Sunday, 31 December 2017

Sun Halo over Sweden


Sun Halo over Sweden
What's happened to the Sun? Sometimes it looks like the Sun is being viewed through a giant lens. In the gif, however, there are actually millions of tiny lenses: ice crystals. Water may freeze in the atmosphere into small, flat, six-sided, ice crystals. As these crystals flutter to the ground, much time is spent with their faces flat and parallel to the ground.

An observer may find themselves in the same plane as many of the falling ice crystals near sunrise or sunset. During this alignment, each crystal can act like a miniature lens, refracting sunlight into our view and creating phenomena like parhelia, the technical term for sundogs.

Visible in the center is the most direct image of the Sun, while two bright sundogs glow prominently from both the left and the right. Also visible is the bright 22 degree halo -- as well as the rarer and much fainter 46 degree halo -- also created by sunlight reflecting off of atmospheric ice crystals.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=12&v=6c0wTtq4xDM
Video Credit & Copyright: Håkan Hammar (Vemdalen Ski Resort, SkiStar)

#naturalphenomena #sundogs #sunhalo

Friday, 29 December 2017

Sad is something I can deal with when I’m aware of its source.


Sad is something I can deal with when I’m aware of its source. When I’m able to take time out to develop a solution and work my way back to a healthier state of mind. It’s the not knowing that kills me. That vague air of unhappiness you cannot understand, escape or destroy.
~B.Taplin

#wordsof wisdom #thesombreair

High-tech heart gel


High-tech heart gel
Because adult heart cells have almost no capacity for replication, muscle damage caused by a heart attack is largely irreparable, causing life-long heart weakness. Certain microRNAs – small, gene-regulatory molecules – have been shown to encourage heart cell replication and improve heart function in mice.

But because RNAs degrade rapidly after injection, repeated treatments are necessary for them to be effective. To sustain microRNA activity for longer, scientists have now engineered a novel microRNA-containing hydrogel (a mix of polymers and water) that acts like a liquid as it passes through the syringe needle, but returns to a firm gel state once injected into the heart.

As such, the microRNAs are stuck in place, protected by the gel and are released slowly as the gel degrades. Indeed, a single injection has been show to sustain heart cell replication (red dots) in mice for two weeks and improve heart function within a month.

Journal article:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41551-017-0157-y

Source & further reading:
https://news.upenn.edu/news/penn-researchers-develop-injectable-gel-helps-heart-muscle-regenerate-after-heart-attack

Story via BPoD

Image: Cardiomyocytes, green, proliferating in a mouse heart after gel injection.
Image credit: Leo L. Wang and colleagues. Department of Bioengineering.
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

#research #heartgel #heartfunction #bioengineering #medicine

Symmetrical eyes indicates dyslexia


Symmetrical eyes indicates dyslexia
Scientists have found that dyslexics have an unusual pattern of cells in their eyes which makes letters appear back to front.

The proposed cause of dyslexia has mainly focused on the brain.
But scientists have discovered that in those with the condition the central area of the retina may have developed in a way that makes letters difficult to read.

In a study, the researchers found dyslexics had light detecting cells – called cones – arranged in a circular way in both of their retinas.

In people with ‘normal’ reading ability, this circular arrangement is only found in the dominant eye. The less dominant eye had an oval arrangement – which leads to a slightly less good image.

During vision, the brain has to ‘knit together’ the two images – each of which goes to a separate side of the brain. For non-dyslexics, the brain grants priority to the dominant eye for the scene – with the other eye playing a less important role.

In the complex task of visually making sense of the world, the brain generates mirror images of what we see, as well as those the right way round.

But in a dyslexic, both eyes were found to have a symmetrical, circular pattern. This means each eye battles for dominance – causing confusion in the brain and leading to some letters such as ‘b’ and ‘d’ becoming confused.

Journal article:
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/284/1865/20171380

Article:
https://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/50676/title/Symmetrical-Eyes-Indicate-Dyslexia/
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4990992/Is-answer-dyslexia-eyes.html

#neuroscience #dyslexia #research #health

Wednesday, 27 December 2017

Bilingual babies: Study shows how exposure to a foreign language ignites infants’ learning


Bilingual babies: Study shows how exposure to a foreign language ignites infants’ learning
For years, scientists and parents alike have touted the benefits of introducing babies to two languages: Bilingual experience has been shown to improve cognitive abilities, especially problem-solving.

And for infants raised in households where two languages are spoken, that bilingual learning happens almost effortlessly. But how can babies in monolingual households develop such skills?

“As researchers studying early language development, we often hear from parents who are eager to provide their child with an opportunity to learn another language, but can’t afford a nanny from a foreign country and don’t speak a foreign language themselves,” said Naja Ferjan Ramirez, a research scientist at the University of Washington Institute of Learning & Brain Sciences (I-LABS).

A new study by I-LABS researchers, published July 17 in Mind, Brain, and Education, is among the first to investigate how babies can learn a second language outside of the home. The researchers sought to answer a fundamental question: Can babies be taught a second language if they don’t get foreign language exposure at home, and if so, what kind of foreign language exposure, and how much, is needed to spark that learning?

The researchers took their query all the way to Europe, developing a play-based, intensive, English-language method and curriculum and implementing it in four public infant-education centers in Madrid, Spain. Sixteen UW undergraduates and recent graduates served as tutors for the study, undergoing two weeks of training at I-LABS to learn the teaching method and curriculum before traveling to Spain. The country’s extensive public education system enabled the researchers to enroll 280 infants and children from families of varying income levels.

Based on years of I-LABS research on infant brain and language development, the method emphasizes social interaction, play, and high quality and quantity of language from the teachers. The approach uses “infant-directed speech” — often called “parentese” — the speech style parents use to talk to their babies, which has simpler grammar, higher and exaggerated pitch, and drawn-out vowels.

