Space station crew gears up for two spacewalks

European Space Agency astronaut Alexander Gerst prepares his suit for a planned six-and-a-half-hour spacewalk Tuesday outside the International Space Station. Gerst and astronaut Reid Wiseman plan to move a faulty cooling pump to a secure location and to carry out a variety of maintenance tasks. NASA

Space station astronauts will venture outside the complex Tuesday and again next week to move a failed ammonia pump to a more secure storage location, to replace an electrical component that will restore one of the lab's solar power channels to normal operation and to carry out a variety of "get-ahead" maintenance tasks.

The two U.S. spacewalks will set the stage for a complex series of eight to 10 NASA spacewalks and module relocations next year that are needed to prepare the station for dockings by Boeing and SpaceX commercial crew ferry craft.

Two commercial crew docking adapters will be installed, one on the front end of the forward Harmony module where shuttles once docked and the other on the module's upper space-facing port. Harmony's Earth-facing port will remain available for use by visiting cargo ships.

A pressurized storage module now attached to the Earth-facing port of the central Unity module will be moved to the forward side of the Tranquility compartment where the multi-window cupola is located, making way for equipment that will enable visiting cargo ships berth at Unity.

The relocations will be carried out remotely using the station's robot arm, but multiple spacewalks will be needed to route and re-route power and data cables and to install a universal communications and navigation system that will be used by Boeing and SpaceX crew craft during station approaches and departures.

When the work is complete, the U.S. segment of the station will be able to accommodate two commercial crew vehicles and two cargo ships at the same time, providing fully independent access to the lab complex for the first time since the space shuttle's retirement in 2011.

"When you look out a little further as to how the EVAs stack up after the first of the year and out into the spring, we're really going to start this transformation of the space station," said Kenny Todd, space station integration and operations manager. "We're going to be doing the things we need to do on these EVAs to prep for moving some modules around.

"All that is in preparation for being able to support future commercial crewed vehicles coming to station. We're trying to get out in front of that. We'll be prepping for moving modules, we'll be installing a new docking adapter system. All of that will be happening throughout the next several months."

But first, NASA is staging a pair of spacewalks to complete unfinished business, to restore an electrical power channel to normal operation and to move camera lights and equipment needed for the upcoming commercial crew reconfiguration.

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Space station crew gears up for two spacewalks

Lily Collins Love, Rosie Premiere Dress: Red Hot In Cutout Gown

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Lily Collins, 25, looked absolutely stunning at the Love, Rosie premiere at the Odeon West End in London on Oct. 6. While Lily is not a Hollywood heavyweight, this stylish star is part of the young Hollywood bunch and her bold statements on the red carpet, (along with the big screen!), leave us wanting more from the star.

She wore a Solace London dress that was perfect for a leading lady. Lily stepped out wearing this beautiful and modern frock while attending the premiere of her new movie. The dress is a solid shade of bold red and features a turtleneck. Cutouts on the side cinch in her waist and put her svelte frame on display and there was more where that came from! When she turned around she showed off a huge cutout at the back which balanced out the more conservative style from the front. With her bob slicked back she opted for some sexy edge and it totally worked.

She opted to wear minimal jewelry and bright red stilettos, which matched her dress. While Lily is usually one to play it safe and sweet on the red carpet, she definitely amped up her style and truly made herself known in this sexy number. This frock made us excited to see what else she has up her sleeve when it comes to her red carpet choices!

Love her look? SHOP for the Solace London dress HERE on ShopBop in black for $425.

Lilys new movie follows the story of Rosie and Alex, two best friends since childhood, as they travel on their journey through love and life. The movie hits theaters in the UK on Oct. 22 and is expected to be out in the US early 2015.

Do you LOVE Lilys red carpet look?

Lauren Carr

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Lily Collins Love, Rosie Premiere Dress: Red Hot In Cutout Gown

"AHS: Freak Show" gets red carpet treatment

Actresses Jyoti Amge and Erika Ervin attend the premiere of FX's "American Horror Story: Freak Show" on Oct. 5, 2014, in Hollywood, California. Kevin Winter/Getty Images

The red carpet was rolled out in Los Angeles on Sunday for the premiere of "Freak Show," the fourth season of the "American Horror Story" anthology series.

Co-creator Ryan Murphy said Lange came up with this season's concept.

