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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Man charged with human trafficking in Howard County – The … – Washington Post

Posted: August 3, 2017 at 11:42 pm

By Sharif Hassan By Sharif Hassan August 2

A Baltimore man was charged Wednesday with multiple counts of human trafficking after an investigation revealed he was forcing multiple women into prostitution in Howard County, police said.

Kamal Goodwyn, 43, also known as Kamal Dorchy of Charles Plaza in Baltimore, is being held in Howard County without bond in the trafficking after allegedly posting ads for the women on Backpage, police said.

Police began investigating the case July 23 after a woman called police from a motel in Laurel and told them she was a victim of human trafficking by a man and that she was tired of working for him, according to charging documents filed in the case.

Goodwyn was arrested after the police located him when he rented a motel room in Prince Georges County, police said. Three more women were discovered in the room, all believed to be trafficking victims and between the ages of 17 and 24, according to police.

Police charge that he coordinated and arranged appointments at motels for the women and forced them to perform sex acts for money. He found women by running ads offering jobs in massage work or prostitution, police said, and took half of the money they earned through performing sex acts and also controlled their access to cellphones, food and sleep.

Police said Goodwyn also physically assaulted the women, threatened them with a handgun and supplied them with drugs. He recently beat one woman who tried to hide money from him and threw her from a car onto a road, according to the charging documents that also said one of the women told police he hits you like a man.

The public defender assigned to Goodwyn could not immediately be reached for comment Wednesday.

All four women were taken to a safe location, police said.

Goodwyn faces a preliminary hearing set for Aug. 30 in Howard County, according to Wayne Kirwan, Director of Community Justice and Public Information Howard County State's Attorney's Office.

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Scientists discover method to rejuvenate aging human cells – National Post

Posted: at 11:42 pm

John Cooke wants it to be clear that he and his fellow researchers at the Houston Methodist Research Institute have not discovered the fountain of youth.

Im not Ponce de Leon, Cooke said in an interview on Tuesday, referring to the 16th century Spanish explorer who, legend has it, was seeking a water source capable of reversing aging.

But in a research letter just published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, Cooke and his colleagues report they have developed technology in their laboratory that rejuvenates human cells, raising the possibility of treatment for an array of age-related diseases.

Working with cells from children suffering from progeria, an extremely rare genetic disorder marked by rapid aging, the scientists from the Houston Methodist Research Institute discovered a dramatic effect on the lifespan and function of the cells.

We can at least stall or slow down accelerated aging, and thats what were working toward, Cooke, department chair of cardiovascular sciences at Houston Methodist, said in a news release. Our next steps are to start moving this therapy toward clinical use. We plan to do so by improving existing cell therapies. I want to develop a therapy for these children.

The new research focused on telomeres, which are found at the end of chromosomes. Cooke likened a telomere to the tip of a shoelace, holding the chromosome together. They have also been compared to the fuse on a bomb, because they get shorter every time a cell divides. Eventually the cell can no longer divide and it dies.

Such shortening is typically associated with aging, and 12 of the 17 progeria patients studied the oldest of whom was 14 had shortened telomere, similar to what would be found in a healthy 69-year-old. The average person with progeria lives just 13 years, with heart attack and stroke a common cause of death.

The technology used by the researchers involved prompting cells to produce a protein, telomerase, which can lengthen the telomere. This was done by delivering RNA to the cells that encode telomerase.

When we lengthen telomeres, we can reverse a lot of the problems associated with aging, Cooke said in a video accompanying the publication.

We were not expecting to see such a dramatic effect on the ability of the cells to proliferate. They could function and divide more normally, and we gave them extra lifespan, as well as better function, Cooke said.

The challenge now is finding a way to deliver the RNA into a human body as opposed to cells in a petri dish. RNA is fragile and breaks down quickly in the bloodstream, so Cooke said they are studying the use of nanoparticles to deliver the treatment.

Animal studies will first have to be conducted to ensure safety before any testing on humans, but he is optimistic clinical treatment could be available within a few years.

In his medical practice, Cooke sees a lot of patients suffering from heart and vascular diseases caused by aging. He is hopeful the new findings will be as beneficial to them as they are to children undergoing rapidly accelerated aging.

