This Week in Science

IrishLion

I am Beyonce, always.
Staff member
Messages
19,127
Reaction score
11,077
So now Backflip Robot has some friends that can open doors for him, while he walks room-to-room eliminating his human enemies? Cool.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/knoOXBLFQ-s" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

SonofOahu

King Kamehameha
Messages
1,835
Reaction score
228
So now Backflip Robot has some friends that can open doors for him, while he walks room-to-room eliminating his human enemies? Cool.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/knoOXBLFQ-s" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Just change those knobs to round ones, and it'll keep those robots out... and any 80+ year-olds too.
 

dshans

They call me The Dribbler
Messages
9,624
Reaction score
1,181
Just change those knobs to round ones, and it'll keep those robots out... and any 80+ year-olds too.


Nah ... just outfit the "hands" with neoprene for gripping and robojock is good to go wherever it damn well pleases!
 

Whiskeyjack

Mittens Margaritas Ante Porcos
Staff member
Messages
20,894
Reaction score
8,126
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/zqE-ultsWt0" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

Old Man Mike

Fast as Lightning!
Messages
8,975
Reaction score
6,464
MONSTER Polluter. Such a system is romantically thrilling in a comic book way, but a really bad idea until a better (WAY better) lift system is invented not still blundering about with what the futurist engineers call "dummo chemical rockets."

Also: the future is about AI global communications with holographic meeting spaces, not flying individual sales hustlers everywhere. I don't like the impersonalness of that future either, but that's where we're going.

If the pictured transportation future is aimed at tourism --- good luck with that as we tear up the planet for resources and demolish the uniqueness of cultures with the global economy. But the Image will be "Fun, Fun, Fun till Daddy takes the T-Bird away!!!"
 

Old Man Mike

Fast as Lightning!
Messages
8,975
Reaction score
6,464
That's why the T-Bird was a better idea.

If it was electric or hydrogen fuel cell, it would have even been a good idea. (until one got out of college anyway).
 

IrishLion

I am Beyonce, always.
Staff member
Messages
19,127
Reaction score
11,077

Pretty sure this is just an elaborate marketing ploy by JJ Abrams for the next "Cloverfield" film, which is a prequel.

The prequel will show us that this falling space station actually sets off the events of all three films in the series:

It emits a distress signal, which plays into the plot of "10 Cloverfield Lane"

The trajectory of the falling canister of Hydrazine from the Chinese space station is miscalculated, and can actually be seen falling into the ocean at the end of the first "Cloverfield" film just off the coast of New York. This causes the mutation of an already-giant squid, turning it into the Godzilla-sized Cloverfield monster in the first film.

Finally, the space station itself is the first iteration of the Cloverfield Space Station from "The Cloverfield Paradox."

Brilliant work, JJ.
 

Veritate Duce Progredi

A man gotta have a code
Messages
9,358
Reaction score
5,352
Pretty sure this is just an elaborate marketing ploy by JJ Abrams for the next "Cloverfield" film, which is a prequel.

The prequel will show us that this falling space station actually sets off the events of all three films in the series:

It emits a distress signal, which plays into the plot of "10 Cloverfield Lane"

The trajectory of the falling canister of Hydrazine from the Chinese space station is miscalculated, and can actually be seen falling into the ocean at the end of the first "Cloverfield" film just off the coast of New York. This causes the mutation of an already-giant squid, turning it into the Godzilla-sized Cloverfield monster in the first film.

Finally, the space station itself is the first iteration of the Cloverfield Space Station from "The Cloverfield Paradox."

Brilliant work, JJ.

Is this true? Or were you being funnies? I really liked the first two: Cloverfield and 10 Cloverfield Lane was amazing.
 

IrishLion

I am Beyonce, always.
Staff member
Messages
19,127
Reaction score
11,077
Is this true? Or were you being funnies? I really liked the first two: Cloverfield and 10 Cloverfield Lane was amazing.

I was writing fan fiction.

I just thought it was kind of funny that this real-life falling space station, and the real-life canisters of harmful chemicals on board, could fit perfectly into the Cloververse to set off the events of all three films.
 

