How do you know what you’re getting with stem cell therapy? – Good4Utah

What are the sources of stem cells and how do they differ?

And, how do you know what you're getting?

Plus, does stem cell therapy work?

These are common questions many people have about stem cell therapy.

Dan Schmidt and Dr. Steven Warren from Intermountain Stem Cells joined Midday to provide answers.

Stem Cell Therapy, particularly in the joints is being used more and more as an alternative to some surgeries. Stem cells help promote new natural growth of cartilage, ligament, tendons and soft tissue.

There are different sources of stem cells:

Stem cells are not all the same and delivered at the same qualities. Intermountain Stem Cell believes the best and most viable source of stem cell is umbilical cord MSC (Mesenchymal Stem Cells).

Intermountain Stem Cells say they've had significant patient outcomes and success in reducing pain and increasing functionality.

If you call now, 801-981-8795, you will receive a complimentary one-on-one consultation and image review.

This segment contains sponsored content.

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How do you know what you're getting with stem cell therapy? - Good4Utah

Seeking spirituality – The Hindu

Those who squander time when they are young will regret this later. The pleasures of youth are short lived. Put out a piece of turmeric in the sun and the skin shrivels in the heat. So does youth vanish.

The education that we acquire in youth is what will stand us in good stead when we are older.

And it is not just education of the sort that we need to find employment. This kind of formal education is important for our economic well being. But we have to think of our spiritual well-being too, said M.A.Manickavelu in a discourse.

Thiruvalluvar asks of what use is education if one does not worship at the feet of God? The Jain work Naaladiyaar says that one should read good works. Instead, if one reads frivolous works it will have as much use as making empty noise. Such worthless reading cannot help us cross the ocean of samsara.

Neetineri vilakkam of Kumaraguruparar says that seeking easy pleasures will keep us happy initially, but will ultimately result in sorrow. While reading and studying may be difficult, they will bring us eternal joy.

It is only spiritual education which helps us realise philosophical truths. Sendanaar, in his Tiruvisaippa, says that for those who love Him, He is like a lamp that dispels darkness. Lord Siva destroyed three demons and the three cities they governed.

But we must look beyond the mere story and study the symbolism behind it. He is the One who destroys our illusion, our karma and our ego. Lord Siva did not even have to exert Himself to destroy the demons or their cities. All He had to do was smile, and His smile was so powerful that it achieved what He wanted in no time at all.

So all we need to do is to study spiritual texts and acquire jnana and He will ensure liberation for us.

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Seeking spirituality - The Hindu

Religion and Spirituality Events: 8/16 – Cecil Whig

Low-cost, local events happening this week. To be included, your event must be family friendly, cost less than $25 per person and take place in Cecil County as well as adjoining areas within a 20-minute drive. Please submit the event title, time, address to accent@cecilwhig.com. Once approved by an editor, the event will be listed until its completion date. It will run in the print edition as space allows. You can also submit to a separate online calendar at cecildaily.com.

YOGA,9 a.m. to 10 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Ongoing $15 drop-in. Multi-level for everyone. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296.

CLUTTERERS ANONYMOUS,6 to 7 p.m. at Janes United Methodist Church, 213 N. Walnut St., Rising Sun. Clutterers Anonymous is a 12-step program to help people solve their problems with clutter/hoarding. There are no dues or fees. Contact Martha H. 443-350-1483.

YOGA,7 p.m. weekly classes at Cecil County Arts Council, 135 E. Main St., Elkton. Intro class is free. Then pay $10 per class or buy five classes for $45. Classes are designed for new and experienced yogis. Contact class instructor Sarah Mester at smester@comcast.net.

IMPROVE MENTAL HEALTH,7 p.m. at 229 E. Main St., Elkton. Panic, fear, anxiety, depression. Attend a free weekly meeting with Recovery International.

FREE LUNCH,12 to 1 p.m. every Friday at Elkton Presbyterian Church, 209 E. Main St. provided by Elkton Community Kitchen. All are welcome. For more information contact elktoncommunitykitchen@gmail.com.

SMART RECOVERY,10 to 11:30 a.m. at Janes UMC in Rising Sun. This meeting is for those recovering from the disease of addiction. This is an open support group that meets every Saturday.

SATURDAY EVENING SERVICE,5 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church, 105 N. Bridge St., Elkton. Will recur every week at this time.

FLEA MARKET, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Cecilton United Methodist Church, 164 W. Main St., Cecilton. Proceeds from the market go to sending kids to Camp Pecometh in the summer.

OUTDOOR WORSHIP, 9:30 a.m.grain or shine outdoor interdenominational service at Elk Neck State Park hilltop shelter, 4395 Turkey Point Road (Route 272, 9 miles south of NEUMC). Gil Nagle.

PARISH SUNDAY SCHOOL, 9:45 a.m. at Zion UMC in Cecilton. Recurs weekly.

MUSICAL MINISTRY,3:30 p.m. at Griffith AUMP Church, 95 Cedar Hill Church Road, Elkton. The Sensational Stars of Kent County will be the guest group, and all are welcome to join. Contact 410-398-1136 or 410-620-4940 for info.

OUTDOOR WORSHIP, at Elk Neck State Park, 4395 Turkey Point Road, North East. Speaker is Chaplain Wayne Lutz courtesy of North East United Methodist Church.

