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Two Robots Aboard the International Space Station Finally Met – Nerdist
Posted: March 26, 2022 at 6:34 am
Its an ISS meet-cute! Two robots working aboard the International Space Station finally met after two years of working in different parts of the station. NASA shared an image of an Astrobee robot and a Project CIMON (Crew Interactive MObile companioN) robot meeting for the first time. While science fiction movies make it clear that robots uniting in space is a giant red flag, this image from the ISS is very charming.
NASAs Ames Research Center shared the delightfully robotic image in a post outlining the robots roles aboard the ISS. The Astrobee pictured (on the right) is one of three identical robots launched to the ISS by NASA. The only difference between the three is the color of their shell. Bumble, pictured above in blue, launched in 2019. The other two robots on Team Astrobee are also named after bees. Honey has a yellow shell and Queen has a green one. Their role aboard the ISS is to perform general assistance tasks like taking inventory or monitoring the environment aboard the station.
The Project CIMON, meanwhile, is a longtime ISS resident. The free-flying robot first launched to the space station back in 2018. Hailing from the German Space Agency, its the ISSs first artificial intelligent assistant. True to its title, Project CIMON is a hands-free database, computer, and camera to support research. But it also has another important task. The teams monitoring the robot are also examining how to use AI for social purposes. The astronauts aboard the ISS find incredible ways to pass the time. But it must be isolating being away from their friends and family. Not to mention their general confinement to the expansive research station. Hopefully, Project CIMON and its technology can help reduce the stress astronauts face.
While the robots couldnt look more distinct from one another, they both play vital roles in the ISSs day-to-day operations. In the post, NASA wrote,These free-floating helpers come from different countries and have unique functions, but they share a mission to assist astronauts, support station operations, and enable research that will take humans to the Moon and on to Mars.
Both robots have pretty vital roles on the ISS. But we hope this isnt their first and last hang session. In fact, get the whole Team Astrobee crew and Project CIMON together for a little robot party. Nothing could go wrong there.
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Russia’s Mir space station returned to Earth 21 years ago – The Register
Posted: at 6:34 am
Today marks 21 years since Russia's space station, Mir, returned to Earth.
As the rhetoric from Russian space agency Roscosmos intensifies, it is worth taking a look back at the deorbit of the Mir complex, the first components of which were launched during the Soviet era.
Assembly of the International Space Station (ISS) was well under way when Mir met its demise. Indeed, it was Russia's commitment to the ISS that ended the veteran station; funding simply did not exist to keep both programs running.
Continuous occupation of Mir ended in 1999, with the return to Earth of the EO-27 crew. One more visit occurred in 2000, with a pair of cosmonauts spending two months aboard the outpost with a view to it being used for commercial purposes, but those plans came to naught other than delaying Mir's fate to 2001.
Operators were keen to de-orbit the complex while it remained under control. On December 26, 2000, contact was briefly lost due to a power drain, and a crew was put on standby to supervise the procedure from onboard the station. They were not required. In January, Mir's computer and gyrodynes (used to maintain attitude) were brought back online and a Progress freighter, loaded with extra fuel, docked on January 27.
There were hopes that the station could yet endure and be boosted to a higher orbit ahead of a possible reoccupation, but the rate of decay coupled with the sheer age of the complex meant that a de-orbit was inevitable.
Leaving the station to come down through atmospheric drag could have resulted in debris striking inhabited regions (NASA's Skylab had sprayed Australia two decades earlier) so the engines of the attached Progress were fired three times on 23 March 2001. Mir's orbit was first dropped to 103 x 137 miles with the initial two firings. The third and final firing was sufficient to set the station on a course to the Pacific ocean.
The complex encountered the atmosphere soon after passing over Japan, and its solar arrays were torn off by the force of re-entry. Its modules came off as it passed over the Pacific, and the demise of the station was visible from Fiji. Anything that survived re-entry fell into the ocean and was not recovered. Mir had, as Russia put it, "ceased to exist."
But the project lives on. Mir 2 forms the rump of Russia's contribution to the ISS and recent emissions from Roscosmos boss Dmitry Rogozin have suggested that Russia might undock its portion in the future.
A brave move, considering the age of the structures.
The Zvezda Service Module, built for Mir 2 and later pressed into ISS service, was constructed in the 1980s and launched in 2000, meaning it has spent over 20 years in orbit. Mir, on the other hand, managed 15 years.
Its fate is a clue to what lies in wait for the ISS and Russia's contribution.
Mir is well documented online, although we'd recommend David Harland's The Story of Space Station Mir. Brian Harvey's Russia In Space: The Failed Frontier? was also a useful resource.
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Prepare to Try to Take Down the Novaquark Space Station in This Dual Universe Event – MMORPG.com
Posted: at 6:34 am
With the upcoming Athena update on the way, there will be a new PTS event for Dual Universe next week. The event, Fool's Defense, lets you face the Novaquark team at the Novaquark space station. The team is encouraging all comers to try and destroy their space station and test the build.
The event will take place at 1400 UTC/10 AM Eastern time on April 1st and is in fact, not a joke. Join the developers from Novaquark on the PTS server and headto the PVP platform, claimed a ship and ammo and you'll be ready to fight. Once you get equipped and team up, either with your own team or creating public groups, it will be time to coordinate and get ready to take on the dev team. since this is in PvP space, everybody is vulnerable and in the official announcement for the event, the developers also warned that there may be potential sabotage or traitors that might be in the ranks of the community side in order to try and spoil your fun. For those who need it, there will be a resurrection node publicly available at the PVP platform.
The Athena update promises a new system that will let the community engage in war of all kinds, including sieges and defenses. With the development team taking on the community, it may be likely that they'll put in everything they can to test out the systems and stress the servers as well as giving players a rewarding opportunity to get an idea what to expect when the update fully hits.
