LOOK UP! The International Space Station flies over Asheville Friday night – WLOS

The International Space Station (ISS) orbits the Earth, and it's visible when it flies over Asheville, if you know where and when to look. (Photo credit: MGN)

The International Space Station (ISS) orbits the Earth, and it's visible when it flies over Asheville, if you know where and when to look.

At 10:42 p.m. on Friday, June 9, 2017 the ISS will fly over Asheville and be visible as it crosses overhead, but only for only a minute. (If you're seeing this story ahead of the flyover, a good way to remember to watch the ISS is to set an alarm on your cell phone.)

If skies are clear in your area, look northwest and wait for the ISS to become visible over the horizon. It will look like a bright, fast-moving star, and will travel overhead and move out of sight into the north-northeast.

The ISS travels at about 17,150 mph if you can believe that, and you can view how many people are aboard it right here.

You can track where the ISS is here. There's even a livecam on the ISS, and you can see what the international astronauts are seeing here.

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LOOK UP! The International Space Station flies over Asheville Friday night - WLOS

From drugs to fruit flies: What SpaceX took to the International Space Station – GeekWire

SpaceX launched the Falcon 9 rocket during the CRS-11 resupply mission on June 3. (SpaceX Photo)

SpaceX impressed the world yet again last week with a flawless ground landing of the Falcon 9 rocket and the fact that it became the first commercial space company to send a vehicle, the Dragon cargo capsule, into orbit twice.

Dragon delivered 6,000 pounds of cargo on its CRS-11 resupply mission to give the astronauts living aboard the International Space Station (ISS) a refresh of supplies in addition to some equipment for scientific research. Here is some of the cargo SpaceX delivered:

1. A bone-rebuilding drug

A common side effect of spending time in space is an osteoporosis diagnosis the weakening of the bones. NASA researchers dont know why, but the phenomenon has been found in both humans and animals in microgravity.

While the astronauts do take measures to prevent bone density loss like exercising for hours a day and taking dietary supplements, there is no known way to get bone density back after its gone.

The Systemic Therapy of NELL-1 for osteoporosis (Rodent Research-5)investigation builds on previous research testing a drug that not only prevents bone loss, but rebuilds it, too. Researchers hope the drug could help millions of people on Earth who suffer from osteoporosis.

The Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) is expected to be fired up on the ISS June 14 to study the composition of neutron stars.

According to Johnson Space Center in a statement, neutron stars are the densest objects in the universe, and contain exotic states of matter that are impossible to replicate in any ground lab. Theyre left behind after a star explodes as a supernova. They emit X-rays that NICER can observe and record.

The Fruit Fly Lab-02 flew to the space station to understand why microgravity causes changes in the heart. According to the statement, reduced gravity can cause changes in heartbeat, total blood volume and lower aerobic capacity.

The fruit flies make good test subjects because they age quickly and have well-understood genetics. Researchers want to use the experiment to make a microgravity heart model to advance further cardiovascular studies and help prevent adverse heart effects from happening in the future.

This new solar panel concept could give power to thrusters on NASA spacecraft headed near the moon or even to Mars.

Traditionally, solar panels are tucked away for launch and unfolded in orbit. The ROSA solar panels are less rigid, roll out like a tape measure and are much lighter and more compact.

In the future, this technology could give more power to commercial communication satellites orbiting Earth, NASA said.

Dragon will leave the ISS and splash back down to Earth in July and return some crew supplies and thousands of pounds worth of experiments.

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From drugs to fruit flies: What SpaceX took to the International Space Station - GeekWire

Great View of the Intl. Space Station – WOODTV.com (blog)


WOODTV.com (blog)
Great View of the Intl. Space Station
WOODTV.com (blog)
There are many views of the International Space Station here in early June. Here's the complete schedule here. Tonight's flyover really stands out. It's at 9:49 pm. We'll still be in twilight. The space station appears halfway up from the horizon to ...

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Great View of the Intl. Space Station - WOODTV.com (blog)

This Dubai-based lensman has rarest photo exhibition… in a space station – Khaleej Times

The five photographs of flowers sent by Dr Hersh Chadha, an Indian national, will now remain displayed in the ISS, making them the first-ever permanent photography exhibition in space.

Ever thought of a photo exhibition in space? A Dubai-based photographer was honoured in Moscow by cosmonauts who returned from the International Space Station (ISS) for sending a series of photographs.

The five photographs of flowers sent by Dr Hersh Chadha, an Indian national, will now remain displayed in the ISS, making them the first-ever permanent photography exhibition in space.

"To me a flower symbolises the beauty of life. Well, I can't give you a flower to take to space but I would like to give these pictures of flowers, that I took from around the world, so that when you look at them, even in space, you get that feeling and truly experience 'your world'.

"It's hard to imagine that three or four people sacrifice their entire lives for humanity and civilisation. What do we give back to them? I wanted to give them a piece of home to take with them," he said in his note to the cosmonauts.

Cosmonaut Sergey Rzhikov was in agreement. "It was a part of the support that we had on board," he said.

It all began more than 15 years ago, when Dr Chadha went to study at Harvard Business School and his fellow student spoke to him about her late father, Stuart Allen Roosa, who was the Command Module Pilot for the Apollo 14 mission.

Dr Chadha was inspired by him and wanted to send his pictures to space. He kept trying till Col Valery Korzun, the chief for the first administration of Cosmonaut Training Centre from Star City in Moscow, arranged for five of his pictures of flowers to be taken to space last year.

"I think I achieved what I wanted. Finally five of my pictures are at the ISS. I want to share my happiness with people so that they can keep pursuing their dream, even if it takes 15 years to come true," said Dr Chadha.

Along with the five photographs, Dr Chadha had sent his book, Visions of Nature, published by Assouline Inc., as a gift for the training centre.

Col Valery Korzun said: "It is a very beautiful book with wonderful pictures taken by a real photo artist, and it is you. Your book will be used as a training manual for taking pictures of the earth from the ISS by the cosmonauts."

Dr Chadha gave a hard disk containing 500 photographs to be used for their training manual.

reporters@khaleejtimes.com

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Will Mini Fusion Rockets Provide Spaceflight’s Next Big Leap? – Space.com

Artist's illustration of a fusion-driven rocket powering a spacecraft to Mars. The company Princeton Satellite Systems is working to develop small fusion drives that could make such missions a reality.

Fusion-powered rockets that are only the size of a few refrigerators could one day help propel spacecraft at high speeds to nearby planets or even other stars, a NASA-funded spaceflight company says.

Another use for such fusion rockets is to deflect asteroids that might strike Earth and to build manned bases on the moon and Mars, the researchers say.

Rockets fly by hurling materials known as propellants away from them. Conventional rockets that rely on chemical reactions are not very efficient when it comes to how much thrust they generate, given the amount of propellant they carry, which has led rocket scientists to explore a variety of alternatives over the years. [Superfast Spacecraft Propulsion Concepts (Images)]

An option now used in spacecraft is the ion drive, which generates thrust by using electricity to accelerate electrically charged ion propellants. Ion drives are far more efficient than chemical rockets, but are limited by the amount of electricity they can harvest via solar panels or generate using radioactive materials.

Instead of chemical rockets or ion drives, scientists have also suggested using fusion rockets propelled by the same nuclear reactions that power stars. These rockets would not only be efficient, but also generate vast amounts of electricity.

However, so far, no one has built a fusion reactor that generates more energy than it consumes. Moreover, the fusion reactors that are under development are huge, making them difficult to hoist into space.

But now, researchers funded by NASA are developing small fusion rockets.

"It's technology that enables really interesting robotic and human missions to Mars and Pluto, and it is also potentially a way of getting into interstellar space," said Michael Paluszek, president of Princeton Satellite Systems in Plainsboro, New Jersey.