ANNUAL SACRIFICE RALLY, 3:30 p.m. at Trinity AUMP Church, 174 Trinity Church Road, Zion. Reverend Maurice Brown & the Brown Family Gospel Singers will be in concert.

DEBTORS ANONYMOUS,6 to 7 p.m. at Janes United Methodist Church, 213 N. Walnut St., Rising Sun. Debtors Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who help each other solve their problems with debt. DA is a 12-step program. There are no dues or fees. Contact Martha H. 443-350-1483.

NARANON MEETING,7 p.m. at Bethel Lutheran Church, North East. Hope and Peace every Monday. Contact Lorri: 443-250-0909.

WOMENS NA MEETING,7 p.m. at Bethel Lutheran Church, North East.

YOGA 4 SENIORS,9 to 10 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Pre-registration is required. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296. $12 per class if all six are pre-paid or $15 drop-in.

SENIOR MEETING, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at St. Stephens Parish Hall in Earleville. Anyone 55 or older is invited to attend. Come and meet your neighbors. No membership fee. Lunch is served. Come for the fellowship, speaker, see what events we are planning. Questions call 410-275-8150. Recurs weekly.

MENS YOGA CLASS,11 a.m. at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Pre-registration is required. Call instructor Laura Hannan at 1-540-421-0296. $12 per class if all six are pre-paid or $15 drop-in.

COMMUNITY ARTS AND CRAFTS,1 p.m. free instruction at St. Stephens Church, 10 Glebe Road, Earleville. Ongoing drawing and painting classes for beginner or serious artists. bspelled123@gmail.com. http://www.communityartandcrafts.com. Call Jerry at 410-275-2945.

TOPS,5:30 p.m. at Rosebank UMC, Rising Sun. Nonprofit weight-loss support group, meets weekly. $6 monthly fee. First meeting free. topsrosebank@gmail.com.

NARANON,7 p.m. every Tuesday at Elkton United Methodist Church. A Nar-Anon adult support meeting for those with addicts in the family.

MEDITATION,7 p.m. every Tuesday with Three Roots Wellness at Painted Turtle Arts Studio, 13 N. Main St., North East. Learn basics of meditation practices and how to make it useful in your everyday life. Donation based. Registration is required email to angela@threerootswellness.com.

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Religion and Spirituality Events: 8/16 - Cecil Whig

SpaceX Dragon Delivers Supplies (and Science) to Space Station – Space.com

A SpaceX Dragon cargo ship arrived at the International Space Station early Wednesday (Aug. 16), delivering 3 tons of supplies, experiments and even some ice cream for the orbiting lab's crew.

The uncrewed Dragon spacecraft was captured by astronauts using the station's robotic arm at 6:52 a.m. EDT (1052 GMT) as the two spacecraft were flying over the Pacific Ocean, just north of New Zealand.

"Congratulations on a job well done," astronaut Andreas Morgenson of the European Space Agency radioed the station's crew from NASA's Mission Control in Houston. "You've just earned yourself some food." [Watch SpaceX Launch Dragon, then Land a Rocket]

The Dragon cargo ship is filled with more than 6,400 lbs. (2,900 kilograms) of supplies, science experiments and food - and yes, ice cream - for the space station's Expedition 52 crew. SpaceX launched delivery mission Monday (Aug. 14) on a Falcon 9 rocket, which then returned its first stage to Earth in a smooth landing.

Called SpaceX-12 or CRS-12, this flight is SpaceX's 12th cargo flight for NASA under the Commercial Resupply Service program. NASA initially agreed to buy 12 delivery flights from SpaceX, but has extended the agreement to include 20 flights. SpaceX did lose one mission in 2015 when a Falcon 9 rocket failed during liftoff, but the rest have been a success.

"Today has special significance because SpaceX-12 is the last flight on the original cargo resupply contract," NASA astronaut Jack Fischer said from the station. "And this, the 36th flight of a Dragon, stands as a testament to a burgeoning commercial industry that has become a pillar of support to NASA's and really all of humanity's quest to explore the universe."

SpaceX's Dragon cargo ship flies over Italy (the country's boot shape can be seen upside in the background) while delivering vital NASA supplies to the International Space Station on Aug. 16, 2017.

Fischer and ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli captured the Dragon using the station's robotic arm. At one point, cameras on the space station captured Dragon as it soared high over Italy, Nespoli's home country.

Most of the cargo riding on Dragon is science gear, a massive haul that includes a protein crystal experiment to research a new treatment for Parkinson's disease, an experiment to grow lung tissue from stem cells and 20 live mice to help scientists study the effects of long space missions. The U.S. Department of Defense also has a small microsatellite prototype on board, and the Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass for the International Space Station (which has the tasty acronym ISS-CREAM) will study cosmic rays.

The Dragon spacecraft will stay docked to the space station for about a month, after which it will be filled with science experiment results and other items for the return to Earth.

NASA has used SpaceX and another spaceflight company, the Virginia-based Orbital ATK, to make commercial resupply flights the space station since 2012. The space agency has since picked SpaceX, Orbital ATK and a third company Sierra Nevada Corp. to make future deliveries under a new agreement.