Speaking of rewarding, anyone that wins will be able to spin a Wheel of Foolish Fortune, where they can get great prizes or intentionally not great prizes. Because an event on April Fool's Day couldnt be all straightforward. For more, see the official announcement over at Dual Universe
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Reaching for the stars: Salisbury University alumna’s work will travel to Space Station – Delmarva Now
Posted: at 6:34 am
Special to Salisbury Daily Times| Salisbury Daily Times
Northrop Grumman Cygnus spacecraft soars to ISS
Northrop Grumman launched its 17th commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station Saturday, carrying 8,300 pounds of supplies. (Feb. 19)
AP
When Salisbury University alumna Kennedy Workman interviews for jobs throughout her graphic design career, she will have a line on her rsum that will set her apart from others: A piece of Workmans work will have traveled into space.
Her mission patch design was chosen as the winner of a competition for Terps in Space, an extension of the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program.
The program allows students in the University System of Marylandto design science experiments to potentially be sent to the International Space Station.
My artwork is not out in a lot of places, but I will be able to say that its been to space, which is incredibly exciting, said Workman.
Based out of the University of Maryland, College Park, the program is led by Daniel Enrique Serrano, senior faculty specialist at the Institute for Physical Science and Technology, and is open to all students.
The project selected to travel to space as part of Mission 16, for which Workmans patch was created, was developed by a collaboration of students from University of Maryland, College Parkand the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
All University System of Maryland students are invited to participate, said Serrano. It means a lot to achieve that collaboration, like the team that won Mission 16, where you have students that are coming from different universities to do research, and for Kennedy to represent our entire mission visually being from a different university. My contribution is small, but it makes me proud to be able to bring these students together.
Workman, from Glenwood, Maryland, and other students in the SU Design Agency, a course led by Allison Seth, were given a brief description of the project and asked to create their version of a representative patch, similar to what one might see an astronaut wear on their spacesuit.
Though no astronaut will wear this patch, it will be sent up with the project expected to travel later this year and then will be returned to Workman with a certificate stating that it traveled to space.
The patch represents the projects basis on microgravity. Researchers will examine the fine details of how planets first began to form by investigating how the smallest particles interact and coalesce to begin forming a larger mass.
I really wanted to utilize an astronaut helmet or an astronaut floating in space to represent the human exploration of space and gravity, said Workman.
I looked at a lot of different pictures of astronauts because I wanted it to feel like they were floating out of the patch design and not too stagnant.
Workman studied spacesuits in images of astronauts and otherillustrations to develop her rendering and received praise from the judges, as her design closely represents what an authentic suit looks like.
More:What changes for Wallops launches to ISS as Russia ends rocket sales to US
One intentional variance was to not have the astronaut in the design wearing gloves, as Workman thought it made it more intimate and human for his bare hands to be holding flowers as he floated in space.
The flowers are part of the designs goal of representing Maryland.
I wanted to incorporate the state flower; thats why the astronaut is holding black-eyed Susans. And they also have the state flag on their astronaut suit, she said.
I tried to keep the color palette with the colors of Maryland and reflect the colors in different areas of the design, like the yellow reflection in the astronauts helmet, and the red stripe on the helmet and the banner around the entire patch design.
Workman was first selected as one of 11 finalists, from 44 designs submitted from across the state, to go to final judging. SU classmate Jennifer Cuevas design was selected as the third-place finisher.
Kennedys patch was one of the most refined and highest quality in terms of visual representation, said Serrano. Her being selected was by a landslide across the board by all the judges as the best design.
The project likely will launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida. Workman would like to be present, if possible, or at least view the launch of her artwork into space remotely.
I think it will be very, very exciting to see it launch, said Workman. I would love to see pictures of the patch on the International Space Station.
More:Rocket Lab chooses Wallops for launch, manufacturing site. Move could create 250 jobs
The SU Design Agency is a 400-level class in which students work in a setting structured like a graphic design firm to complete job assignments for actual clients, including University, community and nonprofit organizations.
The SSEP is a program of the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education = in the U.S. and the Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Space Education internationally. It is enabled through a strategic partnership with Nanoracks LLC, which is working with NASA under a Space Act Agreement as part of the use of the International Space Station as a National Laboratory.
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Tensions over Ukraine could affect space co-operation – The Irish Times
Posted: at 6:34 am
In the coming days a Russian Soyuz capsule is scheduled to leave the International Space Station for Earth, bringing home three personnel who have completed months of duties on the facility.
Two of these heading back to Kazakhstan will be Russian cosmonauts but the third will be American astronaut Mark Vande Hei.
In the midst of a war in Ukraine in which Russian bombs and shells are killing Ukrainian civilians and where US-provided weaponry has killed probably several thousand Russians, co-operation is continuing in space, at least for the present.
The war in Ukraine is not only the most serious crisis in Europe in decades, but the tensions it has generated between the US and Russia may ultimately also have an impact 400km above Earth at the International Space Station.
Almost from its inception about 60 years ago, space exploration has had as much to do with politics as with science, maybe more so.
The race to orbit Earth and later to the moon between the US and the former Soviet Union were as much about showing their own people and the broader world which political system was the most advanced.
However, in more recent years space has been one of the main areas of co-operation between the US and Russia.
The International Space Station project stemmed from an initiative to improve US-Russian relations after the collapse of the Soviet Union and to get away from the cold war rivalry between the two powers that marked the race to be first to the moon in the 1960s.
Even though this new co-operation was tested by Russias annexation of Crimea in 2014, Russian cosmonauts and American astronauts continued to work side by side on the space station.