About a third of the people in this country succumb to strokes and heart attacks, he said. If we can fix that, well fix a lot of diseases.

A study published in the journal Nature in 2010 found that triggering telomerase production reversed aging in mice. But other studies have shown an increased cancer risk as cells stimulated with telomerase are again able to replicate.

Telomerase has become popular among many people hoping to combat aging, with some companies marketing costly telomerase activators in pill or liquid form.

Cooke does not want his research lumped in with the over-the-counter treatments for which he has seen no evidence of their effectiveness.

Im a physician. Im skeptical, and any new therapies have to undergo the rigor of a randomized clinical trial and be shown to be safe and effective, he said.

National Post

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In The Future, Your Car Will Read Your Biology to Make Decisions for You – Futurism

Posted: at 11:42 pm

Next-Level Integration

As automakers like Tesla, Toyota, and Volvo focus on developing vehicles that can interact autonomously with their environments, Ari Teman is exploring ways the cars of the future could interact with you. The inventor, designer, and technologist told Futurism he sees biometrics, which is the ability for a vehicle, an environment, or a service to recognize who you are and how you are, as one of the biggest developments in transportation in recent years.

Though the tech may sound futuristic, biometrics are already a part of our everyday lives the fingerprint sensor you use to unlock your smartphone or the voice recognition software that lets you command your tech via speech are two fairly prevalent examples. While the use of biometrics in the automotive sector isnt as common, it is predicted to grow steadily over the next few years, and a report by Frost & Sullivans Intelligent Mobility Team predicts that a third of new cars will incorporate biometric sensors by 2025.

Teman is currently working with Deutsche Telekoms datacom division to take biometric technology to the next level. He envisions a future in which cars are able to do far more than simply transport passengers from point A to point B. This smart transportation experience will begin before you even enter the car, he predicts.

Your vehicle will recognize you as you approach, says Teman. Theres no driver whos going to look out the window and go, Oh, its Neil. Its going to be a camera, and its going to say, I have to pull up to Neil, whos standing on the sidewalk, and not Joe, whos standing 10 feet away from him.

As soon as a rider enters the vehicle, the cars biometric sensors will go to work. Once youre in the car, were reading your vitals, and were reading your neurological signs, asserts Teman. Everything from how a car operates to the route it chooses can be automatically adjusted based on this information to best suit the passenger.

The car may notice that every time it makes a turn, your heart rate rises, Teman explains. The vehicle could interpret this information as a sign that youre nervous and that it should make an adjustment. The car will think Maybe I should slow down or Maybe theres something in this neighborhood that is bothering this passenger, and it will consider taking a detour or different route next time, says Teman.

He thinks the biometric-equipped car of the future will even be able to make subtle environmental changes based on the biological data it collects: If the car sees youre tired, it can dim the lights. If it sees youre shivering, it can turn up the heat.

While the technology Teman is working on is still on the horizon, several companies have already demonstrated examples of how biometrics can be applied to the transportation sector to make driving safer and more comfortable today.

At the 2017 Consumer Electronics Showcase in Las Vegas, German automaker Continental debuted theirBiometric Access System. Drivers in cars with the system must provide fingerprint authentication to start the engine, helping prevent theft. Meanwhile, an interior camera uses facial recognition software to adjust the cars settings based on the driver, ensuring a more comfortable, personalized experience.

At the same event, electronics company Gentex revealed theirbiometric system. This iris-scanning technology can be incorporated into a vehicles rear-view mirror and is 99.9 percent accurate at confirming a drivers identity. If the person in the car isnt recognized, the system can text the cars owner or limit functionality. If the driver is recognized, everything from the seat to the radio can be adjusted automatically to suit their preferences.

Other companies are taking a focus on safety with their biometric innovations.

Two firms are currently developing car headrests with built-in electroencephalogram (EEG) sensors to tell if a driver is distracted or even falling asleep. If one of these systems notices a problem, it can trigger the cars steering wheel or seat to shake to return the drivers attention to the road.

Meanwhile, Olea Sensor Networks has created a device that attaches to the seat belt in a car to monitor the driver or passengers vital signs. In the case of an accident, it can even automatically notify first-responders, letting them know the passengers identities and conditions.