In addition to cargo delivery flights, SpaceX will fly NASA astronauts to the space station on a crewed version of the Dragon spacecraft. (NASA has also picked Boeing for astronaut trips to space using that company's CST-100 Starliner spacecraft.)

The first crewed flights on Dragon and the Starliner are expected in mid-2018, NASA has said.

Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him@tariqjmalikandGoogle+.Follow us@Spacedotcom,FacebookorGoogle+. Original story onSpace.com.

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SpaceX Dragon Delivers Supplies (and Science) to Space Station - Space.com

Astronauts On The International Space Station Just Got A Big Delivery – Newsy

SpaceX's Dragon capsule made it to the International Space Station carrying some really important things like ice cream.

The capsule landed early Wednesday and delivered over3 tons of NASA cargoand research supplies to astronauts on the ISS.

The haul includes supplies for various projects. One experiment aims to grow crystals of a protein believed to be a strong contributor to Parkinson's disease.

Earth's gravity stunts the protein's growth on the ground, but researchers in space don't have that problem.

Related StoryNASA's Saturn Probe Has One Final Mission Before Its Fiery End

NASA also put20 live mice in the bundleso researchers can study the effects of long-term space missions. Another experiment will collectdata on cosmic rays.

The ice cream, you might imagine, isn't for science; there was just some extra room.

The capsule is expected to leave the ISS in September. NASA says it will bring back over 1.5 tons of science and supplies to Earth.

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Astronauts On The International Space Station Just Got A Big Delivery - Newsy

Gallery: SpaceX launches CRS-12 into space, lands Falcon 9 first stage – SpaceFlight Insider

A Falcon 9 sends the CRS-12 mission toward the International Space Station. This was the last new first-generation Dragon capsule. Photo Credit: Michael Deep / SpaceFlight Insider

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. On Aug. 14, 2017, SpaceX sent its last new first-generation Dragon capsule into space atop a Falcon 9 rocket. The CRS-12 mission carried more than 6,400 pounds (2,900 kilograms) of equipment and supplies to the International Space Station.

Liftoff took place at 12:31 p.m. EDT (16:31 GMT) from Launch Complex 39A. Some 2.5 minutes later, the Falcon 9s nine first-stage Merlin 1D engines cut off as planned. The first stage then separated from the second stage.

While the second stage continued on toward orbit, the first stage performed a series of maneuvers that put it on a course back to Florida.

Just over seven minutes after launch, the first stage heralded its return to the Cape Canaveral area with a triple-sonic boom. Its successful landing marked the sixth time the company has done so on land, the 14th overall.

Meanwhile, the second stage successfully placed the Dragon capsule in an initial orbit. Some 36 hours later, the vehicle would rendezvous with the space station.

The following photos were taken by the SpaceFlight Insider visual team.

Tagged: CRS-12 Dragon Falcon 9 International Space Station Kennedy Space Center SpaceX The Range

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Gallery: SpaceX launches CRS-12 into space, lands Falcon 9 first stage - SpaceFlight Insider

Taking a (red)headcount: how close are we to beating the world record? Poll – Bunbury Mail

1 Aug 2017, 6 p.m.

A NSW city needs 1672 gingers on one day at one park to claim world record.

RED IS BEST: Will you be among the redheads in Orange on Saturday, September 30?

WITH less than two months to go until the attempt for the most redheads in one place its time to ask the question: will the citys Red Army be the biggest ever?

Rachael Brookings Redhead Hunt 4 HD has attracted attention across the Central West, NSW and Australia, with thousands of comments and posts on social media from fair-haired people statingthey would like to be at Wade Park on Saturday, September 30.

So we want to know if the Guinness World Recordis in reach.

To do so were asking all ginger-topped readers to vote in the below poll and register your interest or lack thereof in the innovative event.

Hopefully in a couple of days we will have an accurate picture of how close we are to beating the current world record of1672.

To find out more about the day, which will raise funds to support those suffering from Huntingtons Disease, head to the events Facebook page.

Central Western Daily

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Taking a (red)headcount: how close are we to beating the world record? Poll - Bunbury Mail

Cowboys red-headed rookie earns great praise for impersonating Jason Garrett – Dallas News (blog)


Dallas News (blog)
Cowboys red-headed rookie earns great praise for impersonating Jason Garrett
Dallas News (blog)
... and everybody lobbied for him to do it again." And what did the head coach think of a rookie free agent from Central Michigan trying to out-Garrett coach Garrett? "The players seem to like it," Garrett said bemusedly. "Maybe they think all red ...

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Cowboys red-headed rookie earns great praise for impersonating Jason Garrett - Dallas News (blog)

From Exoplanets to Galaxies: NASA Chooses 6 Missions for Further Study – Space.com

NASA has selected six astrophysics proposals for concept studies under the agency's Explorers Program.

Six astrophysics programs selected for further study by NASA have science goals across the universe, ranging from exoplanets to galaxies.

This round of choices for NASA's Explorers Program, announced Aug. 9, includes three Explorer missions ($250 million each) and three missions of opportunity ($70 million each).

