Magnetic bacteria may help build computer hard drives

18 hrs.

John Roach

Itsy-bitsy, super-speedy computers of the future may be grown with bacteria, according to researchers whove already harnessed a magnet-making microbe to start building hard-drive components.

The little living factories maycome in handy as the computer industry races to build smaller and smaller components at the nanoscale for supercomputers the size of a pinhead.

Weve already seen a hard drive that stores a bit of data with just 12 atoms and a four-atom-wide wire that could get information in and out of quantum bits in tomorrows quantum computers.

Researchers at the United Kingdoms University of Leeds and Japans Tokyo University of Technology have focused their attention on an aquatic microbe that eats iron to create tiny magnets.

Magnetospirillum magneticum swim following Earths magnetic field, a trick they are able to do because of an iron diet. When they eat iron, proteins inside their bodies interact with it to produce tiny crystals of the mineral magnetite, the BBC explains.

The research team replicated the behavior going on inside the bacteria on the outside of the cell wall, making the magnetic material available for hard drives, according the University of Leeds. More details are provided in university press release:

In a process akin to potato-printing on a much smaller scale, this protein is attached to a gold surface in a checkerboard pattern and placed in a solution containing iron.

At a temperature of 80C, similarly-sized crystals of magnetite form on the sections of the surface covered by the protein.The team are now working to reduce the size of these islands of magnets, in order to make arrays of single nanomagnets. They also plan to vary the magnetic materials that this protein can control.

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Magnetic bacteria may help build computer hard drives

Why Super Micro Computer's Earnings May Be Less Than Awesome

It takes money to make money. Most investors know that, but with business media so focused on the "how much," very few investors bother to ask, "How fast?"

When judging a company's prospects, how quickly it turns cash outflows into cash inflows can be just as important as how much profit it's booking in the accounting fantasy world we call "earnings." This is one of the first metrics I check when I'm hunting for the market's best stocks. Today, we'll see how it applies to Super Micro Computer (Nasdaq: SMCI) .

Let's break this downIn this series, we measure how swiftly a company turns cash into goods or services and back into cash. We'll use a quick, relatively foolproof tool known as the cash conversion cycle, or CCC for short.

Why does the CCC matter? The less time it takes a firm to convert outgoing cash into incoming cash, the more powerful and flexible its profit engine is. The less money tied up in inventory and accounts receivable, the more available to grow the company, pay investors, or both.

To calculate the cash conversion cycle, add days inventory outstanding to days sales outstanding, then subtract days payable outstanding. Like golf, the lower your score here, the better. The CCC figure for Super Micro Computer for the trailing 12 months is 70.6.

For younger, fast-growth companies, the CCC can give you valuable insight into the sustainability of that growth. A company that's taking longer to make cash may need to tap financing to keep its momentum. For older, mature companies, the CCC can tell you how well the company is managed. Firms that begin to lose control of the CCC may be losing their clout with their suppliers (who might be demanding stricter payment terms) and customers (who might be demanding more generous terms). This can sometimes be an important signal of future distress -- one most investors are likely to miss.

In this series, I'm most interested in comparing a company's CCC to its prior performance. Here's where I believe all investors need to become trend-watchers. Sure, there may be legitimate reasons for an increase in the CCC, but all things being equal, I want to see this number stay steady or move downward over time.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Because of the seasonality in some businesses, the CCC for the TTM period may not be strictly comparable to the fiscal-year periods shown in the chart. Even the steadiest-looking businesses on an annual basis will experience some quarterly fluctuations in the CCC. To get an understanding of the usual ebb and flow at Super Micro Computer, consult the quarterly-period chart below.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FQ = fiscal quarter.

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Why Super Micro Computer's Earnings May Be Less Than Awesome

New England Journal of Medicine Reports on Three Phase III REVLIMID® (lenalidomide) Trials in Patients with Newly …

BOUDRY, Switzerland--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Celgene International Srl, a subsidiary of Celgene Corporation (NASDAQ: CELG - News), today announced that results from three phase III studies evaluating the use of continuous REVLIMID (lenalidomide) treatment in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (MM) patients or maintenance treatment with lenalidomide following autologous stem cell transplant were published online in the May 10, 2012 edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. All three publications highlight the expanding body of clinical evidence supporting lenalidomide treatment in these areas.

Continuous Lenalidomide Therapy (non-transplant eligible population):

The first article highlights a Celgene-sponsored study of continuous lenalidomide treatment in elderly patients newly diagnosed with multiple myeloma.