"I think back in season one, she said, 'We've got to do carnival, freak shows,' and she kept sending me books," he revealed on the red carpet.

This "AHS" chapter -- set in Jupiter, Florida, in 1952 -- revolves around one of the last touring companies of physically different humans. The attraction includes a bearded lady and a woman with three breasts.

The problem is that business is bad, forcing owner Elsa Mars (portrayed by Lange) to go to great lengths to assure that the show goes on.

With his creative partner Brad Falchuk, Murphy eventually embraced the idea. He wanted this season to imbue a spooky, early 1950s sci-fi feel, and he wanted to give cast member Sarah Paulson an impossible role.

She plays the characters of Bette and Dot Tattler, conjoined twins who may be the star attraction that Elsa's show desperately needs.

Paulson called the roles "the most difficult thing I've ever done in my life."

She said the characters' heads can't turn to look into each other's eyes.

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"AHS: Freak Show" gets red carpet treatment

ISS Space Walk Briefing for Expedition Crew 41 from NASA’s Johnson Space Center, Texas – Video


ISS Space Walk Briefing for Expedition Crew 41 from NASA #39;s Johnson Space Center, Texas
From NASA #39;s Johnson Space Center in Houston, a mission briefing was held about two upcoming space walks on Oct. 7 and Oct. 15 to replace a failed power regulator and relocate a failed cooling...

By: NASA

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ISS Space Walk Briefing for Expedition Crew 41 from NASA's Johnson Space Center, Texas - Video

Gajah – "Hot Pants" (Produced by Uncommon Nasa) (from Hands of Gold Are Always Cold) – Video


Gajah - "Hot Pants" (Produced by Uncommon Nasa) (from Hands of Gold Are Always Cold)
Produced by Uncommon Nasa, taken from Gajah #39;s upcoming (10/28/14) release of "Hands of Gold Are Always Cold". Additional Vocals by Barrie McLain. Get more info at http://www.uncommonnasa.com. Photo...

By: UncommonRecords

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Gajah - "Hot Pants" (Produced by Uncommon Nasa) (from Hands of Gold Are Always Cold) - Video

NASA Postdoctoral Program

Synopsis - Sep 26, 2014 General Information Solicitation Number: NNH14528995L Posted Date: Sep 26, 2014 FedBizOpps Posted Date: Sep 26, 2014 Recovery and Reinvestment Act Action: No Original Response Date: N/A Current Response Date: Oct 06, 2014 Classification Code: 76 -- Books, maps and other publications NAICS Code: 711510 Contracting Office Address NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA Headquarters Acquisition Branch, Code 210.H, Greenbelt, MD 20771 Description NASA/HQ is hereby soliciting information about potential sources for completing a scholarly, analytical book-length manuscript that will serve as a history of NASA's Near-Earth Object(NEO) Program. The NASA History Program Office will manage professional review and oversight of final publication of the manuscript as a NASA Special Publication (SP). NASA/HQ is seeking capability statements from all interested parties, including Small, Small Disadvantaged (SDB), 8(a), Woman-owned (WOSB), Veteran Owned (VOSB), Service Disabled Veteran Owned (SD-VOSB), Historically Underutilized Business Zone (HUBZone) businesses, and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU)/Minority Institutions (MI) for the purposes of determining the appropriate level of competition and/or small business subcontracting goals for completing a scholarly, analytical book-length manuscript that will serve as a history of NASA's Near-Earth Object (NEO) Program. The Government reserves the right to consider a Small, 8(a), Woman-owned (WOSB), Service Disabled Veteran (SD-VOSB), or HUBZone business set-aside based on responses hereto. No solicitation exists; therefore, do not request a copy of the solicitation. If a solicitation is released it will be synopsized in FedBizOpps and on the NASA Acquisition Internet Service. It is the potential offeror's responsibility to monitor these sites for the release of any solicitation or synopsis. Interested offerors/vendors having the required specialized capabilities to meet the above requirement should submit a capability statement of 10 pages or less indicating the ability to perform all aspects of the effort described herein. Responses must include the following: name and address of firm, size of business; average annual revenue for past 3 years and number of employees; ownership; whether they are large, or any category of small business, number of years in business; affiliate information: parent company, joint venture partners, potential teaming partners, prime contractor (if potential sub) or subcontractors (if potential prime); list of customers covering the past five years (highlight relevant work performed, contract numbers, contract type, dollar value of each procurement; and point of contact - address and phone number). Please advise if the requirement is considered to be a commercial or commercial-type product. A commercial item is defined in FAR 2.101. This synopsis is for information and planning purposes and is not to be construed as a commitment by the Government nor will the Government pay for information solicited. Respondents will not be notified of the results of the evaluation. Respondents deemed fully qualified will be considered in any resultant solicitation for the requirement. All responses shall be submitted to Raymond R. Jones IV no later than October 6, 2014. Please reference NNH14528995L in any response. Any referenced notes may be viewed at the following URLs linked below. Point of Contact Name: Raymond Jones Title: Contract Specialist Phone: 301-286-0792 Fax: 301-286-0357 Email: raymond.r.jones@nasa.gov

