Page 1,040«..1020..1,0391,0401,0411,042..1,0501,060..»

Category Archives: Transhuman News

Shanel Campbell Debuts Femmewear Collection for Bed on Water – Papermag

Posted: March 16, 2021 at 2:42 am

In 2018, Shanel Campbell made a splashy debut during New York Fashion Week with a showcase that celebrated the depth and beauty of Black women. It was the Bronx native's first show since graduating from Parsons with an MFA a year prior, and since then her designs have been worn by the likes of Solange, Kelela and Issa Rae.

But Campbell's work goes beyond just fashion and its aesthetics. Her multi-disciplinary practice includes everything from photography to film, the latter of which she got to explore further for the film she debuted last fall as part of GucciFest's emerging artists programming.

This month, the designer debuted her second collection but first under her brand's new moniker Bed on Water, which encompasses art production and graphic design as well. Most of the party-ready looks glamorous fringe, sultry feathers, cutout dresses and pieces depicting $100 bills were shot on mannequins since she needed less people as possible on set due to the pandemic.

"This collection is much different from my last one," Campbell told PAPER over Zoom. "I was just trying to find my design identity more and what my personal interests were before I came out with this collection. In terms of the femmewear thing, I've been having a lot of moments where I'm unpacking my own gender and sexual identity. So I decided to call it femmewear instead of womenswear because clothing doesn't have gender."

This season was also about finding her own process as a designer. Being that her MFA program prioritized textiles as opposed to shapes and graphics, she felt there was a little bit of resistance to that process and that she had to find her own way of working post-grad. She also watched a lot of vintage documentaries and took screenshots of scenes she found compelling, eventually turning them into mood board.

"That's why I featured the mood board in the lookbook, because those types of things are things that I create personally that are moments that inspired the collection," she says. "Those mood boards are going to inform future things as well because it's content I don't think has been fully exasperated of all of its creative worth yet."

A lot of her influences come from the spiritual realm as well she cites things like ascension, nature and energy transfer as constant inspirations, in addition to her Caribbean background, Black history and afro-futurism. A lot of that starts with the critical visual and verbal research she conducts, resulting in work that melds new concepts, techniques and mediums.

"There's someone I used to talk to who opened me up to different concepts," she says of her early interests in spirituality. "Sometimes people find it when they're reaching a low point where all they have left is trying to just ground themselves and look to the earth for answers, because everyone around you is just not making any sense. So it's a combination of the universe talking to me and bringing me towards it and putting people in my life who were spiritual."

While the pandemic may have altered plans to show her futuristic femmewear in person, Campbell looks forward to when people will get to see the intricate details and graphics she's known for up-close. "I love the images we created and I love the collection as is, but in the future, I definitely want to make sure they're seen in person," she says.

Photos courtesy of Bed on Water

From Your Site Articles

Related Articles Around the Web

Read the original here:
Shanel Campbell Debuts Femmewear Collection for Bed on Water - Papermag

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on Shanel Campbell Debuts Femmewear Collection for Bed on Water – Papermag

Ithacas Ink Shop trades prints with Limerick Studio in Ireland to celebrate their shared birth year – ithaca.com

Posted: at 2:42 am

ITHACA, NY -- Founded in 1999 as a cooperative studio and gallery, the Ink Shop Printmaking Center is unique amongst Ithacas independent art spaces. While other galleries rely on a membership or stable of artists to fill out their exhibition calendars, the Shop taking advantage of the multiplicity and portability of the print medium highlights national and international printmakers and places them in conversation with those from Ithaca and Central New York.

Currently open to the public by appointment only, the Shop has been weathering the present health crisis by buckling down on its core identity as a working studio and planning for the future.

Open since last summer and extended through later this month (March 26), a pair of ongoing exhibits celebrate the Ink Shops commitment to its membership as well as its longstanding tradition of overseas commerce. Both Ink Shop Printmakers 20/20 Hindsight Portfolio and Limerick Studio Printmakers: 20 Years of Change represent the fruits of a portfolio exchange, made last year, between the Shop and an independent Irish print shop.

Most of the artists in the Ink Shop portfolio will be familiar in name and approach to longtime followers of local art. The diversity and technical sophistication of the Shops membership is as clear as ever, but the selections feel oddly both encapsulated and scattered. It isnt a show that stands on its own at least not any more.

