, tissue-friendly gel
  • Healthy cells in the gel formed hollow spheres of cells akin to a normal milk duct, cancerous cells, in contrast, packed together into solid, tumor-like spheres.
  • When they treated cancerous cells with a short piece of RNA called a small interfering RNA (siRNA) that blocks only the HoxA1 gene the cells reversed their march to malignancy
  • It stopped the runaway growth and forming hollow balls as healthy cells do, in addition they specialized as if they were growing in healthy tissue
  • The siRNA treatment also stopped breast cancer in a line of mice genetically engineered to have a gene that causes all of them to develop cancer
  • Researchers packed the siRNA into nanoparticles called lipidoids that allow for genes to be silenced for weeks inside the body
  • When they injected these nanoparticles, the treated mice remained healthy, while untreated mice developed breast cancer
  • The Future
  • The idea would be to start the treatment early on and sustain it throughout life to prevent cancer development or progression
  • The same strategy could lead to many new therapies that disable cancer-causing genes no current drugs can stop, and it also can be used to find therapies for other diseases
  • The findings open up the possibility of someday treating patients who have a genetic propensity as more women than ever are undergoing early tests that reveal precancerous breast tissue
  • Early diagnosis could potentially save lives; however, few of those lesions go on to become tumors and doctors have no good way of predicting which ones will turn malignant
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Novel noninvasive therapy prevents breast cancer formation in mice | MedicalXpress.com

— NEWS BYTE —

Sleep Apnea Medical Device

  • Implantation of a sleep apnea device called Inspire Upper Airway Stimulation (UAS) therapy can lead to significant improvements for patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA)
  • Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)
  • Affects more than 8 million men and 4 million women in the U.S. and is twice as common in men
  • Is characterized by repeated episodes of upper airway collapse during sleep, due to narrowing or blockage
  • Patients with OSA stop breathing, known as apnea, frequently during sleep, often for a minute or longer
  • Repeated episodes of apnea can lead to daytime fatigue, and increase a person\’s risk for heart attack, stroke, high blood pressure and even death.
  • Current Treatments for OSA
  • Include weight loss, upper airway surgeries, oral appliances, and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), which is considered the primary treatment for OSA
  • CPAP is a successful treatment when used on a regular basis
  • As many as half of the patients who have been prescribed CPAP are unable to use it regularly, largely due to discomfort with the mask and/or the lack of desire to be tethered to a machine
  • Inspire Upper Airway Stimulation (UAS) Therapy
  • Differs from other traditional sleep apnea devices and surgical procedures as it targets the muscle tone of the throat rather than just the anatomy
  • The device is designed to sense breathing patterns and deliver mild stimulation to a patient\’s airway muscles to keep the airway open during sleep.
  • Surgical implantation of the upper-airway stimulation system was performed by otolaryngologists at 22 academic and private centers
  • Stimulation electrode was placed on the hypoglossal nerve, which provides innervation to the muscles of the tongue
  • The device was implanted in three areas, a sensing lead was placed between rib muscles to detect breathing effort, a neurostimulator was implanted in the upper right chest, just below the clavicle bone
  • Two thirds of patients using the Inspire UAS therapy device had successful control of their OSA, even more reported improvement in snoring, daytime sleepiness and quality of life measures
  • The Study
  • This was the first trial to evaluate the use of upper airway stimulation for sleep apnea
  • Conducted at 22 medical centers in the United States and Europe
  • From 724 candidates initially screened, the STAR trial implanted and prospectively evaluated 126 moderate-to-severe OSA patients who had difficulty using or adhering to CPAP therapy:
  • All patients underwent surgery to implant the device, 83 percent of the participants were men, the mean age was 54.5 years, and the mean body-mass index was 28.4.
  • Patients used a \”controller\” to turn on the device at night, so it is only used when the patient sleeps
  • Long Term
  • Eighty-six percent of patients were still using the device every night at the one year mark, which compares very favorably to CPAP
  • Using various sleep-disorder measuring systems, patients were found to experience 68 to 70 percent fewer sleep-apnea episodes per hour
  • After one year, patients using the device had an approximately 70 percent reduction in sleep apnea severity, as well as significant reductions in daytime sleepiness
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Dr. Soose explains sleep apnea clinical trial | UPMC
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • New device can reduce sleep apnea episodes by 70 percent, study shows | MedicalXpress.com