“Our research shows that parentese helps babies learn language,” Ferjan Ramirez said.

Babies aged 7 to 33.5 months were given one hour of English sessions a day for 18 weeks, while a control group received the Madrid schools’ standard bilingual program. Both groups of children were tested in Spanish and English at the start and end of the 18 weeks. The children also wore special vests outfitted with lightweight recorders that recorded their English learning. The recordings were analyzed to determine how many English words and phrases each child spoke.

The children who received the UW method showed rapid increases in English comprehension and production, and significantly outperformed the control group peers at all ages on all tests of English. By the end of the 18-week program, the children in the UW program produced an average of 74 English words or phrases per child, per hour; children in the control group produced 13 English words or phrases per child, per hour.

Ferjan Ramirez said the findings show that even babies from monolingual homes can develop bilingual abilities at this early age.

“With the right science-based approach that combines the features known to grow children’s language, it is possible to give very young children the opportunity to start learning a second language, with only one hour of play per day in an early education setting,” she said. “This has big implications for how we think about foreign-language learning.”

Follow-up testing 18 weeks later showed the children had retained what they learned. The English gains were similar between children attending the two schools serving predominantly low-income neighborhoods and the two serving mid-income areas, suggesting that wealth was not a significant factor in the infants’ ability to learn a foreign language. Children’s native language (Spanish) continued to grow as they were learning English, and was not negatively affected by introducing a second language.

“Science indicates that babies’ brains are the best learning machines ever created, and that infants’ learning is time-sensitive. Their brains will never be better at learning a second language than they are between 0 and 3 years of age,” said co-author Patricia Kuhl, co-director of I-LABS and a UW professor of speech and hearing sciences.

Source & further reading:
http://www.washington.edu/news/2017/07/17/bilingual-babies-study-shows-how-exposure-to-a-foreign-language-ignites-infants-learning/

Journal article:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mbe.12144/full

#languagedevelopment #bilingualism #learning #neuroscience

Recycling Cassiopeia A


Recycling Cassiopeia A
Massive stars in our Milky Way Galaxy live spectacular lives. Collapsing from vast cosmic clouds, their nuclear furnaces ignite and create heavy elements in their cores. After a few million years, the enriched material is blasted back into interstellar space where star formation can begin anew. The expanding debris cloud known as Cassiopeia A is an example of this final phase of the stellar life cycle.

Light from the explosion which created this supernova remnant would have been first seen in planet Earth's sky about 350 years ago, although it took that light about 11,000 years to reach us. This false-color Chandra X-ray Observatory image shows the still hot filaments and knots in the Cassiopeia A remnant.

High-energy emission from specific elements has been color coded, silicon in red, sulfur in yellow, calcium in green and iron in purple, to help astronomers explore the recycling of our galaxy's star stuff - Still expanding, the blast wave is seen as the blue outer ring. The sharp X-ray image, spans about 30 light-years at the estimated distance of Cassiopeia A. The bright speck near the center is a neutron star, the incredibly dense, collapsed remains of the massive stellar core.

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

Image Credit: NASA, CXC, SAO

#nasa #space #science #stars #Cassiopeia #exploration

December 27 is reserved to Johannes Kepler

December 27 is reserved to Johannes Kepler
Born Dec 27, 1571, the German mathematician & astronomer is best known for his three laws describing the motion of the planets. NASA's Kepler mission is named in his honor, tasked with searching for exoplanets in the Milky Way.

A List of Kepler's Firsts
=> First to correctly explain planetary motion, thereby, becoming founder of celestial mechanics and the first "natural laws" in the modern sense; being universal, verifiable, precise.

In his book Astronomia Pars Optica, for which he earned the title of founder of modern optics he was the:
=> First to investigate the formation of pictures with a pin hole camera;
=> First to explain the process of vision by refraction within the eye;
=> First to formulate eyeglass designing for nearsightedness and farsightedness;
=> First to explain the use of both eyes for depth perception.

In his book Dioptrice (a term coined by Kepler and still used today) he was the:
=> First to describe: real, virtual, upright and inverted images and magnification;
=> First to explain the principles of how a telescope works;
=> First to discover and describe the properties of total internal reflection.

In addition:
=> His book Stereometrica Doliorum formed the basis of integral calculus.
=> First to explain that the tides are caused by the Moon (Galileo reproved him for this).
=> Tried to use stellar parallax caused by the Earth's orbit to measure the distance to the stars; the same principle as depth perception. Today this branch of research is called astrometry.
=> First to suggest that the Sun rotates about its axis in Astronomia Nova
=> First to derive the birth year of Christ, that is now universally accepted.
=> First to derive logarithms purely based on mathematics, independent of Napier's tables published in 1614.
=> He coined the word "satellite" in his pamphlet Narratio de Observatis a se quatuor Iovis sattelitibus erronibus.

Bio:
https://www.nasa.gov/kepler/education/johannes

#history #science #KeplersLaws

Monday, 25 December 2017

One of the risks of being quiet is that other people can fill your silence with their own interpretation: You’re...


One of the risks of being quiet is that other people can fill your silence with their own interpretation: You’re bored. You’re depressed. You’re shy. You’re stuck up. You’re judgmental. When others can’t read us, they write their own story—not always one we choose or that’s true to who we are.
~Sophia Dembling
During these holidays remember to spare some time for you :)
Happy Holidays!

Work by bigblueboo
https://twitter.com/bigblueboo

#math #processing #holidays #introvert

Bacteria found in Alzheimer’s brains


Bacteria found in Alzheimer’s brains
Researchers in the UK have used DNA sequencing to examine bacteria in post-mortem brains from patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Their findings suggest increased bacterial populations and different proportions of specific bacteria in Alzheimer’s, compared with healthy brains. The findings may support evidence that bacterial infection and inflammation in the brain could contribute to Alzheimer’s disease.

