Tuesday, 31 January 2017

500 million year old species offers insights into the lives of ancient legged worms


500 million year old species offers insights into the lives of ancient legged worms
A stubbly, worm-like creature featuring as many as 30 limbs combed the seafloor during the early Cambrian period, according to new research. Its bizarre appearance and feeding behavior are unlike anything ever seen before.

Researchers digging in British Columbia’s Burgess Shale have uncovered the fossilized remains of a 500 million-year-old lobopodian. Named Ovatiovermis cribratus, the newly described animal was only a few inches tall, and filter-fed by waving its body back and forth to scoop up tiny prey. Given its extreme age and unique physical characteristics, scientists say it’s one of the earliest examples of arthropods in the fossil record—a group of animals that includes insects, spiders, scorpions, and crustaceans.

Journal article:
http://bmcevolbiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12862-016-0858-y

Source & further reading:
http://gizmodo.com/this-500-million-year-old-sea-creature-boggles-the-imag-1791821012

Image: Computer animation showing the filter-feeding behavior of the newly discovered lobopodian.
Credit: Jean-Bernard Caron et al., 2017

#biodiversity #lobopodian #coolcritters #science #biology

February 1, is reserved to STS-107 shuttle Columbia crew


February 1, is reserved to STS-107 shuttle Columbia crew
On Feb. 1, 2003, space shuttle Columbia broke up as it returned to Earth, killing the seven astronauts on board. NASA suspended space shuttle flights for more than two years as it investigated the disaster.

An investigation board determined that a large piece of foam fell from the shuttle's external tank and fatally breached the spacecraft wing.

The seven-member crew — Rick Husband, commander; Michael Anderson, payload commander; David Brown, mission specialist; Kalpana Chawla, mission specialist; Laurel Clark, mission specialist; William McCool, pilot; Ilan Ramon, payload specialist from the Israeli Space Agency — spent 24 hours a day doing science experiments in two shifts. They performed around 80 experiments in life sciences, material sciences, fluid physics and other matters.

References:
https://history.nasa.gov/columbia/
http://www.space.com/19436-columbia-disaster.html

Photo:
This image of the STS-107 shuttle Columbia crew in orbit was recovered from wreckage inside an undeveloped film canister. The shirt colors indicate their mission shifts. From left (bottom row): Kalpana Chawla, mission specialist; Rick Husband, commander; Laurel Clark, mission specialist; and Ilan Ramon, payload specialist. From left (top row) are astronauts David Brown, mission specialist; William McCool, pilot; and Michael Anderson, payload commander. Ramon represents the Israeli Space Agency.
Credit: NASA/JSC

#NASA #history #Columbia107 #space #science

Monday, 30 January 2017

Heading a football causes instant changes to the brain


Heading a football causes instant changes to the brain
Researchers from the University of Stirling have explored the true impact of heading a football, identifying small but significant changes in brain function immediately after routine heading practice.

The study from Scotland’s University for Sporting Excellence published in EBioMedicine is the first to detect direct changes in the brain after players are exposed to everyday head impacts, as opposed to clinical brain injuries like a concussion.

Football players headed a ball 20 times, fired from a machine designed to simulate the pace and power of a corner kick. Before and after the heading sessions, scientists tested players’ brain function and memory.

Increased inhibition in the brain was detected after just a single session of heading. Memory test performance was also reduced by between 41 and 67 percent, with effects normalising within 24 hours.

Played by more than 250 million people worldwide, the ‘beautiful game’ often involves intentional and repeated bursts of heading a ball. In recent years the possible link between brain injury in sport and increased risk of dementia has focussed attention on whether football heading might lead to long term consequences for brain health.

Cognitive neuroscientist Dr Magdalena Ietswaart from Psychology at the University of Stirling said: “In light of growing concern about the effects of contact sport on brain health, we wanted to see if our brain reacts instantly to heading a football. Using a drill most amateur and professional teams would be familiar with, we found there was in fact increased inhibition in the brain immediately after heading and that performance on memory tests was reduced significantly.

“Although the changes were temporary, we believe they are significant to brain health, particularly if they happen over and over again as they do in football heading. With large numbers of people around the world participating in this sport, it is important that they are aware of what is happening inside the brain and the lasting effect this may have.”

Dr Angus Hunter, Reader in Exercise Physiology in the Faculty of Health Sciences and Sport, added: “For the first time, sporting bodies and members of the public can see clear evidence of the risks associated with repetitive impact caused by heading a football.

“We hope these findings will open up new approaches for detecting, monitoring and preventing cumulative brain injuries in sport. We need to safeguard the long term health of football players at all levels, as well as individuals involved in other contact sports.”

Journal Article:
http://www.ebiomedicine.com/article/S2352-3964%2816%2930490-X/fulltext

Source:
http://www.stir.ac.uk/news/2016/10/heading-a-football-causes-instant-changes-to-brain/

#neuroscience #TBI #soccer #sporthealth #science #research

Gyrating Active Region


Gyrating Active Region
A close-up animation of a small area of the sun highlighted three active regions, but the one in the center caught the attention (Jan. 20, 2017). Over half a day this active region sent dark swirls of plasma and bright magnetic arches twisting and turning above it. All the activity in the three areas was driven by competing magnetic forces. The dynamic action was observed in a wavelength of extreme ultraviolet light.

Reference:
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/774
Credit: Solar Dynamic Observatory, NASA.

#nasa #SDO #space #science #sun #plasma #science

Where to See the American Eclipse


Where to See the American Eclipse
Are you planning to see the American Eclipse on August 21? A few hours after sunrise, a rare total eclipse of the Sun will be visible along a narrow path across the USA. Those only near the path will see a partial eclipse. Although some Americans live right in path of totality, surely many more will be able to get there after a well-planned drive. One problem with eclipses, though, is that clouds sometimes get in the way.

To increase your clear-viewing odds, you might consult the featured map and find a convenient destination with a historically low chance (more blue) of thick clouds overhead during totality. Given the large fraction of Americans carrying camera-equipped smartphones, this American Eclipse may turn out to be the most photographed event in the history of the world.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: Jay Anderson; Data: MODIS Satellite, NASA's GSFC

#space #NASA #eclipse #science #universe #naturalphenomena

Sunday, 29 January 2017

Do microbes control our mood?


Do microbes control our mood?
If aliens were to examine a human, they would think we were just slavish organisms designed to feed microbes and carry them around. Our bodies contain ten times more bacteria than cells, and there are an estimated 3.3 million genes in the total bacteria DNA, which is 160 times the number of human genes. Our intestine hosts about one kilogram of bacteria which help to digest and metabolize food, produce vitamins and protect us from infections.

The above is textbook knowledge, but loads of recent studies are uncovering new and unsuspected roles for these little companions. There is evidence that gut bacteria can protect or predispose us to pathologies ranging from inflammation to diabetes and obesity. And, as far-fetching as it sounds, a remarkable amount data shows that they can even modify our mood and behavior.