Judy Barringers dark blue etching Beyond the Krmn Line the title refers to the boundary between the Earths atmosphere and outer space is characteristically rich and complex. Like an extract from a graphic novel, the piece unfolds across two panels: a cryptic explosion and placid asteroids, painterly effects played off of crisp outlines and cross-hatching.

Kumi Korfs color intaglio Chrysalis Baby displays a similar nuanced layering, embedding memories of nature in simplified abstract forms. Hunter Buck and Christa Wolf, also working in intaglio, explore varieties of gestural abstraction. Ian McCoys Past, Present, Potential, a black-and-white woodcut on an unfolded manila folder, unravels a configuration of geometric facets into a visionary landscape. Jenny Pope and Scout Dunbar both forego their customary exuberant color for near black-and-white. Popes woodcut Irish Elk and Great Auk and Dunbars transfer drawing Circus Pony the latter accented in colored pencil are characteristically irrepressible.

Success! An email has been sent to with a link to confirm list signup.

Error! There was an error processing your request.

The Limerick Printmakers portfolio, in contrast, ought to represent new vistas. That much of it feels over-familiar testifies to the homogeneity of much contemporary art worldwide. Much of the work displays a youth-oriented or pop aesthetic, perhaps more at home in T-shirt or poster design than in a formal gallery space. (Unlike the Ink Shop work, the Irish pieces here are unframed.)

Several artists do this quite well: with a welcome measure of elegance and wit. Carol Kennedys mixed media cyanotype An Alien in Lough Derg combines the familiar deep blue with a spattering of gold the decorative effect offsetting the intricate threads of a submerged jellyfish. Eva Byrnes silkscreen Are there clouds in the night-time? and ine Finnegans monoprint and collagraph CHANGE SLOW display a seemingly Japanese-inspired kawaii sensibility. Clodagh Twomeys Cornucopia, another silkscreen print, recalls a mid-twentieth-century pop futurism.

Still, some of us long for an art of greater imaginative and expressive depth one attempted by only a few of the Limerick artists here.

David Lilburns What will I think tomorrow? is the most compelling of these by a good measure. Combining drypoint in dark brown with patches of faint blue watercolor and playful additions a U.S. flag stamp among them in chine-coll, Lilburn creates an evocative picture map of his city. The scene is full: little architectural vignettes, caricatures of people and animals, symbols of terrain and travel.

Given the etiolated condition of the local exhibitions scene and the continuing struggles of the artists and organizations that work to make it happen, these two modest shows can best be taken as a kind of institutional memory. Planned in advance of the current pandemic, they testify to longstanding ways of doing things that perhaps need to be reconstructed if not radically rethought. Too, they offer a welcome reminder of exactly what weve been missing.

For those unable to visit the gallery in person, a virtual presentation of these shows can be found at https://ink-shop.org/exhibits/.

See the original post:
Ithacas Ink Shop trades prints with Limerick Studio in Ireland to celebrate their shared birth year - ithaca.com

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on Ithacas Ink Shop trades prints with Limerick Studio in Ireland to celebrate their shared birth year – ithaca.com

The STEM Read Podcast: CRISPR, COVID, and Pure Curiosity with Walter Isaacson and Mike Jones – WNIJ and WNIU

Posted: at 2:42 am

The STEM Read Podcast: CRISPR, COVID, and Pure Curiosity with Walter Isaacson and Mike Jones (Feb. 12, 2021)

On this episode, host Gillian King-Cargile (@gkingcargile) explores the gene editing tool CRISPR, used to create the breakthrough mRNA vaccines for COVID-19. First, she talks with biographer Walter Isaacson (@WalterIsaacson), author of Leonardo da Vinci and Steve Jobs, about his new book The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race. The book chronicles the discoveries surrounding CRISPR and the brilliant scientists racing toward publications, patents, and prizes.

Next, Gillian talks to Mike Jones (@StemNinja), a science teacher at the Thomas Metcalf School in Normal, Illinois. Jones 8th grade class just spent six weeks studying everything from CRISPRs molecular structure to its implications for medical ethics. Well also hear from some of his students, who will share their thoughts and insights on how CRISPR could edit humanitys future.

The STEM Read podcast is produced in association with WNIJ. Support for the STEM Read podcast comes from NIU STEAM and Northern Illinois University.

