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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Alien Isolation Gameplay Walkthrough Part 1 – The Space Station – Closing The Book – Video

Posted: October 22, 2014 at 1:45 am


Alien Isolation Gameplay Walkthrough Part 1 - The Space Station - Closing The Book
Alien Isolation Gameplay Walkthrough Part 1 includes Mission 1: Closing the Book and both Commentary and a Review of the game on HD 1080p and Max Graphics Settings. This Alien Isolation ...

By: JayItsOk

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Alien Isolation Gameplay Walkthrough Part 1 - The Space Station - Closing The Book - Video

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Space Station 76 (2014) Full Movie – Video

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Space Station 76 (2014) Full Movie
Runtime : 1 hour 34 minutes. Watch Space Station 76 (2014) Full Movie HD ! Click here: http://vios.us/1193 Watch Space Station 76 (2014) Full Movie Online Free Streaming ! Full Synopsis:...

By: Ileen Lackey

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2014 Distinguished Alumna Karen Nyberg – Video

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2014 Distinguished Alumna Karen Nyberg
Nyberg is a NASA astronaut. She has logged more than 75 million miles and over 180 days in space, including the 123rd shuttle mission in 2008 and a five-month stint on the International Space...

By: Texas Exes

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2014 Distinguished Alumna Karen Nyberg - Video

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How NASA Deals With Odor Inside the International Space Station

Posted: at 1:45 am

Space may be a vacuum, but at least aboard the International Space Station, smells still have plenty of room to waft. And considering the ISS has 6 living, breathing, excreting human beings living in such close proximity, some of those smells could get to be a major problem. Fortunately, NASA's accounted for that.

NASA engineer Robert Frost and former ISS astronaut Clayton Anderson explain how NASA takes care of astronauts' more malodorous byproducts.

From Robert Frost, NASA Instructor/Engineer in the Mission Operation Directorate:

Odors can result from equipment off-gassing, crew metabolic processes, food, experiments, and returning EVA crew members. Two-hundred and sixteen such contaminants have been identified and designed for.

In the SM (Service Module), the Micropurification Unit () provides a regenerable means to remove both low and high molecular weight contaminants.

In the Lab, the Trace Contaminant Control Subassembly (TCCS) performs a similar function.

Both of these units are nominally operating. Either one is capable of providing the trace contaminant removal for the entire ISS. The vents contaminants overboard while the TCCS traps them in replaceable beds.

Major components of the TCCS include an activated charcoal bed, a catalytic oxidizer assembly, a lithium hydroxide sorbent bed, a fan, and a flow meter. Although the TCCS removes most atmospheric contaminants with the charcoal bed, the high temperature catalytic oxidizer is required for removal of lower molecular weight compounds, such as methane.

TCCS inlet air is drawn directly from the open cabin atmosphere into the activated charcoal bed by the TCCS fan, which is downstream of the charcoal bed. The charcoal bed is impregnated with phosphoric acid, which enables it to absorb ammonia. Downstream of the fan, the process air is split into two flow streams; one going to the Catalytic Oxidizer Assembly, and one to a bypass line. The flow rate to the Catalytic Oxidizer Assembly, measured by a flow meter, is used to control the speed of the fan to provide a specified rate of flow to the oxidizer. The remaining flow is sent through the bypass.

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Return of SpaceX's Dragon cargo craft delayed

Posted: at 1:45 am

Rough seas in the Pacific Ocean will keep SpaceX's Dragon cargo capsule in space a few days longer than planned, with the unpiloted supply ship's return to Earth now set for Saturday hauling a load of research specimens from the International Space Station back to the ground.

SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft is attached to the International Space Station's Harmony module. Credit: NASA Landing was scheduled for Tuesday in a splashdown zone in the Pacific Ocean west of Baja California, but officials opted to delay the return to Saturday due to high sea states in the area, NASA said Monday.

Berthed at the space station's Harmony module since Sept. 23, the SpaceX cargo craft delivered nearly 5,000 pounds of supplies and experiments, including a 3D printer, spacesuit batteries, a small satellite deployer, and a $26 million NASA instrument to help meteorologists study the intensification of hurricanes.

On the way back to Earth, the spacecraft's pressurized cabin will contain refrigerated blood, urine and saliva samples, along with a habitat with 10 rodents, plants grown on the space station, materials specimens, student experiments, cameras and other gear selected for return to Earth for inspection and refurbishment.

The Dragon's return trip will carry approximately 3,300 pounds of station hardware and experiments packed by astronauts.

SpaceX's resupply freighter is the only spacecraft capable of returning significant amounts of cargo to Earth. Russia's Soyuz crew capsule can land with limited cargo, and the space station's other supply ships from Orbital Sciences Corp., Russia, Europe and Japan are designed to burn up during re-entry to dispose of trash.

Operating on commands from mission control, the space station's robotic arm will grapple the Dragon cargo capsule and remove it from the Harmony module's Earth-facing docking port early Saturday.

Astronauts Reid Wiseman and Barry "Butch" Wilmore will oversee the robot arm's release of the 12-foot-diameter solar-powered Dragon spaceship at 9:56 a.m. EDT (1356 GMT) Saturday.

The Dragon's Draco maneuvering thrusters will conduct three burns to depart the vicinity of the space station, then the craft will close and latch the door to its navigation bay before setting up for a de-orbit burn at 2:43 p.m. EDT (1843 GMT).