What is the connection between the microbiota, the brain, and mood?
There is a growing evidence of a microbial gut-brain axis in which bacteria can influence the brain, and vice versa.

Researchers from Canada found that mice from a particularly shy species became more active and curious after receiving a gut microbial transplant from less inhibited mice. We know that some strains of intestinal bacteria produce compounds that have an effect on the nervous system: neurotransmitters, for example, or metabolites that alter the blood-brain barrier. We don’t yet know the precise mechanisms, but it’s quite clear that the gut microbes can influence mood and the behavioral patterns.

Journal article:
http://www.gastrojournal.org/article/S0016-5085(11)00607-X/abstract

Source & further reading:
http://www.youris.com/Health/Immunology/Do-Microbes-Control-Our-Mood.kl

#neuroscience #BBB #microbiota #moodDisorders #science #research

The Cat's Eye Nebula from Hubble


The Cat's Eye Nebula from Hubble
To some, it may look like a cat's eye. The alluring Cat's Eye nebula, however, lies three thousand light-years from Earth across interstellar space. A classic planetary nebula, the Cat's Eye (NGC 6543) represents a final, brief yet glorious phase in the life of a sun-like star. This nebula's dying central star may have produced the simple, outer pattern of dusty concentric shells by shrugging off outer layers in a series of regular convulsions.

But the formation of the beautiful, more complex inner structures is not well understood. Seen so clearly in this digitally reprocessed Hubble Space Telescope image, the truly cosmic eye is over half a light-year across. Of course, gazing into this Cat's Eye, astronomers may well be seeing the fate of our sun, destined to enter its own planetary nebula phase of evolution ... in about 5 billion years.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble, HLA; Reprocessing & Copyright: Raul Villaverde

#NASA #space #science #nebula #universe

Metallic hydrogen, once theory, becomes reality


Metallic hydrogen, once theory, becomes reality
Nearly a century after it was theorized, Harvard scientists have succeeded in creating the rarest - and potentially one of the most valuable - materials on the planet

The material - atomic metallic hydrogen - was created by Thomas D. Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences Isaac Silvera and post-doctoral fellow Ranga Dias. In addition to helping scientists answer fundamental questions about the nature of matter, the material is theorized to have a wide range of applications, including as a room-temperature superconductor.

The creation of the rare material is described in a January 26 paper published in Science.

"This is the holy grail of high-pressure physics," Silvera said. "It's the first-ever sample of metallic hydrogen on Earth, so when you're looking at it, you're looking at something that's never existed before."

To create it, Silvera and Dias squeezed a tiny hydrogen sample at 495 gigapascal, or more than 71.7 million pounds-per-square inch - greater than the pressure at the center of the Earth. At those extreme pressures, Silvera explained, solid molecular hydrogen -which consists of molecules on the lattice sites of the solid - breaks down, and the tightly bound molecules dissociate to transforms into atomic hydrogen, which is a metal.

Watch:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qitm5fteL0

PR:
http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2017/01/a-breakthrough-in-high-pressure-physics/

Source: https://phys.org/news/2017-01-metallic-hydrogen-theory-reality.html#jCp

#physics #research #metallichydrogen #science

Saturday, 28 January 2017

Red Aurora Over Australia


Red Aurora Over Australia
Why would the sky glow red? Aurora. A solar storm in 2012, emanating mostly from active sunspot region 1402, showered particles on the Earth that excited oxygen atoms high in the Earth's atmosphere. As the excited element's electrons fell back to their ground state, they emitted a red glow. Were oxygen atoms lower in Earth's atmosphere excited, the glow would be predominantly green.

Pictured here, this high red aurora is visible just above the horizon last week near Flinders, Victoria, Australia. The sky that night, however, also glowed with more familiar but more distant objects, including the central disk of our Milky Way Galaxy on the left, and the neighboring Large and Small Magellanic Cloud galaxies on the right. A time-lapse video highlighting auroras visible that night puts the picturesque scene in context. Why the sky did not also glow green remains unknown.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Alex Cherney (Terrastro, TWAN)

#space #nasa #science #naturalphenomena #aurora

Watch four alien worlds orbit a distant star


Watch four alien worlds orbit a distant star
Star HR 8799 was born about the same time as humanity's ancestors — 60 million years ago, after the dinosaurs went extinct and the age of animals that would lead to our evolution was just beginning here on Earth. It's 129 light years away from us, tucked toward the front legs of the constellation Pegasus. It's so close and so brilliant (five times brighter than our own sun) that on a clear night it can easily be spotted by the naked eye.

In 2008, scientists discovered three planetary companions circling within a dusty disk that surrounds the star, just as the nine planets of our solar system are encircled by the Kuiper belt. And they took a picture. It tied for the first direct image ever taken of planets outside our celestial neighborhood.

Further observation uncovered another planet. And now, we can watch all four in motion.

This three-second animation is the result of seven years of work by Jason Wang, an astronomy graduate student at the University of California, who compiled dozens of images taken by the W.M. Keck observatory in Hawaii to create the digital equivalent of a flip book.

The black circle at the middle is a result of the device used to block the light from the star so that scientists could detect the much fainter gleam of its nearby planets.

The four glowing globes that orbit it are HR 8799's planets. This animation does not show their full orbits — the planets are so far from their star that it would take more than four centuries to create that video.

But this is a snapshot of four alien worlds orbiting a distant sun. And that's pretty incredible.
Incredible indeed...

Article:
https://astrobiology.nasa.gov/news/a-four-planet-system-in-orbit-directly-imaged-and-remarkable/

Story via WP:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/speaking-of-science/wp/2017/01/27/watch-four-alien-worlds-orbit-a-distant-star/?utm_term=.2c73e8bc894b

#nasa #space #science #stars #planets #Kuiperbelt

Calico cats are actually super interesting from a genetic point of view.


Calico cats are actually super interesting from a genetic point of view. Girl cats have two X chromosomes, and one will inactivate a few days after conception. It inactivates randomly, leaving blotches of fur coded with one X chromosome, and the remaining fur coded with the other!

Reference:
http://www.bio.miami.edu/dana/dox/calico.html

#biodiversity #calicocats #genetics #coolcritters #caturday

Human-Pig Hybrid Created in the Lab


Human-Pig Hybrid Created in the Lab
In a remarkable—if likely controversial—feat, scientists announced that they have created the first successful human-animal hybrids. The project proves that human cells can be introduced into a non-human organism, survive, and even grow inside a host animal, in this case, pigs.

This biomedical advance has long been a dream and a quandary for scientists hoping to address a critical shortage of donor organs.

Every ten minutes, a person is added to the national waiting list for organ transplants. And every day, 22 people on that list die without the organ they need. What if, rather than relying on a generous donor, you could grow a custom organ inside an animal instead?

That’s now one step closer to reality, an international team of researchers led by the Salk Institute reports in the journal Cell. The team created what’s known scientifically as a chimera: an organism that contains cells from two different species.

