Tuesday, 31 October 2017

Thor's Helmet Emission Nebula


Thor's Helmet Emission Nebula
This helmet-shaped cosmic cloud with wing-like appendages is popularly called Thor's Helmet. Heroically sized even for a Norse god, Thor's Helmet spans about 30 light-years across. In fact, the helmet is more like an interstellar bubble, blown as a fast wind -- from the bright star near the center of the bubble's blue-hued region -- sweeps through a surrounding molecular cloud.

This star, a Wolf-Rayet star, is a massive and extremely hot giant star thought to be in a brief, pre-supernova stage of evolution. Cataloged as NGC 2359, the emission nebula is located about 12,000 light-years away toward the constellation of the Big Dog (Canis Major). The sharp image, made using broadband and narrowband filters, captures striking details of the nebula's filamentary gas and dust structures. The blue color originates from strong emission from oxygen atoms in the nebula.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Adam Block, Mt. Lemmon SkyCenter, U. Arizona

#NASA #space #universe #nebula #science

Social Laughter Releases Endorphins in the Brain


Social Laughter Releases Endorphins in the Brain
The recent results obtained by researchers from Turku PET Centre, the University of Oxford and Aalto University have revealed how social laughter leads to endorphin release in the brain, possibly promoting establishment of social bonds.

Social laughter led to pleasurable feelings and significantly increased release of endorphins and other opioid peptides in the brain areas controlling arousal and emotions. The more opioid receptors the participants had in their brain, the more they laughed during the experiment.

"Our results highlight that endorphin release induced by social laughter may be an important pathway that supports formation, reinforcement, and maintenance of social bonds between humans. The pleasurable and calming effects of the endorphin release might signal safety and promote feelings of togetherness. The relationship between opioid receptor density and laughter rate also suggests that opioid system may underlie individual differences in sociability", says Professor Lauri Nummenmaa from Turku PET Centre, the University of Turku.

"The results emphasize the importance of vocal communication in maintaining human social networks. Other primates maintain social contacts by mutual grooming, which also induces endorphin release. This is however very time consuming. Because social laughter leads to similar chemical response in the brain, this allows significant expansion of human social networks: laughter is highly contagious, and the endorphin response may thus easily spread through large groups that laugh together", tells Professor Robin Dunbar from the University of Oxford.

Journal article:
http://www.jneurosci.org/content/37/25/6125

Source & further reading:
http://www.utu.fi/en/news/news/Pages/Social-Laughter-Releases-Endorphins-in-the-Brain.aspx

#neuroscience #endorphins #laughter #opioidreceptors #research

Happy Halloween!


Happy Halloween!
Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn, and cauldron bubble.
~W. Shakespeare

#Halloween #personalnonsense

Sunday, 29 October 2017

Hussar's Armor


Hussar's Armor
For better mobility, some light cavalrymen, such as the legendary Polish hussars, wore half armor. The hussars, an elite branch of the Polish army, went into battle in glittering armor on magnificent horses, seldom losing a battle though they were many times outnumbered by the enemy. Recruited from among the wealthiest of Poland’s nobility, the hussars were accomplished horsemen, famous for the huge "wings" worn on their backs or attached to their saddles.

These wings were made of wooden wing-shaped frames with eagle feathers inserted into the back rims. The thunderous noise made by the flapping of these extra appendages during a charge was meant to frighten the enemy horses. Known as "winged horsemen," the colorfully costumed hussars also wore leopard or similar animal skins in the style of cloaks over the pauldrons (shoulder pieces) of their armor.

Info and photo via The Art Institute of Chicago
http://www.artic.edu/exhibition/saints-and-heroes-art-medieval-and-renaissance-europe

#history #medievalart #armor #hussars

Quick Solar Outburst


Quick Solar Outburst
A small eruption blew a bright, disjointed stream of plasma into space (Oct. 18, 2017). The source of the blast was just out of sight beyond the edge of the sun. Images from SOHO's coronagraph instruments show a bright loop of material heading away from the sun near this same area.

The video, taken in extreme ultraviolet light, covers just two hours of activity. Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/850

#NASA #sun #science #universe #space #plasma

Night on a Spooky Planet


Night on a Spooky Planet
What spooky planet is this? Planet Earth of course, on a dark and stormy night in 2013 at Hverir, a geothermally active area along the volcanic landscape in northeastern Iceland. Geomagnetic storms produced the auroral display in the starry night sky while ghostly towers of steam and gas venting from fumaroles danced against the eerie greenish light.

