NASA’s Search for Alien Atmospheres –"James Webb Space Telescope to Probe Exoplanet Discoveries in the Infrared" – The Daily Galaxy (blog)

"For thousands of years, people have wondered, are there other planets like Earth out there? Do any support life?" said Sara Seager, astrophysicst and planetary scientist at MIT. "Now we have a bunch of planets that are accessible for further study to try to start to answer these ancient questions."

"These are the best Earth-sized planets for the James Webb Space Telescope to characterize, perhaps for its whole lifetime," said Hannah Wakeford, postdoctoral fellow at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. At Goddard, engineers and scientists are currently testing the Webb telescope which will be able to view these planets in the infrared, beyond the capabilities we currently have. "The Webb telescope will increase the information we have about these planets immensely. With the extended wavelength coverage we will be able to see if their atmospheres have water, methane, carbon monoxide/dioxide and/or oxygen."

When hunting for a potentially life-supporting planet, you need to know more than just the planet's size or distance from its star. Detecting the relative proportions of these molecules in a planet's atmosphere could tell researchers whether a planet could support life.

Launching in 2018, one of Webb's main goals is to use spectroscopy, a method of analyzing light by separating it into distinct wavelengths which allows one to identify its chemical components (by their unique wavelength signatures) to determine the atmospheric components of alien worlds. Webb will especially seek chemical biomarkers, like ozone and methane, that can be created from biological processes. Ozone, which protects us from harmful ultraviolet radiation here on Earth, forms when oxygen produced by photosynthetic organisms (like trees and phytoplankton) synthesizes in light. Because ozone is largely dependent on the existence of organisms to form, Webb will look for it in alien atmospheres as a possible indicator of life. It will also be able to look for methane which will help determine a biological source of the oxygen that leads to ozone accumulation.

The discovery of the planets in the TRAPPIST-1 system means that Webb will be able to use its immense capabilities on a relatively nearby system. Researchers recently identified three promising planets in the TRAPPIST-1 system - e, f and g - which orbit in the habitable zone and would make good candidates for Webb to study. Depending upon their atmospheric composition, all three of these Earth-like exoplanets could have the appropriate conditions for supporting liquid water. Because the planets orbit a star that is small, the signal from those planets will be relatively large, and just strong enough for Webb to detect atmospheric features. Shawn Domagal-Goldman, an astrobiologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said, "Two weeks ago, I would have told you that Webb can do this in theory, but in practice it would have required a nearly perfect target. Well, we were just handed three nearly perfect targets."

The number of planets in the system will also enable new research in the field of comparative planetology, which uncovers fundamental planetary processes by comparing different worlds. "This is the first and only system to have seven earth-sized planets, where three are in the habitable zone of the star," said Wakeford. "It is also the first system bright enough, and small enough, to make it possible for us to look at each of these planets' atmospheres. The more we can learn about exoplanets, the more we can understand how our own solar system came to be the way it is. With all seven planets Earth-sized, we can look at the different characterisitics that make each of them unique and determine critical connections between a planet's conditions and origins."

NASA is exploring the solar system and beyond to better understand the universe and our place in it. We're looking to answer age-old questions, like how did our universe begin and evolve; how did galaxies, stars, and planets come to be; and are we alone.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the scientific successor to NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. It will be the most powerful space telescope ever built. Webb is an international project led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and the Canadian Space Agency.

The Daily Galaxy via NASA Exoplanets

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NASA's Search for Alien Atmospheres --"James Webb Space Telescope to Probe Exoplanet Discoveries in the Infrared" - The Daily Galaxy (blog)

The Secrets of Pluto’s Thin Blue Line | Planetary Science | Sci-News … – Sci-News.com

Like a summers evening here on Earth just after sunset. A faint blue glow follows the Sun below the horizon the only bit of color within an otherwise black sky, Tanguy Bertrand imagines a view from the surface of Pluto, a picture more fully realized following recent man-made visitors to the icy dwarf planet, and further enhanced through new modeling from his team 4.7 billion km away in Paris.

Plutos haze layer shows its blue color in this picture taken by the New Horizons Ralph/Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC). The high-altitude haze is thought to be similar in nature to that seen at Saturns moon Titan. The source of both hazes likely involves sunlight-initiated chemical reactions of nitrogen and methane, leading to relatively small, soot-like particles called tholins that grow as they settle toward the surface. This image was generated by software that combines information from blue, red and near-infrared images to replicate the color a human eye would perceive as closely as possible. Image credit: NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute.

Plutos atmosphere was characterized scientifically during 2015s New Horizons flyby that analyzed both its emissions into space (its airglow), and the dimming of background stars viewed through it.

However, it was the view from Plutos far side, the atmosphere backlit by our own Sun, which provided a more illustrative, even familiar picture of a thin blue line encircling the dwarf planet.

That illuminated sky blue ring results from the scattering of sunlight by layers of organic haze within the atmosphere, making Pluto the latest in a growing list of hazy solar system bodies.

A world where haze is a far more pronounced atmospheric feature, tinting the sunlight illuminating its frozen host, can be found orbiting Saturn.

Titans thick orange-brown haze was captured by the Huygens probe during its descent and time on the surface.

Described like L.A. smog on steroids, by Scott Edgington, Cassini deputy project scientist, the solid organic molecules are suspended in Titans atmosphere for far longer than on Pluto due to intense Earth-like vertical winds, creating a thicker haze.

On Pluto, haze particles quickly fall to the surface after their production.

Clues to the origin of atmospheric hazes have mostly come from the analysis of Titan, where evidence suggests methane and nitrogen molecules are dissociated and ionized by the suns UV radiation, a process known as photolysis. The molecules then react with each other to form larger precursor hydrocarbon and nitrile molecules which eventually, through aggregation, produce solid organic aerosols heavy enough to form a haze.

Similar processes are also thought to occur on Neptunes moon Triton, but like on Pluto, yield less haze, whilst organic chemistry models suggest the early Earths nitrogen and methane heavy atmosphere might have been hazy too.

In fact, it has been suggested our own ancient haze may have played a role in the formation of life, protecting the surface from deadly UV and countering the build-up of greenhouse gases to ensure a habitable temperature.

Despite their misty nature, organic hazes are thought to be extremely revealing of the surface and atmospheric state of the bodies they envelope. Their ability to produce and deposit complex hydrocarbons, known as tholins, is thought to give Plutos surface its reddish appearance.

To aid the investigation of Plutos haze and what it might reveal about its host dwarf planet, Bertrand and his team at the Laboratoire de Mtorologie Dynamique in Paris set out to reproduce New Horizons flyby observations.

