Sunday, September 30, 2018

Weight loss: Drinking this beverage for breakfast can help you burn fat says expert [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Drinking this beverage for breakfast can help you burn fat says expert [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss can begin right at the start of the day if the right breakfast is consumed – and a cup of coffee could be just the ticket.

Drinking coffee could help dieters burn fat and kick-start their metabolism from the get-go, as well as boosting concentration and energy levels.

Consuming one or two cups of Joe a day “can help boost your metabolic rate, by stimulating thermogenesis, helping you, in turn, to burn more fat,” nutritionist Sarah Flowers said.

“Coffee also contains Chlorogenic acid, which helps to slow down the absorption of carbohydrates, as well as stimulating the hormone Epinephrine, which helps to break down fat.”

The drink can also help reduce appetite – although it shouldn’t be considered a meal replacement.

Sarah explained: “Coffee can stimulate thermogenesis (heat and energy) which in turn reduces appetite and need, temporarily, for food.

“Coffee also contains chlorogenic acid, which helps to slow down the absorption of carbohydrates and suppresses our hunger hormone, Ghrelin.

“This hormone is stimulated by carbohydrates, which sits in our stomach and growling at us to feed it more and more.

“Carbohydrates also shut off our leptin response – this is the hormone that tells our brain when we are full. By suppressing ghrelin and stimulating leptin, we can effectively reduce our appetite.”

Drinking more coffee doesn’t serve to burn even more fat, however, as the body could become intolerant.

“Before you start guzzling coffee all day long, the fat burning effect diminishes the more coffee you have and you could become intolerant to its effects,” said Sarah, “so it is actually better to choose your coffee wisely and drink only a cup or two per day to enjoy all the benefits.”

According to a study published in the International Journal of Epidemiology – which studied the dietary habits of more than 93,000 people – those who drank more coffee had a decreased risk of obesity and a lower risk of type two diabetes.

Unroasted coffee beans can also help boost weight loss, research has found.

In a study presented to the American Chemical Society, researchers showed how a group of overweight or obese people who consumed a fraction of an ounce of ground green coffee beans each day lost about 10 per cent of their body weight.

This is due to the higher level of chlorogenic acid in green coffee beans, which breaks down when coffee beans are roasted.

However, it’s not just what dieters eat at breakfast that can help them lose weight, but also when they eat it.

In order to get the most out a diet plan, be sure to eat breakfast within one hour of waking up in order to maintain the circadian rhythm and boost metabolism. 

Studies have shown eating breakfast early can prolong time between meals, meaning hunger strikes later in the day and cutting out snack temptations.

Hopefully, this means dieters won’t go on to make bad eating choices for lunch and dinner.

A study from the University of Illinois at Chicago and published in the journal Diabetic Medicine showed that people who had type two diabetes were more likely to have a higher BMI if they eat breakfast later.

Participants who ate breakfast between 7.30am and 9am had a lower BMI by 0.37 kg/m2.

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Galaxy Cluster Distorts View of Distant Cosmic Neighbors in New Hubble Photo [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Space2030: ‘Black Marble’ Earth Brings a Stunning View of the Planet to the UN [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: This is the best time to eat breakfast to help you lose weight [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: This is the best time to eat breakfast to help you lose weight [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Breakfast might not be the first thing on your mind when you wake up but it is undoubtedly essential as part of a healthy lifestyle – but could you be getting the timings all wrong?

When you eat your breakfast is as important as what you eat in the morning to kick-starting any healthy-eating regime.

To maximise your chances of weight loss you should eat your breakfast within one hour of waking up.

By eating your first meal early you can help maintain your circadian rhythm and boost your metabolism.

Studies have shown eating breakfast early can prolong time between meals, meaning hunger strikes later in the day and cutting out snack temptations.

Hopefully, this means dieters won’t go on to make bad eating choices for lunch and dinner.

A study from the University of Illinois at Chicago and published in the journal Diabetic Medicine showed that people who had type two diabetes were more likely to have a higher BMI if they eat breakfast later.

Participants who ate breakfast between 7.30am and 9am had a lower BMI by 0.37 kg/m2.

Dieters wanting to slim down should also be aware of eating enough protein at breakfast, no matter how tempting is it to just eat toast.

“Eating a breakfast rich in protein significantly improves appetite control and may help women to avoid overeating later in the day,” Kevin C. Maki, a lead researcher in a University of Missouri, Columbia weight loss study said.

People who eat protein-rich breakfasts tend to have improved appetite ratings, the study found.

This means lower hunger, more fullness and less desire to eat – all important for weight loss.

Getting enough protein in your breakfast also means you’ll eat fewer calories at lunch.

Tricking your brain into feeling full is another top tip for boosting weight loss.

Research has shown by opting for cereals with a larger flake size you will consume fewer calories and are thereby more likely to lose weight.

A study at Penn State showed people eat more breakfast cereal by weight when flake size is reduced. 

They observed when flakes are reduced by crushing, people pour a smaller volume of cereal into their bowls, but still take a greater amount by weight and calories.

In short, it’s easy to underestimate how many calories you are eating when you pour a smaller-flake cereal into a bowl.

However, if you eat a cereal with bigger flakes you’ll eat less cereal by weight and consume fewer calories without even noticing.

By reducing your calorie intake in this nifty way you’ll be off to a healthy, weight-loss-promoting start before the day even really begins.

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Student Project Scans Sky for Alien Laser Beams [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Friday, September 28, 2018

The crash diet that really does work [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

This Small Japanese Re-Entry Capsule Is Ready for a Test Flight from Space Station [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Delta II Rocket: 30 Years of Launches [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Delta II Rocket: 30 Years of Launches [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

For nearly 30 years, the Delta II rocket system was a reliable workhorse that launched numerous spacecraft away from Earth, with a success rate of 98.7 percent.

The Delta family of rockets has a long history, with roots in the United States' earliest efforts to reach space. Born from the Thor intermediate-range ballistic missile, Delta rockets kept growing in power and capability. Today, the Delta rockets are built by United Launch Alliance (ULA), which formed as a joint venture between Lockheed Martin Space Systems and Boeing.

The last launch of the Delta II carried NASA's ICESat-2 satellite into space on Sept. 15, 2018. The Delta IV rocket — an expendable launch vehicle designed by McDonnel-Douglas, which later became part of Boeing— began carrying the U.S. Air Force's largest and most important military satellites into space in 2002 and continues to do so today.

"It's been a very, very prominent part of space history," said Scott Messer, program manager for NASA programs at ULA, told the press just prior to the final launch.

McDonnell Douglas Corporation, an aerospace manufacturing company, designed and manufactured the Delta II rocket in the early 1980s, before United Launch Alliance took over production in 2006.

The U.S. Air Force was the first to commission Delta II rockets, when, in January 1987, the branch awarded a contract to McDonnell Douglas for the construction of 18 Delta II rockets to launch the Navstar GPS satellites. The first of these launched on Feb. 14, 1989, from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

For more than 20 years, Cape Canaveral was the primary launch site for the Delta II. The dual towers supporting Delta II launches were demolished in July 2018. Since then, Delta II flights have taken off from Space Launch Complex 2 in Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

Unlike the more modern, computerized methods used with other rockets, Delta II's launch sequence requires an operator to physically click a mouse button. When the launch system was designed, NASA preferred having a person in control rather than a completely computerized system, according to The Planetary Society.

After the Delta II's initial launch, in 1989, the rocket continued carrying GPS satellites into space for the Air Force until 2008, when the contract expired.

The rocket played a significant role in launching NASA missions. Between 1998 and 2010, the rocket delivered nearly 60 percent of the agency's scientific satellites into space. Several missions to Mars have launched thanks to the Delta II, including the Mars Pathfinder (in 1996), the Spirit and Opportunity rovers (in 2003), and the Phoenix Mars Lander (in 2007).

Delta II rockets also launched the Deep Space I mission (1998), the Stardust mission (in 1999, to return a sample from a comet), the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (a space observatory to study the high-energy wavelengths of the universe, in 2008), the Kepler planet-hunting space telescope (in 2009) and the twin GRAIL spacecraft to the moon (in 2011).

"Both commercial and government markets recognize [that] the Delta II is a very reliable launch vehicle. But there are other competitors coming on the market," Hieu Lam, Boeing Launch Services' Delta commercial program manager, told Space.com in 2010.

The rocket's final blastoff on Sept. 15, 2018, carried NASA's ICESat-2 spacecraft into orbit, where the satellite will use a laser altimeter to map Earth's ice sheets. That launch was the 155th flight of a Delta II rocket since the rocket's debut in 1989 and marked the 100th consecutively successful Delta II launch.

"Being the last Delta II mission, ICESat-2 is extra special; the sense of pride in working on the last mission has permeated the whole team," Bill Cullen, director of launch operations for United Launch Alliance, told The Planetary Society. "While it is always a little sad to end an era, the team's learning, teamwork, processes and mission focus live on in the enterprise."

First stage

The Delta II relies on the RS-27A as its main engine — a single-start, fixed-thrust liquid-bipropellant gas generator with two vernier rocket engines. The vernier engines help provide vehicle roll control during flight, and each contributes more than 1,000 lbs. of thrust (4.45 kilonewtons) to the main engine.

Nominal thrust (sea level): 200,000 lbs. (890 kilonewtons)
Specific impulse (sea level): 255 seconds
Length: 149 inches (378 centimeters), or 12.4 feet (3.8 meters)
Weight: 2,528 lbs. (1,147 kilograms)

Graphite Epoxy Motors (GEMs)

The Orbital ATK Graphite Epoxy Motor (GEM), the standard solid rocket motor for the Delta II, comes in two options. For the 792X model, six of the 40-inch (100 cm) core diameter GEM-40 motors are ignited at liftoff, while three more are ignited in flight after the first six burn out. The 732X and 742X models include three or four GEMs respectively, all of which are ignited at liftoff.

