Atlas 5 rocket delivers NASA data router into space for astronauts and satellites – Spaceflight Now

CAPE CANAVERAL Bulking up NASAs constellation of tracking stations in the sky that provides critical links between orbiting spacecraft and ground control, a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket successfully deployed a new communications hub in space today.

NASAs Tracking and Data Relay Satellite series, a program that revolutionized mission operations for U.S. human spaceflight and robotic craft, is now in its fourth decade and this morning orbited its 12th satellite.

TDRS is a critical national asset have because of its importance to the space station and all of our science missions, primarily the Hubble Space Telescope and Earth science missions that use TDRS, said Tim Dunn, NASAs TDRS-M launch director.

With its main engine running at full throttle, the Atlas 5 booster lifted off at 8:29 a.m. EDT (1229 GMT) from Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral.

The 191-foot-tall rocket, generating 860,000 pounds of thrust, aimed eastward and accelerated out of the atmosphere with NASAs TDRS-M spacecraft.

Within just five minutes, the rocket had shed 92 percent of its liftoff weight and transitioned to the high-energy Centaur upper stage.

An elliptical parking orbit was achieved within 18 minutes of takeoff, beginning a 90-minute quiescent coast higher through space to reach the optimum conditions for the second burn by Centaur.

That minute-long boost over the Indian Ocean propelled the 7,610-pound payload into a customized high-perigee geosynchronous transfer orbit.

The spacecraft was deployed by the launcher at T+plus 1 hour, 53 minutes to cheers and handshakes all around.

Obviously, there is a lot of relief on the team right now, a lot of celebration, a lot of excitement. I love spacecraft separation. It is the best part of a launch campaign, said Dunn.

So many hours are spent getting to this exact point when you know you have a healthy satellite that just separated from the launch vehicle about to go do its mission that it was intended for.

Trajectory specialists had worked pre-flight to optimize the TDRS-M orbital injection, using up all of the available Atlas 5 performance to extend the satellites useful life by two additional years.

The rocket put the satellite into an orbit that allows the craft to save some of its onboard fuel supply from the upcoming orbit-raising maneuvers and apply that to orbital life.

This marked the 143rd consecutive successful Atlas program launch spanning more than two decades, the 72nd for an Atlas 5 and the 120th for United Launch Alliance.

Whats more, it was the 15th NASA use of the Atlas 5 and 28th mission conducted by ULA for NASA, all done successfully.

The Centaur, with its job completed, was expected to fire its engine later to reach a safe disposal orbit with a perigee above the usable low-earth orbit regime and apogee beneath the geosynchronous belt to guard against orbital debris.

Contact was established with TDRS-M, allowing controllers to determine that the satellite was healthy following arrival in space. The craft was the 76th and final to be built on Boeings 601 satellite design, and its successful launch was the 68th for the program dating back 25 years.

The first order of business for TDRS-M will be severing the straps that held the crafts two 15-foot-diameter graphite composite mesh antennas partially curled like taco shells to fit within the rockets nose cone for launch.

We need them unfurled and full shape to provide the RF performance for the communications services that our mission is founded upon. So one of the first things that happen after we release from the Centaur is we cut the furling straps and unfurl our reflectors It will take a period of a month or so to what we call relax and return to their original shape to give us the full performance, said Dave Littmann, NASAs TDRS project manager.

While giving the antennas time to relax, orbit-raising maneuvers using the satellites onboard main engine will be conducted over the next two weeks to achieve a circular geosynchronous orbit over the equator.

We need about five burns that will take us from the drop-off spot to the geosynchronous location where we will be operating the spacecraft for its lifetime, Littmann said.

From there, we go through the deployments. We unfold the solar arrays and deploy our antennas those unfurled big reflectors and the Space-to-Ground Link antenna, its smaller but still critical to the mission. The SGL is the lifeline to the ground. That process takes 3-5 days.

If all goes well, control of the satellite will be handed from Boeings facilities in California to NASAs White Sands Complex in New Mexico about three weeks after launch to begin on-orbit checkout.

The government hasnt accepted the spacecraft yet. All of the on-orbit testing (is done) from the White Sands Complex with a Boeing team to check the spacecraft out the bus and the payload to make sure all of our RF communications services are ready. About four months after launch, in January or so, we will look to schedule an On-Orbit Acceptance Review to review all of the data accumulated from the test program and determine, hopefully, that the government is in position to accept the spacecraft from Boeing. For the whole period to that point the spacecraft is Boeings responsibility, Littmann said.

All of that testing will occur with the satellite parked over 150 degrees West longitude. Once NASA takes acceptance of the craft, the agencys Space Network assumes ownership, performs its own one-month checkout and then repositions the asset, likely over the Atlantic Ocean Region, Littmann said.

The $408 million TDRS-M was built and launched with the sole purpose to extend the useful life of NASAs constant communications infrastructure, supporting the astronauts around-the-clock aboard the International Space Station, supplying contact with the Hubble Space Telescope and transmitting the data from almost 40 science spacecraft studying Earths environment and space.

The (TDRS-M) spacecraft continues our ability to provide a data path for communications and tracking services from all of the different users out there in orbit today from human spaceflight component of NASA to robotic missions, Littmann said.

Looking down from the vantage point of geosynchronous orbit, the TDRS network receives signals from vehicles like the space station flying at a mere 250 miles above Earth and routes the telemetry, voice, video and science information to a dedicated ground terminal for delivery to Houston.

No matter where the space station is located at any given moment, TDRS has the outpost in sight for the two-way communications.

It works really wellWe are almost spoiled now with how much communication we have. It really makes the science output and the ability to operate space station as miraculous as it is, said astronaut Stephen Bowen.

The TDRS system was born in 1973 to keep astronauts and satellites in constant contact with mission controllers, closing the substantial gaps every orbit as spacecraft passed into and out of range of ground stations scattered around the globe.

When TDRS first became operational in late 1983, the initial space shuttle mission to use the system relayed more information to the ground during its 10 days in orbit than in all 39 previous American manned spaceflights.

Relying on dispersed ground stations was a costly requirement and subjected the sites operators to dangerous conditions in far-off countries, yet the system provided only 15 percent communications capability per orbit.

NASA currently has 7 operational TDRS satellites two launched by the space shuttle in 1993 and 1995 and five Atlas-launched birds from 2000 to 2014, plus two aged shuttle-era craft from 1988 and 1991 now held in reserve with diminished capabilities.

We need at least 6 active spacecraft and one active spare, so we need at least 7 spacecraft to be ready to meet all of our mission requirements. The first generation has some residual capability, (but) TDRS-M is so critical, said Badri Younes, deputy associate administrator for Space Communications and Navigation at NASA Headquarters.

A successful TDRS-M extends the projected life of the constellation to the mid-2020s.

While TDRS got its start by supporting space shuttle missions, todays network is even busier with the space station thats been continuously staffed for nearly 17 years.

The thing we saw during the shuttle era was that when a shuttle would go up on a mission, the load on the TDRS system was extremely high. But once it landed that spike in the load would dissipate. We would see the spikes mission by mission, Littmann said.

What we see today is a little different because those spikes are no longer there, but with the space station being in continuous coverage where we have astronauts 24/7 in orbit. TDRS serves the human spaceflight community in that manner, the comm to the space station is more continuous.

The spikes have changed to a continuous level to support the International Space Station activities, as well as TDRS developed additional capabilities over the years that it now tracks and provides telemetry for various launch vehicles. Thats been added to the mix. The overall usage has remained.

The Atlas 5 rocket that launched TDRS-M, for example, used the constellations K and L satellites to relay data back to the Cape this morning. Delta 2 and Delta 4 rockets and Orbital ATKs Minotaur 4 rely on TDRS too.