The model they used was developed 30 years ago for the Earths own atmosphere, before versions were created for Mars, Venus, the gas giant planets, their satellites and recently discovered exoplanets.

We worked hard to have models ready in anticipation of the New Horizons flyby in the hope we could provide explanations of any observations made.

In a new paper, published in the journal Icarus, Bertrand used aerosol properties similar to those observed in the upper layers of Titan, which most closely resemble Plutos haze to get a close enough fit to constrain certain haze parameters on Pluto. These include haze particle size, to around 10-50 nm, and the amount of time the haze precursor molecules took to become solid, to around 3 months.

This paper is a nice example of the power of comparative planetology where we apply what we learn from one planet to discover new things about another, says Giada Arney from NASA Astrobiology Institutes Virtual Planetary Laboratory, who has herself looked at models of Earths ancient haze to study similar atmospheres around exoplanets.

This paper an important step forward in understanding the processes that occur in Plutos atmosphere.

Bertrands model also showed that the methane photolysis reactions peak at an altitude of 250 km, and occur mostly in the sunlit summer hemisphere, which the team believes explains the higher density hazes observed in the current sun facing north.

Despite this uneven production, the team suggest that the low level of atmospheric circulation should still be sufficient, when combined with indirect UV flux from the interplanetary medium to ensure haze material is falling down to the surface everywhere at all times, covering any icy surface material with a thin layer of darker organics.

This really confirms our inclination that shiny parts of Pluto must be evidence of recent resurfacing,

However, the wide scale reddening of Plutos equatorial region remains a mystery.

Previous suggestions that direct photolysis of the surface could be a cause are contradicted by Bertrands model, which shows Plutos entire UV flux would be blocked through absorption by its atmospheric methane.

Earlier this year an alternative mechanism was proposed that linked the dark equator to the impact that formed Plutos moon Charon.

As well as answering these questions, Bertrand hopes that refined versions of their model could be applied to another wispy atmosphere at the edges of our solar system.

We have very little data on Triton if we understand what is going on with Pluto we may better understand what is going on there as well.

_____

Tanguy Bertrand & Franois Forget. 2017. 3D modeling of organic haze in Plutos atmosphere. Icarus 287: 72-86; doi: 10.1016/j.icarus.2017.01.016

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The Secrets of Pluto's Thin Blue Line | Planetary Science | Sci-News ... - Sci-News.com

NASA Releases Latest Software Catalog to Public to Spur Tech Innovation – Space.com

If you've ever wanted to get your hands on the codes that run the Mars rover Curiosity, New Horizons Pluto probe or other NASA spacecraft, here's your (latest) chance.

The space agency has released its 2017-2018 software catalog to the public, allowing anyone to access NASA codes free of charge.

"The software catalog is our way of supporting the innovation economy by granting access to tools used by today's top aerospace professionals to entrepreneurs, small businesses, academia and industry," Steve Jurczyk, associate administrator for NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) in Washington, D.C., said in a statement.

"Access to these software codes has the potential to generate tangible benefits that create American jobs, earn revenue and save lives," Jurczyk added.

"Access restrictions" do apply to some of the software packages, however, NASA officials wrote in the same statement.

You can search the 2017-2018 NASA software catalog, and download the 154-page PDF version, here: https://software.nasa.gov

NASA first released its software catalog in April 2014. The latest edition marks the third such public release for the space agency.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter@michaeldwallandGoogle+.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookor Google+. Originally published onSpace.com.

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NASA Releases Latest Software Catalog to Public to Spur Tech Innovation - Space.com

After winning fight with NASA, Inverness woman ponders what to do with a bag of moon dust – Chicago Tribune

Nancy Lee Carlson has been getting 400 to 500 emails a day, she says, from people who want to see or buy her rare bag of moon dust.

Awarded the bag from NASA after a yearlong court fight, Carlson, from northwest suburban Inverness, says strangers have even come knocking at her door to see the bag, which was used to store moon rocks collected by Apollo 11 astronauts.

She hasn't decided what she's going to do with it, she said, but she certainly doesn't have it at home. The bag is now kept by a security firm in a remote location she says is unknown even to her.

She had previously kept the bag in her bedroom closet and said she intended to show it at schools and bequeath it to her grandchildren, but she says with the publicity over the case that's not practical now.

"I'm thrilled we won," she said. "This is like the Holy Grail." But, she added, "I'm trying to be as anonymous as possible."

The bag in question is the size of a dinner plate, made of cloth similar to that used in astronaut suits, has a zipper and a rip in the fabric, and contains dark dust that NASA verified is from the moon.

Carlson, a corporate and real estate attorney and a former board member at Community Consolidated School District 15 in Palatine, bought the bag for $995 in 2015 on a government website, http://www.forfeiture.gov. She sent it to NASA to verify its authenticity, and when tests showed it was legitimate, officials refused to return it, saying it was rightfully the space agency's property, since they had originally obtained it and weren't aware of its sale.

Previously, the bag had been in the possession of Max Ary, who ran the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchison, Kan., and was convicted of theft in 2006 for taking and selling items from the museum, some of which were on loan from NASA.

Federal government attorneys obtained a court order to sell some of the items recovered from Ary to pay restitution. The bag was confused with another bag that had been flown to the moon on Apollo 17 and was mistakenly sold to Carlson by auction, government attorneys said.

Carlson said she has gotten complaints that she shouldn't keep to herself a national treasure for which astronauts risked their lives. She believes she obtained the bag fairly and legally, but she was open to the idea of sharing it publicly.

"Like all children born in the '50s and '60s or '70s, I've always been interested in space, since I was a kid," she said. "This (moon landing) is what we watched on TV. I thought it was the greatest thing in the world when man finally left Earth."

She said it will take a couple of weeks for her to decide what to do with the bag.

"Hopefully it will be for the greater good of everyone," she said.

Officials at the Adler Planetarium and Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago said they would be open to taking the bag, but they would have to consider how it would fit into their collections. The planetarium already has a moon rock on display, and lunar meteorites, from chunks of the moon that fell to Earth, as well as meteorite dust.

The museum's Henry Crown Space Center displays the Apollo 8 module and the Aurora 7 capsule, among many other exhibits.

