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BREAKING: PBSO human-trafficking probe makes second arrest – Palm Beach Post
Posted: May 13, 2017 at 5:18 am
RIVIERA BEACH
A 24-year-old Port St. Lucie man helped force women and teen girls to prostitute themselves and sell drugs out of a Riviera Beach home, authorities said in arresting him Thursday on a charge of human trafficking.
Ali Ameers arrest is the latest in an effort by local authorities to crack down on the crime, which some have called modern-day slavery. He would drive them in his silver BMW convertible to sell Xanax, oxycodone, Adderall and more, according to a probable-cause affidavit released Friday morning.
Ameer was booked into the Palm Beach County Jail after being taken into custody by Palm Beach County Sheriffs Office. It is the second arrest for human trafficking in recent weeks and the third by the sheriffs office since it announced a $1.5 million federal grant and partnership Catholic Charities in February to combat the crime.
Ameer faces one count of human trafficking for labor involving a juvenile. During Ameers initial appearance in court Friday morning, Judge Caroline Shepherd ordered he be held without bail. She also ordered he avoid contact with the victim and other minors.
Human trafficking occurs when a person uses force, fraud or coercion to control another for purpose of engaging commercial sex acts, labor or other services against their will. The Polaris Project a nonprofit based in Washington, D.C., that tracks calls to the national trafficking hotline reports that Florida had the third-highest number of reported cases in 2016, behind only California and Texas.
Between Oct. 1, 2015, and Sept. 30, 2016, there were 19 verified reports of human trafficking calls in Palm Beach County to the Florida Abuse Hotline, according to the Florida Department of Children and Families.
Investigators last month arrested Andre Benjamin, alleging he used a 15-year-old girl to sell drugs. According to the arrest report, Ameer acted as Benjamins driver. The teen told investigators Ameer provided her with LSD to sell and, on one occasion, gave her marijuana when Benjamins supply ran out.
The sheriffs investigation focused on a home in the 400 block of Silver Beach Road, west of Broadway.
A woman who was not identified in the arrest report told investigators that Benjamin sold multiple women for sex at the home, including her. Ameer drove women to sell drugs and to have sex for money, the woman said. She said she witnessed Ameer having sex in the home and shooting up an unspecified drug on one occasion.
Ameer previously has been cited for traffic citations but had no prior criminal history in Palm Beach, Martin or St. Lucie counties, according to court records.
Since January, at least six people in Palm Beach County have been accused of labor or sex trafficking. In February, three men were arrested after authorities alleged they kidnapped a 19-year-old woman from a house in Boynton Beach and forced her to advertise her services for sex on the website Backpage.com.
One of the men allegedly told officers they had gone to the Boynton Beach home to pimp the woman out. The three suspects, Christopher Thomas, Jimmy Edmond and Jackson Poinvil, each waived his right to a speedy trial. Their cases are due for a status hearing in June.
The sheriffs office has also arrested a juvenile on a human trafficking charge. Authorities have not disclosed information about that case.
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Elon Musk Just Released Breakthrough Updates About His New Company – Futurism
Posted: at 5:18 am
In BriefElon Musk released a string of tweets and Instagram postsgiving updates on the Boring Company's progress in constructing ahigh-speed underground transportation system. So Boring
Our modern-day DaVinci, Elon Musk, is hard at work bringing his latest venture,the Boring Company,to fruition. The companys aim is to create a network of tunnels to accommodate a high-speed transit system, and Musk just sent out a torrent of updates via Twitter and Instagram containing pictures and video of its latest achievements.
His first tweet signaled that the beginningsof the tunnel are complete. The tunneling machine, Boring 1 (or Godot), now has a proper entry hole, staging area, and starting tunnel.
Musk plans for the first tunnel to run from LAX to Culver City, Santa Monica, Westwood and Sherman Oaks and for future extensionsto cover the entirety of greater Los Angeles, an area spanning87,940 square kilometers (33,954 square miles).
Naturally, given the nature of the geography of Southern California, many commenters are concerned about how the tunnels would stand up to earthquakes. Musk allayed those fears by responding in the affirmative when asked if the tunnels will be earthquake-proof.
Godot is a massive machine whose speed has been compared to that of a snail. However, Musk has plans to ratchet up its pace by a factor of ten. The machine, once completely assembled, will be more than 100 feet long.
The purpose of the Boring Company is to cut travel time in the notoriously congested Los Angeles area. To that end, Musk claims the tunnel will allow travel between the L.A. neighborhood of Westwood and Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) in only five minutes.