A geomagnetic storm is a major disturbance of Earth's magnetosphere that occurs when there is a very efficient exchange of energy from the solar wind into the space environment surrounding Earth. These storms result from variations in the solar wind that produces major changes in the currents, plasmas, and fields in Earth’s magnetosphere. The solar wind conditions that are effective for creating geomagnetic storms are sustained (for several to many hours) periods of high-speed solar wind, and most importantly, a southward directed solar wind magnetic field (opposite the direction of Earth’s field) at the dayside of the magnetosphere. This condition is effective for transferring energy from the solar wind into Earth’s magnetosphere.

Know more about geomagnetic storms:
http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/phenomena/geomagnetic-storms

Fumaroles are vents from which volcanic gas escapes into the atmosphere. Fumaroles may occur along tiny cracks or long fissures, in chaotic clusters or fields, and on the surfaces of lava flows and thick deposits of pyroclastic flows.

Know more about fumaroles:
https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/what-is-a-fumarole.html

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

Image Credit & Copyright: Stéphane Vetter (Nuits sacrées)

#NASA #fumaroles #geomagnetictorms #naturalphenomena #space #science

Saturday, 28 October 2017

Pure mathematics is in its way the poetry of logical ideas.


Pure mathematics is in its way the poetry of logical ideas.
~Albert Einstein

Work by bigblueboo

#animation #math #coding #processing

IRIS


IRIS
NASA’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrometer, or IRIS, peers into a lower level of the Sun’s atmosphere — called the interface region — to determine how this area drives constant changes in the Sun’s outer atmosphere.

The interface region feeds solar material into the corona and solar wind: In this video, captured on Sept. 10, 2017, jets of solar material appear like tadpoles swimming down toward the Sun’s surface. These structures — called supra-arcade downflows — are sometimes observed in the corona during solar flares, and this particular set was associated with the X8.2 flare of the same day.

Source:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/september-2017s-intense-solar-activity-viewed-from-space
Credits: NASA/GSFC/LMSAL/Joy Ng

#NASA #space #universe #science #sun #plasma

Friday, 27 October 2017

InSight (Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) will conduct the first...


InSight (Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) will conduct the first thorough “check-up” of Mars in more than 4.5 billion years, measuring its “pulse”, or seismic activity; its temperature; and its “reflexes” (the way the planet wobbles when it is pulled by the Sun and its moons).

By using sophisticated instruments – tools that can measure the vital signs of a planet – InSight will delve deep beneath the surface of Mars, detecting the clues left by the earliest stages of planetary formation.

Previous Mars missions have explored the surface history of the Red Planet. Mars has been less geologically active than Earth, so it retains a more complete record of its history in its core, mantle and crust. InSight will study the sizes, densities and overall structure of the Red Planet’s core, mantle and crust.

The lander will also measure the rate at which heat escapes from the planet’s interior, and provide glimpses into the evolutionary processes of all the rocky planets in our solar system, including Earth, and even those circling other stars.

You can send your name to Mars onboard the InSight lander! The deadline to get your Martian boarding pass is Nov. 1. To submit your name, visit: mars.nasa.gov/syn/insight

Know more about InSight:
https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/insight/main/index.html

Source:
https://nasa.tumblr.com/

#space #universe #science #NASA #Mars #InSight

Think you know how to improve your memory? Think again


Think you know how to improve your memory? Think again
We all want to improve our memory, but research unveiled by the University of Toronto’s Dr. Katherine Duncan shows that we need to switch our strategies. Memory isn’t a single entity, and separate memory processes, like formation and recall can be enhanced by different brain states. Her results also revealed a major manipulation which triggers these brain states: novelty. The results were presented at the 2017 Canadian Neuroscience Meeting, the annual meeting of the Canadian Association for Neuroscience - Association Canadienne des Neurosciences (CAN-ACN).

The discovery has been years in the making. Back in 2012, Katherine Duncan used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to identify how the brain triggers memory states, uncovering a brain region that detects novelty. She then demonstrated that novelty detection acts like a switch, changing how the brain learns and remembers. Finally, she determined the impact of novelty on human memory. As she puts it, “We find that familiarity increased retrieval of other unrelated memories but reduced the chances for memory formation. On the other hand, novelty enhanced the later formation of distinct memories without worrying about previous experiences.”