A heavier GEM-46 is made available for Delta II Heavy (a larger variant of the Delta II) liftoffs. GEM-46 has a 46-inch core diameter and burns 14 seconds longer than the standard GEM.

GEM-40
Peak vacuum thrust: 145,000 pounds of force (645 kilonewtons)
Length: 510 inches (1,295 cm), or 42.5 feet (12.9 m)
Maximum diameter: 40 inches (100 cm)
Weight: 28,600 lbs. (12,970 kg)
Burn time: 62 seconds

GEM-46

Peak vacuum thrust: 199,000 pounds of force (885 kilonewtons)
Length: 577 inches (1,466 cm), or 48.1 feet (14.7 m)
Maximum diameter: 46 inches (117 cm), or 3.8 feet (1.2 m)
Weight: 42,200 lbs. (19,100 kg)
Burn time: 76 seconds

Second stage

The second stage is powered by an Aerojet AJ10-118K engine, a pressure-fed engine in which a separate gas supply pressurizes the propellant tanks to force fuel and oxidizer together into a combustion chamber. The AJ10-118K has played a role in rocket history for over half a century and can restart or affect the direction of flight. While in the air, the second-stage hydraulic system controls how the rocket rotates on its side-to-side and vertical axis (pitch and yaw). A redundant attitude control system (RACS) uses nitrogen gas to provide roll control, the rotation from front to back, as well as pitch, yaw and control during unpowered flight.

Nominal thrust: 9,753 lbs. (43 kilonewtons)
Specific impulse: 320.5 seconds
Fuel/oxidizer: Aerozine 50/N204
Length: 105.6 inches (268.2 cm), or 8.8 feet (2.7 m)
Diameter (nozzle extension): 60.33 inches (153.2 cm)
Weight: 275 lbs. (125 kg)

Third stage

Depending on the payload, the Delta II offers an optional third stage, but it can fly with only two stages. The additional spin-stabilized, third-stage motor, the Star 48B motor, is produced by Alliant Techsystems. The design incorporates high-energy propellant and a high-strength titanium case, and boasts multiple tabs for attaching external hardware.

Peak vacuum thrust: 17,490 pound-force (77.8 kilonewtons)
Total vacuum impulse: 1.3 pound-force (5.8 newtons) per second
Length: 80 inches (203 cm)
Diameter (maximum): 49 inches (125 cm), or 4.1 feet (1.2 m)
Weight: 4,721 lbs. (2,141 kg)
Burn time: 84.1 seconds

Additional resources:

Delta II Medium-Launch Vehicle (Air Force Space Command)
ULA's Delta II Page

Follow Nola Taylor Redd at @NolaTRedd, Facebook or Google+. Follow us at @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

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Super Typhoon Trami Looks Tremendous from Space in These Amazing Astronaut Photos [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA Roadmap Report Provides Few New Details on Human Exploration Plans [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Victoria’s Secret Angel diet plan revealed – what and WHEN to eat [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Victoria’s Secret Angel diet plan revealed – what and WHEN to eat [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss is usually achieved through a careful balance of diet and exercise.

The Victoria’s Secret 2018 Angels are doing just that, sticking to a strict diet plan and regime before the upcoming show.

The beautiful model’s diet plan has now been revealed, with the foods the models eat all listed.

Qualified nutritionist and personal trainer Rachael Attard revealed the intense plan on her blog.

What to eat

According to the nutritionist, the Angel’s keep up this diet all year round, on top of working out almost daily.

The plan starts with an egg white omelette with spinach and turkey for breakfast.

There is also the option of a green smoothie with chia seeds.

For lunch, the Angels reportedly dine on chicken salad with brown rice.

For dinner, it’s grilled fish and green vegetables and snacks include the likes of berries, almonds, nut butter, yoghurt and protein shakes.

The expert’s blog also revealed that the models “will occasionally eat Ezekiel bread and oats but in small portions.”

On top of eating well, the Victoria’s Secret 2018 models also try to avoid alcohol, other types of bread, processed carbs and gluten in the run-up to the show.

She also reveals that the model’s nutritionist recommends the women have cheat days to maintain a healthy balance.

Former Angel Erin Heatherton is reported to love meat and cheese, while many Victoria’s Secret models often post photos of fries, burgers and pizza on their Instagram pages.

When to eat

According to the nutritionist blog, the Victoria’s Secret Angels try and stick to five smaller meals per day, instead of three.

This involves eating every three hours to help keep the metabolism revved up.

It is also reported that the Angels eat the majority of carbs during the day rather than night.

This is because the body can metabolise carbs better in the morning and is less likely to store them as fat.

Perhaps keeping the model’s motivated on their diet plans is their staggeringly large salary.

Victoria’s Secret is the biggest and most popular fashion event in the world, costing around £9.2 million and with 800 million tuning in annually.

With such high numbers, it comes as no surprise how much the Victoria’s Secret Angels get paid. 

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Thursday, September 27, 2018

Japan’s Hopping Rovers Capture Amazing Views of Asteroid Ryugu (Video) [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Watch Nerd Dream-Team Stephen Colbert and Neil deGrasse Tyson Drive a Mars Rover in NYC! [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Watch Nerd Dream-Team Stephen Colbert and Neil deGrasse Tyson Drive a Mars Rover in NYC! [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson and late-night television host Stephen Colbert took one of NASA's Mars rovers out for a joyride in the streets of Manhattan last week, and you can watch their out-of-this-world adventure in this video clip.

NASA's Mars rover concept vehicle, which looks like a beefed-up version of the Batmobile, made a special appearance on an episode of the CBS series "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" that aired on Friday (Sept. 22). [We Explored NASA's Concept Mars Rover, and It Was Out of This World]

Designed and built by the Florida-based company Parker Brothers Concepts, the six-wheeled, tank-like rover was made as a prototype off-roading vehicle for the first humans on the Red Planet. "Before they send it to Mars, they want to see if it can stand up to New York's inhospitable atmosphere of urine-based humidity," Colbert said before hopping in with his buddy Neil.

The duo cruised down 53rd Street at a "lugubrious" speed of about 3 mph (5 km/h), getting honked at only a handful of times as they took the wrong way onto 8th Avenue before turning the cumbersome vehicle around.

During their adventure, the two made a pit stop at a Duane Reade convenience store to pick up supplies for their make-believe trip to Mars. Items in Colbert's shopping basket included adult diapers to wear under their spacesuits, eyebrow pencils just in case "our eyebrows burn off" during atmospheric entry in a Mars landing, and a dozen eggs to run over with the Mars rover (just for fun).

While Colbert was pretty gung-ho about going to Mars, Tyson conveyed no desire to travel to the Red Planet himself. "Who's gonna want to do that?" Tyson asked. "I don't see people lined up to colonize Antarctica, and Antarctica is balmier and wetter than any place on Mars." To that, Colbert replied, "Matt Damon proved that on Mars you can grow potatoes in your poop. You can't do that in Antarctica." In the 2015 film "The Martian," Damon's character survived on potatoes.

Colbert and Tyson's adventure came to an end when they pulled the Mars up in front of the Ed Sullivan Theater, parking illegally on the side of the road. "If it gets booted, that's NASA's problem," Colbert said. 

 

This episode of "The Late Show" wasn't the first time Colbert had fun with NASA equipment. In 2009, when he was still on Comedy Central's "The Colbert Report," he convinced NASA to name its zero-gravity treadmill after him. To this day, astronauts at the International Space Station use the Combined Operational Load-Bearing External Resistance Treadmill (or COLBERT) to get their exercise in space.

Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her @hannekescience. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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Will the US Military Space Force’s Reach Extend to the Moon? [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Next Moon Landings Will Go Much Further Than Apollo, NASA Chief Tells Senate [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Why Alternate Universes Might Also Host Life Around their Stars [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Why Alternate Universes Might Also Host Life Around their Stars [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

What might stars be like in other universes? In realms where the force behind radioactive decay is stronger or weaker than in our cosmos, scientists now find that such star systems might often be habitable places for life as we know it.

The laws of physics in our universe include a number of fundamental constants, such as the speed of light. However, many scientific models allow for the existence of a vast ensemble of universes called the multiverse, which might include places where the laws of physics differ.

Many researchers have previously suggested that sufficiently large variations in the laws of physics would result in lifeless universes, so that only small differences in the fundamental constants would be permitted. To examine this idea further, astrophysicists examined universes where nuclear forces might differ and speculated on the potential habitability of these alternate places. [5 Reasons We May Live in a Multiverse]

"We don't know if other universes exist, and if they do, we almost certainly can't observe them," study lead author Alex Howe, a theoretical astrophysicist at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, told Space.com. Still, "by doing this thought experiment, we are helping to answer a fundamental question — did our universe have to be the way it is, or why did it have to be? In doing so, we learn more about our own universe," Howe said.

The scientists focused on the weak interaction, also known both as the weak force and the weak nuclear force. This force is responsible for radioactive decay — for example, it causes neutrons to decay into protons, electrons and electrically neutral particles known as electron antineutrinos.

One key way the scientists measured habitability was to estimate whether the worlds in these universes could host liquid water on their surfaces. There is life virtually wherever there is liquid water on Earth, so the search for life outside Earth often focuses on water. 

Previous research found that a universe where the weak force is entirely absent could still be habitable. In the new study, the researchers examined scenarios where the weak force was still present but weaker than in our universe, as well as cases where it was stronger. 

