Required skimming: space and astronomy

This month, CJR presents Required Skimming, a daily miniguide to our staffers beats and obsessions, ranging from finance to food. If we overlooked any of your must-read destinations, please tell us in the comments.

Space.com: The most comprehensive website devoted the latest happenings in astronomy, space exploration, and sky watching.

NBCNews.coms Cosmic Log: Science editor Alan Boyle delivers diverse, often quirky, observations and commentary on topics ranging from space and cosmology to quantum physics and cutting-edge technology.

Discover Magazines Bad Astronomy blog: Astronomer-turned-writer Phil Plait provides expert analysis of hot topics in space and cosmology, from solar storms to exoplanets, often with a refreshing dose of media criticism.

NASA Watch: Critical analysis of the US space program, American politics and policy, the commercial spaceflight industry, and the International Space Station.

Spaceflight Now: Up-to-date information on the latest manned and unmanned space missions and launch schedules in the US and worldwide.

Wireds Beyond Apollo blog: Author and space historian David S.F. Portree covers the latest in exploration and technology with an emphasis on missions and programs planned but not flown (that is, the vast majority of them).

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Required skimming: space and astronomy

Astronomy Extravaganza at S.B. Museum of Natural History

Story Created: Aug 10, 2012 at 8:07 AM PDT

Story Updated: Aug 10, 2012 at 10:14 AM PDT

To celebrate the meteor shower the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History will be holding an Astronomy Extravaganza this Saturday.

To tell us more about the incoming meteor shower we welcomed the museum's Astronomy Programs Manager, Javier Rivera, to our set for KEY News This Morning. Rivera even made us a comet on set.

The Astronomy Extravaganza will take place at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History this Saturday from ten a.m. to ten p.m. It will feature comet demos, planetarium shows, a free telescope raffle as well as an assortment of other activities.

For more information go to sbnature.org/about/385.html.

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Astronomy Extravaganza at S.B. Museum of Natural History

Peter Bardwick of Rocket Fuel to Present at 2012 Pacific Crest Global Leadership Technology Forum

REDWOOD SHORES, CA--(Marketwire -08/10/12)- Rocket Fuel Inc., the leading provider of artificial intelligence advertising solutions for digital marketers, today announced that Chief Financial Officer Peter Bardwick will present at the 2012 Pacific Crest Global Leadership Technology Forum. The 14th annual event will take place August 12-14 at the Sonnenalp Resort in Vail, Colorado.

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About Rocket Fuel:Rocket Fuel is the leading provider of artificial intelligence advertising solutions that transform digital media campaigns into self-optimizing engines that learn and adapt in real-time, and deliver outstanding results from awareness to sales. Recently awarded #22 in Forbes Most Promising Companies in America list, over 700 of the world's most successful marketers trust Rocket Fuel to power their advertising across display, video, mobile, and social media. Founded by online advertising veterans and rocket scientists from NASA, DoubleClick, IBM, and Salesforce.com, Rocket Fuel is based in Redwood Shores, California, and has offices in fifteen cities worldwide including New York, London, Toronto, and Hamburg.

2012 Rocket Fuel Inc. All rights reserved. Rocket Fuel Inc. is a registered trademark of Rocket Fuel Inc. in the U.S. and/or other countries. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

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Peter Bardwick of Rocket Fuel to Present at 2012 Pacific Crest Global Leadership Technology Forum

Lockheed Martin To Authorize Canada's Cascade Aerospace As A C-130 Heavy Maintenance Center

ABBOTSFORD, British Columbia, Aug. 10, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Lockheed Martin (LMT) announced today at the 50th anniversary Abbotsford International Air Show that Cascade Aerospace will be authorized as a C-130 Heavy Maintenance Center (HMC) only the second such center in the world. Cascade is currently a Hercules Service Center (HSC) and conducts in-service support for Canada's legacy CC-130 and new CC-130J fleets.

"During its time as an existing Hercules maintainer, Cascade has demonstrated it has both the capability and process integrity to be certified as a C-130 Heavy Maintenance Center," said George Shultz, Lockheed Martin vice president and general manager for C-130 programs. "As we see worldwide interest in C-130 support expand, it is incumbent upon us to ensure that qualified and experienced companies support the Hercules community. Cascade is dedicated to supporting Canada's CC-130 fleet and authorizing its role as an HMC provider is a natural step in our overall partnership."