Alzheimer’s disease is a neurodegenerative disease that results in cognitive decline, and eventually death. In the brain, the disease causes neurons to die and break down, and involves high levels of a peptide called amyloid and aggregations of a protein called tau. However, scientists are coming to appreciate that inflammation may also play a role.

“Alzheimer’s brains usually contain evidence of neuroinflammation, and researchers increasingly think that this could be a possible driver of the disease, by causing neurons in the brain to degenerate,” says David Emery, a researcher from the University of Bristol, and an author on the study, which was published in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience.

Journal article:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnagi.2017.00195/full

Source:
https://blog.frontiersin.org/2017/07/24/frontiers-in-aging-neuroscience-bacteria-found-in-alzheimers-brains/

#neuroscience #alzheimers #research #bacteria #health #medicine

Saturday, 23 December 2017

What's new, Atlas?


What's new, Atlas?
Atlas' control system coordinates motions of the arms, torso and legs to achieve whole-body mobile manipulation, greatly expanding its reach and workspace. Atlas' ability to balance while performing tasks allows it to work in a large volume while occupying only a small footprint.

The Atlas hardware takes advantage of 3D printing to save weight and space, resulting in a remarkable compact robot with high strength-to-weight ratio and a dramatically large workspace. Stereo vision, range sensing and other sensors give Atlas the ability to manipulate objects in its environment and to travel on rough terrain. Atlas keeps its balance when jostled or pushed and can get up if it tips over.

Know more:
https://www.bostondynamics.com/

Watch:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRj34o4hN4I

#robos #Atlas #science #scitech #innovation

IRIDIUM - 4 MISSION


IRIDIUM - 4 MISSION
On Friday, December 22nd at 5:27 p.m. PST, SpaceX's Falcon 9 successfully lifted off from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, carrying the Iridium-4 mission to orbit. This was the fourth set of 10 satellites in a series of 75 total satellites that SpaceX will launch for Iridium’s next generation global satellite constellation, Iridium® NEXT.

More on the mission:
http://www.spacex.com/sites/spacex/files/iridium4presskit.pdf

Watch IRIDIUM 4 Webcast
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1332&v=wtdjCwo6d3Q

#space #IRIDIUM #Falcon9 #science #universe

What's essential for a happy Xmaths? A very merry equation, of course!😉😁🤗


What's essential for a happy Xmaths? A very merry equation, of course!😉😁🤗

#xmaths #science

Friday, 22 December 2017

How neurons sense our everyday life


How neurons sense our everyday life
Researchers from King’s College London have discovered a molecular mechanism that enables neuronal connections to change through experience, thus fueling learning and memory formation. The findings are published in the journal Neuron and have the potential to reveal new therapeutic strategies for neurological and psychiatric disorders.

One of the most remarkable features of our brain is its ability to sense and interpret the complex environment of everyday life. To accomplish this, brain circuits undergo a process that involves experience-dependent plasticity, a fundamental mechanism through which the nervous system adapts to sensory experience and which is at the root of our capacity to learn as well as encode and retain memories. As an example, all babies are born with the capacity to develop language but their ability to communicate verbally will depend on their exposure to language during the early stages of development.

Impairment of experience-dependent plasticity has been shown to be a feature of many neurological and psychiatric disorders including depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. As such, unravelling key molecular players in this form of plasticity may pave the way for new treatments.

Previous studies have shown that a special group of neurons present in the cerebral cortex called PV+ interneurons (a population of neurons that communicate with each other through deactivating chemical and electrical signals and express a protein called parvalbumin), are able to change in response to stimulus from the environment. However, until now the cellular and molecular mechanisms regulating this adaptability were largely unknown.

In their new study, the multidisciplinary team of researchers led by the Centre for Developmental Neurobiology (CDN) and MRC Centre for Neurodevelopmental Disorders (MRC CNDD) at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, found that this adaptability is shaped by a specific protein called Brevican. Moreover, loss of this protein leads to deficits in short-term spatial memory, the part of memory responsible for remembering different locations as well as spatial relations between objects.

Source:
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/ioppn/news/records/2017/07-July/How-neurons-sense-our-everyday-life.aspx

Journal article:
http://www.cell.com/neuron/fulltext/S0896-6273(17)30552-4

#interneurons #plasticity #parvalbumin #brevican #neuroscience #science

Sunday, 17 December 2017

It's #SunDay!


It's #SunDay!
This satellite view shows a prominence (a relatively cool cloud of solar material suspended above the Sun's surface by magnetic fields) arching up and sending solar material curling back into the Sun.

Prominences are cooler strands of plasma tethered above the sun's surface by magnetic forces. They are quite unstable and frequently fall apart within hours or days.

Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/864

#SunDay #sdo #NASA #space #science #prominences

Saturday, 16 December 2017

Brain Responds Differently to Food Rewards in Bulimia Nervosa


Brain Responds Differently to Food Rewards in Bulimia Nervosa
Findings could contribute to new treatment therapies targeting specific brain pathways

Researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have discovered differences in how the brain responds to food rewards in individuals with a history of bulimia nervosa (BN), an eating disorder characterized by frequent episodes of binge eating followed by efforts of purging to avoid weight gain. The findings further define specific brain mechanisms involved in eating disorders and could help lead to new treatment therapies.

Metabolic (hunger) and hedonic (reward) brain mechanisms both contribute to the regulation of eating. The findings, published July 10 in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, address the question of whether binge eating in BN results from disruption of one or both mechanisms, or is the product of their interaction.

“Our study suggests that adults with bulimia nervosa may have elevated reward-related brain activation in response to taste. This altered neural response may explain why these individuals tend to remain driven to eat even when not hungry,” said Alice V. Ely, PhD, principal author of the study in the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine.

