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Wyoming’s Voter Registration Numbers Dip By More Than 20K Sheridan Media – Sheridan Media
Posted: March 3, 2021 at 1:58 am
This story first appeared on Cowboy State Daily
By Ellen Fike, Cowboy State Daily
Wyomings voter registration numbers have dipped by more than 20,000 over the last two months, but a spokeswoman for the secretary of states office said theres no cause for alarm.
As ofJan. 1, Wyoming has 302,963 registered voters, but as of Monday, the state only had279,864,a drop of 23,099 voters.
However, there hasnt been a mass exodus of voters from the state. Instead, it is the result of a cleaning up of the states files.
Wyoming is required by law to remove, or purge, voters after every general election, Secretary of States office spokeswoman Monique Meese told Cowboy State Daily. The voters being purged are those who did not vote in the last general election and did not respond to a statutorily required notice asking if they wanted to remain a registered voter.
Wyomings 23 counties are required to notify the secretary of states office by Feb. 15 of the year following the November election of voters who did not cast ballots.
While it is speculationon my part I would suspect that is the reason for the decrease, Meese said.
In February, there were 294,113 registered voters, down more than 8,000 than the month prior.
According to the secretary of states voter statistics, the breakdown of registered voters in Wyoming as of Monday looked like: 195,592 Republicans, 46,307 Democrats, 2,548 Libertarians, 696 Constitution Party, 34,682 unaffiliated and 39 other, which includes individuals registered in parties that are no longer recognized in Wyoming.
Laramie County saw the highest number of registered voters with 45,337 (with 9,610 Democrats, 28,608 Republicans, 72 Constitution Party, 358 Libertarian, 6,676 unaffiliated and 13 other).
Although there was an overall drop in voters across all parties, a few parties saw an increase in registered voters in certain counties. Albany, Converse, Crook and Hot Springs counties all saw slight upticks in their independent affiliation numbers compared toFebruary.
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Recollections of Murray on His Ninety-Fifth Birthday – The Shepherd of the Hills Gazette
Posted: at 1:58 am
I first met Murray Rothbard when, as treasurer of the New Jersey Libertarian Party, I invited him to give the keynote address at our inaugural convention. He graciously agreed to do it for the paltry sum of $75 plus a puny chicken dinner. Prior to his talk, I introduced myself to him, and we spoke for a while about the state of the libertarian movement before I mentioned that I was a graduate student in economics and was reading some of the books and articles that he had cited in his treatise Man, Economy, and State. I never expected his reaction to my casual remark. His eyes immediately lit up and he could barely contain his enthusiasm. He feverishly searched his pockets for a pen to no avail and, when I offered him one, he asked me for my contact information and told me that he would pass it on to some people in New Jersey who had formed an Austrian economics reading group.
The following Monday I received a call from a student member of the group who invited me to join the reading circle, which was codirected by another one of my libertarian heroes, Walter Block. Soon after, I was invited to the inner sanctum of Murrays apartment in Manhattan for a personal meeting with him. I was escorted to his apartment by a veteran member of the reading group. I was very nervous on the way, because I was anticipating a somewhat formal interview, in which Murray would grill me and easily expose the staggering inadequacies in my knowledge of libertarianism and Austrian economics. But my apprehension instantly dissipated when Murray excitedly greeted me at the door with a merry Joe, my boy, its great to see you again.
It was a memorable evening. The other student and I sat on the living room rug while Murray regaled us from his couch with jokes, anecdotes, and his observations on current affairs. The conversation was light but interspersed with questions to me about my views on economic and political matters. At one point, the question of what methods were justified in recovering ones property from looters came up. Murray opined that a store owner was justified in using defensive violenceincluding deadly force if necessaryin defending his property from looters. But he believed that if the looter had already seized the property and was running away, the owner could not employ deadly force to retrieve his stolen property and had to call the police. I timidly suggested that the store owner would be justified in using deadly force if necessary to retain control of his property whether it involved defending or recovering it. Murray thought for a moment and then said: Ahh, now THATS a conversation Im willing to have.
I also recall discussing the question of how state-owned property should be disposed of after the libertarian revolution. Murray was lukewarm on my suggestion that it should be auctioned off and the proceeds divided up among taxpayers. He was also not keen on giving ownership of the property to the employees, that is, public schools to the teachers, railroads to the engineers and conductors, etc. These options would be too time consuming, would require a state-like entity to carry out, and could reward the wrong people. The overriding goal, he said, was to return all state property to productive use in the private sector as soon as possible. In addition, he pointed out that it was indispensable to maintain the relevant technological unit intact, which meant no piecemeal homesteading of parts of highways, water and sewer systems, airports, etc. The best solution, he said with a twinkle in his eye, is to give ownership of the entire physical asset to the heroes of the libertarian revolution.
Later in the evening, a surly looking attendant at a seedy parking lot directly across the street from Murrays second-floor apartment began to loudly blow on a trumpet. Since it was a hot and steamy New York summer night, Murrays living room windows were open, and the sound was cacophonous and distracting. Murray was becoming increasingly annoyed, and after a few minutes he could restrain himself no longer. He began to yell from his perch on the couch SHADDUP! SHADDUP! in perfect New Yorker slang. At this point, his wife, Joey, wisely intervened, shushed Murray, closed the windows, and brought a fan into the room. I left Murrays apartment well after 12:00 a.m.
In the years that followed, I enjoyed increasing personal contact with Murray. I saw him countless times at conferences and seminars, and regularly met him for lunch in Manhattan during semester breaks and summers. What struck me most about Murray was not just his creative genius as an economist, social theorist, and political philosopher, but the fact that he was a real person, a term that he himself often used.