In universes with a stronger weak force, neutrons would decay more rapidly, so the early universe in that scenario would be nearly devoid of helium, the researchers said. This is fine when it comes to levels of water in the universe, because water consists of hydrogen and oxygen.

In universes with a weaker weak force, neutrons would decay more slowly, leading to more helium. For any hydrogen to survive without getting incorporated into larger atomic nuclei, the scientists found a different fundamental constant would have to be smaller. In other words, the ratio of baryons, which include protons and neutrons, to photons, which light is made of, would have to shrink.

The weak force also plays a role in how stars fuse hydrogen into helium atoms, which can influence how bright, hot, large and long-lived stars are. Moreover, the weak force controls how often neutrinos interact with regular matter, which in turn has an effect on how energy drains from the interiors of stars. 

Universes with a weaker weak force would have stars with more deuterium, which is a hydrogen atom with an extra neutron within its nucleus. Deuterium-rich stars would be larger, brighter, and redder than equivalent stars in our universe, resembling thered giant stars of our cosmos.

Universes with a stronger weak force would have stars with more helium-3, which is a helium atom missing a neutron from its nucleus. These stars would be slightly brighter and larger in diameter than equivalent stars in our universe and would have modestly shorter lifetimes, although they would have similar temperatures.

Although stars in these universes are somewhat different from ours, their comparable surface temperatures, luminosities, diameters and lifetimes mean these universes would remain potentially habitable over a wide range of strengths for the weak force, according to the researchers.

"The most surprising thing for me was that in most possible universes, stars still work one way or another," Howe said. "In many possible universes, stars would even have more complex life cycles than in ours or could be more favorable to life."

Though they look serene and silent from our vantage on Earth, stars are actually roiling balls of violent plasma. Test your stellar smarts with this quiz.

Open Star Cluster Messier 50

0 of 10 questions complete

Star Quiz: Test Your Stellar Smarts

Though they look serene and silent from our vantage on Earth, stars are actually roiling balls of violent plasma. Test your stellar smarts with this quiz.

Open Star Cluster Messier 50

0 of questions complete

All in all, "in my opinion, the most important implication is that there are many different ways a universe could work and still support life, not just the physics of our own," Howe said.

Future research can examine universes with different strengths of the strong nuclear force, the strongest known force between particles, which binds protons together in atomic nuclei, despite their mutual repulsion, Howe said.

The scientists detailed their findings online Sept. 13 in a study accepted by the journal Physical Review D.

Follow Charles Q. Choi on Twitter @cqchoi. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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‘Ask a Spaceman’ Tells Why Milky Way’s on a Collision Course [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

‘Ask a Spaceman’ Tells Why Milky Way’s on a Collision Course [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

You may feel like you're sitting still while you're reading this sentence, but the Earth — heck, the entire Milky Way — is moving incredibly quickly. In fact, the Milky Way is on a collision course with an even bigger galaxy, known as Andromeda. Should we be worried? Astrophysicist and Space.com columnist Paul Sutter says "no" in the latest installment of "Ask a Spaceman."

In Episode 7 of the Facebook Watch series, Sutter explains that a galaxy collision is a long process — and a complicated one, to boot. "When galaxies collide, I don't want you to have it in your head that it's a car crash — a big bang. A 'Big Bang' is something else, anyway," Sutter quipped, referring to the event that formed our universe about 13.8 billion years ago. (He also covered the Big Bang in Episode 2.) [Milky Way Galaxy's Head-On Crash with Andromeda: Artist Images]

The Milky Way and Andromeda are moving closer to each other at a speed of hundreds of miles every second, he explained. In about 5 billion years, the two galaxies will merge, but that does not mean that the individual stars are going to smash together. Stars are too tiny — compared to the volume of a galaxy — to have a high risk of hitting each other.

Instead, we're going to get some other weird effects, Sutter said. The Milky Way and Andromeda will first swing past each other, then swing back again and interact some more. Eventually, as their mutual gravities intertwine, they will become a much larger galaxy that is unrecognizable from its two predecessors.

That's because galaxies are made up of a lot of loose gas. The shock wave of the galactic collision will compress that gas. In some areas, at first, the gas will compress so much that it will produce a burst of new stars. The resulting merged galaxy will shine extremely brightly becoming the brightest thing in the neighborhood, Sutter explained.

But the spiral-arm structures in the Milky Way and the spiral arms in Andromeda will end up as "tangled wrecks," he added. The gravitational interactions from the collision and merger will tear the arms apart, using up all the gas. "It's going to end in tragedy," Sutter said. "You run out of stuff to make new stars."

Over hundreds of millions of years, the new galaxy will evolve into an elliptical galaxy. Sutter said these sorts of galaxies are dim, red and "pretty dang ugly."

How do we know all this? By studying other galaxies all across the sky, scientists have figured out the different stages of collision — before, during and after — and they can make predictions about the Milky Way's future. After the merger completes, the next pressing question will be deciding what to name the merged galaxy, Sutter joked. He threw out the suggestions "Milkomeda" and "Andromeda Way," but suggested that there might be better options.

"Ask a Spaceman" episodes are released weekly on Wednesdays at 12 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT), so "like" the "Ask a Spaceman" Facebook page or check back later to see more. Sutter also responds to reader questions in every episode. Check the page to learn more about past topics the show covered, such as the Big Bang and Pluto.

Sutter is a cosmologist at The Ohio State University and chief scientist at Columbus, Ohio's Center of Science and Industry. He has a long-running podcast, also called "Ask a Spaceman". You can catch all past episodes of his podcast here.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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This Super-Strong Magnet Literally Blew the Doors Off a Tokyo Laboratory [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

This Super-Strong Magnet Literally Blew the Doors Off a Tokyo Laboratory [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

There's a magnet in a secure room in central Tokyo. It's an electromagnet, the kind that generates a magnetic field when electrical current flows through it. The last time the scientists who operate it switched it on, it blew open the heavy doors designed to keep it contained. Already, it has created one of the most intense magnetic fields ever generated on Earth. And it keeps getting more powerful.

The magnetic field, which recently reached a strength of 1,200 teslas — a unit of magnetic intensity — was described in a paper published Sept. 17 in the journal Review of Scientific Instruments.

Twelve hundred teslas is an enormous measurement. The most powerful magnet most people have any chance of encountering in their lifetime is inside an MRI machine — and the most advanced, powerful, sometimes dangerous MRIs in the world clock in at just 3 teslas. In 2004, Popular Mechanics magazine described a machine billed as "the world's most powerful magnet" — meaning the most powerful magnet that doesn't tear itself to bits whenever it's turned on — and it emitted just 45 teslas. That's less than 4 percent of the power emitted by the magnet created by lead author Shojiro Takeyama and his colleagues.

And crossing the 1,000-tesla mark is a major milestone in an engineering effort that Takeyama said dated back to the 1970s, and which he has led for the last two decades.

To achieve that intensity, Takeyama and his team pump megajoules of energy into a small, precisely engineered electromagnetic coil, the inner lining of which then collapses on itself at Mach 15 — that's more than 3 miles per second (5 kilometers per second). As it collapses, the magnetic field inside gets squeezed into a tighter and tighter space, until its force peaks at a tesla reading unimaginable in conventional magnets. Fragments of a second later, the coil collapses entirely, destroying itself. [Mad Geniuses: 10 Odd Tales About Famous Scientists]

The 1,200-tesla experiment required 3.2 megajoules of energy. But Takeyama, a physicist at the University of Tokyo, told Live Science that he believes his device can reach 1,800 teslas if he and his team apply 5 megajoules to it. (They're taking their time getting to that point, he said, partly due to safety concerns.)

"The most similar magnetic-field generation is by chemical explosives," Takeyama said, referring to experiments beginning in the 1960s and continuing until 2001, in which Russian and American researchers detonated explosives around electromagnets in order to squish them, briefly creating very powerful magnetic fields — up to 2,800 teslas.

"They cannot conduct these experiments in indoor laboratories, so they usually conduct everything in the outdoors, like Siberia in a field or somewhere in a very wide place at Los Alamos [New Mexico]," he said. "And they try to make a scientific measurement, but because of these conditions it's very hard to make precise measurements."

Other forms of superstrong magnetic fields require lasers, but Takeyama said that the laser-generated fields are tiny and supershort-lived, even by physics standards, making them similarly problematic for the sorts of experiments in which he and his laboratory colleagues at the University of Tokyo are interested.

The point of building a magnet in the 1,000-plus tesla range, Takeyama said, is to study hidden physical properties of electrons that are invisible under normal circumstances. He and his team will put different materials inside their magnet to study how their electrons behave.

Under those extreme conditions, he said, conventional models of electrons break down. Takeyama doesn't know exactly what happens to electrons in such extreme situations, but said that studying them in the moments before the coil's self-destruction should reveal properties of electrons normally invisible to science. Extremely powerful magnetic fields also have possible applications in fusion engineering, to keep the hot plasmas of a fusion reaction contained and far from their container walls.

The problem with building magnetic fields that powerful is that, as in the case of Takeyama's magnet, they almost, by definition, destroy themselves within moments of their creation. The field — and the process of creating it — inevitably exerts so much energy on the device generating it that at least some element of the device burns out or collapses on itself. Takeyama said that the advantage of his magnetic field is that it's relatively robust compared with fields generated by lasers or explosive devices. It's large enough to contain a substantial amount of material, requires no explosives and has a life span of a few dozen microseconds (millionths of a second). That's short in human terms, but it lasts several times longer than those laser-generated fields. [Top 10 Greatest Explosions Ever]

Also, while the coil itself is destroyed, the surrounding machine survives the process largely intact.

