NASA-funded asteroid tracking sensor passes key test

Apr. 15, 2013 An infrared sensor that could improve NASA's future detecting and tracking of asteroids and comets has passed a critical design test.

The test assessed performance of the Near Earth Object Camera (NEOCam) in an environment that mimicked the temperatures and pressures of deep space. NEOCam is the cornerstone instrument for a proposed new space-based asteroid-hunting telescope. Details of the sensor's design and capabilities are published in an upcoming edition of the Journal of Optical Engineering.

The sensor could be a vital component to inform plans for the agency's recently announced initiative to develop the first-ever mission to identify, capture and relocate an asteroid closer to Earth for future exploration by astronauts.

"This sensor represents one of many investments made by NASA's Discovery Program and its Astrophysics Research and Analysis Program in innovative technologies to significantly improve future missions designed to protect Earth from potentially hazardous asteroids," said Lindley Johnson, program executive for NASA's Near-Earth Object Program Office in Washington.

Near-Earth objects are asteroids and comets with orbits that come within 28 million miles of Earth's path around the sun. Asteroids do not emit visible light; they reflect it. Depending on how reflective an object is, a small, light-colored space rock can look the same as a big, dark one. As a result, data collected with optical telescopes using visible light can be deceiving.

"Infrared sensors are a powerful tool for discovering, cataloging and understanding the asteroid population," said Amy Mainzer, a co-author of the paper and principal investigator for NASA's NEOWISE mission at the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. NEOWISE stands for Near-Earth Object Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer. "When you observe a space rock with infrared, you are seeing its thermal emissions, which can better define the asteroid's size, as well as tell you something about composition."

The NEOCam sensor is designed to be more reliable and significantly lighter in weight for launching aboard space-based telescopes. Once launched, the proposed telescope would be located about four times the distance between Earth and the moon, where NEOCam could observe the comings and goings of NEOs every day without the impediments of cloud cover and daylight.

The sensor is the culmination of almost 10 years of scientific collaboration between JPL; the University of Rochester, which facilitated the test; and Teledyne Imaging Sensors of Camarillo, Calif., which developed the sensor.

"We were delighted to see in this generation of detectors a vast improvement in sensitivity compared with previous generations," said the paper's lead author, Craig McMurtry of the University of Rochester.

NASA's NEOWISE is an enhancement of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, mission that launched in December 2009. WISE scanned the entire celestial sky in infrared light twice. It captured more than 2.7 million images of objects in space, ranging from faraway galaxies to asteroids and comets close to Earth.

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NASA-funded asteroid tracking sensor passes key test

Brother – a Medicine Man / Shaman / Spiritual Healer ASMR improv performance / role play – Video


Brother - a Medicine Man / Shaman / Spiritual Healer ASMR improv performance / role play
You awake to find yourself in the woods only to be approached by a stranger who some have called a shaman that uses various ASMR techniques to help those on ...

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Brother - a Medicine Man / Shaman / Spiritual Healer ASMR improv performance / role play - Video

Penn Medicine researcher awarded prestigious Grand Prix Scientifique by the Institut de France

Public release date: 15-Apr-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Karen Kreeger karen.kreeger@uphs.upenn.edu 215-349-5658 University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine

PHILADELPHIA Garret FitzGerald MD, FRS, chairman of the Pharmacology Department and director of the Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, has been awarded the 2013 Grand Prix Scientifique by the Institut de France.

FitzGerald shares the prize with Carlo Patrono MD, chairman of Pharmacology at the Catholic University, Rome. The award is based on the recommendation of the International Scientific Council of the Board of Directors of the Lefoulon-Delalande Foundation, Paris. The prize will be awarded under the presidency of the Chancellor of the Institut de France and the President of the French Academy of Sciences on June 5th, 2013. The Grand Prix Lefoulon-Delalande, valued at 500,000 euros ($650,000) is one of the largest prizes for scientific accomplishment and is considered the world's most prestigious prize for cardiovascular research.