A real person is one who loves liberty not as an empty abstraction, but as a real social and economic system that produces the goods, institutions, and culture that are required for flesh-and-blood human beings to live their lives peacefully, prosperously, and happily. This explains why Murray cherished and celebrated American culture and society and was proud to call it his own. Murray was an unapologetic admirer of American culture, because he viewed it as the specific historical product of the relatively libertarian and individualist American capitalist system. Thus, he loved The Godfather movies and James Bond movies, late-night visits to Dennys restaurants, and drinking martinis with his friends at the famous Algonquin Club on Forty-Fourth Street in Manhattan (where the Algonquin Round Table of famous writers, critics, and actors used to gather for lunch every day from 1919 to 1929).
A few other anecdotes about Murray the real person come to mind. Once at an Austrian economics conference in Hartford, Connecticut, Murray wanted to go to a restaurant to continue a late-night conversation he was having with me and several other graduate students. So, we all piled into my car and proceeded to search for a place to eat. We drove around for a half hour, passing numerous restaurants that had already closed. Finally, Murray could contain his frustration no longer and declared: Whats wrong with these people! Dont they realize that the Industrial Revolution occurred two hundred years ago and that we have electric lights now? Why do they stop serving hungry customers just because its dark outside? Fortunately, just as we were about to turn back toward the conference site, I spotted a pizzeria that was open for business. Murray was overjoyed and exclaimed: Joe, youre a hero of the revolution!
A few years later, I participated with Murray in a four-day conference on methodology at the US Military Academy at West Point. By the end of the second day Murray was getting bored and was eager to find entertainment outside the confines of the stodgy and somewhat oppressive atmosphere of the campus hotel. He complained to me that academics in general were too stuffy and pretentious and that we needed to break out of the hotel and go over the wall to have fun among real people. I asked the hotel concierge if he could recommend a club that featured music and dancing. He recommended an establishment that was fifteen miles away in Newburgh, New York. Six of us, including Murray, set out in a car on a route that took us along the dark winding roads through the mountainous terrain abutting the Hudson River. After a few minutes of driving, a thick fog set in and visibility decreased to ten or fifteen yards. We slowed down to twenty miles per hour. Several times we debated turning back, but on each occasion Murray exhorted us: Onward troops! Press on to our destination! We did as Murray asked and wound up having a great time, although the club was a bit of a neighborhood dive with several surly townies casting sidewise glances at our celebratory group. But Murray was just happy to sit and imbibe the atmosphere and drink while providing a hilarious running commentary on the proceedings. He was there, he told us, merely as a sociological observer. On the drive back, he serenaded us with the few lines he remembered from the disco song On the Radio by Donna Summers, which the club DJ played repeatedly that evening. Murray had a practiced musical ear and a good vocal range, and he sounded pretty good.
Perhaps Murrays greatest virtue, however, was his genuine and abiding intellectual humility. Now, Murray did not have a trace of false modesty with respect to his own monumental intellectual achievements, and he proudly acknowledged the titles Mr. Libertarian and Dean of the Modern Austrian School bestowed on him by his admirers. Yet he always generously credited his predecessors and mentors and sought to build upon their scholarship. Thus, he always considered himself, as an economist, no more than a student of Mises, and saw his own prodigious contributions to economic theory as merely attempts to advance what he called the Misesian paradigm. For example, at the famous conference in South Royalton, Vermont, which was a catalyst for the modern revival of the Austrian school, Rothbard gave a lecture in which he ventured to criticize a position taken by Mises on making ethical value judgments based on economic theory. At the time, Rothbard was nearly fifty years old, a prolific author, and one of the most accomplished and recognized Austrian economists in the world. Yet, after his talk ended, I remember him confiding to a few of us in attendance that he was still a little shaky from having publicly criticized his mentor for the first time.
Another example occurred when I met Murray at his favorite Jewish deli in Manhattan. It was sometime in the early 1990s, when he was working on his monumental two-volume treatise on the history of economic thought. Over lunch, he eagerly told me about the many new discoveries he had made: the unjustly obscure economists he had dug up; how one apparently minor economist was actually a brilliant movement builder although his influence was evil; how modern psychobabble, which he generally detested, was actually useful in explaining the thought of a famous classical economist. And on and on he went in his rapid-fire New York style of speaking. He was especially gleeful when he informed me about the novel interpretations and critiques he was developing that would puncture the overblown reputations of some of the most venerable figures in the history of economic thought. While he spoke, I rarely uttered a word, because I was fascinated by what I was learning and intent on absorbing every new idea and insight. I was also stunned by the breadth and depth of his knowledge about a subject that he had not previously written on in much detail. But he must have mistaken my uncharacteristic silence as a sign of boredom, because after about an hour he suddenly stopped and sheepishly apologized for monopolizing the conversation. I assured him that I was not bored and urged him to continue, and, to my delight, he happily resumed his discourse for another two hours or so. Later, I thought to myself, How could he think that I ever would want to interrupt him, a creative genius who was giving me a private seminar on a work in progress that was destined to be a classic as soon as it was published?
Happy Birthday, Murray! I know the world will not soon see your like again.
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Opinion: The Perseverance rover landing on Mars is a giant leap toward human colonization of space – The San Diego Union-Tribune
Posted: at 1:47 am
Thiemens is a distinguished professor of chemistry and biochemistry, Chancellors Associates chair, and former dean of the Division of Physical Sciences at UC San Diego. He lives in North County.
Near high noon local time on Thursday, Feb., 18, the Perseverance spacecraft landed on the surface of Mars. The landing sequence was accompanied by some of the most astounding and breathtaking photography of a space landing ever taken. It happened that the time of landing was during a lecture for my upper-level environmental chemistry course at UC San Diego. The course is not restricted to Earths environment and has included Mars. Since it was timely, I livestreamed the landing and whats known as the seven minutes of terror to the class.