TDRS-M completes the third generation of spacecraft constructed for the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System as we know it today. What comes next is being debated, including possibilities of a technology refresh by adding laser communications to the follow-on program.

However, there is no rush to field the next era of relay satellites. The current TDRS fleet is expected to operate well into the next decade.

Only two of the six shuttle-launched TDRS satellites have been retired, the rest are functional more than 25 years since their deployment and outliving their design lives by exceptional margins.

Just because the 15 years comes to end doesnt mean we stop operating the spacecraft. Like your electronics or laptop at home, you use it until it doesnt work anymore, said Paul Buchanan, TDRS deputy project manager.

For NASAs Launch Services Program, the team has seven high-profile launches scheduled over the next year, including missions to Mars and the Sun, two weather satellites and a planet-hunter.

-Delta 2/JPSS-1 is NET Nov. 10 at 2:48 a.m. local from Vandenberg -Pegasus/ICON is Nov. 14 at 10:28 a.m. Eastern from Kwajalein -Atlas 5/GOES-S is March 1 at 5:01 a.m. at Cape -Falcon/TESS is NET March 20 at Cape -Atlas 5/InSight is May 5 at 4:10 a.m. local from Vandenberg -Delta 4-Heavy/Parker Solar Probe is July 31 at 10:07 a.m. at Cape -Delta 2/IceSat-2 is Sept. 12 at 5:45 a.m. local from Vandenberg

The next two United Launch Launch Alliance Atlas 5 flights will deploy critical-but-classified security payloads for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office.

NROL-42 will fly from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California using a powerful 541-configured rocket with four side-mounted solid-fuel boosters and NROL-52 occurs from Cape Canaveral on a 421 with two solids.

See earlier TDRS-M launch coverage.

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Atlas 5 rocket delivers NASA data router into space for astronauts and satellites - Spaceflight Now

Cassini has uncovered a wealth of data on Saturn’s rings – SpaceFlight Insider

Laurel Kornfeld

August 19th, 2017

Clouds on Saturn take on the appearance of strokes from a cosmic brush thanks to the wavy way that fluids interact in Saturns atmosphere. Photo & Caption Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Space Science Institute

NASAs Cassini spacecraft, now conducting its final orbits between Saturn and its rings, is plunging further than ever into the giant planets atmosphere. Over the last 13 years studying the Saturn system, the spacecraft has discovered a wealth of information about the planets rings.

Data sent back by the probe has revealed the rings formed through numerous processes rather than via a single mechanism.Observations have even provided scientists with insight into both the formation of planets around young stars and the formation of galaxies.

A key finding is that there are numerous ways of forming rings around planets.Saturns many moons play major roles in the rings formation and structure. The planets G-ring as well as two new rings discovered by Cassini in 2006, named the Janus-Epimethius ring and the Pallene ring, are made up of materials expelled from moons that were hit by meteorites.

The E-ring, which is spread out over a large area and not highly concentrated, is composed of water ice particles from Enceladus delivered via jets.

One of two potentially habitable moons orbiting Saturn, Enceladus has a global subsurface ocean from which geysers have been seen erupting through its cracked, icy surface.Images taken by Cassini show long, narrow structures that clearly originate from the moons geysers.

Some rings, such as the F-ring, fall under the gravitational interaction of nearby moons. Satellite Prometheus regularly perturbs this ring, as it does the thin ringlets that traverse the 202-mile (325-kilometer) wide Encke gap in the A-ring.

Both Prometheus and the F-ring have eccentric orbits around their parent planet.Another small moon, Pan, keeps the Encke gap it orbits in open by gravitationally influencing nearby ring particles.

The thin sliver of Saturns moon Prometheus lurks near ghostly structures in Saturns narrow F ring in this view from NASAs Cassini spacecraft. Many of the narrow rings faint and wispy features result from its gravitational interactions with Prometheus (86 kilometers, or 53 miles across). Photo & Caption Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Space Science Institute

When NASAs twin Voyager spacecraft flew by Saturn in 1980 and 1981, its images revealed strange features among the rings that scientists labeled spokes because they flare out much like spokes on the wheels of bicycles.

Data sent back by Cassini showed the spokes to be ice particles that interact with Saturns magnetic field. Electrostatic charges related to the angle of sunlight the rings are exposed to lift these particles above the rings.A seasonal phenomena, the spokes show up around Saturns two equinoxes but vanish at the time of its two solstices.

In 2010, Cassini spotted a new class of small moons that create propeller-shaped features within individual rings. Scientists now believe the processes that formed these tiny moons are similar to the processes by which planets form around young stars.

Observing the motions of these disk-embedded objects provides a rare opportunity to gauge how the planets grew from, and interacted with, the disk of material surrounding the early Sun, said Cassini imaging team lead Carolyn Porco.

While Saturns rings were once thought to be flat, Cassini revealed they are actually bumpy, in some cases hosting fluffy vertical structures as tall as the Rocky Mountains.Located at the outer edges of Saturns A and B rings, these structures were detected by the spacecraft through analysis of light and shadow patterns caused by the varying angle of the Sun over over time.

Wave patterns or oscillations that distort the B-rings outer edges are similar to those found in spiral galaxies such as the Milky Way as well as in protoplanetary disks around newborn stars.

These oscillations are caused by energy released during small movements of the ring particles, which create and feed waves that can grow to hundreds of kilometers in diameter.Cassinis instruments were able to discern patterns in these waves by studying the interplay of light and shadow in the rings vertical structures.

After an Aug. 10 gravitational assist from Titan, Cassini embarked on the 18th of its 22 Grand Finale orbits. On Monday, Aug. 14. Its Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS) conducted the first ever direct sampling of Saturns upper atmosphere.

This collage, consisting of two Cassini images of long, sinuous, tendril-like features from Saturns moon Enceladus and two corresponding computer simulations of the same, illustrates how well the structures, and the sizes of the particles composing them, can be modeled by tracing the trajectories of tiny, icy grains ejected from Enceladus south polar geysers. Image & Caption Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Space Science Institute

Tagged: Cassini Grand Finale Jet Propulsion Laboratory NASA Saturn The Range

Laurel Kornfeld is an amateur astronomer and freelance writer from Highland Park, NJ, who enjoys writing about astronomy and planetary science. She studied journalism at Douglass College, Rutgers University, and earned a Graduate Certificate of Science from Swinburne Universitys Astronomy Online program. Her writings have been published online in The Atlantic, Astronomy magazines guest blog section, the UK Space Conference, the 2009 IAU General Assembly newspaper, The Space Reporter, and newsletters of various astronomy clubs. She is a member of the Cranford, NJ-based Amateur Astronomers, Inc. Especially interested in the outer solar system, Laurel gave a brief presentation at the 2008 Great Planet Debate held at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab in Laurel, MD.

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Cassini has uncovered a wealth of data on Saturn's rings - SpaceFlight Insider

Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex to host Solar Eclipse Day 2017 – SpaceFlight Insider

Press Release

August 19th, 2017

On Aug. 21, 2017, the entire continental U.S. will see a solar eclipse. Only a 70-mile wide swath across the central part of the country will experience totality. Kennedy Space Center will experience a maximum coverage of 86 percent. Image Credit: NASA

WHAT:For the first time in almost 100 years, a total solar eclipse will be visible through the United States. Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, located in the partial eclipse zone, is commemorating this historic event by hosting a viewing opportunity right at Americas spaceport.OnAug. 21, visitors will be able to sit in the Rocket Garden and watch the moon begin to cover the sun.