Here's what happened when it was powered up to 3.2 megajoules for the experiment that produced the 1,200-tesla field:

The device is contained and nondestructive compared with those explosive experiments in Siberia and Los Alamos. But still, every time the magnet is used, Takeyama and his team must enter the room and begin the long, laborious process of cleanup and repairs, he said. His research team must fabricate a new magnetic coil to exquisitely precise dimensions for each use. The typical wait time between experiments, he said, is about two to five months.

Outside researchers interested in elusive fusion-power generators have expressed interest in Takeyama's research as possibly useful for their large, magnetic plasma containment systems, he said. However, he said he's not certain how useful his fields might be in that context, nor is that his primary goal.

Down the road, he said, he expects to amp up the power on his machine, eventually maxing it out at the 5-megajoule, 1,800-tesla mark. But he's in no rush to get to that point, he said. First, he and his team want to explore as much as possible what they can learn at the 3.2-megajoule, 1,200-tesla range. And there remains the problem of safety as the energies involved increase.

For now, he said, his team has added some stronger doors to his lab.

Originally published on Live Science.

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https://www.space.com/41950-magnet-physics-doors-tokyo.html This Super-Strong Magnet Literally Blew the Doors Off a Tokyo Laboratory

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Hop, Don’t Roll: How the Tiny Japanese Rovers on Asteroid Ryugu Move [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Lisa Riley weight loss: Loose Women star reveals healthy snack helped her lose 12 stone [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Lisa Riley weight loss: Loose Women star reveals healthy snack helped her lose 12 stone [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Lisa Riley is the recognisable face of You’ve Been Framed!

She is also an actress who starred as Mandy Dingle in Emmerdale.

Now she often appears on Loose Women as a panellist, and she has spoken out about her incredible weight loss.

Lisa lost an amazing 12 stone by following a diet.

Now she has revealed her healthy snack, which helps her to keep her weight down.

Sharing to her Instagram account Lisa told fans all about her banana oat wedges.

She wrote: “SERIOUSLY HEALTHY!!! Made in only 25 minutes.

“I love my Banana Oat Wedges….perfect for before or after your gym session. And RIDICULOUSLY EASY…only 62 calories per wedge.”

So, how did you make Lisa’s favourite snack? You’ll need a blender and a bowl.

“Get three bananas chop them up, place them into your @thenutribullet whizz them up for two minutes, place two and a half tea cups of fresh oats into your mixing bowl. Add the banana mix, stir thoroughly,” Lisa wrote.

“Put the oven to 190 make your wedges in the palms of your hands and bake for 15-20 minutes.

“And there you go!!! They are DELICIOUS, and guilt free!!! ENJOY!!!”

Lisa, who was once a size 28 and is now a size 12, revealed she lost weight by “changing her lifestyle”.

She is a huge fan of dance workout Zumba, and follows a very heathy diet.

She has hot water and lemon with porridge and honey for breakfast, and butternut squash with coriander soup and oatcakes for lunch.

For dinner she has garlic and chilli cod with roasted spinach and cauliflower.

Lisa Riley’s weight loss Lorraine interview also revealed how food was her comfort blanker.

She said: “I knew all the tricks and porky pies that people tell you, and I put them in the book.

“But now, it’s for life and for my second book I was like, okay right, there are so many more questions to answer.

“I realised the psychology linked with people who were as big as I was, I was a size 28, and that people use food as a comfort blanket.

“I was guilty of that, food and stuff that’s not too good for you was my comfort blanket.”

Tom Watson’s weight loss has impressed many, and he revealed the diet plan he followed to do it. 

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[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Lisa Riley weight loss: Loose Women star reveals healthy snack helped her lose 12 stone

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Ariane 5 Rocket Lofts 2 Satellites on Milestone 100th Launch [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Tom Watson weight loss: Labour MP followed this diet and drank specific drink [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Tom Watson weight loss: Labour MP followed this diet and drank specific drink [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Tom Watson is the Deputy Labour Leader who has lost a whopping amount of weight. 

The left-wing politician is attending the Labour conference today.

However, he has also been doing the TV circuit, chatting about his diet.

Many are keen to find out how the politician has managed to lose so much weight.

Tom followed the Pioppi Diet, which is credited with helping him lose seven stone.

The diet involves eating a Mediterranean diet without any red meat.

There are also no starchy carbs allowed, so that’s pasta out, and no sugar.

It recommends a lot of fat, including coconut oil.

Bread is also not allowed on the plan, however, eggs and dairy are allowed.

However, Tom also has a specific psychological trick to help him stay on his diet.

He revealed in his column in the New Statesman: “I’ve motivated myself with some rudimentary ‘nudge’ theory – every time I reach a weight loss goal, I buy a new piece of kit for my bike.

“When I’ve lost my hundredth pound I’m going to treat myself to a new bike (I’m considering a Brompton but do send suggestions).”

The Labour politician drinks his coffee in a very specific way too, with butter in.

Bulletproof coffee has grass fed butter added to it.

He said in his New Statesman column: “Since last summer I’ve taken off 86lbs through a regime of cutting out sugar, eating better and exercising.

“This morning started with what the LA set call a ‘bulletproof coffee’.

“It’s basically butter from grass-fed cows blended with fresh coffee – the idea is to get saturated fats into your diet so that you’re not as hungry during the day.”

Actress Catherine Tyldesley’s weight loss has shocked many. 

She told the Sun about her weight loss journey in August this year. She said that arranging her schedule is a large part of staying trip.

“It’s just fitting it around your schedule,” she said.

“If I was working I’d go on walks. I have been known to squat Shayne Ward. Squat a friend.”

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https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/diets/1022977/tom-watson-weight-loss-diet-labour-mp-pioppi-keto-coffee Tom Watson weight loss: Labour MP followed this diet and drank specific drink

[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Tom Watson weight loss: Labour MP followed this diet and drank specific drink

Space2030: Space as a Driver for Peace – World Leaders Proclaim Innovative Space Diplomacy as the New Frontier for Peace on Earth [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA Is Hosting a ‘Technosignatures’ Workshop on How to Find Alien Technology [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Travel Through Space and Time with 400 Years of Planetary Maps [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Japanese Moon-Exploration Startup ispace to Launch Landers on SpaceX Rockets in 2020, 2021 [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Silent Opportunity Mars Rover Spotted from Space (Photo) [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

See the Harvest Moon of 2018 in These Gorgeous Photos! [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

The Stuff Falling into This Black Hole Is Moving at Almost 56,000 Miles a Second! [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

‘Oumuamua Isn’t from Our Solar System. Now We May Know Which Star It Came From [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Dust Storms Rage on Saturn Moon Titan, Just Like on Mars and Earth [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

World Leaders Gather Today at the UN to Work Toward Peace in Space [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Did a Huge Impact Blast Out Moons of Mars? Old Data Bolsters Theory [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Are Moon Caves Safe for Astronauts? Earth’s Lava Tubes Can Help Us Find Out [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Are Moon Caves Safe for Astronauts? Earth’s Lava Tubes Can Help Us Find Out [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

It's one thing to step onto a foreign world's surface; it's another matter entirely to set foot beneath its surface, trusting your safety to the structural integrity of a tunnel-like cave.

But that's precisely what humans will likely want to do if they ever intend to spend long periods of time on the moon or Mars. That's because staying below the surface would protect them from damaging radiation, likely more effectively than any terrestrial technology could. So, scientists practiced earlier this month here on Earth, at Lava Beds National Monument in California, to make sure future explorers can see exactly what they're getting into before they enter an extraterrestrial lava tube.

"It's a ton of fun; they're so different from one another," Kelsey Young, a geologist at NASA and principal investigator of the TubeX project to practice checking out terrestrial lava tubes to better prepare for exploration, told Space.com. Tubes can vary in how cluttered they are, their shape and size, what their entrances look like, and more. "There's never a tube that you get in that's exactly like one you've been in before," she said. [Astronauts Explore Caves in Mock Space Mission (Photos)]

Young's particular lava tubes were created by eruptions of the Medicine Lake Shield Volcano between 10,000 and 65,000 years ago, although volcanoes around the world have created similar features. The tubes form around rivers of lava because the flow's edges cool faster than its center. After an eruption ends, that outer shell lingers as a lava tube, often stretching for miles. And as thousands of years pass, patches of the ceiling fall in, creating easy entrances to the cave networks.

Lava Beds sports about 800 cave entrances, with some tunnels having multiple entrances. "It has such a high density of lava tubes in one place," Young said. "Some of them are enormous, like subway tunnel size," but others force scientists to crawl on their hands and knees.

Exactly the same process once played out on both the moon and Mars before each lost their volcanic activity. And people who want to establish a long-term human presence on those worlds are deeply interested in those extraterrestrial lava tubes as refuges from a key health risk of space travel: radiation.

Staying underground may be the most effective protection against radiation, and camping out in lava tubes would be much easier than creating new spaces under the surface. But exploring them without any knowledge in advance would be risky — hence practicing here on Earth to develop techniques that could allow astronauts to map those tubes from above the surface.

"You can't always tell just from the surface which way the tube is going to go," Young said. "Some of them can be quite sinuous, and these tubes are incredibly dark."

That's where a suite of carefully selected science instruments come into play. The team spent about a week at Lava Beds, their second visit of the project. They tested three types of portable technologies, evaluating whether they might allow future explorers to map lava tubes from the surface so they know what they're getting into in advance. Those portable instruments included a ground-penetrating radar, a magnetometer and a gravimeter.

"Obviously we had an inkling that those instruments would perform well or we wouldn't have lugged them out here," Young said. But she was pleased to see how well the trio worked together even just from initial data, with each instrument's strengths augmenting others' weaknesses to develop a detailed picture of each lava tube. "In general, these tools are incredibly powerful at giving you a real-time look at what you're standing on and what you're exploring."