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NASA Postdoctoral Program

NASA Holds Media Briefing to Discuss Comet Flyby of Mars Observations

NASA will host a media briefing at 11 a.m. PDT (2 p.m. EDT) Thursday, Oct. 9, to outline the space and Earth-based assets that will have extraordinary opportunities to image and study a comet from relatively close range to Mars on Sunday, Oct. 19.

The briefing will be held in NASA Headquarters auditorium, and broadcast live on NASA Television and the agencys website.

Comet C/2013 A1 Siding Spring will miss Mars by only about 88,000 miles (139,500 kilometers). That is less than half the distance between Earth and its moon and less than one-tenth the distance of any known comet flyby of Earth. The comet's nucleus will come closest to Mars at about 11:27 a.m. PDT (2:27 p.m. EDT), hurtling at about 126,000 mph (56 kilometers per second), relative to Mars.

The concerted campaign of observations by multiple spacecraft at Mars and by numerous NASA assets is directed at the comet and its effect on the Martian atmosphere. The observations of the comet may yield fresh clues to our solar system's earliest days more than four billion years ago.

Panelists include:

- Jim Green, director, Planetary Science Division (PSD), NASA Headquarters, Washington

- Kelly Fast, program scientist, PSD

- Carey Lisse, senior astrophysicist, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Maryland

- Padma Yanamandra-Fisher, senior research scientist, Space Science Institute, Rancho Cucamonga Branch, California

Media can ask questions from participating NASA locations, or by telephone. To participate remotely from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, reporters must access access in advance by contacting Gina Fontes before 4 p.m. PDT Oct. 8, at 818-354-5011 orgeorgina.d.fontes@jpl.nasa.gov. To participate by phone, reporters must contact Steve Cole at 202-358-0918 orstephen.e.cole@nasa.govand provide their media affiliation by 10 a.m. PDT (1 p.m. EDT) Thursday.

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NASA Holds Media Briefing to Discuss Comet Flyby of Mars Observations

NASA eyes crew deep sleep option for possible Mars mission

By Irene Klotz

Artwork by Mark Elwood(SpaceWorks Enterprises, Inc.)

Artwork by Mark Elwood(SpaceWorks Enterprises, Inc.)

A NASA-backed study explores an innovative way to dramatically cut the cost of a human expedition to Mars -- put the crew in stasis.

The deep sleep, called torpor, would reduce astronauts metabolic functions with existing medical procedures. Torpor also can occur naturally in cases of hypothermia.

Therapeutic torpor has been around in theory since the 1980s and really since 2003 has been a staple for critical care trauma patients in hospitals," aerospace engineer Mark Schaffer, with SpaceWorks Enterprises in Atlanta, said at the International Astronomical Congress in Toronto last week. "Protocols exist in most major medical centers for inducing therapeutic hypothermia on patients to essentially keep them alive until they can get the kind of treatment that they need.

Coupled with intravenous feeding, a crew could be put in hibernation for the transit time to Mars, which under the best-case scenario would take 180 days one-way.

So far, the duration of a patients time in torpor state has been limited to about one week.

We havent had the need to keep someone in (therapeutic torpor) for longer than seven days, Schaffer said. For human Mars missions, we need to push that to 90 days, 180 days. Those are the types of mission flight times were talking about.

Economically, the payoff looks impressive. Crews can live inside smaller ships with fewer amenities like galleys, exercise gear and of course water, food and clothing. One design includes a spinning habitat to provide a low-gravity environment to help offset bone and muscle loss.