Perseverance in many ways is unique and, given the incredible array of space missions, it has a high bar. The landing was in an optimal site for the search for life, a mission focus of Perseverance. As NASA planned, it touched down in the 30-mile-wide, approximately 3.8-billion-year-old Jezero Crater. This site was chosen especially for its potential for life. It is deep, with delta-like drainage features and observed minerals associated with the activity of water which should be directed towards the crater bottom.
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As we discussed in class, the craft carries a full arsenal of analytical instruments to search for life on Mars from a multitude of perspectives. For the first time, there is the capability to drill and collect deeper Mars samples where life may be. Equally important is that it will establish a sample cache depot, where the samples will be left for future astronaut return missions, another first and clearly planned for humankinds deep exploration of space. The examination of Mars in this mission also achieves another first with the inclusion of the Ingenuity helicopter. The flights of Ingenuity will search for new notable geological features as well as provide road maps for future rovers and missions.
What occurred to me while describing the experiments on board Perseverance was that the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment, or MOXIE, earmarked the mission in another special way. The experiment is constructed to convert carbon dioxide, the major component of the Martian atmosphere, to oxygen. The purpose is to prepare oxygen for human consumption and as a propellant to prepare for human habitation on Mars. In some ways, this highlights the fact that our expansion to inhabit space is very clearly underway, and this is a significant step. The Artemis project, scheduled to launch in 2024 and land the first woman and next man at the lunar South Pole, is the beginning of the first permanent station on the moon. It will develop the knowledge, experience and technology to expand our presence to Mars. NASA, along with an international group including Canada, Europe, the United Kingdom, Japan, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Ukraine and Australia, and private corporations and universities, will collaborate on this expansion of human existence from Earth.
In describing and pondering these recent activities from the perspective of watching Sputnik, Apollo and space missions, flying my own rocket atmospheric samplers, measuring moonrocks and meteorites (including Martian ones) for more than 40 years, and learning of Artemis during my tenure on the Space Studies Board of the National Academy of Sciences it is staggering that so much can occur across our planet in less than a lifetime.
In 1976, Gerard K. ONeill wrote in The High Frontier that a post-Apollo road map to colonization of space involved the gravitationally stable L-4 and L-5 points, 60 degrees ahead of and 60 degrees behind the Moon in its orbit around the Earth. In 1979, Gov. Jerry Brown provided funds for creation of the University of Californias California Space Institute. This was a broad multi-campus organization to develop all aspects of space science, exploration and technology, including space inhabitation. Its founder was my former colleague James Arnold, the first chair and founder of our Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UC San Diego, who was instrumental in creating NASAs lunar sample facility and research. He directed Calspace for 10 years and recruited Sally Ride to become the next director and a professor in the Department of Physics and the Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences. These efforts seemed in the far future at the the time but very much justified and prescient.
With widespread international collaborations between countries, corporations and universities, there is an acceleration of space science and technologies. The students in the classroom today may very well be among the first citizens of Mars.
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Opinion: The Perseverance rover landing on Mars is a giant leap toward human colonization of space - The San Diego Union-Tribune
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NASA Mars mission: Perseverance to begin search for life on Red Planet – Daily Express
Posted: at 1:47 am
The Perseverance rover has been on the planet for ten days - while the project is into its 213th day in total. Stunning images from the vehicle's 23 cameras captured the historic descent and dusty terrain of its landing - on what is thought to be a former lake.
Microphones picked up the sound of a gentle wind which was recorded and sent back to Earth.
Perseverance will spend at least two years drilling into rocks in the vicinity in search of past life.
Sanjeev Gupta, one of the leading scientists on the 3 billion mission, has said sophisticated laboratory analysis of samples will be used to establish if life existed.
He refers to the Jezero Crater on which the mission landed as Lake Jezero.
Discussing images of the Mars surface, he told BBC Newsnight: Youre looking at a new vista that nobody has ever seen before.
It looks like a very desolate place; reddish colour, rocks strewn.
But about 3.7 billion years ago, we think the crater that Perseverance landed in was actually a lake, so you would have been sitting in the middle of a lake.
The goals over the next year or so are going to be looking at the rocks we can see in the foreground and the background and trying to work out if the environment was actually habitable for life.
The project is so complex that gathered samples will not be returned until the 2030s, and hundreds of the worlds top scientists are offering their wisdom to the investigation.
READ MORE:Life on Mars: Scientists grow rock-eating organisms on Martian meteor
"Thats what we are seeking - chemical evidence for life or fossilized signatures.
The tubes of samples we are going to bring back are going to be tiny.
"But with lab techniques on Earth we will be able to delve into detail on those.
Presenter Emily Maitlis asked Professor Gupta, of Imperial College Londons Department of Earth Science and Engineering, if life had to be an organism relying on oxygen or water - or whether a different definition could exist.
He replied: We use Earth examples.
The rocks we are looking at are 3.7 billion years old and the earliest life on Earth that we can be certain of occurred about 3.5 billion years ago - and thats microbial life in rocks in Australia that used water and chemical energy.
"So we are using the same sorts of learnings from Earth to look for life on Mars.
On the refinement and evolution of Earth as a planet, Prof Gupta added: It makes Earth feel very special, a tropical landscape on Earth feels very special, and one can actually imagine 3.7 billion years ago one could have actually had a picnic on the lake shore of Lake Jezero but thats not possible now.
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Why are humans so obsessed with Mars? – Livemint
Posted: at 1:47 am
Humans dont live on Mars/ Nor do cats/ Or walruses/ There is no Perestroika on Mars/ Therefore no illusion/ No pollution/ Problems but no solutions/ No evolution, no revolution/ Go, go, go to Mars/ Go, go, go to Mars
Mangal Graha,
lyrics by Chandrabindoo
Theres something about Mars. Saturn has rings. Jupiter has 79 moons, maybe more. But Mars was always about Martians. Its the only planet whose inhabitants captured our collective imagination for over a century. Martians were a thing in a way Venusians and Jovians never were.