Duncan suggests we need to revisit how we make memories. “Your ability to remember something doesn’t just depend on the strength of the memory, it depends on the state that you’re in.” Her work also hints at new strategies to improve memory development. “We’re using what we know about the brain to develop memory enhancing tricks, helping people remember faces, names, and places.”

Source:
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-05/cafn-tyk052317.php

Image via Wikipedia Commons

#neuroscience #memory #neuroimaging #science

Wednesday, 25 October 2017

NGC 7635: Bubble in a Cosmic Sea


NGC 7635: Bubble in a Cosmic Sea
Adrift in a cosmic sea of stars and glowing gas the delicate, floating apparition left of center in this widefield view is cataloged as NGC 7635, the Bubble Nebula. A mere 10 light-years wide, the tiny Bubble Nebula was blown by the winds of a massive star. It lies within a larger complex of interstellar gas and dust clouds found about 11,000 light-years distant, straddling the boundary between the parental constellations Cepheus and Cassiopeia.

Included in the breathtaking vista is open star cluster M52 (lower left), some 5,000 light-years away. Above and right of the Bubble Nebula is an emission region identified as Sh2-157, also known as the Claw Nebula. Constructed from 47 hours of narrow-band and broad-band exposures, this image spans about 3 degrees on the sky. That corresponds to a width of 500 light-years at the estimated distance of the Bubble Nebula.

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

#nasa #space #universe #nebula #science

When you have the slowest reaction time in the world


When you have the slowest reaction time in the world
The axolotl also known as a Mexican salamander or a Mexican walking fish, is a neotenic salamander, closely related to the tiger salamander. Although the axolotl is colloquially known as a "walking fish", it is not a fish, but an amphibian.

Know more:
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/amphibians/a/axolotl/

#biodiversity #coolcritters #axolotl

Quick Solar Outburst


Quick Solar Outburst
A small eruption blew a bright, disjointed stream of plasma into space (Oct. 18, 2017). The source of the blast was just out of sight beyond the edge of the sun. Images from SOHO's coronagraph instruments show a bright loop of material heading away from the sun near this same area. The video, taken in extreme ultraviolet light, covers just two hours of activity.

Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/850

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

Monday, 23 October 2017

Study Finds Gray Matter Density Increases During Adolescence


Study Finds Gray Matter Density Increases During Adolescence
For years, the common narrative in human developmental neuroimaging has been that gray matter in the brain – the tissue found in regions of the brain responsible for muscle control, sensory perception such as seeing and hearing, memory, emotions, speech, decision making, and self-control – declines in adolescence, a finding derived mainly from studies of gray matter volume and cortical thickness (the thickness of the outer layers of brain that contain gray matter). Since it has been well-established that larger brain volume is associated with better cognitive performance, it was puzzling that cognitive performance shows a dramatic improvement from childhood to young adulthood at the same time that brain volume and cortical thickness decline.

A study published by Penn Medicine researchers and featured on the cover of the Journal of Neuroscience may help resolve this puzzle, revealing that while volume indeed decreases from childhood to young adulthood, gray matter density actually increases. Their findings also show that while females have lower brain volume, proportionate to their smaller size, they have higher gray matter density than males, which could explain why their cognitive performance is comparable despite having lower brain volume. Thus, while adolescents lose brain volume, and females have lower brain volume than males, this is compensated for by increased density of gray matter.

“It is quite rare for a single study to solve a paradox that has been lingering in a field for decades, let alone two paradoxes, as was done by Gennatas in his analysis of data from this large-scale study of a whole cohort of youths,” said Ruben Gur.

“We now have a richer, fuller concept of what happens during brain development and now better understand the complementary unfolding processes in the brain that describe what happens.”

The study was led by Ruben Gur, PhD, professor of Psychiatry, Neurology, and Radiology in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Raquel Gur, MD, PhD, a professor of Psychiatry, Neurology, and Radiology, and Efstathios Gennatas, MBBS, a doctoral student of neuroscience working in the Brain Behavior Laboratory at Penn.

