Redstone Explosion Turns Fatal

2 dead after explosion at Ala. Army base, AP

"Two contract workers died after being injured in an explosion while removing a propellant from rockets at Redstone Arsenal, where the Army conducts missile and weapons research. The public affairs office at the post in Huntsville said the two died Wednesday night after being flown to the burn unit at UAB Hospital in Birmingham. Base officials said Thursday the names of the workers would be released later. Both worked for a Redstone contractor, Amtech Corp., and were injured in an explosion at 8:45 a.m. Wednesday while removing ammonium perchlorate from rockets at a test site. The Army described the chemical as an oxidizer used in solid rocket propellant."

Guest Post: Caleb Scharf on the Shadow Biosphere | Cosmic Variance

Caleb ScharfWe’ve been talking about life quite a bit here recently at Cosmic Variance, and it’s always fun to talk about areas in which one has absolutely no professional expertise. But it’s also fun to bring in experts, which is why we’re happy to welcome Caleb Scharf as a guest blogger. Caleb is Director of Astrobiology at Columbia University, author of a textbook on the subject, an recently jumped into blogging. In this post he reminds us that we’re still learning a lot about the forms of life right here on Earth — knowledge that will be invaluable as we search for it elsewhere.

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It’s a real privilege to be able to write a guest blog for Cosmic Variance and to take a little side trip from my regular postings to Life, Unbounded – the science of origins.

The modern search for life in the universe encompasses everything from exoplanets and astrochemistry to geophysics and paleontology. Underlying and motivating the investigations in these fields – collectively labeled astrobiology – there are some fundamental assumptions, but do they make sense?

In recent weeks one might be forgiven for thinking that a shadowy biosphere surrounds us, aliens are poised to dismantle civilization, and that time traveling species are flitting in and out of view like barflies on a Saturday night. It’s a little disconcerting, does the Kool Aid have something special in it this Spring?

Unfortunately I think that all of these headline grabbing items miss the real story of what life is, here on Earth and potentially further afield. The idea of ‘shadow biospheres’ or multiple origins of terrestrial life sounds intriguing, and certainly helps bring focus to the fact that we can be very blinkered in our outlook. It also steers attention away from a more interesting and demonstrably real point.

microbes In the past couple of decades we have found a shadow biosphere, except that far from lurking in the cracks it turns out to be the biggest, most critical, biosphere on the planet. An astonishing 99.9% of life on Earth cannot be coerced to grow in a lab, and so we have overlooked it. Microbial life – single-celled bacteria and our ancient cousins the Archaea – is not just the stuff under your fingernails, it is what makes multi-cellular life like us function, and it helps govern the grand chemical cycles of our planet, from the continents to the oceans to the atmosphere. Such organisms have, over three to four billion years, evolved into an eye popping array of microscopic machines, the ultimate nano-bots. They can extract energy and raw materials from, it seems, almost any environment. A particularly good example is Desulforudis audaxviator – discovered 2.8 km down in a South African gold mine in a pocket of isolated water. Little audaxviator lives all alone when the vast majority of microbial life is utterly reliant on colonial symbiosis. It earns a living by mopping up the molecular detritus left after radioactive decay in the uranium rich rocks dissociates water and bicarbonates. That’s a very, very neat trick.

Twenty or thirty years ago we barely understood that such life existed on this planet. Now we are beginning to see that the longevity of our biosphere owes itself to precisely this crowd of ‘shadowy’ organisms. A truly wonderful paper was published a couple of years ago in which Falkowski, Fenchel and Delong laid out the big picture for life on Earth. In essence, they argue that single-celled microbial life is the manifestation of an even deeper truth; the core planetary gene set. This is the set of recipes for metabolism, or how to harvest a planet for energy, and we all rely on them. The result of billions of years of natural selection, these genes are widely dispersed across the microbial biosphere. This is true to such an extent that should 99% of life be wiped out by an asteroid collision, supervolcano, or dirty telephone receiver, the information for the molecular machinery that drives all organisms will be safely preserved in the surviving 1%. The living world does not end, it just reboots. Because of this, carbon-based life is a far more robust phenomenon than we could have ever imagined. It is the ultimate, Google-like, cloud computer.