Michelle Nichols, the master educator at Adler, said she wasn't sure how unique the bag was, since bags were commonly used for storing samples, but said, "I find it pretty fascinating, because it gives you a sense of the scientific process. By itself it doesn't tell the whole story, but with other things, it becomes part of a science and engineering story."

rmccoppin@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @RobertMcCoppin

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After winning fight with NASA, Inverness woman ponders what to do with a bag of moon dust - Chicago Tribune

Jeff Bezos says NASA should return to the Moon, and he’s ready to help – Ars Technica

Enlarge / Jeff Bezos, chief executive officer of Amazon (far left), listens during a technology summit with then President-elect Trump in December, 2016.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Until the last year, Jeff Bezos has kept the plans for his rocket company, Blue Origin, largely under wraps. Since then, he has talked about doing suborbital space tourismflights, building an orbital rocket, and now he has begun to open up about ambitions beyond low Earth orbit. And unlike SpaceX and its Mars ambitions, Blue Origin has its focus on the Moon.

The Washington Post first reported on the "Blue Moon" concept Thursday evening, which Bezos has articulated in a seven-page white paper sent to NASA leadership and President Trump's transition officials over the last two months. The proposal outlines a plan to build a lunar spacecraft and lander to deliver supplies to the South Pole of the Moon, where scientists believe there are abundant ice resources and almost continuous solar energy.

Later Thursday night, during an awards event hosted by Aviation Week, Bezos explained the philosophy behind this idea. "We are hoping to partner with NASA on a program called Blue Moon where we would provide a cargo-delivery service to the surface of the Moon, with the intent over time of building a permanently inhabited human settlement on the Moon," he said. "Its time for America to go back to the Moon and this time to stay. We can do it. Its a difficult but worthy objective."

In the document, Bezos said this enterprise could only be done in concert with NASA and that his company would help establish cost-effective tools to carry out the development of a lunar settlement. The spacecraft could launch on an Atlas 551 rocket built by United Launch Alliance.Alternatively, it could go up on NASA's under-development Space Launch System, which could deliver considerably more payload, more quickly. Significantly, Bezos said he was also ready to put his own skin into the game. "Im excited about this and am ready to invest my own money alongside NASA to make it happen," the white paper states.

Ars has previously reported that the Trump administration is likely to make lunar exploration a priority over the Obama administration's previous goal of humans on Mars in the 2030s. This seems probable for several reasonscosts, the geopolitical significance of the Moon, and water resources at the lunar poles that could provide the foundation of an in-space fueling system for rockets and spacecraft.

Although the Trump administration has yet to make any announcements about its intent for space policy, the recent activities of private space companies are telling. SpaceX has begun talking about lunar space-tourism missions around the Moon. Robert Bigelow, the founder of Bigelow Aerospace, has begun discussing the use of his expandable modules for habitats in cislunar space, near the Moon. And now Blue Origin is offering up lunar plans of its own.

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Jeff Bezos says NASA should return to the Moon, and he's ready to help - Ars Technica

SpaceX, NASA, and the Northern Lights: this week in space – ExtremeTech

NASA saw the Northern Lights and seized their chance in the wee hours of Thursday morning, launching three science rockets into active auroras within a couple hours of one another.

Kristina Lynch, principal investigator on the mission, said, The visible light produced in the atmosphere as aurora is the last step of a chain of processes connecting the solar wind to the atmosphere. We are seeking to understand what structure in these visible signatures can tell us about the electrodynamics of processes higher up.

The instruments flew on Black IX sounding rockets, launched from the Poker Flat Research Range in Alaska. The third rocket was part of the Ionospheric Structuring: In Situ and Groundbased Low Altitude StudieS, or ISINGLASS, mission. ISINGLASS. Because we have to give something a head-scratching acronym, or else it wouldnt really be NASA, now would it?

SpaceX is either broke enough, or stoked enough on their fleet, that theyve accepted a significant deposit from two people naturally, two unnamed people toward a moon mission in 2018. The as-yet-anonymous astronauts will be in the Crew Dragon capsule atop a Falcon Heavy rocket, launching from Pad 39A. In SpaceXs words: This presents an opportunity for humans to return to deep space for the first time in 45 years and they will travel faster and further into the Solar System than any before them.

In the official teaser, SpaceX tips a hat to NASA, whose Commercial Crew Program enabled SpaceX to develop the Dragon 2 in the first place. Maybe Im a terrible person for routinely picking on flat earthers, but this makes me want to crowdfund tickets for these people.

Saturn and Enceladus, with bonus cryovolcano. Inset: Enceladus, zoomed way in. Image and inset: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Ted Stryk

A scientist sifting through old Voyager 1 data found this long-ignored image of Saturn that came with a prize. Enceladus is visible in the background, in its waxing crescent phase; near its bottom, theres a visible plume coming from the surface. Turns out this was a snapshot of a cryovolcano in mid-eruption, taken by Voyager 1 a day after its closest approach to Saturn. After going through the raw data with the proverbial fine-toothed comb, amateur image processor Ted Stryk is ready to present his work to the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. After combining different [raw data] subsets as well as the full set, Stryk said, I am confident in the detection of the plumes, just where they should be.

Sometimes when Im annoyed, I threaten to fire the object of my annoyance into the sun. NASA is taking this idea more literally. They are sending a spacecraft to the sun, in order to figure out some longstanding scientific questions.

Image: NASA/Johns Hopkins

Scientists are conducting the Solar Probe Plus mission to figure out what gives the solar wind its speed, why the surface of the sun is so much cooler than its atmosphere, and perhaps even what causes the emission of solar energetic particles. On its last few close passes to the sun, Solar Probe+ will get within about 3.7 million miles of the sun about a tenth the distance between the sun and Mercury. Theyre planning to keep the science payload cool with a 4.5-inch-thick carbon composite heat shield.

One last thought: This anticipated finer understanding of the Sun represents a baby step toward becoming a Kardashev Type II civilization, capable of harnessing the entire energy output of our parent star.

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SpaceX, NASA, and the Northern Lights: this week in space - ExtremeTech

NASA Spacecraft Avoids Very Embarrassing Collision With Mars’ Moon – Gizmodo

Were all a little uncoordinated at times, but when youre a hunk of metal hurling through space, the consequences are a bit more severe. This week, NASAs Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN), which has been orbiting the Red Planet for two years, had to perform a last-minute maneuver to avoid a disastrous collision with Mars moon, Phobos. NBD, though.

On February 28th, MAVEN performed a rocket motor burn in order to increase its velocity by less than a mile an hour. The correction ensured that MAVEN would miss the meatball-looking-moon just in the nick of time, by about 2.5 minutes. Had NASA not ordered the maneuver, MAVEN could have smashed into the Martian moon on March 6th.

This is the first time MAVEN has ever had to perform a maneuver of this kind to avoid Phobos. Fortunately, a team at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California meticulously monitors the spacecrafts orbit in relation to Mars two moons precisely so that cosmic smashups can be avoided.