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NASA eyes crew deep sleep option for possible Mars mission

NASA's giant vibrating table: Like Magic Fingers for spacecraft tests

NASA is shaking things up in its preparations for future manned space flights with a 55,000-pound table designed to replicate the forces of a rocket during launch.

The vibration-simulation table is lowered into place. NASA

NASA is hard at work on the Orion spacecraft, a vessel destined to one day ferry astronauts to far-off destinations like an asteroid or Mars. That's a serious responsibility. Orion is nearing an expected unmanned test flight this December and the space agency is in hard-core testing mode to be sure the craft is ready to take off.

NASA needs to be sure Orion can handle the rigors of launching on top of the new Space Launch System rocket, a rocket more powerful than any in history. To that end, NASA ordered up a 55,000-pound vibration-simulation table. The massive device is 22 feet wide and comes stocked with a slew of servo-hydraulic actuators that vibrate the table to replicate the kind of forces a spacecraft would endure while strapped to a honking big rocket.

This Magic-Fingers-on-steroids contraption is now in residence at NASA's Space Power Facility at the Glenn Research Center in Sandusky, Ohio. It joins what NASA describes as the world's largest vacuum chamber and the world's most powerful acoustic testing chamber for spacecraft. That makes the Space Power Facility a one-stop shop for tests that can re-create the rigorous conditions Orion will encounter when in use.

"Launch is the most dynamic and dangerous part of spaceflight. It takes an incredible amount of power for a rocket to boost a spacecraft like Orion into space. And all that power results in intense shaking. Spacecraft systems have to be specially designed to work in spite of the vibration -- this table lets us test them to make sure that they do," Jerry Carek, Space Power Facility manager, said in a statement.

The first Orion module to be tested at the facility will be a service module built by the European Space Agency. Later, NASA will test Orion's crew module, which is designed to carry astronauts on missions. If NASA eventually launches successful long-term manned missions using Orion, then at least a small part of that triumph will be attributable to the testing done on a massive, vibrating table.

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NASA's giant vibrating table: Like Magic Fingers for spacecraft tests

NASA Cassini Significant Events 09/17/2014 – 09/23/2014

Cassini is orbiting Saturn with a 31.9-day period in a plane inclined 40.3 degrees from the planet's equatorial plane. The most recent spacecraft tracking and telemetry data were obtained on Sept. 23 using the 70 meter diameter Deep Space Network (DSN) station in Spain. The spacecraft continues to be in an excellent state of health with all of its subsystems operating normally except for the instrument issues described at http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/significantevents/anomalies . Information on the present position of the Cassini spacecraft may be found on "Eyes on the Solar System":

http://1.usa.gov/1pEI4aQ

Wednesday, Sept. 17 (DOY 260)

While gathering speed towards a Friday periapsis, the Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVIS) controlled the spacecraft's orientation for close to twelve hours to scan Saturn's thermosphere -- the heated, thin upper atmosphere. Data from this observation will be useful for refining estimates of the gas density there to aid in planning Cassini's 2017 proximal orbits.

Thursday, Sept. 18 (DOY 261)

The Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) took control of pointing for six hours to carry out a thermal survey of the rings. Next, UVIS mapped the rings to collect spectral data for about eight hours while the Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS), the Visible and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) and CIRS acquired data in ride-along mode.

Friday, Sept. 19 (DOY 262)

The flight team fired Cassini's small rocket thrusters using commands created and uplinked near real time, for Orbit Trim Maneuver (OTM) 391. The commands caused the spacecraft to turn and burn hydrazine for 79 seconds, imparting the desired change in velocity of 85 millimeters per second to fine-tune the approach to Titan.

As soon as the OTM finished executing, VIMS observed a 4.5-hour occultation as the red giant star R Lyrae passed behind Saturn's rings. This star is brighter in infrared light than the well-known star Vega (Alpha Lyrae) is in visible light. ISS and CIRS rode along. With the occultation complete, CIRS made another thermal survey of the rings; this one lasted four hours. Next, VIMS led ISS and CIRS in a 4.5-hour study of the region where Saturn's shadow falls on the rings. Finally, ISS spent an hour re-targeting features known as "propellers" (http://go.usa.gov/YyGR) in the rings. Cassini passed through periapsis at 753,000 kilometers above Saturn's cloud tops, going 30,911 kilometers per hour relative to the planet.