Source & further reading:
https://health.ucsd.edu/news/releases/Pages/2017-07-10-brain-responds-differently-to-food-rewards-in-bulimia-nervosa.aspx

#neuroscience #eatingdisorders #bulimianervosa #research

Friday, 15 December 2017

Artificial Intelligence, NASA Data Used to Discover Eighth Planet Circling Distant Star


Artificial Intelligence, NASA Data Used to Discover Eighth Planet Circling Distant Star
Our solar system now is tied for most number of planets around a single star, with the recent discovery of an eighth planet circling Kepler-90, a Sun-like star 2,545 light-years from Earth. The planet was discovered in data from NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope.

The newly-discovered Kepler-90i – a sizzling hot, rocky planet that orbits its star once every 14.4 days – was found using machine learning from Google. Machine learning is an approach to artificial intelligence in which computers “learn.” In this case, computers learned to identify planets by finding in Kepler data instances where the telescope recorded signals from planets beyond our solar system, known as exoplanets.

Source & further reading:
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/artificial-intelligence-nasa-data-used-to-discover-eighth-planet-circling-distant-star

Image credit: NASA/Wendy Stenzel

#nasa #space #exploration #Kepler90i #googleAI

SpaceX Launches (and Lands) Used Rocket on Historic NASA Cargo Mission


SpaceX Launches (and Lands) Used Rocket on Historic NASA Cargo Mission
SpaceX launched and landed a used rocket Friday (Dec. 15), pulling off yet another spaceflight double play during a delivery mission for NASA that gets the company a big step closer to its goal of complete reusability.
SpaceX's two-stage Falcon 9 rocket lifted off Friday at 10:36 a.m. EST (1536 GMT) from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, sending the company's robotic Dragon capsule on a resupply run to the International Space Station (ISS) that just might include some Christmas presents for the station’s crew.

Source & further reading:
https://www.space.com/39063-spacex-launches-used-rocket-dragon-spacecraft-for-nasa.html

#NASA #ISS #SpaceX #Falcon9 #space #science

Tuesday, 12 December 2017

Christmas tree worms (Spirobranchus giganteus) are tube-building, segmented bristle worms that live in tropical...

Christmas tree worms (Spirobranchus giganteus) are tube-building, segmented bristle worms that live in tropical oceans. Each worm has two brightly colored crowns that protrude from its tube-like body. These Christmas tree-like crowns are composed of radioles, or hair-like appendages radiating from the worm’s central spine. These appendages are used for respiration and to catch dinner, which typically consists of microscopic plants, or phytoplankton, floating in the water.

These worms are sedentary, meaning that once they find a place they like, they don’t move much. In fact, while the colorful crowns of these worms are visible, most of their bodies are anchored in burrows that they bore into live coral. When startled, Christmas tree worms rapidly retract into their burrows, hiding from would-be predators.

Christmas tree worms come in a variety of bright colors. They aren’t very big, averaging about 1.5 inches in length. However, because of their distinctive shape, beauty, and color, these worms are easily spotted. They are some of the most widely recognized polycheates, or marine burrowing, segmented worms out there.

Source:
https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/xmas-tree.html

Photos:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/globalvoyager/
https://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/animals/blogs/welcome-to-the-magical-world-of-christmas-tree-worms
Wikipedia Commons

#biodiversity #christmastreeworms #marinecritters


Prominence Falls Apart


Prominence Falls Apart
A small prominence slowly rose further up above the sun, then fell apart and back into the sun over about seven hours (Dec. 6, 2017). Prominences, notoriously unstable, are cooler clouds of particles tethered not far above the sun by magnetic forces.

When it stretched out, its distance above the sun was several times the size of Earth. Images were taken in a wavelength of extreme ultraviolet light. These images are colorized since we cannot "see" ultraviolet light. In this case, a yellow tone was used instead of the normal red tint we use for this 304 Angstrom wavelength.

Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/862

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

Menstruation doesn't change how your brain works -- period


Menstruation doesn't change how your brain works -- period
A study published in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience is setting out to change the way we think about the menstrual cycle. While it’s often been assumed that anyone who’s menstruating isn’t working at top mental pitch, Professor Brigitte Leeners and her team of researchers have found evidence to suggest that that’s not the case.

They examined three aspects of cognition across two menstrual cycles, and found that the levels of oestrogen, progesterone and testosterone in your system have no impact on your working memory, cognitive bias or ability to pay attention to two things at once. While some hormones were associated with changes across one cycle in some of the women taking part, these effects didn’t repeat in the following cycle. Overall, none of the hormones the team studied had any replicable, consistent effect on study participants’ cognition.

Professor Leeners, team lead, said: “As a specialist in reproductive medicine and a psychotherapist, I deal with many women who have the impression that the menstrual cycle influences their well-being and cognitive performance.” Wondering if this anecdotal evidence could be scientifically proven - and questioning the methodology of many existing studies on the subject - the team set out to shed some light on this controversial topic.

The study uses a much larger sample than usual, and (unlike most similar studies) follows women across two consecutive menstrual cycles. The team, working from the Medical School Hannover and University Hospital Zürich, recruited 68 women to undergo detailed monitoring to investigate changes in three selected cognitive processes at different stages in the menstrual cycle. While analysis of the results from the first cycle suggested that cognitive bias and attention were affected, these results weren’t replicated in the second cycle. The team looked for differences in performance between individuals and changes in individuals’ performance over time, and found none.

Professor Leeners said, “The hormonal changes related to the menstrual cycle do not show any association with cognitive performance. Although there might be individual exceptions, women’s cognitive performance is in general not disturbed by hormonal changes occurring with the menstrual cycle.”