More:
The STEM Read Podcast: CRISPR, COVID, and Pure Curiosity with Walter Isaacson and Mike Jones - WNIJ and WNIU

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on The STEM Read Podcast: CRISPR, COVID, and Pure Curiosity with Walter Isaacson and Mike Jones – WNIJ and WNIU

The Power of Poetry (Virtual) – wgbh.org

Posted: at 2:42 am

April is National Poetry Month and what better way to celebrate than with a panel discussion with Boston Poet Laureate Porsha Olayiwola, former Boston Poet Laureate Danielle Legros George, Brandeis Visiting Poet-in-Residence Chen Chen, and UMass Amherst MFA Program Director Dara Weir. They will discuss diversity in contemporary poetry and how poets use their art form to respond to the world around them.

Join GBH, in collaboration with Mass Poetry, on April 12, 2021 for a LIVE conversation with our panel of local poets. They will take your questions live, talk about their approaches to poetry and the narrative aspects of their work.

A general admission ticket ($25) includes access to the Zoom webinar discussion and a special digital collection of curated poems from the panel. Registrants will receive the collection by April 1, leaving plenty of time to enjoy the poems that will be discussed as part of the event.

If poetry is your passion and you want to support GBH at the same time, please consider our Poetry Bundle ticket ($100) that also includes the printed collections of each poet featured at the event. Quantities are limited and delivery may take several weeks.

Do not hesitateregister now for what is sure to be an educational and inspiring discussion.

Participating Poets:

Chen Chen

Chen Chen is the author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities, which was longlisted for the National Book Award and won the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize, the GLCA New Writers Award, and the Thom Gunn Award for Gay Poetry. The collection was also a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry and named one of the best of 2017 by The Brooklyn Rail, Entropy, Library Journal, and others. His work has appeared in many publications, including Poetry, Tin House, Poem-a-Day, The Best American Poetry, Bettering American Poetry, and The Best American Nonrequired Reading. Chen earned his MFA from Syracuse University and is pursuing a PhD in English and Creative Writing as an off-site Texas Tech University student. He lives in frequently snowy Rochester, NY with his partner, Jeff Gilbert and their pug dog, Mr. Rupert Giles. Chen is the 2018-2020 Jacob Ziskind Poet-in-Residence at Brandeis University.

Danielle Legros Georges

Danielle Legros Georges is a writer, translator, academic, and author of several books of poetry including The Dear Remote Nearness of You, winner of the New England Poetry Clubs Sheila Margaret Motten book prize. She is a professor in and director of the Lesley University MFA program in Creative Writing, and taught in the Joiner Institute for the Study of War and Social Consequences Writers Workshop, at the University of Massachusetts, Boston for more than a decade. Her awards include fellowships from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, the Boston Foundation, and the Black Metropolis Research Consortium. The Massachusetts Artists Leaders Coalition recognized her civic work with a Champion of Artists Award in 2017. She was appointed the second Poet Laureate of the city of Boston, serving in the role from 2015 to 2019. Her most recent work is a book of translations from the French, Island Heart: The Poems of Ida Faubert, published by Subpress Collective in 2021.

Porsha Olayiwola

Black, futurist, poet, dyke, hip-hop feminist, womanist: Porsha is a native of Chicago who now resides in Boston. Olayiwola is a writer, performer, educator and curator who uses afro-futurism and surrealism to examine historical and current issues in the Black, woman, and queer diasporas. She is an Individual World Poetry Slam Champion and the artistic director at MassLEAP, a literary youth organization. Olayiwola is an MFA Candidate at Emerson College. Porsha Olayiwola is the author of i shimmer sometimes, too forthcoming with Button Poetry and is the current poet laureate for the city of Boston.

Dara Wier

Dara Wier is the author of nine collections of poetry. She teaches at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. The Harvard Review describes Wier's poems this way: "many of Weir's stanzas draw a reader away from a recognizable world into one in which women waltz with bears, houseflies chat with colonels, and the absence of sound makes a material presence." Her most recent book is Reverse Rapture (2005), published by Verse Press.

Special thanks to our event partner:

Mass Poetry

Special thanks to the City of Boston for facilitating scheduling for Porsha Olayiwola

By registering for this event your email may be shared with Mass Poetry.

Go here to see the original:
The Power of Poetry (Virtual) - wgbh.org

Posted in Futurism | Comments Off on The Power of Poetry (Virtual) – wgbh.org

NASA Will Map Every Living Thing on the International Space Station – Scientific American

Posted: March 11, 2021 at 12:31 pm

Astronauts never travel to space alone. Each person voyaging off-world is accompanied by up to 100 trillion bacteria, viruses and other microorganisms, any number of which could jeopardize human health. Yet we are still mostly in the dark about how these communities of microscopic hitchhikers react to microgravity. We do not even know the full spectrum of spacefaring species living onboard the International Space Station (ISS). New studies, however, are designed to change that. Last month astronauts collected samples from across the interior of the ISS to build an unprecedented three-dimensional map of its microbiome. This effort at a space-based microbial census is the first step toward understanding, preventing and mitigating dangerous outbreakswhether they arise onboard the station, during long-duration flights toward Mars or even back home in hospitals.