Continuous Lenalidomide Treatment for Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma (MM-015)

This double-blind, phase III, multicenter, randomized study conducted by Celgene compared melphalanprednisonelenalidomide induction followed by lenalidomide maintenance (MPR-R), with melphalanprednisonelenalidomide (MPR), or melphalanprednisone (MP) followed by placebo in 459 patients aged 65 years with newly-diagnosed myeloma who were not eligible for autologous stem-cell transplant.

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1112704

Post-transplant maintenance

The two additional articles published in the edition highlighted cooperative group studies that evaluated the use of lenalidomide maintenance following autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT).

In each of the studies, one funded by the National Cancer Institute and conducted by the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB) and one by the Intergroupe Francophone du Myelome (IFM), maintenance treatment with lenalidomide following ASCT resulted in delayed time to disease progression or death compared to placebo.

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New England Journal of Medicine Reports on Three Phase III REVLIMID® (lenalidomide) Trials in Patients with Newly ...

Study Identifies Cell Subtypes For Potential Personalized Cellular Therapies

Connie K. Ho for RedOrbit.com

A new study by researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) has discovered two adult stem cell-like subpopulations in adult human skin.

The findings allow for further research to be done in the area of personalized medicine and patient-specific cellular therapies.

The study, using technology from Fibrocell Science, allowed the researchers to identify and confirm two types of cells in human skin cell cultures; the possible source of stem cell-like subpopulations from skin biopsies would be faster to perform, painless, and less invasive than current extractions from adipose tissues and bone marrow.

The research, featured in the inaugural issue of BioResearch Open Access, discusses two subtypes of cells. BioResearch Open Access is a bimonthly, peer-reviewed journal. It features scientific topics like biochemistry, bioengineering, gene therapy, genetics, microbiology, neuroscience, regenerative medicine, stem cells, systems biology, tissue engineering and biomaterials, and virology.

Being able to identify two sub-populations of rare, viable and functional cells that behave like stem cells from within the skin is an important finding because both cell types have the potential to be investigated for diverse clinical applications, commented Dr. James A. Bryne, lead author of the report.

Brynes research, first at Stanford University then at UCLA, focused on reprogramming beginnings of cells from animals and then humans. A graduate of Cambridge University, Bryne studied the intra- and inter-species of epigenetic reprogramming. His work also highlighted how primate embryonic stem cells could be derived from somatic cell nuclear transfers.

The study published in BioResearch Open Access confirmed previous research that identified a rare population of cells in adult human skin that had a marker called stage-specific embryonic antigen 3 (SSEA3). Bryne and his colleagues found that there was an increase in the amount of SSEA3 expressing cells after injury to the human skin. It showed that the SSEA3 biomarker could be used to help identify and isolate cells with tissue-regenerative traits.

Finding these rare adult stem cell-like subpopulations in human skin is an exciting discovery and provides the first step towards purifying and expanding these cells to clinically relevant numbers for application to a variety of potential personalized cellular therapies for osteoarthritis, bone loss, injury and/or damage to human skin as well as many other diseases, remarked Byrne, an Assistant Professor of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA.

Bryne and his team used Fibrocell technology to collect cells from skin samples, cultured the cells in the lab, and purified them by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). The FACS tagged suspended cells with fluorescent markers for undifferentiated stem cells. The researchers were able to separate the rare cell subpopulations from other kinds of cells.

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Study Identifies Cell Subtypes For Potential Personalized Cellular Therapies

2 Cell Transplantation studies impact dental stem cell research for therapeutic purposes

Public release date: 8-May-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: David Eve celltransplantation@gmail.com Cell Transplantation Center of Excellence for Aging and Brain Repair

Tampa, Fla. (May. 8, 2012) Two studies appearing in a recent issue of Cell Transplantation (20:11-12), now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/, evaluate stem cells derived from dental tissues for characteristics that may make them therapeutically useful and appropriate for transplantation purposes.

Induced pluripotent stem cells from immature dental pulp stem cells

A Brazilian and American team of researchers used human immature dental pulp stem cells (IDPSCs) as an alternative source for creating induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), stem cells that can be derived from several kinds of adult tissues. According to the study authors, production of iPSCs "opens new opportunities for increased understanding of human genetic diseases and embryogenesis" and will likely have a "great impact on future drug screening and toxicology tests."