After the retirement of the US space shuttle in 2011, and until the private Space X firm came on the scene in 2020, the Americans paid handsomely about $4 billion (3.64 billion) for seats on Russian space craft to bring their astronauts to and from the station.
The Americans, Russians, Japanese and others have their own modules or parts of the space station, but these are largely inter-dependent.
While the fallout from the invasion of Ukraine by Russia has the potential to cause serious problems for the space station project, the messages from both sides have been mixed.
Restrictions on high tech exports to Russia introduced by the Biden administration were designed to degrade its aerospace industry. The US space agency Nasa argued, on the other hand, that the measures would not impact on ongoing in-orbit and ground-station operations.
However, Dmitry Rogozin, director general of Russian space agency Roscosmos, denounced the restrictions and warned sanctions could destroy teamwork with the US on the International Space Station.
Rogozin has in recent weeks also been involved in a Twitter spat with one of the USs most famous astronauts of recent times and a strong critic of the Russian war in Ukraine, Scott Kelly, who spent a US record of nearly a year in space.
In one instance Rogozin tweeted a video of technicians taping over the flags of the United States, Japan and other nations on the Soyuz rocket that was supposed to launch 36 internet satellites for a UK-based company.
That launch, scheduled for March 4th, did not happen, because OneWeb and the British government, which owns part of the company, declined to meet new demands imposed by Roscosmos on how the satellites would be used.
Kelly responded to that tweet, writing, Dimon, without those flags and the foreign exchange they bring in, your space programme wont be worth a damn. Maybe you can find a job at McDonalds if McDonalds still exists in Russia.
Rogozin replied in a tweet that was subsequently deleted: Get off, you moron! Otherwise the death of the ISS [International Space Station] will be on your conscience!
In response to western sanctions Russia has also said it will no longer sell rocket engines to US companies. It has also halted launches of Russian-built Soyuz rockets from Europes space port in French Guiana.
At the same time, Nasa has said it and the Russians are still working toward a crew exchange deal under which both would routinely share flights to the space station on each others space crafts.
The revival of tensions akin to the cold war comes as Nasa is planning a return to the moon after a 50-year hiatus.
Americans wont be landing on the moon any day soon. It may be 2025 or 2026 before that happens.
However, the first steps are taking place. Last week Nasa rolled out its new mega rocket known as the Space Launch System at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, essentially as a dress rehearsal ahead of an unmanned launch around the moon later this year.
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Tensions over Ukraine could affect space co-operation - The Irish Times
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Satellites have become smaller and cheaper so even you can now do science in space – The Next Web
Posted: at 6:34 am
Want to go to space? It could cost you.
This month, the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft will make the first fully-private, crewed flight to the International Space Station. The going price for a seat is US$55 million. The ticket comes with an eight-day stay on the space station, including room and board and unrivaled views.
Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin offer cheaper alternatives, which will fly you to the edge of space for a mere US$250,000-500,000. But the flights only last between ten and 15 minutes, barely enough time to enjoy an in-flight snack.
But if youre happy to keep your feet on the ground, things start to look more affordable. Over the past 20 years, advances in tiny satellite technology have brought Earth orbit within reach for small countries, private companies, university researchers, and even do-it-yourself hobbyists.
We are scientists who study our planet and the universe beyond. Our research stretches to space in search of answers to fundamental questions about how our ocean is changing in a warming world, or to study the supermassive black holes beating in the hearts of distant galaxies.
The cost of all that research can be, well, astronomical. The James Webb Space Telescope, which launched in December 2021 and will search for the earliest stars and galaxies in the universe, had a final price tag of US$10 billion after many delays and cost overruns.
The price tag for the International Space Station, which has hosted almost 3,000 scientific experiments over 20 years, ran to US$150 billion, with another US$4 billion each year to keep the lights on.
Even weather satellites, which form the backbone of our space-based observing infrastructure and provide essential measurements for weather forecasting and natural disaster monitoring, cost up to US$400 million each to build and launch.
Budgets like these are only available to governments and national space agencies or a very select club of space-loving billionaires.
More affordable options are now democratizing access to space. So-called nanosatellites, with a payload of less than 10kg including fuel, can be launched individually or in swarms.
Since 1998, more than 3,400 nanosatellite missions have been launched and are beaming back data used for disaster response, maritime traffic, crop monitoring, educational applications and more.
A key innovation in the small satellite revolution is the standardization of their shape and size, so they can be launched in large numbers on a single rocket.
CubeSats are a widely used format, 10cm along each side, which can be built with commercial off-the-shelf electronic components. They were developed in 1999 by two professors in California, Jordi Puig-Suari and Bob Twiggs, who wanted graduate students to get experience designing, building, and operating their own spacecraft.
Twiggs says the shape and size were inspired by Beanie Babies, a kind of collectible stuffed toy that came in a 10cm cubic display case.
Commercial launch providers like SpaceX in California and Rocket Lab in New Zealand offer rideshare missions to split the cost of launch across dozens of small satellites. You can now build, test, launch and receive data from your own CubeSat for less than US$200,000.
Small satellites have opened exciting new ways to explore our planet and beyond.
One project we are involved in uses CubeSats and machine learning techniques to monitor Antarctic sea ice from space. Sea ice is a crucial component of the climate system and improved measurements will help us better understand the impact of climate change in Antarctica.
Spire Global operates a fleet of more than 110 nanosatellites. Image: Spire Global
Sponsored by the UK-Australia Space Bridge program, the project is a collaboration between universities and Antarctic research institutes in both countries and a UK-based satellite company called Spire Global. Naturally, we called the project IceCube.
Small satellites are starting to explore beyond our planet, too. In 2018, two nanosatellites accompanied the NASA Insight mission to Mars to provide real-time communication with the lander during its decent. In May 2022, Rocket Lab will launch the first CubeSat to the Moon as a precursor to NASAs Artemis program, which aims to land the first woman and first person of color on the Moon by 2024.
