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Category Archives: Transhuman News

CALL FOR PAPERS 3rd Annual International Space Station Research and Development Conference

Posted: January 26, 2014 at 2:47 am

The deadline is approaching for the CALL FOR PAPERS 3rd Annual International Space Station Research and Development Conference - Discoveries, Applications and Opportunities

Organized by the American Astronautical Society with the support of NASA and the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS)

Hyatt Regency McCormick Place

Chicago, Illinois

ABSTRACT DEADLINE: February 14, 2014

The annual International Space Station (ISS) Research and Development Conference will be held June 17-19, 2014, at the Hyatt Regency McCormick Place in Chicago. Abstracts and poster proposals are solicited under the categories of Discoveries in Microgravity Science; Discoveries in Space Science, Earth Science, Engineering and Education; Applications Benefiting Earth; Applications Enabling Exploration; Applications in Technology; Commercial Applications; and Opportunities. Topics should relate to science, exploration and technology activities (past, present, planned or under development) on the International Space Station.

One of NASAs top strategic goals is to sustain the operation and full use of the International Space Station and expand efforts to utilize the ISS as a National Laboratory for scientific, technological, diplomatic and educational purposes and for supporting future objectives in human space exploration (2011 NASA Strategic Plan).

NASAs International Space Station website

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments_category.html

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CALL FOR PAPERS 3rd Annual International Space Station Research and Development Conference

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Ants in space! Cygnus craft delivers 640 new astronauts to space station.

Posted: at 2:47 am

A small colony of sterile ants in space will help scientists learn how these creatures adjust to microgravity.

For millions of years, ants have been one of most industrious creatures on Earth. Now we're going to see how they fare in space.

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With the help of NASA, a team of scientists now seeks to understand how the insects, renowned by biologists for their navigational and organizational skills, adjust to microgravity.

The experiment could provide us with a better understanding of foraging methods used by ants, the University of Colorado's Stefanie Countryman, one of the co-investigators of the experiment, told the Monitor.

After a two-day voyage, Orbital Science's robotic Cygnus spacecraft delivered the 640 small black common pavement ants to the International Space Station on January 12.

To avoid infestation, sterile worker ants were chosen for the project.

The ants were divided into eight equal groups each consisting of 80 ants. They were assigned to their individual habitats, eight in total. A habitat, says Stanford biologist Deborah Gordon, principal investigator of the project, is a 4-inch by 6-inch covered arena made of acrylic with three sub sections Nest, Forage Area 1, and Forage Area 2.

The ants were first kept in the nest area before the experiment was initiated. As soon as the ants reached the space stationthey were moved to Forage Area 1 a more compact subsection within the habitat where density of ants was high. Their interactions and path shape were monitored on video for 25 minutes, according to NASA.

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Ants in space! Cygnus craft delivers 640 new astronauts to space station.

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How ants in space could help researchers build a better robot

Posted: at 2:47 am

1 day ago Jan. 24, 2014 - 4:33 PM PST

On January 12, the International Space Station crew unloaded the recently-arrived Antares rocket, which contained precious cargo like food, spare parts and tiny satellites. Along for the ride was a colony of ants with a very unique purpose: to demonstrate how the ever-efficient insects adapt to life in microgravity.

If youve ever had an ant invasion in your home, you know this pattern: A single ant finds a source of nourishment and then turns into a milling mass of ants ferrying food back to the colony. Meanwhile, individual ants fan out to investigate the rest of the room.

These behaviors do not come from the queen or some other central force. Instead, they are built on innate algorithms that ants developed over millions of years, according to Stanford University. Ants have poor vision, so they rely on smell and touch for guidance while exploring. When the number of ants is more dense, they are more likely to touch each other, which triggers them to explore in tight spirals. If they run into a low number of other ants, they walk in a straight line. This combination means that they spend more time thoroughly exploring an area that is interesting enough to attract other ants and cover a lot of ground while exploring other regions.