Journal article:
http://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(16)31752-4

Article via SA
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/01/human-pig-hybrid-embryo-chimera-organs-health-science/

Image: This pig embryo was injected with human cells early in its development and grew to be four weeks old.

Photograph courtesy: JUAN CARLOS IZPISUA BELMONTE

#research #chimerapig #transplantation #medicine #health #biomedicaladvance

N159 in the Large Magellanic Cloud


N159 in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Over 150 light-years across, this cosmic maelstrom of gas and dust is not too far away. It lies south of the Tarantula Nebula in our satellite galaxy the Large Magellanic Cloud a mere 180,000 light-years distant. Massive stars have formed within. Their energetic radiation and powerful stellar winds sculpt the gas and dust and power the glow of this HII region, entered into the Henize catalog of emission stars and nebulae in the Magellanic Clouds as N159.

The bright, compact, butterfly-shaped nebula above and left of center likely contains massive stars in a very early stage of formation. Resolved for the first time in Hubble images, the compact blob of ionized gas has come to be known as the Papillon Nebula.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, Hubble Space Telescope

#nasa #universe #space #science #LMC

Thursday, 26 January 2017

It’s Not Your Ears, It’s Your Brain


It’s Not Your Ears, It’s Your Brain
“Could you repeat that?” The reason you may have to say something twice when talking to older family members at Thanksgiving dinner may not be because of their hearing. Researchers at the University of Maryland have determined that something is going on in the brains of typical older adults that causes them to struggle to follow speech amidst background noise, even when their hearing would be considered normal on a clinical assessment.

In an interdisciplinary study published by the Journal of Neurophysiology, researchers Samira Anderson, Jonathan Z. Simon, and Alessandro Presacco found that adults aged 61–73 with normal hearing scored significantly worse on speech understanding in noisy environments than adults aged 18–30 with normal hearing. The researchers are all associated with the UMD’s Brain and Behavior Initiative.

“Evidence of degraded representation of speech in noise, in the aging midbrain and cortex” is part of ongoing research into the so-called cocktail party problem, or the brain’s ability to focus on and process a particular stream of speech in the middle of a noisy environment. This research brings together the fields of hearing and speech science, neuroscience and cognitive science, electrical engineering, biology, and systems science.

The study subjects underwent two different kinds of scans to measure their brains’ electrical activity while they listened to people talk. The researchers were able to see what the subjects’ brains were up to when asked what someone was saying, both in a quiet environment and amidst a level of noise. The researchers studied two areas of the brain. They looked at the more ‘ancestral’ midbrain area, which most vertebrate animals—all the way down to fish—have, and which does basic processing of all sounds. They also looked at the cortex, which is particularly large in humans and part of which specializes in speech processing.

In the younger subject group, the midbrain generated a signal that matched its task in each case—looking like speech in the quiet environment, and speech clearly discernible against a noisy background in the noise environment. But in the older subject group, the quality of the response to the speech signal was degraded even when in the quiet environment, and the response was even worse in the noisy environment.

“For older listeners, even when there isn’t any noise, the brain is already having trouble processing the speech,” said Simon.
Neural signals recorded from cortex showed that younger adults could process speech well in a relatively short amount of time. But the auditory cortex of older test subjects took longer to represent the same amount of information.

Why is this the case? “Part of the comprehension problems experienced by older adults in both quiet and noise conditions could be linked to age-related imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory neural processes in the brain,” Presacco said. “This imbalance could impair the brain’s ability to correctly process auditory stimuli and could be the main cause of the abnormally high cortical response observed in our study.”
“Older people need more time to figure out what a speaker is saying,” Simon noted. “They are dedicating more of their resources and exerting more effort than younger adults when they are listening to speech.”

“Often we will hear an older person say, ‘I can hear you, I just can’t understand you,” said Anderson. “This research gives us new insight into why that is the case.”

Paper:
http://jn.physiology.org/content/116/5/2346

PR:
https://www.umdrightnow.umd.edu/news/its-not-your-ears-its-your-brain

#neuroscience #hearingloss #aging #midbrain

Artificial intelligence can now identify skin cancer as accurately as experts


Artificial intelligence can now identify skin cancer as accurately as experts
A new artificial intelligence system can spot the tell-tale signs of skin cancer just as accurately as human doctors, say researchers, and the next step is to get the tech on a smartphone, so anyone can run a self-diagnosis.

Once the system is refined further and becomes portable, it could give many more people the chance to get screened with minimal cost, and without having to wait for an appointment with a doctor to confirm the symptoms.

The Stanford University researchers behind the deep learning system say the key to its success is an algorithm that enables it to apply what it knows from its existing database of skin cancer samples to pictures it hasn't seen before.

"We made a very powerful machine learning algorithm that learns from data," says one of the team, Andre Esteva. "Instead of writing into computer code exactly what to look for, you let the algorithm figure it out."

To give the system its smarts, the researchers trained it using 129,450 close-up images of skin lesions covering more than 2,000 different diseases, providing a vast database of examples to learn from.

Next, the team borrowed an algorithm developed by Google to spot the difference between cats and dogs in images, and adapted it to tell the difference between skin marks.

They put their new device up against 21 qualified dermatologists, who were shown 376 images of skin lesions and asked to judge if they would refer the patient for further analysis, or give them the all-clear.

Across the board, the AI was able to match the success rate of the professionals.

PR:
http://news.stanford.edu/2017/01/25/artificial-intelligence-used-identify-skin-cancer/

Read the paper:
http://www.nature.com/articles/nature21056.epdf?referrer_access_token=iArkjIgvNbaGjEyPNXjMpNRgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0NXpMHRAJy8Qn10ys2O4tuPQzN7VitPjMSrm-_eh79EcAEX2oqj6tpRdshSnmUQZnzqHcken8gcosiAgtIG2zaWygWU5idFzwmaMyvP1J6gg0FkMQnB8UYBzJ8jCsgAeZ5M-CGpTtxg7FoYJLFFawicKG4uEyk_z-Fs3zHvAS5bEDcmEBNuL8eMctHvxsH91VmBeeuYPjDQ42CJV9_PpB6iKVp67TmxZXz7OcoOLTZFQw%3D%3D&tracking_referrer=www.theguardian.com

Source:
http://www.sciencealert.com/ai-is-now-as-good-as-the-experts-at-spotting-skin-cancer/

#SciTech #AI #cancer #research #health #medicine #deeplearning

Despina, Moon of Neptune


Despina, Moon of Neptune
Despina is a tiny moon of Neptune. A mere 148 kilometers across, diminutive Despina was discovered in 1989, in images from the Voyager 2 spacecraft taken during its encounter with the solar system's most distant gas giant planet. But looking through the Voyager 2 data 20 years later, amateur image processor and philosophy professor Ted Stryk discovered something no one had recognized before -- images that show the shadow of Despina in transit across Neptune's blue cloud tops.