Professor Leeners cautions, however, that there’s more work to do. While this study represents a meaningful step forward, larger samples, bigger subsamples of women with hormone disorders, and further cognitive tests would provide a fuller picture of the way that the menstrual cycle affects the brain. In the meantime, Professor Leeners hopes her team’s work will start the long process of changing minds about menstruation.

Source:
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-07/f-mdc062717.php

Paper:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00120/full

#menstrualcycle #cognitivefunction #workingmemory #neuroscience #science

Monday, 11 December 2017

Highlights of the Winter Sky


Highlights of the Winter Sky
What's up in the sky this winter? The featured graphic gives a few highlights for Earth's northern hemisphere. Viewed as a clock face centered at the bottom, early winter sky events fan out toward the left, while late winter events are projected toward the right. Objects relatively close to Earth are illustrated, in general, as nearer to the cartoon figure with the telescope at the bottom center -- although almost everything pictured can be seen without a telescope.

Highlights of this winter's sky include the Geminids meteor shower peaking this week, the constellation of Orion becoming notable in the evening sky, and many planets being visible before sunrise in February. As true in every season, the International Space Station (ISS) can be sometimes be found drifting across your sky if you know just when and where to look.

Image & info via APOD
https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Illustration Credit & Copyright: Universe2go.com

#space #NASA #universe #science

Thursday, 7 December 2017

What If the Big Bang Wasn't the Beginning? New Study Proposes Alternative


What If the Big Bang Wasn't the Beginning? New Study Proposes Alternative
Was the universe created with a Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago, or has it been expanding and contracting for eternity? A new paper, inspired by alternative explanations of the physics of black holes, explores the latter possibility, and rejects a core tenant of the Big Bang hypothesis.

The universal origin story known as the Big Bang postulates that, 13.7 billion years ago, our universe emerged from a singularity — a point of infinite density and gravity — and that before this event, space and time did not exist (which means the Big Bang took place at no place and no time).

However, there is no direct evidence of the original singularity. (Collecting information from that first moment of expansion is impossible with current methods.) In the new paper, Brazilian physicist Juliano Cesar Silva Neves argues that the original singularity may never have existed.

Read the article:
https://www.space.com/38982-no-big-bang-bouncing-cosmology-theory.html
http://agencia.fapesp.br/before_the_big_bang/26684/

#physics #BigBang #science #blackhole #universe

December 7 is reserved to The Blue Marble


December 7 is reserved to The Blue Marble
This classic "Blue Marble" photograph of the Earth was taken 45 years ago today, on December 7, 1972, by the crew of Apollo 17.

Source:
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=1133

#history #NASA #BlueMarble #Earth #space

Slithering Prominence


Slithering Prominence
A prominence at the sun's edge shifted and slithered back and forth over a one-day period (Nov. 29-30, 2017). Prominences are strands of charged particles suspended above the sun's surface that are pulled and tugged by magnetic forces. This kind of close-up also shows the kind of dynamic activity taking place all over the sun's surface.

The bright area further down from the prominence is an active region, an area of intense tangles of magnetic forces. Towards the end of the clip, it blasts out a small stream of plasma (captured in the still). The images were taken in a wavelength of extreme ultraviolet light.

Credit: Solar Dynamics Observatory, NASA.
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/potw/item/860

#sun #universe #space #science #prominences

Wednesday, 6 December 2017

All the Eclipses of 2017


All the Eclipses of 2017
As seen from planet Earth, all the lunar and solar eclipses of 2017 are represented at the same scale in these four panels. The year's celestial shadow play was followed through four different countries by one adventurous eclipse chaser. To kick off the eclipse season, at top left February's Full Moon was captured from the Czech Republic.

Its subtle shading, a penumbral lunar eclipse, is due to Earth's lighter outer shadow. Later that month the New Moon at top right was surrounded by a ring of fire, recorded on film from Argentina near the midpoint of striking annular solar eclipse.

The August eclipse pairing below finds the Earth's dark umbral shadow in a partial eclipse from Germany at left, and the vibrant solar corona surrounding a totally eclipsed Sun from the western USA. If you're keeping score, the Saros numbers (eclipse cycles) for all the 2017 eclipses are at bottom left in each panel.

Image & info via: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Image Credit & Copyright: Petr Horálek

#science #NASA #eclipses2017 #universe #space

Cubic reinvention


Cubic reinvention

Work by bigblueboo
https://twitter.com/bigblueboo

#math #processing #cube

Saturday, 2 December 2017

The brain’s fight and flight responses to social threat


The brain’s fight and flight responses to social threat
A study published in eNeuro exploring the neural correlates of the ‘fight-or-flight’ response finds that people who choose to flee perceive a greater threat, which leads them to mentally and behaviorally disengage from the situation.

Macià Buades-Rotger and colleagues designed a Lord of the Rings-themed experiment in which 36 female participants competed as Frodo against two confederates playing as Sauron and Saruman in a reaction time task.

Participants could choose to avoid a limited number of encounters with their opponents by “putting the Ring on.” If they chose to stay and fight, they had to select the intensity of a sound blast (retaliation) that would be directed toward their opponent if the participant won the task by having a quicker reaction time. The task was set so that participants lost two-thirds of trials, and each opponent gave either high or low sound blasts.

The authors found that brain regions associated with thinking about the mental state of others were engaged when deciding to flee. However, when facing the highly provoking opponent, the “flight” response was associated with reduced activity in these regions and increased activity in the amygdala, indicating increased threat detection.