The large fusion reactors under development today, such as the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), usually strive to generate hundreds of megawatts of power. In contrast, Paluszek and his colleagues at Princeton Satellite Systems are designing reactors meant to produce only a dozen megawatts or so. This humbler goal results in a smaller, lighter reactor that is easier to build and launch into space "for practical robotic and human missions," Paluszek said.

In addition, these small fusion reactors are much cheaper than larger devices. Paluszek noted that, whereas modern fusion experiments might cost $20 billion, a prototype fusion rocket the researchers plan to develop should cost just $20 million. So far, they have received three NASA grants to fund the project, he said.

The aim for the fusion drives is to get about 1 kilowatt of power per 2.2 lbs. (1 kilogram) of mass. A 10-megawatt fusion rocket would therefore weigh about 11 tons (10 metric tons).

"It would probably be 1.5 meters [4.9 feet] in diameter and 4 to 8 meters [13 to 26 feet] long," Paluszek said.

Nuclear fusion requires extremely high temperatures and pressures to force atoms to fuse, a process that converts some of the mass of the atoms into energy. The fusion reactors that Princeton Satellite Systems is developing uses low-frequency radio waves to heat a mix of deuterium and helium-3, and magnetic fields to confine the resulting plasma in a ring. (Deuterium is made of hydrogen atoms that each have an extra neutron; helium-3 is made of helium atoms, each of which is missing a neutron; and plasma is the state of matter found in stars, lightning bolts and neon lights.)

As this plasma rotates in a ring, some of it can spiral out and get directed from the fusion rocket's nozzle for thrust. "We can get very high exhaust velocities of up to about 25,000 kilometers per second [55.9 million mph]," Paluszek said.

The large amounts of thrust this fusion rocket may deliver compared to its mass could enable very fast spacecraft. For instance, whereas round-trip crewed missions to Mars are estimated to take more than two years using current technology, the researchers estimated that six 5-megawatt fusion rockets could accomplish such missions in 310 days. This extra speed would reduce the risks of radiation that astronauts might experience from the sun or deep space, as well as dramatically cut the amount of food, water and other supplies they would need to bring with them.

In addition, the fusion reactors could also help generate ample electricity for scientific instruments and communications devices. For instance, whereas NASA's New Horizons mission took more than nine years to get to Pluto and had little more than 200 watts of power to work with once it arrived, broadcasting about 1,000 bits of data back per second, a 1-megawatt fusion rocket could get a robotic mission to Pluto in four years, supply 2 million watts of power and broadcast more than 1 million bits of data back per second, Paluszek said. Such a mission could also carry a lander to Pluto and power it by beaming down energy, he added.

"With the amount of power fusion rockets can provide, you can think of science that can't be done now with other technologies, such as powering a lander to drill through the ice on Jupiter's moon Europa," Paluszek said.

A 10-megawatt fusion rocket could also deflect an asteroid about 525 feet (160 m) in diameter coming at Earth, spending about 200 days to travel there and 23 days nudging it off course, Paluszek said. Fusion rockets could even enable an interstellar voyage to the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri, although the trip might take 500 to 700 years, he said. (Alpha Centauri lies about 4.3 light-years from the sun.) [Gallery: Visions of Interstellar Starship Travel]

Previous research suggested this kind of fusion rocket in the 1960s, but the designs proposed for them would not stably confine the plasmas, Paluszek said. About 10 years ago, reactor designer Sam Cohen figured out a magnetic-field design "that could make stable plasmas," Paluszek explained.

One drawback of the kind of nuclear reactor that Princeton Satellite Systems is developing is that radio waves do not penetrate deeply into plasma. "We're limited to something like 10 meters [33 feet] in diameter," Paluszek said. To generate large amounts of power with this strategy, the researchers have to rely on multiple reactors.

Another pitfall is that, while this fusion reactor generates less deadly neutron radiation than most fusion reactors under development, it still does produce some neutrons, as well as X-rays. "Radiation shielding is key," Paluszek said.

In addition, helium-3 is rare on Earth. Still, it is possible to generate helium-3 using nuclear reactors, Paluszek said.

Princeton Satellite Systems is not alone in pursuing small fusion reactors. For instance, Paluszek noted that Helion Energy in Redmond, Washington, also intends to fuse deuterium and helium-3, while Tri Alpha Energy in Foothill Ranch, California, aims to fuse boron and protons.

"Fusion can enable new and exciting science missions that are too expensive and difficult to do with today's technology," Paluszek said.

The researchers have not yet demonstrated fusion with their device, but aim to do so by 2019 to 2020. Paluszek detailed his company's research June 3 at The Dawn of Private Space Science Symposium in New York.

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

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Will Mini Fusion Rockets Provide Spaceflight's Next Big Leap? - Space.com

MIT students studying mission to asteroid Apophis – SpaceFlight Insider

Bart Leahy

June 10th, 2017

Artists impression of the asteroid Apophis approaching the Earth. Image Credit: Dan Durda FIAAA

Apophis, an asteroid the size of an aircraft carrier, will make a close approach to Earth in 2029. It will come withinapproximately 18,300 miles (29,500kilometers), less than one-tenththe distance from Earth to the Moon. A group of students from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is designing a mission to study that asteroid up close as it passes by.

The good news is, according to NASAs Center for Near Earth Objects, Apophis is not going to strike Earth in 2029, but having a rock that big and that close is too good an opportunity not to study. The student mission, called Surface Evaluation & Tomography (or SET), is designed to investigate:

Possible positions of 2004 MN4 (Apophis) on April 13, 2029. (Click to enlarge) Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

A group of 20 students is designing the SET mission as part of a space systems engineering course. The first slide in one student presentationreads: Mission Motivation: Apophis is coming!

The name Apophis comes from Egyptian mythology and is the god of chaos and evil. Appropriately enough, Set is the god sent to thwart him. A rock the size of Apophis would, indeed, bring a lot of chaos were it to crash into Earth.

The engineering class is being led by Professor of planetary sciences Richard Binzel, along with David Miller, the Jerome C. Hunsaker Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics,who recently returned to MIT after serving as chief technologist for NASA. Binzel, who also led a student project to build an instrument for OSIRIS-REx, and Miller challenged their students to build a major science robotics mission combining planetary defense with scientific learning.

The students proposed design would operate using primarily proven, off-the-shelf hardware, including the spacecraft bus (Orbital ATK LEOStar3, which flew on Dawn and Deep Space 1) solar panels, and instruments. The instruments would include heritage hardware from New Horizons (LORRI), OSIRIS-REx (RALPH), Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (SHARAD), and Lucy (TES).

Earlier in the semester, the students performed a System Requirements Review (SRR) and Preliminary Design Review, leading up to their high-powered Critical Design Review, which was attended by officials from NASA Headquarters as well as engineers from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).

To reach Apophis in time for rendezvous, a spacecraft would have to launch in August 2026. The objective of the orbital mission is to get closeenough to Apophisto conduct measurements before, during, and after the 2029 event.

The student-designed mission is the first significant attempt to study Apophis from space, in part because asteroid defense is not precisely NASAs responsibility. Millersays,That kind of falls between the cracks at NASA.

The SET mission, like the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft that will orbit the asteroid Bennu later this decade, could teach scientists more about the construction of asteroids, which were some of the early building blocks of the Solar System. New information could lead to a deeper understanding of the formation of the Solar Systemand planets in other star systems.

The primary importance of the SET mission would be to improve human knowledge about close-approaching asteroids with the hope of learning how to defend against them. The bad news is that this exciting, student-driven study is not being funded by NASA or any other space agency yet.