These innovations are just the beginning. The relationship between ourselves and our cars is poised to shift dramatically in the coming years, transitioning from one in which we dictate the transportation experience into one in which we are quite literally along for the ride.

This interview has been slightly edited for clarity and brevity.

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An Asteroid Headed Our Way Is About to Test NASA’s Planetary Defense System – Futurism

Posted: at 11:42 pm

2012 TC4

Our Solar System is littered with chunks of space rocks that whizz around in different orbits and varying speeds and its no big deal until one of those rocks turns out to be on a nasty unexpected trajectory and smashes into Earth.

Itsactually a pretty unlikely apocalypse scenario, but even with one in 10,000 odds its a good idea to keep an eye out. Now NASA scientists are excited theyll finally get to test out some of their defence systems with an upcoming asteroid fly-by in October.

Dont run for the panic room just yet the inbound asteroid, called2012 TC4, is estimated to safely pass our planet at a distance of about 6,800 kilometres (4,200 miles). We dont have a more concrete number because the space rock has been out of telescope range since 2012.

At a width of roughly 10-30 metres (30-100 feet), TC4 is pretty small. So far astronomers have only caught a glimpse of it once when it hurtled past Earth back in 2012 at a distance much closer than our own Moon.

Back then they only had a window of seven days to make observations and calculate when this asteroid will show up next.

But based on that data, it looks like TC4 will zoom around again on October 12 this year, and researchers are making preparations to not only update their observations of this particular object, but also to test out some of their planetary defense strategies.

This time we are adding in another layer of effort, using this asteroid flyby to test the worldwide asteroid detection and tracking network, assessing our capability to work together in response to finding a potential real asteroid threat,says observation campaign lead Michael Kelleyfrom NASA.

This is the first time NASA researchers get to use an actual space rock for their planetary defense efforts, which involve astronomers from all over the world.

The Planetary Defense Coordination Office (PDCO) wasonly established last year, with the goal to survey the skies for any near-Earth objects that are big enough and close enough to pose a risk to us.

Just last October the offices new space monitoring systemsgave us a heads-up about an unexpected asteroid flyby, calculating its timing, risk, and potential flight paths.

But this time around researchers can actually plan to coordinate their activities.

This is a team effort that involves more than a dozen observatories, universities and labs across the globe so we can collectively learn the strengths and limitations of our near-Earth object observation capabilities,says Vishnu Reddy from the University of Arizonawho will coordinate this new exercise.

While we know for sure that TC4 is not going to smash into Earth, theres so little astronomers know about its orbit that its actually a great test subject for strategies that can improve our ability to track and predict near-Earth objects.

It will be incumbent upon the observatories to get a fix on the asteroid as it approaches, and work together to obtain follow-up observations than make more refined asteroid orbit determinations possible,explains Paul Chodasfrom NASAs Center for Near-Earth Object Studies.

Even though so far a space rock apocalypse is relatively unlikely, NASAs efforts to detect and catalogue as many asteroids as possible is commendable it only took one stray chunk of space debris to wipe out the dinosaurs, after all.

Unfortunately, even with the coordinated efforts to find these space threats, for now theres not a lot we can actually do about them. Thats why some experts warn we really should build anintercepting spacecraft before we need it.

You dont have to lose any sleep over the October 12 flyby, but lets hope that by the time PDCO has sharpened its skills and does find a real threat, we actually have some space bombto blow it up with. Or something.

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An Alliance Upholding the Paris Agreement Now Represents a Third of the US Population – Futurism

Posted: at 11:42 pm

In Brief U.S. President Donald Trump decided to back out of the Paris climate deal two months ago. This doesn't mean, however, that the nation has hung up the gloves in the global fight against climate change. A group of states is taking the lead. The Will to Fight

When a door closes, a window opens, says an old adage. Well, for a number of states and their effort to fight climate change, its not enough to open a window theyre keeping the door open. Almost immediately after U.S. President Donald Trump decided to withdraw the countrys commitment to the historic Paris Climate Agreement, the United States Climate Alliance was born.

First there were three California, New York, and Washington State. I dont believe fighting reality is a good strategy not for America, not for anybody, California governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr. previously said in a statement. If the President is going to be AWOL in this profoundly important human endeavor, then California and other states will step up.