His composite view of Despina and its shadow is composed of four archival frames taken on August 24, 1989, separated by nine minutes. Despina itself has been artificially brightened to make it easier to see. In ancient Greek mythology, Despina is a daughter of Poseidon, the Roman god Neptune.

Image & info via APOD
Image Credit: NASA, JPL - Processed Image Copyright: Ted Stryk

Reference:
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/despina/indepth

#space #nasa #Despina #Neptune #science #universe

Indeed...


Indeed...

#personalnonsense #imagination #touchmyspine

Wednesday, 25 January 2017

A new player in appetite control


A new player in appetite control
MIT neuroscientists have discovered that brain cells called glial cells play a critical role in controlling appetite and feeding behavior. In a study of mice, the researchers found that activating these cells stimulates overeating, and that when the cells are suppressed, appetite is also suppressed.

The findings could offer scientists a new target for developing drugs against obesity and other appetite-related disorders, the researchers say. The study is also the latest in recent years to implicate glial cells in important brain functions. Until about 10 years ago, glial cells were believed to play more of a supporting role for neurons.

Paper:
https://elifesciences.org/content/5/e18716

PR:
http://news.mit.edu/2016/brain-cells-structural-support-influence-appetite-1018

#neuroscience #appetite #obesity #eatingdisorders #glialcells

The Mysterious Voynich Manuscript


The Mysterious Voynich Manuscript
The ancient text has no known title, no known author, and is written in no known language: what does it say and why does it have many astronomy illustrations? The mysterious book was once bought by an emperor, forgotten on a library shelf, sold for thousands of dollars, and later donated to Yale. Possibly written in the 15th century, the over 200-page volume is known most recently as the Voynich Manuscript, after its (re-)discoverer in 1912.

Pictured below is an illustration from the book that appears to be somehow related to the Sun. The book labels some patches of the sky with unfamiliar constellations. The inability of modern historians of astronomy to understand the origins of these constellations is perhaps dwarfed by the inability of modern code-breakers to understand the book's text. The book itself remains in Yale's rare book collection under catalog number "MS 408."

References:
http://www.voynich.nu/extra/coll_rom_mss.html
http://www.crystalinks.com/voynich.html

#history #VoynichManuscript

Same Spark, More Bytes


Same Spark, More Bytes
Scientists have encoded a record amount of data into a single quantum bit, or qubit. The new record, 1.67 bits of data per qubit, was achieved via quantum communication but required only off the shelf technology.

Source & further reading:
https://www.insidescience.org/news/same-spark-more-bytes

#physics #science #quantumcommunication #research

January 24th is reserved to Michio Kaku


January 24th is reserved to Michio Kaku
I know...I'm late again, but I have to mention Dr. Kaku ;)
Born in San Jose, California in 1947, Michio Kaku is a theoretical physicist and futurist at the City College of New York. In high school he built a particle accelerator in his parents’ garage; that project, which he presented at a national science fair, caught the attention of Manhattan Project physicist Edward Teller.

Kaku received a bachelor’s degree in physics from Harvard and a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. Kaku codeveloped string field theory, a branch of string theory, and has written textbooks on superstrings and quantum field theory. Many of Kaku’s books are geared toward the general public. In one of his most recent books, Physics of the Future, he applies the laws of physics to the current state of technology and predicts the advances that will take place by the year 2100.

By 2100, our destiny is to become like the gods we once worshiped and feared. But our tools will not be magic wands and potions but the science of computers, nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and most of all, the quantum theory.

Bio:
http://www.biography.com/people/michio-kaku-21429817

Reference:
http://mkaku.org/

Story via Physics Today.

#history #michiokaku #physics


What is the Fibonacci Sequence?


What is the Fibonacci Sequence?
The Fibonacci sequence is a series of numbers where a number is found by adding up the two numbers before it. Starting with 0 and 1, the sequence goes 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, and so forth.

Named after Fibonacci, also known as Leonardo of Pisa or Leonardo Pisano, Fibonacci numbers were first introduced in his Liber abaci in 1202. The son of a Pisan merchant, Fibonacci traveled widely and traded extensively. Math was incredibly important to those in the trading industry, and his passion for numbers was cultivated in his youth.


Knowledge of numbers is said to have first originated in the Hindu-Arabic arithmetic system, which Fibonacci studied while growing up in North Africa. Prior to the publication of Liber abaci, the Latin-speaking world had yet to be introduced to the decimal number system. He wrote many books about geometry, commercial arithmetic and irrational numbers. He also helped develop the concept of zero.

References:
https://plus.maths.org/content/life-and-numbers-fibonacci
https://www.mathsisfun.com/numbers/fibonacci-sequence.html
http://www.livescience.com/37470-fibonacci-sequence.html

#math #Fibonacci #processing #animation #geometry



Tuesday, 24 January 2017

NOAA’s GOES-16 Satellite Sends First Images to Earth


NOAA’s GOES-16 Satellite Sends First Images to Earth
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released the first high-resolution images that were sent from its newly-launched GOES-16, formerly GOES-R, satellite on Monday.

GOES-16 was launched Nov. 19 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Called a "game changer" by NOAA, the $1.2 billion satellite will help revolutionize weather forecasting in many ways, including sending back data faster and generating images in higher resolution that will lead to more accurate forecasts.

The photos provides by GOES-16 have an image resolution four times greater than the existing GOES satellites.

GOES-16 captured this view of the moon as it looked across the surface of the Earth on January 15. Like earlier GOES satellites, GOES-16 will use the moon for calibration.

Reference:
http://www.goes-r.gov/
https://www.nesdis.noaa.gov/content/goes-16-image-gallery

#space #GOES16 #nasa #NOAA #science #universe #weather


Cassini's Grand Finale Tour at Saturn


Cassini's Grand Finale Tour at Saturn
Cassini is being prepared to dive into Saturn. The robotic spacecraft that has been orbiting and exploring Saturn for over a decade will end its mission in September with a spectacular atmospheric plunge. Pictured here is a diagram of Cassini's remaining orbits, each taking about one week. Cassini is scheduled to complete a few months of orbits that will take it just outside Saturn's outermost ring F. Then, in April, Titan will give Cassini a gravitational pull into Proximal orbits, the last of which, on September 15, will impact Saturn and cause the spacecraft to implode and melt.

Cassini's Grand Finale orbits are designed to record data and first-ever views from inside the rings -- between the rings and planet -- as well as some small moons interspersed in the rings. Cassini's demise is designed to protect any life that may occur around Saturn or its moons from contamination by Cassini itself.

Image and info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, JPL-Caltech

#nasa #space #cassini #universe #science

Monday, 23 January 2017

M78 and Orion Dust Reflections


M78 and Orion Dust Reflections
In the vast Orion Molecular Cloud complex, several bright blue nebulas are particularly apparent. Pictured here are two of the most prominent reflection nebulas - dust clouds lit by the reflecting light of bright embedded stars. The more famous nebula is M78, in the image center, cataloged over 200 years ago.

