Thursday, 29 June 2017

NGC 7814: The Little Sombrero in Pegasus


NGC 7814: The Little Sombrero in Pegasus
Point your telescope toward the high flying constellation Pegasusand you can find this expanse of Milky Way stars and distant galaxies. Dominated by NGC 7814, the pretty field of view would almost be covered by a full moon.NGC 7814 is sometimes called the Little Sombrero for its resemblance to the brighter more famous M104, the Sombrero Galaxy. Both Sombrero and Little Sombrero are spiral galaxies seen edge-on, and both have extensive halos and central bulges cut by a thin disk with thinner dust lanes in silhouette. 

In fact, NGC 7814 is some 40 million light-years away and an estimated 60,000 light-years across. That actually makes the Little Sombrero about the same physical size as its better known namesake, appearing smaller and fainter only because it is farther away. Very faint dwarf galaxies, potentially a satellites of NGC 7814, have been discovered in deep exposures of Little Sombrero.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: CHART32 Team, Processing - Johannes Schedler

#NASA #space #littlesombrero #universe #galaxy

The radioactivity seen with a thermoelectric cloud chamber


The radioactivity seen with a thermoelectric cloud chamber
We’re used to radiation being invisible. With a Geiger counter, it gets turned into audible clicks. What you see above, though, is radiation’s effects made visible in a cloud chamber. In the center hangs a chunk of radioactive uranium, spitting out alpha and beta particles. The chamber also has a reservoir of alcohol and a floor cooled to -40 degrees Celsius.

This generates a supersaturated cloud of alcohol vapor. When the uranium spits out a particle, it zips through the vapor, colliding with atoms and ionizing them. Those now-charged ions serve as nuclei for the vapor, which condenses into droplets that reveal the path of the particle. The characteristics of the trails are distinct to the type of decay particle that created them. In fact, both the positron and muon were first discovered in cloud chambers!

Btw...the positron or antielectron is the antiparticle or the antimatter counterpart of the electron and the muon is an elementary subatomic particle similar to the electron but 207 times heavier - in case you were asking yourself ;)

Video & info source Cloudylabs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XGNvAEtYZkw

Information source via FYFD
https://twitter.com/fyfluiddynamics

#physics #cloudchamber #radioactivity #science

June 29 is reserved to George Ellery Hale


June 29 is reserved to George Ellery Hale
Today is the birthday of astronomer George Ellery Hale, who was born in Chicago in 1868. Hale built four world-class observatories, including the Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin and the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory in California. He fitted those observatories with the largest telescopes of the day, such as a 100-inch reflector scope at Mount Wilson.

Hale was also a pioneering scientist who confirmed the mechanism behind sunspots. He was a true astrophysicist, applying the newest physics knowledge to explain astronomical observations, and he founded The Astrophysical Journal in 1894. Hale helped establish the American Astronomical Society and the National Research Council. In 1949, 11 years after Hale's death, the Palomar Observatory in California unveiled its 200-inch Hale Telescope.

Image and info via Physics Today
http://physicstoday.scitation.org/journal/pto

Bio:
https://amazing-space.stsci.edu/resources/explorations/groundup/lesson/bios/hale/

#history #georgeelleryhale

Cardinal Pell, one of the Pope's top advisers, charged with sexual assault

Cardinal Pell, one of the Pope's top advisers, charged with sexual assault
Well, this is not rocket news...and I'm not really surprised but I'm just disgusted.

#personalnonsense
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/28/world/australia/cardinal-george-pell-charged-sexual-abuse.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share&_r=0

Wednesday, 28 June 2017

Symbiotic R Aquarii


Symbiotic R Aquarii
A long recognized naked-eye variable star, R Aquarii is actually an interacting binary star system, two stars that seem to have a close, symbiotic relationship. About 710 light years away, it consists of a cool red giant star and hot, dense white dwarf star in mutual orbit around their common center of mass. The binary system's visible light is dominated by the red giant, itself a Mira-type long period variable star.

But material in cool giant star's extended envelope is pulled by gravity onto the surface of the smaller, denser white dwarf, eventually triggering a thermonuclear explosion and blasting material into space. Optical image data (red) shows the still expanding ring of debris originating from a blast that would have been seen in the early 1770s.

The evolution of less understood energetic events producing high energy emission in the R Aquarii system has been monitored since 2000 using Chandra X-ray Observatory data (blue). The composite field of view is less that a light-year across at the estimated distance of R Aquarii.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: X-ray - NASA,CXC,SAO, R. Montez et al.; Optical - Adam Block, Mt. Lemmon SkyCenter, U. Arizona

#space #NASA #universe #stars #exploration

Saturn - Raw Images


Saturn - Raw Images
This series of unprocessed images shows Saturn's rings passing in front of the star Kappa Orionis.

Saiph (Kappa Orionis) is a blue pulsating very luminous supergiant star that can be located in the constellation of Orion. It is the 59th brightest star in the night sky. Saiph has been calculated as 8.49 times bigger than the Sun.

More raw images:
https://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/galleries/raw-images/

#NASA #Cassini #Saturn #space #universe

Your brain’s got rhythm


Your brain’s got rhythm
Not everyone is Fred Astaire or Michael Jackson, but even those of us who seem to have two left feet have got rhythm—in our brains. From breathing to walking to chewing, our days are filled with repetitive actions that depend on the rhythmic firing of neurons. Yet the neural circuitry underpinning such seemingly ordinary behaviors is not fully understood, even though better insights could lead to new therapies for disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, ALS and autism.

Recently, neuroscientists at the Salk Institute used stem cells to generate diverse networks of self-contained spinal cord systems in a dish, dubbed circuitoids, to study this rhythmic pattern in neurons. The work, which appeared online in February 14, 2017, issue of eLife, reveals that some of the circuitoids—with no external prompting—exhibited spontaneous, coordinated rhythmic activity of the kind known to drive repetitive movements.

“It’s still very difficult to contemplate how large groups of neurons with literally billions if not trillions of connections take information and process it,” says the work’s senior author, Salk Professor Samuel Pfaff, who is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator and holds the Benjamin H. Lewis Chair. “But we think that developing this kind of simple circuitry in a dish will allow us to extract some of the principles of how real brain circuits operate. With that basic information maybe we can begin to understand how things go awry in disease.”

Source & further reading:
http://www.salk.edu/news-release/brains-got-rhythm/

Journal article:
https://elifesciences.org/articles/21540

Image: Confocal microscope immunofluorescent image of a spinal cord neural circuit made entirely from stem cells and termed a “circuitoid”.
Credit: Salk Institute

#neuroscience #circuitoids #neuralcircuits #research #brain #science #medicine

Macrocilix maia is a moth in the Drepanidae family.