Vehicles will be transported through the tunnels on platforms, called skates or sleds, powered by electricity at speeds of up to 200 kmh (125 mph). He posted a video of a skate at work.
It seems like Musk is a man of his word. Less than six months after tweeting that he was going to build a tunnel boring machine and just start digging, he has done just that. At the beginning, even he emphatically admitted, We have no idea what were doingI want to be clear about that. Now, he is well on his way to making this dream a reality.
With a hand inSpaceX, Tesla, Hyperloop, and now the Boring Company, Musk seems poised to monopolize the future of ground (and apparently underground) transportation.
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MIT’s Portable Translator Can Convert Text to Braille in Real-Time – Futurism
Posted: at 5:18 am
In Brief MIT engineering students have invented a portable device that translates text into braille in real time, and they hope to sell it for less than $200. This cheap alternative to existing technologies will make both books and braille more accessible to the blind community. Team Tactile
Six engineering undergraduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT) have designed a portable device that converts text to braille in real time. Their first prototype was created in a 15-hour hackathon in early 2016. Since that time, the device, called Tactile, has undergone extensive development. Now, its the size of a candy bar and completely portable. The students have applied for a patent for the device, although they are already working on its next iteration.
What really sets Tactile apart from other braille translators, though, is its low cost. Most of these devices are expensive and limited to the translation of text that is available digitally. For example, the HumanWare Braillant attaches to a computer or mobile device to translate text into braille, and it costs $2,595. Tactiles creators hope to sell their device for less than$200.
The students who invented the translation device have plans to improve Tactile, and theyve also got the means to do it. They recently won one of the $10,000 Lemelson-MIT Student Prizes for 2017, which they will spend refining and improving the device.
Currently, the camera only takes a picture of its field of view,team member Chandani Doshi explainedin an email to Smithsonian.We are aiming to make the device similar to a handheld scanner that allows the user to scan the entire page in one go. If theyre successful, this would make the device simpler to use and eliminate the readers need to remember where they are on the page.
Accessibility for people with disabilities is getting more attention now than it has in the past as the movement for inclusion grows. The European Union has drafted rules that will mandate that products and services be more accessible to people with disabilities, including the blind. The Womens March on Washington even added a virtual branch so people with disabilities could attend that way if they chose to.
There are 1.3 million legally blind people in the U.S., and the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 285 million people worldwide are visually impaired 39 million of them are blind, and the remaining 246 million have low vision. The American Foundation for the Blind estimatesthat fewerthan 10 percent of blind people can understand braille, mostly due toa chronic teacher shortage in this area.
Even so, Tactile, which should be on the market within two years, will make any book in any library accessible to those who do understand braille and it will also make braille itself far more accessible and easy to learn. In fact, using Tactile might be the revolution braille needs to bring a higher level of literacy back to the blind community.
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Ripples in Space-Time Might Indicate That We Live in a Multiverse – Futurism
Posted: at 5:18 am
In BriefSigns of extra dimensions may reveal themselves in the waythey impact gravitational waves. Scientists hope that further studyof these waves might allow for a single, coherent theory of theuniverse. Hunting for Extra Dimensions
As important as gravity is to us here on Earth, it is actually surprisingly weak in comparison to other fundamental forces in our universe, such as electromagnetism. In fact, as researchers struggle to unite quantum effects and gravity in single theories that make sense, they find that extra dimensions, usually with gravity, are implied.
However, theorizing the existence of these extra dimensions is much easier than actually proving that they exist. Scientists were hopeful that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) might reveal evidence of their existence.After all, the device gives them the abilityto run specialized experiments searching for massive particle traces, microscopic black holes, and missing energy caused by the migration of gravitons to higher dimensions. So far, however, definitive proof has not been discovered with the LHC.
In their search for answers, researchers Gustavo Lucena Gmez and David Andriot at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Potsdam, Germany, have honed in on two strange effects: high frequency gravitational waves and the breathing mode, a modification of how gravitational waves stretch space.
The researchers calculated that extra dimensions should result in the creation of extra, high frequency gravitational waves. Unfortunately, we dont currently haveobservatories that can detect frequencies in the range they predict, nor are any in development.
However, we do have the tech needed to observe the breathing mode. Space changes shape as it reacts to gravity passing through it. The breathing mode is seen when, in addition to stretching and squishing, space expands and contracts in reaction to additional gravitational waves.With more detectors we will be able to see whether this breathing mode is happening, LucenaGmez told New Scientist.