The authors note, however, that the reprogramming methodology for making iPSCs is relatively new and "needs refining" in terms of technique, efficiency and cell type choice.

The researchers report that they easily, and in a short time frame, programmed human immature dental pulp stem cells into iPSCs with the hallmarks of pluripotent stem cells.

"Human IDPSCs can be easily derived from dental pulp extracted from adult or 'baby teeth' during routine dental visits," said study lead author Dr. Patricia C.B. Beltrao-Braga of the highly ranked National Institute of Science and Technology in Stem and Cell Therapy in Ribeirao Preto, Brazil. "hIDPSCs are immunologically privileged and can be used in the absence of any immune suppression protocol and have valuable cell therapy applications, including reconstruction of large cranial defects."

Contact: Dr. Patricia C.B. Beltrao-Braga, National Institute of Science and Technology in Stem Cell and Cell Therapy, 2051 Tenente Catao Roxo St. Ribeirao Preto, Brazil. Tel. 55 (11) 3091-7690 Email patriciacbbbraga@usp.br

Citation: Beltro-Braga, P. C. B.; Pignatari, G. C.; Maiorka, P. C.; Oliveira, N. A. J.; Lizier, N. F.; Wenceslau, C. V.; Miglino, M. A.; Muotri, A. R.; Kerkis, I. Feeder-free derivation of induced pluripotent stem cells from human immature dental pulp stem cells. Cell Transplant. 20(11-12):1707-1719;2011.

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2 Cell Transplantation studies impact dental stem cell research for therapeutic purposes

Stem cell collaboration could set stage for company’s growth

A stem cell breakthrough at UCLA could mark a big step for a biopharmaceutical company to use its proprietary technology to forge partnerships with pharmaceutical companies and other research institutions.

Fibrocell Sciences technology isolates, purifies and multiplies a patients fibroblast cells, connective skin cells that make collagen. In a research collaboration with the company, UCLA used the technology to isolate, identify and increase the number of different skin cell types, which lead to two rare adult stem cell-like subpopulations being identified in adult human skin SSEA3-expressing regeneration-associated cells associated with skin regeneration after injuries and mesenchymal adult stem cells.

The findings could have broad applications for personalized medicine. Currently, adult stem cells are derived from adipose tissue and bone marrow. Using mesenchymal stem cells would be less invasive and could be more efficient. Mesenchymal stem cells are being used in research to develop osteoblasts, or bone cells; chondrocytes, or cartilage cells; and adipocytes, or fat cells.

David Pernock, the chairman and CEO of Fibrocell, said the move could mark a significant step in the companys growth.

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Pernock added: Once we have shown we can produce these stem cells in meaningful quantities safely and efficiently, I think well be in a position where companies would want to partner with us to develop them for a variety of indications.

In addition to collaborations, the company has been developing its own therapeutics.

The company is poised to launch its first U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved therapy Laviv. The therapy uses individuals fibroblast cells to reduce nasolabial fold wrinkles, folds on both sides of the face that start from the outer corners of the nose down to the corners of the mouth. It is also advancing its acne therapy through phase 3 clinical trials and its burn scar therapy through phase 2 trials.

Pernock joined the company two years ago from GlaxoSmithKline. He said the developments under way at the company indicate it is growing and expects to add engineering staff to its Exton, Pennsylvania office later this year.

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Stem cell collaboration could set stage for company’s growth

Pluristem stem cell therapy saves a patient, shares jump

Wed May 9, 2012 3:35pm BST

(Reuters) - Pluristem Therapeutics Inc said a 7-year old girl suffering from a bone marrow disease experienced a reversal of her condition after receiving its experimental stem cell therapy, sending the Israeli company's shares up 32 percent.

The girl, suffering from aplastic bone marrow in which the patient has no blood-forming stem cells, had a significant rise in her red cells, white cells and platelets following an injection of Pluristem's therapy -- PLacental eXpanded cells.

"The results of this unique case indicate that PLX cells may be effective in treating other diseases that affect the bone marrow," Reuven Or, the child's physician at Hadassah Medical Center, was quoted in a statement by Pluristem.

Last September, the company said animal studies showed that the therapy had the potential to treat blood tissue complications related with acute radiation syndrome, commonly called radiation sickness.

Last month, the U.S. health regulators gave a go ahead to the company to start a mid-stage trial of the therapy for treating Intermittent Claudication -- a subset of peripheral artery disease.