FitzGerald and Patrono share the prize for their development of low-dose aspirin for the prevention of cardiovascular disease. Their work used novel approaches to assess the formation of short-lived fats in the body called prostaglandins that play a key role in the development of blood clotting. They discovered how lower doses of aspirin than had been previously used to treat pain and inflammation act on blood cells called platelets to shut down their role in blocking arteries to cause heart attacks and strokes. Low-dose aspirin is now used for this purpose throughout the world and has saved the lives of tens of millions of people.

"I am delighted to receive this honor," said FitzGerald. "However, it reflects the creativity, focus and hard work of so many people with whom I have been privileged to work. It is a particular pleasure to share this prize with Carlo, with whom I have collaborated and competed, but most importantly, shared a special friendship for more than 30 years."

Aside from his work on aspirin, FitzGerald was the first to predict and then mechanistically explain the cardiovascular hazards from such nonsteroidal antinflammatory drugs as Vioxx and Celebrex. His laboratory has discovered novel indices of oxidant stress and was the first to describe the molecular clock in the cardiovascular system. Among his awards in the past year have been the Scheele Award from the Swedish Academy of the Pharmaceutical Science and the Lucian Award from McGill University.

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Penn Medicine is one of the world's leading academic medical centers, dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and excellence in patient care. Penn Medicine consists of the Raymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (founded in 1765 as the nation's first medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania Health System, which together form a $4.3 billion enterprise.

The Perelman School of Medicine has been ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States for the past 16 years, according to U.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $398 million awarded in the 2012 fiscal year.

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Penn Medicine researcher awarded prestigious Grand Prix Scientifique by the Institut de France

Consider Medical School Choice Carefully as a Minority Student

The African-American doctors on Bravo's latest hit, "Married to Medicine," make the world of minority physicians look glamorous: big houses, a professional circle that shares their ethnicity and plenty of parties.

Students at the Howard University College of Medicine petitioned the show because of its depictions of cat fighting and backstabbing, but "Married to Medicine" is still a hit. Its premiere on March 24 drew 1.9 million viewers, according to a release from the cable channel.

Unlike the show, the reality for prospective M.D.s and current physicians can be far more challenging for underrepresented minorities. The Association of American Medical Colleges defines this group as "those whose numbers in medicine are disproportionately lower than in the general population," such as African-Americans, Mexican-Americans and some Asian subgroups. In the 2011-2012 school year, only 1,332 African-American candidates and 1,701 U.S. Hispanic candidates were accepted into U.S. medical schools, according to the AAMC.

[Determine if a career in medicine is right for you.]

Diversity experts advise prospective students to be selective - both in their applications to medical schools and residencies, and where they choose to practice - in order to be successful in an industry where most of their colleagues come from different racial and religious backgrounds.

"We know from the research that minority medical students face disproportional feelings of isolation and a lack of empowerment," says Monica Vela, associate dean for multicultural affairs at the University of Chicago's Pritzker School of Medicine.

Speaking with current students and faculty can help candidates gauge a school's diversity climate, says Vela, who advises prospective students to evaluate schools on three basic points.

"Find an institution that clearly supports both service, community outreach and research that focuses on minority health and ending health care disparities," says Vela, who is also a faculty member for the Latino Medical Student Association. LMSA, one of several professional organizations for aspiring and current Latino physicians, has about 3,000 members. It provides mentoring and scholarships for medical school students, among other resources.

[Learn what it means to be a disadvantaged M.D. applicant.]

Another organization serving underrepresented minorities is the Islamic Medical Association of North America, which offers seminars and mission trips to countries like Sudan and Haiti.

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Consider Medical School Choice Carefully as a Minority Student

Bangs


Bangs Beards - Liberty University Spring Coffeehouse 2013
Bangs Beards performs "Lazy Sunday Morning" at Liberty University Spring Coffeehouse 2013.

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GTA IV RCMP Clan – Prime Minister of Canada Comes to Liberty City – VIP Escort – Video


GTA IV RCMP Clan - Prime Minister of Canada Comes to Liberty City - VIP Escort
The Prime Minister of Canada pays a visit to Liberty City. He arrived at Francis International Airport and are escorted to Liberty City Air Tours where he to...