Binzel hopes Project Apophis will serve as a kickstarter, with the goal being to encourage NASA Centers and major contractors to consider their own response, perhaps basing formal funding proposals closely following the student design. Apophis is coming so close that Earths gravity is going to tug and redirect its path. The Earth is going to give it a big thunk.

When asked if there were plans to submit SET as a formal proposal to NASA, student team member Alissa Earle told Spaceflight Insider:Right now we are mostly focused on getting the idea out there to get the scientific community thinking about how to take advantage of this once per 1,000-year opportunity. Whether it ultimately ends up looking like the SET Mission or something completely different, the most important thing is that we find a way to effectively watch and learn from this natural experiment.

Even if the mission does not become a reality, this mission-design experience has been a useful learning experience for Earle and the rest of her MIT classmates: For me, it was really interesting to see the starting steps of how missions get designed and to work with the engineering students. We all wanted to design a really great mission but the scientists and engineers approached the problem from different directions. This class offered a great opportunity to [] see how a mission goes from a vague idea (we should send a spacecraft to study Apophis) to a mission design (like the SET Mission).

Tagged: Apophis Asteroids Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT planetary defense The Range

Bart Leahy is a freelance technical writer living in Orlando, Florida. Leahy's diverse career has included work for The Walt Disney Company, NASA, the Department of Defense, Nissan, a number of commercial space companies, small businesses, nonprofits, as well as the Science Cheerleaders.

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MIT students studying mission to asteroid Apophis - SpaceFlight Insider

3 CubeSats win rides on 1st flight of NASA’s SLS – SpaceFlight Insider – SpaceFlight Insider

Jim Sharkey

June 9th, 2017

From left to right: NASA Associate Administrator of the Space Technology Mission Directorate Steve Jurczyk, Benjamin Fried of teamCU-E3, Kyle Doyle of teamCislunar Explorers, Wesley Faler of Team Miles, and NASA Ames Research Center Director Eugene Tu. Photo Credit: Dominic Hart / NASA

On Thursday, June 8, NASA announced the three winning teams of the semi-final round of the space agencys Cube Quest Challenge. In addition to winning $20,000 each in prize money, the three teams have also secured spots to launch their spacecraft on Exploration Mission-1 (EM-1) the first flight of NASAs Space Launch System (SLS) with the Orion spacecraft.

The CubeSats will be placed in the Orion Stage Adapter, the ring that connects the spacecraft to the SLS rocket, and deployed after Orion separates from SLS and begins its journey into deep space. The adapteris capable of carrying a total of 13 CubeSats. Once deployed, they will compete in deep space for a share of a $5 million prize in the final stage of the Cube Quest Challenge.

The three teams are the following:

We are delighted in the profound achievements of these teams, said Steve Jurczyk, STMD associate administrator. Each team has pushed the boundaries of technology and innovation. Now, its time to take this competition into space and may the best CubeSat win.

According to NASA, the final phase of the Cube Quest Challenge comprises two portions: the Deep Space Derby and the Lunar Derby. In the Deep Space Derby, teams must demonstrate communications from a range of at least 2.5 million miles (four million kilometers), which is more than 10 times the distance from the Earth to the Moon. The Lunar Derby requires teams to achieve a lunar orbit and compete for near-Earth communications and longevity achievements. Prizes will be awarded for orbiting the Moon, communicating the fastest and farthest, and surviving the longest.

EM-1 is currently scheduled to launch in late 2019. The Deep Space and Lunar derbies will conclude one year after the CubeSats are deployed.

Opening our first SLS test flight beyond the Moon to citizen inventors and the scientific community creates a rare opportunity for these small spacecraft to reach deep space, said Bill Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for NASAs Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate. These CubeSat-class payloads are expanding our ability to explore by demonstrating affordable and innovative capabilities relevant to future deep space missions.

The Cube Quest Challenge is part of NASAs Centennial Challenges program. The challenge is managed at NASAs Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California.

SLS secondary payloads infographic. Image Credit: NASA

Tagged: Cube Quest Challenge EM-1 NASA Space Launch System The Range

Jim Sharkey is a lab assistant, writer and general science enthusiast who grew up in Enid, Oklahoma, the hometown of Skylab and Shuttle astronaut Owen K. Garriott. As a young Star Trek fan he participated in the letter-writing campaign which resulted in the space shuttle prototype being named Enterprise. While his academic studies have ranged from psychology and archaeology to biology, he has never lost his passion for space exploration. Jim began blogging about science, science fiction and futurism in 2004. Jim resides in the San Francisco Bay area and has attended NASA Socials for the Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover landing and the NASA LADEE lunar orbiter launch.

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3 CubeSats win rides on 1st flight of NASA's SLS - SpaceFlight Insider - SpaceFlight Insider

A Single Mutation Is Responsible For Gingers Burning in the Sun – Inverse

Summers coming which means red heads everywhere are cringing at the prospect of their skin frying from the sun.

Sure, most everyone regardless of hair color burns. Even people who never burn build up mutations in their skin when they tan; after all, tanning is the human bodys direct response to mutations triggered by ultraviolet radiation.

But redheads are in extra danger, thanks to a strange quirk of genetics.

One mutation in the gene that regulates pigmentation gives their hair that vivid color and sprinkles them with freckles, while also damaging their skins ability to protect itself from the suns harsh UV.

Sherrif Ibrahim, a dermatologist and skin cancer expert at the University of Rochester Medical Center, said that, thanks to that mutation, the cells in the skin of redheads do a bad job communicating with each other.

Heres how that communication mess-up occurs: Everyone has two main types of cells in their skin: keratinocytes and melanocytes. Most of the cells are keratinocytes, which have little in the way of natural defenses against UV. They rely on melanocytes, which dump a protective pigment melanin into their neighbors when their neighbors call for help: Were mutating! Were mutating!

In most folks, that process works pretty well, Ibrahim said.

Imagine the finger of the melanocyte extends and knocks on the door of the keratinocyte, he said. The keratinocyte has to open up a hole in its membrane to let the melanin in. It knows to do that thanks to a very specific [signal] receptor called the melanocortin 1 receptor.

But redheads have a mutation to the gene that builds the melanocortin 1 receptor, or MC1R. When the genes in their skin start to mutate under a blast of UV radiation, their protective tanning response breaks down.

Those mutations build up until cells give up on surviving the brief flash of DNA damage and kill themselves to protect that damage from spreading throughout the body.

And thats what we call a sunburn.

But sunburns arent very effective at scouring your body of mutated cells. Some damaged DNA survives which is a big reason why redheads, who only account for one or two percent of the population, account for a full 16 percent of melanoma. Slather up!

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A Single Mutation Is Responsible For Gingers Burning in the Sun - Inverse

Watch Live Sunday @ 9:04 pm ET: NASA Launching Rocket to Create Artificial Clouds – Space.com

By SPACE.com Staff | June 9, 2017 06:20pm ET

A small NASA rocket will launch to create colorful artificial clouds Sunday night (June 11) at 9:04 p.m. EDT (0104 GMT on Monday), and you can watch all the action live here at Space.com. Coverage begins at 8:30 p.m. EDT (0030 GMT Monday).

You can also watch the liftoff, which will take place from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia, at the Wallops Ustream site: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/nasa-tv-wallops

From NASA:

"The window for a NASA Terrier-Improved Malemute sounding rocket launch to test a new ampoule ejection system designed to support studies of the ionosphere and aurora opens June 11 and runs through June 18. Lift-off for a June 11 launch is scheduled between 9:04 and 9:19 p.m. EDT. "NASA has two ground stations at Wallops and Duck, N.C. to view blue-green and red artificial clouds that will be produced as part of the test. Clear skies are required at one of the two ground stations for this test. "The multi-canister ampoule ejection system flying on this mission will allow scientists to gather information over a much larger area than previously able. Canisters will deploy between 4 and 5.5 minutes after launch releasing blue-green and red vapor to form artificial clouds. These clouds, or vapor tracers, allow scientists on the ground to visually track particle motions in space. "The clouds may be visible along the mid-Atlantic coastline from New York to North Carolina. "The NASA Visitor Center at Wallops will open at 8 p.m. on launch day for viewing the flight. "Live coverage of the mission is scheduled to begin at 8:30 p.m. on the Wallops Ustream site. Launch updates also are available via the Wallops Facebook and Twitter sites."