Complimentary certified eclipse viewing glasses will be provided on a first come, first served basis. Space experts will be on site to engage with viewers, answer questions and offer commentary throughout the event; and NASA TV will be streaming live content from across the U.S. onto the visitor complexs Jumbotron.

Leading up to the event, our education team will use the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex mobile planetarium to showcase the science behind a solar eclipse, and there will be two new eclipse-themed shows inScience on a SphereandEyes on the Universe.

For more information, clickhere.

**Photo opportunities and interviews available for media**

WHEN:Monday, August 21, 2017

11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

1:15 p.m.Eclipse visibility at Kennedy Space Center

2:45 p.m.Maximum coverage (86 percent)

WHERE:Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex

Rocket Garden

SR 405

Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899

WHO:INTERVIEWS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST

To attend this event, please RSVP to Lauren Walbert atlwalbert@hillmanpr.com,(443) 683-0294or Rebecca Shireman atrshireman@delawarenorth.com,(321) 449-4273.

Video courtesy of NASA Goddard

Tagged: Kennedy Space Center NASA solar eclipse Solar Eclipse Day 2017 The Range

The preceding is a press or news release either issued by one of the space agencies or by an aerospace firm or organization. The views expressed in the above post do not necessarily reflect those of SpaceFlight Insider.

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Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex to host Solar Eclipse Day 2017 - SpaceFlight Insider

Women with THIS hair colour are OFFICIALLY the most lusted-after on this dating app – Express.co.uk

GETTY

Brits live up to the age old clichs when it comes to who theyre attracted to, it's been revealed.

Men are lusting after slim blondes and women are on the look-out for dark haired and muscular men to couple up with.

New dating app Type has released the data after 4000 Britons signed up for the dating application.

It encourages users to filter out the people they dont fancy. Data revealed over 50 per cent of men like a slim physique and nearly a fifth of male users say blonde is a preferred hair colour.

GETTY

Dark hair is the most sought after hair colour on a man

The women on Type are also adhering to their fair share of clichs, with users showing that the age-old desire for tall, dark and handsome still rings true with modern daters.

Dark hair is the most sought after hair colour on a man, and women are most likely to want a man with an athletic physique.

Red heads are shown the least love, with only 11 per cent of men stating they fancy gingers. Women are even less enamoured with the colouring, with only 4 per cent seeing red-heads or strawberry blondes as their type.

New app Type allows users to specify the type of people they want to match with.

Users tell the app what they're looking for and Type will only show them prospective dates who fit the bill. You can filter for body type, hair colour, height, whether they have piercings, tattoos or beards.

The app will also show users who is on the hunt for a date that fits their description.

So whilst red-heads might not be the user's typical type, their feelings might change when they see who has their eye on them.

The idea is the brainchild of ex-City worker Benno Spencer who was frustrated with existing dating apps on offer.

Caters News Agency

1 of 15

The bridge and groom's silhouettes are reflected in the sea as they walk along the beach

Spencer said: "At one point, I was using lots of dating apps and used to spend hours mindlessly swiping through people who really werent my type.

"I know what type of girl Im attracted to in real life; I love girls with dark hair and eyes, and have always had a soft spot for Brazilian women.

"It felt ridiculous that I couldnt apply the same level of natural preference when on dating apps. Thats where the idea for Type came from and its incredible to see the Type dating app alive and kicking and already helping people find romance."

Type is available to download from the App Store (and rated 5 stars) and Google play and is free to all, no subscriptions required.

Worst proposals EVER? Nearly half of British women left disappointed - new poll reveals. Click here to see the proposals that made headlines for all the wrong reasons.

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Women with THIS hair colour are OFFICIALLY the most lusted-after on this dating app - Express.co.uk

Biggest near-Earth asteroid recorded by NASA will make a pass in September – Sacramento Bee


Sacramento Bee
Biggest near-Earth asteroid recorded by NASA will make a pass in September
Sacramento Bee
If Monday's approaching solar eclipse has you excited about astronomy, there's some good news: Not even two weeks later, another rare feat will pass us by. And miss us, thankfully. An asteroid called Florence will pass within 4.5 million miles of Earth ...
NASA greets Earth-buzzing asteroid Florence in SeptemberCNET
NASA: 3-Mile-Wide Asteroid Set to Pass by Earth Sept. 1Newsmax
NASA Tracking Three-Mile-Wide Asteroid That Will Pass Earth in SeptemberNewsweek
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all 72 news articles »

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Biggest near-Earth asteroid recorded by NASA will make a pass in September - Sacramento Bee

Great American Eclipse: Why NASA is Chasing the Total Solar Eclipse with Jet Planes – Newsweek

NASA is preparing to study the total solar eclipse on Monday by chasing the path of totality with jet planes. By doing so, the space agency should be able to capture the clearest ever image of the suns outer atmosphereits corona.

The corona is like a fiery shell of plasma that surrounds the sun, reaching temperatures of over 1 million degrees Celsius. It is the place where solar winds and coronal mass ejections come from, both of which have the potential to affect Earth. A large CME, for example, could knock out communications satellites and power grids, with one U.S. government report indicating it could cause up to $2 trillion worth of damage.

However, our understanding of the suns corona is limited. Compared with the sun, it is very dim, so when scientists try to look at it, it is obscured by the brightness of the suns surface. During a solar eclipse, however, this all changes. With the suns light blocked out, researches can look at the corona in far more detail.

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This National Solar Observatory image shows a model of the sun's corona during the August 21 total solar eclipse, based on measurements taken one solar rotation (or 27.2753 Earth days) before the event. National Solar Observatory

To take advantage of the forthcoming eclipse, which will pass across the entire U.S., from the Pacific to the Atlantic, NASA plans to follow the event with superfast planes flying high in the stratosphere andcruising at an altitude of 50,000 feet.

The two WB-57F research jets have been modified so that telescopes are mounted on their noses. These telescopes will be used to take high-definition pictures of the corona 30 times per second. Because of the high altitude, the sky will be 20 to 30 times darker than it is on the ground. There will also be less atmospheric turbulence. Combined, this should provide scientists with the clearest-ever view of the corona taken to date.

Each plane will track the eclipse for three and a half minutes, giving a total observation time of seven minutes. From a static point on the surface of Earth, the maximum observation time is just two and a half minutes.

These could well turn out to be the best-ever observations of high-frequency phenomena in the corona, Dan Seaton, co-investigator of the project and a researcher at the University of Colorado, said in a statement. Extending the observing time and going to a very high altitude might allow us to see a few events or track waves that would be essentially invisible in just two minutes of observations from the ground.

One of the mysteries of the suns corona scientists hope to solve is why it is so much hotter than the suns surface, which is just a few thousand degrees Celsius. One suggestion is that magnetic waves move energy from the surface to the outer atmosphere, where it is released as heat. Another theory is that tiny explosions, or nanoflares, are constantly taking place on the suns surface and releasing heat into the corona.

An eruption of solar material from the sun, also known as a coronal mass ejection. NASA

We see the evidence of nanoflare heating, but we dont know where they occur, says Amir Caspi, whose team from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, will be flying in the jets. If they occur higher up in the corona, we might expect to see waves moving downwards, as the little explosions occur and collectively reconfigure the magnetic fields.

As well as looking at the corona, the jets will be used to observe Mercury, taking the first-ever thermal images of the planet to see how temperature varies across its surface. Because Mercury spins far slower than Earth, the side facing the sun ends up reaching around 420 degrees Celsius, while temperatures on the dark side plummet far below zero. Understanding how fast the surface cools down at night will help researchers work out what the soil is made from and how dense it ispotentially shedding light on how it and the other rocky planets formed.

The path of totality will pass through 10 states: Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina.Read our guide on when to watch the total solar eclipse in each state here.