Kudos to the JPL navigation and tracking teams for watching out for possible collisions every day of the year, and to the MAVEN spacecraft team for carrying out the maneuver flawlessly, MAVEN Principal Investigator Bruce Jakosky said in a press release.

MAVEN, which launched in November 2013, has been spending its days studying Mars upper atmosphere, ionosphere, and interactions with solar wind, according to NASA. Hopefully, this brave little spacecraft can continue its work without clumsily crashing into another moon.

That said, at the end of the day, Phobos is still screwed.

[NASA]

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NASA Spacecraft Avoids Very Embarrassing Collision With Mars' Moon - Gizmodo

NASA seeks payload ideas for mystery satellite – SpaceNews

The Intelsat 603 satellite during a 1992 shuttle repair mission. That satellite is based on a bus similar to one that an unnamed government agency, perhaps the NRO, is offering to NASA. Credit: NASA

WASHINGTON NASA is soliciting concepts for payloads that could fly on a mysterious satellite it is in discussions to inherit from another government agency.

NASA issued a request for information (RFI) Feb. 15 for a proposed spacecraft called the NASA Science/Technology Platform Satellite, or NSTP-Sat. The RFI was the first time NASA had publicly discussed such a mission.

The RFI, issued by NASAs science mission directorate, solicits ideas for payloads, including remote sensing instruments and technology demonstrations, which could fly on the spacecraft. The RFI offered few details about the proposed mission, noting NSTP-Sat could fly to low earth orbit, geostationary equatorial orbit, medium Earth orbit, Earth-Moon L1, or lunar orbit in the 2021 timeframe.

The RFI, which remains open until March 17, seeks ideas for how this spacecraft could be used to meet NASAs science and technology development goals. The RFI states that NASA will use the responses to determine whether there are science opportunities for new uses of this spacecraft and whether a solicitation for proposals is warranted to enable such opportunities.

The RFI offered few details about the spacecraft itself. The NSTP-Sat is a spacecraft platform that has become available to NASA as excess Government property through an interagency agreement, it stated. It added the spacecraft was a Boeing GEO spinner bus that could launch on an EELV-class rocket or as a secondary payload on a Space Launch System mission.

NASA and other organizations involved with NSTP-Sat have been reticent to provide additional details about how NASA gained access to the satellite bus. Alan Zide, a program executive in NASAs heliophysics division and the point of contact listed in the RFI, did not respond to email messages with questions about the satellite.

NASA spokesman Dwayne Brown said March 1 that NASA is in discussions with the U.S. Air Force to obtain the bus. NASA and the U.S. Air Force (USAF) are in discussions concerning the transfer of a satellite bus that the USAF has determined does not meet current or projected Air Force mission requirements, he said.

U.S. Air Force spokeswoman Capt. AnnMarie Annicelli said March 2 she was not familiar with the satellite and was looking into it, but has not provided any additional information. When asked who the original customer was for this Boeing-built satellite, Addrian Brooks, a spokesman for Boeing Network and Space Systems, said March 2 that the company was unable to disclose this information.

Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who specializes in space history, notes the dimensions for the satellite provided in the RFI are consistent with two versions of satellites built by Hughes Space and Communications. One, the HS-389, was used for the Intelsat 6 series of satellites, while the HS-393 was sold to other commercial customers. Those satellites were built and launched in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Boeing acquired Hughes Space and Communications in 2000.

The National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), he noted, is thought to have used the same bus for a series of data relay satellites operating under the code name QUASAR, also known as the Satellite Data System (SDS). Four such satellites launched from 1989 through 1996.

Spin-stabilized satellites have fallen out of favor, having been replaced by three-axis stabilized satellites. The last Boeing-built commercial spin-stabilized satellite, a Boeing 376 spacecraft called e-BIRD, launched in 2003.

McDowell said a later generation of QUASAR satellites, launched from 1998 to as recently as 2014, were also assumed to be three-axis stabilized. However, he noted theres little known about this series of satellites, leaving open the possibility it also used the same bus as the earlier spacecraft.

Its possible that some other NRO program also used this bus, but QUASAR/SDS is definitely the most likely, he said in a March 3 email.

If the satellite in question is indeed from the NRO, it would not be the first time NASA inherited spare hardware from that intelligence agency. In 2012, NASA announced it was taking possession of two 2.4-meter mirror assemblies from the NRO. The mirrors were reportedly built for NROs Future Imagery Architecture program, and became surplus when the NRO cancelled the optical portion of that program in the mid-2000s.

NASA, after taking possession of the mirrors, solicited ideas from the scientific community on how to use what it called Astrophysics Focused Telescope Assets. NASA decided to use one of the mirrors for the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST), which originally planned to build a much smaller mirror. WFIRST is planned for launch in the mid-2020s.

Phillip Swarts contributed to this story.

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NASA seeks payload ideas for mystery satellite - SpaceNews

Lego announces "Women of NASA" minifigs – Boing Boing

Last year, MIT News editor Maya Weinstock submitted her Women of NASA minifigures design to LEGO Ideas. LEGO has just approved the idea and laster this year or early 2018 will release an official minifig set of these five inspiring women in science:

Margaret Hamilton, computer scientist: While working at MIT under contract with NASA in the 1960s, Hamilton developed the on-board flight software for the Apollo missions to the moon. She is known for popularizing the modern concept of software.

Katherine Johnson, mathematician and space scientist: A longtime NASA researcher, Johnson is best known for calculating and verifying trajectories for the Mercury and Apollo programs including the Apollo 11 mission that first landed humans on the moon.

Sally Ride, astronaut, physicist, and educator: A physicist by training, Ride became the first American woman in space in 1983. After retiring as a NASA astronaut, she founded an educational company focusing on encouraging children especially girls to pursue the sciences.

Nancy Grace Roman, astronomer: One of the first female executives at NASA, Roman is known to many as the "Mother of Hubble" for her role in planning the Hubble Space Telescope. She also developed NASA's astronomy research program.

Mae Jemison, astronaut, physician, and entrepreneur: Trained as a medical doctor, Jemison became the first African-American woman in space in 1992. After retiring from NASA, Jemison established a company that develops new technologies and encourages students in the sciences.

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Psychologist Gert Storms doesnt want to review scientific papers if their authors refuse to share with him the underlying data. The American Psychological Association (APA), which publishes the journal he edits, has asked him to resign. Nature.coms Gautam Naik reports that the effort to force him out is a test of The Peer Reviewers Opennness []

In 1958 in an Illinois creek bed, an amateur fossil collector named Francis Tully discovered the fossilized remains of a bizarre creature that resembled a mollusk, insect, and worm yet was none of those things. Since then, thousands of 300 million-year-old fossilized Tully Monsters have turned up and the creature was officially named as the []

Frog tongue mechanism has been well-documented, but only recently have scientists started looking at the remarkable combo of tongue softness and frog spits chemical makeup.