A nanosatellite took this photo of Mars. Image: NASA/JPL
Tiny spacecraft have even been proposed for a voyage to another star. The Breakthough Starshot project wants to launch a fleet of 1,000 spacecraft each centimetre in size to the Alpha Centauri star system, 4.37 light-years away. Propelled by ground-based lasers, the spacecraft would sail across interstellar space for 20 or 30 years and beam back images of the Earth-like exoplanet Proxima Centauri b.
With advances in miniaturization, satellites are getting ever smaller.
Picosatellites, the size of a can of soft drink, and femtosatellites, no bigger than a computer chip, are putting space within reach of keen amateurs. Some can be assembled and launched for as little as a few hundred dollars.
A Finnish company is experimenting with a more sustainably built CubeSat made of wood. And new, smart satellites, carrying computer chips capable of artificial intelligence, can decide what information to beam back to Earth instead of sending everything, which dramatically reduces the cost of phoning home.
Getting to space doesnt have to cost the Earth after all.
This article by Shane Keating, Senior Lecturer in Mathematics and Oceanography, UNSW Sydney and Clare Kenyon, Astrophysicist and Science Communicator, The University of Melbourneis republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Shane Keating and Clare Kenyon will be discussing CubeSats and the Space Bridge program at Design beyond Earth: The future of Earth observation, an in-person and online event at Scienceworks in Melbourne on Sunday March 27, 12pm-1pm.
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Within a decade, China intends to offer its Tiangong space station for tourism. – GeeksULTD
Posted: at 6:34 am
China hopes to pique public interest in space tourism by making its soon-to-be-completed space station available to the general public.
Yang Liwei, Chinas first astronaut in space in 2003, told Chinese media earlier this month that persons without official astronaut training may soon visit the Tiangong space station.
When asked if the general public will be allowed to explore Tiangong, Yang replied, It is not an issue of technology, but of demand. And, if there is sufficient demand, it can be accomplished within a decade.
Yang was addressing as a member of Chinas continuing annual political sessions in Beijing, the Chinese Peoples Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). Zhou Jianping, the main designer of Chinas human spaceflight programme, subsequently claimed the countrys Shenzhou crew spacecraft might be used for space tourism, lending credence to the remarks.
Taken together, the statements imply that China is attempting to develop a market for space tourism.
READ MORE: BEST SOUNDING VEHICLE EVER? Porsche Cayman GT4 RS 2022
But first, China must finish and operationalize the three-module, T-shaped space station. This year, China intends to send six missions to complete Tiangong. These will be the launches of two new modules, Shenzhou 14 and Shenzhou 15, as well as two cargo supply missions and two crewed missions.
The two three-person missions are also slated to carry out the first crew handover, which will see six astronauts temporarily stationed on the space station.
However, the Shenzhou spacecraft, which will launch from Jiuquan in the Gobi Desert on a proven Long March 2F rocket, will not be the sole option for transporting passengers into space.
According to Space.com, China is developing a reusable rocket for human spaceflight that would be capable of launching a new, bigger, and largely reusable crew spacecraft to the space station. The new method would allow more individuals to go to space at the same time.
Whereas the Shenzhou spacecraft can only carry three astronauts, the new generation of crewed space transportation vehicles will be able to carry six to seven astronauts, according to Huang Kewu, a human spaceflight official with Chinas main space contractor, the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, last year.
Commercial alternatives are also being considered. CAS Space, a commercial offshoot of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), plans to provide tourist journeys to space as early as 2025, citing Blue Origin as inspiration.
Meanwhile, Space Transportation is designing a rocket with wings for space tourism and point-to-point travel, with a maiden suborbital flight scheduled for 2025. Orbital flights are scheduled to begin around 2030.
Last year, Wu Ji, a researcher at the CASs National Space Science Center, told the Beijing Review that he thought Chinese enterprises will be able to compete in the worldwide space tourism industry. Commercial programs may help reduce costs and boost the efficacy of space operations, which would benefit traditional participants in this sector, Wu added.
Chinas first space-tourism planes may not take off for a few years, but the government appears to be committed to providing several means for visitors to reach space.
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Apitherapy: Benefits, risks, and more – Medical News Today
Posted: at 6:28 am
Apitherapy is an alternative therapy that uses products made by honeybees for medicinal purposes. These products include honey, beeswax, royal jelly, pollen, propolis, and bee venom. Apitherapists may use a combination of these products, depending on the condition they are treating.
Throughout history, people have recognized how important bees are, both as pollinators of plants and for the products they make.
The American Apitherapy Society says that honeybee products can treat various conditions, including arthritis, multiple sclerosis (MS), shingles, and gout.
This article explains what apitherapy is, what products bees make, and how people use the different honeybee products. It also looks at the benefits of apitherapy and the potential side effects and risks.
Apitherapy is a natural therapy that uses products made by honeybees for medicinal or health benefits. Some people also refer to it as bee therapy.
Apitherapy has had a role in traditional medicine for centuries. The ancient Greek, Egyptian, and Chinese civilizations all used honeybee products to treat injuries and illnesses.
Today, researchers believe that these products promote health by reducing inflammation, improving circulation, and stimulating the immune system.
Most of the products that people use for apitherapy come from one species of honeybee: Apis mellifera. Honeybee products that someone may use for apitherapy include:
Honey is probably the most well-known bee product. In apitherapy, people use honey in its raw form, which means that they have not filtered, processed, or heat-treated it. Honey contains small amounts of protein, minerals, vitamins, and enzymes. It also has antifungal and antiviral properties.
Worker bees produce venom to protect themselves and their hives from attack. Bees sting their attackers, injecting them with their venom. Bee venom is a mixture of proteins, amino acids, water, and volatile compounds that cause a painful reaction.