We are constantly overrun by microbes. From the bacteria lining our guts to the too-small-to-see mites living at the base of our eyelashes, it is estimated that there are at least as many microbes on and within us as there are human cells. You can think of people as walking ecosystems, says Pieter Dorrestein, a chemical biologist at University of California, San Diego. Most of these minuscule creatures are actually essential and have such far-reaching impacts on our healthaffecting our immunity, our heart and perhaps even our mental healththat scientists often refer to the microbiome as an invisible organ. In fact, the microbial multitudes within us are so numerous that their total mass can add up to roughly the weight of our brain.

It might not come as a surprise, then, that understanding how the microbiome behaves during spaceflight is crucial if we want to send astronauts on long-term missions to Mars and beyond. But scientists are not only worried about the human microbiomethey are also worried about the spacecrafts microbiome. Take the Russian space station Mir as an example. In 1998about three years before the station deorbited into the Pacific Oceanscientists discovered several dozen species of bacteria, fungi and dust mites hiding behind a service panel. I never pictured an inanimate objecta machine that works beautifully like the stationas having a microbiome similar to someone whos alive, like a human, says Serena M. Aun-Chancellor, who is both a physician and a NASA astronaut. Yet, counter to the notion of space as a sterile, inert environment, any spacecraft will inevitably host an assortment of microbes in numbers sufficient to make any astronauts skin crawl.

A spacecrafts microbiome could prove hazardous to the health of the astronauts. Can you imagine youre on a long flight and all of the sudden you start to get, lets say, a flesh-eating bacterium, and you cant get rid of it? Dorrestein says. Those are the kinds of consequences that could materialize.

It is not a crazy idea. In 2006 a team of scientists sent a culture of salmonella bacteria for an 11-day ride on the space shuttle Atlantis only to find that once the microbes returned to Earth, they more easily killed mice. Bacteria that have slipped Earths surly bonds can also become more resistant to antibioticsa recipe for disaster, given the fact that long-duration spaceflight tends to weaken astronauts immune systems.

The new project launched by NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory and U.C. San Diego could help mitigate the microbial threat. In February astronaut Kate Rubins swabbed 1,000 different locations throughout the ISS. That is about 100 times greater than the number of swabs in typical microbial tracking studies, which usually focus on the most suspect parts of a living space such as kitchens, bathrooms and exercise areas. The samples will be placed in cold storage and, in a few months, sent back to Earth, where scientists will analyze their genetic signatures and name the various microbes to build a three-dimensional map of the ISSs full microbiome.

Moreover, each swab will capture trace molecules from food, oils, skin, and more. That prospect particularly excites Dorrestein, who is working on the project. Scientists currently know very little about what kinds of molecules are present on the ISS that nourish the growth of different microbial communities there. The new map will help them link specific molecules or nutrients to specific microbes. With that connection, scientists can craft guidelines to promote the growth of beneficial microbes and reduce the dangerous onesthrough nutrients alone. That might be as simple as utilizing specific construction materials on a spacecraft to Mars. All of this suggests the problem of a sick spacecraft could be partially solved before it even reaches the launchpad.

But Kasthuri Venkateswaran, a microbiologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and principal investigator of the project, is most excited about the protective measures that could take place in transit. Although the current samples are being sent back to Earth, he notes that astronauts will need to cut out that middleman on future missions. When we go all the way to other planets, you dont have a FedEx to send the samples back, Venkateswaran says. Although scientists do have the capability to perform genomic analysis onboard the ISS, the process is not particularly speedy, and in the event of a dangerous outbreak, every moment may count (just think about how long it often takes to get results back from a PCR test for COVID-19). You want to make sure you can stay on top of thatas were all too aware these days of how some little bug can kind of mess up your world, says David Klaus, a space microbiologist at the University of Colorado Boulder.

