UFO Crash (NASA)
By: Samvel Zakoyan
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Earth HD Time Lapse View from Space NASA
By: mikel jaku
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Nasa Iyo Na Ang Lahat - Daniel Padilla (KathNiel Fanvid)
Hi guys! This is my first ever fanvid. BTW, credits to the owners of the original files. I just collected them. Let #39;s keep on supporting them guys, to infinity and beyond! Feel free to post your comments below. I #39;ll be posting more fanvids soon (lots of #39;em) so I hope you #39;ll like them. Oh, and subscribe! 🙂
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Nasa Iyo Na Ang Lahat - Daniel Padilla (KathNiel Fanvid) - Video
NASA #39;s Project Gemini : Status Report #2 - 1960s Educational Film
NASA status report that details the purposes behind the Gemini Program, including early unmanned flights required to test various systems and sub-systems before a manned space flight is attempted. The Gemini I Gemini II launches are shown. This film supplied courtesy the Department of Defence NASAimages.org
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NASA's Project Gemini : Status Report #2 - 1960s Educational Film - Video
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Media are invited to a photo and interview opportunity at 10 a.m. EST Wednesday, Jan. 30, at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Journalists will visit Kennedy's Swamp Works research laboratories and the facility where NASA's Orion spacecraft is being prepared for its first launch.
Kennedy Director Bob Cabana will provide a status update on the center's transformation to a multiuse government and commercial space launch and recovery complex. Media must be at Kennedy's press site by 9:30 a.m. for transportation to the sites.
Journalists will be able to see and photograph the research and technology work going on in the laboratories and the progress being made on the Orion crew module at Kennedy's Operations and Checkout Building. NASA officials will be available for interviews at both locations.
News media without Kennedy accreditation need to apply for credentials by noon on Jan. 29. International media accreditation for this event is closed. Media accreditation for the scheduled Jan. 30 Tracking and Data Relay Satellite-K launch will be honored for the event. Media must apply for credentials online at: https://media.ksc.nasa.gov
Badges for the Swamp Works and Operations and Checkout Building event may be picked up at the Kennedy Space Center Badging Office on State Road 405.
Kennedy's Swamp Works establishes rapid, innovative and cost-effective exploration mission solutions through leveraging of partnerships across NASA, industry and academia. Concepts start small and build up fast, with lean development processes and a hands-on approach. Testing is performed in early stages to drive design improvements. Capabilities include the Granular Mechanics and Regolith Operations Laboratory, Electrostatics and Surface Physics Laboratory, Regolith Activities Testbed and the Robotics Integration, Checkout and Assembly Area.
In a revamped area of the Operations and Checkout building, NASA employees and Lockheed Martin contractors are working side by side to prepare Orion for Exploration Flight Test-1 next year. Orion is designed to take U.S. astronauts farther into space than ever before.
The Orion spacecraft, managed by NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, will be launched on missions by NASA's heavy-lift Space Launch System (SLS), an entirely new capability for human exploration. Designed to be flexible for launching spacecraft from Kennedy for crew and cargo missions, SLS will expand human presence beyond low-Earth orbit and enable new missions of exploration across the solar system. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages SLS. Kennedy manages the Ground Systems Development and Operations Program, which is preparing to process and launch the next-generation vehicles and spacecraft designed to achieve NASA's goals for space exploration.
For more information about the Orion program, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/orion
For more information on SLS, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/sls
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NASA Invites Media To View Ongoing Orion And Testing Work At Kennedy Jan. 30
NASA scientific balloon being launched in Antarctica. Credit: NASA
Published: Jan. 25, 2013 at 4:03 PM
WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (UPI) -- NASA says a balloon launched in Antarctica and carrying a scientific experiment has broken the record for longest flight by a balloon of its size.
The balloon carrying the Super Trans-Iron Galactic Element Recorder (Super-TIGER) experiment has been aloft for 46 days and is on its third orbit around the South Pole, the space agency reported Thursday.
"This is an outstanding achievement for NASA's Astrophysics balloon team," said John Grunsfeld of the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Keeping these huge balloons aloft for such long periods lets us do forefront science that would be difficult to do otherwise."