Honeybees secrete nutrient-dense royal jelly to feed their larvae for the first few days of their lives. After that, only the bees that will become queens continue eating royal jelly. Worker bees usually live for 46 weeks, while queen bees can live for up to 6 years. Royal jelly is rich in B vitamins, proteins, and antioxidants. Antioxidants reduce the levels of free radicals in the body, which experts think may be responsible for aging.
Pollen, which worker bees collect from plants, is rich in protein, vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and amino acids. Bees pollinate plants while collecting pollen, as they transfer it from one flower to another. They also eat it, and it provides most of their dietary protein.
Propolis is a sticky substance that bees make from plant resins. It is antiseptic and antimicrobial, and honeybees use it to keep the inside of their hives free of bacterial and fungal infections.
Bees make wax to construct their honeycombs and plug the honey cells when they are ready. Bees also mix the wax with propolis to cover any cracks in the hive and protect the bees from infections.
Bees process pollen by mixing it with honey and different enzymes. The pollen ferments and forms beebread, which is both nutrient-rich and easy to digest. It also preserves the nutrients in the food.
People have used apitherapy for centuries, and researchers continue to explore new ways of utilizing these products.
In 2020, an article in the journal Wiley Public Health Emergency Collection suggested that people with COVID-19 may benefit from the antiviral, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant properties that these products contain.
Research suggests that people use apitherapy to treat nerve pain, conditions such as arthritis and MS, and injuries such as wounds or burns.
However, the researchers stress that people receiving this treatment need to persevere with it, as the results may take time.
Apitherapists may suggest using different hive products in combination with other elements, such as essential oils. Each product has its own characteristics and potential health benefits for humans.
Research in the journal Environmental Science and Pollution Research shows that honey has anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antitumor, and antimicrobial properties, as well as heart-healthy qualities.
A person can eat honey or apply it directly to a wound or scar. In an older study from 2010, honey was effective in treating diabetic foot ulcers, although the healing process took up to 3 months.
People use bee venom to treat a variety of ailments, including Parkinsons disease, MS, arthritis, and nerve pain.
An article in the journal Molecules explains that therapists administer bee venom in one of three ways: direct sting, bee venom acupuncture, or bee venom injection.
Royal jelly, honey, bee pollen, and propolis are all rich in nutrients and vitamins, and some also contain proteins. People can benefit from these by taking them as a dietary supplement.
A 2020 review article reported that mouthwashes containing propolis might reduce dental plaque and gingivitis, or gum disease. However, the authors noted the need for more research to confirm this.
Some people find that eating honey made from local wildflowers reduces their hay fever symptoms.
Some people are allergic to bee stings and other bee products. They may have a reaction, which, in some cases, may be life threatening.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the use of injectable bee venom for desensitizing people who are allergic to it.
Other possible negative side effects of apitherapy include:
Apitherapy uses products from honeybees to promote human health.
Therapists may use these products to ease the symptoms of neurological diseases, such as Parkinsons, and autoimmune conditions, such as arthritis.
Anyone considering using apitherapy to treat an existing condition or symptom must talk with a doctor to make sure that there are no possible interactions with their current medication.
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Apitherapy: Benefits, risks, and more - Medical News Today
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Eco-Relations: On David St. John’s The Way It Is and Alexis Pauline Gumbs’s Dub: Finding Ceremony – lareviewofbooks
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IN THE LAST DECADE, poets have increasingly addressed human-induced injury to the world. Historically, poets have always consorted with nature, relying upon its rhythms as deeply related to the imagination. Climate change consciousness has made a myriad of eco-disasters visible: our air, waters, forests, mountains, urban spaces, and other species, all under threat. A whole new way of living and writing is called for. This biannual column will review two or three new poetry volumes that expand poetic inquiry into our eco-relations, our abuses, and the very sources of our breath and inspiration.
Though it ends David St. Johns The Last Troubadour: New and Selected Poems, The Way It Isis its own book, and bends toward the oceans elements. An ecological love song, it offers a way, tremblingly alive toward acceptance, and a profound letting go. Both impersonal and tender in tone, these poems reflect upon the follies and joys of being human through a balladeers confidential style,agile lyricism, the kind to liberate the ego, an avenue of acute necessity now. Each of these 50-plus poems use couplets (with some staggered strategic one-liners); the first lines extending with nine to 12 stresses, while the second line of the couplet draws back to three, at most five stresses, mimicking the emotional wave crashing and then withdrawing, the sound of breath or sea foam trailing off yet these couplets connect, mostly forming perfect grammatical sentences, inflected by the ballads of John Jacob Niles, a folk pioneer who introduced the ballad to Bob Dylan and Joan Baez, among other 1960s songsters. Niless breathy falsetto still hypnotizes in songs such as Go Way From My Window. He tracked and transcribed Appalachian folk ballads, with his handmade mandolin, conveying recurrent yet unique human tragedies, with the ring of the inevitable. St. John first learned these songs from his grandmothers gift of a record and songbook.
The communal trail of humans within nature, nature within the human, drives St. Johns culling of folk stories made out of the weather. The Way It Is writes from the rocks, haunted by the possible, writing with signature ampersand, with no periods, and lots of space. An ending never begs for closure, staying vulnerable. The alternating measures of long and short lines and the space between line endings as well as between the couplets provide overtures to silence, giving permission to contemplation. Apertures let measured light in, while readers hang fire, and the poet, with a threadless needle,stitchesthe poems with breath.