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GTA IV RCMP Clan - Prime Minister of Canada Comes to Liberty City - VIP Escort - Video

Former Congresswoman | Cynthia McKinney | Atlanta Music Liberty Fest | Exposes Government Corruption – Video


Former Congresswoman | Cynthia McKinney | Atlanta Music Liberty Fest | Exposes Government Corruption
Cynthia Ann McKinney (born March 17, 1955) is an American politician and activist. As a member of the Democratic Party, she served six terms in the United St...

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Former Congresswoman | Cynthia McKinney | Atlanta Music Liberty Fest | Exposes Government Corruption - Video

Liberty, BTW plans both now stuck in limbo

This is one of those awkward and, at least for now, irresolvable situations in which discretion is indeed the better part of valor. The Housing Authority of Columbus exercised that discretion last week in a letter to Mayor Teresa Tomlinson confirming that, as a result of "unexpected opposition," its redevelopment plans for the Booker T. Washington housing complex have been put on indefinite hold.

The plan, as most Columbusites are aware, called for the redevelopment to consist in part of the construction of 100 new apartments in the Liberty District, the Liberty Theater-anchored area recognized as the historic heart of the city's black community. Not only do the location and condition of the BTW apartments make for one of the city's least attractive "gateways," but the complex also occupies a large tract at the intersection of Veterans Parkway and Victory Drive that many see as prime for economic development.

But Liberty District stakeholders, led by, among others, Tax Commissioner Lula Lunsford Huff, object to the plan on the grounds that BTW redevelopment, in the form of mixed-income apartments on three blocks near the Liberty is not the kind of development that is in the best interest of the district, its residents or its property owners.

The mayor, though a vocal and active advocate of the redevelopment plan, invoked the time-honored observation that politics is "the art of the possible," and conceded that "at some point this opportunity just became impossible."

A lot of the debate apparently revolves around questions of timing: What did the various players in this drama know, and when did they know it?

Those opposing the BTW contend it is not in line with the city's 2003 Liberty District master plan. There's a question of whether some members of Columbus Council who supported the redevelopment plan knew what was in the 2003 master plan, or even that it existed. Housing Authority Director Len Williams said the redevelopment project has been in the works, and known to some of its present opponents, for two years. If some of the apartments can't be relocated to the city-owned Liberty District land, then where?

Meanwhile, others involved in this have their own perspectives. Liberty Theatre board chairman Robert Anderson, who supports the BTW redevelopment plan, suggested there's more energy involved in blocking the plan than in the Liberty itself: "Everybody seems to be concerned about the theater, but nobody attends it," Anderson said.

And then, of course, there are the people living in the blighted and deteriorating Booker T. Washington complex who just want to know what, if anything, is going change in their lives, and if so, when.

Tomlinson suggests a Liberty District committee with representation from BTW residents. It would be encouraging if something like that could work, because if there's common ground in this standoff, nobody seems to have found it.

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Liberty, BTW plans both now stuck in limbo

Liberty Global receives European Commission nod to acquire Virgin Media

BRUSSELS Europe's biggest cable operator Liberty Global Inc. received the green light Monday for its $22.5 billion acquisition of Virgin Media Inc., the U.K.'s second-largest pay-TV operator, after the European Union said the acquisition raised no competition concerns.

Market analysts said the Virgin Media deal will likely reinforce Douglas County-based Liberty Global's challenge against BSkyB, the U.K.'s top pay-TV provider, owned by Rupert Murdoch. News Corp., which owns The Wall Street Journal, is BSkyB's largest shareholder, with a 39.1 percent stake.

The European Commission, which acts as the EU's antitrust watchdog, said the companies operate cable networks in different EU countries, and that the merged entity would have only a limited market position in the wholesale of TV channels in the U.K. and Ireland.

Liberty Global said the transaction was still subject to majority approval from both shareholders. "The respective shareholder meetings, as well as the closing of the transaction, are expected to occur in the second quarter of 2013," said Marcus Smith, a spokesman for the company.

In its review, the commission said it had looked into the TV content acquisition sector in the U.K., Ireland and the European Economic Area as a whole. It also investigated the vertical link between Liberty Global's activities in the wholesale supply of pay-TV channels, it said.

"It is unlikely that the merged entity would shut out competing TV channel broadcasters from access to the retail Pay-TV market," the commission said in its statement.

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Liberty Global receives European Commission nod to acquire Virgin Media