While every Mars mission, from US space agency Nasas Viking to Indias Mangalyaan, might have expanded the frontiers of science, they have also sadly made us realise that there are no Martians, whether itching to start a War of the Worlds or provide refuge from our nuclear winter. Mars has become the back-up planet now, the one we will escape to when we have rendered Earth uninhabitable. The Mars One project promised to establish a colony, a scheme that was funded by a reality TV show but that has gone belly-up. Business magnate Elon Musk dreams of sending a million people to Mars by 2050. No less than 10,932,295 people sent their names to Nasa to join the 2020 Perseverance mission, their names carried to the red planet on microchips. Over 5,500,000 have added their names for a future mission and gotten a boarding pass. More than 270,000 names are from India, the most after the Philippines and the US. In a year when most of us have not gone anywhere at all, just holding a boarding pass, even one that takes us nowhere, feels exhilarating. But the Martians are missing.
It all probably started because of the Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli. In 1877, he saw channel-like structures on the surface of Mars. His Italian canali, or channels, got translated as canals. In 1906, The New York Times Magazine ran a cover story about Percival Lowell, an amateur astronomer who said he had discovered nearly 500 canals irrigating oases all over the planet. This was the time, writes Nathaniel Rich in Believer magazine, when canals, like the Suez and Panama, had come to represent the pinnacle of human achievement. Newspapers claimed Martians had built two immense canals in two years while earthlings had taken half a century to dig the Suez and Panama. An astronomy professor was sure that once we got advanced telescopes, we would be able to see Martian cities.
That canal fantasy so captivated us that Bengali writer Hemendra Kumar Roy fantasised in his novel, Meghduter Mortey Agomon, that Mars had green fields and jungles around 3,000- to 4,000-mile long canals while the rest of the planet was buffeted by red sandstorms. All that was debunked but, by then, the Martians had landed in our imagination.
In 1897, H.G. Wells had them levelling cities on Earth with lasers as they launched The War Of The Worlds. Decades later, when Satyajit Ray sent his Professor Shonku, the protagonist of his immensely popular Bengali sci-fi stories, to Mars along with his manservant Prahlad, his robot Bidhushekhar and his cat Newton, they too were attacked by an army of Martians. In Hemendra Kumar Roys world, the Martians were dwarfish, with huge triangular heads the same size as their thin bodies, highly evolved yet terrified of guns. They came to Earth to vacuum up samplesan entire pond, a banyan tree with a flock of monkeys, a steamer.
But not all Martians were hostile. Edgar Rice Burroughs discovered a princess on Mars, one that entranced his Confederate war hero turned Mars explorer John Carter. C.S. Lewis imagined a planet of great beauty with benign species bemused by the way humans were turning Earth into a wasteland. Lewis described three kinds of Martianstall, thin, otter-like hrossa covered in thick black hair with a penchant for poetry, the 15ft-high feathered sorn who specialised in science, and the pfifltriggi, with tapir-like heads and frog-like bodies, who mined gold. None of the species thought they were superior to the others.
When they were not trying to destroy us, the Martians were trying to save us. Sometimes, though, we got to save them. Bengali science fiction writer Premendra Mitras Ghana Da was the master of tall tales. When he was kidnapped by a devious scientist and taken to Mars, he found a planet of swirling dust where all civilisation had moved underground. Butspoiler alert!Ghana Da and his two companions, both men, found themselves hot commodities on a planet where the males had died out. Each female Martian was more exquisite than the next. But how come Martians looked exactly like humans? wondered a sceptical listener. They arent humans. But whos to say we arent Martians, retorted Ghana Da. That hundreds of thousands of years ago Martians didnt come to earth to establish our human civilization? Remember we have not found the missing link yet.
For us, Martians were a kind of missing link, whether to a glorious past or a bleak future. In the 1950s-60s, Mars was a perfect backdrop to play out debates over colonisation that were raging on Earth. In Robert A. Heinleins Red Planet, Martians have second thoughts about whether they want to share their planet with colonising humans. The Sands Of Mars, Arthur C. Clarkes first published novel, was set in a colony on Mars whose original inhabitants are plant-eating, kangaroo-like creatures of limited intelligence. In Ray Bradburys The Martian Chronicles, the Martians hunt down the newly arrived earthlings but the humans have a secret weapon against which they are defencelesschicken-pox germs.
Missions like Nasas Mariner 4 in 1965 and Viking, which landed on Mars in 1976, enthralled us but also sounded the death knell for the Martians. Mars slowly started shifting in our minds from the planet that belonged to Martians, to an empty terrain we could turn into Earth-II. Its landmarks were bestowed names like Olympus, Utopia, Elysium, names that sound almost like gated communities in Gurugram. Mars had once been a socialist utopia in the imagination of writers like Aleksandr Bogdanov, where men and women were nearly indistinguishable in their loose body suits and workers had an unlimited supply of goods. When Mariner 4 showed us the canals were an optical illusion, Mars became more of a dystopia, a place to be tamed.
When botanist astronaut Mark Watney (in Andy Weirs The Martian) gets stranded on Mars, he tries to reclaim water and grow potato plants using his own bio-waste. In Mark Haddons The Woodpecker And The Wolf, an astronaut on a Mars station discovers she is pregnant and there are no supplies coming from Earth. Once we were worried about what the Martians wanted from us. The more we learnt about Mars, the more it turned into an extreme episode of Survivor.
Bradbury writes that when the men of Earth came to Mars, they were the Lonely Ones, who were leaving bad wives or bad towns; they were coming to find something or leave something or get something, to dig up something or bury something. Mars became part of the manifest destiny of us as human beings, a wild frontier we would tame into submission without post-colonial guilt.
