Tuesday, April 28, 2009

World's Largest Model Rocket Launch Is Blazing Success

At nearly four stories tall, the world's largest model rocket was only a tenth the size of a real rocket. But the craft's April 25 launch in Price, Maryland, was no small feat.

A replica of a NASA Saturn V rocket, the massive model broke the world record for the tallest and heaviest model rocket that's ever been launched and recovered—36 feet (11 meters) and 1,648 pounds (750 kilograms), respectively.

After soaring to 4,441 feet (1,354 meters), the machine broke into several parts, as planned, and deployed parachutes before landing about a half mile (0.8 kilometer) from the launchpad, amid loud clapping from spectators.

The model's designer, Ohio auto-body specialist Steve Eves, is a child of the space race—"something that's stuck in my mind all these years," he said.

But Eves, 51, didn't get into high-power rocketry until the early 1990s. And when he did, he had no inkling how big his pet project would get, he said.

The giant model and Saturday's launch—attended by about 5,000 spectators—cost U.S. $30,000, much of it covered by donations.

Eves planned the project as a tribute to the upcoming 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission, the first manned trip to the moon, which launched on July 16, 1969.

During 13 NASA missions in the 1960s and '70s, the original Saturn V rockets—still the most powerful in history—never failed. In Eves's eyes, that makes the Saturn V class "the greatest rocket that mankind has ever built."

Remembering seeing a Saturn V in person, Eves said: "Until you stood at the base of one those rockets, [you can't] imagine the courage it took" for people to take them into space. "It's mind-boggling."

Courtesy: NGC

Fatty Foods May Boost Memory

Feeling forgetful? Munch on a fatty snack.

A hormone released during the digestion of certain fats triggers long-term memory formation in rats, a new study says.

Researchers found that administering a compound produced in the small intestine called oleoylethanolamide (OEA) to rats improved memory retention during two different tasks.

When cell receptors activated by OEA were blocked, the animals' performance decreased.

Though the study involved rats, OEA's effects should be similar in other animals, including humans, said study team member Daniele Piomelli, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Irvine.

Follow the Fat

The team suspects OEA's memory-enhancing activity likely evolved to help animals remember where and when they ate a fatty meal, so they could return to that spot later.

Fats are crucial for a variety of biological functions and structures. While the modern human diet is now rich in fats, such foods are actually rare in nature.

"It makes sense that nature evolved a system for strengthening memories associated with the places and context where fats are gathered," Piomelli told National Geographic News.

While Piomelli doesn't recommend that people binge on fast food to improve memory, his team's findings could explain why kids who eat breakfast and mid-morning snacks generally perform better in school.

"Studies show that it's not because they learn better, but because they remember better," Piomelli said.

In the future, scientists could use OEA or OEA-like compounds as medicines to boost memory or treat diseases that affect memory.

"One idea would be to [use drugs] to activate the same receptor that OEA activates, or perhaps give nutrition that produces enough OEA to cause the same [memory] effect," Piomelli said.

The research is detailed this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

First 3-D Pictures of Solar Explosions Created

 
 
Ionized helium rises from the sun on September 29, 2008, in an image from the STEREO stereo spacecraft.

Other STEREO pictures are being used to create the first 3-D images of solar storms, NASA said in April 2009. The 3-D images should help shorten warning times for harmful space weather headed for Earth.
 

Twin satellites have captured the first 3-D pictures of solar storms, NASA announced today.

The new technology will allow for earlier warnings about solar storms that can disrupt GPS signals and power grids, damage satellites, and bombard astronauts with solar radiation, experts said.

The new data come from the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO), a pair of spacecraft deployed in fall 2006. Not unlike human eyes, the satellites' two points of view allow for combination images that render scenes in three dimensions.

So far, the STEREO siblings have imaged solar storms, aka coronal mass ejections, aka CMEs. (See solar storm pictures from the STEREO craft.)

"Before this unique mission, measurements and the subsequent data of a CME observed near the sun had to wait until the ejections arrived at Earth, three to seven days later," said Angelos Vourlidas, a solar physicist at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington and a STEREO project scientist, in a statement.

"Now we can see a CME from the time it leaves the solar surface until it reaches Earth, and we can reconstruct the event in 3-D directly from the images," added Vourlidas, who presented the new findings during a teleconference with other mission scientists. Their work will be published in an upcoming special issue of the journal Solar Physics.