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Watch Live Sunday @ 9:04 pm ET: NASA Launching Rocket to Create Artificial Clouds - Space.com

ASAP on board with NASA’s DSG as stepping stone to Mars – NASASpaceflight.com

June 9, 2017 by Chris Bergin

NASAs major push towards building a new outpost near the Moon has received encouraging words from its key safety advisory body. NASAs Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP) was told the build up of the outpost in the 2020s represented anambitious, forward-looking and credible plan that has both agency and political support. DSG:

NASA has been realigning its exploration plan to involve a Deep Space Gateway (DSG) over recent months, somewhat moving priority away from sending crews out to explore Near Earth Asteroids (NEA) which has only received lukewarm interest from NASAs political paymasters.

This interim step in the overall exploration roadmap will involve a number of the 2020s missions involving NASAs new heavy-lift launch rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS).

SLS still needs to conduct its test flights, which are going to receive officially realigned launch dates in the coming weeks following the decision not to modify Exploration Mission -1 (EM-1) to a crewed flight.

Although the opening two missions have returned to their previous plan, the dates are still going to later than originally advertised, with a NET (No Earlier Than) August 2019 for EM-1 and June 2022 for EM-2on the current internal schedule.

The large gap between the opening two missions is unavoidable per NASA direction, with EM-1 launching on the Block 1 SLS, before major changes especially to the Mobile Launcher (ML) are conducted for the larger Block 1B SLS.

*Click here for more SLS News Articles*

The Block 1B, however, will be NASAs HLV workhorse, providing an upmass capability not seen since the Saturn V days. It will also be capable of an array of missions thanks to its powerful Exploration Upper Stage (EUS).

Providing her with missions that utilizethe power of the rocket, while also progressing on the stepping stones towards Mars missions, has resulted in numerous studies that have changed numerous times.

The latest, and fast becoming a favored approach from both within NASA and political circles involves the DSG. This plan is a partial throwback to the L2 Gateway that gained interest at NASA in 2011.

Its first major public overview of the new plan cameviathe NASA Advisory Council (NAC), where Bill Gerstenmaier, Associate Administrator for NASAs Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate (HEOMD), presented the NAC with the agencys Deep Space Gateway and Transport Plan.

This phased approach ties in current NASA exploration goals, which includes the wealth of knowledge being gained into long-duration human space flight on the International Space Station (ISS).

At the very top level, NASAs plan involves using the ISS now, operating near the Moon in the 2020s, and then leaving the Earth-Moon system and reaching Mars orbit after 2030, noted the ASAP minutes from the bodys latest meeting.

The more detailed plan contains four different phases. Phase 0 involves continuing research and testing on ISS to solve exploration challenges, evaluating the potential for the use of lunar resources, and developing standards.

Advancing the work already conducted, NASA will leverage its own goals with commercial partnerships, with NASA expected to publish individual documents for each system, such as environmental control and life support, power, data, storage, etc., that would contain voluntary standards rather than requirements, with the hope that both international and industry partners would be able to develop hardware and software that could easily be incorporated into the overall architecture, per the overview to the ASAP.

Phase 1 will take place in the 2020s, when NASA undertakes missions to cislunar space for construction efforts of the DSG. By this time commercial partners will be onboard, providing elements of the DSG to be launched on SLS missions. The stock in Cislunar has risen over recent years, with the United Launch Alliance (ULA) and others working on large-scale plans to commercialize this region of space.

In terms of basic functionality, the DSG is being planned to support multiple NASA, commercial, and international objectives, added the overview. It would be designed for the deep space environment and would support a crew of 4 for total mission durations of up to 42 days with the Orion vehicle attached.

It would include a power and propulsion bus and a habitat, and would incorporate a logistics strategy that could involve cargo resupply or crew transportation flights by industry or international partners, such as what is done now for the ISS.

However, it would not be of the size nor complexity of the ISS, with an intent to keep it simple. The entire DSG could be launched on three SLS Block 1B missions over three years, according to the latest overview.

Phase 2 will see the construction of the Deep Space Transport (DST) and its subsequent shakedown and verification.

Phase 1 marks the beginning of missions in cislunar space, including building the DSG and initiating assembly of the Deep Space Transport (DST), added the minutes. Phase 2 involves completion of the DST and conduct of a year-long, Mars-simulation mission sometimes called a shakedown cruise in 2029.

This is where the DSG effort directly benefits missions to Mars, with this stepping stone providing the tools to naturally progress to the major challenge of sending humans to the Red Planet.

The DST element of the DSG will have Mars in mind, potentially be used for the human missions to the vicinity of Mars such as the touted Mars flyby mission and could be a hybrid system with chemical propulsion for Mars gravity-well capture and departure, and SEP (Solar Electric Power) for the rest, per the overview to the ASAP.

This would potentially eliminate the need for a pre-deployed propulsion system at Mars for crew return. The DST would be designed for 3 Mars-class missions of about 1000 days each with a crew of 4, launched on a single SLS Block 1B vehicle. The thinking is that it could be refueled, resupplied, and have at least a minimal outfitting performed in cislunar space.

Phases 3 and 4 would involve the beginning of sustained crew expeditions to the Martian system and to the surface of Mars, with a mission to Mars orbit in 2033.

The usually conservative ASAP noted that while it encouraged NASA to start doing more detailed planning for exploration related launches post EM-2, seeing that now with the kind of system design and engineering trade studies that are being conducted was pleasing.

The Panel acknowledged a lot of progress (has been made) and believes NASA is on the right track. (And that) while the timelines on some of this may seem lengthy, when one considers all of the technical challenges that need to be addressed and the constraints on resources, NASA appears to have a very credible plan going forward.

(Images: NASA and L2 artist Nathan Koga The full gallery of Nathans (SpaceX Dragon to MCT, SLS, Commercial Crew and more) L2 images can be *found here*))

(To Join L2, Click Here:https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/l2/)

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ASAP on board with NASA's DSG as stepping stone to Mars - NASASpaceflight.com

Palazzo applauds NASA focus on planets – Jackson Clarion Ledger

Ledyard King and Deborah Barfield Berry, USA TODAY NETWORK 4:51 p.m. CT June 9, 2017

Rep. Steven Palazzo, R-Miss., right, questions NASA administrator Robert Lighfoot Thursday about space programs.(Photo: Deborah Barfield Berry/USA TODAY)

WASHINGTON Rep. Steven Palazzo praisedNASA's moveaway from studying the Earth andinstead focusingresources on the rest of the universe.

During a House Appropriations Committee hearing Thursday, the Mississippi Republican applauded the agency for proposing to eliminate five Earth science missions designed to measure a number of global warming factors such as ocean ecosystems and carbon levels. President Trump's proposedbudget also would cut fundingfor Earth research grants and would terminate the Carbon Monitoring System, a project that NASA developed in 2010 in response to congressional direction.

Republicans, including Palazzo, have long complainedthe Obama administration diverted too many of NASAs limited resources pursuing climate change data when other agencies were conducting similar inquiries.

I do think its important to be focusing on planetary sciences,Palazzo said at a hearing Thursday ofthe House Appropriations subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies. Looking out theres already over a dozen agencies that study our Earth, but theres only one agency tasked with space exploration and thats NASA."