Pluristem shares, which have gained 5 percent since receiving the FDA nod for the mid-stage trial, were up 15 percent at $2.70 in morning trade on the Nasdaq. They touched a high of $3.10 earlier.

(Reporting by Esha Dey in Bangalore; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)

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Pluristem stem cell therapy saves a patient, shares jump

Vampires give Danish teenagers taste for spirituality

Public release date: 9-May-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Line Nybro Petersen linenp@hum.ku.dk 01-145-519-27803 University of Copenhagen

Danish teenagers are not looking for answers to life's big questions in established religious institutions. Instead, they engage in intense idolisation of American films and TV shows about vampires, angels and other supernatural beings. A new PhD thesis from the University of Copenhagen shows that a series like Twilight for some young Danes replace traditional religion and enhance their interest in spiritual and religious issues.

Many Danish teenagers reject old-fashioned established religious institutions such as the Danish National Evangelical Lutheran Church and its traditional religious beliefs. The lack of a coherent religious world view will in some cases make TV shows like Twilight and the Vampire Diaries, in which vampires and other religious symbols abound, assume part of the function which the old religious institutions used to have.

"My thesis demonstrates that a film series like Twilight offers young people a playground for exploring life's big questions, moral judgment and to imagine the possibility of the supernatural in a pleasurable and informal fashion. The fictional worlds challenge their presuppositions about themselves and their surroundings," explains PhD Line Nybro Petersen from the Department of Media, Cognition and Communication, University of Copenhagen. She adds:

"A number of the teenagers I interviewed did, for example, express their fascination with the fact that vampires that are traditionally portrayed as evil often come across as heroic characters in current TV shows. They see that as an invitation to reconsider their own assumptions about good and evil. But apart from this it is of course important to stress that the TV shows attract the teenagers' attention because they to a great extent deal with the very problems the teenagers grapple with themselves."

Line Nybro Petersen's PhD thesis "Wicked Angels, Adorable Vampires!" consists of a qualitative study of the consumption of TV shows with supernatural and religious content among 72 14- to 18-year-old Danish teenagers, a smaller study among a group of nine teenage Twilight fans as well as a more general analysis of American TV shows' representations of religious themes and issues.

Serial fictions become sacred

According to Line Nybro Petersen, some young fans' idolisation of a film series like Twilight can become so intense that it resembles a new form of religious worship. The film or TV show itself becomes sacred and the fans compare all other supernatural shows to the "canonical" and original show.

"I have observed the Twilight fans at premieres and noted how they through a number of rituals show or perform their affiliation with the series. They cry, shriek, and sing and this performance is central to their sense of belonging to something larger than themselves. They do, in other words, invest a lot of emotion in the fictional universe and the events that form part of it," Line Nybro Petersen points out.

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Vampires give Danish teenagers taste for spirituality

Students get a taste of monastic life | Lifestyle | The Phnom Penh Post – Cambodia's Newspaper of Record

A young girl is ordained as a Buddhist nun at Puthi Khorsachara pagoda, where 300 young people lived for a week as monastics. Photograph: Sou Vuthy/Phnom Penh Post

It is traditional practice in Khmer society for young people to be temporarily ordained as monks or nuns at a Buddhist pagoda. The rite is often done as a show of gratitude from children to their parents, and as a way of earning merits during ones lifetime by learning the Buddhas teachings.

Each year, boys and girls ranging from primary school to university students are ordained at Puthi Khorsachara, where they stay for a week to live as monks and nuns.

This year, 300 young people made the journey to the temple 200 kilometres from Phnom Penh.

Soun Sok Chamrouen, a former engineer student at Preah Kossomak Polytechnical Institute in Phnom Penh, participated in the ordaining ceremony to further his spiritual practice.

I decided to ordain in right now, because I want to understand about Buddhas lessons and his advice, which led people to educate my spirit, my family and society peacefully, said Soun Sok Chamrouen, adding that this event also educates Khmer youth to be grateful to their parents.

We want to learn about the two basic beliefs of Buddhism, which are the principles of rebirth and karma, said Vises Sothearath, a young woman ordained as a nun for the ceremony.

For example, the eight steps to enlightenment through the Buddhas way, she said

Thammear Nunth, a high-ranking Buddhist monk and the General Secretary of Buddhism Practice Section at Pannasastra University, said that in the past both boys and girls relied on pagodas to access general education as well as Buddhist teachings.