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Great American Eclipse: Why NASA is Chasing the Total Solar Eclipse with Jet Planes - Newsweek

NASA’s Voyagers: 35 years of inspiration [Update: Now it’s 40] – Ars Technica

This weekend, NASA's historic Voyager spacecrafts celebrate their 40th year in space. The missions have given humanity many awe-inspiring discoveries in those four decades, and Voyager 1 and 2 have inspired infinite further initiatives or related works, too (such as a great new documentary debuting this week). To celebrate the occasion, we're resurfacing this appreciation from 2012 that details another thing Voyager forever inspired: our science editor.

August 20, 1977 turned out to be a before-and-after moment for meand probably a lot of other people as well. None of us knew it at the time, though, since the launch of Voyager 2 (followed a few weeks later by Voyager 1) wasn't obviously a big deal to most people. In fact, I wouldn't fully appreciate the change until sometime in 1980.

To understand why, a bit of history is in order. NASA had been sending probes to other planets, like the Mariner and Pioneer series, since the 1960s. However, even the best technology of the time was pretty limited in terms of what it could do remotely. And for most of that time, they were badly overshadowed by manned exploration, first the Apollo missions and Skylab, and later the planning for the space shuttle. In fact, even as the Voyagers flew past Jupiter, I seem to recall more attention being paid to the impending de-orbit of Skylab, which scattered charred pieces of itself over Australia later that year.

But for me, everything changed with the arrival of the January issue of National Geographic early the next year. Its picture, of an erupting volcano on Jupiter's moon Io, was simply stunning. The contents continued to amaze. Supersonic winds in Jupiter's atmosphere. Stunning photos of the Great Red Spot. Water ice reshaping the surface of Europa. I can't even begin to imagine how many times I reread the issue.

Further issues of the sort came as the Voyagers passed the other outer planets, but the Jupiter issue was the one that truly fulfilled the before-and-after promise held by the Voyagers' launch.

I had always had an interest in science, going back to things like a childhood addiction to all things dinosaur and a love of PBS specials. But like most other kids, I had been operating under the distorted picture of science presented by the typical school textbooks at the time: make a hypothesis, do some direct tests, and draw a conclusion. The Voyagers turned all that upside-down.

Whoever wrote National Geographic's coverage brilliantly captured the fact that scientists sometimes do things just to see what's out there, rather than being driven by a specific hypothesis. And, quite often, they're actually surprised by what they find. Europa being nearly crater free? None of our previous planetary visits had suggested anything like that was going to be likely. Active volcanoes on a moon? That wasn't on the mission list.

In fact, the discovery of Io's volcanoes showed that serendipity played a part in science. If the narrative was right, they weren't even found during the observations that were directed at the moon. Instead, a camera simply meant to pick out stars for navigation purposes happened to capture an eruption while trying to get a fix on a nearby star.

It also became clear that the whole idea of science being all about direct tests needed a bit of revision. The Voyagers did have cameras and spectrometers that told us about the composition of various things they observed. But they also had magnetometers, that simply registered what was going on in their immediate environment. It was clear those readings could be plugged into models that told us something about the environment as a whole and, more broadly, what was going on at Jupiter and its moons to generate that environment.

And those models weren't static things that you tested, then either accepted or discarded. Tidal forces were quickly pinpointed as providing the heat that made Jupiter's inner moons such dynamic places, but the details were revised, argued over, and left with a fair degree of uncertainty attached. Other data was described even as it was made clear that there was no consensus about what could possibly explain it.

You can tell how much of an impression this made on me based on the fact that I still remember all of this over 30 years later.

But like the best of science, the Voyagers didn't just change their corner of science; they changed how we view the world.

It may be hard to imagine it now, but I had grown up at a time when we believed that the Earth was the only host of active volcanoes in the Solar System, and all of the bodies we'd explored had been so hostile that life wasn't a realistic option. Now, we regularly talk about the active geology of places like Io and Titan, and consider the relative prospects for life on various moons. The Voyagers completely changed the way we talk about the Solar System and, in the process, our place in it.

I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that the Voyagers have also shaped how we view the rapidly expanding catalog of planets outside our solar system as well. Rather than viewing them through the lens of Mars' barrenness or the hellish conditions of Mercury and Venus, the Voyagers made it possible to envision other worlds as part of a cacophony of different environments, including some we have not seen in our own Solar System. In fact, it wouldn't surprise me if the Voyagers didn't help inspire some people to look for planets elsewhere in the first place.

Now, over 30 years on, the Voyagers' greatest discoveries are part of the background of how I view science and the Universe. But they continue to amaze for one other reason: their longevity. NASA builds its hardware to survive incredibly harsh environments, so provided nothing goes badly wrong, it has become common for missions to still be going long after their expected finish. Even so, 35 years of operation and data sent back from the border of the space between the stars is just a staggering testament to the Voyagers' engineering.

They will probably never change the world again, but it's somehow nice to think that their scientific career has continued to span the entirety of one they helped inspire: mine.

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NASA's Voyagers: 35 years of inspiration [Update: Now it's 40] - Ars Technica

NASA jets will chase solar eclipse at 50000 feet – CBS News

It's go time for NASA's stratospheric airborne science team. On Monday, a total solar eclipse will travel coast-to-coast in the U.S. for the first time in 99 years. Pilots at Ellington Field, next door to the Johnson Space Center in Houston, are going on an atmospheric research flight.

Their rides: 1960s-era former bomber jets, called WB-57s.

During the total solar eclipse, the same planes will serve a very different purpose, reports CBS News correspondent David Begnaud.

Cary Klemm is one of four NASA flight crew members who will be chasing the eclipse over Missouri, Illinois and Kentucky at 460 mph.

"My job is to calibrate and initialize the camera payload that we'll be using to look at the eclipse. That includes focusing and zooming in to get the best shot," Klemm said.

CBS News

Klemm said he will be wearing solar eclipse glasses.

"It's actually even more important to wear the eclipse glasses at high altitudes. There's less air to block the sun, and the sun's a lot stronger," Klemm said.

26 Photos

You don't need special glasses in order to appreciate these stunning eclipse photos

Amir Caspi leads the team of scientists.

"These planes will be outfitted with special cameras in their nose cones," Caspi said. "So the planes will be looking at the solar corona, the outer atmosphere of the sun."

He said on a regular day, the sky is so bright, you can't see the corona, but during the total solar eclipse, the "dim corona suddenly becomes visible."

"Our results will lead to a better understanding of the corona, which will eventually lead to a better understanding of ...flares and coronal mass ejections," Caspi said.

"They can cause blackouts of radio frequency communications. Cell phones can have trouble working," Caspi explained. "It can cause power outages by knocking out power grids."

The best way to understand what erupts off the sun's corona is to photograph it over long periods of time. But ground-based cameras will only have about two minutes of total eclipse time.

Because two of the planes will be flying tandem along the eclipse path, it will give scientists an unprecedented look at the sun.

"Each plane will be able to observe totality for about four minutes. And when we stitch together the observations from both of the airplanes, we be getting about seven- to seven-and-a-half minutes of total solar eclipse," Caspi said. "We'll be getting 30 photographs a second for seven-and-a-half minutes of totality. That's about 29,000 photographs between the two airplanes."

Scientists will be studying the data these planes gather for years, but for the rest of us on Monday, NASA TV will be live-streaming images taken from on board shortly after 2:15 p.m. EST. They should be impressive. We're told the sky is 20 to 30 times darker up at 50,000 feet than it is down on the ground.