To combat that issue, the swabs Rubin used in the station-sweeping assay are double-headed. One tip collects microbes for simple detection whereas the other intends to capture their metabolitesthe microorganisms natural chemical by-products. Once Venkateswaran and his colleagues have created a database linking specific microbes with certain metabolites, they can build small biosensors that look for just the metabolites. Picture a handheld device that could diagnose the presence of bacteria or fungi on the spacecraft and alert astronauts of an outbreak immediatelysimilar to a carbon monoxide detector.

A notification from such a system (which Venkateswaran suspects will take another five to 10 years to become a reality) would spark immediate actionas astronauts would intensify their cleaning protocols to prevent the an onboard outbreak. This will make for a better maintenance of tomorrows habitat, Venkateswaran says. Astronauts onboard the ISS already work hard to keep the microbiome population under control. Every week they vacuum the vents and wipe down surfaces with disinfecting wipes. Aun-Chancellor estimates that when she was in orbit, each of the crews six astronauts spent roughly three hours a week cleaning. That is 18 hours each week for the ISSs total habitable volume of just 388 cubic meters (around half of the passenger space in a Boeing 747), which may seem excessive. But given the ISSs unique circumstances, all that sanitizing is necessary. Up there, food just doesnt fall to the floor, she says. Food goes to the ceiling. Food sticks to the walls. Food is everywhere. So its 3-D cleaning.

This kind of conscientious cleaning leads some scientists to dismiss worries about an outbreak en route to Mars. I dont think that the influence of bacteria is really a big showstopper for long term spaceflight because evidence suggests otherwise, Klaus says. Weve had people living on the [ISS] with rotating crews continuously for over 20 years now. And there hasnt been any kind of outbreak there. Aun-Chancellor notes that simply finding dangerous bacteria is not cause for alarmit is only worrying if the microbes are making astronauts sick. I see it more as an identification and a heads up, she says. And then were just kind of watching and mapping and waiting to see what those bacteria do in that stressful environment, she adds.

But Venkateswaran is worried not only about risks to the astronautsbut also the chances of microbial contamination of any otherworldly destinations they visit. Astronauts are basically a pathogen to the planet, Aun-Chancellor says. Theyre a new microbiome thats suddenly stepping foot on Mars. Even the spacesuit that they step out in will have their own missions microbiome on the material surface of that suit. If scientists could map the microbiome on that suit better, they might be able to clean it better, too. Venkateswaran is hopeful that the research will even help scientists design superior suits with joints that prevent even the smallest microbes from leaking through.

The unique applications do not end there. For Liz Warren, senior program director at the ISS U.S. National Laboratory, the most tantalizing aspect about all this research has little to do with space. Any partially closed environmenta house, an airplane, a hospitalwill have its own microbiome. So learning how to prevent certain microbes from thriving in space (or how to halt them when they do) offers helpful lessons for similar environments on Earth. For example, consider another project running on the ISS that tests the efficacy of antimicrobial coatings manufactured by Boeing. The idea is that if the coatings work in spacewhere microbes can be far more dangerousthen they will work on Earth. In short, the ISS is an incredible laboratory in its own right. You cant do that on Earthyou cant take gravity out of the picture, Klaus says. Having microgravity is kind of like having a microscope for the first time in a different way. You see behaviors that you couldnt otherwise see.

Follow this link:
NASA Will Map Every Living Thing on the International Space Station - Scientific American

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on NASA Will Map Every Living Thing on the International Space Station – Scientific American

China and Russia agree to build lunar space station together – Chron

Posted: at 12:31 pm

China and Russia have agreed to build a new lunar space station together, according to a statement by the China National Space Administration (CNSA).

CNSA and Russian federal space agency (Roscosmos) leaders signed a "memorandum of understanding" on Tuesday to move forward with plans to construct a lunar research station, according to Jessie Yeung with CNN.

MARS ROVER DOCUMENTARY: 'Good Night Oppy' will tell the story of a Mars rover that refused to give up

"China and Russia will use their accumulated experience in space science, research and development as well as the use of space equipment and space technology to jointly develop a road map for the construction of an international lunar scientific research station (ILRS)," CNSA said.

A statement from Roscosmos said the two space agencies plan to "promote cooperation on the creation of an open-access ILRS for all interested countries and international partners, with the goal of strengthening research cooperation and promoting the exploration and use of outer space for peaceful purposes in the interests of all mankind," Yeung wrote.

Neither statements from the CNSA or the Roscosmos provide a target date for the ILRS.

NASA isn't far behind with its plans to send astronauts to the moon and "establish sustainable exploration by the end of the decade," according to the space agency'sArtemis program.