Macrocilix maia is a moth in the Drepanidae family. It is found in India, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, China, Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra and Borneo.The wingspan is 37–45 mm.The moth features two symmetrical patterns strikingly resembling flies that seem to feed on bird dropping. The moth even smells of bird droppings.

Reference:
http://www.myrmecos.net/2011/08/30/a-mural-on-moth-wings/

Photo via Wikipedia Commons
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Macrocilix_maia.jpg

#biodiversity #coolcritters #macrocilixmaia #science

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Ocean entry and lava delta formation, Hawaii


Ocean entry and lava delta formation, Hawaii
Lava deltas, similar to river deltas form wherever sufficient sub-aerial flows of lava enter standing bodies of water. The lava cools and breaks up as it encounters the water, with the resulting fragments filling in the adjacent seabed topography such that the flow can move further offshore sub-aerially. Lava deltas are generally associated with large-scale, effusive type basaltic volcanism.

Starting in January at KÄ«lauea Volcano’s Kamokuna ocean entry, the lava hit the salty water, shooting molten rock upward and outward, accompanied by a rising, steamy cloud of acid.

Normally cooling lava would stack up, creating a rocky shelf on which the lava settles called a lava delta. But this time, the flow continued to gush nearly 100 feet down, into the sea, for a whole month.

Ocean Entry Hazards - Important info:
https://volcanoes.usgs.gov/observatories/hvo/hawaii_ocean_entry.html

Article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/02/science/hawaii-lava-stream.html

#naturalphenomena #lavadelta #oceanentry

Coils of Magnetic Field Lines


Coils of Magnetic Field Lines
A smallish solar filament looks like it collapsed into the sun and set off a minor eruption that hurled plasma into space (June 20, 2017). Then, the disrupted magnetic field immediately began to reorganize itself, hence the bright series of spirals coiling up over that area. The magnetic field lines are made visible in extreme ultraviolet light as charged particles spin along them. Also of interest are the darker, cooler strands of plasma being pulled and twisted at the edge of the sun just below the active region. The activity here is in a 21-hour period.

Source:
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/814
Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.

#NASA #space #sun #SDO #plasma #science

#LoveMeNow


#LoveMeNow
"There is always some madness in love. But there is also always some reason in madness.”
― Friedrich Nietzsche

#personalnonsense #words

Monday, 26 June 2017

Gut bacteria may play a role in Alzheimer’s disease


Gut bacteria may play a role in Alzheimer’s disease
New research from Lund University in Sweden has shown that intestinal bacteria can accelerate the development of Alzheimer’s disease. According to the researchers behind the study, the results open up the door to new opportunities for preventing and treating the disease.

Because our gut bacteria have a major impact on how we feel through the interaction between the immune system, the intestinal mucosa and our diet, the composition of the gut microbiota is of great interest to research on diseases such as Alzheimer’s. Exactly how our gut microbiota composition is composed depends on which bacteria we receive at birth, our genes and our diet.

By studying both healthy and diseased mice, the researchers found that mice suffering from Alzheimer’s have a different composition of gut bacteria compared to mice that are healthy. The researchers also studied Alzheimer’s disease in mice that completely lacked bacteria to further test the relationship between intestinal bacteria and the disease. Mice without bacteria had a significantly smaller amount of beta-amyloid plaque in the brain. Beta-amyloid plaques are the lumps that form at the nerve fibres in cases of Alzheimer’s disease.

To clarify the link between intestinal flora and the occurrence of the disease, the researchers transferred intestinal bacteria from diseased mice to germ-free mice, and discovered that the mice developed more beta-amyloid plaques in the brain compared to if they had received bacteria from healthy mice.

Source and further reading:
http://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/gut-bacteria-may-play-a-role-in-alzheimers-disease

Article:
https://www.nature.com/articles/srep41802

Infographic via The Huffington Post

#neurobiology #neuroscience #research #gutbacteria

The M81 Galaxy Group through the Integrated Flux Nebula


The M81 Galaxy Group through the Integrated Flux Nebula
Distant galaxies and nearby nebulas highlight this deep image of the M81 Group of galaxies. First and foremost in this 80-exposure mosaic is the grand design spiral galaxy M81, the largest galaxy in the image, visible on the lower right. M81 isgravitationally interacting with M82 just above it, a large galaxy with an unusual halo of filamentary red-glowing gas. 

Around the image many other galaxies from the M81 Group of galaxies can be seen, as well as many foreground Milky Way stars. This wholegalaxy menagerie is seen through the glow of an Integrated Flux Nebula (IFN), a vast and complex screen of diffuse gas and dust also in our Milky Way Galaxy. Details of the red and yellow IFN, digitally enhanced, were imaged by a new wide-field camera recently installed at the Teide Observatory in the Canary Islandsof Spain.

Image and info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright : D. Lopez & A. Rosenberg, IAC

#universe #exploration #space #science #nebula #galaxy

Scytodes thoracica is a spitting spider, so-called because it spits a venomous sticky silken substance over its prey.


Scytodes thoracica is a spitting spider, so-called because it spits a venomous sticky silken substance over its prey. Its size ranges between 3–6 mm. It has six eyes instead of the eight spiders usually have. Scytodes thoracica is nocturnal. It prefers warm temperatures and is not rare inside houses. In Southern Europe, it can be found under stones outside houses. In Northern Europe it can only be found in houses. They can be found worldwide.

This species has long, thin, legs, and are glabrous (hairless), with the exception of short sensory setae scattered over the body. These spiders are also easily identified by their oversized cephalothorax (prosoma), which slopes upward towards their posterior ends. Their abdomens (which are roughly the same circular shape as the cephalothorax) slope downwards and are only slightly smaller than the cephalothorax. Like all spiders, these two body tagmata (segments) are separated by a thin pedicel (waist-like connector).

Large, well-developed poison glands are located in the cephalothorax. These glands are divided into two parts: a smaller, anterior compartment which stores venom and a larger, posterior compartment which contains a mucilaginous substance. These spiders produce a gummy substance which is a mix of the two substances and is excreted by their fused chelicerae, which can not be moved separately. Scytodes are ecribellate, lacking the silk-spinning organ (cribellum) of some other spiders. They have a single tracheal spiracle.