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NASA, PBS marking 40 years since Voyager spacecraft launches – LA Daily News

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Forty years after blasting off, Earths most distant ambassadors the twin Voyager spacecraft are carrying sounds and music of our planet ever deeper into the cosmos.

Think of them as messages in bottles meant for anyone or anything out there.

This Sunday marks the 40th anniversary of NASAs launch of Voyager 2, now almost 11 billion miles distant. It departed from Cape Canaveral on Aug. 20, 1977 to explore Jupiter and Saturn.

Voyager 1 followed a few weeks later and is ahead of Voyager 2. Its humanitys farthest spacecraft at 13 billion miles away and is the worlds only craft to reach interstellar space, the vast mostly emptiness between star systems. Voyager 2 is expected to cross that boundary during the next few years.

Each carries a 12-inch, gold-plated copper phonograph record (there were no CDs or MP3s back then) containing messages from Earth: Beethovens Fifth, chirping crickets, a babys cry, a kiss, wind and rain, a thunderous moon rocket launch, African pygmy songs, Solomon Island panpipes, a Peruvian wedding song and greetings in dozens of languages. There are also more than 100 electronic images on each record showing 20th-century life, traffic jams and all.

NASA is marking the anniversary of its back-to-back Voyager launches with tweets, reminisces and still captivating photos of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune taken by the Voyagers from 1979 through the 1980s.

Public television is also paying tribute with a documentary, The Farthest Voyager in Space, airing Wednesday on PBS at 9 p.m.

The two-hour documentary describes the tense and dramatic behind-the-scenes effort that culminated in the wildly successful missions to our solar systems outer planets and beyond. More than 20 team members are interviewed, many of them long retired. Theres original TV footage throughout, including a lookback at the late astronomer Carl Sagan of the 1980 PBS series Cosmos. It also includes an interview with Sagans son, Nick, who at 6 years old provided the English message: Hello from the children of Planet Earth.

Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco who joined Voyagers imaging team in 1980 puts the mission up there with mans first moon landing.

I consider Voyager to be the Apollo 11 of the planetary exploration program. It has that kind of iconic stature, Porco, a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, told The Associated Press on Thursday.

It was Sagan who, in large part, got a record aboard each Voyager. NASA was reluctant and did not want the records eclipsing the scientific goals. Sagan finally prevailed, but he and his fellow record promoters had less than two months to rustle everything up.

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The identical records were the audio version of engraved plaques designed by Sagan and others for Pioneers 10 and 11, launched in 1972 and 1973.

The 55 greetings for the Voyager Golden Records were collected at Cornell University, where Sagan taught astronomy, and the United Nations in New York. The music production fell to science writer Timothy Ferris, a friend of Sagan living then in New York.

For the musical selections, Ferris and Sagan recruited friends along with a few professional musicians. They crammed in 90 minutes of music recorded at half-speed; otherwise it would have lasted just 45 minutes.

How to choose from an infinite number of melodies and melodious sounds representing all of Earth?

Beethoven, Bach and Mozart were easy picks. Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven represented jazz, Blind Willie Johnson gospel blues.

For the rock n roll single, the group selected Chuck Berrys 1958 hit Johnny B. Goode. Bob Dylan was a close runner-up, and the Beatles also rated high. Elvis Presleys name came up (Presley died four days before Voyager 2s launch). In the end, Ferris thought Johnny B. Goode best represented the origins and creativity of rock n roll.

Ferris still believes its a terrific record and he has no deep regrets about the selections. Even the rejected tunes represented beautiful materials.

Its like handfuls of diamonds. If youre concerned that you didnt get the right handful or something, its probably a neurotic problem rather than anything to do with the diamonds, Ferris told the AP earlier this week.

But he noted: If I were going to start into regrets, I suppose not having Italian opera would be on that list.

The whole record project cost $30,000 or $35,000, to the best of Ferris recollection.

NASA estimated the records would last 1 billion to 3 billion years or more potentially outliving human civilization.

For Ferris, its time more than distance that makes the whole idea of finders-keepers so incomprehensible.

A billion years from now, Voyager could be captured by an advanced civilization of beings that dont exist yet ... Its literally imponderable what will happen to the Voyagers, he said.

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Family medicine residents worked their way to Victoria – Victoria Advocate


Victoria Advocate
Family medicine residents worked their way to Victoria
Victoria Advocate
Dr. Jeff Mistroff, of Coral Springs, Fla., earned a bachelor's degree in microbiology/molecular biology from the University of Central Florida and an MBA with a health care management concentration from Davenport University. He then completed his ...

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Family medicine residents worked their way to Victoria - Victoria Advocate

GSOM Night 2017-18: Announcement and shirt design request – Golden State of Mind

The season hasnt even started yet, but its never too early to talk about another chance to party at Oracle with a bunch of strangers from the internet! In case you are new to this whole thing, GSOM Night is a unique fan experience that is a cooperative endeavor of the Golden State Warriors team, and us - the GSOM community.

Its a group seating deal for one specific game in order to bring our community out to a game together - with favorable pricing, and the opportunity to shoot free throws afterwards.

Every time people see pictures of it, they invariably ask me. How do you get down on the court like that? Can I go shoot a free throw too?

Well my friends, the answer to both of those questions is: GSOM Night. You can read about last years adventures here. Details for this year are still being finalized, but you can rest assured that there will be custom shirts, and free throws on the court, and GSOM people.

January 25th, 2018. Its a Thursday at 7:30.

We know that weekends are generally more convenient, but coming in to this year, Nate and I had two priorities: keep costs down, and ensure free throws. So we get a game a bit before the All Star break, against an up and coming Timberwolves team (by the way, if you havent yet, be sure to check out Hugo Kitanos excellent profile on the revamped Wolves).

There will be more details. Most importantly of course, pricing and ordering information; but we are also looking into another courtside pregame shoot-around for the first lucky people that buy tickets.

Ok, heres where it gets different from previous years. This time around, we thought it would be fun to solicit designs from GSOM. We still have Tony.psd waiting in the wings in case we need a quick design, but we thought there could be some artists around here that might want to try their hand at coming up with something cool and original.

The specifications for the image are:

We will be back soon with more updates and details, but please share this now among your friends - and the internet at large. We want as may brilliant ideas as we can get. The GSOM moderation team will work with Tony.psd to select the final image.

Also, please save the date for GSOM night. Our Warriors are leaving Oracle soon, so this literally is one of the very last chances you will ever have to go see our favorite team, and then walk down onto the court after the game and try to hit a free throw.

See you there!

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GSOM Night 2017-18: Announcement and shirt design request - Golden State of Mind

Eclipse’s Heavy Cell Phone Loads Could Parch East Oregon Crops – Jefferson Public Radio

Cell phone towers in Oregons path of totality are expected to overload. Thats because of selfies-with-the-sun that thousands of visitors might try to upload.

But theres an unexpected consequence of cell coverage going down: farm irrigation circles could go dry.

A circle pivot is a wheeled arm that walks around 120-acres or more, spraying water across a field. Farmers can set the rate so it passes over the ground very slowly or more rapidly. The new ones work off cell towers, so farmers can adjust that water right from their mobile phones.

Ever since the eclipse has been creeping up closer, cell companies like Verizon have been working to increase their capacity in the path of totality for the expected crowds.

Verizon is one of the main companies that works out here and that farmers fields are connected with. But that cell expansion work has already thrown off many of the irrigation circles on Verizon service.

We have a great network of people we work with, Joe Hill, a wheat farmer in North Powder, Oregon. But I mean its darn frustrating.

Verizon said in a statement this is a once in a lifetime occurrence and they are expecting some challenges. But they have tried to upgrade their service wherever possible.

Hill is worried about the eclipse. He expects major trouble for at least four days.