Bubbles

Turn down your lights
Messages
661
Reaction score
76
My cousin in the news again after discovering the farthest star ever recorded....some 9.3 billion light years away (36 trillion miles) using gravitational lensing. Very cool stuff! This one is about 100 times farther away than the previous farthest star.....that's no small leap....expecting even greater discoveries with the launch of hubble's replacement in 2 or 3 years.

https://www.mprnews.org/story/2018/...s-discover-farthest-individual-star-ever-seen
 

connor_in

Oh Yeeaah!!!
Messages
11,433
Reaction score
1,006
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Time Lapse of giant <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/lava?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#lava</a> flow consuming car, telephone pole falling <br><br>Date: 5-6-2018<br>Location: Leilani Estates, Hi <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LeilaniEstates?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LeilaniEstates</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Leilani?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Leilani</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Hawaii?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Hawaii</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/volcano?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#volcano</a> <a href="https://t.co/7Td2ecfV62">pic.twitter.com/7Td2ecfV62</a></p>— WXChasing (@bclemms) <a href="https://twitter.com/bclemms/status/993334431883677696?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 7, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

Bishop2b5

SEC Exchange Student
Messages
8,933
Reaction score
6,160
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Time Lapse of giant <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/lava?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#lava</a> flow consuming car, telephone pole falling <br><br>Date: 5-6-2018<br>Location: Leilani Estates, Hi <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LeilaniEstates?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LeilaniEstates</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Leilani?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Leilani</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Hawaii?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Hawaii</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/volcano?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#volcano</a> <a href="https://t.co/7Td2ecfV62">pic.twitter.com/7Td2ecfV62</a></p>— WXChasing (@bclemms) <a href="https://twitter.com/bclemms/status/993334431883677696?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 7, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Why don't they just sacrifice a virgin or two and put an end to this?
 

BGIF

Varsity Club
Messages
43,946
Reaction score
2,922
https://www.cnn.com/2018/06/04/us/hawaii-kilauea-volcano/index.html
Earthquake hits Kilauea summit, sending ash plumes up to 8,000 feet
By Scott McLean, Madison Park and Amir Vera, CNN
Updated 5:38 AM ET, Mon June 4, 2018

The earthquake happened at 3:51 p.m. local Sunday, according to the US Geological Survey. It did not cause a tsunami threat, according to the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
But the Hawaii Civil Defense Agency said the fallout will affect the volcano and Pahala areas, and cautioned about the possibility of aftershocks.
There were 500 quakes in the summit area of Kilauea in a 24-hour period over the weekend -- the highest rate ever measured at the summit area, according to Brian Shiro, supervisory geophysicist at the USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.
Following vigorous eruptions from the Kilauea volcano, nearly a dozen people were left stranded in an area cut off by lava, Hawaii authorities announced Sunday. Hawaii Civil Defense Service officials said they went through the neighborhood to warn residents this was their last chance to evacuate before their final escape route was cut off by lava.

Some chose to stay in the area, which now has no power, cell reception, landlines or county water, officials said.
Authorities are planning to airlift people out if the lava spreads farther and endangers the dozen or so holdouts. Some said they were staying because they had nowhere else to go, officials said.
Three people were evacuated from an isolated part of the Kapoho community Sunday, according to the Hawaii Fire Department.
"USGS was on a routine overflight and saw people on the road in an area cut off by the lava. They stopped to inquire of their situation, and then when asked, airlifted them to a safe place. They had become trapped after trying to move belongings, and had no cell service," according to they agency statement.
USGS said it will not be commenting further on the matter nor providing additional information.

When asked at a press conference Sunday night how many people remain stranded by lava, Hawaii Civil Defense Administrator Talmadge Magno did not provide much more detail, saying, "Got reports of seeing people here and there. Yesterday I gave an estimate of about a dozen, probably still at that -- minus these three."
Magno reiterated that there's no power or water in these areas and that those stranded are "off the grid."
Meanwhile, seven people were cited Saturday for loitering in a disaster zone, and they will have to appear in court, Hawaii officials said.

Limit exposure to gas and ash
Volcanic gas and ash emissions remain high at the Kilauea summit and in the fissure system, the Civil Defense Agency said on Sunday. It advised residents in communities downwind, including Pahala, Ocean View and Kona, to limit their exposure to gas and ash.

At least 87 homes have been destroyed by the Kilauea volcano eruption in the four weeks since lava began flowing, Magno said Friday.
The lava from the Kilauea volcano has covered an area of 5.5 square miles -- four times as big as New York's Central Park, according to USGS.
Four weeks have passed since the first eruption rocked Hawaii's Big Island and lava continues oozing from volcanic fissures, burning homes to the ground and turning into rivers of molten rock. This eruption has lasted longer than the 1955 and 1924 eruptions, the USGS said.
 

BGIF

Varsity Club
Messages
43,946
Reaction score
2,922
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2018/06/guatemala-volcano-deadly-explosive-eruption-science/

Why Guatemala's Volcano Is Deadlier Than Hawaii's
More than two dozen were killed by the Fuego volcano's eruption, and experts fear more danger could come.