Now that they are provided education in schools and universities, they seem to be drifting away from Buddhism, he said. This ordaining was an opportunity to connect university students to Buddhism again, explained the monk.

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Students get a taste of monastic life | Lifestyle | The Phnom Penh Post - Cambodia's Newspaper of Record

Buddhist relics draw crowd in Mount Shasta

More than 70 people filled a family meditation temple in Mount Shasta Friday to experience what are believed to be ancient, earthly remains of Buddha.

The 2,600-year-old relics were retrieved from the spiritual master's ashes after his cremation, according to one of two custodians who have accompanied these relics and those of others on a world tour.

Specifically, we have 3,000 relics from 40 masters, said Chris Cowen at the home of John and Patty Cashman before the ceremony Friday. They resemble pearls, but they are actually the crystallization of enlightenment. Simply being in the presence of the relics, you receive a lot of blessings, regardless of one's spirituality.

He said this was the third time the relics have visited the Cashmans temple, the first time since 2003.

The other custodian, Dana Lissey, said her spiritual teacher, Lama Zopa Rinpoche, gathered all the relics. Their world journey is part of a project that offers the relics to the public until they are permanently enshrined in the Heart Shrine of the Maitreya Buddha statue in Kushinagar, India.

His wish was for the relics to travel the whole world so that people could see them and recognize their very positive energy, she said. About 1.5 million people have seen them in the last 11 years.

At the beginning of the opening ceremony to honor the relics' three-day visit in Mount Shasta, John Cashman welcomed all faiths to his temple. Representatives from several groups contributed word and song to the proceedings. Among those were the pastor and choir from Mt. Shasta Baptist Church in Weed, Zen Buddhists from Shasta Abbey, singers from the Mount Shasta Quaker Fellowship, and a minister from the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Siskiyou.

Attendees queued around a shrine in the center of the temple. They paused before display cases containing the relics to read and reflect. Behind each container of relics in a display case stood a card bearing a picture and information about the master whose ashes yielded them.

Lissey said this display of relics represented a range of historical figures from the first Buddha to master Lama Lhundrup, who passed September of last year.

As the procession slowly circled the shrine, a pastor from Shasta Abbey sat with a gold container said to house relics from the ashes of Buddha. It's peaceful, said Rev. Jisho Perry of the feeling that came to him as he held the sacred relics. We meditate on silence. This is a deep silence.

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Buddhist relics draw crowd in Mount Shasta

Search for enlightenment will be topic of seminar

Nationally acclaimed author, humorist and teacher Robert "Bob" Forman will lead a discussion on the search for enlightenment in our increasingly confusing world from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday in the center at St. Francis in the Foothills United Methodist Church.

The discussion is open to the public and free of charge. Light refreshments will be served.

Forman addresses this question from the perspective of his 40-year career as a seeker and thousands of conversations with seekers of all faiths and cultures.

"Traditional models are giving seekers the wrong impression about spiritual enlightenment and it is creating a lot of pain and frustration," he said.

His latest book is titled "Enlightenment Ain't What It's Cracked Up to Be: A Journey of Discovery, Snow and Jazz in the Soul." He'll sign copies of the book, which will be available at the seminar.

The conversation with Forman is co-sponsored by the St. Francis Chrysalis Men's Group and the church's Adult Education Committee.

St. Francis is located at 4625 E. River Road, at North Swan Road, and the church phone number is 299-9063.

To contribute a story, go online to azstarnet.com/foothills

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Search for enlightenment will be topic of seminar

Next Soyuz Space Station crew prepares for launch

The next residents of the International Space Station are making final preparations for a May 14 launch.

This week, NASA Flight Engineer Joseph Acaba and his two Russian crewmates, Soyuz Commander Gennady Padalka and Flight Engineer Sergei Revin, are completing their training, undergoing Soyuz spacecraft fit checks and taking part in traditional ceremonies. Video file documentation of the final preparations will be broadcast starting May 10.

Live NASA TV coverage of the Soyuz TMA-04M spacecraft launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan begins at 9 p.m. CDT on May 14 (May 15, Baikonur time), with launch scheduled for 10:01 p.m.

The trio will arrive at the station May 16, joining Expedition 31 Commander Oleg Kononenko of the Russian Federal Space Agency, Flight Engineer Don Pettit of NASA and Flight Engineer Andre Kuipers of the European Space Agency, who have been aboard since December 2011. Padalka, Acaba and Revin will transition to the Expedition 32 crew in July and return to Earth in mid-September.