Well, In some of them we will still be able to have some control and drive out and turn them on and turn them off. But some of them are wired so, the only way we can turn the water on and off and-or change the speed is all based on using that cell-phone controlled unit, Hill said. In those cases its going to be pretty, pretty challenging.

Down the road outside near the town of Haines, Jess Blatchford said hes ready for this gathering storm of eclipse-rs. Blatchford also expects all his circles to go offline this week. Hes got four-wheelers primed so he and his crew can run to each individual field on his 2,000 acre ranch and get the water back online manually.

Hes hoping his phone will still alarm when the circles shut off.

Blatchford mainly grows processing potatoes. Even a couple hot days off water can cause heat stress. With potatoes its hard to know what youve got until you dig them up, but he said even a few days without water could mean thousands of dollars lost on a single field.

Blatchford is mainly worried about fire. He said it hasnt rained much here in weeks. And there are a lot of dry fieldsright where eclipse-rs might try to pull off the road.

There is still a lot of stubble around, Blatchford said. You get people that dont understand they dont need to be driving out around fields and there is a pretty big fire hazard.

As for posting on Facebook, making calls or Googling, Blatchford isnt too worried.

That doesnt worry me, he said. If it quit for a day, that would just be a pretty quiet day.

Like Blatchford, many farmers in the area said they dont mind giving up their solitude and sharing their dramatic mountain views with visitors for a few days. But theyre just hoping theres enough bandwidth and blacktop to share.

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Eclipse's Heavy Cell Phone Loads Could Parch East Oregon Crops - Jefferson Public Radio

How to speed up your Wi-Fi – Popular Science

No one likes slow Wi-Fiit's right up there with creaking doors and leaking taps as one of the most frustrating household problems. To boost your upload and download speeds back up to where they should be, try making these tweaks to your router and other devices.

We've already covered some of the hardware upgrades you can invest in to remove dead spots and get better home Wi-Fi. So in this guide, we'll focus on software fixes and changes you can make to your existing gear. If those tweaks don't work, switching to a mesh network system or investing in a repeater can also improve your Wi-Fi speed.

Just like your laptop and cell phone, routers run their own software, in this case called firmware because it's so tightly tied to the hardwarethe manufacturer preinstalls and configures it before shipping the device. Companies don't often issue updates for their routers' firmware, but many do make new versions of their software available for download. These updates fix bugs and may also include performance upgrades, as well as extra support for newer devices on the market.

The best way to find new firmware for your router is to head to the website of the manufacturer or the Internet Service Provider who gave you the router. If you can't find a download link, run a web search using "firmware" followed by your router's make and model.

The exact process for installing the firmware varies from router to router. Typically, you open the device settings on your computer and look for the option that lets you install an update from a downloaded file (often a zip archive) on your hard drive. The downloaded package often includes installation instructions, but if you're still not sure how to do it, consult the router instruction manual or look up the instructions online.

Here's another trick to try with a slow router: Change the wireless channel it uses. This means slightly adjusting the wireless frequency that your internet signals are broadcast on. Your router should have a setting that lets you modify the channel under a heading like Wireless or Advanced. If you can't find it immediately, look up the instructions online or in the router manual.

Most routers use channel 6 by default. Change this to 1 or 11 (to minimize interference with channel 6), and you might notice an uptick in Wi-Fi performance. All of your connected devices will also have to adjust their channels, but the majority of your gear will do this automatically, with no need to adjust the Wi-Fi name or password. You might have to play around with some trial and error before you arrive at the best channel, but stick to 1, 6, or 11 for the best chance of getting the fastest speeds.

In a related trick, some more advanced routers offer two frequency bands: the standard 2.4GHz band and the faster 5GHz band. These bands follow the same principle as the channels mentioned above, but when you switch bands, you're shifting the frequency much further. That means that Wi-Fi-enabled devices you connect to different bands won't interfere with each other.

If your router supports dual bands (check your model's documentation for details), you'll usually see two different Wi-Fi networks you can connect to. Divide your devices across both networks, depending on the speed and range each piece of hardware needs from your Wi-Fi. For example, the 5GHz band typically offers faster speeds but shorter range, so devices closer to your router should use that one. It'll stream your Spotify tunes more reliably to your games console, but it's not as good at blasting through walls and doors as the older 2.4GHz standard. Use the latter for devices that you move around your home, such as phones, or that are located farther away from the router.

You need an 802.11a, 802.11n, 802.11ac or 802.11ad dual-band router to make use of the 5GHz band. Most routers sold in recent years do support these standards. On either band, if you're getting sub-optimal Wi-Fi speeds and seeing buffering wheels more often than you'd like, you can still change the wireless channel used in the 5GHz range or the 2.4GHz one. Check out your router's help pages for more information on your options.

Internet use can quickly eat up the available bandwidth, especially on slow connections or those shared among multiple people. So if you're struggling to get a decent speed, try investigating what else is happening on your network. For example, running Netflix alongside Hulu while you take multiple video calls probably isn't the best way to maximize your streaming speed.

You can visit a site like Speedtest.net to identify the speeds you're currently getting. But taking steps to increase those speeds means you'll have to patrol the specific use of your home Wi-Fi networkwhich is up to you and the people you live with. The easiest solution for maximum speeds is turning off devices not currently in use. This not only saves money on your energy bill, but also makes sure that those computers, televisions, and tablets can't possibly be wasting the bandwidth that you need for another application.

At the same time, you want to make sure no unwelcome visitors or invasive neighbors are lurking on your home network. Your router should have come with Wi-Fi password protection already enabled. Changing this password on a regular basisnot to mention keeping it secretwill help keep your network to yourself and your invited guests. We've covered some other tips for this in a guide to keeping others off your Wi-Fi.

Another option is to specify which internet uses you value most. Some routers include a feature called Quality of Service, or QoS, that lets you prioritize certain applications (like Netflix) or types of content (like video) over others. You could use it to make sure your video calls stay stable even if that makes the Spotify stream spotty. Some routers also let you prioritize certain devices (say your computer) over others (say your roommate's). If your router has a QoS feature, look on the manufacturer's website or in the supplied manual for instructions on setting it up and telling the router what you'd like to prioritize.

Plenty of innocuous household objects will slow down your Wi-Fiincluding the water inside fish tanks. Now you know why your laptop never gets a signal when it's behind the aquarium in your study aquarium. Even if you keep a fish-free home, try moving your furniture to put as few objects (including walls) as possible between your devices and your router.

In addition to bulky objects, anything that emits a wireless signal can interfere with the Wi-Fi your router broadcasts. That includes wireless baby monitors, wireless landline phones, microwaves, Bluetooth keyboards and mice, and even string lights. All of them generate electromagnetic interference that can reduce your upload and download speeds. In most cases, the disruption should be minimal, but it's worth bearing in mind if you're experiencing problems. Rearranging the aforementioned items can help, and if that solution is inconvenient, switch your router to its 5GHz channel: Most microwaves and other wireless gear use the 2.4GHz frequency, so the higher band should have less congestion.

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How to speed up your Wi-Fi - Popular Science

Danbury dentist accredited in dental sleep medicine – Danbury News Times

Photo: H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticut Media

Dentist Leila Chahine, of Dental Wellness and Health in Danbury, holds a Mandibular Advancement Device. Tuesday, August 15, 2017, in Danbury, Conn.

Dentist Leila Chahine, of Dental Wellness and Health in Danbury, holds a Mandibular Advancement Device. Tuesday, August 15, 2017, in Danbury, Conn.

Danbury dentist accredited in dental sleep medicine

Dental Wellness & Health, the office of Leila Chahine, recently received accreditation from the American Academy of Dental Sleep Medicine, or AADSM, in recognition of the offices excellence in treating patients with sleep apnea, snoring and other breathing-related sleep disorders.