As a boy, I remember lying on our rooftop in Kolkata on sultry power-cut summer nights looking up at the stars, imagining someone out there looking back at us. I only had access to a pocket-sized sky hemmed in by the water cisterns and television antennas of taller buildings all around us. But the imagination was unfettered, racing through the sky at the speed of light. At the time, I could never have thought that an Elon Musk would talk about setting up human colonies on Mars in my lifetime. But thanks to Isaac Asimov and Ghana Da stories, I fantasised about what Martians might be like.
Mars is back on our minds, thanks to Perseverance, but the Martians have vanished. And even as I marvel at the selfies from Percy, I cant help but miss the Martians in whom we once saw the best and worst of ourselves.
Cult Friction is a fortnightly column on issues we keep rubbing up against. Sandip Roy is a writer, journalist and radio host.
@sandipr
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Perseverance – The Mars Rover – Fiorella Beausang-Hunter – Latymer Upper School – This is Local London
Posted: at 1:47 am
On Thursday 18th February, the Mars rover Perseverance landed at the Jezero Crater after having been launched six and a half months earlier on July 30th from Cape Canaveral in Florida, and will remain there for at least one Mars year (687 Earth days). Its main job is going to be to find evidence of ancient life and collect rock and soil samples for possible return to Earth. It will also test the oxygen production on the planet to prepare for the feasible habitation of humans on Mars. In addition, there is a helicopter that hitched a ride with the rover, named Ingenuity, which will be used to test the first powered flight on Mars.
Acting as the brains of the metal creature, the rover has two computers, one being backup, which help with monitoring its condition, exchanging information with the team back on Earth and navigating the rock terrain of the red planet, so they carry out the same functions as a human brain. The computers run at 200 megahertz speed, which is 10 times faster than the computers of the other two Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity. They have an incredible amount of memory, with 2 GB of flash memory, which is 8 times as much as other rovers on Mars, 256 MB of RAM and 256 KB of ROM. The memory is even radiation proof to survive through space and the Martian surface. All of this is protected by the rovers body, or the warm electronics box, WEB for short. The helicopters mass is 1.8kg, and it can fly up to 300 meters an altitude of 5 meters. Its power comes from lithium ion batteries, which are charged by a solar panel. This gives it enough energy for a 90-second flight per Martian day.
Back in 2011, when NASA found evidence of water on Mars, the world was buzzing about possible alien life. Now they hadnt actually found water, but the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter had detected evidence of hydrated salts where there were mysterious dark streaks on the red planet. Scientists suggested that it was most likely a shallow subsurface flow, with enough water wicking to the surface to explain the darkening. However, two years later, additional research was done which interpreted the streaks as granular flows, where it was sand and dust slipping downhill causing the dark streaks, not seeping water. The hydrated salts that the Orbiter detected do suggest that there is some water on Mars, whether that be in the form of ice or liquid water. When the rock and soil samples are returned from Perseverance, we might be able to see some more evidence of water. If there evidence of water, it could mean that there could was life on Mars, which could be in the form of humans or aliens like you would see in a sci-fi movie.
In November 1964, the first successful flybys of Mars were launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Mariner 3 was launched on November 5th but did not make it to Mars, as the protective casing on the spacecraft failed to open properly, so it was lost during the launch. However, Mariner 4 was launched 3 weeks later, and successfully made it to Mars. It first flew past the red planet in July of 1965, and took the first close-up photographs of another planet. There had been 6 previous attempts to get to Mars made by the Soviet Union, all of which had failed due to launch and spacecraft failures, but their first (partially) successful mission was Mars 2 in 1971. The orbiter was successful, but the lander crashed into Mars, and with it went the rover. This was, however, the first impact on Mars. The most recent NASA mission to Mars was the 2018 InSight mission, consisting of a lander and two flybys, all of which were successful. The missions purpose was to look at the geology of the planet, specifically the interior structure. There are two planned NASA missions for the next decade. The first is another rover, set to launch in 2022. This will be a part of a series of missions in collaboration with the ESA and Roscosmos to find out if there was ever life on Mars. The one after is another sample return, set to launch in 2026, and land on Mars in late 2027/2028. This mission is specifically focused on the concept of sample return, and with Perseverance being part of the first mission to conduct sample return on another planet, it is a fairly new concept. The mission will last for about 5 years, returning in 2031.
Many of the Mars missions are now focused on finding out if there was life on the planet, and testing new techniques such as the previously mentioned sample return. Soon focus will be shifted onto human colonization, if possible. Soon we might see the first human on Mars, maybe as soon as 2026. If the climate situation on Earth gets worse, we may have to leave to survive, and colonizing other planets will not be a choice, but a necessity.
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Perseverance - The Mars Rover - Fiorella Beausang-Hunter - Latymer Upper School - This is Local London
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The Avid Reader: A trip into the universe – Monadnock Ledger Transcript
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This is a big month for our solar system. The robot explorer Perseverance made a 300-million-mile journey through space and landed on Mars, an Antares rocket launched the Cygnus cargo ship to the space station for NASA, and a local man published his poetic thoughts on the universe.
Our thoughts naturally turn toward space and what it took to make robotic probes, and massive rocket launches seem almost commonplace.
So, whether you grew up in the Sputnik era or think of that time as ancient history you probably need a refresher. The best source for this is Americas funniest historian Mary Roach. Her book Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void, is an irresistible cruise across all the facets of how to become an astronaut so you can jaunt into space, and what to do when you get there.
Starting with how Japan selects an astronaut (hint: origami is seriously involved), moving on through the psychology of isolation (several someones caught up on sleep), continuing though motion sickness (throwing up really is in that direction when in weightless confinement), and interspacing it all with amusing anecdotes, Roach kept me reading from chapter to chapter without pause.
Roach begins with early space travel and all of the trials experienced by those macho astronauts and then turns to how all of this was just a prelude to the enormous challenges of eventual interplanetary travel.
