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Category Archives: Transhuman News
Space Foundation Student Art Headed for the International Space Station
Posted: April 30, 2013 at 9:46 pm
TERRAHEART Project Once again Includes Winning Art in Launch to Space
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (April 30, 2013) -- Digital images of artwork honored by the Space Foundation International Student Art Contest will travel to space this summer and take up residence aboard the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the Japanese program called TERRAHEART, which sends student art, poetry and writings into space. This is the second time TERRAHEART has invited the Space Foundation to send student art and the first time the art will travel to the ISS aboard a Japanese rocket. A DVD of the images will be launched by HIIB this summer from JAXA Tanegashima Space Center, in the southern part of Japan.
The Space Foundation 2013 International Student Art Contest invited students in pre-kindergarten through 12th grade from around the world to submit original artwork depicting the theme If I were Going ... , resulting in more than 4,700 entries representing 45 countries, including 38 U.S. states and territories - the largest response since the contest began three years ago. Thirty-six works of art were recognized and displayed at the recent 29th National Space Symposium, held April 8-11 in Colorado Springs.
About TERRAHEART
The TERRAHEART project works with teachers in schools and other educational institutions in Japan to stimulate discussion about the future in the context of space. Through classroom activities and interconnected websites, the project explores:
* What kinds of support do we need to help children develop and nurture their powers to live as good inhabitants of the Earth?
* For each stage of their development, how can we strengthen the links between children, their inner selves, other human beings and nature - the Earth or the universe? The connection between the Space Foundation and TERRAHEART was made by the Japan Space Forum (JSF), which coordinates an alliance of industry, government and academia for the development of Japan's aerospace industry. Operating under policies established by the Japanese government, JSF supports research proposals and implements programs to educate and enlighten the public about the aerospace industry as well as provide for the exchange and development of human resources. Space Foundation International Student Art Contest Winners Represent 12 Countries The winners of the Space Foundation International Student Art Contest, whose artwork will travel to space (organized by state and school), are:
UNITED STATES California
D-DIM Academy, Buena Park Junsu Lee, Grand Prize, 6th-8th grade; 1st Place, 6th-8th grade painting & mixed media Julie Moon, 3rd Place, 6th-8th grade painting & mixed media EDU After School, San Diego Daniel Tsivkovski, 2nd Place, Pre-K-2nd grade painting & mixed media Elite Art Academy, Palo Alto Kathleen Xue, Grand Prize, 9th-12th grade; 1st Place, 9th-12th grade drawing; Space Foundation
Achievement Award Meyerholz Elementary School, San Jose Poem Shiuey, Grand Prize, Pre-K-2nd grade; 1st Place, Pre-K-2nd grade painting & mixed media The Mirman School, Los Angeles Bryan Montenegro, 2nd Place, 3rd-5th grade digital St. James Episcopal School, Los Angeles Edwin SJ Nah, 2nd Place, 6th-8th grade painting & mixed media
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NASA says space station's batteries safer than 787's
Posted: at 9:46 pm
NASA officials are confident lithium-ion batteries due to launch to the International Space Station in 2016 will not overheat like the batteries that grounded the Boeing 787 Dreamliner earlier this year.
File photo of the International Space Station. Credit: NASA The space station's existing nickel-hydrogen are up for replacement in a few years, and NASA managers selected more efficient lithium-ion batteries for the job.
Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne - NASA's space station battery contractor - tapped GS Yuasa Lithium Power Inc., a U.S.-based subsidiary of GS Yuasa Corp. of Japan, to supply the cells for the space station's next-generation lithium-ion batteries.
GS Yuasa is also the supplier for batteries used on the Boeing 787 airplane, which was grounded in January after batteries aboard two of the jumbo jets smoldered and caught fire.
No crew members or passengers were injured in the incidents, but one firefighter received minor injuries while responding to the fire on a Japan Airlines 787 on the ground in Boston.
Kirk Shireman, NASA's deputy space station program manager, said earlier this month that the space station batteries should not be affected by the problem.