Its a system that interests robotics researchers. If a fleet of robots is exploring a collapsed building, they can work more quickly if they dont have to rely on a central commander to tell them where to go.

But what happens if you disrupt the very basis of the ants communication system? Stanford University researchers decided to answer the question by sending ants into space, where low gravity would alter how many times they encounter other ants. About 70 ants were placed in a container that shifted in size to reveal different behaviors.

Stanford biology professor Deborah Gordon

In microgravity, the struggle to walk interferes with interactions, in particular the relation between density and interaction rate, said biology professor Deborah Gordon, who designed the experiment. Thus each ant has less information about density, and so less information to influence its path shape and searching behavior.

How the ants react could inform robot behavior in scenarios where radio communications have been interrupted. If its smoky or dusty and they can no longer communicate, the robots could develop a new system on the spot that still allows them to search an area thoroughly and efficiently.

Gordon, whose interest in ants began with a broader interest in central control-free systems like brains and embryos, said it is very exciting to send an experiment to the ISS. Her team will now study video from the ants time aboard the space station to work out how they responded to microgravity.

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How ants in space could help researchers build a better robot

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Facilities first, and fly fishing on Mars

Posted: at 2:46 am

Published on January 24, 2014

I dont like mid-winter melts. Photo by Paul Smith/Special to The Telegram

Published on January 24, 2014

Snowshoes on snowshoes off. Photo by Paul Smith/Special to The Telegram

Published on January 24, 2014

The first thing a setter does is build a good comfortable outhouse. This is mine. Photo by Paul Smith/Special to The Telegram

Is it possible that my descendants might live on Mars? Will they fly fish in summer and snowshoe in winter like I do here on Earth?

They might build cabins in the Martian forest or own sailboats on lovely glacier-fed lakes. Who knows what the future holds?

I think it is inevitable that humans will eventually fly to Mars. Its our nature to explore. There will always be the few amongst us who crave the ultimate adventure. The green grass on the other side of the hill is today, and always has been, irresistible to the spirited adventurous human soul.

It is why Columbus set sail in the Santa Maria, in spite of more reserved folks telling him and his crew that they would sail to their deaths off the edge of the world.

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Facilities first, and fly fishing on Mars

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FOGEL: One giant leap of faith

Posted: at 2:46 am

We should not send people to Mars until we create sufficient technology to get them home by Jared Fogel | Jan 23 2014

Mars: The Next Giant Leap for Mankind:http://www.mars-one.com. The Mars One website, which promotes its mission to colonize Mars through phrases like this, is doing everything it can to get the message out, and so far it has worked.

Less than a month ago, the Mars One project, which received more than 200,00 applicants to go on the mission, narrowed down the applicant pool to 1,058 men and women. Over the course of the next two years the program will narrow down the pool until there are six groups of four individuals remaining. From there, the future inter-planet explorers will undergo around eight years of training until the launch of their seven- to eight-month journey in 2024.

But theres a catch. The final 24 astronauts will be given only a one-way ticket to Mars. They will never return home.

This is uncharacteristic of any space missions to date. Historically speaking, whenever astronauts have been sent into space or to the moon, the intent has been for them to return home safely. However, this has not always been the case. Think of the Challenger, Columbia, and other space missions that suffered astronaut fatalities. This difference between the round trip always featured with NASA and the Mars Ones one-way ticket is likely because the Mars project is not funded by NASA or any other country but rather by a Netherlands non-profit organization.

Nevertheless, I dont think it is in anyones power to make the decision to send astronauts to their imminent deaths. I understand that these potential astronauts are signing up and agreeing to take part in this program under their own free will, but the program should not have been created in the first place because of this one-way trip aspect. Additionally, sometimes free will can be misinterpreted. For example, one man from Utah has decided that he would prefer to abandon his wife and four kids for the opportunity to journey to Mars. Thus, the Mars One would not only send people to live on Mars but would also potentially tear up families in the process.