To its left is the lesser known NGC 2071. Astronomers continue to study these reflection nebulas to better understand how interior stars form. The Orion complex lies about 1500 light-years distant, contains the Orion and Horsehead nebulas, and covers much of the constellation of Orion.  

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Marco Burali, Tiziano Capecchi, Marco Mancini (MTM observatory, Italy)

#space   #nasa   #science   #M78   #universe

You are hallucinating right now to make sense of the world


You are hallucinating right now to make sense of the world
...beyond our perceived thoughts of reality, there lies a world of 'perfect forms…Reality as we know it is just an imitation; a copy of these perfect forms  -Plato believed that and if you read his Theory of Forms you'll have a few questions as well regarding our perception of the world.

What are hallucinations?
Hallucinations are sensations that appear real but are not elicited by anything in our external environment. They aren’t only visual – they can be sounds, smells, even experiences of touch.

Understanding what is happening in the brain during hallucinations reveals how we’re having them all the time and how they shape our perception of reality.

A bewildering and often very frightening experience in some mental illnesses is psychosis – a loss of contact with external reality. This often results in a difficulty in making sense of the world, which can appear threatening, intrusive and confusing. Psychosis is sometimes accompanied by drastic changes in perception, to the extent that people may see, feel, smell and taste things that are not actually there – so-called hallucinations. These hallucinations may be accompanied by beliefs that others find irrational and impossible to comprehend.

But a team of researchers based at Cardiff University and the University of Cambridge explore the idea that hallucinations arise due to an enhancement of our normal tendency to interpret the world around us by making use of prior knowledge and predictions.

In order to make sense of and interact with our physical and social environment, we need appropriate information about the world around us, for example the size or location of a nearby object. However, we have no direct access to this information and are forced to interpret potentially ambiguous and incomplete information from our senses. This challenge is overcome in the brain – for example in our visual system – by combining ambiguous sensory information with our prior knowledge of the environment to generate a robust and unambiguous representation of the world around us.

For example, when we enter our living room, we may have little difficulty discerning a fast-moving black shape as the cat, even though the visual input was little more than a blur that rapidly disappeared behind the sofa: the actual sensory input was minimal and our prior knowledge did all the creative work.

“Vision is a constructive process – in other words, our brain makes up the world that we ‘see’,” explains first author Dr Christoph Teufel from the School of Psychology at Cardiff University. “It fills in the blanks, ignoring the things that don’t quite fit, and presents to us an image of the world that has been edited and made to fit with what we expect.”

“Having a predictive brain is very useful – it makes us efficient and adept at creating a coherent picture of an ambiguous and complex world,” adds senior author Professor Paul Fletcher from the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge. “But it also means that we are not very far away from perceiving things that aren’t actually there, which is the definition of a hallucination."

Journal article:
http://www.pnas.org/content/112/43/13401.abstract

PR:
http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/how-hallucinations-emerge-from-trying-to-make-sense-of-an-ambiguous-world

Interesting reading via New Scientist - article behind a paywall
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23230980-400-you-are-hallucinating-right-now-to-make-sense-of-the-world/

Plato's Theory of Forms - Read & Learn
http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/dbanach/platform.htm

Image via Google Image search.

#neuroscience   #hallucinations   #perception   #research   #humanbrain   #medicine

What is AFib or AF?


What is AFib or AF?
Atrial fibrillation is a type of arrhythmia in which the upper chambers of the heart (the atria) beat erratically. This erratic beating can be extremely fast, reaching more than 300 beats per minute, which prevents blood from circulating freely from the atria into the lower chambers of the heart, known as the ventricles. Atrial fibrillation can be a one-time event, a recurring issue or a permanent condition.

Atrial fibrillation (also called AFib or AF) is a quivering or irregular heartbeat (arrhythmia) that can lead to blood clots, stroke, heart failure and other heart-related complications.

What happens during AFib?
Normally, your heart contracts and relaxes to a regular beat. In atrial fibrillation, the upper chambers of the heart (the atria) beat irregularly (quiver) instead of beating effectively to move blood into the ventricles.

If a clot breaks off, enters the bloodstream and lodges in an artery leading to the brain, a stroke results. About 15–20 percent of people who have strokes have this heart arrhythmia. This clot risk is why patients with this condition are put on blood thinners.
Even though untreated atrial fibrillation doubles the risk of heart-related deaths and is associated with a 5-fold increased risk for stroke, many patients are unaware that AFib is a serious condition.

Know the symptoms:
http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/Conditions/Arrhythmia/AboutArrhythmia/What-are-the-Symptoms-of-Atrial-Fibrillation-AFib-or-AF_UCM_423777_Article.jsp#.WIYEYbnn670

Get the right treatment:
http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/Conditions/Arrhythmia/AboutArrhythmia/Treatment-and-Prevention-of-Atrial-Fibrillation_UCM_423778_Article.jsp#.WIYEe7nn670

Reduce risks for stroke and heart failure:
http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/Conditions/Arrhythmia/AboutArrhythmia/Prevention-Strategies-for-Atrial-Fibrillation-AFib-or-AF_UCM_423784_Article.jsp#.WIYEpbnn670

Watch & learn:
http://watchlearnlive.heart.org/CVML_Player.php?moduleSelect=atrfib

Animation by Biosense Webster

#heart   #health   #AFib   #cardiovasculardisease   #medicine

Sunday, 22 January 2017

Winter Hexagon over Manla Reservoir


Winter Hexagon over Manla Reservoir
If you can find Orion, you might be able to find the Winter Hexagon. The Winter Hexagon involves some of the brightest stars visible, together forming a large and easily found pattern in the winter sky of Earth's northern hemisphere. The stars involved can usually be identified even in the bright night skies of a big city, although here they appeared recently in dark skies above the Manla Reservoir in Tibet, China.

 The six stars that compose the Winter Hexagon are Aldebaran, Capella, Castor (and Pollux), Procyon, Rigel, and Sirius. Here, the band of our Milky Way Galaxy runs through the center of the Winter Hexagon, while the Pleiades open star cluster is visible just above. The Winter Hexagon asterism engulfs several constellations including much of the iconic steppingstone Orion.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Jeff Dai (TWAN) 

#space   #stars   #nasa   #science   #winterhexagon    #universe

Dark thoughts


Dark thoughts

work by Charlie Deck

#processing   #animation   #mathematics

January 22 is reserved to Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser


January 22 is reserved to Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser
ALSN was a German physician and bacteriologist, born January 22, 1855, Schweidnitz (now Swidnica, Poland); died July 1916, Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland).

The history of sexually transmitted diseases is thought to date back to earliest times, and many ancient texts describe conditions that may be those of syphilis and gonorrhea, which at one time were thought to be the same disease. A main figure in the research in this area was Albert Ludwig Sigesmund Neisser, who discovered the gonococcus in 1879 and later produced the most comprehensive account of experimental syphilis ever published.