The subject matter, along with trying for songs persistence, faces our communal mortality, erosion, eco-bereavement, political repression, lovers and friends coming and going, place names proliferating, and many tales. In several poems, the Russian Revolution of 1917 spurs poetic and political resistance, the one taking heat from the other. In Alexandr Blok, for instance, the speaker recalls dining with Moscow scholars a married couple, and after reaching back into the dark century & at last, retrieving his black cashmere // Overcoat bought from a thrift store, he disappears into the snowy night, in upstate New York // Not Moscow or St. Petersburg. He imagines others see him walk as the most lyrical shadow alive. In other words unseen.In another poem, he puts it uncompromisingly: Reverie is a state beyond all forms allowed by the state.
Shadows, shades, slanted-ness slip-slide throughout.A new Romantic, a new Symbolist, St. John also embodies the 21st-century survivor, after the wars, revolutions, atrocities, exiles not expecting gauzy immortality, or a vatic post, instead inclining towarda way, a path to the it is, inclining toward the anonymous home-made, the making of homes as poems; in this way, he exemplifies what H.D. called spiritual realism. Besides, thin careful arms awaiting Icarus, convinces that Icarus had to fall; these poems grip us with their wide, yet wry acceptance of what Generation tags as those lyrics / of pure human spittleyou know // That song I mean the one about all of us fiercely / irrelevant & yet so briefly alive.We the irrelevant, tipping toward world disaster, the very impetus for feeling yet so briefly alive.This is the way it is.The spittle, and the transmission of it.
St. John, expert at suture, leaps between couplets, as he does near the opening of Generation, while considering the emptiness in authenticity when, in fact, [g]rowing so precisely redacted, he admits:
So I cant help it & maybe Im doing all right? Someone else has to tell me
I spend all my time in meetings & almost noneWith the few people I love
The Last Troubadour, brings in the dazzling Joshua, another maker spitting arc-welder // Over armatures of rebar shaping a dozen abstract / guitars or mandolins as though he could recover those times as lost as song.Other characters, shaping and shaped by the environment, wander throughout this West Coast anthem Jolene, flamenco dancer with her peeled off shirt, and PTSD Elijah, disturbed by her riveting gunshot rhythms (Hot Night in Akron), set against a landscape of hungry boys and hungry girls (The Way It Is). See also Evangeline & Her Sisters, Backstreets, and the delicious Lucky,with its abandoned house now a place where / kids come to drink & fuck: the grass and the glassless window zooming in on a hen her head broken and her belly eaten open, the backdrop for Luckys own tale of being thrown out of everywhere. This loss and dislocation vaporizes as we follow myriad trails.
Alongside portraits of invisible lives that are obscure without the poets eye, My Life As Sandoz Mescaline sets more ballad material into motion, a hallucinated fairy tale, the very finest arctic dog team ever known and in one somatic heartbeat Id harnessed my spoon-sized sled // To their oracular dancing bodies & in an instant like night fog / I was gone. In almost every poem, St. John evanesces; the ego, unseen, slips out; he identifies with Claude Rains in the film adaptation of H. G. Wellss The Invisible Man. Being gone wages the question of where one is going and the way it is. But gone also leaves an opening for what Bhanu Kapil calls soft craziness. An Ecclesiastical Sketchbook is beyond desire and fear (mostly), the altar a place of offerings, sacred rituals so faltering is a reminder of human vanity. The last poem in this collection, Script for the Lost Reflection, provides the erasing inherent in writing:
& Im exactly who I say I am tonight just an image
Of a last reflection fading slowly as summer light before your eyes
Growing up in Fresno, St. John is a poet of California,particularly its Northern incarnation, the wild Big Sur Coast, its bridges built by the WPA in the 1930s, offering hair-pin curves, disallowing development, though climate change and the Silicon Valley wages its eco-attacks. In one poem, while he sits at Big Surs Henry Miller Library and Gallery, he reads Millers The Air-Conditioned Nightmare, a fierce objection to Americas overwork sterility and consumerist superficiality. Also central to this books emanating power, it highlights the iconic Big Sur of Edward Weston (18861958), whose early photographs in the late 20s of the coast haunt with their three layers, the gelatin one composed of light-sensitive silver compounds that turn into the image after it has been exposed. Survival. Little Sur sights elephant seals with their yelps echoing off canyon walls. This early tide as porous knuckles of rock // Shoulder their way above the foam. Tied to this topography and its lore, St. John absorbs ecological distress: You see this landscape is the landscape of / my valley the one I remember // Out of the plunder that is the swollen glow (Vineyard).
Perhaps the most dazzling poem in this collection is Emanations, haunted, teased out from one of St. Johns geo-anchors, Jeffers Country, centered on the stone home the poet Jeffers built, or rather did so after laborious tree planting, lifting improbably giant boulders and rocks, creating a memorial to the ragged coast as well as to himself as part of the land, with sea as interlocutor: it takes great / strength to believe truly // In solitude trusting its sinews & silence holding yourself against / waves of your own darkness. In this long-segmented poem, we remeet Evangeline (from Evangeline & Her Sisters the sisters being her skinny twin silver / .38s,); here, she is in rehab near Point Pinos Lighthouse. The poem then eases us into Tor House, where the mouth simply drops seeing Thirty feet beyond his window those huge looming eggs of stone / the granite boulders Jeffers // Hauled & rolled from the shore every afternoon. Hawk Tower, where Jeffers wrote, faces off the harsh land, even harsher than a skeptical man / who walks mornings not speaking / The worlds raw sea edge awaiting him he who made / stone love stone (this last phrasing my wifes favorite). St. John revisits Cypress Cove, and those lethal rocks // smashed by purposeful waves & those skyrocket cathedrals of spray. We learn that the troubadour poet had [f]or years kept a notebook of obscure trails between Point Lobos / & Gorda all those glories. (I want this notebook!)