Engineers working on the Dreamliner have devised ways Boeing says will prevent similar problems in the future, but investigators have not found the root cause of the battery overheating. The suspect batteries provide electricity to the Dreamliner's auxiliary power unit. The Dreamliner batteries include eight cells arranged in a four-by-two matrix.
Photo of the charred battery from a Japan Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner which caught fire at Boston Logan International Airport in January. Credit: NTSB Officials attributed the battery failures to "thermal runaway," where overheating in one cell can lead to the meltdown of other cells within a battery - a chain reaction which could ultimately spread beyond the battery and into other airplane systems if not extinguished.
Engineers at Boeing, GS Yuasa and Thales, one of the 787's electrical system subcontractors, redesigned the batteries to prevent overheating in one cell from cascading into other sections of the battery. The contractors beefed up the battery's casing to contain a fire.
The Dreamliner returned to commercial service Saturday with an Ethiopian Airlines flight, two days after the Federal Aviation Administration approved Boeing's battery fix. Other carriers will resume Dreamliner flights over the next couple of months as national regulatory agencies grant approvals following the installation of redesigned batteries.
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NASA says space station's batteries safer than 787's
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Space station skipper gives Canada's new $5 bill an out-of-this-world debut
Posted: at 9:46 pm
Watch the unveiling of Canada's new $5 bill, featuring space station commander Chris Hadfield.
By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News
Canada's new printed-polymer $5 bill has received the country's highest sendoff, altitude-wise, from International Space Station commander Chris Hadfield. Tuesday's currency-unveiling ceremony in space was just the latest in a series of achievements that have drawn attention to Canada's best-known spaceflier.
Hadfield already has made his mark as a photographer, a musician and composer, and an explainer of outer-space phenomena ranging fromcryingto vomiting in zero-G. There's a reason why the Bank of Canada turned to him to introduce one of the last currency notes to be converted to counterfeit-resistant polymer: One side of the $5 bill celebrates Canada's contributions to space exploration, including the space station's Canadarm2 and DEXTRE robot.
"I just want to tell you how proud I am to be able to see Canada's achievements in space highlighted on our money," Hadfield told Canadian officials via a space-to-Earth video link. Hadfield said the pictures played to Canada's strength in space robotics.
As Hadfield spoke, he plucked a bill from the wall of the station's Destiny laboratory and set it spinning in zero gravity in front of the camera. The other side of the bill has a less spacey theme: It features a portrait of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, who was Canada's prime minister from 1896 to 1911.
Bank of Canada spokeswoman Julie Girard said the outer-space ceremony was "quite a few months in the making." The polymer note was flown up to the space station with Hadfield back in December, and held in reserve for Tuesday's ceremony. "We wanted to be the first to unveil a bank note in space," she told NBC News.
Bank of Canada
This rendition of the Canadian $5 bill shows Canadarm2 and DEXTRE in more detail. The bank note is to be issued in November.
Canada's new $10 note, which commemorates the country's rail system, was unveiled at the same time in Ottawa. The $5 and $10 bills will complete Canada's conversion to polymer-based currency, tricked up with transparent areas and hologram markings to make them harder to counterfeit. The Bank of Canada says these notes should last two to three times longer than the country's cotton-based paper bank notes and when they wear out, they can be traded in and recycled.
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Space station skipper gives Canada's new $5 bill an out-of-this-world debut
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EarthTalk / Efforts to regulate genetic engineering of crops sacked
Posted: at 9:46 pm
Dear EarthTalk: What is the Monsanto Protection Act and why are environmentalists so upset about it?
Rita Redstone
Milwaukee, Wisc.
The so-called Monsanto Protection Act is actually a provision (officially known as Section 735) within a recently passed Congressional spending bill, H.R. 933, which exempts biotech companies from litigation regarding the making, selling and distribution of genetically engineered seeds and plants.
President Barack Obama signed the bill and its controversial rider into law in March, much to the dismay of environmentalists. It means that Monsanto and other companies that supply the majority of the nation's crop seeds can continue to produce genetically engineered products regardless of any potential court orders stating otherwise. Opponents of genetically engineered foods believe that giving such companies a free reign over the production of such potentially dangerous organisms regardless of judicial challenge is a bad idea -- especially given how little we still know about the biological and ecological implications of widespread use of genetically engineered crops.