Now, the alliance boasts a membership of 13 states and Puerto Rico representing a bi-partisan coalition committed to the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions [26-28 percent from 2005 levels] consistent with the goals of the Paris Agreement. Latest to join the group is Colorado, after governor John Hickenlooper passed an executive order to cut the states greenhouse gas emissions before 2025.

So far, the U.S. Climate Alliance represents more than 33 percent of the U.S. population. Thats roughly $7.16 trillion of the nations GDP. The 14 members also cover a total of 1.3 million clean energy jobs. This is a grassroots-based movement, Gov. Hickenlooper said in a statement, the Denver Post reported. That groundswell will build into a national movement.

Clearly, the alliance is not something that can be ignored or easily dismissed and theyve been showing it. Each of the governors of these states have firmed up efforts in their respective states to make sure they meet the goals set by the Paris accords.

Above all, what these states represent is hope for a cleaner future. At the very least, it means that the U.S. currently the second largest contributor to greenhouse gasses, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists isnt letting up on efforts to save our planet, despite the seeming absence of federal support.

As Washington state governor Jay Inslee said, Our collective efforts to act on climate will ensure we maintain the [United States] commitment to curb carbon pollution while advancing a clean energy economy that will bring good-paying jobs to Americas workers.

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First Successful Colorimetric LAMP Experiment Performed on International Space Station Opens Up New Possibilities … – PR Newswire (press release)

Posted: at 9:53 am

For the first time, astronauts 250 miles above Earth successfully tested a novel DNA detection method that changes color in the presence of a target DNA sequence, in only 30 minutes. The method, developed by NEB, is called colorimetric loop-mediated isothermal amplification (cLAMP). It works through a clever combination of an inexpensive pH dye and less of the buffer that scientists typically use during polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A change from pink to yellow indicates the presence of a predetermined DNA or RNA sequence.

"One major hurdle to DNA-based diagnostics in outer space particularly those based on PCR is the need for specialized equipment, which can present significant logistical challenges. With limited resources and challenging working environments associated with deep space travel, astronauts will need diagnostics that are simple and easy-to-use," said Nicole Nichols, Group Leader, DNA Polymerase Development at NEB and co-investigator of the experiment.

"The robustness of colorimetric LAMP in zero gravity opens up a whole new set of possibilities, including the ability to test for viruses, health markers, or even food and environmental organisms, granting a degree of self-sufficiency needed for life and survival in space," Nichols said.

Here on Earth, this technique could be instrumental in improving healthcare in remote regions of the world. For example, river blindness, the second most common cause of blindness due to infection, is normally detected through either microscopic examination or PCR detection of the Onchocerca volvulus parasite, both of which require equipment and procedures that can be cumbersome for researchers that need a quick diagnosis out in the field.

"The colorimetric LAMP assay is poised to help those who need to work without electricity and use reagents that are cost effective," said Nichols. "NEB's parasitology research group recently tested a cLAMP assay directly on skin snips from African patients with river blindness and found that it was more sensitive in detecting the parasite than PCR and conventional microscopy."

LAMP, which is a single tube technique that can make large amounts of DNA at a constant temperature, obviates the need for expensive thermocyclers used in conventional nucleic acid amplification methods like PCR. However, NEB scientists have modified the LAMP method by adding a colorimetric component that exploits a natural phenomenon during DNA amplification.

"LAMP produces large quantities of protons when DNA from a sample is amplified. However, these protons are masked by the buffer used in a typical LAMP reaction," explains Nathan Tanner, staff scientist at NEB, and one of the developers of the colorimetric LAMP assay.

"By removing the buffer from the reaction, we demonstrated that the accumulation of protons significantly changes pH levels. This change can be visualized by adding a pH-sensitive colorimetric dye, such as our pink to yellow indicator. We've taken this principle and developed it into a stable formulation, which is commercially available for a wide range of diagnostic assay developers to enable field-friendly, point-of-care tests," Tanner said.

The colorimetric LAMP assay conducted on the ISS was part of an experiment designed by Julian Rubenfein, from New York's Stuyvesant High School. Rubenfein was the 2016 winner of Genes in Space, a national competition that challenges students in grades 7-12 to design experiments that solve real-life space exploration problems through DNA analysis. Rubenfein's proposal was centered around the examination of telomere dynamics in outer space and involved two sets of experiments that were flown on board the ISS the colorimetric LAMP experiment and a more traditional PCR, also conducted using NEB's reagents. Both experiments were enabled by a portable thermocycler aboard the ISS designed by miniPCR.