By Sarah Gibbens
PUBLISHED JUNE 4, 2018

One of Guatemala's most infamous volcanoes is living up to its name. The Volcan de Fuego, Spanish for fire volcano, erupted overnight. Yet that eruption stands in stark contrast to the images seen from Hawaii's Kilauea over the past month. There's a scientific reason for that.

At least 25 have been killed in the eruption of Volcan de Fuego to date. Photos and videos taken by those on the ground show ash covering people and huge plumes rolling down the volcano's side.

Whereas Kilauea, a shield volcano, is characterized by large globs of slow-moving lava inching out of fissures, Fuego, a stratovolcano, is prone to spewing fast-moving flows of ash, lava, and mud.

They're different eruption styles are born from the volcanoes' unique underlying geology, says Concord University volcanologist Janine Krippner.

“The magma itself is quite different,” she says. “The magma at Kilauea is quite runny, which means the gasses can easily escape. At Fuego, the magma is stickier and more viscous.”

That sticky magma traps enough air to build up pressure until an explosive eruption occurs. In rare instances, it can form a new crater, but the eruption at Fuego came from its existing main crater.

The worst of the volcano's impact, lahars and pyroclastic flows, are chain reactions following the fiery eruption.


After an eruption explodes from Fuego's crater, it deposits loose rock and volcanic debris onto the volcano's slopes. Pyroclastic flows form when the ash and rocks, some as large as boulders, form hot, fast avalanches that rapidly descend.

“They're extremely hot and extremely lethal,” says Krippner.

After these pyroclastic flows disperse, the loose rock stays behind. Because much of Guatemala is tropical, it experiences frequent and heavy rainfall. When this mixes with the volcanic debris, rainfall can form dangerous mudflows called lahars. With minimal rainfall, the lahars move like wet concrete, but after intense rains, they can turn into watery flash floods that inundate valleys.

The region surrounding the volcano is also experiencing poor air quality, a common impact of volcanic eruptions. Inhaling volcanic ash can lead to respiratory issues, and experts advise staying indoors.

Fuego is one of three stratovolcanoes in the region. Though they all sit over a geologically active area, there's no evidence that an eruption from one volcano could trigger an eruption in one of the others, notes Krippner.

While Fuego is known to be one of the region's more active volcanoes, an eruption on this scale hasn't been seen since 1902, when an eruption killed thousands of people. A large eruption in 1974 damaged nearby farmland, but no fatalities were recorded.
 

no.1IrishFan

Well-known member
Messages
6,279
Reaction score
421
My cousin in the news again after discovering the farthest star ever recorded....some 9.3 billion light years away (36 trillion miles) using gravitational lensing. Very cool stuff! This one is about 100 times farther away than the previous farthest star.....that's no small leap....expecting even greater discoveries with the launch of hubble's replacement in 2 or 3 years.

https://www.mprnews.org/story/2018/...s-discover-farthest-individual-star-ever-seen

Awesome stuff!
I was quite disappointed when I heard of the delays to the JWST.
Last week I got to go star gazing in the very north parts of Phoenix with some people who had pretty powerful personal scopes. It's one thing to look up in awe of the night sky, it's another to view star clusters 12 million light years away from a 22 inch Dobsonian.
 

BGIF

Varsity Club
Messages
43,946
Reaction score
2,922
This, Not Brought To You By The Mercury Theater!

This, Not Brought To You By The Mercury Theater!

NASA's Curiosity rover finds organic matter on Mars
By Ashley Strickland, CNN
Updated 6:07 PM ET, Thu June 7, 2018

(CNN)Organic matter has been found on Mars in soil samples taken from 3 billion-year-old mudstone in the Gale crater by the Curiosity rover, NASA announced Thursday. The rover has also detected methane in the Martian atmosphere.

The search for life outside Earth focuses on the building blocks of life as we know it, which includes organic compounds and molecules -- although these can exist without life. Organic matter can be one of several things: a record detailing ancient life, a food source for life or something that exists in the place of life.
No matter its purpose, these work as "chemical clues" for researchers about Mars.
Methane is considered the simplest organic molecule. It's present in other places in our solar system that could host life, like Saturn and Jupiter's moons Enceladus, Europa and Titan. And if life does exist elsewhere, it may be very different or even form differently from how we understand life on Earth.

The new findings are also detailed in two studies published Thursday in the journal Science. Together, the researchers believe these findings to be "breakthroughs in astrobiology."