The office is one of only three in Connecticut and 71 in the nation to receive the accreditation.

If a patients sleep ability is not healthy, the rest of his or her body cannot attain the most favorable health, either, Chahine said. I see my job as evaluating the whole patient and trying to create the best dental situation possible to foster optimal health. Our team is proud to be recognized for the highest level of care we provide to our patients.

Dental Wellness & Health, at 16 Hospital Ave., offers general dentistry services as well as the sleep disorder treatments. To combat sleep apnea and other sleep disorders, and to offer an alternative to CPAP machines, Chahine custom fits patients with a mouth piece or oral sleep appliance that repositions the lower jaw to allow for stable air flow during sleep.

Sleep is my passion, Chahine said.

To become accredited, facilities must meet quality measures outlined in the AADSMs Standards for Accreditation of Dental Sleep Medicine Facilities, which detail expectations for the proficiency of a facilitys dental director and staff. The standards also detail expectations in: documentation and billing of patients; professionalism of consumer care; follow-up service; and safety.

The accreditation lasts for three years. The program was developed to define excellence in dental sleep medicine, said Harold Smith, president of the AADSM. Patients and referring physicians can have peace-of-mind when working with an accredited facility, knowing that the facility has proven, recognized excellence in every aspect of care.

Smith said dentists and physicians can work together to diagnose and treat sleep disorders.

Chahine, who is from Lebanon, hopes the accreditation will increase understanding and acceptance of dental sleep medicine as it pertains to overall health and quality of life. Before, there was no way to tell the difference between a dentist with experience in dental sleep medicine and a novice, she said. Sleep apnea is a serious condition. Ive been specializing in this for 20 years. The accreditation is way for patients to ensure they are getting the best care.

Chahine, a past president of the Greater Danbury Dental Society, formerly served as the education chairman of the AADSM.

The AADSM is a non-profit national professional society dedicated to the practice of dental sleep medicine. It has more than 3,000 member dentists.

To reach Dental Wellness & Health, call 203-744-1814.

The writer may be reached at cbosak@hearstmediact.com; 203-731-3338

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Saints elevated Beau Lowery to director of sports medicine during the offseason – The Advocate

The Saints apparently made some changes to their training staff this offseason that flew under the radar.

Beau Lowery was elevated to director of sports medicine after spending the previous two seasons as director of rehabilitation. Scottie Patton still remains as head athletic trainer.

In the team's media guide, Lowery is listed as the first name under the heading of "sports medicine." In the 2016 media guide, Patton had top billing under the heading of "athletic training." Lowery was listed second.

This change happened before the misdiagnosis on Delvin Breaux's broken fibula led to the firing of two team orthopedists.

Lowery, who earned a degree is physical therapy from Mississippi Medical Center in 1998 and a master's in kinesiology from LSU, spent his first four seasons with the Saints as an assistant athletic trainer/physical therapist. He later earned his doctorate in physical therapy through the University of Mississippi Medical Center in 2013.

Lowery spent two years as a physical therapist at the Baton Rouge Orthopedic Clinic before landing with the Saints and served as an associate athletic trainer/physical therapist at LSU from 2004-210, working primarily with the baseball team. He also worked with the men's golf and cheerleading programs.

Prior to working with LSU, he spent three summers with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Follow Nick Underhill on Twitter, @nick_underhill.

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Saints elevated Beau Lowery to director of sports medicine during the offseason - The Advocate

Dr. Harmon: The moment I knew medicine was my calling – American Medical Association (blog)

Physicians are privileged to see patients at their most vulnerable, to reshape lives and continually revitalize the nations health system. In a challenging practice environment, physicians remain driven by the power of healing and the indelible connections they form with patients and families.

The AMA Wire When I Knew Medicine Was My Calling series profiles a wide variety of doctors, offering a glimpse into the lives of the busy women and men navigating new courses in their careers and in American medicine. No matter their age, their specialty or their career stage, they were born to do this and they tell us why.

Share a moment with: Gerald Harmon, MD, a family physician in Pawleys Island, South Carolina, and chair of the AMA Board of Trustees.

I was born to: Help others heal.

The moment I knew medicine was my calling: My third year of college I was offered an opportunity to pursue a career in medicine while I was in the military reserves. I had never entertained the thought of a medical career, but a new health professions scholarship program was developed and I applied.

An experience from residency that confirmed my calling as a physician: I was attending an ill newborn as a second-year resident, and the infants severe heart defect required emergency helicopter transport two hours away. The weather was atrocious yet the military flight crews and leaders trusted my judgment to ask them all to risk their lives transporting the critically ill baby. It was a tough call, but it quickly matured my feelings that doctors had a high calling.

An experience from medical school that kept me going: My first exposure to clinical medicine other than the cadaver lab for anatomy was to attend a postmortem autopsy of a patient who literally had been hit by a train! After I got past that gruesome realitysomething I had never really counted onI figured I might make it as a doctor!

My source of inspiration: My wife and best friend Linda. Shes a career nurse and is Florence Nightingale personified. No better health care role model.

My hope for the future of medicine: That the golden age of medicine is always ahead of usthe greatest discoveries and experiences truly lie in days to come.

The hardest moment in medicine and how I got past it: My niece and nephew, ages 2 and 4, were fatally injured in a vehicle accident early in my career. Up until that time, my three children had never been exposed to the death of other children and assumed their doctor dad and his colleagues could literally make all children well. It was a sobering experience for me and I did suffer some self-doubts about medicine for a while, but I found strength in my brother and his wife who survived and gave me a purpose to continue my career.

My favorite experience working with the medical team: Watching and teaching new studentsmed students, residents, nursing studentsyou name it. We all have a good experience learning medicine as a team.

The most challenging aspects of caring for patients: The incredible volume and rapidly changing perspective of health care options. When I began medicine toward the end of the 20th century (sounds ancient, I know) we were still using textbooks and libraries, had no internet or cell phones, and most ulcer patients and heart patients came to major surgery. We have had an explosion of technology and treatment options over my three decades in medicine.

The most rewarding aspect of caring for patients: Unquestionably, the gratitude of my patients and their families. It is so heartfelt and sincere when they express thanks that it moistens my eyes every time. Very few human beings get to share that sensation.

The skills every physician should have but wont be tested for on the board exam: The ability to sit, and speak to, and communicate with, patients and families in an effective manner. It truly is an art and a learned skill.

One question students should ask themselves before pursuing medicine:Am I truly devoted to the profession as a calling and not just a way to have a job?

A quick insight I would give students who are considering medicine: Buckle up; youre in for the ride of your life. It doesnt get any better than this!

Mantra or song to describe my life in medicine: Lean On Me, by Bill Withers.

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Dr. Harmon: The moment I knew medicine was my calling - American Medical Association (blog)

‘Insecure’ Actor Jay Ellis Talks New Web Series ‘Hard Medicine’ And Lawrence Hive – Essence.com

The actor has jumped into the producers chair for a new workplace comedy.

Jay Ellis is a pretty busy guy. Outside of hit series Insecure, the actor and producer is working on a number of projects, one of which is the new web series Hard Medicine.

RELATED: Jay Ellis Says Fans Well Get To See Lawrence's "World Open Up" In Season Two Of 'Insecure'

The series, produced by Ellis and his producing partner Paula Bryant-Ellis, is a workplace comedy in the vein of The Office. The first two episodes of the series are available on Ellis Facebook page and the Urban Movie Channel (UMC) has picked up the remainder of the eight-episode first season.