Provided by JPL/NASA (news : web)

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Next Soyuz Space Station crew prepares for launch

New experiments sought for space station

A nonprofit organization that has been tasked with managing research on the American portions of the International Space Station will begin accepting proposals for specific projects beginning in June, company officials have announced.

The Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) was selected by NASA in 2011 to manage the space station's U.S. National Laboratory, and to maximize use of these facilities while the orbiting outpost remains operational planned until at least 2020.

Starting in June, CASIS will begin accepting solicitations for life science research projects to fly on the space station that examine osteoporosis, muscle deterioration, immune system responses, protein crystallization and vaccine development in a microgravity environment.

"The thing that the space station provides us with is tremendous capability already on orbit," Alan Stern, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., and a science adviser to CASIS, told reporters last month at the 28th National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colo., via a video conference call.

The specific life science topics were decided upon following a review of more than 135 experiments NASA flew in space over the past decade. The CASIS Biological Sciences Review Panel was led by Timothy Yeatman, CASIS' interim chief scientist.

The identified areas of research will act as a starting point, but eventually the scope of the projects will be expanded, said Jim Royston, CASIS' interim executive director. The aim is to build upon the findings of previous studies, and to spur innovation and commercialization in the process. [ 7 Aerospace Technologies On the Road ]

"We are really excited by the potential of what we will be able to learn on orbit about treating these problems on Earth," Yeatman said in a statement.

In April, NanoRacks LLC, a private company already operating research facilities on the station's U.S. National Laboratory under a NASA Space Act Agreement, announced a solicitation call for experiments that will fly outside the orbiting outpost in the vacuum of space.

The platform, which will be attached outside the station's Japanese Kibo laboratory, will be launched in 2014, and is designed to test how materials, biological samples and electronics fare on the exterior of the station as it orbits 240 miles (386 kilometers) above Earth.

After CASIS selects research proposals, the organization will try to leverage its core $3 million budget to also attract investment from other sources, including other research organizations and private companies.

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New experiments sought for space station

Keeping Immune Cells Alive And Kicking Onboard The Space Station

May 9, 2012

Image Caption: Andr Kuipers on the International Space Station completing ESAs ROALD-2 biological experiment. Blood samples are frozen in the Space Stations freezer for preservation before being returned to Earth for analysis. Credits: ESA/NASA

New results from research on the International Space Station are offering clues on why astronauts immune systems dont work as well in space. The findings may benefit the elderly on Earth.

Astronauts suffer many types of stress adapting to weightlessness. For years, scientists have known that our immune system works less well in space, and trying to find the reason is a driving force for space research.

Researchers at the University of Teramo, the European Centre for Brain Research and the Santa Lucia Foundation have discovered that a particular enzyme, called 5-LOX, becomes more active in weightlessness.

The 5-LOX enzyme in part regulates the life expectancy of human cells. Most human cells divide and regenerate but the number of times they replicate is limited.

Could a change in 5-LOX enzyme activity affect astronauts health in space?

To find out, the researchers needed to test their theory in the only laboratory that can switch off gravity: the International Space Station.

Target locked on 5-LOX

Blood samples from two healthy donors were sent to the orbital outpost. One set was exposed to weightlessness for two days, while the other was held in a small centrifuge to simulate Earth-like gravity. The samples were then frozen and sent back to Earth for analysis.

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Keeping Immune Cells Alive And Kicking Onboard The Space Station

5 Ways To Make Money In Space

Would you like to invest in something a little different from just your standard stocks and bonds? You could join the ranks of some of the modern day space pioneers hoping to cash in on what is rapidly becoming a popular place to invest your entrepreneurial dollars: space. Here are some space-related investment opportunities to consider.

SEE: Money Facts: The Space Shuttle Program

Build SatellitesYou might be surprised at how much of your life is affected by satellites. GPS units work by receiving signals from satellites. Weather reports are accurate (sometimes) because of satellite data, and satellite television is a growing trend. If you're the kind of person who likes to visit places far off the technology grid, then you probably have a satellite phone. Most importantly, our national security relies heavily on military satellites.

Satellites can cost hundreds of millions of dollars and at least $50 million to launch, and as we've seen in the past, there's no guarantee that the rocket to launch your satellite will actually make it to space.