— TWO-BYTE NEWS —

Glue for the Heart

  • In a preclinical study, researchers developed a bio-inspired adhesive that could rapidly attach biodegradable patches inside a beating heart in the exact place where congenital holes in the heart occur, such as with ventricular heart defects.
  • Heart Defect Treatments
  • When a child is born with a heart defect such as a hole in the heart, the highly invasive therapies are challenging due to an inability to quickly and safely secure devices inside the heart
  • Sutures take too much time to stitch and can cause stress on fragile heart tissue
  • Currently available clinical adhesives are either too toxic or tend to lose their sticking power in the presence of blood or under dynamic conditions, such as in a beating heart
  • A New Adhesive
  • Many creatures in nature have secretions that are viscous and repel water enabling them to attach under wet and dynamic conditions
  • Researchers developed a material with these properties that also is biodegradable, elastic and biocompatible
  • The degradable patches secured with the glue remained attached even at increased heart rates and blood pressure and it works in the presence of blood and moving structures
  • The adhesive was strong enough to hold tissue and patches onto the heart equivalent to suturing, is biodegradable and biocompatible, so nothing foreign or toxic stays in the bodies of these patients
  • Its adhesive abilities are activated with ultraviolet (UV) light, providing an on-demand, anti-bleeding seal within five seconds of UV light application
  • What This Means
  • Researchers note that their waterproof, light-activated adhesive will be useful in reducing the invasiveness of surgical procedures, as well as operating times, in addition to improving heart surgery outcomes
  • \”It should provide the physician with a completely new, much simpler technology and a new paradigm for tissue reconstruction to improve the quality of life of patients following surgical procedures.\” | Pedro del Nido, MD, Chief of Cardiac Surgery, Boston Children\’s Hospital, co-senior study author
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Bio-inspired glue keeps hearts securely sealed | ScienceDaily.com

Supernova In the Works

  • SN 1987A is the closest supernova to that we’ve been able to study since the invention of the telescope and it has provided scientists with good opportunities to study the physical processes of an exploding star
  • A nebula with a giant star at its center has striking similarities to SN 1987A.
  • Both stars have identical rings of the same size and age, which were travelling at similar speeds; both were located in similar HII regions; and they had the same brightness
  • No one can predict when a star will go supernova, but astronomers are certainly hoping they’ll have the chance to watch it happen.
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • What a Star About to Go Supernova Looks Like | UniverseToday.com

— SPACECRAFT UPDATE—

Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo (SS2)

  • 2014 should be the year that Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo (SS2) brings passengers on suborbital space flights
  • The company started off the year by successfully completing its third rocket-powered supersonic flight after dozens of successful subsonic test flights
  • Getting to Altitude
  • The WhiteKnightTwo (WK2) carrier aircraft brought SS2 to an altitude around 46,000 ft, then SS2 was released, and its rocket motor was ignited, powering the spaceship to a planned altitude of 71,000 ft.
  • SS2’s highest altitude to date, and it also reached a speed of Mach 1.4.
  • Testing
  • They tested the spaceship’s Reaction Control System, the newly installed thermal protection coating on the vehicle’s tail booms, and the “feather” re-entry system.
  • The RCS will allow its pilots to maneuver the vehicle in space so that passengers will have great views of Earth, as well as aiding the positioning process for spacecraft re-entry
  • The new reflective protection coating on SS2’s inner tail boom surfaces is being evaluated to help maintain vehicle skin temperatures while the rocket motor is firing.
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Stunning video: Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo goes supersonic in test flight | euronews (in English)
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • SpaceShipTwo Goes Supersonic in Third Rocket-Powered Test Flight | UniverseToday.com

China’s Lunar Lander and Rover Back “Awake”

  • According to a BACC statement the Chinese Lunar lander, Chang’e-3, and the Yutu rover have \’woken up\’ from their Lunar night hibernation
  • Engineers put them to sleep to conserve energy since there is no sunlight to generate power with the solar arrays during the lunar night.
  • Lunar night time environment when temperatures plunged to below minus 180 degrees Celsius, or minus 292 degrees Fahrenheit
  • During the nocturnal hiatus they were kept alive by a radioisotopic heat source that maintained at a temperature of about minus 40 degrees Celsius to prevent debilitating damage to the computer and electronics subsystems inside a box below the deck
  • Just prior to hibernating, the lander snapped the first image of the Earth taken from the Moon’s surface in some four decades
  • The Yutu rover has already resumed roving, and they expect the Chang’e-3 lander should survive at least a year.
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube | Stunning video: Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo goes supersonic in test flight | euronews (in English)
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • China\’s Historic Moon Robot Duo Awaken from 1st Long Frigid Night and Resume Science Operations | UniverseToday.com