"We are honored to receive this prestigious status from Lockheed Martin," said David Schellenberg, Cascade Aerospace CEO. "We are privileged to have Lockheed Martin's respect and credibility behind it, and to be positioned as one of only two C-130 HMCs in the world. With more than 1,450 C-130s currently operating in 65 countries around the globe as well as Lockheed Martin's C-130J delivery backlog and strong order book this much-appreciated standing will significantly increase the international opportunities for Cascade Aerospace."

Lockheed Martin delivered Canada's 17th CC-130J aircraft to the Royal Canadian Air Force at 8 Wing Trenton earlier this year, completing the order Canada placed in December 2007 and delivering the aircraft on budget and three months ahead of schedule. Cascade's team supports the day-to-day activities of both the CC-130J and legacy model aircraft at 8 Wing Trenton, the hub of air mobility operations in Canada.

Lockheed Martin awarded a 20-year contract in 2010 to Cascade for maintenance services to support Canada's new CC-130Js. Cascade also provides fleet management services directly to the RCAF for their legacy model C-130 fleet. Cascade is one of only two Lockheed Martin-authorized Hercules Service Centers in the western hemisphere and one of 13 worldwide. An HMC is one that is authorized to do work on the new C-130J aircraft whereas an HSC is authorized to do work on the legacy C-130B-H aircraft.

Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a global security and aerospace company that employs about 120,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. The corporation's net sales for 2011 were $46.5 billion.

For additional information, visit our websites:http://www.lockheedmartin.com http://www.codeonemagazine.com

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Lockheed Martin To Authorize Canada's Cascade Aerospace As A C-130 Heavy Maintenance Center

Nutrition shines as profits and sales slide at recession-hit DSM

Royal DSM paid tribute to its nutrition division which held steady as its sales and profits dipped for the second quarter and first half of the financial year, as recessed global economies took their toll on bottom lines.

Despite the, challenging macro-economic environment spoken of by Feike Sijbesma, CEO/Chairman of the DSM Managing Board, the companys nutrition portfolio (which includes animal feed) managed a 21m growth in operating profits year-on-year from 366m in H1 2011, to 387m this year.

For the quarter, operating profits inched up from 193m in Q2 2011, to 195m, but net sales jumped almost 10% from 1637m to 1799m

But across the company the figures were less rosy, with net sales down 2% from 4644m to 4558 for the half and EBITDA profits down 14% (from 693m to 596m).

Polymer intermediates performed particularly poorly with operating profits almost halving from 192m to 99m for the half compared to the previous year. Performance materials dropped from 173m to 156m EBITDA while pharma improved from 12m to 22m.

The company noted the economic slowdown was not restricted to the developed world, with China not immune to the broader economic situation, and increased price competition there.

Profit improvement programme

Responding to the figures, DSM said it was implementing measures that would see 125m in cost savings by 2014, including facility rationalisation, shaving a 1000 staff from its 22,000+ global workforce and better synergies from recent acquisitions including omega-3 players, Ocean Nutrition Canada and Martek BioSciences.

The cross-selling of Martek products through the DSM global sales network resulted in double digit growth of Nutritional Lipids in infant nutrition outside USA, the company said.

It also hoped to pull back a further 25-30m in profit and margin improvements.

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Nutrition shines as profits and sales slide at recession-hit DSM

Monterey police rely more on 'touch DNA' to find suspects

Armed with a Supreme Court ruling and a DNA profile in 2010, Monterey police obtained the county's first "John Doe" arrest warrant, identifying a commercial burglary suspect whose name and face were unknown.

The effort is about to pay off. Monterey police Lt. Leslie Sonne said the department will soon make an arrest it believes will clear 14 other commercial burglaries from Palo Alto to Beverly Hills where police collected the same DNA profile.

Monterey police Sgt. Bill Clark said the case exemplifies how advances in DNA testing and the availability of warrants based solely on a suspect's genetic profile are changing the way detectives process property crime scenes that used to get only a dusting for fingerprints.

DNA analysis has come a long way since the days when criminalists needed a large blood stain to get a profile. Since 2005, scientists have been able to isolate DNA swabbed from surfaces like windowsills and cellphones that were merely touched by suspects, hence the common reference "touch DNA."