Bio:
http://www.antimicrobe.org/h04c.files/history/Neisser.asp

Reference:
https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Gonorrhoea_(Neisseria_gonorrhoeae)_in_the_United_States

#history   #gonorrhea   #medicine   #ALSN   #health   #STS

SpaceX Falcon 9 to Orbit


SpaceX Falcon 9 to Orbit
Birds don't fly this high. Airplanes don't go this fast. The Statue of Liberty weighs less. No species other than human can even comprehend what is going on, nor could any human just a millennium ago. The launch of a rocket bound for space is an event that inspires awe and challenges description.

Pictured here, a SpaceX Falcon 9 V rocket lifted off through a cloud deck from Cape Canaveral, Florida last July to deliver cargo and supplies to the International Space Station. From a standing start, the 300,000+ kilogram rocket ship lifted its Dragon Capsule up to circle the Earth, where the outside air is too thin to breathe. Rockets bound for space are now launched from somewhere on Earth about once a week.

image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Tim Shortt, Florida Today

#nasa   #space   #science   #spacex   #universe

Saturday, 21 January 2017

10


10
Happy B-day kiddo!

#personalnonsense

Friday, 20 January 2017

Daphnis the Wavemaker


Daphnis the Wavemaker
Plunging close to the outer edges of Saturn's rings, on January 16 the Cassini spacecraft captured this closest yet view of Daphnis. About 8 kilometers across and orbiting within the bright ring system's Keeler gap, the small moon is making waves. The 42-kilometer wide outer gap is foreshortened in the image by Cassini's viewing angle.

Raised by the influenced of the small moon's weak gravity as it crosses the frame from left to right, the waves are formed in the ring material at the edge of the gap. A faint wave-like trace of ring material is just visible trailing close behind Daphnis. Remarkable details on Daphnis can also be seen, including a narrow ridge around its equator, likely an accumulation of particles from the ring.

Image and info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: Cassini Imaging Team, SSI, JPL, ESA, NASA

#space   #nasa   #cassini   #daphnis   #saturn   #esa

Life cycles of stars


Life cycles of stars
A star's life cycle is determined by its mass. The larger its mass, the shorter its life cycle. A star's mass is determined by the amount of matter that is available in its nebula, the giant cloud of gas and dust from which it was born. Over time, the hydrogen gas in the nebula is pulled together by gravity and it begins to spin.

As the gas spins faster, it heats up and becomes as a protostar. Eventually the temperature reaches 15,000,000 degrees and nuclear fusion occurs in the cloud's core. The cloud begins to glow brightly, contracts a little, and becomes stable. It is now a main sequence star and will remain in this stage, shining for millions to billions of years to come. This is the stage our Sun is at right now.
 
As the main sequence star glows, hydrogen in its core is converted into helium by nuclear fusion. When the hydrogen supply in the core begins to run out, and the star is no longer generating heat by nuclear fusion, the core becomes unstable and contracts. The outer shell of the star, which is still mostly hydrogen, starts to expand. As it expands, it cools and glows red. The star has now reached the red giant phase. It is red because it is cooler than it was in the main sequence star stage and it is a giant because the outer shell has expanded outward. In the core of the red giant, helium fuses into carbon.

All stars evolve the same way up to the red giant phase. The amount of mass a star has determines which of the following life cycle paths it will take from there.

For low mass stars, after the helium has fused into carbon, the core collapses again. As the core collapses, the outer layers of the star are expelled. A planetary nebula is formed by the outer layers. The core remains as a white dwarf and eventually cools to become a black dwarf.

High mass stars are born in nebulae and evolve and live in the Main Sequence. However their life cycles start to differ after the red giant phase. A massive star will undergo a supernova explosion. If the remnant of the explosion is 1.4 to about 3 times as massive as our Sun, it will become a neutron star. The core of a massive star that has more than roughly 3 times the mass of our Sun after the explosion will do something quite different. The force of gravity overcomes the nuclear forces which keep protons and neutrons from combining. The core is thus swallowed by its own gravity. It has now become a black hole which readily attracts any matter and energy that comes near it.

What happens between the red giant phase and the supernova explosion?
Once stars that are 5 times or more massive than our Sun reach the red giant phase, their core temperature increases as carbon atoms are formed from the fusion of helium atoms. Gravity continues to pull carbon atoms together as the temperature increases and additional fusion processes proceed, forming oxygen, nitrogen, and eventually iron.

When the core contains essentially just iron, fusion in the core ceases. This is because iron is the most compact and stable of all the elements. It takes more energy to break up the iron nucleus than that of any other element. Creating heavier elements through fusing of iron thus requires an input of energy rather than the release of energy. Since energy is no longer being radiated from the core, in less than a second, the star begins the final phase of gravitational collapse. The core temperature rises to over 100 billion degrees as the iron atoms are crushed together. The repulsive force between the nuclei overcomes the force of gravity, and the core recoils out from the heart of the star in a shock wave, which we see as a supernova explosion.

References:
http://www.schoolsobservatory.org.uk/astro/stars/lifecycle
http://www.telescope.org/pparc/res8.html
https://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/educators/lessons/xray_spectra/background-lifecycles.html

#universe   #space   #stars   #science    #nasa

Brain Modulyzer Provides Interactive Window Into the Brain


Brain Modulyzer Provides Interactive Window Into the Brain
Did you know that your brain processes information in a hierarchy? As you are reading this page, the signal coming in through your eyes enters your brain through the thalamus, which organizes it. That information then goes on to the primary visual cortex at the back of the brain, where populations of neurons respond to very specific basic properties. For instance, one set of neurons might fire up because the text on your screen is black and another set might activate because there are vertical lines. This population will then trigger a secondary set of neurons that respond to more complex shapes like circles, and so on until you have a complete picture.

For the first time, a new tool developed at the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) allows researchers to interactively explore the hierarchical processes that happen in the brain when it is resting or performing tasks. Scientists also hope that the tool can shed some light on how neurological diseases like Alzheimer’s spread throughout the brain.

Created in conjunction with computer scientists at University of California, Davis (UC Davis) and with input from neuroscientists at UC San Francisco (UCSF), the software, called Brain Modulyzer, combines multiple coordinated views of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data—like heat maps, node link diagrams and anatomical views—to provide context for brain connectivity data.

Paper:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7466855/?reload=true

Brain Modulyzer is now available on github:
https://github.com/sugeerth/BrainModulyzer/

Source & further reading:
http://newscenter.lbl.gov/2016/10/10/brain-modulyzer-provides-interactive-window-brain/ 

Image:
Brain Modulyzer combines multiple coordinated views—such as heat maps, node link diagrams and anatomical views—of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data—like heat maps, node link diagrams and anatomical views—to provide context for brain connectivity data.
Credit: Sugeerth Murugesan, Berkeley Lab/UC Davis

#neuroscience   #brainmodulyzer   #neuroimaging   #research

Thursday, 19 January 2017

After a decade of parenting


After a decade of parenting
What it's like to be a parent?
It's one of the hardest things you'll ever do but in exchange it teaches you the meaning of unconditional love.