TheGenes in Spacecompetition was founded by miniPCR and Boeing and is sponsored by Math for America, the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, NEB, and FedEx.

To learn more about colorimetric LAMP, visit http://www.neb.com/M1800 To learn more about the Genes in Space Competition, visit GenesinSpace.org.

About New England Biolabs Established in the mid 1970s, New England Biolabs, Inc. (NEB) is the industry leader in the discovery and production of enzymes for molecular biology applications and now offers the largest selection of recombinant and native enzymes for genomic research. NEB continues to expand its product offerings into areas related to PCR and qPCR, gene expression, sample preparation for next generation sequencing, synthetic biology, glycobiology, epigenetics and RNA analysis. Additionally, NEB is focused on strengthening alliances that enable new technologies to reach key market sectors, including molecular diagnostics development. New England Biolabs is a privately held company, headquartered in Ipswich, MA, and has extensive worldwide distribution through a network of exclusive distributors, agents and seven subsidiaries located in Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan, Singapore and the UK. For more information about New England Biolabs visit http://www.neb.com.

NEW ENGLAND BIOLABS and NEB are registered trademarks of New England Biolabs, Inc.

GENES IN SPACE and MINIPCR are trademarks of Amplyus, LLC.

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SOURCE New England Biolabs

http://www.neb.com

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Check out these incredible photos from the ISS of Earth’s strongest storm in 2017 – Washington Post

Posted: at 9:53 am

A monster typhoon has been swirling in the Northwest Pacific Ocean for over a week. On Sunday, it became the strongest storm on Earth so far this year, with 160-mph winds.

It seems inevitable, given the projections, that this storm will track over Japans southern prefectures of Okinawa and Kagoshima as a very strong typhoon. On Wednesday morning, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center predicted it would be near northern Okinawa on Saturday evening, Eastern Time, as the equivalent of a Category 3 hurricane.

Japan has already endured several spates of extreme weather this summer, the AP reports, with heavy rains triggering deadly landslides on Kyushu in June that killed 37 people and left six missing. Torrential rains in northern Japan flooded parts of northern Honshu island in late July.

Astronauts on the International Space Station fly over the Pacific Ocean several times per week. Every summer, they have the opportunity to see incredible storms like Typhoon Noru.

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A perfectly-timed photo of the space station and the moon puts human achievements in perspective – Quartz

Posted: at 9:53 am

The International Space Station is the size of a football field. But a stunning image by Spanish photographer Dani Caxete shows it as a tiny figure dwarfed by the moona jaw-dropping reminder of the magnificence of nature, and the persistence of human achievement.

The image is on the shortlist for the Insight Astronomy Photographer of the Year, an annual contest run by Britains Royal Greenwich Observatory. Caxete writes:

The International Space Station (ISS) whizzes across the dusky face of the Earths natural satellite, the Moon, whilst photographed in broad daylight. Shining with a magnitude of -3.5, the ISS was illuminated by the Sun at a height of 9 on the horizon. Like the Moon, the ISS receives solar rays in a similar way during its 15 orbits of the Earth a day, making it possible to see it when the Sun is still up. This is a real shot, with no composite or clipping in the process.

The sight of the moonhumanitys first major conquest in spacealongside the space station makes one wonder where technology will take us next. Will we one day see spacecrafts orbiting the Earth the way we see commercials flights streak across the sky? Will a future settlement on the moon be visible from Earth?

Here are some other breathtaking shots from the contests finalists.

A stargazer observes the constellation of the Big Dipper perfectly aligned with the window of the entrance to a large glacier cave in Engadin, Switzerland. This is a panorama of two pictures, and each is a stack of another two pictures: one for the stars and another one for the foreground, but with no composing or time blending.

A large, searing hedgerow prominence extends from the surface of the Sun on 29 August 2016. There are a number of different prominence types that have been observed emanating from the Sun, and the hedgerow prominence is so called due the grouping of small prominences resembling rough and wild shrubbery.