According to Gur, the study findings may better explain the extent and intensity of changes in mental life and behavior that occur during the transition from childhood to young adulthood.

Journal article:
http://www.jneurosci.org/content/early/2017/04/21/JNEUROSCI.3550-16.2017

Source & further reading:
https://www.pennmedicine.org/news/news-releases/2017/may/penn-study-finds-gray-matter-density-increases-during-adolescence

#graymatter #adolescence #braindevelopment #neuroimaging #neuroscience #science

Where Your Elements Came From


Where Your Elements Came From
The hydrogen in your body, present in every molecule of water, came from the Big Bang. There are no other appreciable sources of hydrogen in the universe.

The carbon in your body was made by nuclear fusion in the interior of stars, as was the oxygen. Much of the iron in your body was made during supernovas of stars that occurred long ago and far away. The gold in your jewelry was likely made from neutron stars during collisions that may have been visible as short-duration gamma-ray bursts or gravitational wave events.

Elements like phosphorus and copper are present in our bodies in only small amounts but are essential to the functioning of all known life. The featured periodic table is color coded to indicate humanity's best guess as to the nuclear origin of all known elements. The sites of nuclear creation of some elements, such as copper, are not really well known and are continuing topics of observational and computational research.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & License: Wikipedia: Cmglee;
Data: Jennifer Johnson (OSU)

#chemistry #universe #elements #periodictable

Sunday, 22 October 2017

DNA vaccine protects against toxic proteins linked to Alzheimer’s


DNA vaccine protects against toxic proteins linked to Alzheimer’s
A new DNA vaccine when delivered to the skin prompts an immune response that produces antibodies to protect against toxic proteins associated with Alzheimer’s disease – without triggering severe brain swelling that earlier antibody treatments caused in some patients.

Two studies from the Peter O’Donnell Jr. Brain Institute demonstrate in animals how a vaccine containing DNA of the toxic beta-amyloid protein elicits a different immune response that may be safe for humans.

The vaccine, which will likely be tested further by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, is on a shortlist of promising antibody treatments that may eventually help settle a high-stakes debate of whether amyloid is a vital target for preventing or curing Alzheimer’s.

“If you look at the hard reality, the odds are against us because so many therapies have failed through the years. But this has potential,” said Dr. Roger Rosenberg, co-author of the studies and Director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Center at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

Dr. Rosenberg notes that earlier research established that antibodies significantly reduce amyloid buildup in the brain, but he needed to find a safe way to introduce these into the body. A vaccine developed elsewhere showed promise in the early 2000s, but when tested in humans it caused brain swelling in some patients.

Dr. Rosenberg’s idea was to start with DNA coding for amyloid and inject it into the skin rather than the muscle. The injected skin cells make the amyloid protein, and the body responds by producing new antibodies that inhibit the buildup of amyloid, which some scientists blame for destroying neurons.

Although the DNA vaccine has not yet been tested in humans, it produces a different kind of immune response in the tested animals that significantly lessens the chance of an adverse response in the brain, according to the studies published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease and Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy.

The research is notable because it shows a DNA vaccine can be effective and safe in two large mammals. Most other vaccines only produced an immune response in mice but not large mammals.

Journal article:
https://alzres.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13195-017-0257-7

Source & further reading:
http://www.utsouthwestern.edu/newsroom/articles/year-2017/alzheimers-dna-vaccine.html

#alzheimersdisease #betaamyloid #DNAvaccine #neuroscience #science
#medicine #health #research

To find yourself, think for yourself.


To find yourself, think for yourself.
~ Socrates

Plato's texts are pretty clear...since he is the one telling the story of Socrates’ trial, his behavior and defense during the trial, and the seemingly insufficient prosecution that led to the penalty of death.

1) Socrates’ defense against the charge that he doesn’t believe in G-d’s is fairly sufficient.
2) I do not believe that one person can be blamed for the sole corruption of an entire generation of young adults.

So...think for yourself!

#personalnonsense #socrates

An Inflammatory Storm


An Inflammatory Storm
These may look like lightning traces crackling across the sky but this storm is happening on a much smaller scale, triggered by an infection or injury deep inside a muscle. Within minutes the area is flooded with white blood cells called neutrophils (stained pink), which rush out of the blood vessels (blue and green) and get to work.