"We have greatly expanded our search for organic compounds, which is fundamental in the search for life," said Paul Mahaffy, study author and director of the Solar System Exploration Division at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
The two studies build on and advance smaller detections of atmospheric methane and ancient organic compounds on Mars. Those detections either caused debate or lacked the context for understanding, the researchers said.
But Curiosity's data are providing a clearer and more conclusive picture of the conditions and processes on Mars -- and what it may have been like on the Red Planet billions of years ago, when conditions were more suitable for life.
"With these new findings, Mars is telling us to stay the course and keep searching for evidence of life," said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters. "I'm confident that our ongoing and planned missions will unlock even more breathtaking discoveries on the Red Planet."

Finding clues beneath the surface
We've been exploring the surface of Mars in hopes of understanding the Red Planet since NASA's Viking mission in the 1970s. The Viking Project was the first US mission to safely land spacecraft on the Martian surface, as well as send back images.
And although hopes were high that the two landers and their instruments would detect signs of life or organic compounds in samples taken from the surface, that didn't happen.

Decades later, Viking helped inspire the instruments on today's Martian rovers. And Curiosity dug a little deeper beneath the surface, which is blasted with radiation, to see what stories the soil had to tell.
Curiosity sampled sites by drilling five centimeters below the surface in the Gale crater, which is where the rover landed in 2012. The 96-mile crater, named for Australian astronomer Walter F. Gale, was most likely formed by meteor impact between 3.5 to 3.8 billion years ago. It likely held a lake, and now includes a mountain.
The rover was able to heat the samples to between 932 and 1508 degrees Fahrenheit and study the organic molecules released through gas analysis. The organic molecules and volatiles, comparable to samples of sedimentary rock rich in organics on Earth, included thiopene, methylthiophenes methanethiol and dimethylsulfide.
They don't exactly roll off the tongue, but researchers believe that these are fragments of larger molecules that were present on Mars billions of years ago. And the high amount of sulfur in the samples is most likely how they've lasted so long, the researchers said. Drilling beneath the surface, rather than sampling what was on top like Viking did, also helped.

Potential contaminants were analyzed and accounted for, so the results are the most conclusive yet.
"The Martian surface is exposed to radiation from space," said Jen Eigenbrode, a study author and research scientist at the Goddard Space Flight Center. "Both radiation and harsh chemicals break down organic matter. Finding ancient organic molecules in the top 5 centimeters of rock that was deposited when Mars may have been habitable bodes well for us to learn the story of organic molecules on Mars with future missions that will drill deeper."
Methane in the air
Over five years, Curiosity has used its Tunable Laser Spectrometer to measure methane in the atmosphere at the Gale crater. Before, researchers couldn't understand why the little bit of methane detected in the Martian atmosphere varied. With five years of data from a single location, they now have answers.
There is a seasonal variation to the methane that repeats, which means the methane is being released from the Martian surface or from reservoirs beneath the surface. The methane could even be trapped in water-based crystals beneath the surface.
Methane is a strong greenhouse gas, and it could have supported a climate that sustained lakes on Mars. That could even be happening beneath the surface now, the researchers said. The release of methane is an active process on Mars, which could suggest new things about what's unfolding on the Red Planet.

Detecting this organic molecule in the atmosphere, combined with the finding of organic compounds in the soil, has strong implications about potential life on Mars in its past.
The Gale Crater was probably habitable 3.5 billion years ago, based on what Curiosity has shown us. Then, the conditions would have been comparable to Earth. This is also when life was evolving on our own planet.
Knowing that these molecules and compounds were present, then, gives new strength to the idea that life originated or existed on Mars and that more work by the Martian rovers can uncover the past.
NASA's InSight Lander, launched on May 5, will land on Mars on November 26. Its two-year mission will explore Mars to see if it's "geologically alive," or active below the surface. For example, scientists want to know if it has "Mars quakes." And the Mars 2020 rover, which is expected to launch July 2020, may be able to assist with one day retrieving soil samples from Mars.
"Are there signs of life on Mars?" asked Michael Meyer, lead scientist for the Mars Exploration Program at NASA Headquarters. "We don't know, but these results tell us we are on the right track."
 

BGIF

Varsity Club
Messages
43,946
Reaction score
2,922
JUNE 7, 2018 / 1:10 PM / UPDATED 3 HOURS AGO
NASA rover data shows Mars had the ingredients needed for life
Will Dunham

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A NASA rover has detected a bonanza of organic compounds on the surface of Mars and seasonal fluctuations of atmospheric methane in findings released on Thursday that mark some of the strongest evidence ever that Earth’s neighbor may have harbored life.