On the moon or Mars, such an instrument suite could tell astronauts which tunnel entrances lead only to dead-ends and which open onto vast undergrounds spaces that could become living areas. Similarly, they can map out hazards like tricky entryways and floors covered with rubble.

In an environment where any injury would be a serious event, seeing inside lava tubes without stepping into them could be a hugely valuable tool for astronauts, safely revealing lunar or Martian secrets.

"Until you explore it, it's just a pit," Young said.

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her @meghanbartels. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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https://www.space.com/41921-exploring-lava-tubes-for-moon-landings.html Are Moon Caves Safe for Astronauts? Earth's Lava Tubes Can Help Us Find Out

[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Are Moon Caves Safe for Astronauts? Earth’s Lava Tubes Can Help Us Find Out

Monday, September 24, 2018

Planet Earth Wobbles As It Spins, and Now Scientists Know Why [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Astronaut Trump? Ivanka Says She Wanted to Go to Space in NASA Visit [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Drink this much apple cider vinegar to lose 11 pounds in ONE week [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Drink this much apple cider vinegar to lose 11 pounds in ONE week [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss is usually achieved through a careful balance of diet and exercise.

However, there are many other tips and tricks that can help speed up weight loss, and improve results.

One way is drinking apple cider vinegar, a natural, fermented liquid that is known to aid weight loss.

Drinking the liquid everyday can even help you lose 11 pounds in just one week, a health website has claimed.

How does it work?

Apple cider vinegar has been used for centuries in cooking and for its medicinal properties, but only recently has it been used for weight loss.

Studies have shown the link between apple cider vinegar and the body boosting fat burning, with the liquid decreasing fat and sugar production in the liver.

According to Natural Remedies 4U, the liquid can actually speed up weight loss and has the potential to help Britons lose a whopping 11 pounds in one week.

The vinegar works by ridding the body of toxins, and as a result boosts digestion and the metabolism.

It also works by reducing appetite and controlling blood sugar levels, which can spike and lead to increased appetite.

The liquid also aids weight loss by reducing the body’s ability to store fat and increasing the body’s amount of fat burning genes.

Apple cider vinegar is a natural liquid that is fermented, meaning it is full of good pre and probiotics – which aid gut health.

How much to drink?

Apple cider vinegar is a fermented liquid, and should only be consumed in small quantities. 

According to Healthline.com, the perfect amount of the vinegar to drink is one to two tablespoons a day.

Doses should ideally be consumed before meals, to sooth the liquid’s effect on the stomach, and at different times throughout the day.

Apple cider vinegar shouldn’t be drink alone, but instead mixed with water or made into a tea with other spices such as ginger.

When buying apple cider vinegar it is important that the liquid has “the mother” in it, as it is the most powerful bacteria that oozes health properties.

Other benefits of apple cider vinegar include controlling blood sugar levels, lowering cholesterol, helping with PCOS and fighting off bacteria and viruses. 

Many studies prove its miraculous effects, with one study of overweight or obese subjects finding that those taking the drink lost double the amount of weight over a three month period.

Scientists found the drink helped to reduced the appetite, decrease weight and cause dieters to lose inches.

Another study found 15 or 30 ml (one or two tablespoons) of apple cider vinegar daily for three months helped overweight adults lose an average of 2.6 and 3.7 pounds.

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https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/diets/1021625/weight-loss-apple-cider-vinegar-how-much-benefits Weight loss: Drink this much apple cider vinegar to lose 11 pounds in ONE week

[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Weight loss: Drink this much apple cider vinegar to lose 11 pounds in ONE week

‘Personal Space’: Museum Exhibits Astronauts’ Spaceflight Mementos [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

How Do Flat-Earthers Explain the Equinox? We Investigated. [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Here Comes Fall: Harvest Moon 2018 Rises Tonight! [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Watch Stars Drift and Constellations Change Shape Using Mobile Apps [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA Balloon Observes Glowing Blue Clouds in Earth’s Upper Atmosphere (Video) [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Antarctica Greenhouse Produces Cucumbers, Tomatoes and More in Mars-Like Test [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

How to Grow Crops on Mars If We Are to Live on the Red Planet [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

How to Grow Crops on Mars If We Are to Live on the Red Planet [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Space.com's Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Preparations are already underway for missions that will land humans on Mars in a decade or so. But what would people eat if these missions eventually lead to the permanent colonization of the red planet?

Once (if) humans do make it to Mars, a major challenge for any colony will be to generate a stable supply of food. The enormous costs of launching and resupplying resources from Earth will make that impractical. [How Living on Mars Could Challenge Colonists (Infographic)]

Humans on Mars will need to move away from complete reliance on shipped cargo, and achieve a high level of self-sufficient and sustainable agriculture.


Read more: Discovered: a huge liquid water lake beneath the southern pole of Mars


The recent discovery of liquid water on Mars – which adds new information to the question of whether we will find life on the planet – does raise the possibility of using such supplies to help grow food.

But water is only one of many things we will need if we're to grow enough food on Mars.

Previous work has suggested the use of microbes as a source of food on Mars. The use of hydroponic greenhouses and controlled environmental systems, similar to one being tested onboard the International Space Station to grow crops, is another option.

This month, in the journal Genes, we provide a new perspective based on the use of advanced synthetic biology to improve the potential performance of plant life on Mars.

Synthetic biology is a fast-growing field. It combines principles from engineering, DNA science, and computer science (among many other disciplines) to impart new and improved functions to living organisms.

Not only can we read DNA, but we can also design biological systems, test them, and even engineer whole organisms. Yeast is just one example of an industrial workhorse microbe whose whole genome is currently being re-engineered by an international consortium.

The technology has progressed so far that precision genetic engineering and automation can now be merged into automated robotic facilities, known as biofoundries.

These biofoundries can test millions of DNA designs in parallel to find the organisms with the qualities that we are looking for.

Although Mars is the most Earth-like of our neighbouring planets, Mars and Earth differ in many ways.


Read more: Dear diary: the Sun never set on the Arctic Mars simulation


The gravity on Mars is around a third of that on Earth. Mars receives about half of the sunlight we get on Earth, but much higher levels of harmful ultraviolet (UV) and cosmic rays. The surface temperature of Mars is about -60℃ and it has a thin atmosphere primarily made of carbon dioxide.

Unlike Earth's soil, which is humid and rich in nutrients and microorganisms that support plant growth, Mars is covered with regolith. This is an arid material that contains perchlorate chemicals that are toxic to humans.

Also – despite the latest sub-surface lake find – water on Mars  mostly exists in the form of ice, and the low atmospheric pressure of the planet makes liquid water boil at around 5℃.

Plants on Earth have evolved for hundreds of millions of years and are adapted to terrestrial conditions, but they will not grow well on Mars.

This means that substantial resources that would be scarce and priceless for humans on Mars, like liquid water and energy, would need to be allocated to achieve efficient farming by artificially creating optimal plant growth conditions.

A more rational alternative is to use synthetic biology to develop crops specifically for Mars. This formidable challenge can be tackled and fast-tracked by building a plant-focused Mars biofoundry.

Such an automated facility would be capable of expediting the engineering of biological designs and testing of their performance under simulated Martian conditions.

With adequate funding and active international collaboration, such an advanced facility could improve many of the traits required for making crops thrive on Mars within a decade.

This includes improving photosynthesis and photoprotection (to help protect plants from sunlight and UV rays), as well as drought and cold tolerance in plants, and engineering high-yield functional crops. We also need to modify microbes to detoxify and improve the Martian soil quality.

These are all challenges that are within the capability of modern synthetic biology.

Developing the next generation of crops required for sustaining humans on Mars would also have great benefits for people on Earth.


Read more: Before we colonise Mars, let's look to our problems on Earth


The growing global population is increasing the demand for food. To meet this demand we must increase agricultural productivity, but we have to do so without negatively impacting our environment.

The best way to achieve these goals would be to improve the crops that are already widely used. Setting up facilities such as the proposed Mars Biofoundry would bring immense benefit to the turnaround time of plant research with implications for food security and environmental protection.

So ultimately, the main beneficiary of efforts to develop crops for Mars would be Earth.

Briardo Llorente, CSIRO Synthetic Biology Future Science Fellow, Macquarie University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. Follow all of the Expert Voices issues and debates — and become part of the discussion — on Facebook, Twitter and Google +. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher. This version of the article was originally published on Space.com.

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Japanese Cargo Ship Launches Toward Space Station [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Rockers Coheed and Cambria Are Heading to a ‘Planetary Prison’ [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Astronaut Scholarship Foundation Launches Exclusive Retro 51 Pen [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Diet Coronation Street star Catherine Tyldesley used to shrink from size 22 [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: Diet Coronation Street star Catherine Tyldesley used to shrink from size 22 [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Catherine Tyldesley of Coronation street fame gave up eating pies and bacon sandwiches to lose weight.

A throwback picture of the star at size 22 shocked many, given her stunning figure now.

The soap star credits lifting weights for her shapely physique now.

Catherine, from Salford, is a mother-of-one to her son Alfie.

She is known for appearing on ITV’s Coronation Street from 2011 to 2018.

However, she has left the show, and her lest episode aired on 3 August.

Catherine played Eva Price, a glamorous character who was known for her big hair and fake eyelashes.

She told the Sun about her weight loss journey in August this year. She said that arranging her schedule is a large part of staying trip.

“It’s just fitting it around your schedule,” she said.

“If I was working I’d go on walks. I have been known to squat Shayne Ward. Squat a friend.

“On night shoots there are a lot of pies and bacon sandwiches floating about but I took stuff with me.”