From Tor House, we move into the house built from Cliff Mays blueprints by the poets mother, another maker, in this poem of nested homes (his aunts painting cottage crops up as well). This deserves quotation more fully; note the second line has more stresses, words setting stone by stone in a plotted layout:
I grew up in a house of redwood glass & stone []
A lesson in organic mid-century modern aspiration huge exposed beams of solid redwood its ceiling planks too
The fireplace a mosaic of flagstones & multicolored volcanic rocks & living room walls pale Australian gum
All these natural materials communicated from the mouth of Jeffers County; the home was a testament to possibility (in Fresno), an ecopoetic image of living with the land and not exclusivelyon it so bound to its elemental nature.The poem culminates in a solitary visit to Tor House, in silence / by the bedby the sea-window a good death-bed,with the proximity of the pulse of waves licking raw the shore stones as pines & cypress / chimed in the sea wind.
There are elegies in this book, one for Larry Levis (The One Who Should Write My Elegy Is Dead) that starkly calls to us, so briefly alive, idiosyncratic lives, akin to diverse driftwood, washed up at Andrew Melera State Park in Big Sur, there, as elsewhere in this ecopoetic love song, its characters are arrested by salt, twisting like Monterey pines. In this manner, St. John calls upon a cliffs majestic sweep, correcting human arrogance, a crucial claim made by Jeffers himself in the early 20th century:
We must uncenter our minds from ourselves;We must unhumanize our views a little, and become confidentAs the rock and ocean that we were made from.
These lines from Carmel Point transition to Alexis Pauline Gumbs, who embodies this kind of we that was made from water, rock, plus mammal cartilage, seaweed, burr, feelers everywhere. Gumbss Dub: Finding Ceremony is indebted to many ghost voices, those calling for freedom from sedimented cultural binaries of black and white, male and female, humans and creatures. Both a gathering and a recovery, this last pivotal volume in a trilogy, commits to a new poetics. Using a broad canvas, Gumbs generously offers instructions for ritual healing, sometimes cryptic, sometimes deadly lucid: the rising you could be any of us, followed by an injunction to save the top of your head for the water. dont let nonsense burn it / out. cleanse with salt and coolness. thousands of years ago it was a / spout. place your head in places worthy. place your hands over your / heart. bless yourself with generations. thats a start. This start prepares for the poets map for survival and resplendence, charted necessarily across a long hypnotic text, its 15 sections, gradually, letting its medicine work.
The book prompts the reader to enact self-instructions discovered through listening, and breathing into rhythmic, ancestral memory, here with the wild Atlantic and Caribbean coasts. Not an easy occupation, she warns how do we breathe across generations. ask yourself. this is / not the power of positive thinking. this is no birthday wish in smoke. / this is existence or absence. no joke. Reading like a guided meditation, Gumbs sets forth a way of welcoming ancestors:
put yourself in the center and draw them in, stand where you stand-which is not under and not over. you. not gonna get over it. andwhere you stand is not always standing either, is it? sometimes quick-sand sometimes bended knee, very often that cross-legged thing youdo, sitting on the floor or hugging your own legs like they were peo-ple. be where you are and draw them to you. you might need to moveyour hands, one of those legs or a book from blocking your heart,that would be a good start. put your arms out like if you were float-ing water. daughter. they know where to find you.
With the backdrop of the English colonizing Jamaica in 1655, with its already enslaved Africans, Gumbs cleaves away using the masters tools (to re-cite Audre Lordes famous proviso that you cant build afresh with tools shaped by an oppressor logic). Here the poet unveils other tools, akin to the tactics of whales navigating beneath the sea, hearing and mothering each other. Gumbs uniquely traces the transformation from cultural conditioning to discover kin for at some point we all had to learn how to see the invisible. the unborn. the unremembered, the discounted, ourselves. As medium-poet, she can even hear what the coral said: and their call to dream until you birth yourself in water singing with bones of all your lost [] breathe not from your mouth, / not from your nose but through your hair and through your skin. Skin embodies porous empathy. Humanity, indeed, must uncenter itself to have a chance of survival; she calls for inevitable prompts for stillness, dance, screaming. Noting the problem with owning, and creating a self-justifying story, that unlike blood it only binds you to one life, ecosystems possess for this poet an uncanny awareness:
the trees knew, the trees and the ferns and the moss and the lichenknew. The rocks knew [] the bacteria in your eyes, between your teeth,roaming the smooth expanse of your stomach knew and acted
With the enormity of what we face, our climate crisis, that the smallest plankton had to / get ready after centuries of making life out of sun. Taking the perspective of an ecosystem herself, she records the mountainous islands of trash. the unearned permanence of plastic.
Gumbs uniquely taps with phrases, from the opus of critical race theorist Sylvia Wynter, who wrote through the 1970s and the 1990s, insistently rethinking of what exactly we mean by human. (The title Human Being as Noun? Or Being Human as Praxis? Towards the Auto-poetic Turn/Overturn, an unpublished manifesto, gives a clue.) Gumbs chooses emphatic moments, or pressure points, for each footnoted prose poem (the predominant form with lots of space between them). The phrases create a force field in order to return to the flow of eco-rhythms, prayers, and invocations. Wynters 1976 Ethno or Sociopoetics, defines socio-poesis, as a true revolution in poetry based on context, as opposed to Ethno-poetics, which in its historical self-making created a self, a we that exists only through the negation of an Other. In other words, Dub honors Wynters ideas, which include the latters reflection upon colonized LANDS [.] SERVED AS THE CATALYST FOR THAT TOTAL commercialization of land and labour, the central dynamic of capitalism. TOTAL stands naked here, propelling Gumbss own socio-poetics, dependent on context, and upon collaborative lyricism, a collective we.