The 7% waxing crescent Moon setting in the evening sky over the Needles Lighthouse at the western tip of the Isle of Wight. Despite the Moon being a thin crescent, the rest of its shape is defined by sunlight reflecting back from the Earths surface.

During an astrophotography tour of the Murmansk region with Stas Korotkiy, an amateur astronomer and popularizer of astronomy in Russia, the turquoise of the Aurora Borealis swirls above the snow covered trees. Illuminated by street lamps, the trees glow a vivid pink forming a contrasting frame for Natures greatest lightshow.

The Milky Way rises ominously above a small radio telescope from a large array at Miyun Station, National Astronomical Observatory of China, in the suburbs of Beijing. The image depicts the ever-growing light pollution we now experience, which together with electromagnetic noise has turned many optical and radio observatories near cities both blind and deaf a battle that inspired the photographers title of the shot. The image used a light pollution filter (iOptron L-Pro) and multiple frame stacking to get the most of the Milky Way out of the city light.

NGC 7331 is an unbarred spiral galaxy found some 40 million light years away from Earth, in the constellation Pegasus. Of the group of galaxies known as the Deer Lick Group, NGC 7331 is the largest, and can be seen dominating the image whilst the smaller galaxies NGC 7335, NGC 7336, NGC 7337, NGC 7338 and NGC 7340 drift above it.

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See the International Space Station, Moon and Saturn in the UK sky … – Astronomy Now Online

Posted: at 9:53 am

Soon after the onset of nautical dusk on 2August, observers in the British Isles can see not only the 10-day-old waxing gibbous Moon within a low-power binocular field of the ringed planet, but the International Space Station makes a flypast too! Outshining the brightest stars, the ISS rises low in the west soon after 11:16pm. It passes a span of an outstretched hand at arms length above Saturn low in the south-southwest a few seconds before 11:20pm for skywatchers in the heart of the UK but dont leave it too long as the spacecraft fades from view into the Earths shadow around 11:20:30pm (all times British Summer Time). AN graphic by Ade Ashford.

If you see a bright star slowly crawling across the sky in an arc from west to east, an object that doesnt flash or possess red and green running lights like an aircraft, then you can be sure that youve spotted the International Space Station (ISS). The 400-tonne orbiting laboratory is so large 73 109 x 20 metres that it can be viewed with the unaided eye from the heart of the most light-polluted town or city. Fortunately, its current orbit carries it over the British Isles and Western Europe for the next few nights.

As an added bonus, the ISS passes close above an attractive conjunction of the 10-day-old Moon and Saturn late into the evening of Wednesday, 2August 2017 for observers in the British Isles. On this night the ringed planet and waxing gibbous Moon lie just 5degrees apart, so the pair will fit in the same field of view of a low-magnification binocular. As seen from the heart of the UK, the International Space Station passes just 18degrees the span of an outstretched hand at arms length above Saturn and the Moon a few seconds before 11:20pmBST.

If you have a clear quadrant of sky from the south to the west, look low in the western sky of the British Isles at 11:17pm for the spacecrafts ascent but be vigilant as the International Space Station is only in sunlight for a further 3minutes before fading into the Earths shadow in the south close to 11:20pm+30sec. BST.

Using Astronomy Nows Almanac to make ISS viewing predictions Many of you may have used our online Almanac to obtain information about lunar phases, or the rising and setting of the Sun, Moon and planets for wherever you may live, but the Almanac can also tell you when and where to see the International Space Station.

In the Almanac, select the closest city to your location from the Country and City pull-down menus before ensuring that the box beside AddISSpasses? has a tick in it and just as importantly the DaylightSavingsTime? box, if applicable to your time and location. The table underneath the months Moon phase data then shows current nighttime passes of the International Space Station over your chosen location during the next five days, if any.

For the given Date in year/month/day format, LocalTime is the instant the ISS first becomes visible and Duration indicates the length of the sighting in minutes. At the given LocalTime, look in the direction indicated by Approach and, weather permitting, you should see the ISS as a slowly moving, bright star. Max.elevation is how high the Station will get above your horizon (90 is overhead, while 20 is about the span of an outstretched hand at arms length) and Departure indicates where the ISS will be when it vanishes from sight. Sometimes an appearance or disappearance occurs well up in the sky when the Station emerges into sunlight or slips into the Earths shadow, respectively.