She has also previously revealed how she began to tackle her weight loss when she was at her biggest.

In 2013 she told The Mirror: “I took control of my weight, and I slowly and steadily lost more than 5 stone. 

“Along the way, I learned to understand just how important a healthy, balanced diet is. It sparked my huge interest in healthy living and nutrition.”

Catherine chronicles here weight loss and health journey on her Instagram.

Yesterday, she posted a picture of herself working out, congratulating the gym on its anniversary.

She said: “Happy 3rd Birthday to Ultimate Performance Manchester!! Thankyou from the bottom of my heart – you’ve changed my life… and then some!!! #neverstoplearning #health #fitness”

A week ago she posted a picture to her Instagram, where she has 448,000 followers, with her personal trainer, adding the caption: “Where ever thy be – seek UP”.

Another TV star Gregg Wallace’s weight loss of three stone has inspired many. 

Before attempting to lose weight the presenter had a fry up for breakfast every morning and drank beer everyday.

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https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/diets/1020965/weight-loss-catherine-tyldesley-cath-diet-plan-coronation-street-fat-instagram Weight loss: Diet Coronation Street star Catherine Tyldesley used to shrink from size 22

[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Weight loss: Diet Coronation Street star Catherine Tyldesley used to shrink from size 22

Friday, September 21, 2018

The New BFR: How SpaceX’s Giant Rocket-Spaceship Combo for Mars Has Changed [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Distant Whirling-Dervish Stars Spin in Super-Weird Patterns [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Distant Whirling-Dervish Stars Spin in Super-Weird Patterns [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Distant stars appear as pinpricks of light in our sky, but we know from our own sun that there's a lot more going on inside of them.

And new research adds to that picture, identifying stars with incredibly strange spinning patterns. In these stars, material at the equator spins much, much faster than the stuff found farther north or south in the star. To picture it, imagine if Earth's equator experienced two sunrises and sunsets every day at midlatitude locations like New York or Buenos Aires, Argentina. Our own sun also spins fastest at the equator but not to such an extreme degree.

"It's so important and useful when we see these observations, especially [when they're] pointing out behavior that's unexpected or much different from what we see in the sun," Maria Weber, a stellar astrophysicist at the University of Chicago and the Adler Planetarium who wasn't involved in the new research, told Space.com. "We have our one sun to look at, but that's only one of the many varieties of the stellar-dynamo zoo." [What's Inside the Sun? A Star Tour from the Inside Out]

Our sun experiences a phenomenon called latitudinal differential rotation, which is just a fancy way of saying that different regions of the star spin at different speeds depending on how far from the equator they are. Material at the sun's equator rotates about 11 percent faster than material found halfway up our sun, say at about 45 degrees north or south. And the difference is even starker at the poles; the equator rotates about 30 percent faster than these regions.

Rotation isn't just a neat trick: It also affects a crucial characteristic of a star, its magnetic field. In general, the faster a star spins, the stronger its magnetic field is, but that can get more complicated when a star displays stark differences in speed at different latitudes.

So, a team of scientists set out to see whether they could spot this phenomenon on other stars. To do so, they turned to data from the Kepler space telescope's first mission. Although that instrument is better-known for spotting thousands of exoplanets, it also happened to provide data that was uniquely suited for a technique called asteroseismology. This method requires data about the same stars over a long period of time, the sort of data that's hard to get from Earth.

"In space, you have continuous data," study lead author Othman Benomar, a stellar scientist at New York University Abu Dhabi, told Space.com. Having "these four years of continuous data is really what enables us to study the differential rotation. Without these four years, it wouldn't have been possible."

Benomar and his colleagues looked at how waves travel through stars, a motion that causes tiny changes in the stars' brightness. He said it's a little like the Doppler effect, in which light and other waves become shorter or longer depending on whether their source is moving toward you or away from you. Waves within stars become shorter or longer depending on whether they're traveling in the same direction that material is rotating or opposite that rotation.

So, the team used Kepler data to study 40 stars that looked pretty unassuming. "There is nothing peculiar when you look at them, because they pretty much look like all these stars," Benomar said. They look basically the same as the sun, with similar mass, age and radius — until you look more carefully, he said. "Then, you realize that there is some peculiarity." [In Photos: The Sun's Monster X9.3 Solar Flare of Sept. 6, 2017]

Though they look serene and silent from our vantage on Earth, stars are actually roiling balls of violent plasma. Test your stellar smarts with this quiz.

Open Star Cluster Messier 50

0 of 10 questions complete

Star Quiz: Test Your Stellar Smarts

Though they look serene and silent from our vantage on Earth, stars are actually roiling balls of violent plasma. Test your stellar smarts with this quiz.

Open Star Cluster Messier 50

0 of questions complete

The team was able to spot latitudinal differential rotation in 13 of those stars, with a few showing the phenomenon so strongly that their equators rotated twice as fast as their midlatitude regions. (For the remaining stars, the researchers didn't have data precise enough to measure whether differential rotation was occuring; they could find only the average rotation.) These stars may require an as-yet-unknown phenomenon to handle their magnetism and keep it from interfering in this rotational phenomenon, the researchers said.

Despite these findings, scientists using asteroseismology in work like this face a huge data problem. Kepler lost the ability to do the required long-term, continuous data-gathering back in 2013, when a mechanical problem made the telescope unable to keep a steady gaze across the heavens. And NASA's new planet-hunter, TESS, doesn't take this kind of continuous data either.

"That's something we might not be able to measure for decades," Benomar said. That's because the next telescope that will be able to produce this type of data is the European Space Agency's Planetary Transits and Oscillations of Stars (PLATO) mission, currently scheduled to launch in 2026. "Clearly, it will be modeling for the next few years at least," Benomar said.

And that's a shame, because measurements like these often spur new scientific discoveries. "I think we learn more about the observations that kind of perplex us than the observations that verify what we already know," Weber said.

The research is described in a paper published today (Sept. 20) in the journal Science.

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her @meghanbartels. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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By Jove! Juno Snaps Picture of Elusive ‘Brown Barge’ on Jupiter [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

NASA’s New Planet-Hunting Telescope Spots Its Second Possible World Already [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Delta II to ‘Live Among Giants’ in Kennedy Space Center Rocket Garden [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Watch a Satellite Net a Cubesat in Awesome Space Junk Cleanup Test [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Watch a Satellite Net a Cubesat in Awesome Space Junk Cleanup Test [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

The video is stunning: A satellite in orbit fires a net to snare a nearby target in the pioneering demonstration of space-junk-cleanup technology.

The space net demonstration, which occurred Sunday (Sept. 16), is part of the European RemoveDebris mission, designed to test active debris-removal techniques in space for the first time. The target wasn't an actual piece of space junk but a small cubesat measuring (10 x10 x 20 centimeters, or 4 x 4 x 8 inches) that was released by the main RemoveDebris spacecraft shortly before the capture experiment. 

"It went very well," said RemoveDebris mission principal investigator Guglielmo Aglietti, director of the Surrey Space Centre at the University of Surrey in the United Kingdom. "The net deployed nicely, and so did the structure attached to the cubesat. We are now downloading the data, which will take a few weeks, since we only can do that when we have contact with the satellite. But so far, everything looks great." [7 Ways to Clean Up Space Junk]

RemoveDebris is a refrigerator-size spacecraft built by satellite manufacturer Surrey Satellite Technology (SSTL), which is part of the RemoveDebris consortium together with the University of Surrey, the aerospace company Airbus and other European companies. It's designed to test space-junk-cleanup methods in orbit. In addition to the debris-catching net, the satellite is equipped with a small harpoon, a visual-tracking system and a drag sail. 

The net demonstration is the first test so far for RemoveDebris, and it began when the satellite released its cubesat target on Sunday. 

Once the cubesat drifted about 19 feet (6 meters) from the chaser RemoveDebris craft, the satellite deployed a 3-foot-wide (1 m) inflatable structure that increased the object's size to match that of a real target. Then, the chaser satellite ejected the net using a spring-loaded mechanism. The entire sequence was preprogrammed and took about 2 to 3 minutes to complete, Aglietti said. 

He told Space.com that the RemoveDebris team couldn't use an actual piece of space junk, because international laws consider even defunct satellites to be property of the entity that launched them. Thus, it would be illegal to catch other people's space debris, he said.

Ingo Retat, who led the team at European space manufacturer Airbus, which designed the net, said it took six years of testing in parabolic flights, special drop towers and vacuum chambers for the engineers to gain enough confidence to send the technology to space.

"Our small team of engineers and technicians have done an amazing job moving us one step closer to clearing up low Earth orbit," Retat said in a statement. 

Interest in active space-debris-removal technology has increased in recent years as the number of spacecraft and satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO) has risen. Too much debris from defunct satellites or rockets could threaten newer satellites in orbit, because a hit from even a tiny piece of junk could destroy a satellite, experts have said. 

Satomi Kawamoto, of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), said in a conference last year that more than 100 objects need to be removed from LEO at the rate of five per year to prevent the so-called Kessler syndrome — an unstoppable cascade of collisions predicted in the 1970s by NASA scientist Donald Kessler. This collision cascade would generate a massive amount of fragments and make operating in the space around Earth unsafe.

The net consists of ultra-lightweight polyethylene Dyneema, which is commonly used to make mountaineering ropes. Six weights attached to the net ensured that it would spread to its full size of 5 m (16 feet) across, said Retat. 

"The weights are actually small motors that are used to close the net around the debris," Retat said. "They run on a timer that begins counting down once the net has been deployed, and [they] automatically tighten up to trap the object."

In an operational setup, the net would be connected to the chaser spacecraft with a tether. After the capture, the chaser spacecraft would fire its engines and drag the space junk into Earth's atmosphere, where the object would burn. 