Image courtesy NGC, NASA

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

EXXON VALDEZ PHOTOS: 20 Years On, Spilled Oil Remains

David Janka of the conservation group WWF shows off an oil-stained glove after reaching into a hole on Eleanor Island in Alaska's Prince William Sound on February 6, 2009.
 

Two decades after the worst oil spill in U.S. history, huge quantities of oil still coat
Alaska's shores with a toxic glaze, experts said in March 2009. (Read the story.)

Of the 11 million gallons of crude oil that bled from the stranded tanker on the night of March 23, 1989, more than 21,000 remain, tucked into isolated coves and underneath the sand.

"The damage that [the spill] created is something beyond anyone's imagination," said Michel Boufadel, Temple Universitys Civil and Environmental Engineering chair, who has just completed research on why the oil has persisted.
 
A mixture of oil and water oozes into a roughly 10-inch-deep (25-centimeter-deep) hole dug into a beach on Alaska's Eleanor Island in Prince William Sound on February 6, 2009.

An intensive clean-up effort after the Exxon Valdez disaster ended in 1994, when oil was naturally disintegrating at a high rate. Experts wrongly predicted the oil would be gone within a few years.

Instead, the natural breakdown of the oil has slowed, mostly due to the oil-coated beaches' isolation from regular water flow, experts said in March 2009. Water both sloughs off bits of oil and replenishes nutrients for oil-eating bacteria, experts say.
Crews use high-pressured hoses to blast oil-covered rocks on Naked Island, Alaska, on April 21, 1989, about a month after the Exxon Valdez tanker ran aground.

An 11,000-person crew removed much of the oil from the beaches until 1994, when government officials decided to end the clean-up effort.

But that decision was made too soon, as huge quantities of oil still remain, experts said in March 2009.

 
Courtesy: NGC
 
More >> Wiki

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Microsoft IE8 Released

 
Having finished its latest browser, Microsoft on Thursday kicked off its campaign to get consumers to actually start using it. 
Its available:

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Google Talk Worm Origin Found?


googletalklogo105-2.jpg"Hey check out this video! http://tinyurl.com/xyz,"; says an old friend by Google Talk IM. Well sure, you think, I'd love to see a video from you - it's been a long time! Maybe you got an IM like that this afternoon, too. Maybe you got six.

There's nothing wrong with clicking on such a link, but when the site that loads as a result, Viddyho.com, asks for your Google Talk username and password in order to view the video - then you should know that trouble is afoot. Surprisingly, a whole lot of tech savvy people fell for it today. Update: The Harvard Crimson says it has unearthed the person responsible for the Viddyho worm.

Daniel Carroll reported tonight on the Harvard Crimson newspaper's site that he did a little tracing backwards, further than other reporters on the story had, and found that a San Franciscan named Hoan Ton-That appears to be responsible for the site that was harvesting the user credentials of worm victims. Ton-That's web hosting account has been suspended, Carroll reports that he's learned from the company. The alleged author of the worm didn't respond to his requests for comment but has a twitter account here and apparently was in this author's home town of Portland, Oregon just last week. (We were not plotting the attack together, I swear.) Ton-That's Twitter bio reads: "Anarcho-Transexual Afro-Chicano American Feminist Studies Major" - which sounds like either an immature joke or a pretty bad ass bio to us.

The Tech Issues

We do think there are some big issues to discuss here, too, though.

The fact that many otherwise tech savvy people are falling for this trap shows that legitimate experiments in user authentication (like OpenID) still have a whole lot of explaining to do and secure APIs need more adoption. This could just as easily have been Facebook or Twitter that hijacked your Google Talk account - we give them our passwords and just trust that they won't.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Satellite Collision Creates Dangerous Debris

 
The satellite collision that destroyed two U.S. and Russian orbiters on January 10, 2009, added more than 500 bits of debris to the roughly 18,000 pieces of known space junk orbiting Earth (shown in an artist's conception).

The collision occurred about 491 miles (790 kilometers) over Siberia, putting most of the debris well above the path of the
International Space Station, which circles about 220 miles (354 kilometers) above the Earth. Although it will take a few days to get a complete picture of the debris field, NASA officials calculate that the crash would have thrown only a very small number of objects in the space station's direction.

"There are actually debris from this event which we believe are going through the space station's altitude already," NASA's Nicholas Johnson told CBS News, but the risk to the station is very small.
 
Courtesy: NGC