Source:
http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Scytodes_thoracica/

Photo credit: André Karwath

#biodiversity #coolcritters #spiders

Scientists worry about the rapid rise of CO2 in the atmosphere, which may mean Earth’s natural sponges have changed


Scientists worry about the rapid rise of CO2 in the atmosphere, which may mean Earth’s natural sponges have changed

Interesting reading via New York Times:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/26/climate/carbon-in-atmosphere-is-rising-even-as-emissions-stabilize.html

#pollution #climatechange #emissions #science

June 26th is reserved to William Thompson


June 26th is reserved to William Thompson
Today is the birthday of William Thomson, better known as Lord Kelvin. He was born in 1824 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Thomson studied mathematics and physics at Cambridge University. At the age of 22 he was appointed physics professor at Glasgow University. Although Thomson had wide interests, including electromagnetism, his research focused on establishing a mathematical framework for thermodynamics, including its first and second laws and the absolute temperature scale.

His theoretical interest in electromagnetism became a practical one, when in the 1850s, he served as a consultant on a proposed transatlantic telegraph cable. The eventually successful project was completed in 1858. Queen Victoria knighted Thomson for his role in the project. Later, in 1892, she ennobled him, and Thomson became known as Lord Kelvin.

Reference:
http://digital.nls.uk/scientists/biographies/lord-kelvin/

Image & info via Physics Today
http://physicstoday.scitation.org/journal/pto

#physics #history #LordKevin

Saturday, 24 June 2017

3 coordinated spacecraft will study Einstein-predicted gravitational waves in space in a new ESA mission with NASA


3 coordinated spacecraft will study Einstein-predicted gravitational waves in space in a new ESA mission with NASA
ESA (the European Space Agency) has selected the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) for its third large-class mission in the agency's Cosmic Vision science program. The three-spacecraft constellation is designed to study gravitational waves in space and is a concept long studied by both ESA and NASA. 

ESA’s Science Program Committee announced the selection at a meeting on June 20. The mission will now be designed, budgeted and proposed for adoption before construction begins. LISA is expected to launch in 2034. NASA will be a partner with ESA in the design, development, operations and data analysis of the mission.

Gravitational radiation was predicted a century ago by Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity. Massive accelerating objects such as merging black holes produce waves of energy that ripple through the fabric of space and time. Indirect proof of the existence of these waves came in 1978, when subtle changes observed in the motion of a pair of orbiting neutron stars showed energy was leaving the system in an amount matching predictions of energy carried away by gravitational waves.

In September 2015, these waves were first directly detected by the National Science Foundation’s ground-based Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). The signal arose from the merger of two stellar-mass black holes located some 1.3 billion light-years away. Similar signals from other black hole mergers have since been detected.

Source and further reading:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/esa-to-develop-gravitational-wave-space-mission-with-nasa-support
http://sci.esa.int/cosmic-vision/59243-gravitational-wave-mission-selected-planet-hunting-mission-moves-forward/

Image: Merging black holes. Credit: ESA/C. Carreau

#NASA #ESA #LISA #space #science #research #physics #gravitationalwaves

Jupiter's Stripes


Jupiter's Stripes
Each of the light & dark atmospheric bands in this JunoCam image is wider than Earth.

This enhanced-color image of Jupiter’s bands of light and dark clouds was created by citizen scientists Gerald Eichstädt and Seán Doran using data from the JunoCam imager on NASA’s Juno spacecraft.

Three of the white oval storms known as the “String of Pearls” are visible near the top of the image. Each of the alternating light and dark atmospheric bands in this image is wider than Earth, and each rages around Jupiter at hundreds of miles (kilometers) per hour. The lighter areas are regions where gas is rising, and the darker bands are regions where gas is sinking.

Juno acquired the image on May 19, 2017, at 11:30 a.m. PST (2:30 p.m. EST) from an altitude of about 20,800 miles (33,400 kilometers) above Jupiter's cloud tops.

Source:
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/news/jupiters-bands-of-clouds
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt /Seán Doran

#NASA #Juno #Jupiter #science #space #universe

Researchers Show How Lou Gehrig’s Disease Progression Could Be Delayed


Researchers Show How Lou Gehrig’s Disease Progression Could Be Delayed
A team of biomedical scientists has identified a molecule that targets a gene known to play a critical role in the rapid progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), sometimes known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, the neurodegenerative disease that affects motor neurons — nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that link the nervous system to the voluntary muscles of the body.

The research, done on a mouse model of ALS, aims at blocking the gene, thus providing an important stepping stone for the development of novel treatments to delay the progression of ALS and, potentially, other human diseases.

Specifically, the team, led by Maurizio Pellecchia, a professor of biomedical sciences in the School of Medicine at the University of California, Riverside, reports in the journal Cell Chemical Biology on the design of 123C4, a molecule the lab developed that targets the EphA4 receptor, a gene in animal models and in humans that is efficacious in delaying the progression of ALS.

Importantly, the expression of EphA4 is associated not only with the progression of motor neuron disease, but also with other conditions including abnormal blood clotting, spinal cord and brain injury, Alzheimer’s disease, as well as gastric and pancreatic cancers.

“Research in assessing the therapeutic value of EphA4 for these diseases has been hampered, however, by the lack of suitable pharmacological EphA4-inhibitors,” said Pellecchia, who holds the Daniel Hays Endowed Chair in Cancer Research and is the director of the Center for Molecular and Translational Medicine. “While the exact mechanism responsible for the therapeutic efficacy of our agent, 123C4, is still to be fully understood, we are confident that 123C4 – or its derivatives – will find wide application in preclinical studies as well as human clinical trials for the treatment of ALS and potentially other human disorders.”

Source and further reading:
https://ucrtoday.ucr.edu/44253

Journal article:
http://www.cell.com/cell-chemical-biology/fulltext/S2451-9456(17)30025-9

#neuroscience #research #ALS #gene #brain

Markarian's Chain to Messier 64


Markarian's Chain to Messier 64 
Top to bottom, this colorful and broad telescopic mosaic links Markarian's Chain of galaxies across the core of the Virgo Cluster to dusty spiral galaxy Messier 64. Galaxies are scattered through the field of view that spans some 20 full moons across a gorgeous night sky. The cosmic frame is also filled with foreground stars from constellations Virgo and the well-groomed Coma Berenices, and faint, dusty nebulae drifting above the plane of the Milky Way.