The spaceship will jettison its unpressurized trunk section and solar panels a few minutes later to burn up in the atmosphere, while the main module re-enters cocooned inside a specialized ablative heat shield developed by NASA and SpaceX to withstand temperatures reaching up to 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit on its hypersonic approach to a landing zone off the coast of Baja California.

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You Are Here: Around the World in 92 Minutes, Chris Hadfield's Photos of Earth from Space

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As commander of the International Space Station, Chris Hadfield captivated the world with beautiful photos and commentary from space.

In a new book, You Are Here: Around the World in 92 Minutes,Hadfield chooses the best from the thousands of photos he took on the International Space Station.

The Richat Structure in Mauritania, also known as the Eye of the Sahara, is a landmark for astronauts. If you've been busy doing experiments and haven't looked out the window for a while, it's hard to know where you are, especially if you're over a vast 3,600,000-square-mile desert. This bull's-eye orients you, instantly. Oddly, it appears not to be the scar of a meteorite but a deeply eroded dome, with a rainbow-inspired colour scheme(Chris Hadfield)

Salt from evaporation ponds in Great Salt Lake, Utah, is used to produce a lot of the world's magnesium metal. The largest saline lake in the western hemisphere attracts pastel-coloured algae, brine shrimp and the birds that love them, but so far, just this one lone wolf(Chris Hadfield)

On a clear day you can see forever (or at least from Havana to Washington, DC)(Chris Hadfield)

The Nile, draining out into the Mediterranean. The bright lights of Cairo announce the opening of the north-flowing river's delta, with Jerusalem's answering high beams to the northeast. This 4,258 mile braid of human life, first navigated end-to-end in 2004, is visible in a single glance from space(Chris Hadfield)

A twist of cloud near Arica, Chile. You see these frequently in this part of the world because the Pacific is cold, the land is warm, and the currents and winds combine to form a cloudy vortex clockwise here, because it's the southern hemisphere. North of the equator, the spiral would turn counter-clockwise(Chris Hadfield)

Manhattan awake, 9:23am local time...(Chris Hadfield)

...Manhattan at rest, 3:45am local time(Chris Hadfield)

Venice, floating in its lagoon(Chris Hadfield)

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Biotechnology 1: Genetic Engineering – Video

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Biotechnology 1: Genetic Engineering
First of 3 video podcasts.

By: Alan Allmen

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Proposition 105 would require mandatory GMO labeling – Video

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Proposition 105 would require mandatory GMO labeling
Under Proposition 105, food producers would be required to label foods produced with genetic engineering, or GMO #39;s. Russell Haythorn reports.

By: 7 NEWS - The Denver Channel

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Sowing the seeds of an illogical crop ban

Posted: at 1:44 am

Last year's half-baked and unsuccessful proposal to ban genetically engineered crops in Los Angeles has not improved with time. Yet here it is before the City Council again, complete with wild statements about bioengineered food, chock full of inconsistent logic and, just like last year, rendered virtually meaningless because there are no such crops in the city and no plans to grow them.

The motion, brought to the council Tuesday by Councilmen Paul Koretz and Mitch O'Farrell, cites concern by consumers that genetically engineered food might be unsafe to eat, a position that is not backed by years of scientific study. The councilmen point out in support of their proposal that 52% of county voters favored a failed 2012 statewide proposition that would have required that labels be put on foods with bioengineered ingredients ignoring the fact that labeling a product and banning the process that created it are entirely different things.

The councilmen also complain about the herbicides used on bioengineered crops, and those complaints are partly justified. But linking that to a ban makes for foolish policy. It is true that plants have often been engineered to resist herbicides, which are then sprayed on the plants intensively and repeatedly over time. That, in turn, has given rise to herbicide-resistant weeds, which can be very difficult to eradicate in fields of conventionally grown crops. But the problem is not the genetically engineered plants, it is the heavy application of the herbicides. Conventional lawns are also heavily treated with herbicides and other chemicals that aren't good for the environment. The proper response is a regulation on pesticide and herbicide use, not a ban on the crops.

And not all genetic engineering of crops is designed to build resistance to pesticides. Scientists have, for instance, developed a form of rice that contains significant amounts of vitamin A, an innovation that could prevent blindness and death for millions of people in Asia and Africa. Scientists are at work on oranges they hope will resist citrus greening, a disease that threatens to wipe out orange groves throughout the U.S. What if future projects included drought-tolerant crops that could survive the kind of prolonged dry spell California has been experiencing? Why would we want to ban such products without any scientific indication that they're unhealthy or unsafe?

That's not to say all bioengineered plants are keepers. Herbicide-resistant turf grass is undergoing product testing. But because grasses spread easily, there should be concern that the engineered products could take over neighbors' lawns and become omnipresent pests even in the wilderness areas that surround the city.

In other words, making sound policy requires lawmakers to rise above irrational fears and easy generalizations and to become informed about science.

Follow the Opinion section on Twitter @latimesopinion

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Wanessa – Worth It "DNA TOUR RELOADED" (FLEXX CLUB 18-10-14) FULL HD – BY LEH SANUTY – Video

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Wanessa - Worth It "DNA TOUR RELOADED" (FLEXX CLUB 18-10-14) FULL HD - BY LEH SANUTY
Wanessa - Worth It (FLEXX CLUB 18-10-14) FULL HD - BY LEH SANUTY.

By: Leh Sanuty

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