The Super-TIGER instrument is measuring rare heavy elements among the high-energy cosmic rays bombarding the Earth from elsewhere in our Milky Way galaxy.
The 39-million cubic foot scientific balloon launched Dec. 8 from the long duration balloon site near McMurdo Station, Antarctica, took its scientific payload to an altitude of 127,000 feet, more than four times the altitude of most commercial airliners, scientists said.
The McMurdo launch site takes advantage of the stratospheric anti-cyclonic wind pattern circulating from east to west around the South Pole.
The Super-TIGER science team said it plans to keep the balloon flying for eight to 10 more days to allow a close approach to McMurdo Station before terminating the flight and recovering the experiment.
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Like vinyl records and skinny ties, good things eventually come back around. At NASA, that means looking to the Apollo program for ideas on how to develop the next generation of rockets for future missions to the moon and beyond.
Young engineers who weren't even born when the last Saturn V rocket took off for the moon are testing a vintage engine from the program.
The engine, known to NASA engineers as No. F-6049, was supposed to help propel Apollo 11 into orbit in 1969, when NASA sent Neil Armstrong and two other astronauts to the moon for the first time. The flight went off without a hitch, but no thanks to the engine it was grounded because of a glitch during a test in Mississippi and later sent to the Smithsonian Institution, where it sat for years.
Now engineers are learning to work with technical systems and propellants not used since before the start of the space shuttle program, which first launched in 1981.
Nick Case, 27, and other engineers at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center on Thursday completed a series of 11 test-firings of the F-6049's gas generator, a jet-like rocket which produces 30,000 pounds of thrust and was used as a starter for the engine. They are trying to see whether a second-generation version of the Apollo engine could produce even more thrust and be operated with a throttle for deep-space exploration.
AP
There are no plans to send the old engine into space, but it could become a template for a new generation of motors incorporating parts of its design.
In NASA-speak, the old 18-foot-tall motor is called an F-1 engine. During moon missions, five of them were arranged at the base of the 363-foot-tall Saturn V system and fired together to power the rocket off the ground toward Earth orbit.
Thursday's test used one part of the engine, the gas generator, which powers the machinery to pump propellant into the main rocket chamber. It doesn't produce the massive orange flame or clouds of smoke like that of a whole F-1, but the sound was deafening as engineers fired the mechanism in an outdoor test stand on a cool, sunny afternoon.
The device produced a plume that resembled a blow torch the size of two buses and set fire to a grassy area, which was quickly extinguished.
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REDONDO BEACH, Calif. NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is one of the most intricate and powerful observatories ever devised.
Almost immediately after launching into space in 2018, James Webb Space Telescopewill begin the slow process of unfolding from its clamshell configuration into the most sensitive infrared instrument of its kind yet built. The telescope will then begin peering deep into the cosmos for signals left over from the Big Bang that created our universe.
But JWST's nail-biting deployment won't be the first time the craft unfolds. Before constructing the final components, engineers have been making sure to test and retest mockups in conditions potentially harsher than the telescope the long-awaited $8.8 billion successor to NASA's iconic Hubble Space Telescope will experience.
Space-ready drafts of the mirrors, solar shields and electronics-bearing body of the craft have been fabricated by the Northrop Grumman Corporation, NASA's primary contractor in charge of building JWST. [Photos: The James Webb Space Telescope]
Each piece is identical to the final product. The pieces of the giant telescope are exposed to the some of the worst trials engineers can come up with. The mockups must perform not only in ideal circumstances, but also in subpar conditions.
"You don't just test how it's going to work the way it's supposed to work," Scott Willoughby, JWST's program manager at Northrop Grumman, said during a Jan. 11 tour of the company's facility here in Redondo Beach.
Built in stages
The jet-sized telescope isn't being built all at once, but instead incrementally, allowing for testing of the individual parts.
"You don't built it all and see if it works," Willoughby said.
The first priority has been high-risk objects such as the mirrors and the instruments. JWST contains 18 hexagonal mirrors in an array, rather than one large mirror.
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Jan. 27, 2013 NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System, also known as the Space Network, will get an upgrade this month when the agency launches the first of a new generation of communications satellites to connect man of NASA's spacecraft to their control centers and mission data centers.