Look carefully for Markarian's eyes. The famous pair of interacting galaxies is near the top, not far from M87, the Virgo cluster's giant elliptical galaxy. At the bottom, you can stare down Messier 64, also known as the Black Eye Galaxy. The Virgo Cluster is the closest large galaxy cluster to our own local galaxy group. Virgo Cluster galaxies are about 50 million light-years distant, but M64 lies a mere 17 million light-years away.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Rogelio Bernal Andreo (Deep Sky Colors)

#space #science #galaxy #NASA #universe #exploration

Thursday, 22 June 2017

DNA Replication Has Been Filmed For The First Time


DNA Replication Has Been Filmed For The First Time
“Here’s proof of how far we’ve come in science - in a world-first, researchers have recorded up-close footage of a single DNA molecule replicating itself, and it’s raising questions about how we assumed the process played out.The real-time footage has revealed that this fundamental part of life incorporates an unexpected amount of ‘randomness’, and it could force a major rethink into how genetic replication occurs without mutations.”

HOW IT WORKS:
“The DNA double helix consists of two intertwining strands of genetic material made up of four different bases - guanine, thymine, cytosine, and adenine (G, T, C and A).Replication occurs when an enzyme called helicase unwinds and unzips the double helix into two single strands.A second enzyme called primase attaches a 'primer’ to each of these unravelled strands, and a third enzyme called DNA polymerase attaches at this primer, and adds additional bases to form a whole new double helix.”

WHY THIS IS WEIRD AND NOT WHAT WE EXPECTED:
“The fact that double helices are formed from two stands running in opposite directions means that one of these strands is known as the 'leading strand’, which winds around first, and the other is the 'lagging strand’, which follows the leader.The new genetic material that’s attached to each one during the replication process is an exact match to what was on its original partner.So as the leading strand detaches, the enzymes add bases that are identical to those on the original lagging stand, and as the lagging strand detaches, we get material that’s identical to the original leading strand.

Scientists have long assumed that the DNA polymerases on the leading and lagging strands somehow coordinate with each other throughout the replication process, so that one does not get ahead of the other during the unraveling process and cause mutations. But this new footage reveals that there’s no coordination at play here at all - somehow, each strand acts independently of the other, and still results in a perfect match each time.“

Source & further reading:
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-06/uoc--vio061317.php

Journal article:
http://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(17)30634-7?_returnURL=http%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS0092867417306347%3Fshowall%3Dtrue

Gif:
Each glowing strand is a piece of double helix growing by replication at the left-hand end. They move at different speeds and stop and start. Dark gaps in the line are single-stranded DNA where one polymerase failed to attach (the fluorescent dye only binds double-stranded DNA).

Some surprises come out of being able to observe replication directly. For example, the two polymerases involved in replication (one for each strand) aren't coordinated. They stop and start at random, but overall they move at the same average speed, so everything works out. This stochastic model is quite different from a smooth-running, coordinated machine usually imagined.

CREDIT: James Graham, UC Davis

#DNA #research #biology #molecularbiology #cells #science

Machine lust


Machine lust
I have a thing for machines...I could watch this for a few hours.
This is a Octo-Plus ON6H Ingersoll.

Reference:
http://www.ingersoll-imc.com/en/index.htm

#scitech #engineering #cuttingtools

Solstice Conjunction over Budapest


Solstice Conjunction over Budapest
Before a solstice Sun rose on June 21, brilliant Venus and an old crescent Moon posed together over Budapest, Hungary for this predawn skyscape. In the foreground the view looks across the Danube river from Buda to Pest toward the dome and peaks of the Hungarian Parliament building. Low clouds are in silhouette against a twilight sky.

But far enough above the eastern horizon to catch the sunlight shines another seasonal apparition on that solstice morning, noctilucent clouds. Seen near sunrise and sunset in summer months at high latitudes, the night-shining clouds are formed as water vapor in the cold upper atmosphere condenses on meteoric dust or volcanic ash near the edge of space.

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

#nasa #space #naturalphenomena #solstice #noctilucentclouds

RIP Jerry Nelson


RIP Jerry Nelson
Jerry Nelson, who along with Terry Mast and George Gabor, created an innovative segmented telescope mirror that has been the basis for both ground- and space-based optical telescopes ever since, has passed away.
The construction of the 5-m Hale Telescope in 1949 pushed the boundaries for single-mirror telescopes. At such a large size the mirror has to be thick enough to support its own weight without being so massive that gravity changes the shape of the mirror as it moves.

A workaround was not developed for decades, with the first Keck telescope, which was installed in 1993 being the first of its kind—a 10-m segmented mirror made of 36 smaller hexagonal mirrors, each independently controlled by a computer. This design has been present on every subsequent large ground-based optical telescope and is also present in the Hubble-replacing James Webb Space Telescope.

Article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/21/science/jerry-nelson-segmented-telescope-dies-at-73.html

Photo: Jerry Nelson peering into a mirror at the Lick Observatory.
Credit: University of California Santa Cruz

#history #JerryNelson

PTSD Symptoms May Be Prevented With Ketamine


PTSD Symptoms May Be Prevented With Ketamine
Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) researchers have found that a single dose of ketamine, given one week before a stressful event, can buffer against a heightened fear response.

The study, conducted in mice, suggests that prophylactic administration of ketamine—a drug commonly used as a general anesthetic or a rapid-acting antidepressant—might prevent post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in soldiers and others who subsequently experience psychological trauma.

The study was published online in January in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.
Journal article:
https://www.nature.com/npp/journal/v42/n8/full/npp201719a.html

Source and further reading:
http://newsroom.cumc.columbia.edu/blog/2017/02/08/ptsd-symptoms-may-prevented-ketamine/

#neuroscience #PTSD #research #brain #science

Oshobotomy or why do I detest Osho?


Oshobotomy or why do I detest Osho?
India's one time best-selling author with over 2,000 publications translated into 44 languages was an impostor pretending to be an enlightened guru.

Osho was a corrupt and astute businessman who made himself fabulously wealthy by preying on the naive flood of Westerners seeking spirituality. He had a Master’s with a distinction in Philosophy, and taught Philosophy, therefore was perfectly capable of expounding classic Eastern and Western philosophy. The key was to use this knowledge to make a fortune off all of the gullible young Westerners flocking to India, after the example of the Beatles, in search of spirituality and an alternative to what they saw as a stultifying Western fixation on money and security. And who is easier to rip off than people investing everything in being trusting in an effort to become better and more evolved people? Osho (at that time “Bhagwan Rajneesh”) came up with the brilliant formula of releasing them of the bonds of money by having them give it to him.

And the show goes on even these days. This type of pre-packaged, consumer spirituality is designed to not only appeal to the masses, but also packaged to make up for what it lacks. This is spirituality all dolled up for the retail market.