St. Patricks Day is a boozy celebration of history and culture, and the ShamRockIt! Nipyata is a delightful fusion of traditions, packing ten assorted nips (or airplane bottles) and candy into a shamrock-shaped piata, eager to be bludgeonedto a recyclable mess and relinquish its pot of confectionary gold.The mental gymnastics to make sense of this []

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Wireless headphones arent a mind-bending thing anymore now that Apple made them the standard thing-to-be-outraged-over-in-the-new-iPhone fare, thereby killing the cool factor. But lets be reasonable here. Wires really are a pain when youre running, trying to get off the bus, or even just standing up from your desk. Wireless headphones make sense, they just dont []

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Lego announces "Women of NASA" minifigs - Boing Boing

NASA Wants Public’s Help Naming 7 Newly Discovered Planets – CBS New York

March 2, 2017 11:45 PM

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) NASA recently asked the publicto help name seven newly discovered planets,and the people have responded.

Social media is all abuzz about the solar system with people chiming in like crazy, using the hashtag #7NamesFor7NewPlanets.

I think thats amazing, one man told CBS2s Jessica Layton.

It started trending after NASA suggestedthe public weigh inon what to call the seven newly discovered planets near the Trappist-1 star in the Aquarius constellation.

What I would name new planets? Oh God, thats a lot of pressure, awoman said.

But outside the Forbidden Planet comic book store, nobody was too shy to share, Layton reported.

Johnny thyroids, murple, grapefruit, one man suggested.

I would name them after the seven dwarfs, another added.

Barbara? one man said.

Id name them after the women who worked at NASA who were inHidden Figures,' a woman added.

From serious to silly and sweet, its got peopletalking about science, which pleases planetarium manager Kevin Conod.

We do know that they are rocky type planets, and they are somewhat similar to the Earth in terms of size, he explained.

During a visit to the museum in Newark, Conod told Layton the unnamed planets are light years away from the Earth. With current technology, it would take 159,000 years to get there.

So lets face it the closest well get in this lifetime is having fun trying to name them.

Its a good way to engage the public, Conod said.

Especially now, science needs all the fans it can get, said Merle Milder, of North Bergen, New Jersey.

This might be a good way of tryingget people to start caring about NASA and space expedition stuffbecause I know theyre horrendously underfunded, said Peter Gritch, of Queens.

For now at least, plenty are willing to give their two cents.

Conod said its possible NASA will take the ideas into consideration, but ultimately its the International Astronomical Union that will make the final decision.

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NASA Wants Public's Help Naming 7 Newly Discovered Planets - CBS New York

NASA study improves forecasts of summer Arctic sea ice – Science Daily


Science Daily
NASA study improves forecasts of summer Arctic sea ice
Science Daily
However, each year, as the sea ice starts to melt in the spring following its maximum wintertime extent, scientists still struggle to estimate exactly how much ice they expect will disappear through the melt season. Now, a new NASA forecasting model ...

and more »

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NASA study improves forecasts of summer Arctic sea ice - Science Daily

Big Nanotechnology Advance Could Spell End of Deadly Organ Shortage – NBCNews.com

A transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image shows the iron oxide nanoparticles coated in a mesoporous silica that are used in the tissue warming process. Haynes research group, University of Minnesota

Previous research successfully thawed tiny biological samples that were only 1 to 3 milliliters in volume. This new technique works for samples that are up to 50 milliliters in size. The researchers said there is a strong possibility they could scale up their technique to even larger systems, such as organs.

"We are at the level of

However, this research will likely not make it possible to return

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Since the first successful

Right now, the majority of organs that could potentially be used for transplants are discarded, in large part because they can only be safely preserved for 4 to 36 hours. If only half the hearts and lungs that are discarded were successfully transplanted, the waitlists for those organs could be eliminated in two to three years, according to the Organ Preservation Alliance.

One way to save donated organs for transplantation is to freeze them.

Unfortunately, ice crystals can also form during the reheating process. Moreover, if thawing is not uniform across samples, fracturing or cracking may occur. Although scientists had developed methods to safely use freezing-cold temperatures to

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In future research, scientists will attempt to transplant thawed tissues into living animals to see how well they do. "From my perspective and my collaborators' perspective, there is no reason why that should not work," Bischof told Live Science.

However, the researchers stressed that it was unlikely these findings would apply to the

"Even if you preserved the whole body, the chances that neural pathways established during life were maintained during and after cryopreservation are probably remote," said study co-author Kelvin Brockbank, chief executive officer of Tissue Testing Technologies in North Charleston, South Carolina. "I don't think we'll see success for rewarming whole bodies within the next hundred years."

The scientists detailed

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2016-2017 Georgia Tech Institute for Electronics and Nanotechnology (IEN) Seed Grant Program – Information and … – Research Horizons

Posted March 1, 2017 Atlanta, GA

Program Description The Georgia Tech IEN is an Interdisciplinary Research Institute (IRI) comprised of faculty and students interested in using the most advanced fabrication and characterization tools, and cleanroom infrastructure, to facilitate research in micro- and nano-scale materials, devices, and systems. Applications of this research span all disciplines in science and engineering with particular emphasis on biomedicine, electronics, optoelectronics and photonics, and energy applications. As there can be a learning curve associated with initial proof-of-concept development and testing using cleanroom tools, this seed grant program was developed to expedite the initiation of new graduate students and new research projects into productive activity. Successful proposals to this program will identify a new, currently-unfunded research idea that requires cleanroom access to generate preliminary data necessary to pursue other funding avenues.

Georgia Tech Applicants This program is open to any current Georgia Tech or GTRI faculty member as project PI. The graduate student performing the research should be in the first 2 years of his/her graduate studies, and preference will be given to students who are new users of the IEN facilities. The students research advisor (project PI) does not need to be a current user of the IEN cleanroom/lab facilities.

External (non-Georgia Tech) Applicants Recent funding from the NSF to create the Southeastern Nanotechnology Infrastructure Corridor,SENIC (http://senic.gatech.edu/) as part of the NNCI has allowed IEN to open this program to external (not affiliated with Georgia Tech) users currently at an academic institution in the southeastern US. The graduate student performing the proposed research cannot be a current user of the IEN facilities. The students research advisor (project PI) may have a current project in place for use of the IEN cleanroom/lab facilities, but this is not a requirement. If awarded, a specialized service agreement will need to be arranged with the users home institution. Past awardees of a seed grant may submit additional proposals for different students/projects, but not in consecutive funding cycles. It is the responsibility of the project PI and student to determine their ability to make use of the awarded time during the grant period. Extensions requested once the project has begun will not be granted.