Based on the researchers calculations, the additional waves at high frequencies wouldpoint decisively to extra dimensions. However, the breathing mode could have explanations beyond those theoretical dimensions, but its detection would be a significant clue pointing toward their existence.
Even without definitive proof, were making progress in our hunt for other dimensions. Since 2015, scientists have been able to observe gravitational waves, and becausegravity probably exists in other dimensions, observing and analyzing the behavior of these waves under different conditions might provide clues about those extra dimensions. The existence of another dimension makes weak gravitational force more understandable if gravity exists throughout all of these extra dimensions as well, it should be weaker.
Put another way, the existence of extra dimensions would allow for a coherent, comprehensive theory of the universe. It would also explain uncertainties about the nature of gravity. It would even put us on the road to explaining why the universe is expanding faster and faster. If extra dimensions are in our universe, this would stretch or shrink space-time in a different way that standard gravitational waves would never do, explainedLucena Gmez.
Proof of an extra dimension would be extraordinarily exciting for physicists working to explain the laws of the universe with a single, coherent theory. If we were able to reconcile the conflicts between quantum field theory and general principles of relativity, for example, things like antigravity, instantaneous communication and transport, transmutation of matter, and faster-than-light travel might all be possible. For now, we dont havea definitive answer, but understanding the behaviors of gravitational waves would be aremarkable step in the right direction.
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Astronomers Just Found a Planet They Didn’t Know Was Possible – Futurism
Posted: at 5:18 am
In Brief Astronomers have discovered an exoplanet that defies previously established trends. Although a hot Neptune, the exoplanet HAT-P-26b has an atmospheric composition that's more Jupiter-like, giving clues as to how it was formed. Warm and Unusual
The easiest way to make sense of the various unfamiliar objects we find floating around in the cosmos is by thinking about them in the context ofcelestial bodies we are familiar with. Our Solar System has become the starting point for our analysis of other bodies, especially exoplanets.
Thats how the termhot Neptunecame about its our way of describing exoplanets as massive as Uranus or Neptune but that orbit closer to their stars. Weve already come across a number of these hot Neptunes, but one of the most recently discovered defies all expectations astronomers have about the exoplanets.
Located about 437 light-years away from Earth, HAT-P-26b is a hot Neptune that has a primordial atmosphere composed mostly of hydrogen and helium an unusual mixture for planets very close to their stars. Astronomers have just begun to investigate the atmospheres of these distant Neptune-mass planets, and almost right away, we found an example that goes against the trend in our Solar System, said researcher Hannah Wakefordfrom NASAs Goddard Space Flight Centerin a news release.
Usually, massive planets have lower metallicities a lower presence of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium in their atmosphere. For example, Jupiter and Saturns are five and ten times than that of the Sun, respectively. Smaller planets like Uranus and Neptune, on the other hand, have higher metallicities, about a hundred times greater than the Sun.
For hot Neptune HAT-P-26b, however, this standard fails. Its metallicity is only about 4.8 times that of the Sun much closer to Jupiters than to Neptunes.
Such a discovery just confirms that theres so much we dont know about the universe and whats in it. Assumptions that may be true for Earth or for the planets in our solar system may not necessarily be true for others out there. This analysis shows that there is a lot more diversity in the atmospheres of these exoplanets than we were expecting, which is providing insight into how planets can form and evolve differently than in our solar system, said University of Exeters David K. Sing, second author of the paper, which is published in Nature.
For Wakeford, its discoveries like this that make her work exciting. This kind of unexpected result is why I really love exploring the atmospheres of alien planets, she said.
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Futurist Bob Johansen Will Headline CTHRA’s Disruptive Thinking HR Symposium – Multichannel News
Posted: at 5:18 am
5/10/2017 11:15 AM
NAPERVILLE, ILL., May 1, 2017 Technological advancements, drastically changing consumer behaviors, megamergers, globalization and the convergence of services are all factors that are transforming our industry. Business as usual is not an option for companies seeking to continue their success, resulting in this years theme for CTHRAs HR Symposium: Disruptive Thinking. The event will be held on October 26, 2017 at the DoubleTree Hilton Hotel in Philadelphia.
Understanding disruption is hard. Disrupting is even harder. If youve ever wondered what the future of human resources looks like, I invite you to attend CTHRAs 2017 HR Symposium, said Michele Parks, Symposium committee chair, CTHRA board member and vice president of talent management for Cox Communications.