For this first-time attempt, the engineers left the tether out, as it could cause some unexpected complications, Aglietti said. For example, the satellite could rebound and hit the main RemoveDebris spacecraft, which still has three more experiments to run. 

Aglietti said the cubesat wrapped in the net will fall out of orbit naturally over time. It should remain in orbit no more than a year.

RemoveDebris was delivered to the International Space Station in April and deployed by astronauts in June. 

The 5.2-million-euro ($18.7 million) mission, funded by the European Union, will next validate a vision-based navigation system designed to track and analyze pieces of space debris. In early 2019, RemoveDebris will test another Airbus-led active-removal technology: a pen-size harpoon that will be fired into a fixed plate attached to a boom that will extend from the main spacecraft. 

The campaign will conclude in March 2019, when RemoveDebris will deploy a large sail designed to increase the craft's atmospheric drag and speed up its re-entry. Ultimately, the spacecraft will burn up as it re-enters the atmosphere. 

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

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Japanese Probe Deploys Tiny Hopping Robots Toward Big Asteroid Ryugu [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Thursday, September 20, 2018

Fly Me to the Moon: Japanese Billionaire to Achieve ‘Lifelong Dream’ on SpaceX Lunar Trip [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

You Can See Photos from Japanese Asteroid Probe’s 1st Rover Landing Attempt Right Now! [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: How to blast belly fat, lose weight and get a six pack in six EASY steps [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss: How to blast belly fat, lose weight and get a six pack in six EASY steps [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weight loss is often on the minds of many Britons, along with getting into shape and ultimately getting a six pack.

But getting muscly doesn’t have to be hard, or all-consuming, with simple hacks existing to speed up the process.

With so much body advice out there, it can be hard to know which to follow in order to blast belly fat and shape up.

Head trainer at top London boutique Sweat it, Melissa Weldon revealed the six easy steps to achieving a six pack.

Step 1 – Build a strong foundation

Talking to the Express.co.uk, Melissa revealed that you can lose all the body fat in the world; but if you haven’t built a strong core, no six pack will be revealed.

She said: “A workout which covers the fundamentals of fitness; strength, cardio and mobility will make you stronger and fitter with the bonus of improving your metabolism and physique.”

Try smart exercises such as interval training to burn more fat and strength training to build muscle.

Step 2 – Abs are built in the kitchen

Many people believe that a six pack is only achievable through the gym, but diet has to complement training in order to see results.

A diet rich in protein, carbs and fats will both fuel you and aid recovery from training.

It is also important to eat healthy snacks, with some snacks actually letting you lose weight while snacking. 

Melissa’s diet tip? “Add sprinkles of foods and drinks that you really enjoy, and you will be much less likely to ‘fall off the wagon’ and have a binge. If you do have a blowout, the world will keep spinning; jump back on it, don’t wait for Monday.”

Step 3 – Change your mindset.

Work towards fitness goals; run a 5k or an obstacle race, work towards lifting those bigger dumbbells, try out those intermediate speeds in a treadmill class.

When trying to achieve a six-pack is it important to always strive to be better than the person you were yesterday. This shift will produce results quicker, getting fitter and stronger in less time than expected.

Step 4 – Train with a friend.

According to Melissa, “It’s very easy to back out of a workout when they only person you are accountable to is yourself. Less easy to let a friend down for that 7 am class.”

Step 5 – Try and enjoy it

When working to a goal it is important to find a routine that works, and slots into the day. Forget other people and social media and decide what works best for you.

Some exercises combine both fun and fat-burning, with a recent study naming the unusual top three calorie burning exercises.

The surprising list included Taekwondo, vigorous swimming and rollerblading.

Step 6 – Be patient

“There are no quick fixes. Focus on the long game, this will get you long-term sustainable results,” says Melissa.

“It is proven, that training consistently three to five times per week over a longer period yields better and long-term results than extreme dieting and training.”

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Gregg Wallace weight loss: How Masterchef star lost three stone with this diet trick [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Gregg Wallace weight loss: How Masterchef star lost three stone with this diet trick [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Gregg Wallace is the TV presenter know for his work on Masterchef.

He has co-presented both MasterChef, Celebrity MasterChef and MasterChef: The Professionals.

The former-baker was born in Peckham, South East London, and works for the BBC.

He also appears on Sunday Kitchen and Eat Well for Less?

Gregg Wallace weight loss diet trick 

Gregg lost weight by heading to the gum “most mornings” he revealed.

He also revealed he seriously overhauled his diet.

Before attempting to lose weight the presenter had a fry up for breakfast every morning and drank beer everyday.

He also had fish and chips every week and another takeaway once or twice a week.

He told the Sun in November 2017: “When I was at my biggest I was having a daily fry up, fish and chips once per week, takeaway a couple more times and drinking beer nearly every day.”

However, he changed his approach to food and saw results.

“I made a conscious decision to cut down on fried and high sugar foods, as well as booze — which helped me lose weight,” he said.

Gregg cooks certain healthy meals to help him lose weight.

“I’m a huge fan of curries, chillies and stews and it is still possible to lose weight and eat hearty meals,’ he said.

He advised dieters: “Think about cooking with meats such as chicken and pork — all the things that don’t have much fat.

“Use lean mince to make chillies, fill up with tasty stews stuffed full of healthy, low-calorie veg.”

Tom Watson’s weight loss has also seriously impressed the British public. 

The Labour MP, 51, showed off his incredible weight loss this morning on Sky news, shocking Britons with his new slimmed-down frame.

His new frame shocked viewers of the show, who took to Twitter to praise the politician for his weight loss.

One user wrote: “Just watching @tom_watson on @SkyNews and he looks like he has shifted loads of weight….. Good Job Tom….. It is a real motivator seeing real life results…. (sic)”

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Tom Watson weight loss: MP lost SEVEN stone by following this unusual diet plan [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Tom Watson weight loss: MP lost SEVEN stone by following this unusual diet plan [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Tom Watson, 51, showed off his incredible weight loss this morning on Sky news, shocking Britons with his new slimmed-down frame.

His new frame shocked viewers of the show, who took to Twitter to praise the politician for his weight loss.

One user wrote: “Just watching @tom_watson on @SkyNews and he looks like he has shifted loads of weight….. Good Job Tom….. It is a real motivator seeing real life results…. (sic)”

In recent months the Labour MP has shed a large amount of his body weight, making no secret of his weight-loss journey.

He has lost a whopping seven stone since last summer, after realising how much his weight was affecting his health.

Tom is now in the best shape he’s been in years, and it’s all down to following one unusual diet trick.

Writing in a newsletter about his weight-loss journey last year, Tom said: “Did I tell you I’m on a diet? I know you’re not supposed to call them that anymore, to be on message they have to be a ‘lifestyle change’.”

His “lifestyle change” consisted of following the Pioppi Diet, a diet designed to reverse obesity and type two diabetes – reversing Tom’s diabetes.

The diet advocates a low-carb regime, and allows three meals a day with the one rule “only eat until you feel full”.

The diet plan also calls on the follower to consume two to four tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil a fay.

A small handful of tree nuts is also part of the Pioppi plan, along with vegetables in at least two meals and oily fish three times a week.

The plan, which saw Tom shed the pounds, also bands added sugar and refined carbs,m detrimental to the waist-line.

Before embarking on the plan Tom went through his cupboard and threw out all tempting snacks, foods with sugar and products such as pasta.

“I would avoid, slightly more controversially, a lot of starchy carbs,” he told The Guardian.

“I do have some brown rice and occasionally pasta when I’m out. If I have bread, I have it made with almond flour.”

The Labour MP also tried other methods such as the keto diet and drinking “bulletproof coffee”.

Talking in his New Statesman column, Tom said: “Since last summer I’ve taken off 86lbs through a regime of cutting out sugar, eating better and exercising. This morning started with what the LA set call a “bulletproof coffee”.

“It’s basically butter from grass-fed cows blended with fresh coffee – the idea is to get saturated fats into your diet so that you’re not as hungry during the day.

Another Briton who lost an impressive amount of weight is celebrity chef and restaurateur, Tom Kerridge.

Tom lost a staggering 12 stone by reforming his diet and turning his life around, but how did he do it? 

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SpaceX Will Livestream Moon Tourist Flight in HD Virtual Reality, Elon Musk Says [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

For Tiny Light Particles, ‘Before’ and ‘After’ Mean Nothing [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

For Tiny Light Particles, ‘Before’ and ‘After’ Mean Nothing [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Beneath the surface of the familiar world is a smaller, quantum world that defies our fundamental ideas of time and space.

In this mini world, the concepts of "before" and "after" dissolve, such that two events can both precede and succeed each other. In other words, event A can occur before event B, and event B can occur before event A, according to a new study published Aug. 31 in the journal Physical Review Letters. 

This idea, called a "quantum switch," was first proposed in 2009 by another team and has since been explored both theoretically and experimentally. Previous experiments showed event A could both precede and succeed event B, but the research couldn't say that these two scenarios were happening at the same place, said Cyril Branciard, co-author of this new study and a physicist at the NÉEL Institute in France. [The 9 Biggest Unsolved Mysteries in Physics]

To determine exactly where these violations of causality occurred, the researchers "implemented another quantum switch with a slightly different architecture," Branciard told Live Science. The new design allowed them to demonstrate experimentally that event A was happening both before and after event B not only at the same time, but also in the same place, Branciard told Live Science.

Branciard and his team programmed and observed how a photon — a quantum particle of light — moved its way through a circuit. The photon could take one of two paths: If the photon took one path, they called the occurrence event A, and if it took the other, they called it event B.