Award Information Each seed grant award will consist of free cleanroom access to the student identified in the proposal for 2 (consecutive) billing quarters. Based on current access rates and the academic cap on hourly charges (https://cleanroom.ien.gatech.edu/rates/), this comprises a maximum award of $6000 for the 6 month period. This maximum award amount is still in effect even if IEN non-cleanroom (lab) equipment, electron beam lithography (EBL), or tools in the Materials Characterization Facility (MCF) are required. The designated student user is expected to only utilize the cleanroom/tool access while working with the PI on the proposed project. Members of the IEN processing staff will be available to consult during the project period. The number of awards for each proposal submission date will depend on the number and quality of the proposals. A short report describing the research activities is required midway and at the completion of the award period.

Submission Schedule This Seed Grant program is offered in two competitions each year with due dates on April 1 and October 1. While it is expected that research activity will begin on June 1 and December respectively, there is flexibility in scheduling the 2 quarters of research work, as long as they conform to the IEN billing quarters.

Proposal Requirements (2 pages max) The proposal (submitted as a PDF file of no more than 2 pages) should do the following:

1. Provide a project title. 2. Identify the research problem and specify the proposed methods. 3. Indicate the IEN research tools necessary to conduct the research. If assistance is needed with this component, staff members of the IEN are available for consultation. 4. Describe the relationship of this research to the PIs other research activity. 5. Identify the PI and the graduate student involved (including year of graduate work), and if there will be a mentoring relationship with the PIs other students. Note if there are collaborative relationships with Georgia Tech faculty that bear on this research project. 6. Specify the potential for follow-on funding based on the results of this initial work.

Submit the PDF file by the specified due date to Ms. Amy Duke (amy.duke@ien.gatech.edu).

Review Criteria Proposals will initially be reviewed by IEN staff for technical feasibility within the 6-month time frame.Rating of proposals will be done by a review committee of Georgia Tech faculty, with final selection of awardees by IEN staff.

For more information, please contact Dr. David Gottfried, dsgottfried@gatech.edu, (404)894-0479.

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2016-2017 Georgia Tech Institute for Electronics and Nanotechnology (IEN) Seed Grant Program - Information and ... - Research Horizons

Nanotechnology: An Epic Revolution of Tiny Proportions – Big Think


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Nanotechnology: An Epic Revolution of Tiny Proportions
Big Think
Max Mankin: Computer chips rely on nanotechnology. So fundamentally the advances that have brought cell phones from briefcase sized to palm sized rely on making your logic devices, the devices inside your cell phone that compute how to get to the ...

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Nanotechnology: An Epic Revolution of Tiny Proportions - Big Think

PhD Research Fellow in Biophysics and Nanomedicine – Times Higher Education (THE)

A PhD research fellowship within the field of biophysics is available at the Department of Physics. The appointments have duration of 3 years with the possibility of until 1 year extension with 25% teaching duties in agreement with the department. Student should start mid-August 2017.

Information about the department The position is organized in the Department of Physics. Currently, there are 22 professors, 12 associate professors, 4 adjunct professors, 72 PhD research fellows and 15 postdoctoral positions appointed at the Department of Physics. Our research spans a broad spectrum of natural sciences and technology, which in turn allows us to offer an education providing a solid basis for future careers. Physics research is carried out in experimental as well as theoretical fields, often across conventional boundaries between disciplines. Research staff at the department makes a special effort to increase the awareness and understanding of the importance and impact of physics in our society. Further information about the department can be found at https://www.ntnu.edu/physics

Job description The PhD student will work on the project Acoustic Cluster Therapy (ACT) for improved treatment of cancer and brain diseases funded by the Research Council of Norway. This project is in collaboration with international universities and two companies Phoenix Solutions who developed a platform for ultrasound activated targeted drug delivery and Cristal therapeutics who developed a pioneering approach to transform drugs into tailor-made nanoparticles. A major challenge in cancer therapy is to obtain adequate delivery of the therapeutic agents to cancer cells, and limit the systemic exposure. The explored concepts utilize an acoustic activated cluster (microbubble/ microdroplet) system and nanoparticles to deliver a drug payload at the targeted pathology. The biodistribution of (novel) biologicals will be assessed using (fluorescence) microscopy other imaging modalities in healthy animals and disease models. In vivo MRI, ultrasound, near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) imaging, ex vivo analyses, and histological examinations will be used to investigate the in vivo distribution and behavior of the nanoparticles.

The project involves studies in cell cultures and preclinical testing in mice, which require designing and building various experimental setups for ultrasound exposure and imaging. The student should have broad experimental experience especially with imaging techniques like confocal laser scan microscopy (CLSM) or multi photon microscopy (MPM). Knowledge of image analysis methods would be considered an asset. It is essential that the student is willing to work with laboratory animals and thus willing to obtain the FELASA license. Furthermore, it is crucial to be able to travel to workshops and for research collaboration in other EU countries as well as the USA with notice.

Qualifications The student should hold very good grades and a Master of Science in biophysics, bio (nano)technology, biomedical sciences, or related sciences.

The regulations for PhD programs at NTNU state that the applicant must have a master's degree or equivalent with at least 5 years of studies and an average grade of A or B within a scale of A-E for passing grades (A best). Candidates from universities outside Norway are kindly requested to send a Diploma Supplement or a similar document, which describes in detail the study and grade system and the rights for further studies associated with the obtained degree: http://ec.europa.eu/education/tools/diploma-supplement_en.htm

The position requires spoken and written fluency in the English language. Such evidence might be represented by the results of standard tests such as TOEFL, IELTS, Cambridge Certificate in Advanced English (CAE) or Cambridge Certificate of Proficiency in English (CPE). The candidate's language skills might also be assessed in a personal interview.

For more information about the research activities see http://www.ntnu.edu/physics/biophysmedtech/ultrasound

Terms of employment The appointment of the PhD fellows will be made according to Norwegian guidelines for universities and university colleges and to the general regulations regarding university employees. Applicants must agree to participate in organized doctoral study programs within the period of the appointment and have to be qualified for the PhD-study.

NTNUs personnel policy objective is that the staff must reflect the composition of the population to the greatest possible extent.