Journal article:
http://www.eneuro.org/content/4/3/ENEURO.0337-16.2017

Source & further reading:
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-06/sfn-tbf062117.php

Image: When avoiding the highly provoking opponent there was increased activity in the amygdala and reduced activation in brain regions typically recruited when thinking about others’ feelings and intentions. This pattern suggests that avoidance is associated with enhanced threat detection and reduced perspective-taking.
Credit: Macià Buades-Rotger

#amygdala #neuroimaging #orbitofrontalcortex #prefrontalcortex #socialbehavior #neuroscience

Because...of yellow prussiate of soda ;)


Because...of yellow prussiate of soda ;)

#personalnonsense #chemisphun

Jupiter Blues


Jupiter Blues
The Juno spacecraft captured this image when the spacecraft was only 11,747 miles (18,906 kilometers) from the tops of Jupiter’s clouds — that’s roughly as far as the distance between New York City and Perth, Australia. The color-enhanced image, which captures a cloud system in Jupiter’s northern hemisphere, was taken on Oct. 24, 2017 at 10:24 a.m. PDT (1:24 p.m. EDT) when Juno was at a latitude of 57.57 degrees (nearly three-fifths of the way from Jupiter’s equator to its north pole) and performing its ninth close flyby of the gas giant planet.

Source:
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/news/jupiter-blues
Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt/ Seán Doran

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

Mapping Particle Injections in Earth's Magnetosphere


Mapping Particle Injections in Earth's Magnetosphere
Scientists have been studying the near-Earth environment for the better part of a century, but many mysteries — like where the energetic particles that pervade the area originate and become energized — still remain. In a new type of collaborative study, scientists combined data from 16 separate NASA and Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) spacecraft to understand how a particle phenomenon in the magnetic environment around Earth occurs. These events, called substorms, can cause auroras, disrupt GPS communications and, at their most intense, damage power grids.

The scientists chose an event during a quiet period in the near-Earth space environment, which they assumed would provide a simple case that would be easy to model. What they found proved otherwise.

“Even for this small event, it’s tremendously complex,” said Drew Turner, research scientist at The Aerospace Corporation in El Segundo, California. “What this shows is we don’t yet have a good global picture for what’s happening during small substorms, let alone during the big whoppers.”

Data from each individual mission is only able to provide a snapshot of what the environment looks like at a specific place and a specific time. While this allows scientists to understand some space plasma phenomena in detail, it is difficult to get a comprehensive picture of where the particles came from and where they’re going. However, by combining datasets from spacecraft situated in locations spread around Earth, Turner and his team were able to address big-picture questions about particle movement.

“Each spacecraft plays a unique role,” Turner said. “As we move forward and continue shaping the future of magnetospheric physics, the global picture of substorms and other important phenomena will become clearer as more spacecraft are deployed using innovative orbital configurations and instrumentation.”

In addition to getting a view of how complicated the system can be, the results also helped the researchers learn about substorm structure.

“We often consider substorms to be the ‘building blocks’ of the solar wind and magnetosphere interaction — the fundamental element,” said David Sibeck, THEMIS project scientist and Van Allen Probes mission scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “That’s one reason why we study them.”

The researchers, using ground-based magnetometers, found a signature of what’s known as a substorm current wedge — one of the major features of a classic substorm. This result, combined with the spacecraft data, showed there is activity around Earth for more than an hour leading up to wedge formation, a process that has been hotly debated in the past. Their results have been published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.

Journal article:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2017JA024554/full

Source & further reading:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2017/all-missions-onboard-for-nasa-heliophysics-research

Animation: As particles are injected into the space around Earth, shown in various colors here, spacecraft orbiting the planet observe their signatures.

Credits: NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio

#NASA #space #science #substorm #magnetosphere

Thursday, 30 November 2017

What's a calorimeter?


What's a calorimeter?
Calorimeters measure the energy a particle loses as it passes through the detector. It is usually designed to stop entire or “absorb” most of the particles coming from a collision, forcing them to deposit all of their energy within the detector. Calorimeters typically consist of layers of “passive” or “absorbing” high-density material – for example, lead – interleaved with layers of an “active” medium such as solid lead-glass or liquid argon.

Electromagnetic calorimeters measure the energy of electrons and photons as they interact with matter. Hadronic calorimeters sample the energy of hadrons (particles that contain quarks, such as protons and neutrons) as they interact with atomic nuclei. Calorimeters can stop most known particles except muons and neutrinos.

The components of the ATLAS calorimetry system are: the Liquid Argon (LAr) Calorimeter and the Tile Hadronic Calorimeter.

Info:
https://atlas.cern/discover/detector/calorimeter

Photo: portion of the Atlas Electromagnetic Calorimeter, CERN- I've seen at Museo Nazionale Scienza e Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci in Milan.

#physics #calorimeter #Atlas #science #CERN

I like physics, but I love cartoons... or vice versa. :)


I like physics, but I love cartoons... or vice versa. :)

#personalnonsense #life #cartoon

What is secularism?


What is secularism?
Secularism is an increasingly hot topic in public, political, and religious debate across the globe. With discussions on secular schools, secular hospitals, and the move away from religion in modern society in the news, it’s important to know about secularism’s history and how it affects our lives.

Here are five facts about secularism:
1) The term was coined by George Holyoake in 1851. It originally denoted a system which sought to order and interpret life on principles taken solely from this world.

2) Some religious practices have been secularized and made so popular that the associations with religion are not always discussed. Yoga, meditation, and mindfulness are all promoted as secular programs despite their religious roots.

3) Usually secularism focuses on religion however it also demarcates the secular from other phenomena including superstition, the sacred, and the metaphysical.

4) Some perceive the religious decline of our modern world as religion’s role in society changing shape. More individualistic capitalist societies could just be changing the way we engage with belief systems, making them less recognizably religious.

5) Secularism is very different to atheism. A secular society is not necessarily a society in which there is little or no public manifestation of religious belief, it could in fact be the opposite. A secular society is simply one in which the state itself takes a neutral view with respect to religion, and protects the freedom of individuals to believe, or not to believe, to worship, or not to worship.