Clean up the JunkAccording to the Space Surveillance Network (a government agency tasked with tracking all objects in space larger than a baseball), there are at least 8,000 identified objects from earth currently in orbit. These include active satellites, spent rocket parts and other debris. Of those 8,000 orbiting objects, only 7% are operational satellites. Space agencies are becoming increasingly concerned about the growing amount of space debris, which could damage working satellites if they collide. Since space debris travels at speeds of up to 17,000 miles per hour, a collision with even the smallest piece of space junk may destroy a half-billion-dollar satellite.

ToursRichard Branson's Virgin Atlantic Airlines is offering commercial flights into space. A ticket will only set you back $200,000 and there's already more than 500 takers, including actor Ashton Kutcher. The company took its first test flight in 2010 and is inching ever closer to its maiden commercial voyage. However, Virgin isn't the only company offering space travel to the public, as competitors like Space Adventures are selling trips to the Moon. If more companies enter the commercial "space race" and spaceflight becomes commonplace, the price of tickets is sure to drop.

SEE: Save Money - Travel For A Living

Mining an AsteroidCertain natural resources are becoming harder to find here on Earth, so a new company, backed by filmmaker James Cameron and Google exec Larry Page, wants to go to space to find them. It's simple, really. Launch a satellite, find an asteroid, tow it back to the moon or into Earth's orbit and strip it of anything valuable. Sure, it's never been done, but how hard could it be? It's likely to take hundreds of billions of dollars to do it and if it did work, it may drive down the price of the valuable materials that are believed to be contained on these asteroids.

Set up a LabMaybe you're more the scientist-type than the engineer. Not only do Space Shuttles serve as cargo vessels to space, but it's also where many astronauts have made innovations and discoveries in medicine, biology and manufacturing, largely due to the zero-gravity environment. In the future, commercial laboratories and manufacturing facilities may be constructed in space in order to capitalize on the unique features of a zero gravity environment.

The Bottom LineUntil recent years, space travel was reserved for governments that had massive amounts of funds to develop the technology to put man safely into orbit. Now, as private companies see the potential for big profits, spaceflight technology is rapidly evolving, which could push the cost down for private citizens to travel into space. However, for the time being, you can still invest in companies that offer or develop these technologies.

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5 Ways To Make Money In Space

Flight Hardware Completed For Tower Supporting Space Telescope Mirrors, Science Instruments

Northrop Grumman has completed the flight composite components for the structure that connects the Optical Telescope Element to the spacecraft on NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. Northrop Grumman is under contract to NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. for the design and development of Webb's sunshield, telescope and spacecraft.

The flight structure known as the Deployable Tower Assembly (DTA) is designed by Northrop Grumman's business unit Astro Aerospace and is a telescoping tower primarily comprised of composite components fabricated by Webb teammate ATK.

The DTA deploys after launch, raising the cold telescope off the warm spacecraft bus, and is a key component of JWST's passive cooling architecture.

Passively cooling the telescope to cryogenic temperatures avoids using limited-life cryogenic liquid coolants. Made of lightweight graphite composite material chosen for its ability to thermally insulate the cold telescope from the hot spacecraft, the tower assembly extends to nearly twice its stowed height, from 1.7 meters (5.6 feet) to 2.9 meters (9.6 feet) once it is deployed.

"ATK's completion of the deployable tower assembly composite components marks another flight hardware milestone in the fabrication of one of the most significant structures that supports the telescope's optical train," said Scott Texter, Webb Optical Telescope Element manager, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems.

"These parts were very difficult to fabricate, involving some complex geometries, and ATK did a commendable job."

The tower includes deployable harness trays for the electronics and refrigerant cables that run to the cryocooler, which keeps the Mid-Infrared Instrument at ultra cold temperatures.

The 5.9 meters (19.6 feet) of electronics cables are attached to a Z-folded cable-tray structure that unfolds. The cryocooler line is a high-tech "slinky" that uncoils as the DTA extends, via a complex drive mechanism inside the tubes that pushes them apart.

Successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope is the world's next-generation space observatory. It will be the most powerful space telescope ever built. Webb will observe the most distant objects in the universe, provide images of the very first galaxies ever formed and study planets around distant stars.