The position as PhD is remunerated according to the Norwegian State salary scale. There is a 2% deduction for superannuation contribution.

It is expected that the candidate can start in the position within August 2017 (but preferably not later). Further information can be obtained from Professor Catharina Davies, Department of Physics, NTNU, Phone: +47 73593688, e-mail: catharina.davies@ntnu.no or Dr. Annemieke van Wamel, Phone: +47 73593432, e-mail: annemieke.wamel@ntnu.no.

The application The application should contain: -CV -Reference letters -Certificates from Bachelor and Master degrees -List of publications or other scientific work, if any -Statement on research interest (maximum one page) -Documentation of English language proficiency (e.g. TOEFL, IELTS, etc.) if English or a Scandinavian language is not the applicant's mother tongue

Applications must be submitted electronically through this site. Applications submitted elsewhere will not be considered.

The reference number of the position is: NV-40/17

Application deadline: April 6th 2017.

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PhD Research Fellow in Biophysics and Nanomedicine - Times Higher Education (THE)

Best Buy Inc Co (BBY) Stock Dives Into the Retail Dumpster – Investorplace.com

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Best Buy (NYSE:BBY) announced slightly lower same-store sales during the holiday season, and investors dumped BBY stock in a hurry.

The drop was minor, less than 1%.But it was unexpected, and missed analyst estimates of a top-line gain of 0.5%.

For the quarter, Best Buy reported earnings of $607 million ($1.91 per share) on revenue of $13.48 billion. This compared with earnings of just $479 million($1.40) but revenue of $13.62 billion a year earlier. More importantly, while adjusted profits of $1.95 per share easily beat estimates of $1.67, revenues fell short of analysts expectations, also for $13.62 billion.

The revenue shortfall meant analysts threw Best Buy stock into the dumpster with retailers such as Macys Inc. (NYSE:M), with shares down almost 5% early Wednesday, to $42.40. During the Christmas season, on Dec. 8, the shares traded as high as $49.31.

Were the analysts right, or did they just offer smart investors a bargain? Is Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) about to kill all retailers, or is this just a case of Moores Law in action?

Best Buy even trounced the higher earnings whisper number of $1.66 per share. But actual estimates were all over the map, with some very bearish about the companys ability to cut costs and others bullish on margins.

The Zacks Metric Model noted that BBY stock had beaten estimates for four quarters, and that shareholders had been rewarded with a 36% gain. In particular, Best Buy was posting big gains in online sales the so-called omni-channel approach and Zacks was expecting an upside surprise.

On the bottom line, of course, Best Buy delivered one. And considering the sizable beat, BBY shares shouldve rocketed higher.

But something elseis at play and that something is Moores Law.

Moores Law, which turned 50 in 2015, was described by Intel Corporation(NASDAQ:INTC) co-founder Gordon Moore as an expected increase in circuit density on silicon, doubling every 18 months ago as far as he could see, in 1966.

But, as I have been writing for many years now, Moores Law also turned traditional economics on its head.Moores Law is deflationary, and the deflationary impact grows with time, as integrated circuits are incorporated into more and more things, and as the impact is compounded by its use in various ways.

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Foundation Medicine Receives Medicare Payment in Non-Small … – Business Wire (press release)

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Foundation Medicine, Inc. (NASDAQ:FMI) today announced that it has received payment from Palmetto GBA, the Companys Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) in North Carolina, for its FoundationOne comprehensive genomic profiling assay when used in the clinical course of care for individuals in the United States with Stage IIIB/IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who meet the eligibility requirements under Palmetto GBAs Local Coverage Determination L36143 (LCD). The LCD was most recently updated on December 22, 2016. Foundation Medicine began submitting an initial set of claims to Palmetto GBA in January 2017 for FoundationOne, and received its first payments for claims under this LCD on March 1, 2017.

Coverage and payment for FoundationOne under Palmetto GBAs LCD is a positive step toward advancing access to precision medicines for individuals living with non-small cell lung cancer, said Troy Cox, chief executive officer for Foundation Medicine. We look forward to continuing to work with Palmetto GBA as we gain additional payment experience under this LCD for non-small cell lung cancer. We will continue to work with FDA and CMS as they review our universal companion diagnostic test through the Parallel Review process with the goal of being the first pan-cancer, universal companion diagnostic test to receive FDA approval and a National Coverage Determination from CMS.

About Foundation Medicine Foundation Medicine (NASDAQ:FMI) is a molecular information company dedicated to a transformation in cancer care in which treatment is informed by a deep understanding of the genomic changes that contribute to each patient's unique cancer. The company offers a full suite of comprehensive genomic profiling assays to identify the molecular alterations in a patient's cancer and match them with relevant targeted therapies, immunotherapies and clinical trials. Foundation Medicines molecular information platform aims to improve day-to-day care for patients by serving the needs of clinicians, academic researchers and drug developers to help advance the science of molecular medicine in cancer. For more information, please visit http://www.FoundationMedicine.com or follow Foundation Medicine on Twitter (@FoundationATCG).

Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements for Foundation Medicine

This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including, but not limited to, statements regarding reimbursement of the Companys comprehensive genomic profiling assays, the benefits provided by anFDA-approved and CMS-covered version of the Companys universal companion diagnostic test, and progress with the Parallel Review process with FDAand CMS; the scope and timing of any approval of FoundationOne as a medical device by FDAand any potential national coverage decisions by CMS; and strategies for achievingMedicarecoverage decisions at the local or national level and new and expanded coverage from third-party payers.All such forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations of future events and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially and adversely from those set forth in or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include the risks that FDA does not approve our universal companion diagnosic test as a medical device or that CMS does not decide to offer our universal companion diagnostic test as a covered benefit underMedicare; FDAor CMS is delayed in the completion of the Parallel Review process; and the risks described under the caption "Risk Factors" inFoundation Medicine's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year endedDecember 31, 2016, which is being filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof, as well as other risks detailed inFoundation Medicine'ssubsequent filings with theSecurities and Exchange Commission. All information in this press release is as of the date of the release, andFoundation Medicine undertakes no duty to update this information unless required by law.

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Foundation Medicine Receives Medicare Payment in Non-Small ... - Business Wire (press release)

SFU computing science alumnus named 2017 Sloan Research Fellow – Simon Fraser University News

By Suraaj Aulakh

When Fereydoun Hormozdiari graduated from Simon Fraser Universitys School of Computing Science with a PhD in 2011, he had already authored major research publications, including papers in the journals Nature and Genome Research. His hard work and success has continued into his professional career, as he has now been named a 2017 Sloan Research Fellow for his work in computational and evolutionary molecular biology.