Osho, is also known for a string of sexual allegations and his fleet of Rolls Royces - 90+; many people still worship him as a living Buddha without bothering to find out anything about him, or look at some of the ridiculous things he said.

On this note...use your fucking brain before you interpret the words written by other people.

Image: Art of Eric Wayne

#personalnonsense #oshobotomy

Wednesday, 21 June 2017

Northern Summer on Titan


Northern Summer on Titan
While yesterday's solstice brought summer to planet Earth's northern hemisphere, a northern summer solstice arrived for ringed planet Saturn nearly a month ago on May 24. Following the Saturnian seasons, its large moon Titan was captured in this Cassini spacecraft image from June 9. The near-infrared view finds bright methane clouds drifting through Titan's northern summer skies as seen from a distance of about 507,000 kilometers. Below Titan's clouds, dark hydrocarbon lakes sprawl near the large moon's now illuminated north pole.

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

#space #science #NASA #cassini #Titan

Monday, 19 June 2017

Study Finds Naps May Help Preschoolers Learn


Study Finds Naps May Help Preschoolers Learn
Research has shown that naps play an important role in sustaining new learning in infants. A new study from the University of Arizona suggests naptime could have a similar effect on language learning in preschool-age children.

Researchers studied verb learning in 3-year-olds and found that those who napped after learning new verbs had a better understanding of the words when tested 24 hours later.

The findings, which will be published in the journal Child Development, suggest that parents may want to consider maintaining regular naptimes for preschoolers, who are at an age at which naps have a tendency to dwindle, said lead study author and UA alumna Michelle Sandoval, who conducted the research as a doctoral student in the UA Department of Psychology.

Source & further reading:
https://uanews.arizona.edu/story/study-finds-naps-may-help-preschoolers-learn

Image via Google photo search

#neuroscience #naps #learning #brain #sleep #research

The World Out There...


The World Out There...
With 219 potential new worlds out there, some could be habitable & 10 of them like our own.

Here's things to know:
https://nasa.tumblr.com/post/162008265939/we-just-identified-more-than-200-new-potential

Image credit: NASA

#Space #NASA #science #universe #exploration

The Massive Stars in Westerlund 1


The Massive Stars in Westerlund 1
Star cluster Westerlund 1 is home to some of the largest and most massive stars known. It is headlined by the star Westerlund 1-26, a red supergiant star so big that if placed in the center of our Solar System, it would extend out past the orbit of Jupiter. Additionally, the young star cluster is home to 3 other red supergiants, 6 yellow hypergiant stars, 24 Wolf-Rayet stars, and several even-more unusual stars that continue to be studied. 

Westerlund 1 is relatively close-by for a star cluster at a distance of 15,000 light years, givingastronomers a good laboratory to study the development of massive stars. The featured image of Westerlund 1 was taken by the Hubble Space Telescopetoward the southern constellation of the Altar (Ara). Although presently classified as a "super" open cluster, Westerlund 1 may evolve into a low massglobular cluster over the next billion years.

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

#space #NASA #stars #science #ESA #Hubble

Saturday, 17 June 2017

Unprecedented Ultraviolet View of Mars


Unprecedented Ultraviolet View of Mars
Global images of Mars from the MAVEN mission show the ultraviolet glow from the Martian atmosphere in unprecedented detail, revealing dynamic, previously invisible behavior. They include the first images of "nightglow" that can be used to show how winds circulate at high altitudes. Additionally, dayside ultraviolet imagery from the spacecraft shows how ozone amounts change over the seasons and how afternoon clouds form over giant Martian volcanoes. The images were taken by the Imaging UltraViolet Spectrograph (IUVS) on the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission (MAVEN).


Source and further reading:
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/goddard/2016/maven-uv-mars

#space #NASA #MAVEN #mars #science

"The pyramid shape is said to hold many secrets and amazing properties. One of them is a sense of wonder.”


"The pyramid shape is said to hold many secrets and amazing properties. One of them is a sense of wonder.” 
― Vera Nazarian

Work by Charlie Deck

#C4D #animation #math

Detail from Robert McCall's 1976 mural at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.


Detail from Robert McCall's 1976 mural at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

#space #Science #history

Transporter of thyroid hormones is crucial for embryonal development of the brain


Transporter of thyroid hormones is crucial for embryonal development of the brain
Thyroid hormones are very important for the development of the brain. And when the transporters of these hormones are not functioning properly, the consequences for the development of the cerebellum or ‘the little brain’ are very serious. These are the findings of a study by researchers from KU Leuven and King’s College London.

Thyroid hormones control our everyday metabolism, but they’re already crucial before birth: they are essential for the development of the organs, including the brain. “These hormones ensure that different cell types originate in the brain at the right moment, move to the right place, and make the right connections,” explains Professor Veerle Darras from the Lab of Comparative Endocrinology at KU Leuven. “Until the thyroid is fully developed, a foetus depends on the mother’s hormones. If the mother-to-be doesn’t produce enough thyroid hormones, this has a negative impact on the brain development of the foetus from a very early stage.”

Determining whether the thyroid is properly functioning is typically done by measuring the amount of hormones in the blood. Unfortunately, this is not always a good indicator. “This proved to be the case with the rare Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome (AHDS), a hereditary condition of the nervous system that only affects boys. These children suffer from severe mental retardation and locomotor deficits. Doctors looked for possible thyroid hormone deficiencies but, surprisingly, the level of hormones in the blood was abnormally high. The problem turned out to be in the transporters that bring the hormones from the blood to the inside of the cell. Due to a genetic mutation an important transporter – MCT8 – is deactivated in patients with AHDS.”

To find out more about this mutation Professor Darras’s team examined what happens in a chicken embryo when this transporter is deactivated in a part of the little brain, PhD student Pieter Vancamp continues. “The little brain is important for locomotion. A thyroid hormone deficiency impairs its development, but the role of the transporters was not yet known. In our study, we noticed relatively quickly that some important proteins – necessary for the development of brain cells – were not produced in sufficient amounts in the part of the brain with no active transporter. In a later stage, we noticed that the Purkinje cells – nerve cells located in the cortex of the little brain – have less dendritic branches. Therefore, brain cell signalling goes haywire, and problems arise in other cells as well.”

The results show that thyroid hormones are essential for embryonic development right from the start. “The earlier things go wrong, the harder it is to repair the damage after birth."