Here is an example from last year computed for the centre of the UK:In the example above, as seen from the heart of the BritishIsles on the evening of Tuesday, 2August 2016, the ISS first appeared 16 (a span and a half of a fist at arms length) above the west-southwest (WSW) horizon at 10:09pmBST in a viewing window lasting five minutes. It attained a peak altitude of 50 above the south-southwest (SSW) horizon before sinking down to 15 above the eastern (E) horizon at 10:14pmBST. One orbit later, the ISS rose again at 11:46pmBST.

Note: the actual times of events in the future will change as the orbit of the ISS varies over time; Almanac predictions made on the day are more accurate.

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The Ethics of Mars Exploration: Q&A with Lucianne Walkowicz – Space.com

Posted: at 9:52 am

Dr. Lucianne Walkowicz is an astronomer at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago. This October, she begins work as the new NASA/Library of Congress Chair of Astrobiology.

Lucianne Walkowicz, a researcher at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago, is setting off on a year's mission with the U.S. Library of Congress to pick apart the ethics of Mars exploration.

Walkowicz, an eloquent speaker known for her TED talk "Let's not use Mars as a backup planet," has been named the Library of Congress' Baruch S. Blumberg Chair in Astrobiology the first woman to hold the yearlong position. While there, she will work on a project with the title "Fear of a Green Planet: Inclusive Systems of Thought for Human Exploration of Mars."

Space.com talked to Walkowicz about the new project, the current state of space-exploration policy and how the big questions on colonization tie into her activism with underrepresented students in science, technology, engineering and math through the nonprofit organization Urban Alliance. [Making Sense of Humanity's Impact on Earth from Outer Space]

Space.com: How do you intend to explore space policy in order to incorporate it into your research on future Mars exploration?

Lucianne Walkowicz:I think that one of the things that most excites me about being able to carry out this research, specifically at the Library of Congress, is access to not only the history of policy that's within the library's holdings, but also to be in a place where there are a lot of policymakers in other words, Washington, D.C.

What governs how we explore at the moment is theOuter Space Treaty of 1967, which is now quite an old document. It was signed on by most of the countries existing at the time, and says, for example, that you can't own a celestial body.

Back a couple of years ago,the Space Act was enacted, which said that you could actually own some of the products of a celestial body. So, for example, you might not be able to own Mars, but potentially you could own something that you had mined on Mars, and if you look at that document, it says that you can own everything that isn't biological, but you can also own water.

Space.com: Is this, then, a stumbling block of existing exploration policy, or is legislation like the Space Act sufficiently effective?

Walkowicz: So I think this is a nice example of where the policy sounds good on paper but doesn't actually fold in all of the things that we know about astrobiology today. Mars, for example, had once been a much more hospitable world than it is currently: It could have had a past history of life, and could even continue to host microbial life in some trace amount today. Mars is an example of a place that has its own history. And I think a lot of times, within historical narratives, you hear people recycle the talk about exploration. Often there's an assumption that because we don't see large-scale macroscopic life running across the surface of Mars today, that we don't have to worry about those things.

What I would like to do is look at the ways in which these ideas interact with the actual existing policy, and how what we know about Mars now interacts with the existing policy, because it remains a fact that Mars is a place unto its own that has its own history, and what respect do we owe to that history? What rights does that history have? [Luxembourg Adopts Space Resources Law]

Space.com: You mentioned that you are taking this position to research the intersection of science and policy. How would nations negotiate Mars exploration under the current laws?

Walkowicz: One of the things about this research is that we really don't know.

The Outer Space Treaty, which, as I mentioned, is a very old document, is really the closest thing we have to an idea of how internationally we see people existing in space. But the fact of the matter is that even things like the Space Act, which was intended to clear the way for asteroid mining, all have an air of hypothetical-ness about them. That is because nobody has tested them. Nobody has tried to interact with them in a practical way, and I think a large part of this issue is that it hasn't really been thought out very well. There are policies that exist, but the way it would actually go down in real life I think is still very much an open question.

Space.com: What do you think is the most important aspect of the ethics of Mars exploration?