"When we started years and years ago, we needed a blood stain the size of penny to get any results," said Meghan Kinney, a criminalist with the Department of Justice's lab in Watsonville. "Now we don't even need to be able to see it to get a DNA type from it."

And if police can convince a judge that DNA from a crime scene was likely left by the perpetrator, they can get a John Doe warrant for that genetic profile. The significance: The warrant stops the

Objections

No-name warrants have been used in sexual assault cases, where semen often provides an easy DNA profile, since the 1990s. But it was not until January 2010 that the state Supreme Court upheld the practice.

Now, the possibility of "tolling" the legal filing deadline with the simple swipe of a surface has investigators arming themselves with cotton swabs like never before.

The legal tool is not without controversy. The Supreme Court's ruling was split 5-2. In his dissenting opinion, Justice Carlos Moreno said the warrants do not authorize the arrest of any individual and are being used as a mere placeholder to circumvent the statute of limitations until the named perpetrator can be identified and found.

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Monterey police rely more on 'touch DNA' to find suspects

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About 4.5 Million Funding for Group Leaders at the MPIB

10.08.2012 - (idw) Max-Planck-Institut fr Biochemie

The European Research Council (ERC) encourages excellent basic research in Europe in order to promote visionary projects and open up new interdisciplinary science areas. Three young group leaders of the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry (MPIB) in Martinsried near Munich succeeded in obtaining one of the coveted ERC Starting Grants. Spread over a period of five years, Esben Lorentzen, Andreas Pichlmair and Frank Schnorrer will receive 1.5 million each for their research projects. Due to their scientific achievements until now they were the winners against several thousand competitors. Delivery Service for Cilia Tiny hair-like structures (cilia) are found on the surface of most cells in the body, where they serve to move the cell, process external signals and coordinate the correct arrangement of the inner organs during development of the organism. To do this, cilia have to be supplied with the right building blocks. This is taken over by a complex transport system which is called intraflagellar transport (IFT). Defects in the IFT can lead to severe physical and mental disorders. Together with his research group Structural Biology of Cilia, Esben Lorentzen investigates how the system works. Using X-ray crystallography, the scientists could already decipher the structure of a subunit of the IFT complex, and others shall follow. These results could help avoid mistakes in the composition of the cilia and thus prevent the development of diseases.

Targeting Viruses When viruses enter our body across our mucosa, the immune system reacts promptly. Immune cells recognize the pathogens via signal molecules on the cells surface and initiate the appropriate maneuver. These molecular sensors for viruses are the research focus of Andreas Pichlmair and his research group Innate Immunity. If the viruses are successful and enter the cell, the pathogens take command and make the cellular metabolism work for them. It is still not known in detail how viruses alter the genetic activity and the protein production of the infected cells. To identify modified proteins and elucidate their importance for viral replication, Andreas Pichlmair and his colleagues utilize mass spectrometry among other methods.

Flying Power Packs The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster possesses different kinds of muscles and therefore can perform various behaviors such as crawling, running and, of course, flying. With the help of targeted gene modifications, the scientists in Frank Schnorrers research group Muscle Dynamics investigate how muscles of the fruit fly develop at the right place in the body and how the contractile machinery within the muscles is assembled properly. By performing more than 25,000 flight tests, the scientists identified the essential switch gene Spalt, which enables Drosophila to fly. It initiates the development of the special flight muscles, which can contract 200 times per second. Spalt and its related genes are not only important for the development of the flight muscles in insects, but probably also for the proper functioning of human heart muscles. In the future, Frank Schnorrer wants to understand how flight muscles achieve their special properties through the influence of Spalt.

Contact Dr. Esben Lorentzen Structural Biology of Cilia Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry Am Klopferspitz 18 82152 Martinsried E-Mail: lorentze@biochem.mpg.de http://www.biochem.mpg.de/lorentzen

Dr. Andreas Pichlmair Innate Immunity Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry Am Klopferspitz 18 82152 Martinsried E-Mail: apichl@biochem.mpg.de http://www.biochem.mpg.de/pichlmair

Dr. Frank Schnorrer Muscle Dynamics Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry Am Klopferspitz 18 82152 Martinsried E-Mail: schnorrer@biochem.mpg.de http://www.biochem.mpg.de/schnorrer