More on this topic:
http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780191816819.001.0001/acref-9780191816819-e-137

#secularism #history #thisthat

New Simple Test Could Help Cystic Fibrosis Patients Find Best Treatment


New Simple Test Could Help Cystic Fibrosis Patients Find Best Treatment
Researchers at the University of North Carolina have presented a simple test that aims to determine which treatment for cystic fibrosis (CF) will work best for a given patient.

The test uses nanospheroids, “fuzzy balls” that grow from cells taken from inside the noses of CF patients,as samples for drug testing.

“Any given drug may not be the drug that works best for a given patient, because there’s so much variation from person to person,” said Jennifer Guimbellot, MD, who conducted the research at UNC and is now assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

“We still have a long way to go to get a really optimized therapy for most cystic fibrosis patients, and the only way we can do that is to have a model like ours, where we can take cells from each individual patient and test them with each individual drug to find out which one is the best match.”

Source & further reading:
http://news.unchealthcare.org/news/2017/november/new-simple-test-could-help-cystic-fibrosis-patients-find-best-treatment

Image: These are nasospheroids that developed from a CF patient's nasal tissue in a dish. UNC researchers are using them to screen the effectiveness of CF treatments.

#research #medicine #cysticfibrosis #mucus #lungs #nanospheroids #treatment #CFTR #drugs #hydration #cells #rectal biopsy

Sun Magnetogram

Sun Magnetogram
There is currently a semi-circular quiescent filament suspended above the solar surface along the magnetic inversion line; between magnetic regions of opposite polarity. The magnetogram shows the surface distribution/polarity of the magnetic fields: the black areas are regions of ‘south’ magnetic polarity, and the white regions ‘north’ polarity.

The term magnetogram refers to a pictorial representation of the spatial variations in strength of the solar magnetic field. Magnetograms are often produced by exploiting the Zeeman effect (or, in some cases, the Hanle effect), which George Ellery Hale employed in the first demonstration that sunspots were magnetic in origin, in 1908.

References:
https://www.nasa.gov/content/goddard/sdo-hmi-magnetogram/
https://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/

#sun #NASA #magnetogram #science #space

November 30 is reserved to Jonathan Swift


November 30 is reserved to Jonathan Swift
It's Jonathan Swift's 350 B-day, how should we celebrate?
Eating babies, of course ;)

Jonathan Swift (30 November 1667 – 19 October 1745) was an Anglo-Irish satirist, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for the Whigs, then for the Tories), poet and cleric who became Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.

Swift is remembered for works such as A Tale of a Tub (1704), An Argument Against Abolishing Christianity (1712), Gulliver's Travels (1726), and A Modest Proposal (1729). He is regarded by the Encyclopædia Britannica as the foremost prose satirist in the English language, and is less well known for his poetry. He originally published all of his works under pseudonyms – such as Lemuel Gulliver, Isaac Bickerstaff, the Drapier – or anonymously. He was a master of two styles of satire, the Horatian and Juvenalian styles.

His deadpan, ironic writing style, particularly in A Modest Proposal, has led to such satire being subsequently termed "Swiftian".

Bio: https://www.britannica.com/biography/Jonathan-Swift
https://www.biography.com/people/jonathan-swift-9500342

#history #JonathanSwift

Tuesday, 28 November 2017

“Beyond the edge of the world there’s a space where emptiness and substance neatly overlap, where past and future...


“Beyond the edge of the world there’s a space where emptiness and substance neatly overlap, where past and future form a continuous, endless loop. And, hovering about, there are signs no one has ever read, chords no one has ever heard.”
~Kafka on the Shore

Work by bigblueboo

#math #animation #spirals #processing #coding

Acknowledge the power of your own self, you're an amazing creature and that alone should make you a confident driver...


Acknowledge the power of your own self, you're an amazing creature and that alone should make you a confident driver of your own life.

#wordsofwisdom #lickmythoughts

Neutron Stars Rip Each Other Apart to Form Black Hole


Neutron Stars Rip Each Other Apart to Form Black Hole
This supercomputer simulation shows one of the most violent events in the universe: a pair of neutron stars colliding, merging and forming a black hole.

A neutron star is the compressed core left behind when a star born with between eight and 30 times the sun's mass explodes as a supernova. Neutron stars pack about 1.5 times the mass of the sun — equivalent to about half a million Earths — into a ball just 12 miles (20 km) across.

As the simulation begins, we view an unequally matched pair of neutron stars weighing 1.4 and 1.7 solar masses. They are separated by only about 11 miles, slightly less distance than their own diameters. Redder colors show regions of progressively lower density.

As the stars spiral toward each other, intense tides begin to deform them, possibly cracking their crusts. Neutron stars possess incredible density, but their surfaces are comparatively thin, with densities about a million times greater than gold. Their interiors crush matter to a much greater degree densities rise by 100 million times in their centers. To begin to imagine such mind-boggling densities, consider that a cubic centimeter of neutron star matter outweighs Mount Everest.

By 7 milliseconds, tidal forces overwhelm and shatter the lesser star. Its superdense contents erupt into the system and curl a spiral arm of incredibly hot material. At 13 milliseconds, the more massive star has accumulated too much mass to support it against gravity and collapses, and a new black hole is born. The black hole's event horizon — its point of no return — is shown by the gray sphere. While most of the matter from both neutron stars will fall into the black hole, some of the less dense, faster moving matter manages to orbit around it, quickly forming a large and rapidly rotating torus. This torus extends for about 124 miles (200 km) and contains the equivalent of 1/5th the mass of our sun. The entire simulation covers only 20 milliseconds.

Watch & learn:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vw2sLcyV7Vc
Credit: NASA Goddard

#space #NASA #neutrons #blackhole #science

Sunday, 26 November 2017

Flies' disease-carrying potential may be greater than thought, researchers say


Flies' disease-carrying potential may be greater than thought, researchers say
In a study of the microbiomes of 116 houseflies and blowflies from three different continents, researchers found, in some cases, these flies carried hundreds of different species of bacteria, many of which are harmful to humans. Because flies often live close to humans, scientists have long suspected they played a role in carrying and spreading diseases, but this study, which was originally initiated at Penn State's Eberly College of Science, adds further proof, as well as insights into the extent of that threat.

