Moon Dust Could Give Astronauts Permanent DNA Damage, Study finds

Moon Dust Could Give Astronauts Permanent DNA Damage, Study finds

Moon dust could give astronauts permanent DNA damage, study finds

Moon dust clings to clothing and poses serious health risks to astronauts, a new study finds. Credit: NASA

More Posts from Redplanet44 and Others

7 years ago

A big grab for humanity

February 17, 2010 – Astronaut Nicholas Patrick Works A 5-hour, 48-minute Shift Outside The International
February 17, 2010 – Astronaut Nicholas Patrick Works A 5-hour, 48-minute Shift Outside The International
February 17, 2010 – Astronaut Nicholas Patrick Works A 5-hour, 48-minute Shift Outside The International
February 17, 2010 – Astronaut Nicholas Patrick Works A 5-hour, 48-minute Shift Outside The International
February 17, 2010 – Astronaut Nicholas Patrick Works A 5-hour, 48-minute Shift Outside The International

February 17, 2010 – Astronaut Nicholas Patrick works a 5-hour, 48-minute shift outside the International Space Station. Hang on!

(NASA)

7 years ago
Smart Ink Adds New Dimensions To 3-D Printing

Smart ink adds new dimensions to 3-D printing

Researchers at Dartmouth College have developed a smart ink that turns 3D-printed structures into objects that can change shape and color. The innovation promises to add even more functionality to 3D printing and could pave the way to a new generation of printed material.

The advancement in the area of form-changing intelligent printing - also known as 4D printing - provides a low-cost alternative to printing precision parts for uses in areas ranging from biomedicine to the energy industry.

“This technique gives life to 3D-printed objects,” said Chenfeng Ke, an assistant professor of chemistry at Dartmouth. “While many 3D-printed structures are just shapes that don’t reflect the molecular properties of the material, these inks bring functional molecules to the 3D printing world. We can now print smart objects for a variety of uses.”

Many 3D printing protocols rely on photo-curing resins and result in hard plastic objects with rigid, but random molecular architectures. The new process allows designers to retain specific molecular alignments and functions in a material and converts those structures for use in 3D printing.

Read more.

7 years ago

Tyson fights like Tyson with words

8.28.17
8.28.17
8.28.17
8.28.17
8.28.17

8.28.17

7 years ago

Do 5s often develop complexes about being fuckups or incompetent over small things, like not understanding something they weren't taught, or being forgetful, etc (I ask because I believe I have adhd and am a 5 core, and some of the difficulties from the disorder have given me a complex, which is one of the main reasons I typed myself as a 5, along with my really annoying tendency to need to show off my intelligence)

Yes, but it also sounds like you have a strong 3 fix. 5s hate this on a gut level because they can’t keep up their self image as completely competent and intelligent. 3s hate this because others see them failing at a task and 3s have trouble contextualizing that everyone fails at stuff and no one really cares. 

Plus “annoying tendency to show off my intelligence” is the hallmark of 3+5

6 years ago

Types as Ya Boy Bill Nye quotes

ESFJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ESFP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ESTJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ESTP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ENFJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ENFP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ENTJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ENTP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ISFJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ISFP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ISTJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

ISTP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

INFJ:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

INFP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

INTJ: 

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes

INTP:

Types As Ya Boy Bill Nye Quotes
7 years ago
Rocket Into Sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s A Pristine Day In West
Rocket Into Sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s A Pristine Day In West
Rocket Into Sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s A Pristine Day In West
Rocket Into Sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s A Pristine Day In West
Rocket Into Sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s A Pristine Day In West

Rocket into sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s a pristine day in west Texas. The desert stretches far to the horizon out the capsule’s windows with the foothills of the Van Horn mountain range in the distance. The typical winter day is broken first by a deep rumble from below  followed an instant later by clouds of smoke and a flash of flame. That’s the scene inside Blue Origin’s New Shepard crew capsule during launch as seen in new footage from this week’s test. Mannequin Skywalker - the company’s astronaut simulator - is seen rocketing to over 322,000 feet, or 61 miles, strapped in one of the cabin’s six seats.