Each team has the chance to do a concept study. Scientific evaluations will be performed on each study, then NASA will select one Explorer mission and one mission of opportunity to fund in 2019. The expected launch dates would fall in 2022. [The Biggest Space Missions to Watch in 2017]

The three mission proposals (each receiving $2 million for the concept study), according to a NASA statement, are:

The three missions of opportunity (each receiving $500,000 for the concept study) are:

Explorers is NASA's longest-running program. Its first mission was Explorer 1 in 1958, which also was the first U.S. satellite. Explorer 1 discovered the Van Allen radiation belts surrounding Earth. More than 90 missions have run under the program, including the Uhuru and Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) missions that led to Nobel Prizes for their investigators.

"The Explorers Program brings out some of the most creative ideas for missions to help unravel the mysteries of the universe," Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator of NASA's science mission directorate, said in the statement. "The program has resulted in great missions that have returned transformational science, and these selections promise to continue that tradition."

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

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From Exoplanets to Galaxies: NASA Chooses 6 Missions for Further Study - Space.com

Why NASA Is Launching Massive Balloons of Bacteria During the Eclipse – Gizmodo

Image Courtesy of Montana State University

Mondays total solar eclipse will provide some much-needed wholesome enjoyment for all of us here in the United States. To make things even sweeter, NASAin collaboration with researchers at Montana State Universitywill be seizing the opportunity to launch some giant balloons during the event.

Scientists arent sending up balloons because theyre super stoked about the eclipse, though they are (probably). These enormous balloons are part of a project aptly named the Eclipse Ballooning Project, and will be used to run several experiments, one of which could help researchers preparing for a mission to Mars.

Out of the total fleet of roughly 75 balloons, over 30 of them will carry small samples of an extremely resilient strain of bacteria called Paenibacillus xerothermodurans over80,000 feet above Earth. The P. xerothermodurans samples will be attached to thin, aluminum coupons and attached to the outside of the balloons. According to the researchers, Earths stratosphere is similar to the surface atmosphere on Mars, so theyll be able to get some idea of how bacteria might behave there.

We have to be extremely careful that we dont bring bacteria or other tiny Earth organisms to other planets, project leader Angela Des Jardins, Director of the Montana Space Grant Consortium (MSGC), told Gizmodo. While most of these tiny forms of life that exists in abundance around us wont survive the trip through space, its understood that some resilient types could go dormant on the trip and then survive on the surface of the other planet. Therefore, in order to be prepared to keep planets we visit absolutely pristine, its important to understand how bacteria might behave there.

In addition to testing out some hearty bacteria, the balloons will have cameras attached to them in order to capture cloud video. The team hopes this will be useful to scientists looking to understand cloud formation during a solar eclipse. Some balloons will also carry tiny weather stations called radiosondes, which researchers can later use to study how Earths atmosphere responds to an eclipse.

We anticipate having high-quality video and images back from the balloons flights within a day or two, Jardins said. Analysis of the bacteria experiment will be done by scientists at Cornell and it will likely be a month or two before results are ready. Analysis of the atmospheric response to the eclipse (from our special set of weather balloons) will similarly take a month or two.

So if youre watching the eclipse this Monday, dont forget to look up: you might just see a giant ball of bacteria floating in the sky. Just kidding, you wont. Also, dont look up without wearing eclipse glasses or youll go blind.

Correction: An earlier version of this article stated that the balloons would be traveling 80,000 miles above Earth. It is actually 80,000 feet. Our bad! Weve edited the text to reflect the change.

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Why NASA Is Launching Massive Balloons of Bacteria During the Eclipse - Gizmodo

Aliens could conquer Earth by following ‘dangerous’ maps NASA ‘foolishly’ sent into space – Fox News

Back in the optimistic early days of space exploration, everyone thought it was a great idea to offer aliens a chart telling them how to find Planet Earth.

But now the man who sent four maps into deep space fears this decision could prove to be disastrous.

Frank Drake, an American astronomer and famed alien hunter, worked with Nasa to design maps which were placed inside Pioneer 10 and 11 as well as Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes.

All four of these spaceships have now left the solar system and are speeding through deep space.

The plaque placed aboard the Pioneer craft shows a man and a woman alongside a basic map which plots the position of Earth compared to a distant pulsar stars, which are bright and long-lasting so could still direct aliens our way if they are found millions of years from now.

Voyager was fitted with "golden records", which can be played to reveal natural sounds and even images from Earth.

A similar pulsar map is engraved on the front of the records.

Frank Drake now fears it may have been a bad idea to send the maps into space.

Responding to a request for comment by Fox News, a NASA spokesperson said:"[T]he so-called Golden Records are unlikely to be found anytime soon, as space is largely empty and the Voyagers will not be encountering any other planets or stars in our lifetimes."

"In those days, all the people I dealt with were optimists, and they thought the ETs would be friendly,"Drake told National Geographic.

"Nobody thought, even for a few seconds, about whether this might be a dangerous thing to do."

The article about Drake was actually written by his daughter Nadia, who asked whether it may one day be seen as "foolish and dangerous" to have broadcasted details of our whereabouts to aggressive aliens.

Many scientists now believe contacting extraterrestrials is a spectacularly bad idea.

Professor Stephen Hawking recently warned that "meeting an advanced civilisation could be like Native Americans encountering Columbus".

"That didnt turn out so well," he said.He claimed alien life could be "rapacious marauders roaming the cosmos in search of resources to plunder, and planets to conquer and colonize.

This story has been updated with NASA's comment.

