Tag Archives: science

Total Solar Eclipse on Sunday – 07-11-10

PART ONE… http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-eclipse-20100710,0,127538.story?track… http://stereo.gsfc.nasa.gov/img/total_lg.gif Total solar eclipse fans chase a moment in the sun They travel thousands of miles to catch the celestial intersection of sun and moon, which some describe as a spiritual high. On Sunday, it happens again. By Amina Khan, Los Angeles Times July 10, 2010 When the moon blots out the sun's blinding rays on Sunday, a sliver of the Earth's surface will be plunged into eerie darkness. Travelers who have crossed thousands of miles to witness the celestial show will gaze at the sky and, for a few minutes, see a thing most people never get to see: a halo of fire — the sun's corona — flickering around the edges of the silhouette of the moon. But Jay Pasachoff, over on Easter Island, may be looking down more than up — calibrating his instruments, checking for technical glitches, peering through lenses. He doesn't need to look up. He's seen 28 total eclipses, and 50 eclipses in all. Get important science news and discoveries delivered to your inbox with our Science & Environment newsletter. Sign up

HIV Vaccine AIDS Cure Antibody

The major breakthrough in the science and medical history has been achieved as the American scientists found two key proteins that could neutralize 91 percent of the virus' 190 strains which might potentially result in developing a vaccine for HIV. added by: f4schennai

Science and the Spill

Hello Currenters! The Science Group is dedicating this month to the BP spill; all featured stories will be about the oil and other contaminants that continue to spew into the Gulf, what scientists predict, what they are learning and what efforts are being considered and implemented to stop it. These particular stories are less about political opinions and more about facts and the ecological ramifications of the spill. If you have stories like this, please post them into the Science Group ( http://current.com/science/ ) and EthicalVegan's new group, BP Catastrophe ( http://current.com/groups/bp-catastrophe/ ) Here are a few examples of the stories we have right now: Just the Facts: Livescience takes a look at the most common questions related to the spill, ( http://bit.ly/9C7gk2 ), NYTimes tracks the spill with interactive maps ( http://bit.ly/cShkGz ) and EthicalVegan has an ongoing collection of photos from the area ( http://bit.ly/a2ds28 ) Pollution vs Pollution: Oil isn't the only thing in that water! Scientific American discusses dispertants ( http://bit.ly/9sbGkR ) JanforGore has a video about Corexit ( http://bit.ly/drn5OT ) and the Gulf Coast's Dead Zone is set to grow this year, with the spill being only ONE of the pollutants involved! ( http://bit.ly/clZyWn ) The Ecosystem: Microbes just love methane, and scientists have been awarded grants to study the impact all the oil and methane will have on the microbial population, which effects oxygen levels ( http://bit.ly/bOA1jE ) Birds are getting a helping hand from the US Gov ( http://bit.ly/cJohJH ) and studies are being conducted specifically on the impact on the Whale population ( http://bit.ly/dhJuHU ). So come on by and check out some science, join the group and post some stories! I will try to update the group daily with a wide array of scientific information and studies. Thanks, hope this is helpful and interesting! added by: DeliaTheArtist

Monsanto Roundup – We don’t want a sterile world edition

Much is happening in the world of GMOs and biotech food and this is the latest Monsanto Roundup from the Sustainable Agriculture Group on Current that keeps you in the loop about it, because it is that important to our biodiversity and health. In this Roundup: 1: “Monsanto claims patent on animals fed GMOS” (Greed run amok) 2: “Unintended changes in GM rice and maize disprove “substantial equivalence” (you can run from the science but you can't hide) 3: Haitian farmers burn Monsanto seeds (finally a reason to dance) 4: USSC ruling on Monsanto vs. Gertsen Seed (GE alfalfa) (walking the GMO tightrope) 5: Dennis Kucinich introduces Genetically Engineered Food Right To Know Act (proving that there are at least some members of Congress who understand the constitution and the laws of nature) That and a couple other items and a little commentary to inform you about what multinationals are doing to control your seed and food.This is not science fiction folks, this is your life. . added by: JanforGore

Let Them Drink Starbucks! Mika Brzezinski Wants a Ban on All Sugary Sodas

It’s pretty well documented MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski likes to brag about her workout routine and showcase its effects on her physique . And perhaps for that reason, Brzezinski believes that entitles her to pass judgment on what consumers should put into their bodies. On MSNBC’s July 6 “Morning Joe,” Brzezinski boasted about San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom’s vending machine soda ban that took effect today . But Brzezinski wanted to take it a step further – not to just ban them in city vending machines, but just stop people from drinking soda altogether. “And in San Francisco, a ban on sugary drinks in city vending machines is starting to take effect,” Brzezinski said. “That’s so great. It was issued by Mayor Gavin Newsom, my new hero, Mike Barnicle — in an effort to combat obesity and improve citizen’s health, and it will. In fact, if people would just not drink soda pop, they would be healthier and less fat.” Perhaps Brzezinski missed irony of making this statement during her show, “Morning Joe brewed by Starbucks Coffee .” Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX ) is regularly under attack from food police group the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) . In 2002, CSPI accused the coffee of giant of “pouring food porn.” “We need to stop producing things like this,” Brzezinski declared. Brzezinski also revealed her other anti-junk food sentiments, but said ultimately getting “rid of soda pop” would be suit her. “I don’t like birthday cake,” Brzezinski said. “It’s fattening. And no cupcakes either in schools. No, just get rid of soda pop. That would make me happy. We don’t need it.”