Source and further reading:
https://nieuws.kuleuven.be/en/content/2017/transporter-of-thyroid-hormones-is-crucial-for-the-embryonal-development-of-the-brain

Image:
A cross-section of the folded cerebellar cortex or ‘little brain’ of a chicken embryo, with three layers of cells. The middle layer consists of Purkinje cells with their characteristic dendritic branches. This image shows healthy Purkinje cells, highlighted in bright colours. With a deactivated MCT8 transporter, the Purkinje cells would have much smaller dendritic branches.
© KU Leuven - Joke Delbaere & Pieter Vancamp

#neuroscience #research #thyroidhormones

Saturn near Opposition


Saturn near Opposition
Saturn reached its 2017 opposition on June 16. Of course, opposition means opposite the Sun in Earth's sky and near opposition Saturn is up all night, at its closest and brightest for the year.This remarkably sharp image of the ringed planet was taken only days before, on June 11, with a 1-meter telescope from the mountain top Pic du Midi observatory. North is at the top with the giant planet's north polar storm and curious hexagon clearly seen bathed in sunlight. But Saturn's spectacular ring system is also shown in stunning detail.

The narrow Encke division is visible around the entire outer A ring, small ringlets can be traced within the fainter inner C ring, and Saturn's southern hemisphere can be glimpsed through the wider Cassini division. Near opposition Saturn's rings also appear exceptionally bright, known as the opposition surge or Seeliger Effect. Directly illuminated from Earth's perspective, the ring's icy particles cast no shadows and strongly backscatter sunlight creating the dramatic increase in brightness. Still, the best views of the ringed planet are currently from the Saturn-orbiting Cassini spacecraft. Diving close, Cassini's Grand Finale orbit number 9 is in progress.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html

Image Credit & Copyright: D. Peach, E. Kraaikamp, F. Colas, M. Delcroix, R. Hueso, G. Therin, C. Sprianu, S2P, IMCCE, OMP

#space #NASA #Saturn #science

Friday, 16 June 2017

Brain Plasticity - How adult-born neurons get wired-in


Brain Plasticity - How adult-born neurons get wired-in
One goal in neurobiology is to understand how the flow of electrical signals through brain circuits gives rise to perception, action, thought, learning and memories.

Linda Overstreet-Wadiche, Ph.D., and Jacques Wadiche, Ph.D., both associate professors in the University of Alabama at Birmingham Department of Neurobiology, have published their latest contribution in this effort, focused on a part of the brain that helps form memories — the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus.

The dentate gyrus is one of just two areas in the brain where new neurons are continuously formed in adults. When a new granule cell neuron is made in the dentate gyrus, it needs to get ‘wired in,’ by forming synapses, or connections, in order to contribute to circuit function. Dentate granule cells are part of a circuit that receive electrical signals from the entorhinal cortex, a cortical brain region that processes sensory and spatial input from other areas of the brain. By combining this sensory and spatial information, the dentate gyrus can generate a unique memory of an experience.

Overstreet-Wadiche and UAB colleagues posed a basic question: Since the number of neurons in the dentate gyrus increases by neurogenesis while the number of neurons in the cortex remains the same, does the brain create additional synapses from the cortical neurons to the new granule cells, or do some cortical neurons transfer their connections from mature granule cells to the new granule cells?

Their answer, garnered through a series of electrophysiology, dendritic spine density and immunohistochemistry experiments with mice that were genetically altered to produce either more new neurons or kill off newborn neurons, supports the second model — some of the cortical neurons transfer their connections from mature granule cells to the new granule cells.

This opens the door to look at how this redistribution of synapses between the old and new neurons helps the dentate gyrus function. And it opens up tantalizing questions. Does this redistribution disrupt existing memories? How does this redistribution relate to the beneficial effects of exercise, which is a natural way to increase neurogenesis?

Source & further reading:
http://www.uab.edu/news/innovation/item/7957-brain-plasticity-how-adult-born-neurons-get-wired-in

Journal article:
https://elifesciences.org/articles/19886

Image via Science Direct showing the distinct folded shape of the hippocampal region. The darkly stained area represents the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus.

#neuroscience #research #brainplasticity #neurobiology

Thursday, 15 June 2017

Print, wipe, rewrite


Print, wipe, rewrite
Despite the ubiquity of tablet computers and e-readers, we simply cannot erase our addiction to paper. An estimated four billion trees are felled every year to make paper or cardboard, an energy-intensive process with a vast environmental footprint. Now chemist Yadong Yin of the University of California, Riverside, and his colleagues have developed “rewritable” paper that could help curb that impact.

The researchers coated conventional paper with nanoparticles of two chemicals: Prussian blue, the pigment that gives blueprints their characteristic color, and titanium dioxide, a substance used in sunscreens. A blast of ultraviolet light makes the titanium dioxide nanoparticles donate electrons to their Prussian blue neighbors. That jolts the pigment into shifting its color from midnight blue to milky white.

By shining that UV light through a transparent screen marked with black text, the researchers “printed” blue text on a white background. The text lasts about five days and then spontaneously fades away: “Every morning I could just push a button, and a printer would give me a fresh newspaper to read over breakfast,” Yin says.

The paper can also be reset by heating and reused more than 80 times, a significant improvement over previous types of rewritable paper. “The key advantages are high reversibility and stability, easy handling, low cost and low toxicity,” says Sean X. Zhang, a materials scientist at Jilin University in China, who was not involved in the study but has also worked on developing rewritable paper. By comparison, technologies such as electronic ink—used for Amazon's Kindle Paperwhite—involve moving charged black-and-white particles around, which requires electronics.

Source & further reading:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/reprintable-paper-offers-sustainable-alternative-to-the-printed-word

Image: Printed rewritable paper made using Prussian blue nanoparticles.
Credit: Courtesy of Yadong Yin University of California, Riverside

#science #nanoworld #nanoparticles #research

Jupiter's clouds of many colors


Jupiter's clouds of many colors
NASA’s Juno spacecraft was racing away from Jupiter following its seventh close pass of the planet when JunoCam snapped this image on May 19, 2017, from about 29,100 miles (46,900 kilometers) above the cloud tops. The spacecraft was over 65.9 degrees south latitude, with a lovely view of the south polar region of the planet.

This image was processed to enhance color differences, showing the amazing variety in Jupiter’s stormy atmosphere. The result is a surreal world of vibrant color, clarity and contrast. Four of the white oval storms known as the “String of Pearls” are visible near the top of the image. Interestingly, one orange-colored storm can be seen at the belt-zone boundary, while other storms are more of a cream color.  

JunoCam's raw images are available for the public to peruse and process into image products in the image processing gallery.     