Noted futurist, Bob Johansen, Ph.D. (pictured), distinguished fellow at the Institute for the Future, will open and close CTHRAs Symposium. During the opening general session titled The New Leadership Literacies, Johansen will share his projections for the future workplace including how current practices at centralized organizations will become brittle in a future where authority is not just decentralized but distributed. He will also explain how HR leaders can leap into the future by learning five new leadership literaciescombinations of disciplines, practices and worldviewsto thrive in a world of increasing volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity. The new literacies Johansen will share are: 1. Look backward from the future, 2. Voluntarily engage in fear, 3. Embrace shape-shifting organizations, 4. Be there even when youre not there and 5. Create and sustain positive energy. Johansen will return to the stage in the afternoon to outline practical strategies that HR professionals can leverage to channel uncertainty into success. His closing general session is titled, How HR Can Thrive in a Future of Extreme Disruption. As a parting gift, registered Symposium attendees will receive a copy of Johansens book, The New Leadership Literacies.
In addition to Johansens general sessions, CTHRAs HR Symposium will feature breakout sessions, several networking opportunities and the Excellence in HR Awards Luncheon (nominations are being accepted through June 15 at http://www.CTHRA.com). For more Symposium details and online registration, please visit http://www.CTHRASymposium.com. Early bird registration rates are available now through August 25.
ABOUT CTHRA The Cable and Telecommunications Human Resources Association (CTHRA) is the premier human capital resource for the industry and a growing nonprofit organization with more than 3,000 members spanning 50 companies. CTHRA provides industry-specific benchmarks, information and resources, as well as networking and educational opportunities. Its groundbreaking initiatives include compensation and employee benefits surveys and its Annual HR Symposium. For more information, visit http://www.cthra.com. # # #
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Chicagoan, Neo-Futurist alumna Jessica Anne debuts new book – Chicago Tribune
Posted: at 5:18 am
If you've ever had the pleasure of seeing lifelong Chicagoan and Neo-Futurist alumna Jessica Anne perform, then you know that her voice the physical instrument by which she makes her words heard onstage is an unforgettable phenomenon: clear, sharp, piping and incisive. If you give yourself the pleasure of reading her debut book, the delightful hybrid "A Manual for Nothing," then you will no doubt notice that her literary voice the tone and attitude with which she makes her words manifest on the page is equally memorable. Published by Noemi Press and written in the second person, her manual feels passionate and compassionate, an urgent emergency written for you. Anne answered the following questions by email; the transcript has been edited for clarity and space.
Q: This book incorporates fiction, nonfiction, poetry and drama. Why blend genres like this? And did the book's hybridity and brevity it's just 162 pages make it tricky to publish?
A: I got excited reading unclassifiable books by authors like Maggie Nelson and Lidia Yuknavitch, and I wanted to try it.
I was concerned with form. I thought committing to the form of the manual would be a neat way to hold the story together, and then within that form I had fun doing whatever I wanted. Making this messy object of many genres helped me to get closer to a truth. Even though that truth might not be the truth.
I only submitted the manual as fiction, and publishers seemed to be OK with that. I got my fair share of rejection, of course, but nobody pushed back saying, this isn't fiction, young lady. I think the trick was submitting to presses that seemed to be known for publishing genre-bending work.
Q: How did your background as a performer in general and as a Neo-Futurist in particular help shape this book? How does that sensibility affect your writing?
A: Neo-Futurists are very concerned with balance, both in the late-night show ("The Infinite Wrench," the new title for the program formerly known as "Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind") and in the prime-time programming. We are constantly sticking our same thermometers into the meat of the material to make sure there aren't too many monologues, too many deconstructions, is there enough political material? And that mindset has definitely carried over into my book-writing pursuits. Making the manual I would think, OK, now I need an interview, have to make sure I get an anthem in there and at least one scene, and so on.
And overall, my background in theater mostly affects my writing process. Writing still feels very physical to me and often starts out loud, pacing around my apartment or walking through the park.
Q: In recent years, you've been a fixture in Chicago's theater, live lit and literary communities, even organizing last summer's Andersonville Lit Crawl and currently serving as an editor of MAKE magazine. How do these pursuits inform one another and how has Chicago impacted you as an artist?
A: Whether it's a theatrical show or a neighborhood event or a magazine or a live magazine the thing I'm looking for is warm bodies. Sitting around writing or editing or emailing the chamber of commerce can be so lonely. But, if there are lots of other people pulling their own weight under the same project, that helps me to keep a steady pace so that no one person gets crushed. And then when it all comes together everyone claps because it's all so much better in company than it ever could have been on its own. And Chicago just has a really good attitude. Times I've had auditions and or work in bigger cities, I noticed how cold and quick the people were behind the tables. Go to a reading or a show in Chicago, and hang out as long as you want. Talk to everybody you like and want to work with. They're happy to see you.