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Aliens could conquer Earth by following 'dangerous' maps NASA 'foolishly' sent into space - Fox News

Found: Authentic NASA Spacesuits in the Corner of a Thrift Store – Atlas Obscura

The initial discovery. Screenshot via News 6

Talia Rappa and Skyer Ashworth were searching through the piles of clothes at a Salvation Army in Florida that was going out of business, when they came upon a white suit with a NASA logo on it. Underneath were five more suits, in blue, that also came from NASA.

They bought the suits for 20 cents a piece, $1.20 in total. Their thrift store find has now been authenticated, News 6 reports: These were authentic NASA suits worn by ground crew and astronauts in the early 1980s.

No one knows how the suits came to be at the thrift store; they may have been there for years. Rappa and Ashworth found them under a pile of sweaters. The labels on the suits indicate that they were worn by astronauts George Nelson, Robert A. Parker, and Charles D. Walker.

The thrifters stand to make a substantial profit on their discoveries: According to News 6, a local TV channel, the suits could be worth $5,000 a piece. Theyll be auctioned through the American Space Museum in November. Rappa and Ashworth say theyll donate a portion of their profits to the museum, and the rest of the money will go towards their college tuition. Ashworth, whose parents have worked for NASA communications, will be studying aerospace.

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Found: Authentic NASA Spacesuits in the Corner of a Thrift Store - Atlas Obscura

NASA: July 2017 Didn’t Even Need an El Nio to Tie For Hottest July in Recorded History – Gizmodo

Good news, everyone! The Earth is still like a car with the windows rolled up, and it doesnt seem like anyone is coming by with the keys anytime soon.

July 2017 is statistically tied with July 2016 for the title of hottest July in 137 years of records, Mashable reported, which is especially concerning because there was no El Nioa complicated climate cycle in which the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean floods with warmer than usual water, and raises the average temperature across the globe.

According to a NASA press release, July 2017 was 1.49 degrees Fahrenheit (0.83 degrees Celsius) warmer than the 1951 to 1980 baseline average, beating out July 2016 by an incredibly slim margin. El Nio was ongoing in 2016, which means that this years July was able to match a predecessor with extra help. Alarmingly, NASA noted all previous months of July were more than a tenth of a degree cooler.

NASA added their data is collected from some 6,300 meteorological stations around the world, ship- and buoy-based instruments measuring sea surface temperature, and Antarctic research stations.

The data is preliminary and may change, Mashable noted. But climate scientist Gavin Schmidt tweeted what data is already available predicts that there is a 77% chance 2017 will duel with 2016 as the hottest year on record.

Scientists are increasingly able to demonstrate higher rates of extreme weather eventslike massive storm systems or a southern European heat wave this year locals dubbed Luciferare linked to climate change. One of the key findings of a draft of an upcoming federal scientific survey was that uncertainty in this field is diminishing, and changes to the climate caused by humans dumping massive amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere are primarily responsible.

Thousands of studies conducted by tens of thousands of scientists around the world have documented changes in surface, atmospheric and oceanic temperatures; melting glaciers; disappearing snow cover; shrinking sea ice; rising sea level; and an increase in atmospheric water vapor, the reports executive summary read. ... The last few years have also seen record-breaking, climate-related weather extremes, as well as the warmest years on record for the globe.

As Mashable noted, the last cooler than average month in the 137 years of recorded data was December 1984.

The good news is that most of the worlds nations have agreed to work together to start dealing with the problem, ratifying the 2015 Paris accords. The bad news is the US federal government under Republican leadership is continuing to do its best to destroy decades of environmental regulations and undermine climate science.

[NASA via Mashable]

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NASA: July 2017 Didn't Even Need an El Nio to Tie For Hottest July in Recorded History - Gizmodo

NASA may finally be getting a leaderOklahoma pilot Jim Bridenstine – Ars Technica

Enlarge / Rep. Jim Bridenstine (R-Okla.) is likely to be NASA's next administrator.

NASA may finally be close to getting some clarity about its leadership during the Trump administration. On Tuesday, NASA Watch reported that the President will nominate US Representative Jim Bridenstine (R-Okla.) as administrator and Aerojet Rocketdyne Vice President John Schumacher as deputy administrator. Both men have been rumored to be nominated for these posts in recent weeks, but there have been no official confirmations as yet.

Two sources familiar with Washington, DC, space politics confirmed the choices to Ars, but one of them offered a caveat. "I have heard same from multiple sources, but this is Trump world," one DC-based source said.

A formal announcement has been in the works for September, but a date and location have not yet been set. "To the best of my knowledge, there have been no White House announcements on this subject matter at this time," NASA's associate administrator for communications, Jen Rae Wang, told Ars on Tuesday evening.

John Logsdon, a noted space historian and author of several books, includingAfter Apollo? Richard Nixon and the American Space Program, said he has been hearing the same names. "Appointing Jim Bridenstine and John Schumacher as the top two NASA officials is an intriguing and potentially very productive move," Logsdon told Ars, via e-mail. "Bridenstine, for several years, has been conceptualizing what is needed for, as he suggests, an 'American Space Renaissance' and has been testing his ideas with multiple audiences. Schumacher is a Washington space community veteran, with years of both senior NASA and space industry executive experience. Together, they can bring both fresh ideas and a sense of political and policy realism to the space agency."

