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Posts Tagged ‘Science’

NASA Engineer Shows YouTube “Best of the Best” Shuttle Videos

11 Dec


Matt Melis, a longtime NASA engineer, has take to the ‘Tube to show off what he calls “the best of the best” imagery from shuttle launches, including high-definition video

Melis has been in the launch analysis game for quite some time. His 45-minute tribute to space shuttle launches is incredibly educational and a fascinating watch for fans of space programs.

You’ll get to hear NASA engineers explain every imaginable detail of a shuttle launch as footage from the ground and from the shuttles themselves show what goes into the first phase of a successful space mission. You’ll get to see launches for STS-114, STS-117, and STS-124 missions.

In short, if you’re really into space stuff, this YouTube video is the director’s commentary of your dreams.

“Photographic documentation of a space shuttle launch plays a critical role in the engineering analysis and evaluation process that takes place during each and every mission,” Melis writes on the YouTube video page.

“Motion and still images enable shuttle engineers to visually identify off-nominal events and conditions requiring corrective action to ensure mission safety and success… Rendered in the highest definition possible, this production is a tribute to the dozens of men and women of the shuttle imaging team and the 30 years of achievement of the Space Shuttle Program.”

Melis has been at the Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, for many years. He was part of the ballistics team that analyzed the Columbia launch accident, for example.

Here’s the full video. Let us know what you think in the comments.


Reviews: YouTube

More About: NASA, Science, shuttle launch, space, space shuttle, trending, youtube

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Science for the masses

09 Dec

Observational science is hard. And it seems to be getting harder. Nowadays, when you want to analyze the latest and greatest data set, it could consist of finding a minute-long evolving oscillatory gravitational-wave signal buried in months and mountains of noise. Or it could consist of picking out that one Higgs event among 600 million events. Per second. Or it could consist of looking for tiny correlations in the images of tens of millions of galaxies.

The interesting effects are subtle, and it’s easy to fool oneself in the data analysis. How can we be sure we’re doing things right? One popular method is to fake ourselves out. A group gets together and creates a fake data set (keeping the underlying parameters secret), and then independent groups can analyze the data to their heart’s content. Once the analysis groups publicly announce their results, the “true” parameters underlying the data can be revealed, and the analysis techniques can be directly evaluated. There is a correct result. You either get it or you don’t. You’re either right or wrong.

dark matter from gravitational lensing This approach has been developed for particle physics and gravitational waves and all sorts of other data sets. The latest version of this is the GREAT10 data challenge, for weak gravitational lensing data analysis. As we’ve discussed before (here, here, here), gravitational lensing is one of the most powerful tools in cosmology (Joanne Cohn has a brief introduction, with lots of links). In short: the gravity from intervening matter bends the light coming from distant objects. This causes the images of distant objects to change in brightness, and to be bent (”shear” is the preferred term of art). By looking at the correlated effects on (literally) millions of distant galaxies, it is possible to infer the intervening matter distribution. What is particularly powerful about gravitational lensing is that it is sensitive to everything in the Universe. There are no prejudices: the lensing object can be dark or luminous, it can be a black hole or a cluster of galaxies or something we haven’t even thought of yet. As long as the object in question interacts via gravity, it will leave an imprint on images of distant sources of light.

Measuring the Universe with gravitational lensing would be simple if only all galaxies were perfectly round, and the atmosphere wasn’t there, and telescopes were perfect. Sadly, that’s not the situation we’re in. We’re looking for an additional percent-level squashing of a galaxy that is already intrinsically squashed at the 30% level. The only way to see this is to notice correlations among many, many galaxies, so you can average away the intrinsic effects. (And there might be intrinsic correlations in the shapes of adjacent galaxies, which is a pernicious source of systematic noise.) And if some combination of the telescope and the atmosphere produces a blurring (so that stars, for example, don’t appear perfectly spherical), this could easily make you think you have tons of dark matter where there isn’t any. How do you know you’re doing it right? You produce a fake sky, with as many of the complications of the real sky as possible. Then you ask other people to separate out the effects of the atmosphere and the telescope (encapsulated in the point spread function) and the effects of dark matter (via gravitational lensing). The GREAT10 team has done exactly this (see discussions here, here, here). They have released a bunch of images to the public. They know exactly what has gone into making the images. Your task is to figure out the PSF and the gravitational lensing in the image. Everyone is welcome to give it a shot! The images, and lots of explanatory documentation, are available here. The group that does the best job of finding the dark matter gets a free trip to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. And, most importantly, an iPad. What more incentive could you want? Start working on your gravitational-lensing algorithms!

This is truly science by the masses, for the masses.

 
 

Giant storks lived among the ancient "hobbit" people of Indonesia [Monsters Among Us]

08 Dec
The ancient species of "hobbit people" called Homo florensiensis may have shared their Indonesian island with giant 6-foot-tall cranes. Their antagonistic relationships with these bird monsters may have made it into ancient art, too. More »
 
 

Bacteria evolve a way to share electrons

04 Dec

Life is powered by the shuffling of electrons. When organisms break down a food source like a sugar, they're really extracting high-energy electrons, which they shuffle down through intermediate proteins before they end up in a final electron acceptor. For most of the life we're familiar with, that acceptor is oxygen. But for various microbes that thrive in the absence of oxygen, a variety of other chemicals are used.