Jessica Anne will appear at 7 p.m. May 25, at Unabridged Books, 3251 N. Broadway.
Kathleen Rooney is the author, most recently, of the novel "Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk."
By Jessica Anne, Noemi, 162 pages, $15
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Retro-Futurist Com Truise At Ballroom – CTNow
Posted: at 5:18 am
If you're into oscillations, wave patterns, circuitry, mechanized arpeggios, computer percussion sounds and the general alternate universe of retro synthesizers and a sort of dystopian dance pop that can be made with them, you might enjoy the music of Seth Haley, who performs under the name Com Truise.
For Kraftwerk fanatics or Giorgio Moroder obsessives, Haley is making tightly meshed music that has a op-art, retro-futurist quality, evoking pixelated keyboard music of the early '80s. Fans of Neon Indian will relate to the ways that Com Truise conjures the airless sonic data burblings of a bygone self-satisfied techno-pipedream era. Haley designs much of the art that goes along with Com Truise releases, and the visuals seem to line up perfectly with the sound, with a particular obsolete palette and a strange, imposing but soothing grid-like quality.
Com Truise and Clark perform at at Ballroom at the Outer Space, 295 Treadwell St., Hamden, May 21, at 8 p.m. Tickets are $17 to $20. 203-288-6400, thespacect.com.
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Nasa should get rid of International Space Station as soon as possible and go to Mars instead, says Buzz Aldrin – The Independent
Posted: May 11, 2017 at 12:27 pm
From the International Space Station, Expedition 42 Flight Engineer Terry W. Virts took this photograph of the Gulf of Mexico and U.S. Gulf Coast at sunset
Nasa
This image of an area on the surface of Mars, approximately 1.5 by 3 kilometers in size, shows frosted gullies on a south-facing slope within a crater. The image was taken by Nasa's HiRISE camera, which is mounted on its Mars Reconaissance Orbiter
Nasa
The Orion capsule jetted off into space before heading back a few hours later having proved that it can be used, one day, to carry humans to Mars
Nasa
The Soyuz TMA-15M rocket launches from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, carrying three new astronauts to the International Space Station. It also took caviar, ready for the satellite's inhabitants to celebrate the holidays
Nasa
NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman shared this image of Yellowstone via his twitter account
Nasa
Nasa celebrated Black Friday by looking into space instead sharing pictures of black holes
Nasa
X-rays stream off the sun in this image showing observations from by NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, or NuSTAR, overlaid on a picture taken by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)
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This near-infrared color image shows a specular reflection, or sunglint, off of a hydrocarbon lake named Kivu Lacus on Saturn's moon Titan
Nasa
Although Mimas and Pandora, shown here, both orbit Saturn, they are very different moons. Pandora, "small" by moon standards (50 miles or 81 kilometers across) is elongated and irregular in shape. Mimas (246 miles or 396 kilometers across), a "medium-sized" moon, formed into a sphere due to self-gravity imposed by its higher mass
Nasa
An X1.6 class solar flare flashes in the middle of the sun in this image taken 10 September, captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory
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An image from Nasa's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) shows a 200,000 mile long solar filament ripping through the Sun's corona in September 2013
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A false colour image of Cassiopeia A comprised with data from the Spitzer and Hubble Space Telescopes and the Chandra X-Ray observatory
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An image of the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy seen in infrared light by the Herschel Space Observatory. Regions of space such as this are where new stars are born from a mixture of elements and cosmic dust
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Nasa's Mars Rover Spirit took the first picture from Spirit since problems with communications began a week earlier. The image shows the robotic arm extended to the rock called Adirondack
Nasa
Nasa astronaut Scott Kelly captured this photograph of the green lights of the aurora from the International Space Station
The Space Shuttle Challenger launches from Florida at dawn. On this mission, Kathryn Sullivan became the first U.S. woman to perform a spacewalk and Marc Garneau became the first Canadian in space. The crew of seven was the largest to fly on a spacecraft at that time, and STS-41G was the first flight to include two female astronauts
Galaxy clusters are often described by superlatives. After all, they are huge conglomerations of galaxies, hot gas, and dark matter and represent the largest structures in the Universe held together by gravity
Nasa's Hubble Space Telescope has unveiled in stunning detail a small section of the Veil Nebula - expanding remains of a massive star that exploded about 8,000 years ago
The arrangement of the spiral arms in the galaxy Messier 63, seen here in an image from the Nasa Hubble Space Telescope, recall the pattern at the center of a sunflower