A United Launch Alliance Atlas V 401 is due to loft the TDRS-K spacecraft Jan. 29 on a course to geosynchronous orbit where the spacecraft will have a wide view of Earth. From that position, the spacecraft will provide communications with NASA's fleet of Earth-orbiting science spacecraft, including the International Space Station and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.
The advanced spacecraft, known as TDRS, is needed to ensure the communications network is able to provide critical services to user spacecraft in the next decade.
"We have some aging satellites, so we need new spacecraft to go in there and help carry more of the data," said Diana Calero, mission manager for NASA's Launch Services Program, or LSP, based at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The processing for this mission included the standard in-depth reviews but also took into account extra engineering sessions to investigate whether the underperformance of an upper stage engine during an earlier, non-NASA launch would occur during the TDRS ascent, said Tim Dunn, NASA launch director. The Centaur upper stage used by the Atlas V uses an engine similar to the one that underperformed during a Delta IV launch last year.
"Our engineers and analysts from the Launch Services Program, working alongside the United Launch Alliance engineers, we've been methodically reviewing data and working very closely on flight clearance for the TDRS-K mission, so that's been our biggest challenge to date," Dunn said.
The TDRS spacecraft is large and looked impressive as it stood with its large steerable antennas folded over top of each other inside a processing hangar at Astrotech in Titusville, Fla. The spacecraft, built by The Boeing Company in El Segundo, Calif., arrived in Florida on Dec. 18 on an Air Force C-17 transport plane. Following testing, fueling and launch preparations, it was positioned inside a two-part payload fairing and taken to Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
Onboard thrusters will provide the final propulsion to reach geosynchronous orbit following separation from the Centaur upper stage.
"The antennas are furled and they have a certain amount of days that they can stay furled," Calero said. "If they pass that, then the antennas, when they're deployed, they can actually degrade in space and so we have to play close attention to how long they stay furled. So it was really challenging trying to schedule the shipping of the spacecraft with the moving launch date. We're still watching it very closely."
TDRS-K will be the 11th TDRS launched by NASA since it began building the space-borne network in 1983. The most recent spacecraft launched in 2002 on an Atlas IIA.
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NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System offers upgrade to vital communications net
NASA presents a video tribute to the astronauts of the Apollo 1, Challenger and Columbia tragedies.
By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News
This should be the saddest week of the year for NASA which is marking the anniversaries of three fatal tragedies, including the 10th anniversary of the shuttle Columbia's catastrophic breakup. But the way NASA Administrator Charles Bolden sees it, this week is not just about mourning 17 dead astronauts.
"I think this is not a memorial. It's a celebration, because of what they made possible," he told NBC News this month during a visit to Seattle. "We're commemorating them, and we're thanking them by continuing to move forward and not dropping back and dwelling on the pain. They'd be pretty angry, I think, if they saw that."
The week of celebration and, yes, of commemoration begins on Sunday with the 46th anniversary of the 1967 Apollo 1 launch-pad fire. The 27th anniversary of the 1986 Challenger explosion follows on Monday. This year, NASA is focusing the most on Friday, the 10th anniversary of the Columbia tragedy, which has been set aside as the agency's "Day of Remembrance" for all of its fallen astronauts.
Ever since the loss of Columbia and its crew of seven, NASA has organized solemn commemorations during the last week of January.
"We honor the memory of all three crews that were lost over the history of human spaceflight," Bolden explained. "We thought it was fitting that it be somewhere around the dates of those three losses. We think about this every day, to be quite honest. But we take these particular times and set them aside, when we can let everyone else around the world join us and help celebrate."
There's that word again.
"I use the term 'celebrate' because we have to remember that, yeah, we lost some valiant people but what their sacrifice brought is what we should really be thinking about: the fact that they dared to challenge and do things differently," Bolden said. "Because of what they did, we're well on the cusp of going deeper into space than we've ever gone before."