#personalnonsense   #parenting   #nurseryofemotions

Layer Cake Sunset


Layer Cake Sunset
On January 18 a tantalizing sunset was captured in this snapshot. Seemingly sliced into many horizontal layers the Sun shimmered moments before it touched the horizon, setting over the Pacific Ocean as seen from the mountaintop Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. Pink hues of filtered sunlight were created by the long sight-line through the hazy atmosphere.

But the remarkable layers correspond to low atmospheric layers of sharply different temperature and density also along the line of sight. Over a long path through each layer the rays of sunlight are refracted strongly and create different images or mirages of sections of the setting Sun.  

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Yuri Beletsky (Carnegie Las Campanas Observatory, TWAN)

#nasa   #naturalphenomena   #sunset   #space   #universe

Wednesday, 18 January 2017

Flat spin


Flat spin
It's essential to keep moving, learning and evolving for as long as you're here and this world keeps spinning.

Work by Charlie Deck.

#animation   #processing   #spinning   #math

Lined chiton (Tonicella lineata)


Lined chiton (Tonicella lineata)
The lined chiton is a species of chiton from the North Pacific. It has been recorded from intertidal and subtidal waters to a depth of 30 to 90 m. T. lineata often occurs on rocks that are encrusted by coralline algae; presumably this is what their coloration is intended to camouflage against. If knocked from its substrate, T. lineata will contract into a ball in order to protect its vulnerable ventral side, similar to many isopods. Coralline algae are also the major food item of T. lineata.

Photo via Wikipedia Commons
References:
http://www.afsc.noaa.gov/kodiak/photo/mistonicella.htm
http://www.centralcoastbiodiversity.org/lined-chiton-bull-tonicella-lineata.html

#coolcritters   #linedchiton   #marinelife   #biodiversity

What is Planet Nine?


What is Planet Nine?
"Planet Nine" is an informal nickname for a predicted but undiscovered world that may exist in the outer solar system. It also has been called "Planet X".

Caltech researchers have found evidence of a giant planet tracing a bizarre, highly elongated orbit in the outer solar system. The object, which the researchers have nicknamed Planet Nine, has a mass about 10 times that of Earth and orbits about 20 times farther from the sun on average than does Neptune (which orbits the sun at an average distance of 2.8 billion miles). In fact, it would take this new planet between 10,000 and 20,000 years to make just one full orbit around the sun.

The researchers, Konstantin Batygin and Mike Brown, discovered the planet's existence through mathematical modeling and computer simulations but have not yet observed the object directly.

References:
https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planetnine
https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/2016/01/21/caltech-researchers-find-evidence-of-a-real-ninth-planet

#infographic  on Planet Nine - potential rogue planet captured by our solar system.

#space   #planetnine   #nasa   #universe   #exploration

Scientists Tissue-Engineer Part of Human Stomach in Laboratory


Scientists Tissue-Engineer Part of Human Stomach in Laboratory
Scientists from Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center have used pluripotent stem cells to engineer human stomach tissues that produce acid and digestive enzymes. This, along with the ability to engineer the stomach’s hormone-producing region, the antrum, which the same team showed two years ago, will allow investigators to grow both parts of the human stomach to study disease, model new treatments and understand human development and health in ways never before possible.

The research is published online Jan. 4/2017 in Nature.
“Now that we can grow both antral- and corpus/fundic-type human gastric mini-organs, it’s possible to study how these human gastric tissues interact physiologically, respond differently to infection, injury and react to pharmacologic treatments,” said Jim Wells, PhD, principal investigator and director of the Pluripotent Stem Cell Facility at Cincinnati Children’s. “Diseases of the stomach impact millions of people in the United States and gastric cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide.”

Source & further reading:
https://www.cincinnatichildrens.org/news/release/2017/stem-cells-generate-human-stomach

Paper:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v541/n7636/full/nature21021.html

Image: This confocal microscopic image shows tissue-engineered human stomach tissues from the corpus/fundus region, which produce acid and digestive enzymes.

#organogenesis   #endoderm   #research   #stemcells   #medicine   #health

The Elephant's Trunk Nebula in Cepheus


The Elephant's Trunk Nebula in Cepheus 
Like an illustration in a galactic Just So Story, the Elephant's Trunk Nebula winds through the emission nebula and young star cluster complex IC 1396, in the high and far off constellation of Cepheus. Also known as vdB 142, the cosmic elephant's trunk is over 20 light-years long. This colorful close-up view includes image data from a narrow band filter that transmits the light from ionized hydrogen atoms in the region.

The resulting composite highlights the bright swept-back ridges that outline pockets of cool interstellar dust and gas. Such embedded, dark, tendril-shaped clouds contain the raw material for star formation and hide protostars within. Nearly 3,000 light-years distant, the relatively faint IC 1396 complex covers a large region on the sky, spanning over 5 degrees. This dramatic scene spans a 1 degree wide field, about the size of 2 Full Moons.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Stephen Leshin

#space   #universe   #science   #nebula   #nasa

2016 Sets Global Temperature Record


2016 Sets Global Temperature Record
2016 was hotter than 2015, the previous record. And 2015 hotter than 2014, the previous record year.

These record temperatures are all part of a warming trend that dates back to the late-19th century, largely caused by human emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases into the atmosphere.

Source & further reading:
https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/noaa-nasa_global_analysis-2016.pdf

#weather   #climatechange   #temperature   #science

Tuesday, 17 January 2017

What’s really going on in PTSD brains? Experts suggest new theory


What’s really going on in PTSD brains? Experts suggest new theory
For decades, neuroscientists and physicians have tried to get to the bottom of the age-old mystery of post-traumatic stress disorder, to explain why only some people are vulnerable and why they experience so many symptoms and so much disability.

All experts in the field now agree that PTSD indeed has its roots in very real, physical processes within the brain – and not in some sort of psychological “weakness”. But no clear consensus has emerged about what exactly has gone “wrong” in the brain.

In a Perspective article published in Neuron, a pair of University of Michigan Medical School professors – who have studied PTSD from many angles for many years – put forth a theory of PTSD that draws from and integrates decades of prior research. They hope to stimulate interest in the theory and invite others in the field to test it.
The bottom line, they say, is that people with PTSD appear to suffer from disrupted context processing. That’s a core brain function that allows people and animals to recognize that a particular stimulus may require different responses depending on the context in which it is encountered. It’s what allows us to call upon the “right” emotional or physical response to the current encounter.

A simple example, they write, is recognizing that a mountain lion seen in the zoo does not require a fear or “flight” response, while the same lion unexpectedly encountered in the backyard probably does.
For someone with PTSD, a stimulus associated with the trauma they previously experienced – such as a loud noise or a particular smell – triggers a fear response even when the context is very safe. That’s why they react even if the noise came from the front door being slammed, or the smell comes from dinner being accidentally burned on the stove.  