With limited funds, flat funding and budgets, I think our resources are better spent exploring the deep space," he said.

Not that NASA is getting out of the business of Earth science completely.

Acting NASA administrator Robert Lightfoot told two House committeesThursday there are 20 other Earth science missions NASAstill plans to conduct.

Theres a lot of analog to learning about Earth and how it plays with the other planets because Earth is a planet as well and how Earth evolves we learn a lot. on what can happen to Mars, what can happen to Venus," Lightfoot told Palazzo during an afternoon hearing. There is a value for us in learning about Earth as well. But I understand your point."

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Trump's NASA budget preserves Mars mission, cuts Earth science, asteroid trip, education

Rep. Steven Palazzo joins ceremony to sign a NASA bill

Palazzo to push moon mission

In March, Palazzo, former chairman of the House Space Subcommittee, joined other lawmakers at the White House when Trump signed a $19.5 billion billto fund NASA programs. Palazzo, whosedistrict is home to Stennis Space Center,was instrumental in helping craft the bill.

Palazzo,who has pushed for a return-to-the-moon mission,questioned Lightfoot Thursday about whether the nation could put a man back on the moon and eventually Mars.

Lightfoot said the agencys goal of sending a humanto Mars by 2033 remains on track despite concerns raised about future funding and independent assessments that suggest such a mission is unlikely without a sizable, long-term increase in funding.

Its kind of a stepping-stone approach," he said.

Lightfoot told lawmakers the $3.9 billion in the budget proposal for human exploration would allow NASA to continue developing its two key pieces of hardware: the Orion vehicle that will carry astronauts into deep space and the Space Launch System rocket that Orion will ride on past the moon and towardMars.

Both systemsare scheduled to be tested: first, in an uncrewed flight in 2019, then with astronauts into lunar orbit, no later than 2023.

The budget we proposed has got the systems we need in 2018 to keep making the progress we think we need, Lightfoottold members of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee.

But some Republicans had issues with the proposal, including Hal Rogers of Kentucky, who questioned the elimination of the education office when Lightfoot came before members of theAppropriations subcommittee.

The education programshopefully have been spreading the word about NASAs (accomplishments), Rogers told Lightfoot. Icant understand why you would want to cut that."

The administrator said NASA is trying to weave education outreach and promote space careers into other areas.

I dontdeny that the (education) programs have been pretty successful for us but we felt like in the balance of things we could do this more effectively in a different way, he said.

Follow Deborah Barfield Berry on Twitter at @dberrygannett.

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Palazzo applauds NASA focus on planets - Jackson Clarion Ledger

NASA Just Gave Us 10 Good Reasons to Hunt For Near-Earth Asteroids – ScienceAlert

Our Solar System suddenly feels a little more cluttered, with NASA's Near-Earth Objectmission having just released a year's worth of survey data, putting a bunch of new space rocks on our radar.

Most of the asteroids, comets, and general clumps of cosmic dandruff are too far away to be considered a threat to our planet, but NASA will be sure to keep a close eye on 10 objects that thinks could be big and near enough to be considered a hazard.

As the name suggests, NASA's Near-Earth Orbit Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (NEOWISE) is an orbiting telescope that looks for objects in our Solar System with orbits that could bring them close to our planet.

In 2010, NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer spacecraft ran low on coolant for its telescope, so researchers scaled down the mission to scan the skies closer to home rather than looking all over the cosmos.

After entering a brief two-year nap in 2011, the spacecraft was reactivated, and has since characterised a total of 693 near-Earth objects. Of those, 114 had never been seen before.

This past year alone, NEOWISE has discovered 5 new comets, 64 main belt asteroids, and 28 near-Earth objects.

It found these by using its low infra-red bandwidth telescope to snap 2.6 million images of the sky.

A new technique called tail-fitting has now allowed researchers to use the database of images to model comet behaviour as they sweep through the Solar System.

"Comets that have abrupt outbursts are not commonly found, but this may be due more to the sudden nature of the activity rather than their inherent rarity," says Emily Kramerfrom NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California.

"It is great for astronomers to view and collect cometary data when they find an outburst, but since the activity is so short-lived, we may simply miss them most of the time."

To get some idea of the total number of objects out there, take a look at the video clip below, which shows the orbits of asteroids in grey, near-Earth objects in green, and comets in yellow:

But what about those 10 potentially hazardous asteroids (PHA)? Is it time to invest in silver and wait out the fireball in grandpa's bunker?

PHAs are classified as asteroids that have a minimum orbit intersection distance of 0.05 astronomical units (1 AU is the distance from Earth to the Sun, so 0.05 AU is about 7.5 million kilometres, or 4.6 million miles).

They also must be big enough to have an absolute magnitude of 22 or brighter, which would make them bigger than 140 metres (around 500 feet) in size, assuming they were reflective enough.

So far, we know of 1,806 of these objects, and while some will give us a close shave in coming years, none seem to be destined for our backyard.

Don't upset grandpa any time soon, though - a team of astronomers from the Czech Academy of Sciences think the risk of being hit with a big rock in coming years is growing.

Their conclusions are based on an analysis of 144 meteors from the Taurid meteor showers that have hit our atmosphere and exploded, also commonly called bolides.

Along with the comet Encke, the Taurids are thought to be the remains of an even bigger comet that has been disintegrating over the past 20,000 to 30,000 years.

The researchers claim they have detected a new branch of debris, one that they suspect holds at least two asteroids between 200 and 300 metres (about 650 and 1,000 feet) in size.

"Most probably, the branch also includes many undetected asteroids which are dozens of metres in diameter or larger," the Czech academy said in a press release.

"Hence, the danger of a crash with an asteroid grows markedly once every few years that the Earth encounters this stream of inter-planetary material."

The researchers noted that the asteroids they observed that were larger than 300 grams (about 10.5 ounces) were extremely fragile.

Not that a fragile 300-metre-wide rock ploughing through out atmosphere isn't at least some cause for concern.

As usual, the message is we need to keep our eyes peeled and keep track of the things orbiting the Sun with us. Because it's not like we have any big plans in case one takes us by surprise.

Thanks, NEOWISE! Let's hope this next year is another productive one.

The Taurids meteor research was published in Astronomy and Astrophysics.

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NASA Just Gave Us 10 Good Reasons to Hunt For Near-Earth Asteroids - ScienceAlert

Of 18000 astronaut applicants, NASA picked 12. One is from Miami. – Miami Herald


Miami Herald
Of 18000 astronaut applicants, NASA picked 12. One is from Miami.
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Of 18000 astronaut applicants, NASA picked 12. One is from Miami. - Miami Herald

Here is what you need to know about nanotechnology – Born2Invest

The size of a nanometer is approximately one one-millionth of a millimeter, and thats the scale at which nanotechnology is slowly starting a revolution.

Nanotechnology represents the manipulation of matter on an atomic molecular and supermolecular scale. The size of a nanometer is approximately one one-millionth of a millimeter, and thats the scale at which nanotechnology is slowly starting a revolution.

Have you ever wanted to know more about this extraordinary and emerging technology? Here are some of the revolutionary facts about nanotechnology that might interest you:

First the good news: nanomaterials have already been proven to be very effective at cleaning soil, water, and to some extent the air, and theres still more work to be done particularly in the field of green energy. The bad news: like all new ventures we dont know the long-term health impact of nanotechnologies. Nanoparticles are just so tiny that there is a potential for them to accumulate in plants and microorganisms, so nobody is sure yet what breathing in a lung full of nanoscopic particles would do to our health.