The spectacular cosmic pairing of the star Hen 2-427 more commonly known as WR 124 and the nebula M1-67 which surrounds it
Four images from New Horizons Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) were combined with colour data from the Ralph instrument to create this enhanced colour global view of Pluto
The HiRISE camera aboard Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter acquired this closeup image of a "fresh" (on a geological scale, though quite old on a human scale) impact crater in the Sirenum Fossae region of Mars. This impact crater appears relatively recent as it has a sharp rim and well-preserved ejecta
This photograph of the Florida Straits and Grand Bahama Bank was taken during the Gemini IV mission during orbit no. 19 in 1965. The Gemini IV crew conducted scientific experiments, including photography of Earth's weather and terrain, for the remainder of their four-day mission following Ed White's historic spacewalk on June 3
For 50 years, NASA has been "suiting up" for spacewalking. In this 1984 photograph of the first untethered spacewalk, NASA astronaut Bruce McCandless is in the midst of the first "field" tryout of a nitrogen-propelled backpack device called the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU)
This Nasa Hubble Space Telescope image presents the Arches Cluster, the densest known star cluster in the Milky Way
Nasa astronaut Reid Wiseman tweeted this photo from the International Space Station on 2 September 2014
On Mars, we can observe four classes of sandy landforms formed by the wind, or aeolian bedforms: ripples, transverse aeolian ridges, dunes, and what are called draa
A sokol suit helmet can be seen against the window of the Soyuz TMA-11M capsule shortly after the spacecraft landed with Expedition 39 Commander Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Soyuz Commander Mikhail Tyurin of Roscosmos, and Flight Engineer Rick Mastracchio of NASA near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system and perhaps the most majestic. Vibrant bands of clouds carried by winds that can exceed 400 mph continuously circle the planet's atmosphere
This Chandra X-Ray Observatory image of the young star cluster NGC 346 highlights a heart-shaped cloud of 8 million-degree Celsius gas in the central region
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MIT students will chat live with astronaut on International Space Station – The Boston Globe
Posted: at 12:27 pm
Astronaut Jack Fischer, a crew members on the International Space Station, waved prior to the launch of the Soyuz MS-04 spacecraft at the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in April.
Educators from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are expanding their classroom space this week.
On Wednesday, graduate and undergraduate students from the Cambridge schools department of Aeronautics and Astronautics will get the chance to participate in a live videochat with NASA astronaut Jack Fischer, an MIT alumnus who is currently aboard the International Space Station, 220 miles above the earth.
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The question-and-answer session between students, faculty, and Fischer marks somewhat of a rare occasion for those interested in life as an astronaut. The last time MIT conducted such an interview was in 2011, when two MIT graduates, Greg Chamitoff and Mike Fincke, were aboard the ISS.
Its kind of an exciting opportunity, said William Litant, spokesman for the Aeronautics and Astronautics department. Its a good kind of community-building experience here, too.
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Litant said MIT has produced more astronauts than any other school in the country besides the Military Academies. He said it seems that at any given moment theres a former or current astronaut strolling through the schools campus. Four of the astronauts who walked on the moon got their degrees from MIT, according to NASA officials.
This is where astronauts tend to visit, he said. No matter where you turn, you see an astronaut.
Fischer, Wednesdays visitor, wont be grounded when he speaks to students. He will field questions from them as he floats inside the space station, taking a break from his day-to-day duties as an outer space explorer.
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Fischer, who received a masters degree in aerospace engineering from MIT in 1998, is part of the Expedition 51/52 crew that launched to the space station in April, according to NASA.
The roughly 20-minute conversation will be streamed live on NASA TV, so those who arent part of the classroom environment can still get a feel for what its like to be an astronaut.
Litant said the questions from students tend to range from What is it like sleeping in space? to What do you do to entertain yourself?
It really runs the gamut, from serious technical questions to real human-interest type stuff, he said. It adds to the enthusiasm that our students already have here.
In a statement, NASA officials said that by connecting students directly to astronauts, it provides unique, authentic experiences designed to enhance student learning.
The video call offers a real-time opportunity for aspiring young aerospace engineers to pose questions about living, working, and researching in space to an alumnus who is doing just that, officials said.
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MIT students will chat live with astronaut on International Space Station - The Boston Globe
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