Since President Obama left office in January, a civil servant named Robert Lightfoot has been guiding the agency through the transition. Lightfoot was among the candidates for both positions, and it is not clear whether he will remain on at NASA. By all accounts, Lightfoot has done a good job at maintaining NASA's programs through the last eight months. His most critical decision came in May, when Lightfootdecided against putting crew on the maiden launch of the Space Launch System (SLS).

An aviator in the US Navy Reserve, Bridenstine is serving his third term as a US Representative for Oklahoma. From almost the beginning of his tenure in Congress, Bridenstine has shown an interest in civil, commercial, and military space policy. The conservative has previously outlined broad goals to modernize the US spaceflight enterprise with his American Space Enterprise Act.

He is a big-picture guy and seen as a potential changemaker. Bridenstine, 42, was championed by several commercial space companies because he is open to increased privatization of US civil and military space activities. "Our civil and defense space enterprises must not compete with the private sector, but enable domestic, commercial launch, and space capabilities," he has said.

The Oklahoma Congressman has also openly advocated for a human return to the Moon before NASA embarks upon a mission to Mars. In speeches and in a blog post on his Congressional website, Bridenstine has called the opening of the Moon for commercial activity the "Sputnik moment" for this generation.

"From the discovery of water ice on the Moon until this day, the American objective should have been a permanent outpost of rovers and machines at the poles with occasional manned missions for science and maintenance," Bridenstine wrote. "The purpose of such an outpost should have been to utilize the materials and energy of the Moon to drive down the costs and increase the capabilities of cis-lunar space."

Bridenstine checks several boxes for the Trump administration and space: a conservative Trump supporter, someone who would prioritize lunar exploration, build upon the commercialization of space, and be willing to push NASA back toward human exploration at the expense of some activities, such as Earth science. Some ardent supporters of NASA's large, government-led exploration programsthe SLS rocket and Orion spacecrafthave balked at Bridenstine since January due to his pro-commercialization views. However, the likely choice of a deputy administrator, Schumacher, may alleviate some of those concerns.

With more than three decades of experience inmilitary, civil, and commercial space, Schumacher understands how Washington, DC, works. He also has previous NASA experience, serving aschief of staff for former NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe from 2003 to 2005 and as NASA's Associate Administrator for External Relations from 1994 to 2003.

Schumacher hasworked at Aerojet Rocketdyne for the last 11 years, joining Aerojet in 2006 asvice president of the company's Washington, DC, operations. Aerojet is one of the prime contractors on the SLS rocket. In 2015, the engine-builder received a $1.16 billion contract from NASA to re-start production of the RS-25 engine to power the core stage of the SLS rocket.

In addition to demonstrating the administration's support for traditional aerospace contractors, Ars understands that Schumacher is seen as someone with the political connections and experience to manage NASA and push forward its agenda in Congress.

So what does this mean, if true? It suggests that Vice President Mike Pence and the Space Council will seek to innovate with NASA going forward. For example, it seems likely that the space agency will, over the next 12 to 18 months, revamp its exploration plans to include study the lunar surface for ice deposits and the ease at which those might be recovered. Human missions to the surface of the Moon are also likely to be planned for the 2020s.

Congress has maintained strong support for the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft, and White House seems willing to go along with both, at least for now. (The new executive secretary of the space council, Scott Pace, favors such an approach). At the same time, a Bridenstine-led NASA would likely continue to look for innovative ways to increase commercial partnerships, such as offering opportunities for traditional aerospace contractors, like Boeing and Lockheed Martin, as well as new space firms, such as SpaceX and Blue Origin, to deliver cargo to the Moon and build landers for that purpose.

The always simmering traditional space versus commercial space dynamic will be one of the most interesting areas to watch under the new leadership. The appointment of Bridenstine and Schumacher indicates that Pence has not fully made a decision yet on how much to commercialize NASA beyond its existing commercial crew and cargo programs.

Planetary science also seems relatively safe under NASA's likely leadership, given the strong support in Congress such missions enjoy. Climate science, of course, has been under siege at other federal agencies, and it likely would face similar funding cuts under Bridenstine's leadership.

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NASA may finally be getting a leaderOklahoma pilot Jim Bridenstine - Ars Technica

Why NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has to die at Saturn – CNET

This NASA artist's illustration shows Cassini between Saturn and its rings.

At the ripe old age of 19, NASA's Cassini spacecraft will die next month. That would be young for a human, but it's old for a space probe.

Cassini launched on Oct. 15, 1997 on a very specific mission to study Saturn, its rings and its moons. On Sept. 15, it will plunge into Saturn's atmosphere. But why do we have to say goodbye? The answer involves fuel and the potential for contamination of some of Saturn's most intriguing moons.

Cassini is running low on rocket fuel. NASA needs that fuel in order to steer the spacecraft. Cassini can't be left to float unmoored out in space due to the remote possibility it could accidentally crash into Saturn's moons Titan or Enceladus.

Cassini's studies have shown the two moons might have the ingredients to support life. NASA doesn't want to contaminate either one with Earth microbes that could have hitched a ride on Cassini. So Cassini pretty much sealed its own fate with the data it sent back.

It took Cassini seven years to reach Saturn and it has spent 13 years traveling around the ringed planet's neighborhood. Thanks to Cassini, we know there's a snowman shape on Enceladus and what an aurora looks like on Saturn.