We are all familiar with 3D printers, but personal nano factories will be far more advanced. Theoretically, as soon as we can build one fabricatora nanomachine that assembles individual molecules into useful shapesthat fabricator could build more of itself and they could assemble themselves into larger and larger machines. Nanotech theorists think that these machines could build computer processors so small and efficient that laptops could house literally billions of CPUs, making them exponentially more powerful than todays computers.

This nanotech revolution is starting to sound like a paradise, but if we can build all the non-edible consumer goods we need, and nano factories enable massive gains and efficiency in every sector of society, then just what will we do for work? Granted, economies have restructured with the advent of new technologies before. But couple that level of unrest with nano factories ability to manufacture extremely powerful and complex robotic weapons, and the nanotech revolution suddenly becomes a nightmare.

According to some experts, nanotechnology will completely disrupt the economy. (Source)

Its hard to argue against technologies that will prolong human life, and this is probably the most exciting area of nanotechnology. The holy grail of nanomedicine is nanobots that swim through your bloodstream patrolling for tumors, arterial clogs, or other dangerous abnormalities. Those things are still a long way away, but in the meantime, scientists are using nanoparticles in multiple ways like targeted delivery vehicles for cancer medications. Scientists from MIT recently proved that its possible to insert nano factories into the body to manufacture drugs on demand at specific sites. Who knows, in the future, curing cancer could be as simple as getting a shot.

SEE ALSO From Underwear Nightmare to Promising Enterprise

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Here is what you need to know about nanotechnology - Born2Invest

Nanotechnology Helps Expose Workings of Bacterial ‘Machines’ – AZoNano

Written by AZoNanoJun 9 2017

Researchers at the University of Liverpool have probed the structure and material properties of protein mechanisms in bacteria, which have the ability to change carbon dioxide into sugar through photosynthesis. Details of this research have been published in the journal Nanoscale.

This is an illustration of a carboxysome. (Credit: Dr Luning Liu, University of Liverpool)

Cyanobacteria are a phylum of bacteria that yield energy and oxygen during photosynthesis, akin to green plants. They are among the most plentiful organisms in fresh water and oceans. Unique internal machines in cyanobacteria, known as carboxysomes allow the organisms to transform carbon dioxide to sugar and provide impacts on universal biomass production and the environment.

Carboxysomes are nanoscale polyhedral structures that are made up of different types of enzymes and proteins. So far, little is known about these 'machines' that are constructed and maintain their organization to perform carbon fixation activity.

Structure in nature

A team of Researchers from the Universitys Institute of Integrative Biology, led by Royal Society University Research Fellow Dr Luning Liu, examined in depth the native structure and mechanical stiffness of carboxysomes using advanced microscopes and biochemical techniques.

For the first time, the Researchers were successful in biochemically purifying active carboxysomes from cyanobacteria and characterizing their carbon fixation activity and protein composition. They then used atomic force microscopy and electron microscopy to visualize the morphology and internal protein organization of these bacterial machines.

Moreover, the complex mechanical properties of the 3D structures were established for the first time. Though structurally close to polyhedral viruses, carboxysomes were discovered to be a lot softer and structurally flexible, which is associated to their formation dynamics and regulation in bacteria.

Its exciting that we can make the first contact with these nano-structures and understand how they are self-organised and shaped using state-of-the-art techniques available at the University. Our findings provide new clues about the relationship between the structure and functionality of native carboxysomes.

Dr Luning Liu, Research Fellow, Royal Society University

Nanomaterial engineering

The self-assembly and modularity characteristics of carboxysomes make them fascinating systems for Nanoscientists, Bioengineers, and Synthetic Biologists, who aim to discover ways to design new nano-bioreactors and nanomaterials.

Were now just starting to understand how these bacterial machines are built and work in nature. Our long-term vision is to harness the knowledge to make further steps towards better design and engineering of bio-inspired machines. The knowledge and techniques can be extended to other biological machines.

Dr Luning Liu, Research Fellow, Royal Society University

The project was conducted in partnership with Professor Rob Beynon at the Centre for Proteome Research and the Centre for Cell Imaging and funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and a Royal Society University Research Fellowship.

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Nanotechnology Helps Expose Workings of Bacterial 'Machines' - AZoNano

Can this nano-particle turn into gold standard Big C treatment? – Hindu Business Line

Aravind Kumar Rengan... working for affordable cancer treatment

An IIT-Hyderabad Scientist has developed a liposome core with gold coating with therapeutic, imaging applications

They are small, but potent enough to kill cancerous cells.

An IIT-Hyderabad scientist has successfully engineered biodegradable nano-particles that can be delivered to tumour sites either to kill the cancer cells or image them.

In animal trials, the liposome a minute spherical sac of phospholipid molecules enclosing a water droplet, especially formed artificially to carry drugs or other substances into tissues core with gold-coated nano (thinner than the human hair) particles have been successful in killing cancerous cells without any side-effects. Results have been positive in treating the tumours, especially in breast cancer and fibro sarcoma, says Aravind Kumar Rengan of the IITH, who started his work in 2010 during his stint at IIT- Mumbai. His work won him the the Indian National Science Academy, Young Scientist Award 2017.

The INSA citation reads: This research through which he was able to engineer a biodegradable nano-system for photothermal therapy of cancer and proved its in-vivo biodegradability, has got immense translational potential and can be used to treat cancer in an affordable way with minimal side-effects.

At present, there is only one other similar delivery system in the world at the Rice University in the US. Researchers there use silica core coated with gold nano-particles. The USFDA-approved particles of 100 nanometres have gone into human trials now, after sustained progress since 2008, says Aravind Kumar.

Silica and gold are non-biodegradable and do not get excreted by the kidney. Therefore, they can be only therapeutic agents. In contrast, the liposome core with gold coating developed by us gets excreted by the kidney, and hence has the potential for both therapeutic and imaging applications, he explains.

The currently used imaging techniques are X-Ray or MRI and CT scans where gadolinium and iodoform are used as image contrast material. Once more work is done, our nano-particle can be used as a clinically viable imaging agent, he claims.

The research work by Aravind Kumar, Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering at IIT-Hyderabad, was published in the Journal of Nanoscale and ACS Nano Letters.

The nano-particles engineered by Aravind Kumar have the ability to absorb specific light in the NAR (nuclear acoustic resonance), which is like NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) and is used as a light imaging tool to detect and characterise soft tissue.

When the particles are delivered to the tumour site, they give out signals, which can be analysed in real time. For treatment, the nano-particles are injected onto the tumour killing the cancerous cells. There is no chemical or herbal drug involved in delivering the medicine and there are no side-effects, either.

Aravind Kumar has filed four patents three Indian and one PCT (Paris Convention Treaty), which covers many countries. The next step is to do pre-clinical validation. The nano-particle should not be toxic to humans.

Thereafter, Phase-I clinical trials will be done. The research project was supported besides IIT-Hyderabad, by the Departments of Biotechnology and Science and Technology, the Ministry of HRD, and Infosys Foundation, says Aravind Kumar.

(This article was published on June 9, 2017)

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Can this nano-particle turn into gold standard Big C treatment? - Hindu Business Line

Trump’s Coal Bet Faces a Tough Foe: Moore’s Law – Bloomberg

Forward progress.

Donald Trump justified his decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement by claiming that compliance would impose crippling economic burdens on the United States. I happen to love the coal miners, Trump declared, before reaffirming his intention to make the fossil fuel the centerpiece of the nations energy policy.

QuickTake Climate Change

The backlash against the president was ferocious, but mainly focused on his lack of concern for the catastrophic effects of climate change. Far less attention has been directed at his conviction that coal will be cheaper than renewable sources of energy in the foreseeable future.

This is a question, luckily, that history can help answer. Recent research suggests that certain technologies introduced over the past two centuries exhibit very predictable rates of advancement, becoming more efficient --and thus cheaper -- at a steady clip. And solar energy is one of those technologies. Looking into the past can give us a glimpse of the future.