Today, more than 90 percent of the corn, soybeans, cotton, sugar beets and canola planted in the U.S. is derived from seeds genetically engineered by Monsanto and other companies to resist pests and thus increase yields. Aviva Shen of the ThinkProgress blog reports that, instead of reducing farmers' use of toxic pesticides and herbicides, genetically engineered seeds are having the opposite effect in what has become a race to keep faster and faster developing "superweeds" and "superbugs" at bay. With Congress and the White House refusing to regulate genetically engineered crops, the court system has remained a last line of defense for those fighting the widespread adoption of genetic engineering -- until now, that is, thanks to H.R. 933.
Monsanto isn't the only seed company heavily into genetic engineering, but it is the biggest and most well-known and spends millions of dollars each year on lobbyists to keep it that way. Critics point out that the company has spent decades stacking government agencies with its executives and directors. "Monsanto's board members have worked for the EPA, advised the U.S. Department of Agriculture and served on President Obama's Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations," reports the group Food & Water Watch. "The prevalence of Monsanto's directors in these highly influential positions begs a closer look at how they're able to push the pro-genetically engineered agenda within the government and influence public opinion."
"The judicial review process is an essential element of U.S law and serves as a vital check on any Federal Agency decision that may negatively impact human health, the environment or livelihoods," reports Food Democracy Now! "Yet this provision seeks an end-run around such judicial review by preemptively deciding that industry can set its own conditions to continue to sell biotech seeds, even if a court may find them to have been wrongfully approved."
Another concern of safe food advocates now is getting the government to require food makers to list genetically engineered ingredients clearly on product labels so consumers can make informed choices accordingly. "Not only is (genetically engineered) labeling a reasonable and common sense solution to the continued controversy that corporations like Monsanto, DuPont and Dow Chemical have created by subverting our basic democratic rights," adds Food Democracy Now!, "but it is a basic right that citizens in 62 other countries around the world already enjoy, including Europe, Russia, China, India, South Africa and Saudi Arabia."
CONTACTS: ThinkProgress, http://www.thinkprogress.org; Food & Water Watch, http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org; Food Democracy Now!, http://www.fooddemocracynow.org.
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EarthTalk / Efforts to regulate genetic engineering of crops sacked
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Examples Of Genetic Engineering: Bizarre Yet Beneficial Uses Of Modern Biotech
Posted: at 9:46 pm
April 29, 2013
Rayshell Clapper for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online
After learning about human genetic engineering, many readers might want to find out about some examples of genetic engineering. Both bizarre and beneficial, the following article highlights some truly fascinating and pragmatic examples of modern genetic engineering.
The Biotechnology Forums, a website for professionals and students in biotechnology (the area that studies genetic engineering) recently explained some of these examples. The first animal example of genetic engineering is the spider goat. Yes, you read that correctly. A spider goat is able to produce the strong, stretchable silk used by spiders to create their webs. This silk web is one of the strongest natural materials known to man, stronger even than steel.
Nexia Biotechnologies Company inserted the gene from a golden orb-weaver spider into the genome of goat in such a way that the goat secretes the protein of the spider web in its milk. The milk was then used to create a what Nexia called (and trademarked) BioSteel, a material with characteristics similar to spider webs.
Beyond goats capable of secreting spider webs in their milk, there are a number of other really cool examples of genetic engineering in animals. In one redOrbit blog, this author reported about a cat that glows in the dark. The glow-in-the-dark feline has a fluorescence gene that makes it glow under an ultraviolet light. As the Biotechnology Forum outlines, here is how South Korean scientists first created the glowing cat in 2007:
They took skin cells from Turkish Angora female cat (species that were originally tamed by Tatars, but was later transferred to Turkey and is now considered the countrys national treasure), and using the virus they inserted the genetic code for the production of red fluorescent protein. Then they put genetically modified nuclei into eggs for cloning and such cloned embryos are returned to the donor cat. It thus became the surrogate mothers own clones.