While similar comedies have had a few people of color in its cast, the star of Hard Medicine is Dr. Harriet Moore, played by Nicole Slaughter, a black woman in charge of a low-income health clinic.

RELATED: Jay Ellis UsedIssa Rae's Instagram To Confess His Love For 'Chewing Gum' Actress Michaela Coel

"We always felt that for us, it's The Office meets Scrubs, but with people of color Ellis told ESSENCE. People of color have worked in medicine just like everybody else. We can use this type of filmmaking in that type of way to tell a story and to tell a comedy just like anyone else can.

The show is the brainchild of Melissa Eno Effa, who plays the acerbic Clarice. She [Melissa] came up with this concept and I was like 'I want to shoot it like this.' This is the kind of show I grew up on and love. And, these clinics in black neighborhoods have always been faced with being shut down, but what still service the community.

Soon after teaming up with Melissa, UMC called and offered to bring the show over to their network, becoming another in a list of web hits to become television successes.

The barrier to entry has gotten torn down, Ellis said. "What were finding and what all these networks are finding and different digital services are finding is that the web is a great testing ground. You can put things out there, tighten them up and build an audience around them.

And, nowhere is that more evident than Ellis hit series Insecure, created by and starring Issa Rae. The HBO show was inspired by Raes own successful web series, Awkward Black Girl, which saw Rae awkwardly navigating adulthood and dating.

Insecure is now in its second season and has been renewed for a third, which means the new and dedicated Lawrence Hive will get to see their boy once again.

I never expected that, Ellis adds, when asked about his new fans. You never expect it.

Reflecting on the insanity of Insecure'sseason one finale, Ellis said, I was on a thirteen hour flight, so I actually missed the finale. When I landed I turned on my phone and my battery died before I could even get home because my phone was ringing so much. So many text messages came through and I kept getting updates on Twitter and Instagram, it was insane.

You know, you never think a hive is going to happen, its something you cant control.

Ellis added, I see Lawrence and I see a lot of my friends. I see a lot of things I've done and have gone through. There are so many things hes going through that are relatable and I think that is something that is really cool. To see so many black men be able to see representation of themselves on television. That to me is what the hive is all about."

You can watch episodes of Ellis' new series, Hard Medicine, every Wednesday on UMC. And, if fans use the code HMonUMC17theycan get 60 days for free.

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'Insecure' Actor Jay Ellis Talks New Web Series 'Hard Medicine' And Lawrence Hive - Essence.com

Authors believe gender gap in veterinary medicine is fixable – Purdue Exponent

Women make up 55 percent of active veterinarians and nearly 80 percent of the students in veterinary medicine. Despite this, women only make up 25 percent of leadership roles, and average salaries in the profession have dropped.

The book Leaders of the Pack: Women and the Future of Veterinary Medicine, published by Purdue University Press, was written by Julie Kumble M.Ed. and the late Dr. Donald Smith, dean emeritus of Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine, to address the gender gap between men and women in leadership.

Kumble, a researcher and writer whose career focused on empowering women, said that the gender gap isnt unique to veterinary medicine but can be found in every other field.

I just want to stress that every profession has a gender gap at the top of every single profession, Kumble said. The people at the top echelons of nursing, the CEOs and CFOs, those tend to be more men. Look at our Congress, its 20 percent women. If you look at who the partners are in law firms, only 20 percent are women, so its across the board. Veterinary medicine isnt unique.

According to Kumble, the gender gap is the result of many factors and there isnt one gleaming answer. One factor is that men were traditionally in the profession longer than women and own specialty practices like orthopedics or dentistry; these specialty practices pay higher salaries. Kumble encourages women to own their own practices.

Another factor is the linear trajectory of a career that doesnt accommodate women with children.

Women are the ones bearing children and raising children so how are we going to build into our system ways for them to get back to work when theyre ready and not miss out on salary and not miss out on promotions, Kumble said.

Kumble cited the Scandinavian countries as a source for solutions, which include policies on family leave or requiring minimum percentages of women on directory boards.

In the book, she gives advice on how women can close the gender gap. One thing she would say to a new student studying veterinary medicine is to be open-minded to the vast opportunities in the profession, from research to the government.

The second is to find mentors during all stages of your career who can offer advice and shine light on your path, (and) then to do the same for others, Kumble said.

Willie Reed, the Purdue dean of veterinary medicine, acknowledges the gender gap and hopes to be a mentor for his students.

Encouraging women to consider leadership positions and providing training for them is something we have fostered here in the college, Reed said.

Reed nominates women for a training program through the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges, and the senior administration in Purdues college has more women than men, unlike most colleges.

One of the women who went through the program is Doctor of Veterinary Medicine Ann Weil, a clinical professor of anesthesiology.

I think my dean has done a lot to help me personally in terms of improving my leadership skills, Weil said. The AAVMC sponsors leadership training, and I had the privilege of being asked to participate in the program. You learn media training, conflict resolution, team building, and listening skills. Its a pretty intense program.

Reed believes leadership development is important not just for the faculty but also the students in his college, who are predominately women.

Leadership is something that is needed and is expected, Reed said. Its like many things, you have to study leadership and be trained and thats part of what were doing here in the curriculum of veterinary medicine.

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Authors believe gender gap in veterinary medicine is fixable - Purdue Exponent

Hervert a resident in internal medicine at St. Bernards in Arkansas – Kearney Hub

JONESBORO, Ark. Dr. Mitchell Hervert has been selected to be a part of this years class of physicians in an internal medicine residency program at St. Bernards Medical Center in Jonesboro.

He was born and grew up in Ord, Neb. Hervert earned his Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degree from Kansas City University of Osteopathic Medicine in Kansas City, Mo., and earned a bachelors degree in biology from Hastings College in Hastings, Neb.

Hervert is the son of Clark and Laurie Hervert of Ord and the grandson of Shirley Wolfe of Kearney, Neb.

Hervert is one of five recent medical school graduates selected for advanced training in the field of internal medicine at St. Bernards. The physicians began duties on July 1 and are taking part in intensive training through observation and lecture, working under the mentorship of other physicians as they provide inpatient care in the hospital setting as well as follow-up care through a residents clinic.

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Hervert a resident in internal medicine at St. Bernards in Arkansas - Kearney Hub

WSU school of medicine gave inaugural class their white coats Friday – KREM.com

KREM 2's Alexa Block goes to the inaugural white coat presentation for the Elson Floyd School of Medicine.

Alexa Block , KREM 8:41 PM. PDT August 18, 2017

SPOKANE, Wash --- WSUs Elson S. Floyd School of Medicines inaugural class took center stage when they received their white coats on Friday.

The school welcomed its first class of students on Friday in the white coat ceremony at the Fox Theater. All 60 of the medical students went up on stage and were presented with their white coats.

The 60 students are from 15 different counties in Washington, two of them have served in the military and together they speak 25 languages, according to the medical school. They all took the Hippocratic Oath at the ceremony to cement their medical aspirations.

This class was almost not possible because a 1917 law gave the University of Washington the sole authority to operate a medical school in the state. In 2015 it was finally decided WSU could have its own medical school. It was a long, drawn out battle between lawmakers, academics and citizens to get WSU the medical school.

One of the focuses of the school is to provide healthcare for rural areas. One out of five Americans live in rural areas, but only 9 percent of the nations doctors practice in rural areas. Many of the students want to work in these areas too.

The medical school is named after Elson Floyd because of all the work he put in to make this school a reality.

They will be able to learn on clinical equipment that was donated from the Paul Lauzier Foundation, check out the full story here.

2017 KREM-TV

KREM

WSU Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine welcomes its first class

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WSU school of medicine gave inaugural class their white coats Friday - KREM.com