Anja Konschak Public Relations Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry Am Klopferspitz 18 82152 Martinsried Tel. +49 89 8578-2824 E-Mail: konschak@biochem.mpg.de http://www.biochem.mpg.de function fbs_click() {u=location.href;t=document.title;window.open('http://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u='+encodeURIComponent(u)+'&t='+encodeURIComponent(t),'sharer','toolbar=0,status=0,width=626,height=436');return false;} html .fb_share_link { padding:2px 0 0 20px; height:16px; background:url(http://www.eugenesis.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/29c1d78260e_icon.gif.gif?6:26981) no-repeat top left; } Share on Facebook Weitere Informationen: http://www.biochem.mpg.de/en/news - New Press Releases of the MPI of Biochemistry http://erc.europa.eu/ - Website of the European Research Council (ERC) Anhang Press Release (PDF)

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About 4.5 Million Funding for Group Leaders at the MPIB

NYPD unveils super computer

Published: Aug. 9, 2012 at 5:09 PM

NEW YORK, Aug. 9 (UPI) -- The New York City Police Department unveiled a super computer system created to help police better track criminals, officials said.

The system, called the Domain Awareness System and unveiled Wednesday, was developed jointly by the NYPD and Microsoft Corp., the New York Daily News reported.

"We're not your mom-and-pop police department anymore," New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. "We are in the next century. We are leading the pack."

Police officers will have access to the city's more than 3,000 street cameras and all of the department's databases through the one system, said NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly.

"For years, we've been stovepiped as far as databases are concerned," Kelly said. "Now, everything that we have about an incident, an event, an individual comes together on that workbench, so it's one-stop shopping for investigators."

Because the police department played a key role in developing the system, should Microsoft sell it to other cities across the country, the NYPD will get 30 percent of the proceeds, the New York Post reported.

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NYPD unveils super computer

How the DIY Space Capsule Test Could Fail

In 1 day and 14 hours we will launch our space capsule Tycho Deep Space. I hope you will follow this test live here on Wired.com. Stay tuned!

In space flight, only one thing is certain: no matter the result, it always looks cool!

Space flightor rocketry is a special discipline where all your long hours of work are put to a final test of complete destruction or success. This test is no different. We intend to launch the 500 kg capsule using the Launch Escape System, an 80 kN engine capable of pulling the capsule to a height of approx. 1.4 km, releasing it for drogue and main parachute deployment and finally a splashdown on water.

As the Flight Director I have the privilege of not only controlling the operation at sea but also operating all flight events. So, I may also be the cause of complete failure if I manage to mess up the flight events. The factor of human error is huge in this mission.

LES engine assembled at Space Port Nexoe. Image: Kristian von Bengtson

The flight events are as follows: - LES engine ignition (launch) - LES system separation at apogee, estimated by FIDO or flight visual - Capsule drogue deployment - Capsule drogue release and main chute deployment - Main chute release after splash down - Capsule uprighting system

Nominal flight events. Image: Kristian von Bengtson

All flight events are vital for the result of this operation. And many questions to be answered on launch day.

Trajectory

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How the DIY Space Capsule Test Could Fail

NASA Morpheus Lander Crashes During Test Flight

For a few moments today, NASA forgot about the successful landing of the Curiosity rover on Mars, and focused on the Morpheus lander, which unfortunately caught fire and crashed this morning.

In a tweet, NASA's Kennedy Space Center announced that the prototype experienced a failure during its first free-flight test today, but no one was hurt in the explosion.

The unmanned experimental and "green" device barely left the launch pad around 12:40 p.m. today before experiencing a hardware component failure, and crashing back to the ground, according to NASA officials.

Engineers are looking into the test data, the space center said in a statement, which explained that "failures such as these" were anticipated and are actually part of the development process.

"What we learn from these tests will help us build the best possible system in the future," NASA said.

According to the agency's official Project Morpheus website, the spacecraft is a vertical test bed vehicle that demonstrates a new green propellant propulsion system, as well as autonomous landing and hazard-detection technology.

"The Morpheus Project represents not only a vehicle to advance technologies, but also an opportunity to try out 'lean development' engineering practices," the site said.

Manufactured and assembled at NASA's Johnson Space Center, the Morpheus can carry 1,100 pounds of cargo to the moon, perhaps transporting a humanoid robot, a small rover, or a small laboratory to convert moon dust into oxygen.