— CURIOSITY UPDATE —

  • Watching From Orbit
  • NASA\’s Curiosity Mars rover and its recent tracks from driving in Gale Crater appear in an image taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA\’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on Dec. 11, 2013.
  • The tracks show where the rover has zigzagged around obstacles on its route toward the lower slopes of Mount Sharp, its next major destination.
  • HiRISE first imaged the Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft while it was descending on a parachute
  • Mars Orbiter Images Rover and Tracks in Gale Crater | mars.nasa.gov
  • Multimedia
  • YouTube Curiosity Rover Report JPLnews
  • Image Galleries at JPL and Curiosity Mulimedia
  • Social Media
  • Curiosity Rover @MarsCuriosity
  • Further Reading / In the News

SCIENCE CALENDAR

Looking back

  • January 17, 1929 : 85 years ago : Expanding universe : Edwin Hubble communicated the now classic paper that first showed the universe was expanding (and later provided observational evidence for the Big Bang theory). But Hubble explicitly made no such an interpretation. He left that to the reader. His paper was simply titled “A Relation Between Distance and Radial Velocity Among Extra-Galactic Nebulae.” He listed the data that he plotted on a graph. It showed a roughly linear relationship between radial velocity for various galaxies and their distance. It dramatically showed that the the further away the galaxy, the faster it is moving away from the observer. However, stating that future new data might change the interpretation, he discretely wrote that he thought it “premature to discuss in detail the obvious consequences of the present results.

Looking up this week

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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!

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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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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.

]]> Brains & Light | SciByte 21 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/13951/brains-light-scibyte-21/ Tue, 15 Nov 2011 21:51:47 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=13951 We take a look at memory, flexible brain implant, supernova's, light absorption, a new space station crew, the latest news on Russia's Phobos-Grunt mission!

The post Brains & Light | SciByte 21 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Hello everyone and welcome back to SciByte!

We take a look at memory, flexible brain implant, supernova’s, light absorption, a new space station crew, the latest news on Russia’s Phobos-Grunt mission and take another peek back into history and up in the sky this week.

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Grab a book to support the show, this week’s pick:

Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan

   

Show Notes:

SciByte 20 Correction

  • One letter can make a world of difference …
  • Today’s power plants use fission to generate heat and do useful work. The creation of the first man-made fission reactor, known as Chicago Pile–1, achieved criticality on December 2, 1942. Fusion differs from the fission reactions used in current nuclear power plants for it occurs when light nuclei travelling at high speed combine, without radioactive waste as a byproduct.

Feedback

  • What’s the deal with Ceres?

  • The low down

  • Ceres is also the largest Main Belt asteroid, comprising about a third of the mass of the asteroid belt

  • Discovered on 1 January 1801 by Giuseppe Piazzi, it was the first asteroid to be identified

  • surface is probably a mixture of water ice and various hydrated minerals such as carbonates and clays, and may even harbour an ocean of liquid water under its surface

  • Significance

  • International Astronomical Union (IAU) gathered at the second General Assembly on August 24, 2006 and voted on an official definition of planet

  • There is now a new category of planets designated as “dwarf planets,” including Pluto, Charon (its moon), and Ceres

  • * Of Note*

  • Ceres was almost the 5th planet, but the definition to planet requires the orbit to be ‘cleared’

  • The 2006 IAU decision that classified Ceres as a dwarf planet never addressed whether it is or is not an asteroid

  • The IAU has never defined the word ‘asteroid’

  • NASA continues to refer to Ceres as an asteroid, saying in a 2011 press announcement that “Dawn will orbit two of the largest asteroids in the Main Belt”,as do various academic textbooks

  • Social Media

  • NASA’s Dawn Mission @NASA_Dawn

  • Further Reading / In the News

  • Ceres: Overview @ NASA.gov

  • Ceres Designated a ‘Dwarf Planet’ @ Dawn Spacecraft

  • Ceres and Pluto: Dwarf Planets as a New Way of Thinking about an Old Solar System @ NASA.gov