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Flight Hardware Completed For Tower Supporting Space Telescope Mirrors, Science Instruments

Northrop Grumman Completes Flight Hardware for Tower Supporting NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Mirrors, Science …

REDONDO BEACH, Calif., May 8, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Northrop Grumman Corp. (NYSE:NOC - News) has completed the flight composite components for the structure that connects the Optical Telescope Element to the spacecraft on NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. Northrop Grumman is under contract to NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. for the design and development of Webb's sunshield, telescope and spacecraft.

The flight structure known as the Deployable Tower Assembly (DTA) is designed by Northrop Grumman's business unit Astro Aerospace and is a telescoping tower primarily comprised of composite components fabricated by Webb teammate ATK. The DTA deploys after launch, raising the cold telescope off the warm spacecraft bus, and is a key component of JWST's passive cooling architecture. Passively cooling the telescope to cryogenic temperatures avoids using limited-life cryogenic liquid coolants. Made of lightweight graphite composite material chosen for its ability to thermally insulate the cold telescope from the hot spacecraft, the tower assembly extends to nearly twice its stowed height, from 1.7 meters (5.6 feet) to 2.9 meters (9.6 feet) once it is deployed.

"ATK's completion of the deployable tower assembly composite components marks another flight hardware milestone in the fabrication of one of the most significant structures that supports the telescope's optical train," said Scott Texter, Webb Optical Telescope Element manager, Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems. "These parts were very difficult to fabricate, involving some complex geometries, and ATK did a commendable job."

The tower includes deployable harness trays for the electronics and refrigerant cables that run to the cryocooler, which keeps the Mid-Infrared Instrument at ultra cold temperatures. The 5.9 meters (19.6 feet) of electronics cables are attached to a Z-folded cable-tray structure that unfolds. The cryocooler line is a high-tech "slinky" that uncoils as the DTA extends, via a complex drive mechanism inside the tubes that pushes them apart.

Successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, the James Webb Space Telescope is the world's next-generation space observatory. It will be the most powerful space telescope ever built. Webb will observe the most distant objects in the universe, provide images of the very first galaxies ever formed and study planets around distant stars. The Webb Telescope is a joint project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.

For more information about the Webb telescope, visit: http://www.jwst.nasa.gov

Northrop Grumman is a leading global security company providing innovative systems, products and solutions in aerospace, electronics, information systems, and technical services to government and commercial customers worldwide. Please visit http://www.northropgrumman.com for more information.

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Northrop Grumman Completes Flight Hardware for Tower Supporting NASA's James Webb Space Telescope Mirrors, Science ...

Space Needle to award free trip to space today

(SPACE.com) Five would-be space tourists have been battling in Seattle this week for a free suborbital spaceflight, a grand prize that will be announced tomorrow (May 9) by famed moonwalker Buzz Aldrin.

The five contestants are finalists in Space Race 2012, a competition sponsored by Seattle's Space Needle and the private spaceflight company Space Adventures. The contest officially opened on Aug. 1, 2011 and attracted more than 50,000 entrants from all over the country, according to Space Needle officials.

The final five met in Seattle Monday (May 7) to begin a series of mysterious challenges whose nature was kept a secret by contest organizers. Monday's activities involved an indoor skydiving competition, during which finalists had to complete a number of tasks while floating in a wind tunnel.

Two contestants were eliminated after this event, leaving only Lauren Furgason of Seattle, Sara Cook of Washington, D.C., and Gregory Schneider of Tucson, Ariz.

"The field is down to three," Space Needle officials wrote Tuesday in a Facebook post. "Challenge #2 for Space Race finalists is about to start at the Museum of Flight! Two will move on to tomorrow's final round."

Part of challenge number two involves building some type of solar panel, contest officials revealed via Twitter Tuesday.

The competition will conclude at the Space Needle Wednesday, when NASA astronaut Buzz Aldrin -- who in 1969 became the second person to set foot on the moon-- announces the winner.

That lucky person will receive a free suborbital spaceflight, up to an altitude of about 62 miles (100 kilometers), aboard a vehicle provided by Armadillo Aerospace. The Virgina-based Space Adventures is selling seats for the Armadillo spacecraft at $110,000 per person, so that's the approximate value of the prize.

Like the other companies gearing up to launch people to suborbital space, Armadillo isn't quite ready to do so yet, so the launch date has not been officially set. Space Race 2012 is also offering a variety of other prizes, such as a free trip aboard the microgravity-inducing aircraft G-Force One.

All of the finalists said getting to space is a long-standing dream. Schneider said that he also hopes to inspire his children to dream big.

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Space Needle to award free trip to space today