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Let Them Drink Starbucks! Mika Brzezinski Wants a Ban on All Sugary Sodas

Which Natural Beauty Ingredients are Backed By Serious Science?

Image credit: Good.is Aloe vera, green tea, shea butter, and tea tree oil: All common ingredients in all-natural beauty regimens. But are these things really effective? Is there any science to back up the claims? Good has a quick guide to the science behind naturals…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Which Natural Beauty Ingredients are Backed By Serious Science?

Obama’s New Space Policy Includes Cleaning Up Space Junk

Image credit NASA, via Popular Science Announced earlier this week, President Obama’s new National Space Policy is focusing on pollution both here on Earth and the space surrounding it. The new policy hopes to see an international collaboration to hone in on monitoring climate change with satellites and cleaning up space debris, which is viewed as a threat to space exploration (to which

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Obama’s New Space Policy Includes Cleaning Up Space Junk

Programmable Matter Takes Shape with Self-Folding Origami Sheets

June 28, 2010 | 1 comments Shifty Science: Programmable Matter Takes Shape with Self-Folding Origami Sheets A prototype sheet that folds itself into two different shapes may lead to objects that can assume any number of forms on command By John Matson Self-folding robotic sheet SHAPE-SHIFTER: The segmented sheet created by researchers at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology can fold itself into a boat or an airplane shape in a matter or seconds. The Harvard Microrobotics Lab Researchers at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) have invented a real-life Transformer, a device that can fold itself into two shapes on command. The system is hardly ready to do battle with the Decepticons—the tiny contraption forms only relatively crude boat and airplane shapes—but the concept could one day produce chameleonlike objects that shift between any number of practical shapes at will. Self-folding sheets are just one facet of programmable matter, the attempt to build structures that can shape-shift on demand. The idea, says study co-author Daniela Rus, a roboticist at M.I.T., is bringing materials and machines closer together to make everyday objects that can be programmed, much like people program a computer. “Instead of programming bits and bytes,” she says, “you program mechanical properties of the object.” The system, described in a paper published online this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, consists of a thin sheet of resin–fiberglass composite, just a few centimeters across, segmented into 32 triangular panels separated by flexible silicone joints. Some of the joints have heat-sensitive actuators that bend 180 degrees when warmed by an electric current, folding the sheet over at that joint. Depending on the program used, the sheet will conduct a series of folds to yield the boat or airplane shape in about 15 seconds. The folding-sheet approach is an extension of the field of computational origami, the mathematical study of how flat objects can be folded into complex, three-dimensional structures. Although the design presented in the new paper takes only two shapes, the researchers say that in principle the system could produce many more. “We were looking for ways to embed a bunch of different functionalities into one low-profile sheet,” says study co-author Robert Wood, an electrical engineer at Harvard University's Microrobotics Laboratory. “In the longer run we'd like to develop systems to bring this not to just three, four or five shapes but to a much greater scope of different achievable shapes.” Given a set of desired three-dimensional shapes, the group's algorithms determine how to fold the sheet to produce each of the final shapes and then how to accommodate those different folding sequences on a shared sheet. Another algorithm optimizes the sheet for its desired purpose, limiting the number of embedded actuators needed to produce the final shapes. On the airplane–boat prototype sheet, for instance, only half the joints have actuators. The researchers note that although the algorithms produce a workable folding pattern to make a given shape, human experts are often able to design a more efficient scheme. “It doesn't know how to get creative, and sometimes human origamists can see a few moves ahead, like a chess player,” Rus says. “You see patterns that are not obvious to a computer program that does a step-by-step process.” In the near term Rus envisions the computational origami technology forming the basis of three-dimensional display systems—for instance, maps that can reproduce the topography of a given region on demand. “You can imagine making machines that have the ability to give you three-dimensional views of the objects they render,” she says. In the more distant future programmable matter applications might move beyond mere shape mimicry to involve programmable optical, electric or acoustic properties. Video courtesy of the Harvard Microrobotics Lab added by: EthicalVegan

Above Average Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone Forecast by NOAA Scientists

File image of Gulf areas affected by hypoxia, NOAA No, it has nothing directly to do with the BP oil spill, but it won’t help things… Scientists supported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have just announced that the northern Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone–that’s the Gulf Dead Zone to you and me, where there’s so little oxygen that it doesn’t really support life–is likely to be of above average size this summer, though it won’t set a new re… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Above Average Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone Forecast by NOAA Scientists

The Secret to Biodiversity is in the Soil

Image: Photoshop Top Secret , via Flickr Mankind has long been fascinated by biodiversity, even imagining species beyond the natural realm. We have learned to appreciate the value of biodiversity by enjoying the variety in nature, and by benefiting from products derived from many different species. But did you ever wonder why there is so much diversity on our planet? If “survival of the fittest” is the r… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Secret to Biodiversity is in the Soil