And why make a cat that glows in the dark? The researchers explained that this was no frivolous experiment and that potential benefits exist in medicine for treating and testing for human diseases caused by genetic disorders. And just today, researchers in Uruguay announced that they had successfully created a genetically modified glowing sheep. Though not directly applicable to medical technology, the researchers had this to say about the purpose of their research: Our focus is generating knowledge, make it public so the scientific community can be informed and help in the long run march to generate tools so humans can live better, but were not out in the market to sell technology.
Moving on, two other good example are the less-flatulent cow and the so-called Ecopig. As Mother Nature Network explains, cows produce a lot of methane gas, which is second only to carbon dioxide in contributing to the greenhouse effect. So scientists at the University of Alberta identified the bacteria responsible for producing methane and designed a breed of cows that create 25 percent less methane than the average cow. This is one genetic engineering example that directly and practically addresses one of the major problems facing modern man.
The Ecopig (aka enviropig or Frankenswine) is yet another of the many examples of genetic engineering that positively contribute to the environment. The Ecopig has been genetically altered to better digest and process phosphorus. The reason is that pig dung is high in phytate, a form of phosphorous that farmers use it as fertilizer but which over stimulates the growth of algae which can deplete oxygen in the watersheds and thus kill marine life. The Ecopig has been genetically modified by adding E. Coli and mouse DNA to the pig embryo, which reduce the pigs phosphorous output by about 70 percent.
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Examples Of Genetic Engineering: Bizarre Yet Beneficial Uses Of Modern Biotech
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Wanessa – Murder (Oficial Video DNA Tour) – Video
Posted: at 9:46 pm
Wanessa - Murder (Oficial Video DNA Tour)
Wanessa - Murder.
By: daam netto
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Wanessa - Murder (Oficial Video DNA Tour) - Video
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DNA of a Dangerous Church – Series Opener – Video
Posted: at 9:46 pm
DNA of a Dangerous Church - Series Opener
What makes a church dangerous? We are... Willing to take a risk Willing to follow where our convictions lead Willing to put our faith into action, our money ...
By: Alive Wesleyan
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DNA of a Dangerous Church - Series Opener - Video
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Breaking: Female DNA Found on Boston Marathon Bomb Components – Video
Posted: at 9:46 pm
Breaking: Female DNA Found on Boston Marathon Bomb Components
FOX News reported tonight that the FBI confirmed FEMALE DNA was found on the Boston Marathon bomb components.
By: jim hoft
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Breaking: Female DNA Found on Boston Marathon Bomb Components - Video
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Wanessa fala com o Papelpop sobre DNA Tour – Video
Posted: at 9:46 pm
Wanessa fala com o Papelpop sobre DNA Tour
Conversamos com a cantora Wanessa sobre a turn, o DVD e o CD novo, cantora pop internacionais, maternidade e vdeos polmicos na internet.
By: tvpapelpop
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Wanessa fala com o Papelpop sobre DNA Tour - Video
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DNA Trails: Searching for answers in Boston, 9/11 wreckage
Posted: at 9:45 pm
(PIX11) DNA found on a bomb fragment from the Boston Marathon bombings has become the new focus in the investigation.
Dr. Lawrence Kobilinksy, the head of the science department at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, believes that the female DNA found on that fragment of the pressure cooker bomb used to kill three and maim and injure 264, was probably not a victim, but more likely created by someone who either came into contact with the bomb: an accomplice, or someone who sold a part of the bomb-making material or someone who had indirect contact.
That means that the bombmaker could have shaken hands, for example, with a woman, and her skin cells could be transferred to the bomb.
Yesterday the FBI took DNA samples from Katherine Russell, the widow of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the brother who was killed in a shootout with police. They also took DNA from their three year old daughter.
In another high-profile case, DNA from the piece of plane believed to be part of the 9-11 attack on the World Trade Center is now being analyzed. Dr. Kobilinksy says DNA can survive for a very long time, and under great duress.
If bone fragments are found, investigators will grind them up, and try to match the DNA to a database.
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DNA Trails: Searching for answers in Boston, 9/11 wreckage
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