It is a greathonor to be named as one of the Sloan Research Fellows, says Hormozdiari, who is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis).

As a junior faculty member, this award will not only help in funding parts of my research but it will also help in attracting strong students and postdocs and getting additionalfunding.

Since 1955, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation has been awarding this fellowship to outstanding early-career scientists from various disciplines. This year, 126 researchers across Canada and the United States of America were selected to receive this prestigious fellowship, which includes $60,000 towards their research.

The selection process is detailed and thoroughafter being nominated by fellow scientists, candidates are screened by senior scholars and judged based on their research accomplishments and potential to become a scientific leader.

This honour is often seen as a sign of future successmany researchers go on to win other awards and recognition for their work. In fact, 43 former Sloan Research Fellows later also received a Noble Prize in their fields.

At UC Davis, Hormozdiaris research focuses on developing novel computational algorithms to study the human genome and get a better understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism. He hopes to eventually develop approaches that allow for early prediction and diagnosis of complex diseases.

The ultimate goal would be to predict these disorders long before any symptoms appear.

Hormozdiari credits his experience at SFU for helping him get to where he is now.

I would highly advise students to take advantage of the great computing science community SFU has to offer. I was veryfortunatetodo my graduate studies under the supervision of professor S. Cenk Sahinalp and during that time I learned to enjoy my research incomputational biology.

It is always wonderful to hear about the amazing accomplishments of our graduates, says Greg Mori, Director of the School of Computing Science. Fereydouns focus on using computational biology to study and predict diseases could one day significantly impact the way a patient is diagnosed. This award is well-deserved and is a great example of the success our students and alumni can achieve.

This isnt the first time that the Sloan Research Fellowship has been awarded to a researcher affiliated with the School of Computing Science. In 2016, professor Leonid Chindelevitch was named a Sloan Research Fellow, also for his work in computational and evolutionary molecular biology.

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SFU computing science alumnus named 2017 Sloan Research Fellow - Simon Fraser University News

Tufts Physician-Researcher Named to Endowed Professorship – Tufts Now

Iris Jaffe, associate professor of medicine and executive director of the Molecular Cardiology Research Institute (MCRI), has been appointed the Elisa Kent Mendelsohn Professor of Molecular Cardiology.

Jaffe received an M.D. and a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. After completing clinical training in internal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, she received a vascular biology research fellowship at Tufts Medical Center in 2003, in conjunction with completing a clinical cardiology fellowship at Brigham and Womens Hospital. She joined the Tufts University School of Medicine faculty in 2005, and received a clinical scientist development award from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the NIH.

Jaffe took on a number of leadership roles at Tufts while continuing to build her laboratory and care for patients. She was the first chair of the Women in Medicine Committee at Tufts Medical Center and previously served as chair of the Scientific Affairs Committee at the School of Medicine. She is also on the faculty of the Sackler School for Graduate Biomedical Sciences, where she is a member of the Cell, Molecular and Developmental Biology Program, and she has played a leadership role in the combined M.D./Ph.D. Program. She was associate director of the MCRI before being named executive director last fall.

Jaffe is an active mentor for budding scientists, from eager high school students to undergraduate and graduate students to a growing contingent of postdoctoral fellows. In the laboratory she has combined her expertise in gene transcription and vascular biology with her interests as a clinical cardiologist to explore the molecular mechanisms that contribute to common cardiovascular diseases. She was the first to demonstrate the presence of functional mineralocorticoid receptors in human vascular cells and explored their role in hypertension, atherosclerosis, vein graft failure and pulmonary hypertension.

Jaffe is the recipient of the Established Investigator Award from the American Heart Association (AHA), the Mid-Career Award for Research Excellence from the AHA Blood Pressure Research Council, and the Milton O. Zucker, M.D., F.A.C.S., and Natalie V. Zucker Prize from the School of Medicine. She is an elected member of the American Society of Clinical Investigation and is a standing member of the NIH Vascular Cell and Molecular Biology Study Section.

The Molecular Cardiology Research Institute Professorship in Medicine was established in 1998 by the medical center and the medical school to support the executive director of the Molecular Cardiology Research Institute. In 2006 it was renamed the Elisa Kent Mendelsohn Professorship in Molecular Cardiology, in memory of the daughter of the chairs inaugural holder, Michael Mendelsohn.

I am confident that Dr. Jaffe will continue to build on Tufts legacy of advancing insights into the mechanisms of cardiovascular disease, as well as nurture the next generation of scientists and physician-scientists as the Mendelsohn Professor, said Harris Berman, dean of the School of Medicine.

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This VR Surgery Demo Had The Most Disgustingly Realistic Haptics I’ve Felt – UploadVR

Like many people, Im not great with needles. Just looking at them sends a shiver coursing through my body, and I find myself instinctively backing away. Once youve had your first injection, that thin, precise pinpoint of pain sticks in your mind and its hard to forget. It was with some bravery, then, that I picked up a syringe and used it in VR.

At MWC this week, UK-based Fundamental VR put me on the other side of the equation, as a doctor actually injecting a needle into a patient, and it was another kind of experience entirely.

Fundamental worked with Pacira Pharmaceutical to create FeelRealVR, a platform that offers surgery simulation with incredible haptic feedback. You might well have seen the peripheral used to do this before; the user holds a pen-shaped device thats attached to a robotic arm that will apply the correct amount of pressure relative to where the needle is trying to inject. Its a startlingly stubborn device; as I push against a bone it refuses to budge and I feel it scrape as I move it across the surface.

When I push the needle into the skin, however, it gives me just a moments resistance before slowly allowing me to sink it into an opened kneecap, with gruesomely convincing friction making me feel like I was really pushing it into someones body. It reminded me of when Id have an anaesthetic injection when having teeth taken out, with that slight pause to break the surface before it pushes in. It was bone-chillingly accurate.

The demo itself was a perfect example of what VR can do for the healthcare industry. The areas I needed to inject were highlighted and I had to make sure I didnt administer too much to the liquid inside the syringe. I couldnt imagine a better tool for training surgeons.

Fundamental VRs Richard Vincent told me the studio had reached this amazing level of realism by working closely with hospitals. A few institutions are even using its tech with more elaborate software, though it wasnt allowed to demo that at MWC.

The team is also working with Microsofts HoloLens for a mixed reality version of its software, and can create other scenarios by simulating a scalpel instead of a needle. FeelRealVR looks to be a versatile platform, then, and now that could be instrumental in training new generations of surgeons.

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This VR Surgery Demo Had The Most Disgustingly Realistic Haptics I've Felt - UploadVR