Still though, isn’t this also a blinkered view of what might constitute life? Well, sure, but there’s another fact to consider. When we look out into the universe we find that the chemistry of our life – carbon based molecular structures – is not just occasional, it’s ubiquitous. Carbon is a fabulous player; simple molecules, rings, chains, polymers, sheets, crystals, and great clumps of sooty particles abound. Some is produced directly from the huge outflows of cooling gas from old stars, much forms in the thick nebulae and proto-stellar cocoons that eventually give rise to planets. Thousands of recognizable organic molecules, including amino acids, are found in the treacly mix of some meteorites – the remains of our own ancient solar system. This is a chemical bonanza that must have played a role in setting the stage on the young planet Earth. If this is blinkered then stick a blindfold on me.

So life on Earth is tough and tenacious, and the building blocks are everywhere. Is this enough reason to think that a similar blueprint exists in other places across the universe? Well, it’s definitely motivation to go looking, and to go looking for the kind of exotica that we already know, rather than inventing new ones. Is this reason enough to think that ‘intelligent’ life exists somewhere else? That’s a tough call. Life on Earth did remarkably well for the past 3.5 billion years without us around, I don’t think there is anything that indicates we are more than an evolutionary oddity (albeit an incredible one). It’s a big universe though, with plenty of room for oddities, even if they turn out to be extremely familiar.


Evolution, With Dope Rhymes and a Funky Hip-Hop Beat | Discoblog

Perhaps you've wished, while paging through a heavy textbook on evolutionary biology, that learning the subject could be a little more like an Eminem concert? If so, rush over to a New York theater where the rapper Baba Brinkman is ready to fill your brain with his one-man show, "The Rap Guide to Evolution."
The project began when Brinkman got a call from evolutionary biologist Mark Pallen, who asked him to compose a rap in honor of Charles Darwin's 200th birthday. Says Brinkman: "All winter I sent him copies of my rap lyrics, and he came back with corrections, which means my hip-hop show is peer reviewed." Here's a segment of his show: Olivia Judson, who praised the show in The New York Times, says she suspects this is "the only hip-hop show to talk of mitochondria, genetic drift, sexual selection or memes." She continues:
[Brinkman] is a man on a mission to spread the word about evolution — how it works, what it means for our view of the world, and why it is something to be celebrated rather than feared. Brinkman is performing his show through Saturday, May 8th at the Bleeker Street Theatre in New York City. If you can't make it ...


Herschel Reveals the Hidden Side of Star Birth

From EurekAlert! - Breaking News:

The first scientific results from ESA's Herschel infrared space observatory are revealing previously hidden details of star formation. New images show thousands of distant galaxies furiously building stars and beautiful star-forming clouds draped a

Driving to Devon Island Across Sea Ice

Mars Institute team to complete Arctic sea-ice drive along fabled Northwest Passage to reach "Mars on Earth"

"An international team led by Mars Institute scientist Dr. Pascal Lee will depart the Arctic community of Resolute Bay today aboard the Moon-1 Humvee Rover on a sea-ice crossing expedition. The team is headed for the Haughton-Mars Project Research Station (HMPRS) on Devon Island, High Arctic, a remote outpost dedicated to space exploration on the world's largest uninhabited island. The Moon-1 is an experimental vehicle simulating future pressurized rovers that will one day allow humans to explore long distances on the Moon and Mars. Last year, the scientists completed a record-setting 494 km drive on sea-ice in the Moon-1 along the fabled Northwest Passage between Kugluktuk and Cambridge Bay, Nunavut."

Cummins N14 Injector Problem

I have 2001 cummins n14 435+ hp engine. I got an engine tune up done about 4 months back. Now I got one injector dead about a week ago. And after it was fixed after a day another one is gone. Is it to do with bad tune up? or bad workmanship? fuel? I am just trying to figure out the reason.

Keeping A Cancelled Rocket Alive

Obama's NASA plans in peril?, Orlando Sentinel

"NASA itself also appears to be hedging its bets that the president's vision might not pass muster with Congress. KSC officials and contractors, under direction from Johnson Space Center and NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden, are pressing ahead with plans for test flights of a multibillion-dollar Ares I rocket that Obama wants to cancel. Meanwhile, big aerospace contractors are trying to sell members of Congress on a new $8 billion rocket that could be fashioned from pieces of the space shuttle, which is supposed to be retired later this year. Last week, a group of contractors led by aerospace giant Boeing Co. met Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., to push the new rocket idea. Nelson previously has backed more Ares test flights."