In 1965, Gordon Moore, one of the founders of chip giant Intel, noticed that the number of transistors per integrated circuit doubled every two years on average, with corresponding advances in speed and declines in cost. This quickly became known as Moores Law. In the succeeding half century, Moores Law has held up, with the cost of computing power plunging dramatically over the years.

Last year, two economists published an intriguing paper that riffed off Moores Law. Many technologies, they correctly observed, followed a generalized version of Moores Law in which costs tend to drop exponentially. Some technologies, however, do not follow this model, and it can be hard to distinguish between them. Past performance, in other words, is not always predictive of future results.

In order to sort out the ones that follow a version of Moores Law from the ones that dont, the researchers engaged in an interesting thought experiment. They selected 53 very different technologies across a range of sectors and built a deep database of historical unit costs for producing milk; sequencing DNA; making laser diodes, formaldehyde, acrylic fiber, transistors, and many other things; and electricity from nuclear, coal, and solar.

They then engaged in a statistical method called hindcasting. This entails going back to various points in the past for each technology, taking whatever trend existed at the time, and then extrapolating it into the future. They then took this prediction and compared it to what actually happened. This has the virtue of actually testing the predictive power of the data rather than fitting the data to a model.

Moreover, it gives some insights into the accuracy of future forecasts. After all, the authors note, a skeptic who looks at the trends in the cost of solar and coal would rightfully respond, How do we know that the historical trend will continue? Isnt it possible that things will reverse, and over the next 20 years coal will drop dramatically in price and solar will go back up? Hindcasting offers a way to answer that question in quantitative terms.

And the answers are rather interesting. The researchers found that many technologies dont follow a robust version of Moores Law, even if the cost per unit can fluctuate a great deal in the short term. The cost of chemicals, household goods, and many other goods dont stay the same, but they fluctuate in a random fashion, going up for a number of years and then going back down again. Others, like transistors, DNA sequencing, and others, are eerily predictable.

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Energy, on the other hand, is a mixed bag. The current unit cost of coal is approximately the same as it was in the year 1890 in inflation-adjusted terms. It has, however, fluctuated randomly over time by a factor of three, exhibiting short-term trends that eventually reverse themselves. The same is true of gas and oil. Nuclear has also fluctuated, but is actually more expensive now than when it was first introduced in the 1950s. In short, theres no equivalent for Moores Law when it comes to fossil fuels and nuclear power.

Which brings us to solar. Here the trend has been unmistakable, with the price per unit dropping a very steady 10 percent per year. This has been a very rapid decline with little variability. Despite changes in demand, the ebb and flow of government subsidies, solar has steadily dropped in cost.

This very Moore-ish trajectory permits us to make reasonably secure predictions about the future cost of solar power. Theres a very slim chance those predictions could be wrong, but compared to predicting the cost of coal -- which is akin to spinning a roulette wheel we can get some glimpse of the future.

And that future will almost certainly be dominated by solar -- not because its green, but because its cheap. Indeed, the authors data suggests that theres a fifty-fifty chance that solar will become competitive with coal as early as 2024; theres a good chance that could happen even sooner. Indeed, it already has in some countries.

In the near future, it will likely be the coal industry that will need subsidies to compete with solar, not the other way around.

Trump can love coal miners all he wants. But he cannot stop solar from becoming the cheapest energy source any more than he could have halted the rise of ever cheaper, more powerful computers. Hes going to lose -- again.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story: Stephen Mihm at smihm1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mike Nizza at mnizza3@bloomberg.net

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Trump's Coal Bet Faces a Tough Foe: Moore's Law - Bloomberg

IBM Up Against Moore’s Law with 5nm Chip – All About Circuits

Moores Law will be relevant for a few more years with recent news that IBM, GlobalFoundries, and Samsung succeeded in fitting 30 billion transistors onto a single, 5nm chip.

With concerns that the trend Moore's Law predicted, which states that the number of transistors able tofit on a single chip would double every two years, was slowing down or becoming obsolete, research into High Performance and Parallel Computing has begun to gain traction as one of the solutions for ensuring that computation power continues to expand, while decreasing power and resource requirements.

IBM managed this feat by using a new type of gate: the Gate All Around Field-Effect Transistor (GAAFET). This is similar to transistors found in 7nm chips, which are Fin Field-Effect Transistors (FINFET). Both are 3-dimensional, extending a fin upward to allow for more silicon, but in the case of GAAFET, there are three nanosheet layers of silicon.

Manufacturing chips this small is a complicated task. However, by using ultraviolet laser etching the process becomes more precise and manageable, which is part of the breakthroughallowing IBM to create 5nm chips.

Tech industry analysts in the past did not predict a 5nm chip would be possible before the early 2020s. While IBM and its partners still have some time to go before they are likely to begin producing the 5nm chip, it is still a head start in the industry.

Currently, 10nm is the smallest chip available on the market, with smartphones typically utilizing 14nm Qualcomm chips. The 5nm chip is promised to be significantly faster and power efficient (up to 40 and 75 percent more efficient, respectively) compared to its 10nm predecessor; IBM believes days could be added to the battery life of phones.

There has been speculation that the GAAFET could be scaled down to as small as 3nm. However, the more a chip is scaled down, the higher thepotential for problems with physical limitations of transistors that small, including added complexity in manufacturing.

Talking about 3nm chips may be getting ahead of ourselves, since 7nm chips have yet to enter the market, and 10nm chips have just begun to appear.

Samsungonly started manufacturing 10nm chips last October, which were reported to have a 27 percent increase in performance and a 40 percent increase in power efficiency compared to 14nm chips.

Coffee Lake, Intels codename for its 8th-generation Core processors, is the successor of the Kaby Lake 14nm microarchitecture. Reportedly, it refines the manufacturing process with up to a 30% increase in performance compared to Kaby Lake. The recently announced Intel i9 chip will also utilize a 14nm chip.

However, Intel claims that chip size is not the best way to describe the actual improvements of a chips density and that Samsungs 10nm chips are still equivalent to Intels 14nm chip before its refinement. An alternative method of addressing performance involves the use of a formula which focuses on standard logic cell densityand weightedbased on typical chip design.

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IBM Up Against Moore's Law with 5nm Chip - All About Circuits

Q BioMed Announces Attendance at Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) Annual Meeting – PR Newswire (press release)

The meeting provides an ideal location to meet with collaborators, vendors and partners working on the recently announced commercialization of Strontium-89 Chloride (Sr89). Sr89 Injection USP is a non-opioid analgesic indicated for the relief of bone pain in patients with painful skeletal cancer metastases.

Approximately 70% of patients with advanced breast and prostate cancer metastases will develop bone metastases, an extremely painful condition. Bone metastases occur in most tumor types but are most prevalent in cancers of the breast, prostate, and lung. These bone lesions can cause serious skeletal complications, including spinal cord or nerve root compression, hypercalcemia of malignancy, pathologic fractures, and severe bone pain which can significantly compromise quality of life and may negatively affect survival. Palliation of pain, prevention of skeletal complications, and maintenance of quality of life are the primary objectives in managing patients with metastatic bone disease.

AB-Rated Strontium Chloride Sr89 Injection USP (Sr89) can be used in combination with or to reduce the need for opiate based drugs, as well as in combination with cancer therapeutic drugs. After administration, pain relief can occur in as little as one to two weeks and can last several months, when another dose can be administered with minimal side effects. Clinical studies have demonstrated that for many, the combination of alternating weekly chemohormonal therapies with Sr89 demonstrated a prolonged and progression-free survival.

Please visit our website http://www.qbiomed.com to sign up and stay up-to-date with our progress.