A few bacteria don't even use a chemical receptor at all, instead transferring their excess electrons to metals in their environment (these can form the basis of microbial fuel cells). Now, researchers have witnessed the evolution of a bacteria that transfers its electrons to another bacteria, which goes on to put them to further use.

There are a number of symbiotic relationships like this among the microbes, some of which can metabolize an organic molecule, while others can transfer them to a low-energy chemical. Typically, the bugs exchange an organic chemical or hydrogen to a symbiotic bacteria that extracts further energy from it.

In the current paper, the authors forced two different species of bacteria to live in an anaerobic environment, and provided them with ethanol as food. Initially, they grew very poorly. After several transfers, however, the rate of growth improved, and small, colored nodules began to appear in the culture, which contained a mix of the two types of bacteria. The authors checked a number of the chemicals that are typically used to transfer electrons in these symbiotic cultures, but saw no evidence of their being used.

To figure out what was going on, they did whole-genome sequencing, and found only one change: a single base missing in the gene for a protein that regulates RNA production. Making a similar mutation in another strain also allowed those bacteria to form quick-growing nodules. The mutation appears to cause proteins involved in electron transfer to be expressed at increased levels. These proteins end up on pilli, arm-like structures that extend out from the bacteria.

As a result, the authors conclude that one of the two species of bacteria has evolved the ability to transfer electrons directly to their neighboring species, allowing both to get more energy out of the limited food available.

Science, 2010. DOI: 10.1126/science.1196526  (About DOIs).

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NASA reveals arsenic-bred organisms, search for life gets broader parameters

02 Dec
If you were hoping NASA was going to announce the very first tweet from an extraterrestrial being, sorry to break your heart -- it is astrobiological, but the findings are actually borne of this rock. Researchers in Mono Lake, California, have discovered a microorganism (pictured) that uses arsenic instead of phosphorous to thrive and reproduce. The latter, as far as terrestrial life is concerned, is a building block of life along with carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur, all integral to our DNA and RNA. Arsenic, meanwhile, is generally considered poisonous -- but "chemically it behaves similarly to phosphate," apparently making for a good substitution. In other words, NASA's proven that life can be made with components different than our current assumptions, both locally and beyond the stars. Seems entirely logical, if you ask us. (A silicon-based Horta, Mr. Spock?)

So, what about other atypical life-forming chemicals? NASA isn't speculating. That sound you hear is a thousand light bulbs popping up as science fiction writers everywhere conjure up brand new super villains -- and a thousand Chemistry professors writing new extra credit questions for their fall semester finals.

NASA reveals arsenic-bred organisms, search for life gets broader parameters originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Dec 2010 14:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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An interactive history of American space travel

01 Dec
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I absolutely love this. Spacelog.org is taking the radio transcripts from NASA missions, pairing them with great graphic design, and making the whole thing searchable and linkable. The result: An delightfully immersive perspective on history.

They've got transcripts finished for Apollo 13 and John Glenn's Mercury 6. But more are on the way, and Spacelog could use your help adding to and improving the site.



 
 

Self-affirming essay boosts coeds’ physics skills

29 Nov

For many years, there has been a persistent achievement gap between the performance of males and females in math and the sciences. It has become increasingly apparent, however, that the problem is cultural. The math gap seems to vanish in countries with higher degrees of gender equality, while females exposed to the stereotypical expectation that they'd do worse in a subject tended to live down to these low expectations. These findings, however, don't provide clear guidance as to how to address the problem: if females have already been exposed to these stereotypes, how do you get them to ignore them and perform up to their abilities? The answer, it appears, may be as simple as a short essay.

A study in last week's Science describes a program at the University of Colorado, focused on helping to narrow the achievement gap in an introduction to physics class targeted to science majors. In past years, research had found that a strong background and preparation could account for over half the gender difference in test scores, but that still leaves other, substantial factors to explain the discrepancies.

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Saturn’s moon Rhea may have a breathable atmosphere [Future Space Colony]

25 Nov
Saturn's icy moon Rhea has an oxygen and carbon dioxide atmosphere that is very similar to Earth's. Even better, the carbon dioxide suggests there's life - and that possibly humans could breathe the air. More »
 
 

Stronger-Than-Diamonds Graphene Can Be Made From Sugar [Graphene]

17 Nov
It's been discovered that you create the very same substance those Ruskis won the Nobel prize for out of household sugar. Borrow a cup from your neighbour, and get baking the world's hardest substance. No, not your Mom's scones. Graphene. More »


 
 

We’re Running Out of Chocolate [Chocolate]

09 Nov
At the rate we're going, chocolate is going to be a rare—and extremely pricey—commodity within the next twenty years. Somebody needs to light a fire under those Oompa-Loompas, stat. More »