Each tragedytook a terribletoll and in each case, NASA learned from its mistakes:
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Prof Steve Wilks (Nanotechnology) Prof Steve Conlan (Molecular Cell Biology), Swansea University
"Nanohealth is really going to move medicine forward. There are huge challenges facing medicine, facing clinicians, facing hospitals - both in the UK and overseas." The Centre for NanoHealth is one of Swansea University #39;s major research projects, and is a collaboration between our Colleges of Engineering, Science and Medicine. In this video, co-directors Steve Conlan and Steve Wilks explain what nanohealth is, and why it #39;s so important. "Clinicians provide #39;problems #39;, which we try and solve with them. This includes things like looking at blood in microscopic detail, creating scaffolds for growing new tissues, and using optics and lasers for diagnoses."
By: Swansea Uni
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Micronova - Aalto University and VTT Centre for Micro and Nanotechnology
Micronova is Finland #39;s National Research Infrastructure for micro- and nanotechnology, jointly run by VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and Aalto University. Micronova #39;s expertise covers the entire micro-nano innovation chain, from basic device physics and materials research to the development of new fabrication techniques and device prototypes, and even small scale manufacturing. Video by KLOK 2013.
By: aaltouniversity
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Micronova - Aalto University and VTT Centre for Micro and Nanotechnology - Video
Nanotechnology-Mad Scientist Mike 2012
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Public release date: 25-Jan-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Kathleen Eggleson keggleso@nd.edu 574-631-1229 University of Notre Dame
Every day scientists learn more about how the world works at the smallest scales. While this knowledge has the potential to help others, it's possible that the same discoveries can also be used in ways that cause widespread harm.
A new article in the journal Nanomedicine, born out of a Federal Bureau of Investigation workshop held at the University of Notre Dame in September 2012, tackles this complex "dual-use" aspect of nanotechnology research.
"The rapid pace of breakthroughs in nanotechnology, biotechnology, and other fields, holds the promise of great improvements in areas such as medical diagnosis and treatment" says Kathleen Eggleson, a research scientist in Notre Dame's Center for Nano Science and Technology and the author of the study.
"But the risk of misuse of these breakthroughs rises along with the potential benefit. This is the essence of the 'dual-use dilemma.'"
The report examines the potential for nano-sized particles (which are measured in billionths of a meter) to breach the blood-brain barrier, the tightly knit layers of cells that afford the brain the highest level of protectionfrom microorganisms, harmful molecules, etc.in the human body. Some neuroscientists are purposefully engineering nanoparticles that can cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) so as to deliver medicines in a targeted and controlled way directly to diseased parts of the brain.
At the same time, the report notes, "nanoparticles designed to cross the BBB constitute a serious threatin the context of combat." For example, it is theorized that "aerosol delivery" of some nano-engineered agent in "a crowded indoor space" could cause serious harm to many people at once.
The problem of dual-use research was highlighted last year when controversy erupted over the publication of findings that indicate how, with a handful modifications, the H5N1 influenza virus ("bird flu") can be altered in a way that would enable it to be transmitted between mammalian populations.
After a self-imposed one-year moratorium on this research, several laboratories around the world announced that they will restart the work in early 2013.
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Notre Dame study explores the potential benefits and threats of nanotechnology research
Jan. 25, 2013 Every day scientists learn more about how the world works at the smallest scales. While this knowledge has the potential to help others, it's possible that the same discoveries can also be used in ways that cause widespread harm.
A new article in the journal Nanomedicine, born out of a Federal Bureau of Investigation workshop held at the University of Notre Dame in September 2012, tackles this complex "dual-use" aspect of nanotechnology research.
"The rapid pace of breakthroughs in nanotechnology, biotechnology, and other fields, holds the promise of great improvements in areas such as medical diagnosis and treatment" says Kathleen Eggleson, a research scientist in Notre Dame's Center for Nano Science and Technology and the author of the study.
"But the risk of misuse of these breakthroughs rises along with the potential benefit. This is the essence of the 'dual-use dilemma.'"
The report examines the potential for nano-sized particles (which are measured in billionths of a meter) to breach the blood-brain barrier, the tightly knit layers of cells that afford the brain the highest level of protection -- from microorganisms, harmful molecules, etc. -- in the human body. Some neuroscientists are purposefully engineering nanoparticles that can cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) so as to deliver medicines in a targeted and controlled way directly to diseased parts of the brain.