Typically, research involving long-time travel in space usually tends to be very dry and technical. Yet, with her usual wit, Roach provides a series of highly entertaining accounts including how scientists figured out methods for feeding these sailors to the stars. For example, one suggestion was to add shredded paper as a thickener to a main course of vitamin and mineral-enriched sugar water. However, Roach was unable to ascertain whether it was as an aid to palatability, regularity, or document security. I guess some things will forever remain a mystery, even for Roach.
All of these chapters culminated in discussing that final goal in the race to outer space specifically to Mars. While many of us thought that the moon was the big deal, the reality was much further away, mostly because many deep thinkers have realized that Earth may not always be as habitable as it is right now. Yes, projections are that at some point in the distant future our sun will die, humanity will have used up Earths resources, and some cataclysmic event is highly likely.
How do we know this? Michio Kaku has the answer in The Future of Humanity: Our Destiny in the Universe. Kaku is a theoretical physicist, very deep thinker, and author of several best sellers. He begins by reminding us that one day about seventy-five thousand years ago, humanity almost died. This was due to that massive eruption of Toba in Indonesia that created a volcanic winter. It is theorized that all but around 2,000 humans world-wide died, along with most of the vegetation and wildlife. Apparently this was the first cataclysmic event, and mathematical and scientific speculation suggests more are on the way.
Things got better after that first big blow up, but as we know, other events have, and will, happen. For Kaku, Mars is only the next goal in what he believes is just the first in a series of stages, scaffolding to the ultimate prize interstellar colonization.
Given what we know of the current scientific trends, this is not really so far-fetched. Medical science is working to reverse aging (we need amazing longevity to survive the flights to the nearest star system that has earth-like planets orbiting younger suns). Botanists are developing life-sustaining plants that will grow under a variety of hostile conditions (check out UNHs kiwis), and engineers are designing starships rugged enough to travel those astonishing distances.
Right now, Mars is the planet of choice for many of the experiments in space travel, and Kaku brilliantly discusses all of these efforts. Once Mars has again become the lush and habitable planet many think it once was, all of the data can be gathered and used for the next step of the journey.
Speaking of journeys, Kaku also speculates that perhaps some day humans can leave their bodies and just laser port to the farther galaxies. This is how theoretical physicists think and many times their thinking becomes reality. What a fascinating way to think of how we could achieve immortality.
Once read, these books make it impossible to get these thoughts out of my head. Like the endless breakers on the sand, I keep thinking of the forever of space, the possibility of some part of me being forever and traveling through the stars, and someday a civilization that can harness extragalactic energy to keep life going despite the ultimate apocalypse.
And one man, in a small corner of a medium-sized state, looks up at the stars every night and gives poetic voice to those thoughts that swirl through our heads. The Peterborough Poetry Project has just published Bill Chatfields newest poems We Are Stardust: The Universe in Verse. Sometimes when we look to the heavens after reading something profound, or remembering a photograph from a distant telescope, we lack the words to describe what we feel. That is what poetry is for and that is what poets do.
Chatfield likes to push the envelope surrounding our traditional thinking by giving voice to our ponderings. For example, the Big Bang is a scientific belief that leads us to believe this whole thing we call the infinite universe all started in a moment, with a bang. As finite beings, we can accept that because we understand a beginning and an end. Chatfield, on the other hand, in his poem No Big Bang suggests something else.
Some scientists doubt
that a Big Bang
created all of this
that we see
from a bland without.
The idea
of no big bang
sounds about right to me.
Beginnings and
endings play
havoc with the idea of eternity.
After reading about packing for a Martian voyage and laughing with Roach about the very human efforts to launch these expeditions, then venturing beyond the outer rim of our galaxy with Kaku, we can begin to appreciate how one poet can give voice to these thoughts. Now, we need to formulate our responses to this future.
The Peterborough Poetry Project has offered a challenge and a promise. All readers are asked to become part of the Cosmic Poetry series by submitting their own poems about the cosmos. So, read, think, speculate, imagine, and, first dance your mind through the stars, then second, put pen to paper and add your new fresh voice to the Cosmos.
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The Expanse season five kicks off slowly – The Prospector
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The Expanse, the hit sci-fi show set in humanitys far future,returnedto Amazon Prime in December 2020, with a new actionpackedstoryline and stunning visuals based onastronautic science.
In thehour-longepisodes, The Expanse deliversjawdropping narrative expanding upon two maincharactersNaomi Nagataplayed by Dominique Tipperand Amos BurtonplayedbyWesChatham,whilst focusingon new tensions and conflicts between planetary governments.
ASyfy channel original for its first three premier seasons, The Expanse has received numerous awards and nominations, such as the Dragon Award and Saturn Award, for its depiction of accurate science inits cinematography. It.Waspicked up by Amazon for its fourth, fifth, andupcomingsixth season.
Im going to analyze this season,so bewareof spoilers.
The seasonreturnstothemain characters split up after theincidentcausedby Belterson the newly colonizedexoplanet.Beltersisagroup of people native to the Asteroid Belt between Earth and Mars.
We join James Holden,played by StevenStraitand Naomi Nagatabeginningtheir lives together when Naomi finds informationaboutthe locationof herlong-lostsonwho wasstolen by her ex-husband, and main antagonist of this season MarcoInaros,played by Keon Alexander.The reunion is promptly interruptedwhenher son turnson herandNaomi is taken. Thistriggers a series of eventsleading James and his crew aiding in a dire rescue mission.This islearningabout asecret group seeking the last remaining amount ofprotomolecule,a bioweapon revealed to be engineered by an ancientspecies thatwent extinct for unknownreasons.
On another storyline,we follow Alex seeking amends with his familythathe leftbehindprior toseason one.He isrejoined withthemartialmarine gunnery sergeant Roberta BobbieDrapper,played by Frankie Adams.Asthe two begin travelingthe solar systemin arepurposedmartialwarship,they investigatewho is supplying the BelterO.P.Aterrorist organization with Martiantechnology.