Source:
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/news/jupiters-clouds-of-many-colors
Photo Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt /Seán Doran

Image processing gallery:
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing

#space #Juno #NASA #Jupiter #universe

Manhattan Moonrise


Manhattan Moonrise
A Full Moon rose as the Sun set on June 9, known to some as a Strawberry Moon. Close to the horizon and taking on the warm color of reflected sunlight filtered through a dense and dusty atmosphere, the fully illuminated lunar disk poses with the skyscrapers along the southern Manhattan skyline in this telephoto snapshot. The picture was taken from Eagle Rock Reservation, a park in West Orange, New Jersey, planet Earth. That's about 13 miles from southern Manhattan and some 240,000 miles from the Moon. Foreground faces of the modern towers of steel and glass share the Moon's warm color by reflecting the last rays of the setting Sun. The tallest, with the shining triangular facet, is New York City's One World Trade center.

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

#space #NASA #naturalphenomena #fullmoon

The design of a simple, inexpensive cosmic-ray-muon detector has led to an international outreach program

The design of a simple, inexpensive cosmic-ray-muon detector has led to an international outreach program
Particle physicist Spencer Axani originally set out to build a cosmic-ray muon detector for an experiment in Antarctica. He writes about how the simple, inexpensive design inspired a new initiative, CosmicWatch, in which students build their own desktop detectors to perform experiments and demonstrations.

Interesting reading via Physics Today
http://physicstoday.scitation.org/do/10.1063/PT.6.1.20170614a/full/

First things first...what is a muon?
When cosmic rays enter the Earth's atmosphere they collide with atoms and molecules, mainly oxygen and nitrogen. The interaction produces a cascade of lighter particles, a so-called air shower secondary radiation that rains down, including x-rays, muons, protons, alpha particles, pions, electrons, and neutrons.

Muons are the most numerous energetic charged particles at sea level. A charged particle cannot avoid losing energy by ionization. As it passes through matter the charged particle interacts with the electric fields and typically knocks loose some of the loosely bound outer electrons. A muon interacts very little with matter except by ionization. Because of this, muons can travel large distances and commonly reach the ground.

Muons - info source:
http://cosmic.lbl.gov/SKliewer/Cosmic_Rays/Muons.htm

Photos via Google photo search and Physics Today.

#physics #research #muons #muondetector #science



Wednesday, 14 June 2017

Chaotically Magnetized Cloud Is No Place to Build a Star, or Is It?


Chaotically Magnetized Cloud Is No Place to Build a Star, or Is It?
For decades, scientists believed that the magnetic field lines around a forming star were extremely powerful and orderly, warping only under extreme force and at great distance from the nascent star.

Now, a team of astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) has discovered a weak and wildly disorganized magnetic field strikingly near a newly emerging protostar. These observations suggest that the impact of magnetic fields on star formation is more complex than previously thought.

The researchers used ALMA to map the surprisingly disorganized magnetic field surrounding a young protostar dubbed Ser-emb 8, which resides about 1400 light-years away in the Serpens star-forming region. These new observations are the most sensitive ever made of the small-scale magnetic field suffusing the region surrounding a young forming star. They also provide important insights into the formation of low-mass stars like own sun.

Previous observations with other telescopes have confirmed that magnetic fields surrounding some young protostars form a classic “hourglass” shape – a hallmark of a strong magnetic field – that starts near the protostar and extends many light-years into the surrounding molecular cloud.

“Before now, we didn’t know if all stars formed in regions that were controlled by strong magnetic fields. Using ALMA, we found our answer,” said Charles L. H. “Chat” Hull, an astronomer and NRAO Jansky Fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, Mass., and lead author on a paper appearing in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. “We can now study magnetic fields in star-forming clouds from the broadest of scales all the way down to the forming star itself. This is exciting because it may mean stars can emerge from a wider range of conditions than we once thought.”

Source & further reading:
http://www.almaobservatory.org/en/press-room/press-releases/1188-chaotically-magnetized-cloud-is-no-place-to-build-a-star-or-is-it

Image: Artist impression of chaotic magnetic field lines very near a newly emerging protostar.
Credit: NRAO/AUI/NSF; D. Berry 

#space #ALMA #science #magneticfield #stars #universe

Early Signs of Anxiety, Depression May Be Evident in the Brains of Newborns


Early Signs of Anxiety, Depression May Be Evident in the Brains of Newborns
Early predictors of anxiety and depression may be evident in the brain even at birth, suggests a study published in the February 2017 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry(JAACAP). Analyzing brain scans of newborns, the researchers found that the strength and pattern of connections between the amygdala and certain brain regions predicted the likelihood of the babies developing greater internalizing symptoms like sadness, excessive shyness, nervousness, or separation anxiety by age two. Such symptoms have been linked to clinical depression and anxiety disorders in older children and adults.

“The fact that we could see these connectivity patterns in the brain at birth helps answer a critical question about whether they could be responsible for early symptoms linked to depression and anxiety or whether these symptoms themselves lead to changes in the brain,” said Cynthia Rogers, MD, an assistant professor of child psychiatry. “We have found that already at birth, brain connections may be responsible for the development of problems later in life.”

Source:
https://www.elsevier.com/about/press-releases/research-and-journals/early-signs-of-anxiety,-depression-may-be-evident-in-the-brains-of-newborns

Journal article:
http://www.jaacap.com/article/S0890-8567(16)31931-1/fulltext

#neuroscience #neonatalamygdala #research

Red Sprites over the Channel


Red Sprites over the Channel
Mysterious and incredibly brief, red sprites are seen to occur high above large thunderstorms on planet Earth. While they have been recorded from low Earth orbit or high flying airplanes, these dancing, lightning-like events werecaptured in video frames from a mountain top perch in northern France. Taken during the night of May 28, the remarkably clear, unobstructed view looks toward a multicell storm system raging over the English Channel about 600 kilometers away. Lasting only a few milliseconds, the red sprite association withthunderstorms is known. Still, much remains a mystery about the fleeting apparitions including the nature of their relation to other upper atmospheric lightning phenomena such as blue jets or satellite detected terrestrial gamma flashes.

Image &info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Stephane Vetter (Nuits sacrees, TWAN)

#NASA #naturalphenomena #redsprites #space

Tuesday, 13 June 2017

King of the Gods: Jupiter dated to be oldest planet in the Solar System


King of the Gods: Jupiter dated to be oldest planet in the Solar System
A new study from an international team of astronomers has dated Jupiter for the first time, and their findings suggest that the Gas Giant is the oldest planet in the solar system.