Volcano shocker | Bad Astronomy

This is amazing footage of shockwaves erupting a week or two ago from the volcano Eyjafjalajökull (which I believe is pronounced Gugliucci):

Amazing! There is a lot of gas trapped inside the rising magma under the volcano. When it gets near the surface, the gas can escape violently, exploding and creating shock waves. These waves travel through the smoke and ash already in the air, compressing them, and you can see this as a darkening in the plume. This volcano is still erupting and still causing massive screwups in air traffic over Europe. The last big eruption lasted for two years, so we may need to sit back and think about that for a while.

Tip o’ the lavabomb to Fark.


Florida Legislature Acts To Support Space Sector

Unanimous Support by Florida Legislature Facilitates Competitive Space Industry in Florida

"Florida's space industry remained a forefront issue for legislators throughout the 2010 legislative session, which concluded on April 30. Faced with the impending Shuttle retirement (expected to result in 23,000 direct and indirect job losses, contributing to significant economic impact across the state), the legislature voted to unanimously support critical legislation designed to stimulate economic development and promote aerospace industry jobs."

Hey Baby, Wanna Come Over and Try My New iPad? | Discoblog

If the mere mention of an iPad sets your pulse raising and your heart thumping, if there's nothing you like better than gliding your fingers over the sleek screen of an iPhone, then you should know that there will soon be an online dating site just for people like you. A new site called Cupidtino promises to help Apple fans find each other, and find happy geek love.
The site will launch in June, but rabid Apple fans can sign up now to be included in the beta version, and can follow Cupidtino on Twitter.
Why start a dating site for such a narrow slice of humanity? According to the site:
Diehard Mac & Apple fans often have a lot in common – personalities, creative professions, a similar sense of style and aesthetics, taste, and of course a love for technology. We believe these are enough reasons for two people to meet and fall in love.
To mark this fine occasion, Flavorwire brainstormed some pickup lines that might work on a Cupidtino participant. A couple of our favorites:
“Is your daddy Steve Jobs? ‘Cause your case is lookin’ finer than a new MacBook Pro’s.”
“Baby, I’m all the AppleCare you’ll ever need.” Related Content:
Discoblog: Video: Google ...


ET-137 Heading to KSC

ET-137 being loaded into Pegasus. Click for a larger version. Image credit: Lockheed Martin / Michoud Operations

The next to the last External Tank for the shuttle shown here being loaded into a barge after leaving at the Michoud Assembly Facility and bound for the Kennedy Space Center.

The External Tanks are way too large to be moved over the highway or rail systems so they are moved by an enclosed barge called the Pegasus.  The tank was actually loaded on the first of the month but high winds delayed the departure. The journey is about 900 miles and will take six days to accomplish.  The tank will arrive on May 9, 2010 and will be mated to the shuttle Atlantis for the scheduled May 14 launch date.

The final ET is being built and is scheduled to be completed next month.  Another tank called ET-122, damaged in Hurricane Katrina, is being constructed and it is a “spare launch on-need” tank.  These will mark the end the tank building activities for Lockheed Martin after building 133 tanks over 29 years.

There is a website for Michoud Operations with more (and larger) images and links to some pretty interesting PDF files.  One of the files, titled: Space Shuttle External Tank Statistics and Comparisons, I found to be especially interesting.

Here are some highlights:

  • The tank is 154 feet (46.9 m) long with a diameter of 27.6 feet (27.8 m).
  • The tank supplies propellant (liquid Oxygen and Hydrogen) at a rate of 1,035 gallons per second.
  • The propellant temperature: Liquid Oxygen -297oF (-183 C) / Liquid Hydrogen -423oF (-253 C)
  • The foam covering the tank is only about one inch thick (2.54 cm), yet it protects the super cold propellant insulated from the aerodynamic friction that can heat some parts of the tank to 1,800oF (982 C)
  • The aluminum skin of the tank is less than 0.5 inches (1.3 cm) thick.  Of course it’s a special alloy of aluminum and not like a soda can.
  • The ratio of the tank weight to the weight it can carry is 1:27 compared to a “standard” pickup of 3:1.

So, I wonder what is to become of the employees at Michoud?  I wish them the best of luck.

Linear Motors

Can anybody help me about designing a linear motor with maxwell v.10?

Or is there anybody who design a linear motor?Need help!!