Rocket Into Sub-orbit on Blue Origin’s New Shepard! (December 15, 2017) It’s A Pristine Day In West

Within seconds, the receding countryside below gives way to vast swaths of desert. The sky turns from thick and blue to pitch black in a matter of seconds as the vehicle races upwards. New Shepard would reach a maximum ascent velocity of Mach 2.94 during the flight.  As the single BE-3 engine of the propulsion stage cuts out, the cabin becomes weightless as indicated by straps on the dummy’s chest. Hundreds of miles of the Earth below spread out in all directions from the cabin’s six panoramic windows. Measuring 2.4 by 3.6 feet, they’re the largest ever flown on a space vehicle. Weightless conditions and breathtaking views continue as the capsule begins its descent to Earth. It’s like the launch but in reverse; the black of space quickly fills with colour as the atmosphere is reentered. Because New Shepard is a suborbital vehicle and doesn’t boost the capsule fast enough to achieve significant atmospheric friction, there is no flaming meteor-in-the-sky or heat shield on the spacecraft. It simply falls through the sky, racing to meet the Earth below which it only just left. Back in the thicker atmosphere, three drogue parachutes help stabilize the cabin before the larger main canopies are unfurled. These help bring the capsule to a safe, soft landing at just one foot per second a few kilometers from the launch pad. According to Blue Origin’s founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos, the pinging heard inside the capsule in the video was due to one of the 12 experiments carried on board Mission 7. This was the first New Shepard flight granted a commercial launch license by the FAA, allowing them to carry commercial research payloads on the flight. Other flight milestones can also be discerned by the subtle audio and visual clues, such as MECO, stage separation, drogue cute deployment and mail parachute deployment. Read our full story on Mission 7 and the resumption of New Shepard testing by clicking here.

Check out the full video with audio by clicking here or below.

P/C: Blue Origin.

7 years ago

GMO does NOT mean Generally Mean Organizations.

Why We Need GMOs to Survive Climate Change
Why We Need GMOs to Survive Climate Change
Why We Need GMOs to Survive Climate Change
Why We Need GMOs to Survive Climate Change

Why we need GMOs to survive climate change

Genetically modified organisms get a bad rap for many reasons, but we’ve actually been genetically altering what we eat since the dawn of human history.

“For 10,000 years, we have altered the genetic makeup of our crops,”explains UC Davis plant pathology professor Pamela Ronald.

“Today virtually everything we eat is produced from seeds that we have genetically altered in one way or another.” (You can read more about Ronald’s thoughts on genetically engineered food here.)

Right now her focus is on rice. It’s one of our basic crops and without it, we would struggle to feed much of the world.

With climate change, we’re seeing an increase in flooding in places like India and Bangladesh, which makes it harder to grow this important food staple.

So Ronald and her lab have developed a flood-tolerant strain of rice. It’s known as Sub1a or “scuba rice” and millions of farmers in South Asia are now growing it in their fields. 

Why We Need GMOs to Survive Climate Change

Today is National Food Day, a day dedicated to hunger awareness. But as we focus on food insecurity, we need to talk more about how global warming will make the problem worse.

As our climate continues to heat up, it has huge impacts on what foods we are able to grow. Will our crops be able to survive droughts and floods? The University of California leads six labs that are working to develop other climate-resilient crops including chickpea, cowpea and millet.

Find out what other scientists are doing to improve our food.

6 years ago

““One of the holy grails of biomaterials research has been working out a way to get skin to grow onto and attach to metals and plastics without the risk of infection. It looks like this design and technique may have solved the problem,” says Dr Stynes, who is researching his PhD at the University of Melbourne. “It could pave the way for fully implantable robotics, prosthetics, catheters, intravenous lines, and the reconstruction of surgical defects with artificial materials.” Professor Richard Page, Director of Orthopaedics and the Centre of Orthopaedic Research and Education at Barwon Health and Deakin University, said the ability of the scaffold to make the skin think it was growing on other skin is potentially a major finding.”

— Breaking the Skin Barrier Can Lead to Breakthroughs in Robotics to Human Interface

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    redplanet44 reblogged this · 6 years ago
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