Back in October, NASA signed the Artemis Accords to work with eight other nations and several partners in the private sector on future moon explorations, according to Mike Wall with Space.com.

A company called the Orbital Assembly Corporation (OAC) has set its sights on constructing the first commercial space station by 2025.

Russia and China, however, are not part of the Artemis agreement to work with the United States on their race to the moon, according to Wall.

While Russia has collaborated with the U.S. through the International Space Station, China is prohibited from collaborating on space projects unless Congress approves the partnership in advance, Wall said.

China also plans to send astronauts to the moon by the 2030s, and if they succeed, they will be only the second country after the U.S. to accomplish such a mission, Yeung wrote.

Originally posted here:
China and Russia agree to build lunar space station together - Chron

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on China and Russia agree to build lunar space station together – Chron

China and Russia are building a lunar space station together – Insider

Posted: at 12:31 pm

China is now one step closer to achieving its goals of bringing its people to the moon.

The country's national space administration announced this week that it had signed an agreement with Russia to build a lunar space station together. This station, they say, will be "open to all countries."

The International Scientific Lunar Station will also "carry out a wide range of scientific research including exploration and utilization of the moon," a statement from both agencies said.

This memorandum of understanding was signed by Dmitry Rogozin, general director of the Roscosmos State Corporation, and Zhang Kejian, head of China's National Space Administration.

"China and Russia will use their accumulated experience in space science, research and development as well as the use of space equipment and space technology to jointly develop a road map for the construction of an international lunar scientific research station (ILRS)," the statement continued.

Al Jazeera previously reported that China had poured billions into its "space dream" in the hopes of one day building a crewed space station and sending humans to the moon.

This investment has clearly paid off. The Chang'e-5 space probe last December brought back samples that it had picked up during its moon landing. The success of the Chang'e-5 was noted at the time to be a landmark demonstration of China's rapidly accelerating space capabilities.

According to a CNN report, the Chinese have now put in motion plans to send astronauts to the moon by the 2030s, which would make it the second country to send a man to the moon.

A statement from Roscosmos also noted that the organizations would "promote cooperation on the creation of an open-access ILRS for all interested countries and international partners, with the goal of strengthening research cooperation and promoting the exploration and use of outer space for peaceful purposes in the interests of all mankind."

This announcement to cooperate with the Chinese comes four months after Russia reportedly snubbed NASA's invitation to join the Artemis Accords, a plan that was meant to facilitate the US's preparations to build a permanent base on the moon and, eventually, send astronauts to Mars. At the time, NASA had announced its resolve to return to the moon in 2024, complete with plans to land the first woman and the next man on the moon by that deadline.

In October last year, however, Russia opted not to sign on to the Accords despite being courted by NASA, and despite seven other countries (including Australia, Canada, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom) getting on board with the agreement.

The Artemis Accords, named after NASA's moon-and-Mars-bound human-spaceflight program, also outlined guidelines for space exploration for nations to follow if they joined the effort: such as being peaceful, cooperating, and mining resources sustainably from space.

See the rest here:
China and Russia are building a lunar space station together - Insider

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on China and Russia are building a lunar space station together – Insider

New study from space station looks at human cells infected with salmonella | TheHill – The Hill

Posted: at 12:31 pm

In a new study published in the journal npj Microgravity, scientists and astronauts conducted experiments with human cells and pathogens to see how the two would change and interface differently in a low-gravity environment. The researchers used the microbial species salmonella typhimurium to infect human cells in controlled experiments on Earth and on the International Space Station.

The researchers found that there were changes in RNA and protein expression in the human cells in a microgravity environment. They also found that salmonella was able to cause the human cells to upregulate increase the rate or level of expression of compounds that would help fight an infection in both cells that were inflight and on the ground.

Inflight cells upregulated genes that were associated with inflammation, one of the human bodys mechanisms for fighting pathogens. Other genes that are related to virulence or stress regulators were also upregulated in the cells in space compared to the cells on the ground.

"We appreciate the opportunity that NASA provided our team to study the entire infection process in spaceflight, which is providing new insight into the mechanobiology of infectious disease that can be used to protect astronaut health and mitigate infectious disease risks,"said one of the studys authors Cheryl Nickerson, who is based at the Biodesign Center for Fundamental and Applied Microbiomics, Arizona State University, in a press release. "This becomes increasingly important as we transition to longer human exploration missions that are further away from our planet."