  • Dawn Mission: Dawn – Home Page – NASA

  • International Astronomical Union

*— UPDATES — *

Phobos-Grunt Update

*— NEWS BYTE — *

Memory and your brain

  • The low down
  • Scientists have long studied people with memory deficits, but there haven’t been many studies on people with exceptional memories
  • some real-life people can remember every day of their lives in detail
  • Those superrememberers have more bulk in certain parts of their brains, possibly explaining the remarkable ability to recall minutiae from decades ago
  • The reserachers fund 11 people who scored off the charts for autobiographical memory. These people could effortlessly remember, for instance, what they were doing on November 2, 1989, and could also tell you that it was a Thursday
  • Significance
  • Using brain scans, researchers found that people with supermemories had larger brain regions associated with memory, specifically a brain structure called the lentiform nucleus, a cone-shaped mass in the core of the brain, was bigger in people with exceptional memories
  • Brain region involved in such incredible recall has been implicated in obsessive-compulsive disorder
  • OCD and superior memory might have a common architecture in the brain
  • The subjects haven’t been clinically evaluated for OCD, but LePort says that there are some similarities
  • The ability to organize their memories by dates seems to relieve anxiety
  • Though no genetic tests have been performed, some of the volunteers have reported that family members share extraordinary powers of recall
  • The volunteers are now keeping detailed diaries, so that the scientists can test whether particular kinds of memories are better suited to recollection. People might be better at remembering emotional memories, for instance
  • Social Media
  • UC Irvine @UCIrvine
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Society for Neurosciencce
  • Exceptional memory linked to bulked-up parts of brain @ ScienceNews.com
  • Enlarged Brain Parts Linked to Extraordinary Memory @TopNews.us

Flexible Brain Implant for Seizures

  • The low down
  • The brain contains billions of interconnected neurons that normally transmit electrical pulses
  • During a seizure, these pulses occur in abnormal, synchronized, rapid-fire bursts that can cause convulsions, loss of consciousness and other symptoms
  • Significance
  • Researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health have developed a flexible brain implant that could one day be used to treat epileptic seizures
  • In an animal model, the researchers saw spiral waves of brain activity not previously observed during a seizure
  • Similar waves are known to ripple through cardiac muscle during a type of life-threatening heart rhythm called ventricular fibrillation.
  • Someday, these flexible arrays could be used to pinpoint where seizures start in the brain and perhaps to shut them down
  • A stimulating electrode array might one day be designed to suppress seizure activity, working like a pacemaker for the brain
  • These flexible electrode arrays could significantly expand surgical options for patients with drug-resistant epilepsy
  • the array could be rolled into a tube and delivered into the brain through a small hole rather than by opening the skull
  • * Of Note*
  • The implant is a type of electrode array that conforms to the brain’s surface – to take an unprecedented look at the brain activity underlying seizures
  • is made of a pliable material that is only about one quarter the thickness of a human hair
  • It contains 720 silicon nanomembrane transistors in a multiplexed 360-channel array, which allow for minimal wiring and dense packing of the electrodes
  • The flexibility of the array allows it to conform to the brain’s complex shape, even reaching into grooves that are inaccessible to conventional arrays
  • The researchers tested the flexible array on cats. Although mice and rats are used for most neuroscience research, cats have larger brains that are anatomically more like the human brain, with simplified folds and grooves
  • Social Media
  • The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) @SfNtweets
  • Penn Medicine Media @PennMedMedia
  • NIH for Health @NIHforHealth
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Society for NeuroScience
  • Nature Neuroscience
  • National Institutes of Health
  • Ultrathin flexible brain implant offers unique look at seizures @ MedicalXPress.com
  • Flexible Brain Implant Could Treat Epilepsy @ DiscoveryNews.com
  • Brain implant ‘could be used to treat epilepsy’ @ EpilepsyResearch.ork.uk

Did a supernova kick start our solar system?

  • The low down
  • Scientists think the sun and surrounding planets were born from a churning disk of gas and dust, but what precisely caused the stuff to condense and form these bodies has been a mystery
  • New computer simulations support the supernova scenario
  • cold cloud of gas, and set it 15 light-years from an exploding supernova. Stun the cloud with the supernova’s shockwave. Incubate, and watch as the solar system begins to take shape
  • Significance
  • Understanding how the local solar neighborhood grew up is crucial for learning how other planetary systems are born
  • Some clues to the solar systems origin appear in radioactive elements that were injected into and swam around the presolar cloud
  • Today, they are embedded in objects such as asteroids, and are thought to mark the first solid bodies that emerged after the cloud’s collapse
  • aluminum–26, has helped scientists determine that the solar system was born a little more than 4.5 billion years ago
  • All of it appears to have enriched the cloud within roughly 20,000 years, much faster than most simulations can explain
  • The team ruled out solar wind from a nearby star or enrichment occurring from within the cold cloud itself, because the key elements would have been delivered too slowly or in the wrong quantities
  • approached the problem differently, by calculating in three dimensions rather than two, but also concluded that shocking the embryonic solar system would simultaneously trigger the cloud’s collapse and quickly inject the required radioactive elements
  • Social Media
  • Carnegie Institution @carnegiescience
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Supernova may have kicked off solar system @ Science News
  • Astrophysical Journal
  • Carnegie Institution for Science