On Earth,Amos returnsto his hometown of Boston,Massachusetts,to settle a disputeabout an old arrangement made prior to season onethatescalates.Amos fleestheworld withhis acquaintance after a terrorist attack, brought on by antagonist Marco as he flings meteor into the Earths atmosphere, destroying manylarge,populatedcities across the globe.
The season finishes withUnited Nations secretary general playedbyChrisjenAvasarala,played byShohrehAghdashloo,strugglingto keep peace between Earth and Marsasthesnewly formed Belter terrorist organization declarewar.
Therearea lot of great aspects of thisseasontomake up for the dry and slow plotline.This is done byexploring many of the other main characters past lives andhistories andthingsliketheoverwhelming anticipation ofwherea missing asteroid around Venusisand how itwasusedina terrorist attackon the Earth.The politics that go into keeping peacebetweenthree governmentsadd to it too.
However,this seasonlacks pacing.It can lose the audiences attention early on with the first three episodes.While theresthrilling momentslikethebattle between theRocinante,the shows main space vessel,and the Belter armada,it takes over too much of the season making quite a few of the scenes unnecessary to seasons plot.
Another problem surrounds the characterAlex Kamal,played byCas Anvar. There were sexual assault allegationsagainst the actor,as well as multiple womenallegedlyreceivinginappropriate messages and pictures.Theactor was fired from the show because of the allegations, bringinga troubling scene toward the end of the season, where he was killed off. The scene is troubling becausefeels forced rather than necessary or compelling to the plot.It alsobrings concern aboutwhat will happen in season six.
Season fiveof The Expanseis by far more thrilling than itsprecedingseason,which seemed to drag on before the final three episodes, but season five comes with its owncomplications.Thedeath of main character Alex,even the expectation of the asteroid impactfelt anti-climactic compared to other thrilling scenes seen in seasons two and three.
Other than that,season five keepsaudienceslocked in and is must watch for anyone invested.Thedevelopingplotlineseemsto be setting up for something big in season six.Id rate the season3.5picksout of five,as it delivers to the audience compelling drama and thrilling actioncontent,butmay take a bit of watching to get to.
Sven Kline may be reached at[emailprotected]edu.@SvenKline on Twitter.
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Ageless Review: The Long Run – The Wall Street Journal
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On arriving in London to seek his fortune, the rambunctious Scottish physician George Cheyne set about hobnobbing in coffee houses and taverns, where he ate lustily and swallowed down much liquor. Before long, he had ballooned to nearly 450 pounds. In a state of existential crisis and discerning that his mortality was in the balance, he published a self-help manual, An Essay of Health and Long Life (1724). In this bestselling treatise, he singled out tea, coffee, chocolate and snuff as being especially detrimental to the human condition.
This seminal work, among others, spawned a tradition of books addressing the topic of longevity which continues to this day. While Cheyne and others contrived innumerable methods designed to maintain good health and extend lifespans, the process of aging has itself invariably been viewed as an immutable part of human nature.
No longer, says Andrew Steele in his entertaining and thoughtful book Ageless (Doubleday, 352 pages, $29). While we wither and become frail after a mere seven or so decades, the humble Galpagos tortoise bumbles on healthily into a 175-year dotage. Capturing this traitknown as negligible senescenceis the holy grail of aging research.
So if, as Mr. Steele contends, tortoises get old without getting elderly, might we not master biological immortality and become ageless too? Were this achievable, the existence of a bristlecone pine tree in Californias White Mountains, estimated to be an extraordinary 4,850 years old, suggests that such potential extensions to our longevity might be more than mere tweaks. The fact that lifespans of different species vary so greatlysome mayflies emerge, mate and die within 5 minutes, while bowhead whales can live for more than 200 yearsindicates that our lifespan is programmed by evolution, rather than restricted by insurmountable constraints.
Ageless follows biologist George C. Williamss simple evolutionary explanation for why we age, based on a phenomenon called antagonistic pleiotropy. Put simply, genes selected to facilitate early successful reproduction may have detrimental effects as we get older. In Mr. Steeles words, it looks as if evolution has traded our future health for increased reproduction. Were we able to roll the clock back and redesign ourselves, we would doubtless find alternative genetic circuits that did not have these unfortunate consequences. Perhaps one day, Mr. Steele conjectures, we will be able to reprogram our genomes to remove this legacy. Fortunately, there may be more immediately accessible paths to a longer life.
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Immigration Bill Shows Need To End Employment-Based Immigrant Backlog – Forbes
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High-skilled foreign nationals, including doctors and engineers, rally on Capitol Hill in ... [+] Washington, D.C., to protest long delays in getting green cards on September 18, 2007, in Washington, D.C. The employment-based green card backlog has worsened since 2007. (Photo by Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Without a change in immigration law, it will be sometime in the year 2216195 years from nowwhen the last person born in India waiting today in the employment-based immigrant backlog is expected to receive a green card. Barring advances in human longevity, businesses and high-skilled foreign nationals must rely on Congress to solve this problem and enact reasonable policies to welcome highly skilled people who want to become Americans.
The Scope of the Problem: H-1B and L-1 (intracompany transferee) are temporary statuses, meaning if someone wishes to remain in the United States, they must obtain an employment-based immigrant visa (or green card) that grants permanent residence. However, there is far greater demand for high-skilled individuals than the limited number of employment-based green cards allotted by Congress.
Since 1990, when Congress set the annual limit on employment-based immigrants at 140,000 (and 65,000 H-1B temporary visas), changes in technology have accelerated the demand for high-skilled technical labor. Congress established the current employment-based limits before the internet became a part of daily life. It also predates the iPhone, the iPad, YouTube, e-commerce, Netflix, Google, cloud computing and thousands of innovative companies and technologies that have come into existence and fueled the demand for high-skilled labor.
U.S. businesses would still need more scientists and engineers to grow and innovate even if the number of Americans earning degrees in science and engineering had explodedand it hasnt.