Context processing involves a brain region called the hippocampus, and its connections to two other regions called the prefrontal cortex and the amygdala. Research has shown that activity in these brain areas is disrupted in PTSD patients. The U-M team thinks their theory can unify wide-ranging evidence by showing how a disruption in this circuit can interfere with context processing and can explain most of the symptoms and much of the biology of PTSD.

Source & further reading:
http://www.uofmhealth.org/news/archive/201610/what%E2%80%99s-really-going-ptsd-brains-u-m-experts-suggest-new

Paper:
http://www.cell.com/neuron/abstract/S0896-6273(16)30640-7?_returnURL=http%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS0896627316306407%3Fshowall%3Dtrue

#neuroscience   #PTSD   #disruptedcontextprocessing   #amygdala   #fear

Space Station Vista: Planet and Galaxy


Space Station Vista: Planet and Galaxy
If you could circle the Earth aboard the International Space Station, what might you see? Some amazing vistas, one of which was captured in this breathtaking picture in mid-2015. First, visible at the top, are parts of the space station itself including solar panels. Just below the station is the band of our Milky Way Galaxy, glowing with the combined light of billions of stars, but dimmed in patches by filaments of dark dust.

The band of red light just below the Milky Way is airglow -- Earth's atmosphere excited by the Sun and glowing in specific colors of light. Green airglow is visible below the red. Of course that's our Earth below its air, with the terminator between day and night visible near the horizon. As clouds speckle the planet, illumination from a bright lightning bolt is seen toward the lower right. Between work assignments, astronauts from all over the Earth have been enjoying vistas like this from the space station since the year 2000.  

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, JSC, ESRS

#nasa   #space   #science   #ISS   #universe   #JSC

Monday, 16 January 2017

Gene Cernan, Last Man To Walk On The Moon, Dies At 82


Gene Cernan, Last Man To Walk On The Moon, Dies At 82
The last person to leave footprints on the moon has died. NASA reported that Gene Cernan died Monday at the age of 82, surrounded by his family.

Gene Cernan flew in space three times, including twice to the moon. Cernan was big, brash and gregarious. And if he hadn't been lucky, he could have missed his chance to walk on the moon.

Cernan challenged himself his whole life. When he entered the military, he chose to be a naval aviator. Landing on an aircraft carrier is perhaps the hardest thing to do in aviation. Cernan did it because it wasn't easy. He said he was constantly pushing himself to do better and be better.

Cernan's final trip in space was also the final time NASA sent people to the moon, the Apollo 17 mission, which took off on Dec. 7, 1972.

Article:
https://www.nasa.gov/astronautprofiles/cernan
http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/01/16/505928876/gene-cernan-last-man-to-walk-on-the-moon-dies-at-82

Photo: Astronaut Gene Cernan salutes the U.S. flag during his moonwalk in 1972. No one else has been there since Apollo 17 left.

#history   #nasa   #space   #GeneCernan

Fly Me to the Moon


Fly Me to the Moon
No, this is not a good way to get to the Moon. What is pictured is a chance superposition of an airplane and the Moon. The contrail would normally appear white, but the large volume of air toward the setting Sun preferentially knocks away blue light, giving the reflected trail a bright red hue.

Far in the distance, to the right of the plane, is the young Moon. This vast world shows only a sliver of itself because the Sun is nearly lined up behind it. Captured two weeks ago, the featured image was framed by an eerie maroon sky, too far from day to be blue, too far from night to be black. Within minutes the impromptu sky show ended.

The plane crossed the Moon. The contrail dispersed. The Sun set. The Moon set. The sky faded to black, only to reveal thousands of stars that had been too faint to see through the rustic red din.  

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Tamas Ladanyi (TWAN)

#naturalphenomena   #nasa   #moon   #sun

Geostationary Highway through Orion


Geostationary Highway through Orion
Put a satellite in a circular orbit about 42,000 kilometers from the center of the Earth and it will orbit once in 24 hours. Because that matches Earth's rotation period, it is known as a geosynchronous orbit. If that orbit is also in the plane of the equator, the satellite will hang in the sky over a fixed location in a geostationary orbit. As predicted in the 1940s by futurist Arthur C. Clarke, geostationary orbits are in common use for communication and weather satellites, a scenario now well-known to astroimagers.

Deep images of the night sky made with telescopes that follow the stars can also pick up geostationary satellites glinting in sunlight still shining far above the Earth's surface. Because they all move with the Earth's rotation against the background of stars, the satellites leave trails that seem to follow a highway across the celestial landscape. The phenomenon was captured last month showing several satellites in geostationary orbit crossing the famous Orion Nebula.  

Video source & info via APOD:
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: James A. DeYoung

#space   #nasa   #science   #orionNebula   #orbits   #universe

Sunday, 15 January 2017

Computer experts identify 14 themes of creativity


Computer experts identify 14 themes of creativity
Dr Anna Jordanous, lecturer in the School of Computing, worked with language expert Dr Bill Keller (University of Sussex) on how to define the language people use when talking about creativity, known in the field as computational creativity. With that knowledge it becomes possible to make computer programs use this language too.

Dr Jordanous and Dr Keller looked at what people say when they talk about “what is creativity” in academic discussions, from various disciplines – psychology, arts, business, and computational creativity.

In an article entitled Modelling Creativity: Identifying key components through a corpus-based approach, published by PLOS ONE, they describe a unique approach to developing a suitable model of how creative behavior emerges that is based on the words people use to describe it. Computational creativity is a relatively new field of research into computer systems that exhibit creative behaviors.

Using language-analysis software they identified the creative words and grouped them into clusters. These are considered to be 14 components of creativity. These clusters have been used to evaluate the creativity of computational systems, and are expected to be a useful resource for other researchers in computational creativity, as well as forming a basis for the automated evaluation of creative systems.

Source & further reading:
https://www.kent.ac.uk/news/science/11106/computer-experts-identify-14-themes-of-creativity

Journal article:
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0162959

#neuroscience   #computationalsystems   #semantics   #research

Saturday, 14 January 2017

Physicists detect exotic looped trajectories of light in three-slit experiment


Physicists detect exotic looped trajectories of light in three-slit experiment
Physicists have performed a variation of the famous 200-year-old double-slit experiment that, for the first time, involves "exotic looped trajectories" of photons. These photons travel forward through one slit, then loop around and travel back through another slit, and then sometimes loop around again and travel forward through a third slit.

Interestingly, the contribution of these looped trajectories to the overall interference pattern leads to an apparent deviation from the usual form of the superposition principle. This apparent deviation can be understood as an incorrect application of the superposition principle—once the additional interference between looped and straight trajectories is accounted for, the superposition can be correctly applied.

The team of physicists, led by Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza and Israel De Leon, has published a paper on the new experiment in a recent issue of Nature Communications.

Paper:
http://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms13987

Story via Phys.org:
https://phys.org/news/2017-01-physicists-exotic-looped-trajectories-three-slit.html#jCp

Image:
The red path shows an exotic looped trajectory of light through a three-slit structure, which was observed for the first time in the new study.
Credit: Magaña-Loaiza et al. Nature Communications

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