Neutrophils are the body’s first response against damage and infections, eating up invading bacteria and producing chemicals that attract other components of the immune system to come and join the fight – a process known as inflammation. But while this is an important part of our body’s defenses, a build-up of neutrophils in the brain or heart following a heart attack or stroke can actually increase damage and cause further problems.

Scientists are investigating exactly what causes this neutrophil storm, with the aim of developing more effective treatments for strokes and heart disease.

Image by:
Dr Tamara Girbl, Centre for Microvascular Research, William Harvey Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London

Centre for Microvascular Research, William Harvey Research Institute Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, UK
http://www.whri.qmul.ac.uk/research/inflammation/224-microvascular-research%20

Image copyright held by the photographer
Image on the ‘Highly Commended’ shortlist in the British Heart Foundation’s Reflections of Research competition 2017
https://medium.com/british-heart-foundation/heart-disease-under-a-new-lens-our-10-competition-winners-5a29eec46eb6

Info via BPoD - Kat Arney
http://www.bpod.mrc.ac.uk/archive/2017/10/17

#medicine #research #health #heartdisease #neutrophils #science

Friday, 20 October 2017

Venice is like eating an entire box of chocolate liqueurs in one go.


Venice is like eating an entire box of chocolate liqueurs in one go.

#personalnonsense #venice

Thursday, 19 October 2017

Attirement of the Bride


Attirement of the Bride

Max Ernst 1940

#personalnonsense #art

Tuesday, 17 October 2017

One of the great joys of traveling through Italy is discovering firsthand that it is, indeed, a dream destination.


One of the great joys of traveling through Italy is discovering firsthand that it is, indeed, a dream destination.

#personalnonsense #Portofino

Monday, 16 October 2017

I like a good story and I also like staring at the sea...do I have to choose between the two?


I like a good story and I also like staring at the sea...do I have to choose between the two?

#personalnonsense #Italy

Thursday, 12 October 2017

Complicated structure...but inspiring.


Complicated structure...but inspiring.

#personalnonsense #stillLife

Monday, 9 October 2017

Spheregasm


Spheregasm
What is mind but motion in the intellectual sphere?

work by bigblueboo
http://bigblueboo.tumblr.com/

#math #animation #sphere #coding #processing

Sunday, 8 October 2017

The Veins in Your Brain Don’t All Act the Same


The Veins in Your Brain Don’t All Act the Same
Certain blood vessels in the brainstem constrict when blood vessels elsewhere in the body would dilate. And that contrary behavior is what keeps us breathing, according to a new paper by UConn researchers published May 8 in the journal eLife.

If the body were a marching band, the brainstem would be the drum major. It keeps our heart beating and our lungs breathing in the essential rhythms of life. And just like a drum major, the job is more complex than it looks. If cellular waste products build up in the body, the brainstem has to jolt the lungs into action without disrupting other bodily functions, as surely as a drum major reins in a wayward woodwind section without losing the low brass.

Neuroscientists studying the brainstem have focused on neurons, which are brain cells that send signals to one another and all over the body. But focusing just on the neurons in the brainstem is like staring only at the drum major’s hands. Recently, neuroscientists have come to understand that astrocytes, cells once thought to simply provide structure to the brain, also release signaling molecules that regulate neurons’ function. But until now, no one even considered the possibility that blood vessels may be similarly specialized.

For more than a century, doctors and scientists have known that blood vessels dilate when cellular waste products like carbon dioxide build up. Widening the vessels allows fresh blood to flush through, carrying in oxygen and washing away the acidic carbon dioxide. This has been shown to be true throughout the body, and is standard dogma in undergraduate physiology classes.

UConn physiologist Dan Mulkey was teaching exactly that to undergraduates one day when he realized that it couldn’t possibly be true in a certain part of the brainstem.

“I thought, wow. If that happened in the region of the brain I study, it would be counterproductive,” Mulkey says. He studies the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN), a small region in the brainstem that controls breathing. He’s shown in the past that RTN neurons respond to rising levels of carbon dioxide in the bloodstream by stimulating the lungs to breathe. But if the blood vessels in the RTN dilated in response to rising carbon dioxide the same way blood vessels do everywhere else, it would wash out that all-important signal, preventing cells in the RTN from doing their job driving us to breathe. It would be as if the drum major didn’t notice the percussion section wandering off to left field.