Although there appear to be thousands of perfectly willing volunteers that will offer their lives on Earth for the chance to possibly live and die on Mars, this does not mean it is the right thing to do to send them there. Some may argue otherwise, but I believe an individual human life is more valuable than the knowledge gained from this expedition, especially since we could have the proper technology to bring them home 20 or 30 years down the road.

Even when the United States was first exploring potential moon exploration, the trip did not take place until we had sufficient technology to make a round trip: to the moon and back. Im sure there were plenty of individuals who would have offered their lives for the eternal fame that comes with exploration, but that doesnt mean it was right to offer up their lives for the sake of research and advancement. My point is that there was never any publicity involving one-way trips to the moon, and the trip did not take place until we knew that we could manage a round trip.

I understand that the moon is different than Mars, largely because Mars, after Earth, is the most habitable planet in the solar system thanks to its thin atmosphere and signs of water. Because there are no such conditions on the moon, there was never any mobilization to colonize there, but that doesnt change the fact that we decided that human exploration comes before colonization. Mars also lies much farther a seven- to eight-month journey away from Earth than the moon. Moreover, much like the moon, to our knowledge there are no signs of current life on Mars. Even with all of the potential research possibilities, the distance and lack of life presents a tough case to consider colonization a worthy trip.

Technological feasibility aside, I believe that the ultimate aim of the Mars One project is to stimulate new research on a planet with which we dont yet have much familiarity, and this is a very noble cause. On the other hand, it is not worth sacrificing lives, because no non-profit organization or any other organization should have the ability to offer up lives for the sake of research.

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FOGEL: One giant leap of faith

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Man who developed first vaccine for hepatitis B leaves £30million to charity

Posted: at 2:46 am

25 Jan 2014 00:01

PROFESSOR Sir Ken Murray, one of the first researchers in genetic engineering, saved many lives worldwide.

PRESSTEAM

A SCIENTIST who developed the first vaccine for hepatitis B has left 30million to the charity he founded in Edinburgh.

Professor Sir Ken Murrays groundbreaking work was credited with saving lives worldwide.

The 82-year-old, who worked at Edinburgh University for more than 30 years and was one of the first researchers in genetic engineering, died at home in the city last April.

His will reveals his estate was worth 45million with his fortune built on royalties from the vaccine.

The main beneficiaries are the Darwin Trust of Edinburgh, founded by Sir Ken in 1983.

They will receive 30million to support the education of young scientists and fund research and facilities at Edinburgh University.

Trust chairman Dr John Tooze, 75, said: Ken was an extraordinary man who remained very modest despite the huge royalties that his hepatitis B vaccine brought him.

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Minecraft Dinosaurs – Part 101 – Pachycephalosaurus DNA! Finally! – Video

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Minecraft Dinosaurs - Part 101 - Pachycephalosaurus DNA! Finally!
Minecraft Dinosaurs Fan Revival mod! Minecraft Dinosaurs / Fossil and Archeology mod comes to life as we begin a new series on Megneous Gaming - Minecraft Di...

By: Megneous

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Minecraft Dinosaurs - Part 101 - Pachycephalosaurus DNA! Finally! - Video

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Got my DNA results from Ancestry.com part1 – Video

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Got my DNA results from Ancestry.com part1
Go to Part 2 here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dP0yxaMWv0A Join our forum at http://www.illuminatingminds.ning.com check out site http://www.illuminatingm...

By: Druana Johnston

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Got my DNA results from Ancestry.com part1 - Video

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How to Hard Reset Droid DNA – Video

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How to Hard Reset Droid DNA
Simple instructions on how to hard reset the Droid DNA.

By: ITJungles

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How to Hard Reset Droid DNA - Video

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DNA Cover By Luli – Video

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DNA Cover By Luli
My puppy Luli being dramatic :P. Created by VideoFX for Android. http://goo.gl/BRiFJ.

By: Mariel Lopez

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DNA Cover By Luli - Video

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