There were limitations to the study; not all samples that came back from space were able to be analyzed as fully as the scientists were hoping to. There were also small differences in the amount of pathogen administered to cells on the ground compared to inflight.

America is changing faster than ever! Add Changing America to your Facebook or Twitter feed to stay on top of the news.

Still, this studys findings are a good start to understanding how infections in space might affect our bodies. Scientists will need to know a lot more about the bodys response to a variety of pathogens, not just salmonella. This is all so that in the future humans may be able to spend more time in space and on longer flight missions.

"We knew that spaceflight also impacted several important structural and functional features of human cells that Salmonella normally exploits during infections on earth," the studys lead author Jennifer Barrila, who is also based at the Biodesign Center for Fundamental and Applied Microbiomics, Arizona State University,said in the press release. "Our study indicates that there are some pretty big changes in the molecular landscape of the intestinal epithelium in response to spaceflight, and this global landscape appears to be further altered during infection with Salmonella."

READ MORE LIKE THIS FROM CHANGING AMERICA

NEW PSYCHEDELICS STUDY SUGGESTS PLACEBO WORKS TOO

NEW STUDY WARNS PFIZER AND MODERNA COVID-19 VACCINES COULD BE FAR LESS EFFECTIVE AGAINST SOUTH AFRICA VARIANT

1 IN 4 AMERICANS REFUSE TO GET COVID-19 VACCINE: POLL

ALASKA BECOMES FIRST STATE TO OPEN VACCINES TO ADULTS OF ANY AGE

Read more:
New study from space station looks at human cells infected with salmonella | TheHill - The Hill

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on New study from space station looks at human cells infected with salmonella | TheHill – The Hill

3D Scanning Tech Developed For Space Station Can Help Feed People On Earth – Forbes

Posted: at 12:31 pm

A flowering perennial ryegrass spike

Perennial ryegrass is fed to livestock in the United States and many other countries. The Artec Space Spider is a handheld 3D scanner created for use on the International Space Station. Travis Tubbs is a major with U.S. Space Force using the scanner to measure ryegrass varieties on Earth and help identify specific plants with the most desirable traits for breeders and farmers.

The problem here is with seeds that fall off too early. In the state of Oregon alone, where Tubbs has conducted published research, 360 million pounds of ryegrass seed was harvested in 2019, valued at more than $186 million. But 20% of the ryegrass grown there very year is lost due to something called early seed shattering, when seeds break off from the plant prematurely.

Artec Studio x-ray representation of a scan of a perennial ryegrass spike

Tubbs says creating 3D scans of individual plants, a simple process that takes about a minute, can help scientists pinpoint plants with the most desirable traits and outcomes in the field and use them to breed superior ryegrass and other kinds of plants, from rice and barley and wheat to fruits and vegetables.

These superior plants will be highly insect-resistant and drought tolerant, and require little to no pesticides, he says.

Technology is going to march forward and this is a great tool that can be used to help all farmers in analyzing whats out in their field.

Space Force and the Spider

The Space Force, the newest branch of the U.S. Armed Forces, was established in December 2019, before Tubbs started the project.

Hes a professor at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado who teaches in the Biology Department and conducted his research at Oregon State University. Space Force is part of the Air Force.

Travis Tubbs

Tubbs came across the Artec Space Spider while looking for ways to study ryegrass and early seed shattering. I was literally going to build my own camera system to make this work, he says.

His research involved using the Space Spider to precisely capture ryegrass spikes and literally count the number of seeds that particular plants were losing every week. Coming back to specific plants was as simple as marking them with pieces of tape, then using intuitive software to analyze the scans, Tubbs says.

The advantage to 3D scans is that you can observe the unique characteristics of a plant, twisting a stalk around, for instance, to see how many seeds a spike of ryegrass has retained.

One big takeaway of the research: The height of the plant has something to do with how well it can retain seeds, Tubbs says. The taller the plant, the less likely it is to hold on to those seeds. So you want to breed shorter plants.

Also, plants with a wider angle of spikes, or spikes that dont grow too closely together, are more desirable.

Throughout two years of the project, Tubbs had 640 ryegrass plants under his care, originating from seeds collected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture from 40 different locations around the world. A total of 160 individual plants in the field were measured six to eight times over the duration of the work. The Artec Space Spider costs about $20,000.

The Moon and Mars

At first blush, you might think this ryegrass research by a Space Force major has something to do with growing crops for upcoming missions to the moon, or Mars.

Not yet, but this is definitely something thats useful for that, Tubbs says. You can digitize a 3D structure and send it off to whenever you need, around the world. Or above the world.