When Mulkey returned to the lab, he asked his team, including NIH postdoctoral fellow Virginia Hawkins, to see how blood vessels in thin slices of brainstem respond to carbon dioxide. And they saw it was indeed true – RTN blood vessels constricted when carbon dioxide levels rose. But blood vessels from slices of cortex (the wrinkled top part of the brain) dilated in response to high carbon dioxide, just like the rest of the body.

But how did the blood vessels know to act differently in the RTN? Mulkey guessed that RTN astrocytes had something to do with it. He suspected that the astrocytes were releasing adenosine triphosphate (ATP), a small molecule cells can use to signal one another. And that was causing the RTN blood vessels to constrict.

When they tested it, they found the hypothesis was correct. The astrocytes in the RTN were behaving differently than astrocytes anywhere else in the body. When these brainstem astrocytes detected high levels of carbon dioxide, they released ATP signaling to the neurons and blood vessels.

Source & further reading:
http://today.uconn.edu/2017/05/veins-brain-dont-act/

Paper:
https://elifesciences.org/articles/25232

Photo:
A blood vessel in the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN). Endothelial cells lining the vessel are purple, red blood cells are red, and neurons are green. Astrocytes are not identified in this image, but would be among the greyed background cells.
Credit: Dan Mulkey/UConn

#astrocytes #brainstem #bloodvessels #retrotrapezoidnucleus #breathing #neuroscience

Unusual Mountain Ahuna Mons on Asteroid Ceres


Unusual Mountain Ahuna Mons on Asteroid Ceres
What created this unusual mountain? Ahuna Mons is the largest mountain on the largest known asteroid in our Solar System, Ceres, which orbits our Sun in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Ahuna Mons, though, is like nothing that humanity has ever seen before. For one thing, its slopes are garnished not with old craters but young vertical streaks. One hypothesis holds that Ahuna Mons is an ice volcano that formed shortly after a large impact on the opposite side of the dwarf planet loosened up the terrain through focused seismic waves.

The bright steaks may be high in reflective salt, and therefore similar to other recently surfaced material such as visible in Ceres' famous bright spots. The featured double-height digital image was constructed from surface maps taken of Ceres last year by the robotic Dawn mission.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: Dawn Mission, NASA, JPL-Caltech, UCLA, MPS/DLR/IDA

#NASA #space #universe #science #Ceres

Thursday, 5 October 2017

What's in a year?


What's in a year?
#infographic via NASA

#space #NASA #astronomy #untolduniverse

You’re Not Too Old to Learn That


You’re Not Too Old to Learn That
One day, our brains will not work the way they used to, we won’t be as “sharp” as we once were, we won’t be able to remember things as easily.

This is what’s been engrained in us. We’re even led to believe that we can’t learn new skills, or take in certain information such as language, past a certain age.

But, a new theory holds that it doesn’t have to be that way. In fact, as adults, if we continue to learn the way we did as children, UCR psychology professor Rachel Wu asserts, we can redefine what it means to be an “aging” adult.

Wu has published “A Novel Theoretical Life Course Framework for Triggering Cognitive Development Across the Lifespan,” in the journal Human Development. In the paper, she redefines healthy cognitive aging as a result of learning strategies and habits that are developed throughout our life. These habits can either encourage or discourage cognitive development.

“We argue that across your lifespan, you go from ‘broad learning’ (learning many skills as an infant or child) to ‘specialized learning,’ (becoming an expert in a specific area) when you begin working, and that leads to cognitive decline initially in some unfamiliar situations, and eventually in both familiar and unfamiliar situations,” Wu said.

Read the paper:
https://www.karger.com/Article/Abstract/458720

Source:
https://ucrtoday.ucr.edu/45473

Image:
Wu took up painting seven years ago. At first, she was told she was terrible (painting on left). But, after years of practicing and taking courses, she was told she was talented (painting on the right).

#neuroscience #cognitivefunction #aging #learning

Global Aurora at Mars


Global Aurora at Mars
A strong solar event last month triggered intense global aurora at Mars. Before (left) and during (right) the solar storm, these projections show the sudden increase in ultraviolet emission from martian aurora, more than 25 times brighter than auroral emission previously detected by the orbiting MAVEN spacecraft.