Four moons, which may have a potential for harboring some sort of life, appeared in NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day today. Two of them, the 5,152 kilometer diameter Titan, and the 504 kilometer wide Enceladus, are targets that Cassini regularly studies:

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NASA Cassini Significant Events 09/17/2014 - 09/23/2014

Nano Energy Award 2014

Nano Energy Award 2014 winner: Yi Cui

We are delighted to announce that the winner of the 2014 Nano Energy Award is Professor Yi Cui,Associate Professor at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, for his outstanding contribution in development of nanomaterials and technologies for energy storage.

The Nano Energy Award is to reorganize a young and middle career scientist who has made exceptional contribution in the development of nanoenergy. Nano Energy Award will be presented at The First International Conference on Nanoenergy and Nanosystems (NENS2014) that will be held on December 8-10, 2014 in Beijing, China.

The committee for selecting the winner consisting of Dr. Zhong Lin Wang (Editor-in-Chief and founding editor of Nano Energy journal, http://www.nanoscience.gatech.edu), Dr. Sang-Woo Kim (Associated Editor of Nano Energy), Dr. Peter Lund (Associated Editor of Nano Energy) and Dr. Jelena Petrovic (Publisher of Nano Energy) has selected the winner from many excellent nominations.

Nano Energy (http://www.journals.elsevier.com/nano-energy) is a multidisciplinary, rapid-publication forum of original peer-reviewed contributions on the science and engineering of nanomaterials and nanodevices used in all forms of energy harvesting, conversion, storage, utilization and policy. Nano Energy provides a comprehensive coverage of this exciting and dynamic field which joins nanoscience and nanotechnology with energy science. The first impact factor received by Nano Energy is 10.2 for the year of 2013.

Nanoenergy and Nanosystems 2014 (http://www.nens.cn) is the first international conference that will cover the important topics in nanoenergy, from energy conversion, storage, sensors, system integration to self-powered technology. It will present the most advanced research in the fields and a platform for communications among the scientists worldwide.

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Nano Energy Award 2014

Penn Medicine Receives $3.5 Million NIH Grant to Study New Ways to Combat Diabetes

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Newswise PHILADELPHIA Penn Medicine will receive $3.5 million over the next five years to establish a National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) consortium to study new ways to treat diabetes. The program will be led by Klaus H. Kaestner, PhD, the Thomas and Evelyn Suor Butterworth Professor in Genetics and an investigator with the Institute for Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. The consortium is a joint effort between the Kaestner lab and that of Benjamin Glaser, MD, head of the Endocrinology and Metabolism Service, Department of Internal Medicine, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.

This award will enable us to continue a fruitful collaboration begun four years ago during a sabbatical stay in Jerusalem, says Kaestner. By leveraging Dr. Glasers clinical expertise with the technology development ongoing in my lab we hope to make rapid progress towards new treatments for diabetes.

The prevalence of diabetes has reached epidemic proportions worldwide and is predicted to increase rapidly in the future, putting a tremendous strain on health care budgets in both developed and developing countries. There are two major forms of diabetes and both are associated with decreased beta cell number or function, explains Kaestner. No treatments have been devised that increase beta cells in humans, and transplantation of beta cells is extremely limited due to lack of appropriate donors. For these reasons, increasing functional beta cells before or after transplantation has become a primary objective of diabetes research.

The teams previous studies have shown that adult human beta cells can be induced to replicate, and importantly, that these cells can maintain a normal response to glucose levels. However, the replication rate achieved is still too low for clinical applications.

The team aims to develop better ways to increase functional beta cells by inducing replication of adult beta cells, and by restoring juvenile properties to aged beta cells. To accomplish these aims, they will use cutting-edge and emerging technologies that are already established or are being developed. They will combine clinical experience with expertise in molecular biology and extensive experience in genomic modification aimed at enhancing beta-cell replication. By basing interventions on changes found in human disease and normal aging, this approach will increase the chances that discoveries made can be translated more rapidly into clinically relevant protocols.

The NIDDK grant is 1UC4DK104119-01.

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

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Penn Medicine Receives $3.5 Million NIH Grant to Study New Ways to Combat Diabetes