Tubbs predicts that improved plant varieties derived from 3D scanning will be sprouting from the ground in the near futuremaybe a decade or more. And farmers can be involved in using the technology.

As the world population continues to grow, weve got to get better and faster at producing food.

Excerpt from:
3D Scanning Tech Developed For Space Station Can Help Feed People On Earth - Forbes

Posted in Space Station | Comments Off on 3D Scanning Tech Developed For Space Station Can Help Feed People On Earth – Forbes

Eczema: What causes it, the symptoms and how to treat it – CNET

Posted: at 12:13 pm

Eczema affects about one in 10 people in the United States.

About one in 10 Americans will get eczema at some point in their lives, and about 31.6 million Americans are currently suffering from it. Eczema is common, yet no matter how long you've had it, dealing with eczema is never a walk in the park. Not only is it physically uncomfortable or even painful, it's emotionally distressing since often the symptoms can affect your appearance, and it can feel impossible to find relief.

If you suffer from eczema (like I do), you know how it feels to go through an outbreak and find little to no solutions for the symptoms, and once they do resolve (if they do for a bit) you live in fear of your next outbreak. My last major flare was around the holidays when my entire face broke out in red, itchy, patches that extended down the sides of my neck. Not only did it feel terrible, it pretty much ruined my holiday since I felt so distressed about the rash during a time when I wanted to celebrate.

Although we don't yet know what exactly causes eczema, and there's no cure -- we know a lot about how to manage it, treat the symptoms, and help identify triggers to help prevent future flares. Keep reading below for more insight from a dermatologist about what you need to know about eczema, the symptoms and current treatments.

Our Health & Wellness newsletter puts the best products, updates and advice in your inbox.

"Eczema is a common itchy rash that occurs on the skin. Eczema can appear anywhere on the body, however it typically occurs most commonly in skin folds on the extremities," says Dr. Jared Jagdeo, board-certified dermatologist and chief medical officer at Ever/Body.

According to the American Academy of Dermatology Association, there are seven different types of eczema, and you can have several different kinds at once.

The seven different types of eczema:

Eczema can affect different areas of your body including your arms, hands, neck or face.

Since eczema technically represents a group of different skin rashes, the symptoms can vary with each different type of rash and for each individual person. But according to Mayo Clinic, in general the symptoms include:

People with eczema sometimes experience flares (i.e. it comes and goes), and some people have it chronically.

In general, we don't know the exact cause of eczema yet. But it is thought to be associated with the immune system, genetics and also environmental factors. According to the National Eczema Association, most eczema cases can be explained by "a combination of genes and environmental triggers."

According to Jagdeo, things like changing seasons or exposure to irritants can also trigger symptoms. "Eczema can worsen with the change in seasons and [with] skin irritants such as fragrances," says Jagdeo.

Common eczema triggers, according to the National Eczema Foundation:

There is currently no cure for eczema, but the symptoms can be treated or managed in a variety of ways. One way to help prevent and treat flares is by trying to identify your triggers, which you can discuss with your doctor -- ideally a board-certified dermatologist who can help you identify triggers and proper treatment for your eczema.

"[Use] gentle skin care with emollients and avoid skin irritants such as fragrance-containing products," says Jagdeo.

Doctors can also prescribe you products to treat eczema that you apply directly to the skin. Typically these are "topical medications known as anti-inflammatory steroids to soothe the skin," according to Jagdeo.

"Immune modifying treatments such as oral or injectable medications [can] help improve the skin by decreasing the immune mediated inflammation that causes eczema," adds Jagdeo.

Over-the-counter creams and products that are marketed for eczema can sometimes help, but you should always see a dermatologist first to help determine the correct treatment and products for your specific situation. "Board certified dermatologists are experts in eczema and skin care and can help recommend OTC treatments to improve your eczema, along with prescription based recommendations as medically necessary," says Jagdeo.

OTC treatments Dr. Jagdeo recommends:

Now playing: Watch this: How do I get the COVID-19 vaccine? Your questions answered

23:39

The information contained in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as health or medical advice. Always consult a physician or other qualified health provider regarding any questions you may have about a medical condition or health objectives.

Read more from the original source:
Eczema: What causes it, the symptoms and how to treat it - CNET

Posted in Eczema | Comments Off on Eczema: What causes it, the symptoms and how to treat it – CNET

Page 1,040«..1020..1,0391,0401,0411,042..1,0501,060..»