A photon is can be thought of as both a particle and a wave. If the researchers used a photon with a horizontal polarization— the direction in which these waves oscillate the photon would first travel path A and then travel backward to pass through path B, meaning event A happened before B. If they vertically polarized the photon, the photon would travel first through path B, then A, meaning B happened before A.

But in the quantum world, a bizarre phenomenon known as superposition holds sway. In superposition, photons can be both horizontally and vertically polarized — as illustrated by the famous Schrödinger's cat paradox, in which a cat in the quantum world could be both dead and alive, Branciard said.

There's a catch, however: Physicists can't actually see or measure what the photons are doing; the very act of measurement destroys the superposition. "The measurement would force the photons to 'choose' to follow one order or the other," Branciard said.

Instead, they set up a series of "obstacles," or optical elements such as lenses and prisms, that indirectly made the two events distinguishable from each other. As the photons traveled through the paths, the lenses and prisms changed the shape of the waves of each photon. This, in turn, altered their polarization— a direction that can be both up ,down, sideways, or really at any angle, according to Branciard. At the end of the photons' journeys, the researchers could measure the new polarization.

Branciard and his team set up their optical elements in different ways such that they can conduct many trials with various settings. A combination of measurements taken throughout the experiment served as a "causal witness" — a value that, if negative, meant that the photons would have traveled both paths at the same time.

Indeed, when photons were in this state of superposition, the causal witness was negative, showing that the photons traveled both paths at the same time, meaning "before" and "after' meant nothing to these tiny particles. Event A caused event B, and event B caused event A at the same time.

In the future, this quantum switch could enhance communication in quantum devices, Branciard said.

Originally published on Live Science.

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A Japanese Probe Is About to Drop Two Hopping Robots Onto Asteroid Ryugu [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

NASA’s New Planet-Hunter TESS Beams ‘First Light’ Image to Earth [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

‘Ask a Spaceman’ Reveals Why You Wouldn’t Want to Enter a Wormhole [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

The Strongest Material in the Universe Could Be (Nuclear) Pasta [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Weird Infrared Signal Emanates Across Space, But What Created It? [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

SpaceX’s New BFR Spaceship Really Does Look Like Tintin’s Moon Rocket [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Rick Stein weight loss: Padstow fish and chip chef ate this food to lose weight [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Rick Stein weight loss: Padstow fish and chip chef ate this food to lose weight [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Rick Stein, 71, is the chef famous for his Padstow fish and chips restaurant.

In fact, he owns four restaurants, with three more in Falmouth, Porthleven and Newquay.

The father of three who is married to his partner Sarah Burns, was born in Oxfordshire and was Oxford educated.

His frame has shrunk over the years, how has Rick Stein lost weight? 

The chef has lost weight over the years, and revealed he used one specific diet trick to do so.

While many reach for eggs or bacon first thing in the morning, Rich has a different preference.

Instead, the chef eats chilli first thing in the morning.

He told the Guardian: “I find that the heat from chilli counteracts hunger pangs, which I believe is why it’s so popular in the developing world.

“So I have a very spicy Vietnamese pho for breakfast.”

The chef, who is almost six foot, revealed his ideal weight would be 14st.

“I’m classed as ‘overweight’ but I’m not that fussed as I take enough exercise,” he told Daily Mail.

“I eat a lot of meat and veg and cut out the carbohydrates.”

He also revealed details of his exercise regimen.

He told the paper: “I make a point of not using escalators. I don’t go to the gym, but swim virtually every day in the sea in Cornwall, winter and summer.”

Rick has a number of awards including 14th most influential chef in UK in 2005 and The Good Food Award Television and Radio Personality in 1995 and 1996.

He won an English Seafood Restaurant of the Year Award 2002 from AA.

Johnny Vegas weight loss has impressed many and the comedian has shed three stone.

Johnny has slimmed down in recent months, first shocking fans with his new physique in July.

Appearing on ITV’s This Morning, Johnny revealed even more secrets behind his impressive weight loss.

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Giant Ice Volcanoes Once Covered Dwarf Planet Ceres [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Bizarre Physics Phenomenon Suggests Objects Can Be Two Temperatures at Once [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Apollo 9: The Lunar Module Flies [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Apollo 9: The Lunar Module Flies [bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]

Apollo 9 was an Earth-orbiting mission that tested out the Apollo lunar module for the first time. The lunar module was designed to bring astronauts to the surface of the moon and NASA wanted to ensure that the spacecraft worked well in Earth orbit before testing it at the moon.

The crew included Commander Jim McDivitt, Dave Scott and Russell Schweickart. After a launch on March 3, 1969, the crew spent 10 days in low Earth orbit testing the lunar module's engines, navigation systems and docking maneuvers, as well as backpack life-support systems. And while the module performed well, the astronauts were forced to modify a spacewalk after one of them fell ill during the flight.

McDivitt began his flying career in the U.S. Air Force both in combat and as a test pilot, and joined NASA for the Gemini program. He was part of the Gemini 4 crew during the first-ever U.S. spacewalk by Ed White in 1965, and took pictures that still are widely circulated today.

Scott, also an Air Force pilot and Apollo 9's command module pilot, had one spaceflight under his belt. He was co-pilot on the Gemini 8 mission, which experienced a malfunction when the thruster stuck open and began spinning the spacecraft so quickly that the astronauts feared losing consciousness. Scott's commander, Neil Armstrong, stabilized the ship and the two had an early, but safe landing. Scott later commanded the Apollo 15 mission.

Fellow Air Force flier Schweickart also had a strong theoretical background: He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a master's degree in upper atmosphere physics and star tracking and also worked as a research scientist at MIT. Apollo 9 was his only flight in space.

After the triumph of Apollo 8 orbiting the moon, Apollo 9's mission was no less ambitious. Perhaps it did not have the glamor of circling another world, but it was an important step to getting to the moon.

Future crews had to be comfortable with docking and undocking the two Apollo spacecraft — necessary maneuvers for the lunar module to land on the moon, and for the command module to bring the astronauts from lunar orbit back to Earth.

Although the astronauts were serious about their work, they assigned whimsical names to the spacecraft: the command module was called Gumdrop, and the lunar module, Spider, because that's what the modules resembled.

The first few days went relatively smoothly. The astronauts docked the two spacecraft successfully on the first try. Gumdrop fired its engines several times with Spider attached, proving it could handle the mass of the lunar module during orbital maneuvers.

On Flight Day 4, NASA wanted to test an astronaut's ability to climb from one spacecraft to the other in case the lunar module and command module refused to dock with each other in lunar orbit. If that happened, a spacewalk to the command module would be the crew's only ticket home.

The crew planned to simulate this spacewalk. Unfortunately, Schweickart felt nauseated from almost the beginning of the mission. According to flight director Chris Kraft, McDivitt waited until almost the last minute to inform Mission Control about the situation.

"If he reported on Schweickart a few days earlier, the flight surgeons would probably have prescribed medications that could have eliminated his symptoms," Kraft recalled in his autobiography, "Flight: My Life in Mission Control" (Dutton, 2001). NASA elected to reduce the spacewalk requirements to make sure that Schweickart could perform the tasks safely.

Astronauts are well-prepared to adapt their mission plans as needed, and the Apollo 9 crew was no exception.

Before the scheduled spacewalk, McDivitt and Schweickart performed their assigned tests of Spider's engine, showing that it could easily maneuver the spacecraft.

The spacewalk started out as planned, as Schweickart carefully suited up and climbed out on the front "porch" of Spider to collect data on the outside. He was then supposed to clamber over to Gumdrop. However, Schweickart began to tire and McDivitt decided to cancel that climb. Mission Control agreed with the decision, and the team called it a day.

Flight Day 5 brought the hardest and most exciting part of the mission: undocking the two spacecraft and flying the lunar module by itself. McDivitt and Schweickart flew Spider more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) away. Scott, remaining in Gumdrop, watched in wonder as Spider got smaller and smaller, appearing like a bright star in the distance, and then disappeared.

Spider's crew then turned on their "ascent" stage to simulate rising again from the moon, while Mission Control waited anxiously to see if it worked. The engine fired flawlessly, and Spider eventually docked with Gumdrop safely.

The crew remained in orbit until March 13 and splashed down about 3 miles from their recovery ship in the Atlantic Ocean. Apollo 9's tests of Spider proved the lunar module could work in space. With that established, NASA could turn to the tricky problem of testing it near the surface of the moon.

The 50th anniversary of Apollo 9 is in March 2019. Gumdrop is on display at the San Diego Air and Space Museum, while Spider burned up as planned in the Earth's atmosphere.

Apollo 9 was an important engineering test for the lunar module. Even though the crew did not gain the prestige of heading out to the moon, and even though the mission is not well-remembered by the public today, Apollo 9 was a crucial step in getting ready for lunar landings.

In 1969, Apollo 10 performed a landing simulation while in lunar orbit, and Apollo 11 made the first landing. Several other landing attempts followed between 1969 and 1972, with all but one crew (Apollo 13) fulfilling their objectives and making it onto the lunar surface.

Following the Apollo program, NASA turned its focus to Earth science and embarked on the space shuttle program (1981 to 2011) as well as the International Space Station program (starting in 1998) to test long-duration spaceflight. The agency, however, may return to the moon in the coming years. In late 2017, the Trump administration directed NASA to return humans to the moon before voyaging on to Mars. NASA is considering a design for a lunar space station, called the Deep Space Gateway, and working on a spacecraft for long-duration voyages, called Orion.

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https://www.space.com/17616-apollo-9.html Apollo 9: The Lunar Module Flies

[bestandroiddoubledinheadunit950.blogspot.com]Apollo 9: The Lunar Module Flies