Dating a celestial object isn't too difficult, so long as you have a sample of it. The Earth is about 4.543 billion years old, for instance. Jupiter, meanwhile is about 4.599 billion years old, making it 56 million years older than the Earth.

But no human has ever set foot on Jupiter, nor has any spacecraft. This forced the scientists to think of a different technique for establishing the monster planet's birthday. "We do not have any samples from Jupiter (in contrast to other bodies like the Earth, Mars, the moon and asteroids)," said study lead Thomas Kruijer. "In our study, we use isotope signatures of meteorites (which are derived from asteroids) to infer Jupiter's age.

They discovered two iron meteorites that formed in the early universe, each from different nebular clouds. One formed about 4.599 billion years ago, the other 4.596 billion years ago. "Our measurements show that the growth of Jupiter can be dated using the distinct genetic heritage and formation times of meteorites," Kruijer said.

Assuming that it's accurate, this dating will be a valuable tool in our understanding of how the early solar system formed. For instance, isotope analysis found that Jupiter's solid core formed with the first nebular cloud, only 1 million years after the start of the solar system. The core accreted gas quickly, preventing large amounts of material from slipping into the inner solar system — hence why Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are all small planets and our solar system lacks large, rocky super-Earths. 

Source:
https://sputniknews.com/science/201706131054602259-jupiter-oldest-planet-solar-system/

Journal article:
http://m.pnas.org/content/early/2017/06/06/1704461114

Photo credit: NASA

#NASA #Jupiter #science #space #research

Monday, 12 June 2017

An Unusual Hole in Mars


An Unusual Hole in Mars
What created this unusual hole in Mars? Actually, there are numerous holes pictured in this Swiss cheese-like landscape, with all-but-one of them showing a dusty, dark, Martian terrain beneath evaporating, light, carbon-dioxide ice. The most unusual hole is on the upper right, spans about 100-meters, and seems to punch through to a lower level. Why this hole exists and why it is surrounded by a circular crater remains a topic of speculation, although a leading hypothesis is that it was created by a meteor impact.

Holes such as this are of particular interest because they might be portals to lower levels that extend into expansive underground caves. If so, these naturally-occurring tunnels are relatively protected from the harsh surface of Mars, making them relatively good candidates to contain Martian life. These pits are therefore prime targets for possible future spacecraft, robots, and even human interplanetary explorers.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: NASA, MRO, HiRISE, JPL, U. Arizona

#space #nasa #Mars #exploration #science

Saturday, 10 June 2017

Why Sockeye Salmon Change From Blue to Red?


Why Sockeye Salmon Change From Blue to Red?
Salmon flesh is red due to their diet. Salmon gain 99% or more of their body mass in the ocean and the food they eat in the ocean is high in carotenoids (the same pigment that gives carrots color). These pigments are stored in their flesh.

As salmon approach their spawning grounds they begin to absorb their scales. The carotenoid pigments in their flesh are transferred to the skin and eggs. By the time they spawn, their flesh is truly white because of all the carotenoids have been moved out of the flesh. The red skin makes them more visible and may signal their readiness to spawn. The pigments may also help the fish absorb oxygen from the water.

Article:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/09/science/sockeye-salmon-blue-red-color-change.html

Reference:
https://www.nps.gov/katm/learn/photosmultimedia/sockeye-salmon-frequently-asked-questions.htm
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/fish/sockeye-salmon/

#biodiversity #salmon #coolcritters

Autism May Begin Early in Brain Development


Autism May Begin Early in Brain Development
Autism is not a single condition, but a spectrum of disorders that affect the brain’s ability to perceive and process information. Recent research suggests that too many connections in the brain could be at least partially responsible for the symptoms of autism, from communication deficits to unusual talents.

New research from the University of Maryland suggests that this overload of connections begins early in mammalian development, when key neurons in a region of the brain known as the cerebral cortex begin to form their first circuits.

By pinpointing where and when autism-related neural defects first emerge in mice, the study results could lead to a stronger understanding of autism in humans—including possible early intervention strategies. The researchers outline their findings in a research paper published January 31, 2017 in the journal Cell Reports.

“Our work suggests that the neural pathology of autism manifests in the earliest cortical circuits, formed by a cell type called subplate neurons,” said UMD Biology Professor and senior study author Patrick Kanold. “Nobody has looked at developing circuits this early, in this level of detail, in the context of autism before. This is truly a new discovery and potentially represents a new paradigm for autism research.”

Source & further reading:
https://www.umdrightnow.umd.edu/news/autism-may-begin-early-brain-development-umd-research-shows

Journal article:
http://www.cell.com/cell-reports/abstract/S2211-1247(17)30024-4

Image: brains of children with autism are hyperconnected in ways that relate to symptom severity.
Credit: Cell Reports, Keown et al

#neuroscience #research #autism #brain

Saturn in the Milky Way


Saturn in the Milky Way
Saturn is near opposition in planet Earth's sky. Rising at sunset and shining brightly throughout the night, it also lies near a line-of-sight to crowded starfields, nebulae, and obscuring dust clouds along the Milky Way. Whitish Saturn is up and left of center in this gorgeous central Milky Way skyscape, a two panel mosaic recorded earlier this month.

You can find the bright planet above the bowl of the dusty Pipe nebula, and just beyond the end of a dark river to Antares, alpha star of the constellation Scorpius. For now the best views of the ringed giant planet are from the Saturn-orbiting Cassini spacecraft, though. Diving close, Cassini's Grand Finale orbit number 8 is in progress.

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

#nasa #space #Saturn #MilkyWay #science

Friday, 9 June 2017

Scars fade with time.

Scars fade with time. And the ones that never go away, well, they build character, maturity, caution...so, love your scars

#personalnonsense #loveyourscars
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWASeaYuHZo

"Cosmos is a Greek word for the order of the universe.


"Cosmos is a Greek word for the order of the universe. It is, in a way, the opposite of Chaos. It implies the deep interconnectedness of all things. It conveys awe for the intricate and subtle way in which the universe is put together."
~Carl Sagan

#wordsofwisdom #cosmos

The saddleback caterpillar (Acharia stimulea) is the larva of a species of moth native to eastern North America.


The saddleback caterpillar (Acharia stimulea) is the larva of a species of moth native to eastern North America. These caterpillars have a pair of fleshy “horns” at either end, and these, like much of the body, bear urticating hairs that secrete an irritating venom. Stings can be very painful and can cause swelling, nausea, and leave a rash that can last for days.

Know more:
http://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/urban/medical/saddleback_caterpillar.htm

Photo via redddit

#biodiversity #coolcritters #bugs