With a sunlit crescent toward the right, data from MAVEN's ultraviolet imaging spectrograph is projected in purple hues on the night side of Mars globes simulated to match the observation dates and times. On Mars, solar storms can result in planet-wide aurora because, unlike Earth, the Red Planet isn't protected by a strong global magnetic field that can funnel energetic charged particles toward the poles.

For all those on the planet's surface during the solar storm, dangerous radiation levels were double any previously measured by the Curiosity rover. MAVEN is studying whether Mars lost its atmosphere due to its lack of a global magnetic field.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit: MAVEN, LASP, University of Colorado, NASA

#space #nasa #universe #science #mars #MAVEN

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

A Hummingbird's Shining Armor


A Hummingbird's Shining Armor
This beautiful close-up footage of a perched male Anna's hummingbird showing off its iridescent head and "gorget" was filmed by Vimeo user Don DesJardin in California.

When a perched male Hummingbird raises its head toward the sun at just the right angle, its throat glitters like a crimson spotlight. When it turns its head slightly, the bird’s throat no longer gleams. It appears colorless, dark.

A hummingbird’s brilliant throat feathers are called its “gorget” (pronounced gor-jit). The term comes from days of old, when a knight-in-armor wore a metallic collar or gorget to protect his throat. The hummingbird’s intense glint is the result of iridescence, rather than colored pigments. The bird’s throat feathers contain minutely thin, film-like layers of “platelets,” set like tiles in a mosaic against a darker background. Light waves reflect and refract off the mosaic, creating color in the manner of sun glinting off oily film on water.

Watch the video:
https://vimeo.com/3331560

Info source:
http://www.audubon.org/news/a-hummingbirds-shining-armor

#biodiversity #coolcritters #hummingbird #gorget #science

The Soul Nebula in Infrared from Herschel


The Soul Nebula in Infrared from Herschel
Stars are forming in the Soul of the Queen of Aethopia. More specifically, a large star forming region called the Soul Nebula can be found in the direction of the constellation Cassiopeia, who Greek mythology credits as the vain wife of a King who long ago ruled lands surrounding the upper Nile river.

The Soul Nebula houses several open clusters of stars, a large radio source known as W5, and huge evacuated bubbles formed by the winds of young massive stars. Located about 6,500 light years away, the Soul Nebula spans about 100 light years and is usually imaged next to its celestial neighbor the Heart Nebula (IC 1805). The featured image, impressively detailed, was taken last month in several bands of infrared light by the orbiting Herschel Space Observatory.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & License: ESA, Herschel Space Obs., NASA, JPL-Caltech

#nasa #soulnebula #universe #space #ESA

Soap films have the remarkable property of self-healing.


Soap films have the remarkable property of self-healing. A water drop, like the one shown below, can pass through a bubble (repeatedly!) without popping it. This happens thanks to surfactants and the Marangoni effect.

Surfactants are molecules that lower the surface tension of a liquid and congregate along the outermost layer of a soap film. When water breaks through the soap film, its lack of surfactants causes a higher surface tension locally. This triggers the Marangoni effect, in which flow moves from areas of low surface tension toward ones of high surface tension.

That carries surfactants to the region where the drop broke through and helps stabilize and heal the soap film. Incidentally, the same process lets you stick your finger into a bubble without popping it as long as your hand is wet!

What is Marangoni Effect? Read & Learn: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/marangoni.html

What are surfactants? Read & Learn:
http://www.essentialchemicalindustry.org/materials-and-applications/surfactants.html

Image credit: G. Mitchell and P. Taylor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0h16Tyn2138

Story via FYFD
https://twitter.com/fyfluiddynamics

#physics #MarangoniEffect #surfactants #soapfilms #fluidDynamics #science

Jeffrey C.


Jeffrey C. Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W. Young are the joint winners of the 2017 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine winning for their discoveries about how internal clocks and biological rhythms govern human life.
"Using fruit flies as a model organism, this year's Nobel laureates isolated a gene that controls the normal daily biological rhythm. They showed that this gene encodes a protein that accumulates in the cell during the night, and is then degraded during the day. Subsequently, they identified additional protein components of this machinery, exposing the mechanism governing the self-sustaining clockwork inside the cell. We now recognize that biological clocks function by the same principles in cells of other multicellular organisms, including humans.