"We believe that this may show a mechanism for pathogen transmission that has been overlooked by public health officials, and flies may contribute to the rapid transmission of pathogens in outbreak situations," said Donald Bryant, Ernest C. Pollard Professor of Biotechnology and professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, Penn State.

Source & further reading:
https://phys.org/news/2017-11-flies-disease-carrying-potential-greater-thought.html#jCp

Image: Researchers used a scan electron microscope to find where bacterial cells and particles attach to the fly body. The electron microscope captures an up close look at the head of a blowfly in this picture.
Credit: Ana Junqueira and Stephan Schuster

#research #bacteria #flies #health

Barophene shines alone as 2D plasmonic material


Barophene shines alone as 2D plasmonic material
An atom-thick film of boron could be the first pure two-dimensional material able to emit visible and near-infrared light by activating its plasmons, according to Rice University scientists.

That would make the material known as borophene a candidate for plasmonic and photonic devices like biomolecule sensors, waveguides, nanoscale light harvesters and nanoantennas.

Plasmons are collective excitations of electrons that flow across the surface of metals when triggered by an input of energy, like laser light. Significantly, delivering light to a plasmonic material in one color (determined by the light's frequency) can prompt the emission of light in another color.

Models by Rice theoretical physicist Boris Yakobson and his colleagues predict that borophene would be the first known 2-D material to do so naturally, without modification.


Source: https://phys.org/news/2017-11-borophene-d-plasmonic-material.html#jCp

#nanotech #plasmons #science #research #scitech

Saturday, 25 November 2017

How to find a star cluster


How to find a star cluster
In the latter years of the 18th century, astronomers William and Caroline Herschel began to count stars. William called the technique "star gauging" and his aim was to determine the shape of our Galaxy.

With this simple technique the Herschels produced the first shape estimate for the Galaxy. Fast-forward to the 21st century and now researchers use star counts to search for hidden star clusters and satellite galaxies. They look for regions where the density of stars rises higher than expected. These patches are called stellar over-densities.

It's the perfect meeting of old and new. Astronomers have combined recent data from ESA's Gaia mission with a simple analysis technique from the 18th century to discover a massive star cluster that had previously escaped detection. Subsequent investigations are helping to reveal the star-forming history of our Galaxy, the Milky Way.

Source & further reading:
http://sci.esa.int/gaia/59741-how-do-you-find-a-star-cluster-easy-simply-count-the-stars/

Video credit: ESA

#stars #galaxy #Gaia #space #research #universe #science #ESA

Parkinson’s Is Partly An Autoimmune Disease, Study Finds


Parkinson’s Is Partly An Autoimmune Disease, Study Finds
Researchers have found the first direct evidence that autoimmunity — in which the immune system attacks the body’s own tissues — plays a role in Parkinson’s disease, the neurodegenerative movement disorder. The findings raise the possibility that the death of neurons in Parkinson’s could be prevented by therapies that dampen the immune response.

The study, led by scientists at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) and the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, was published in Nature.

“The idea that a malfunctioning immune system contributes to Parkinson’s dates back almost 100 years,” said study co-leader David Sulzer, PhD, professor of neurobiology (in psychiatry, neurology, and pharmacology) at CUMC. “But until now, no one has been able to connect the dots. Our findings show that two fragments of alpha-synuclein, a protein that accumulates in the brain cells of people with Parkinson’s, can activate the T cells involved in autoimmune attacks.

“It remains to be seen whether the immune response to alpha-synuclein is an initial cause of Parkinson’s or if it contributes to neuronal death and worsening symptoms after the onset of the disease,” said study co-leader Alessandro Sette, Dr. Biol. Sci., professor in the Center for Infectious Disease at La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology in La Jolla, Calif. “These findings, however, could provide a much-needed diagnostic test for Parkinson’s disease and could help us to identify individuals at risk or in the early stages of the disease.”

Source and further reading:
http://newsroom.cumc.columbia.edu/blog/2017/06/21/parkinsons-is-partly-an-autoimmune-disease-study-finds/

Journal article:
http://www.nature.com/articles/nature22815

#neuroscience #Parkinson's #alphasynuclein #immunesystem #dopaminergicneurons

Friday, 24 November 2017

24 November is reserved to Charles Darwin


24 November is reserved to Charles Darwin
24 November 1859: Charles Darwin publishes ‘On the Origin of Species’
The publication of Darwin’s letters and reports from South America and the Galapagos islands established his reputation as a geologist of real standing. Among his most important findings was that the finches found on different islands were fundamentally similar in shape, but displayed variations in size and claws – the result, he theorized, of ‘natural selection’.

Read the book online:
http://darwin-online.org.uk/converted/pdf/1861_OriginNY_F382.pdf

Bio:
https://www.biography.com/people/charles-darwin-9266433

#history #evolution #CharlesDarwin

Colored X-ray of the arteries(red) of a human neck and shoulder


Colored X-ray of the arteries(red) of a human neck and shoulder
The bones (purple) are also seen on the X-ray, aiding identification of the arteries. The ribs of the chest are seen from the front. The head has been turned to one side to expose the right-hand side of the neck and its carotid arteries (internal and external). These bring oxygenated blood to the head.

The right arm has been raised to show how the subclavian artery passes under the collar bone (clavicle) and into the arm. The arteries carry oxygenated blood from the heart (not seen). The arteries have been highlighted by arteriography: injecting them with a radio-opaque medium to absorb the X-rays.

Credits: CNRI/Science Photo Library

#medicine #arteries #anatomy #humanbody #science