Nano shag-carpet absorbs light

  • The low down
  • Black paint only absorbs about 90 percent of the light that hits it
  • in the cold dark of space, black paint takes on a silvery hue
  • other nanomaterials and metamaterials that can absorb nearly all light in some wavelengths
  • these require special fabrication processes to work in whichever wavelength researchers want
  • Significance
  • The new material is made of carbon nanotubes and can be grown on a variety of space-friendly substrates, from silicon to titanium to stainless steel
  • absorbs an average 99 percent of all the ultraviolet, visible, infrared, and far-infrared light that hits it
  • collecting and trapping light inside tiny gaps between the nanotubes, which are arranged in vertical fibrous strands
  • * Of Note*
  • It could also help scientists examine small spots in high-contrast areas, like planets orbiting other stars, and even look at the Earth, where weak light signals of interest to atmospheric scientists are washed out by the atmosphere’s reflectivity
  • Social Media
  • NASA Goddard @NASAGoddard
  • Results for #SPIEDigitalLibrary](https://twitter.com/#!/search?q=%23SPIEDigitalLibrary)
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • New Super-Black Material Absorbs 99 Percent of All Light That Dares to Strike It @PopSci
  • New ‘super-black’ material absorbs light across multiple wavelength bands @ PhysOrg.com
  • NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • SPIE Optics and Photonics

An ancient horse of a different color … or spots

  • The low down
  • Previous genetic studies had suggested that horses were either bay or black before domestication, and more elaborate patterns emerged as a result of breeding selection imposed by humans
  • In new study published show that some prehistoric horses really did sport spots
  • Significance
  • A new analysis of DNA from the remains of 31 horses found in Europe and Siberia suggests that prehistoric horses came in bay, black and leopard-spotted at least 16,000 years ago
  • Of the 31 horses studied, 18 were bay, seven were black and six carried genetic variants that produce a leopard spotting pattern
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • Prehistoric horses came in leopard print @ScienceNews.com

A new crew for the Space Station Arrives

  • The low down
  • A Russian rocket successfully lifted off from snowy Central Asia on Nov. 13, carrying a NASA astronaut and two Russian cosmonauts to the International Space Station
  • Despite intense snowfall at the launch site, the winds remained calm, which enabled Russian controllers to proceed with the scheduled liftoff
  • The temperature was about 24 F, roughly 6 inches (15 cm) of snow had accumulated on the ground at launch time and moderate wind gusts partially obscured the view.
  • The spaceflyers are expected to arrive at the space station on Wednesday (Nov. 16) after a two day journey
  • Significance
  • NASA astronaut Dan Burbank and Russian cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin, they will be joined in December by the next trio to round out Expedition 30
  • Burbank previously visited the space station in 2000 and 2006, on missions aboard the space shuttle Atlantis. This will be his first long-duration stint at the massive orbiting laboratory. Shkaplerov and Ivanishin are both conducting their first spaceflight.
  • The station’s Expedition 29 crew, which currently consists of commander Mike Fossum of NASA, Japanese astronaut Satoshi Furukawa and Russian cosmonaut Sergei Volkov.
  • Commander Fossum and his two crewmates have been living and working aboard the station since June. They are scheduled to return to Earth on Nov. 21. Before his departure, Fossum will hand over command of the station to Burbank, who will lead the station’s new Expedition 30 mission for the duration of his stay
  • * Of Note*
  • The Expedition 30 crew could also be present for the test flights of two robotic commercial vehicle during their stay at the station
  • SpaceX’s Dragon capsule and Orbital Sciences’ Cygnus freighter are tentatively scheduled to carry out demonstration flights of their spacecraft in the new year
  • The three newest station residents will remain at the massive orbiting complex until March 2012
  • Multimedia
  • Launch Video
  • Russian Spacecraft Going to Space Station @YouTube.com
  • Expedition 29 Crew Gets Final Approval for Launch @ YouTube.com
  • Social Media
  • NASA Astronauts @NASA_Astronauts
  • Results for [#SpaceX](https://twitter.com/#%21/search?q=%23SpaceX)
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • New Space Station Crew Launches in Spectacular Snowy Display @ Space.com
  • New Crewmembers to Arrive at Space Station Early Wednesday @ Space.com
  • Soyuz Launches to Station amid Swirling Snowy Spectacular @ UniverseToday
  • SpaceX’s Dragon capsule
  • International Space Station
  • NASA Astronauts