But National Aeronautics and Space Administration scientists emphasized there could be nonbiological explanations for both discoveries made by the Curiosity rover at a site called Gale crater, leaving the issue of Martian life a tantalizing but unanswered question.

Three different types of organic molecules were discovered when the rover dug just 2 inches (5 cm) into roughly 3.5 billion-year-old mudstone, a fine-grained sedimentary rock, at Gale crater, apparently the site of a large lake when ancient Mars was warmer and wetter than the desolate planet it is today.

Curiosity also measured an unexpectedly large seasonal cycle in the low levels of atmospheric methane. About 95 percent of the methane in Earth’s atmosphere is produced from biological activity, though the scientists said it is too soon to know if the Martian methane also is related to life.

Organic molecules are the building blocks of life, though they can also be produced by chemical reactions unrelated to life. The scientists said it is premature to know whether or not the compounds were created in biological processes.

Whether anywhere other than Earth has harbored life, perhaps even in microbial form, is one of the paramount questions in science.

“There’s three possible sources for the organic material,” said astrobiologist Jennifer Eigenbrode of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. “The first one would be life, which we don’t know about. The second would be meteorites. And the last one is geological processes, meaning the rock-forming processes themselves.”

The rover, which has allowed scientists to explore whether Mars ever boasted conditions conducive to life, in 2014 made the first definitive detection of organic molecules, also in Gale crater rock formed from ancient lake sediment - but it was a much more limited set of compounds.

“What the organic detections in the rock do is to add to the story of habitability. It tells us that this ancient environment on Mars could have supported life,” Eigenbrode said. “Everything that was needed to support life was there. But it doesn’t tell us that life was there.”

Christopher Webster, an atmospheric science research fellow at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, said it is possible existing microbes are contributing to the Martian atmospheric methane.

“With this new data, we again cannot rule out microbial activity as a potential source,” Webster said.

The amount of methane peaked at the end of summer in the northern hemisphere at about 2.7 times the level of the lowest seasonal amount.

The scientists were surprised to find organic compounds, especially in the amounts detected, considering the harsh conditions, including bombardment of solar radiation on the Martian surface. After drilling, Curiosity heats the rock samples, releasing the compounds.

Referring to the findings regarding organic compounds and methane, Webster said, “They hint at an earlier time on Mars when water was present and the existence of primitive life forms was possible.”

The scientists hope to find better preserved organic compounds with Curiosity or other rovers that would allow them to check for chemical signatures of life.

The research was published in the journal Science.
 

Old Man Mike

Fast as Lightning!
Messages
8,975
Reaction score
6,464
Way back in the 1970s NASA sent the Viking Rovers to Mars and the head of the program was a very bright and personable scientist named Jerry Soffen. We had a big NASA supporting science prof at WMU (ex-BBall superstar named Phil Larsen) who had enough clout to get Soffen to come here and present the findings almost in real time (not quite but pretty currently.) I had the privilege of sitting with Jerry Soffen and discussing the design of the experiments and the results.

NASA knew then that the Martian soil was EXTREMELY oxidizing, almost the equivalent to having doses of peroxide insinuated into the iron minerals. This environment was very hostile to the preservation of "soft" chemical structures like would be involved with life. Finding such molecules anywhere near the surface was thought to be unlikely. Dig deeper was Jerry's opinion ... and apparently he was right.
 

IrishLax

Something Witty
Staff member
Messages
37,545
Reaction score
28,995
You guys want to see the dark side of the moon?

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddar...nasa-camera-shows-moon-crossing-face-of-earth

dscovrepicmoontransitfull.gif
 

zelezo vlk

Well-known member
Messages
18,012
Reaction score
5,052
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/WZtfsfoKSB0" frameborder="0" allow="autoplay; encrypted-media" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

Old Man Mike

Fast as Lightning!
Messages
8,975
Reaction score
6,464
It's neat that we can look back at the Earth-Moon system and see this, but the picture they've chosen to show on the film sequence is either bad photography or made up from poor earlier work.

We have much better coverage of 98% of the so-called Far Side and anyone who wants to engage in their own Lunar exploration can get access to it (I have a friend who pores over the images looking for possible artificial structures.)

The chosen image in the "gif" must have computer slop as it manages to make the crater to the right of the big upper basin look like it has an almost artificial "ray" system radiating from it. If you see really good farside photography you will see hints of rays but nothing so dramatic. Other features on the gif are also presented far from their true appearance.

I mention these things just to show that much better photography of the farside exists if anyone wants to see it in minute detail.
 
Top