"With exquisite precision, our inner clock adapts our physiology to the dramatically different phases of the day. The clock regulates critical functions such as behavior, hormone levels, sleep, body temperature and metabolism."

Article:
http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2017/10/02/554993385/nobel-prize-in-medicine-is-awarded-to-3-americans-for-work-on-circadian-rhythm

https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2017/press.html

#nobelprize2017 #medicine #internalclock

Parkinson’s disease in a dish: Researchers reproduce brain oscillations that characterize the disease


Parkinson’s disease in a dish: Researchers reproduce brain oscillations that characterize the disease
Abnormal oscillations in neurons that control movement, which likely cause the tremors that characterize Parkinson’s disease, have long been reported in patients with the disease. Now, University at Buffalo researchers working with stem cells report that they have reproduced these oscillations in a petri dish, paving the way for much faster ways to screen for new treatments or even a cure for Parkinson’s disease.

The paper is published online in Cell Reports.

“With this new finding, we can now generate in a dish the neuronal misfiring that is similar to what occurs in the brain of a Parkinson’s patient,” said Jian Feng, PhD, senior author on the paper and professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB. “A variety of studies and drug discovery efforts can be implemented on these human neurons to speed up the discovery of a cure for Parkinson’s disease.”

The work provides a useful platform for better understanding the molecular mechanisms at work in the disease, he added.

Source & further reading:
http://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2017/05/002.html

Journal article:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28467897

Image via UCSB (University of California Santa Barbara)

#parkinson'sdisease #dopamine #oscillations #dopaminergicneurons #neuroscience

Sunday, 1 October 2017

What are red sprites?


What are red sprites?
Red sprites are thought to be caused by a rare but intense form of lightning called positive lightning. Whereas most cloud-to-ground lightning has a negative electric charge, positive lightning has a positive charge. It makes up less than 5 percent of lightning, but it packs a punch that's up to 10 times stronger than negative lightning.

That flash of lightning is so strong that it breaks apart molecules in the atmosphere into ions, forming a cold plasma cloud that can be tens of miles across.

The sprites' red color likely comes from those ions smashing into molecules in the air. Similar to the aurora, the charged particles excite nitrogen, hydrogen, and oxygen. The gases eventually settle down and release that energy, some of it in the form of pretty colors.

This photo shows red sprites dancing above a thunderstorm located over southeastern Germany. It was taken just before midnight on August 18, 2017, when the storm was approximately 315 miles (507 km) away from Low Tatras, Slovakia. Red sprites are mysterious forms of lightning that sometimes appear in the upper atmosphere above energetic thunderstorms. Their pinkish-red flashes can only be detected at night (usually only with high-speed cameras) and seem to be linked to particularly strong cloud-to-ground lightning bolts (positive strikes).

More info:
https://www.popsci.com/what-red-sprite#page-3

Photo Source:
http://epod.usra.edu/blog/2017/09/red-sprites-observed-from-slovakia.html
Photographer: Ondrej Králik

#naturalphenomena #redsprites

A single genetic change around 2013 gave Zika the ability to cause severe fetal microcephaly


A single genetic change around 2013 gave Zika the ability to cause severe fetal microcephaly

Read the research:
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/early/2017/09/27/science.aam7120.full

#research #ZIKV #viruses #health #medicine #science

Two Comets and a Star Cluster


Two Comets and a Star Cluster
Two unusual spots are on the move near the famous Pleiades star cluster. Shifting only a small amount per night, these spots are actually comets in our nearby Solar System that by chance wandered into the field of the light-years distant stars. On the far left is comet C/2017 O1 ASAS-SN, a multi-kilometer block of evaporating ice sporting a bright coma of surrounding gas dominated by green-glowing carbon.

Comet ASAS-SN1 shows a slight tail to its lower right. Near the frame center is comet C/2015 ER61 PanSTARRS, also a giant block of evaporating ice, but sporting a rather long tail to its right. On the upper right is the Pleiades, an open cluster dominated by bright blue stars illuminating nearby reflecting dust. This exposure, taken about two weeks ago, is so deep that the filamentary interstellar dust can be traced across the entire field. The Pleiades is visible to the unaided eye, but it should require binoculars to see the comets.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Damian Peach
http://www.damianpeach.com/

#space #NASA #comet #science #universe