One of Wynters potent phrases, The Ceremony Must Be Found, (Boundary 12.3 1984), haunts the collection; it directs us to read Dub as alternative space, with humans less powerful than the aquatic deeps. Dub reminds that more than six centuries of systemic persecution leaves us searching for another model for being in the world. In our time, books, like this one, allow for visceral epistemology-in-action, using inner expansive space to escape commodification, or to move beyond being bound, or dubbed. This involves intuited memory of the hold of a slave ship, while also holding her readers in the process.
Gumbs reverbs dub poetry, originally a form of performance art, emerging out of Kingston, Jamaica, in the 1970s, essentially spoken word backed by reggae rhythms, and characterized by political commentary. Noting in her introduction that dub also refers to the doubling journey of a queer Caribbean diasporic Black feminist writer (herself) with Wynter, a world historical Caribbean theorist, almost Gumbss grandmothers age. Not surprising, Gumbss Caribbean ancestors are powerful interlocuters in this work, but she also contacts Irish ancestors who shipwrecked into the Caribbean and stayed, alongside those who survived the Middle Passage. The section Blood Chorus lives through thrown-over captives us? we let the whales name us. deep with their moaning, we put our ears underwater.
Dub provides an acoustic whooshing the reader through a ceremonial working through, where the corals, folded along the edge of / generations. you will have a problem the problem being a self to keep going. Listening deeper, the poet is called to write page after page so you can see / us, facing morning so we can see you, you will be surrounded and / astounded. you will be surprised and thoroughly revised. you will not / be the you you thought you knew, footnoted with Wynters phrase the correlated Otherness continuum from the essay Human Being as Noun? Gumbs herself states she needed to unlearn herself, situating one of her selves in a continuum: and if you can believe a black woman artist would most likely end up screaming in the asylum, (another Bertha from Jane Eyre?), supplemented with self-inquiry: think what could have made / me the way I am. think. how I made you the way you are. And what was it made both of us, with the warning, are / you ready? tagged with Wynters the center of the universe as its dregs. Together, theorist and poet, bow to so-called discards, here boda, combined whale, human, and goddess: boda made herself by breathing.
For present-day sufferers of environmental dissociation, Gumbs incants: put your forehead in the / water. she will show you. here i am. This linguistic touch reaches through these pages. In the section losing it all, a ballad for self-love emerges:
quiet your mind and open your heart. Open your heart. open your heart.calm your mind down so you can open your heart. im not going to say it again.
dance well so you can leave it all there. leave it all there. leave it all there.dance hard so you leave it all there. Soft with yourself and the pain.
wash clean so you can swim in your skin. Shrug off the sin. be born againwash clean so the day can begin. im not going to say it again.
Key to her practice, Gumbs include[s] speakers who have never been considered human, attuned to whales, corals, barnacles, bacteria. This poesis calls for repetition and repletion, also the timing and rhythm of prayer, making Dub an artifact and tool for breath retraining and interspecies ancestral listening, posing the delicious question: What if you could breathe like coral from a multitude of years ago? or What if you could breathe like whales who sing underwater and recycle air to sing again before coming up for air? To approach this possibility, Gumbs relies on the incantatory power of the spoken broken word. Syncing with other ecopoetic projects, interspecies communication appears urgent. Elsewhere, in Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals, out as well in 2020, Gumbs calls herself a marine mammal apprentice, trying echolocation, an undersea mammals way of bonding through song. [T]he breathing of whales is as crucial to our own breathing and the carbon cycle of the planet as are the forests, she writes, adding, if humans retreated to pre-commercial whaling numbers their gigantic breathing would store as much carbon as 110,000 hectares, the size of the entire Rocky Mountain National Park.
With interior rhyming, these prose poems choreograph an untangling of the knots of the heart, particularly the one created by the self/other blueprint set down as permanent. Dub wakes us concussively. Both wrenching and playful, it offers instructions (two sets of them), warnings, and its central bid to listen to the undrowned. Her achieved hope for interspecies communication generates possible activism. Within the cultural whiplash of the 21st century, dialectical thinking crumbles to the touch. Gumbs directs humans toward diverse ways of knowing, releasing denigrated embodiments, and thankfully resurrects Wynters swift disabling of Western epistemology and logic, through singing, breathing, healing, touching.
Susan McCabe is a professor of English and Creative Writing at USC, and has published H. D. & Bryher: An Untold Love Story of Modernism (2021), Elizabeth Bishop: Her Poetics of Loss (1994), and Cinematic Modernism (2005) and received as well the Agha Shahid Prize for a book of poems, Descartes Nightmare (2008).
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Eco-Relations: On David St. John's The Way It Is and Alexis Pauline Gumbs's Dub: Finding Ceremony - lareviewofbooks
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Doctor Strange’s Entire Timeline In The MCU Explained – Looper
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The events of "Avengers: Infinity War" last long enough to reach 2018, as evidenced by a number of onscreen dialogues and confirmed by Feige. The film ends with the Blip, in which half of all life disappears in moments. In several films and TV shows, characters explicitly state that the Blip lasted five years, and a dramatically emphasized title card in "Avengers: Endgame" makes that clear as well. As Thanos Blipped Strange, he spent 2018 to 2023 simply not existing. As shown in "Black Widow," those who were Blipped didn't notice the passage of time at all, and so to Strange, one moment it was 2018, and the next it was 2023.
During Strange's five-year absence, the remaining population of the universe carried on, and a few notable events took place. Two are of particular importance, as they undoubtedly featured in Strange's tour of alternate futures. First, around a month after the Blip, the remaining Avengers locate Thanos and kill him, but not before learning that the Infinity Stones are all destroyed. The second, and universally critical, event of note takes place five years after the Blip, when Scott Lang is finally freed from the Quantum Realm and returns to Earth.
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Doctor Strange's Entire Timeline In The MCU Explained - Looper
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