Between 1995 and 2015, full-time U.S. graduate students in electrical engineering decreased by 17%. The number of full-time U.S. graduate students in computer science increased by 45% from 1995 to 2015, while international graduate students increased by over 480%. (H-1B visa fees paid by employers have funded approximately 100,000 college scholarships for U.S. students in science and engineering.)
As of March 2020, the backlog in EB-1, EB-2 and EB-3the employment-based first, second and third preferenceswas 915,497, according to the Congressional Research Service (CRS).
Without Congressional action, notes CRS, the problem will grow worse: The total backlog for all three categories would increase from an estimated 915,497 individuals currently to an estimated 2,195,795 individuals by FY 2030.
Let that number sink in: Within a decade, more than 2 million people will be waiting in line, most for many years or even decades, for employment-based green cards. And there are indications this underestimates the problem.
Table 1 shows that in FY 2018 only about 4,500 Indians obtained permanent residence in the employment-based second preference and fewer than 6,000 received green cards in the employment-based third preference. (The National Foundation for American Policy obtained the data via a Freedom of Information Act request.)
CRS estimates the annual demand for employment-based green cards in the three preference categories is 262,376 (including dependents). This is based on petitions U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) approved in FY 2018. CRS explains the backlog grew because there is a current limit of 120,120 green cards for the three employment-based immigration categories.
Another problem is that Congress established a per-country limit of 7% for each country that burdens mainly potential employment-based immigrants from India but also affects people born in China and the Philippines. The law, in effect, gives the same number of green cards for employment to India as it does Iceland.
In the employment-based second preference (EB-2): Under current law, and owing to a limited number of green card issuances, the current backlog of 568,414 Indian nationals would require an estimated 195 years to disappear, according to CRS. David Bier of the Cato Institute predicts about 186,038 Indian immigrants will die . . . before they receive green cards even if they could remain in line forever.
By FY 2030, [the] estimated wait time would more than double, according to CRS. Under S. 386, the estimated wait time for newly approved EB-2 petition holders would shrink to 17 years, and in FY 2030, the wait time would be 37 years, the same as for all other foreign nationals.
S. 386 was a bill in the last Congress sponsored by Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) that would have eliminated the per-country limit for employment-based immigrants. Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) wrote H.R. 1044 with Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) and it passed the House in July 2019. The companion bill, S. 386, was blocked in the Senate for more than a year. It became a Christmas tree for extraneous immigration provisions. The Senate finally approved S. 386 near the end of the session but the House found the provisions to be objectionable and it did not become law. The bill would not have increased the number of employment-based green cards but would have reduced the wait times for those waiting the longest for permanent residence, particularly professionals from India.
Without any change in the law, CRS predicts: Currently, new Indian beneficiaries entering the EB-3 [employment-based third preference] backlog can expect to wait 27 years before receiving a green card. (The wait time would be much longer in the EB-2 category.)
Scientists and engineers waiting for their green cards may see their children who have lived in the United States for years be forced to leave the country when they age out of their place on a mother or fathers immigration application when reaching 21 years old. USCIS policies during the Trump administration caused many spouses of H-1B visa holders waiting for green cards to lose their work authorization due to long processing delays.
New Immigration Bill Would End the Employment-Based Backlog: The U.S. Citizenship Act, developed by the Biden administration, would eliminate the employment-based backlog within 10 years through various provisions, according to a National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP) analysis.
First, the bill would no longer count spouses and children toward the annual limit, which would approximately double the annual number of employment-based green cards. Second, the legislation increases the annual limit for family-sponsored immigrants and allows unused numbers from the family categories to be used by the employment categories. That means once the family backlog is eliminated, which NFAP predicts could happen within 5 or 6 years, backlog reduction in the employment-based categories would accelerate.
Third, the bill eliminates the per-country limit. Fourth, the legislation allows unused green cards from earlier years to be redirected to reduce family and employment backlogs.
The bill also contains a provision, which NFAP has recommended, to allow any individuals who wait at least 10 years with an approved immigrant petition to receive permanent residence without numerical limit. If Congress passed only this reform, it would help many people and bring certainty to otherwise interminable waits for many employment-based immigrants.
Related to the backlog, in its final days, the Trump administration published a final rule designed to price employment-based immigrants and H-1B visa holders out of the U.S. labor market. The regulation would boost required wages 23% to 41% depending on the occupation, according to an NFAP study. The regulation could block people waiting for green cards if the new required salary is too high for an employer to retain them in H-1B status. (Individuals can be extended in H-1B status while waiting for an employment-based green card.)
If the Biden administration keeps the rule, it would be a significant victory for former White House adviser Stephen Miller and opponents of immigration.
Numerous studies and private wage surveys show that there is no evidence high-skilled foreign nationals are paid less than comparable U.S. professionals. If employers were forced to pay high-skilled immigrants 41% more than comparable U.S. workers, one would expect critics would still claim the immigrants were paid less because that is typically the only argument put forward against high-skilled foreign nationals who work in America. Members of Congress are repeatedly told to believe the only value someone born in another country offers a U.S. business or the U.S. economy is a willingness to work for less money.
If we have learned one thing from the pandemic, it is how valuable immigrants are to America. Immigrants play key roles in the two companies responsible for the Covid-19 vaccines Americans are receiving to protect their lives. Modernas leaders, two cofounders and critical scientific personnel are immigrants, as are the chief executive (and chief science officer) of Pfizer and a key scientist (Katalin Karik) who made a crucial breakthrough on messenger RNA, as noted in a December 2020 article. Even the founders of Pfizer were immigrants.
We have blown the opportunity to maximize the incredible high-skilled immigrants in this country, said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) at a recent hearing. The backlog of green cards is immoral to me. Will this be the year moral outrage and economic sense lead to a solution for employment-based immigrants?
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