In advance of today's test flight, the liquid-oxygen and methane-propelled lander had been tested in a series of tether flights, contributing to the project's overall reported cost of about $7 million in the last two and a half years, according to Space.com.

Previously, the SUV-sized Morpheus sparked a grass fire at the Johnson Space Center in Houston during a 2011 tethered test flight, Space.com reported. No one was hurt.

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NASA Morpheus Lander Crashes During Test Flight

NASA's Morpheus lander in fiery crash at Cape Canaveral

MIAMI (Reuters) - NASA'S Project Morpheus lander, an experimental vehicle designed with a view toward future U.S. space missions beyond Earth's orbit, crashed and burst into flames at the Kennedy Space Center in central Florida on Thursday. During a so-called autonomous free-flight test, NASA said the vehicle lifted off the ground successfully but "then experienced a hardware component failure ...

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NASA's Morpheus lander in fiery crash at Cape Canaveral

Hy-Power Nano Inc. names Dr. Hadi Mahabadi as Chief Operating Officer

Former Xerox executive pioneered nanotechnology innovation and commercialization

BRAMPTON, ON, Aug. 9, 2012 /CNW/ - Hy-Power Nano Inc. has named Dr. Hadi Mahabadi as Chief Operating Officer after he became intrigued with the nanotechnology commercialization work taking place at the company.

"I see tremendous potential in the technology under development here, building made-in-Canada solutions with nanotechnology that could address customer needs around the world," says Dr. Mahabadi. "It's exciting to be able to utilize my expertise and contribute to the advancement of this important technology through a small, nimble company with great future potential."

Dr. Mahabadi, an innovation and commercialization leader, recently received an Order of Canada in June 2012 for his internationally recognized innovations in the field of polymer science and his commitment to promoting scientific development in Canada.

Previously, Dr. Mahabadi was Vice President and Director of the Xerox Research Centre of Canada, where he spearheaded many innovations and commercialized technologies. His expertise complements Hy-Power Nano's focus to combine proven ingenuity in the coatings sector, where its parent company operates, with nano-enabled innovation to bring exceptional products to market.

"Dr. Hadi Mahabadi offered tremendous insights when he joined our board in February 2012 and also served as a consultant," says Joseph Grzyb, CEO of Hy-Power Nano Inc. "We quickly realized he could play a more active role in the company by becoming COO. He's a great addition to the Hy-Power Nano team."

Dr. Mahabadi spent 30 years with Xerox, rising to the company's top Canadian research position. He retired from Xerox in Sept 2011 with more than 100 published scientific papers and over 200 US/international patents to his name; having received the Robert F. Reed Technology Medal (the Printing Industries of America's highest honour), two Xerox President Awards (the corporation's highest honour for individual achievement) and the University of Waterloo's Engineering Alumni's Achievement Medal. He is a Fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada, a Fellow of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, and a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Engineering.

Dr. Mahabadi also is President of CanWin Consulting Inc, which provides a range of services for innovation to start-up and other small and medium enterprises, such as Hy-Power Nano, in Canada.

About Hy-Power Nano Inc.

Hy-Power Nano Inc. (www.hy-powernano.com) of Brampton, ON, is a subsidiary of Hy-Power Coatings Limited, Southern Ontario's premier coatings service provider with a 45-year track record of innovation and application of industrial coatings. Hy-Power Nano is developing "next generation" nanocoating products that can deliver exceptional solar blocking and thermal insulation benefits. Hy-Power has attracted the interest of a number of commercial partners seeking the use of nano-enabled coatings and paints to enhance the energy efficiency of their products and the growing demand for high quality nano oxides used as transparent conductors to enable touch screen functionality.

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Hy-Power Nano Inc. names Dr. Hadi Mahabadi as Chief Operating Officer

BG Medicine’s net loss widens

BG Medicine Inc. reported a wider net loss in the second quarter of $6.4 million the Waltham company cited higher costs and it withdrew an application to the Food and Drug Administration for approval for a diagnostic test. The company said it could not meet an Aug. 15 FDA deadline to supply more information about its CardioScore test but plans to resubmit the application for regulatory approval. CardioScore is its lead product candidate a blood test for atherothrombotic cardiovascular disease, commonly known as vulnerable plaque.

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BG Medicine’s net loss widens