At the same time, the report notes, "nanoparticles designed to cross the BBB constitute a serious threatin the context of combat." For example, it is theorized that "aerosol delivery" of some nano-engineered agent in "a crowded indoor space" could cause serious harm to many people at once.
The problem of dual-use research was highlighted last year when controversy erupted over the publication of findings that indicate how, with a handful modifications, the H5N1 influenza virus ("bird flu") can be altered in a way that would enable it to be transmitted between mammalian populations.
After a self-imposed one-year moratorium on this research, several laboratories around the world announced that they will restart the work in early 2013.
The FBI is actively responding to these developments in the scientific community.
"The law enforcement-security community seeks to strengthen the existing dialogue with researchers," William So of the FBI's Biological Countermeasures Unit says in the study.
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(01-27-13) Al-Rastan | Homs | Childre Have No Medicine or Help, Mother Asks UN
http://www.facebook.com twitter.com Syrian victims are screaming for your help. Will you answer?
By: SyrianDaysOfRage
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(01-27-13) Al-Rastan | Homs | Childre Have No Medicine or Help, Mother Asks UN - Video
My lovely medicine
"The Pretty Reckless-My Medicine (Single Version)" #9834; #9834; #9834; #1047; #1074; #1091; #1082; #1086; #1079; #1072; #1087; #1080; #1089; #1100; #1087; #1088; #1072; #1074; #1086; #1086; #1073; #1083; #1072; #1076; #1072; #1090; #1077; #1083; #1100;: UMG :::VKONTAKTE::: vk.com :::TWITTER::: twitter.com
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Disco #39;s the Best Medicine
You #39;ll always feel better with a dose of Disco - no prescription needed, and no nasty lingering side effects. If you enjoyed this video, check out his others right here on YouTube; join Disco on Facebook and Twitter!
By: MsJumpinJude
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Jeremy M. Berg, director of UPMCs new Institute for Personalized Medicine holds a model that he built of a protein that is mutated in human disease. Jasmine Goldband | Tribune-Review
Published: Saturday, January 26, 2013, 9:00p.m. Updated 14 hours ago
Drugs like Plavix, which prevents blood clots in people with coronary artery and vascular diseases, benefit millions of people.
But some people who take them find they dont work.
About 15 percent of people who take Plavix dont activate it properly. There are lots of people who are taking it who are not benefiting from it at all, said Jeremy Berg, a UPMC specialist in personalized medicine.
Personalized medicine tailors treatment to individuals based on increasingly accessible genetic information. The data are used, for example, to predict a patients likelihood of developing types of cancer, determine which therapies or drugs will work for diseases like asthma or even how to treat a particular case of influenza.
Berg, a bio-organic chemist with a doctorate in chemistry from Harvard University, is the first director of UPMCs new Institute for Personalized Medicine, announced this month.
The goal of setting up the institute, and others like it, is to make personalized medicine real. It improves the chances of getting better therapies and treatments to the public, Berg said.
Research being done into genetically informed treatments and therapies has been going on for years. UPMCs is the second personalized medicine institute to open in the state in the past 12 months, the other being the Hershey Institute for Personalized Medicine, operated by Penn State that opened in February.
Institutes such as these get treatments from research labs to patients, doctors and scientists said.
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DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/7q6bf4/transfusion) has announced the addition of the "Transfusion Medicine Interactive: A Case Study Approach CD-ROM" report to their offering.
Transfusion Medicine Interactive, designed to complement the Practical Guide to Transfusion Medicine, is a CD-ROM that serves as an interactive textbook for those interested in understanding the practical aspects of clinical transfusion medicine. This is a handy reference that allows users to take advantage of the interactive benefits of receiving auditory and text feedback while managing complex, multi-part cases presented in a clinical-pathological conference format.
Transfusion Medicine Interactive demonstrates how to reach conclusions from current data and how to proceed in accumulating further data to ensure accurate diagnosis and management of blood banking and transfusion events.
Infinite Learning Potential
Topics of Interest
This CD-ROM ensures that there is something for everyone:
from medical technology students to physicians and nurses in training and in clinical practice. It is a great resource for medical professionals who are interested in advancing their clinical transfusion medicine training.
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/7q6bf4/transfusion
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