The last 14miles for the Endeavour

  • The low down
  • After travelling over 122 million miles the Space Shuttle Endeavour will make it’s final 14 miles from LAX to the California Science Center
  • the options for moving a nearly six story, 180-thousand pound spacecraft, with a 78-foot wing span are limited
  • The Randy’s Donuts sign was an absolute no, no to touch
  • Further Reading / In the News
  • How to Drive Space Shuttle Endeavour Down the Streets of Los Angeles @UniverseToday.com

SCIENCE CALENDER

Looking back this week

  • Nov 22, 1809 : 202 years ago – The Pen : The first patent was issued in the U.S. for a metallic writing pen was issued to Peregrine Williamson a jeweller of Baltimore, Maryland. Williamson’s pens were made of steel rolled from wire, a sort of steel quill that would never need cutting to sharpen the nib. There are references to steel pens being used in Britain before this patent.
  • Nov 19, 1872 : 139 years ago – Adding Machine : the first U.S. patent for an adding machine capable of printing totals and subtotals, called a “calculating machine,” was issued to E.D. Barbour of Boston, Mass. However, it was not practical. (No. 133,188)
  • Nov 21, 1877 : 134 years ago – Edison’s phonograph : Thomas Edison announced his invention of his “talking machine” – the tin-foil cylinder recorder that preceeded the phonograph. The indented tin foil, however, would survive only a few playings. By the first public showing of a phonograph, which took place in New York City in early Feb 1878, its practical applications had not yet been realized.
  • Nov 19, 1895 : 116 years ago – Paper Pencil : the first U.S. patent for a paper pencil was issued was issued to Fredrick E. Blaisdell of Philadelphia, Pa. (No. 549,952)
  • Nov 17, 1970 : 41 years ago – Mouse Patent : a U.S. patent was issued for the computer mouse – an “X-Y Position Indicator for a Display System” (No. 3541541). The first mouse was a simple hollowed-out wooden block, with a single push button on top. Engelbart had designed this as a tool to select text, move it around, and otherwise manipulate it.
  • Nov 16, 1972 : 39 years ago – Skylab III : Skylab III, carrying a crew of three astronauts, was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on an 84-day mission that remained the longest American space flight for over two decades
  • Nov 20, 1998 : 13 years ago – International Space Station : the first module of the International Space Station was launched on a Russian Proton rocket. It was followed two weeks later by the Unity connecting module from the U.S. The project, initiated by NASA in 1983, also involved Canada, Japan and the 11 members of the European Space Agency. After the Cold War, the Russians had been invited to participate, not merely as an exercise in international cooperation, but also to employ Russian scientists who might have otherwise sold their expertise to renegade countries.

Looking up this week

  • Coronal Mass Ejections

  • It ejected from the sun on Nov 11th

  • Went past Mercury on Nov. 13th was predicted to hit Venus on the 14th. (above left)

  • astronomers around the world have been monitoring a dark filament of magnetism sprawled more than 1,000,000 kilometers across the face of the sun

  • On Nov. 14th the filament snapped and flung a fraction of itself into space and NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory recorded the action (above right)

  • Keep an eye out for …

  • Thursday, Nov 17 : Leonid meteor shower will peak, but will be contending with the last-quarter moon so only a few “shooting stars” will shine through the lunar glow

  • Friday, Nov 14 : Last-quarter Moon (exact at 10:09 a.m. EST). The Moon shines near Mars and Regulus this morning and tomorrow morning

  • Saturday Nov. 19 : Mars is visible to the upper left of the Moon at first light this morning

  • Saturday Nov. 19 : Venus is low in the southwest in the early evening with Mercury below it, although you may need binoculars to see it.

  • Tuesday, Nov 22 : Look to the southeast at first light for Saturn and the star Spica near the crescent Moon. Spica, the brightest star of Virgo, is close to the left of the Moon, with fainter Saturn a little farther to the left of Spica.

  • More on whats in the sky this week

  • Sky&Telescope

  • AstronomyNow

  • SpaceWeather.com

  • HeavensAbove

  • StarDate.org

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