The spacecraft is deep into its grand finale phase, which includes daring dives between the planet and its rings and a dip into Saturn's outermost atmosphere.

Cassini has had a great run and it will continue to collect and send back data up until it is destroyed. The spacecraft has given us an intimate view of a very fascinating alien planet. It feels like a old, long-distance friend who is constantly in touch. It's hard to see it go, but Cassini's legacy of discovery will live on.

Tech Enabled: CNET chronicles tech's role in providing new kinds of accessibility.

Batteries Not Included: The CNET team reminds us why tech is cool.

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Relive Cassini's most spectacular Saturn images

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NASA Astronauts Set To Get Sweet Treat With Next Delivery To International Space Station – NPR

NASA Astronauts Set To Get Sweet Treat With Next Delivery To International Space Station
NPR
This week, a rocket bound for the International Space Station lifted off with 6,400 pounds of supplies. Along with the provisions, medical supplies and experiments, NASA astronauts will be getting a special care package with ice cream. Facebook; Twitter.

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NASA Astronauts Set To Get Sweet Treat With Next Delivery To International Space Station - NPR

Nanotechnology Gives Green Energy a Green Color – Futurism

Green Panels

Solar panels have tremendous potential to provide affordable renewable energy, but many people see traditional black and blue panels as an eyesore. Architects, homeowners and city planners may be more open to the technology if they could install green panels that melt into the landscape, red panels on rooftops and white ones camouflaged as walls.

A new study published this week inApplied Physics Lettersbrings us one step closer to a future of colorful, efficientsolar panels. Researchers have developed a method for imprinting existing solar panels with silicon nanopatterns that scatter green light back toward an observer. The panels have a green appearance from most angles yet only show about a 10 percent power reduction due to the loss of absorbed green light.

Some people say why would you make solar cells less efficient? But we can make solar cells beautiful without losing too much efficiency, said Verena Neder, a researcher at AMOLF and lead author of the paper. The new method to change the color of the panels is not only easy to apply but also attractive as an architectural design element and has the potential to widen their use.

Most research on solarcellshas focused on increasing efficiency and reducing cost. Currently, the solar panels sold to consumers can ideally turn up to 22 percent of the suns light into usable energy. Colored solar panels are already on the market, but the dyes and reflective coatings that give them their color greatly reduce efficiency.

Neder and colleagues created their efficient, green solar panels through soft-imprint lithography, which works somewhat like an optical rubber stamp to imprint a dense array of silicon nanocylinders onto the cell surfaces. Each nanocylinder is about 100 nanometers wide and exhibits an electromagnetic resonance that scatters a particular wavelength of light. The geometry of the nanocylinder determines which wavelength it scatters and can be fine-tuned to change the color of the solar cell. The imprint reduces the solar panelsefficiencyby about 2 percent.

In principle, this technique is easily scalable for fabrication technology, said Albert Polman, a scientific group leader at AMOLF and senior author on the paper. You can use a rubber stamp the size of a solar panel that in one step, can print the whole panel full of these little, exactly defined nanoparticles.

Unlike existing colored solar panels, the nanopatterns give a consistent appearance from different angles. The structure we made is not very sensitive to the angle of observation, so even if you look at it from a wide angle, it still appears green, Neder said.

The nanopatterns also could be useful in makingtandem solar cells, which stack several layers, each designed to absorb certain parts of the spectrum, to achieve efficiencies of greater than 30 percent.

Next, the researchers are designing imprints to create red and bluesolar cells. Once they master these three colors, the primary colors oflight, they can create any color, potentially even white. You have to combine different nanoparticles, and if they get very close to each other they can interact and that will affect thecolor, Polman said. Going to white is a really big step.

This article was provided by American Institute of Physics. Materials may have been edited for clarity and brevity.

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EC Publishes NanoData Landscape Compilation Reports – Nanotechnology News

Home > Nanotechnology Columns > Bergeson & Campbell, P.C. > EC Publishes NanoData Landscape Compilation Reports

Abstract: On June 8, 2017, the European Commission (EC) published eight NanoData Landscape Compilation reports.

August 16th, 2017

On June 8, 2017, the European Commission (EC) published eight NanoData Landscape Compilation reports. See https://publications.europa.eu/en/search-results?p_p_id=portal2012searchExecutor_WAR_portal2012portlet_INSTANCE_q8EzsBteHybf&p_p_lifecycle=1&p_p_state=normal&queryText=NanoData+landscape+compilation&facet.collection=EULex,EUPub,EUWebPage,EUSummariesOfLegislation&language=en&startRow=1&resultsPerPage=10&SEARCH_TYPE=SIMPLE& The EC states that the reports offer a snapshot of the environment for nanotechnology in different application fields:

- NanoData Landscape Compilation: Health: This report offers a snapshot of the status of the environment for nanotechnology in the context of health. Analysis of that environment, trends in the data, and the effects of European policies and actions on health nanotechnology will be reported in the NanoData Health Impact Assessment and are therefore not included in this report; - NanoData Landscape Compilation: Manufacturing: This report offers an overview of policies and programs for nanotechnology manufacturing in the European Union (EU), publications, patenting, research and innovation, industry, products and markets, and the wider environment; - NanoData Landscape Compilation: Information and Communication Technologies: This report offers a snapshot of the environment for nanotechnology in the context of information and communication technologies (ICT). It gives an overview of policies and programs for nanotechnology and ICT in the EU, publications, patenting, research and innovation, industry, products and markets, and the wider environment; - NanoData Landscape Compilation: Transport: Transport is defined here as a sector based on vehicles for transporting people and/or goods via the air, rail, road, water, and space, and is here divided into two main areas, vehicles and infrastructure. The industry generates about five percent of European employment and seven percent of European gross domestic product (GDP). Transport is also responsible for the emission of nearly 25 percent of greenhouse gases in the EU, however; - NanoData Landscape Compilation: Energy: Nanotechnology has the potential to contribute to energy sustainability by reducing consumption, improving the infrastructure for energy generation, transmission, and use, and offering new methods for energy production. To achieve this, the field of nanotechnology and energy needs to have a solid research base; routes for new developments in energy technology to be further advanced and commercialized; and a market open to nanotechnology energy products, in the context of appropriate regulation and standards. The European Energy Strategy is seeking to tackle that challenge through measures to improve energy efficiency, increase the share of renewable energy, and reduce greenhouse gases. This report looks, from a research, development and deployment (market) perspective, at the role of nanotechnology in achieving those energy goals and at the overall landscape in Europe for nanotechnology and energy; - NanoData Landscape Compilation: Construction: This report offers a snapshot of the status of the environment for nanotechnology in the context of construction. The construction industry covers the building, maintaining, and repairing of buildings and infrastructures for living, working, and transport, including providing materials for those purposes. The sector is a major consumer of raw materials, chemicals, energy and intermediate products such as electrical equipment, as well as services; - NanoData Landscape Compilation: Environment: This report offers a snapshot of the status of nanotechnology in the context of the environment. Nanotechnology is one of the emerging technologies that can help to prevent or remediate environmental degradation and improve monitoring (direct effect), or lead to reduced energy and resource consumption (indirect effect). Introducing new substances, such as nanomaterials and nanoparticles with unknown characteristics, into the environment may have negative environmental and health effects, however. Aspects of nanotechnology both for and in the environment are covered in this report; and NanoData Landscape Compilation: Photonics: Nanoscale effects impact on photonics, e.g., in the surface quality of waveguides and optical fibers. The focus here remains as closely as possible on photonics as it relates to nanotechnology, e.g., where nanotechnology enhances photonics and vice versa.

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Blog Review: Aug. 16 – SemiEngineering

3D logic; when to hack a car; market predictions; jittery clocks; Monte Carlo sampling.

Cadences Paul McLellan checks out how Imec sees the future of transistors and the challenges of 3D logic.

Synopsys Robert Vamosi gets a lesson on the electronic systems powering modern cars, and considers when its ethical to hack one.

Mentors Colin Walls takes a look at how to pass data between RTOS tasks.

Rambus Aharon Etengoff looks at recent semi market predictions, from expanding capital spending to slowing M&A.

Ansys Paolo Colombo examines why extremely hot weather leaves airplanes unable to fly.

Coventors Sandy Wen notes that as silicon photonics manufacturing gains momentum, its important to pay attention to process variation issues.

Silicon Labs Kevin Smith investigates he causes of noisy or jittery clocks and the role of jitter attenuators.

Intels Ron Wilson considers the difference between a motion and a gesture, and the challenges in making robots move more like humans.

Nvidias Ahana Dave points to how astronomers are using AI to learn more about the lifecycles of red giants.

Cadences Arthur Schaldenbrand examines advanced concepts in analog design in a new series, beginning with an overview of variation-aware design and Monte Carlo sampling.

And dont miss the blogs featured in last weeks Low Power-High Performance newsletter:

Editor In Chief Ed Sperling observes that memory and processors are still separate, but that could change as the volume of data increases.

Executive Editor Ann Steffora Mutschler finds its an exciting time to be involved in designing computer vision applications.

Cadences Vinay Patwardhan zeroes in on ways to optimize for the lowest power in a high-frequency, high-switching design.

Rambus Sarvagya Kochak contends that alternatives to traditional DRAM are needed to meet the bandwidth and latency demands of the cloud.

Mentors Progyna Khondkar digs into the fundamental parts of UPF constructions.

ARMs Kinjal Dave examines the unique system design choices needed to integrate functionally asymmetric compute elements.

Synopsys Pedro Ricardo Miguel explains how to overcome bandwidth limitations of MIPI DSI with visually lossless compression.

ARMs Brian Fuller argues that its becoming increasingly important to process actionable data at the edge, not in the cloud.

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Blog Review: Aug. 16 - SemiEngineering

Ripple Price Forecast and Analysis – August 16, 2017

Ripple prices remained relatively flat in yesterday’s trading, although there was a slight bias to the downside. XRP prices dropped 1.12% over 24 hours, adding to a lackluster week of 13% losses.

All this occurred despite Ripple news of expansion into China.

Under normal circumstances, investors ramp up their holdings at the merest whiff of international expansion. However, in this case, optimism was blunted by confusion over whether or not Ripple is entering China alone.

Read: Ripple Price Forecast and Analysis - August 17, 2017

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Ripple Price Forecast and Analysis – August 16, 2017