Walkowicz: I would say that the most important aspect, what really draws me to this particular line of research, is the opportunity to closely examine our past history so that we can move forward in a way that is more inclusive for our future: I think that a lot of the ways that we currently speak about exploration draw on narratives that were very harmful in the past.

The comparisons that are so often invoked to Christopher Columbus are a good example, where we constantly recycle these narratives from history that were actually quite harmful, and were histories of exploitation. So, as we move forward to trying to explore places like Mars, I'm curious as to how we can acknowledge these harmful past events and move forward in a way that is more inclusive for everyone who might choose to explore the universe, whether by leaving Earth or by studying it here.

Space.com: In what ways is the scientific community vulnerable to perpetuating historically destructive patterns that stem from its surrounding social environment?

Walkowicz: I think we are at an interesting point in science right now, where truly, for many years I think and this is still a persistent myth people think that science sometimes exists outside of its larger societal framework, and that it is somehow purer and therefore not vulnerable to these harmful patterns that have been enacted in all aspects of society.

But, if you look at the makeup of predominantly who becomes a scientist particularly in physics and astronomy the makeup of who becomes a research-level faculty scientist is still very white and very male, and I think shows that there is still a great deal of inequality in access to STEM careers for people who have not been typically represented as scientists. And that includes people of color, broadly, and women, and especially women of color. [Women of Color in Astronomy Face Greater Degree of Discrimination, Harassment]

Space.com: You're also involved with a nonprofit organization, Urban Alliance, which serves underrepresented students in science, technology, math and engineering. Why is the organization important?

Walkowicz: My interaction with Urban Alliance started here in Chicago. They are predominantly based in the mid-Atlantic, in Virginia, D.C. and Baltimore, but their other location is actually here where I am, in Chicago. I gave a talk at Chicago Ideas Week a couple of years ago, and they had partnered with Urban Alliance, and they brought a group of their students just to hang out afterwards and talk about space. And I had a really wonderful series of questions and answers and conversations with them, and between that and the Adler Planetarium where I am, which has a very vibrant teen program, one of the things I'm always struck by is that our teens have wonderful, insightful questions about our future here on Earth and space, and I think you hear a lot of people talk in sort of the abstract about what the next generation needs or what the next generation thinks, or even people invoking, "Well, all children want to be astronauts, etc.," and you know, when you actually talk to teenagers, they have a beautiful cornucopia of opinions.

I think that working with Urban Alliance or even just more broadly with students in the D.C. area is important, because the majority of people are not asking those students what they think and are not engaging them in actually forging their own futures, and I think that their opinions are important. And I think it's particularly important to reach out to students who do come from diverse backgrounds, because you find that, when you get groups of people together who come from a variety of different places, they see things in a variety of different ways.

Our research shows that that makes for a more robust set of problem solvers, and I really think that the more people we can engage from more backgrounds to work together, the stronger we'll be and the greater our chances will be in space and on Earth. [To Get to Mars, NASA Must Convince Lawmakers]

This aerial view shows Adler Planetarium's relationship to the Chicago skyline in the background.

Space.com: How will you present your findings from the yearlong position you begin in October 2017 as Chair of Astrobiology at the Library of Congress?

Walkowicz: Well, I think it'll be a variety of things. I'll be organizing in this position [a] series of symposia, so a lot of those will be bringing together people who work at the intersection of not only astronomy and planetary science, but also anthropology, policy, and space policy, specifically, and social justice within the sciences.

I'll be hoping to have those people come together at the Library and engage in conversations, so I think there will probably be some public aspect of that to be worked out over the course of this year. But also, I'm hoping to do a lot of writing on the topic. I eventually would like to be writing about this in a longer form; I've played with the idea of writing a book. For the moment, I'd like to spend the year digging into these subjects and writing about them whenever possible, because I think it's important to engage as many people in thinking about this stuff as you can, so I'd love to use this year to have some of these questions reach a wider audience and get people thinking about them more.

I think it's the beginning of a much larger, bigger conversation! [Large laugh] So I'm excited to delve into this in a deeper way.

Follow Doris Elin Salazar on Twitter @salazar_elin.Follow us@Spacedotcom,FacebookandGoogle+. Original article onSpace.com.

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The Ethics of Mars Exploration: Q&A with Lucianne Walkowicz - Space.com

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