About Strontium-89 Chloride

Following intravenous injection, soluble strontium compounds behave like their calcium analogs, clearing rapidly from the blood and selectively localizing in bone mineral. Uptake of strontium by bone occurs preferentially in sites of active osteogenesis; thus primary bone tumors and areas of metastatic involvement (blastic lesions) can accumulate significantly greater concentrations of strontium than surrounding normal bone. Strontium-89 Chloride is retained in metastatic bone lesions much longer than in normal bone, where turnover is about 14 days. In patients with extensive skeletal metastases, well over half of the injected dose is retained in the bones. Excretion pathways are two-thirds urinary and one-third fecal in patients with bone metastases. Urinary excretion is higher in people without bone lesions. Urinary excretion is greatest in the first two days following injection. Strontium-89 is a pure beta emitter and Strontium-89 Chloride selectively irradiates sites of primary and metastatic bone involvement with minimal irradiation of soft tissues distant from the bone lesions. (The maximum range in tissue is 8 mm; maximum energy is 1.463 MeV.) Clinical trials have examined relief of pain in cancer patients who have received therapy for bone metastases (external radiation to indexed sites) but in whom persistent pain recurred.

INDICATIONS AND USAGE: Strontium-89 Chloride Injection is indicated for the relief of bone pain in patients with painful skeletal metastases. The presence of bone metastases should be confirmed prior to therapy.

CONTRAINDICATIONS:None known.

WARNINGS: Use of Strontium-89 Chloride (Sr89) in patients with evidence of seriously compromised bone marrow from previous therapy or disease infiltration is not recommended unless the potential benefit of the treatment outweighs its risks. Bone marrow toxicity is to be expected following the administration of Strontium-89 Chloride, particularly white blood cells and platelets. The extent of toxicity is variable. It is recommended that the patient's peripheral blood cell counts be monitored at least once every other week. Typically, platelets will be depressed by about 30% compared to preadministration levels. The nadir of platelet depression in most patients is found between 12 and 16 weeks following administration of Sr89. White blood cells are usually depressed to a varying extent compared to pre-administration levels. Thereafter, recovery occurs slowly, typically reaching pre-administration levels six months after treatment unless the patient's disease or additional therapy intervenes. In considering repeat administration of Sr89, the patient's hematologic response to the initial dose, current platelet level and other evidence of marrow depletion should be carefully evaluated. Verification of dose and patient identification is necessary prior to administration because Strontium-89 Chloride delivers a relatively high dose of radioactivity. Strontium-89 Chloride may cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman. There are no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women. If this drug is used during pregnancy, or if the patient becomes pregnant while receiving this drug, the patient should be apprised of the potential hazard to the fetus. Women of childbearing potential should be advised to avoid becoming pregnant.

About Q BioMed Inc.

Q BioMed Inc."Q" is a biomedical acceleration and development company. We are focused on licensing and acquiring biomedical assets across the healthcare spectrum. Q is dedicated to providing these target assets the strategic resources, developmental support, and expansion capital the need to ensure they meet their developmental potential, enabling them to provide products to patients in need.

Forward-Looking Statements:

This press release may contain "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Such statements include, but are not limited to, any statements relating to our growth strategy and product development programs and any other statements that are not historical facts. Forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could negatively affect our business, operating results, financial condition and stock price. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those currently anticipated are: risks related to our growth strategy; risks relating to the results of research and development activities; our ability to obtain, perform under and maintain financing and strategic agreements and relationships; uncertainties relating to preclinical and clinical testing; our dependence on third-party suppliers; our ability to attract, integrate, and retain key personnel; the early stage of products under development; our need for substantial additional funds; government regulation; patent and intellectual property matters; competition; as well as other risks described in our SEC filings. We expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward looking statements contained herein to reflect any change in our expectations or any changes in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based, except as required by law.

Contact: Dennis Corin CEO Q BioMed Inc. +1-888-357-2435

SOURCE Q BioMed Inc.

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Q BioMed Announces Attendance at Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) Annual Meeting - PR Newswire (press release)

E3 Spotlight: Bethesda, Fallout 4 VR, DOOM VR And (Possibly) Skyrim VR – UploadVR

While my first experience with VR was in the mid-90s with the VFX-1, my introduction to the latest round of VR devices was at E3 2012 when John Carmack showed Doom 3 in VR at the Bethesda booth on a newly-announced but not-yet-released HMD called the Oculus Rift, which was little more than a motion-tracking display duct-taped to an elastic ski goggle strap. The refresh rate was slow and the resulting experience was slightly nauseating if you spent more than a few minutes in the headset, but even then I understood what this new tech was going to mean to gaming, as well as to myriad other industries.

Bethesda was one of the earliest supporters of VR development, so its no surprise that they have made some of the most-anticipated VR game announcements to date, most notably Fallout 4 VR and Doom VR, which were both announced at its E3 2016 press conference. Since AAA games are so resource-intensive and therefore economically risky to develop, many of the big early VR gaming experiences are going to be translations of existing titles, but thats not so bad when youre talking about some of the deepest, most fun and engaging gaming experiences of all time.

Another year, another E3, so what can we expect from Bethesda at this years show?

Bethesdas press conference is on Sunday, June 11 at 6:30pm Pacific, and we know Fallout 4 VR is going to be a big part of that presentation. We played Fallout 4 VR extensively last year, but its been 12 months since weve seen the games progress, so we expect a huge leap this year in terms of what Bethesda is showing as Fallout 4 will undoubtedly be the VR highlight at Bethesdas presser.

While Fallout 4 is the only VR title that Bethesda has confirmed will be at the show at this time, theres no doubt in my mind that theyll have at least one other VR-related announcement at the show, and perhaps two or more others.

My guess is Bethesda will focus on the Vive version during the conference, but will announce Fallout 4 is coming to PSVR, and the PSVR version will have a bigger showing at the PlayStation conference on Monday. Teleport was the only locomotion system available in the E3 2016 demo, but Bethesda has made it clear that Fallout 4 VR will be the full game with various locomotion options, so we fully expect to try some of those variants at E3. Im particularly curious to see if the game will support full locomotion. Its personally what I would want out of an experience like Fallout to make it as immersive as possible, but well have to see if its plausible in such a vast world without making the average player feel like theyve had one too many rum and Nuka colas.

We havent heard anything definitive at this point, but I would also expect to get an update on Doom VR at the show, as well as get some hands-on time with a new playable level. While Doom was little more than a tech demo last year, Ive seen plenty of games in various stages of development over the years, and I have no doubt Doom VR will be a full-blown experience with deep gameplay.

The biggest surprise for everyone would be if Bethesda dropped the Megaton and said that Fallout 4 VR was available tonight, just like they did with the Fallout Shelter mobile game in 2015. I could see it happening, but I think its more realistic that Bethesda will announce a release date later in 2017, so at least we wont have to wait that long to play.

While recent rumors suggest Bethesda is working on Skyrim VR, the same rumors also report Bethesda may not show it at E3. Personally, I at least expect a mention. Since Fallout 4 and Skyrim run on the same engine, the translation work Bethesda has already done for Fallout 4 VR would make Skyrim VR a natural candidate for a relatively easy transition into virtual reality well at least easier than building a game of that scale from the ground up and honestly I think a VR sword-swinging, bow-shooting, medieval dungeon crawler will be even more popular than the apocalyptic setting of Fallout.

Whatever happens, Fallout 4, Skyrim and Doom are the kinds of games that will be killer apps for VR, and will sell VR units as gamers look for the most immersive experience. I cant wait for E3 to begin!

What do you think Bethesda will show at E3 2017? Let us know in the comments below!

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E3 Spotlight: Bethesda, Fallout 4 VR, DOOM VR And (Possibly) Skyrim VR - UploadVR