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    12
    POPS
    Alien hunt is too exciting to ignore
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  2-18-2009    3
     Well, the writer certainly has a point. There is something very basic in answering this question. Life on earth is ultimately unique as long as no alien life is discovered. And yet we strive to know that we are not alone even at the cost of losing this very unique place. Is it the primordial blessing of the tree of knowledge that makes us go there?
    25
    POPS
    Solar Storm Season Could Plunge Earth Into Total Blackout
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  1-14-2009    1
     Put lots of sun screen everywhere... just in case :-)
    16
    POPS
    Lost and Found in Space...
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  11-27-2008    2
     No Remarks
    20
    POPS
    Sweden's Ultra-Modern Underground Data Center
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  11-16-2008   
     When asked the motivation behind Pionen, Jon Karlung, CEO of Bahnhof said “Rather than just concentrating on technical hardware we decided to put humans in focus. Of course, the security, power, cooling, network, etc, are all top notch, but the people designing data centers often (always!) forget about the humans that are supposed to work with the stuff.” “Since we got hold of this unique nuclear bunker in central Stockholm deep below the rock, we just couldn't’t build it like a traditional – more boring – hosting center,” he said. “We wanted to make something different. The place itself needed something far out in design and science fiction was the natural source of inspiration in this case – plus of course some solid experience from having been a hosting provider for more than a decade.” Regarding the design of the facility, he said “I’m personally a big fan of old science fiction movies. Especially ones from the 70s like Logan’s Run, Silent Running, Star Wars...
    19
    POPS
    New spaceship force field makes Mars trip possible
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  11-4-2008   
     Now this has been confirmed in the laboratory in the UK using apparatus originally built to work on fusion. By recreating in miniature a tiny piece of the Solar Wind, scientists working in the laboratory were able to confirm that a small "hole" in the Solar Wind is all that would be needed to keep the astronauts safe on their journey to our nearest neighbours. Dr. Ruth Bamford, one of the lead researchers at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, said, "These initial experiments have shown promise and that it may be possible to shield astronauts from deadly space weather".
    17
    POPS
    Hubble Back In Business: Pair Of Gravitationally Interacting Galaxies In Full View
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  11-2-2008    1
     Strangely or not, Hubble telescope became a piece of high technology almost everybody loves. It seems no other project has attracted so many sentiments. It is as if it became our eye into remote space, an horizon yet to be explored.
    18
    POPS
    The Statistical Universe - On the Vastness of the universe
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  10-21-2008   
     But inflation does not really make the universe more uniform — just huge. If inflation is correct, then the billions of light-years that our telescopes probe are a mere dot on a far vaster canvas. The multiverse comprises a large number of distinct patches, each far bigger than our night sky. What observers see, therefore, also depends on where they find themselves. Most of the regions in the multiverse are inhospitable to life, and their properties will not be observed. But what exactly is life? In order to extract predictions from the multiverse, my colleagues and I have developed a statistical tool to find regions with observers: We look not for life itself but for the disorder left behind by the complex processes that its formation depends on. To understand the physical signatures of life in this way may help us finally to comprehend our own little corner of the multiverse. Interesting Read.
    15
    POPS
    NASA launches probe to study edge of solar system
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  10-19-2008   
      "The interstellar boundary regions are critical because they shield us from the vast majority of dangerous galactic cosmic rays, which otherwise would penetrate into Earth's orbit and make human spaceflight much more dangerous," David McComas, IBEX principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in San Antonio, Texas, said recently.
    13
    POPS
    Long-distance demonstration of solar-powered wireless power transmission achieved
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  9-17-2008    4
     In the longer term, with sufficient investments in space infrastructure, space solar power can be built from materials from space. The full environmental benefits of space solar power derive from doing most of the work outside of Earth's biosphere. With materials extraction from the Moon or near-Earth asteroids, and space-based manufacture of components, space solar power would have essentially zero terrestrial environmental impact. Only the energy receivers need be built on Earth.
    24
    POPS
    Creature Survives Naked in Space
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  9-9-2008    5
     This is one trick we humans should know how to do.
    27
    POPS
    New hyperspace engine could roundtrip Mars in 5 hours
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  8-31-2008    5
     The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics awards prizes for the best papers presented each year. Last year’s winner went to a paper authored by physicist Jochem Hauser, calling for experimental tests of Heim’s theory. “This hyperdrive motor,” Hauser said, “would propel a craft through another dimension at enormous speeds. It could reach a star eleven light years away in just eighty days.”
    25
    POPS
    Four Reasons Not to Give Up on Interstellar Travel
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  8-23-2008   
     It looks far, dark, and cold... Yet, 120 years ago, flight was science fiction as well. C. G. Jung said that all dreams of space travel are just an escape from one most difficult challenge of all, that is the journey to man's inner space. :-) ...and see my clip from last week on suggested FTL drive. It seems the motivation to escape an inner journey just grows.
    14
    POPS
    Physicists Seek Answers to Quantum Correlations
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  8-17-2008    1
     The physicists ruled out several possible classical explanations for the instantaneous communication. For one thing, they showed that the photons did not share information before leaving Geneva, and so they didn´t travel knowing about each other´s properties. In another test, the scientists showed that no communication could have occurred through a different reference frame, as might happen because of the photons´ high speeds. According to Einstein´s theory of relativity, observers moving at high speeds can get different measurements of the same event because they have different reference frames. But, by performing tests over a complete rotation of the Earth, the researchers ruled out this possibility. "We think space and time are important because that´s the kind of monkeys we are,"
    26
    POPS
    String Theory Faster-Than-Light Drive Proposed
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  8-13-2008   
     Dreams of interstellar travel may need to be put on hold for the moment, however. Cleaver and Obousy estimate that the amount of energy needed to influence the extra dimension is equivalent to the entire mass of Jupiter being converted into pure energy for a ship measuring roughly 10 meters by 10 meters by 10 meters. "That is an enormous amount of energy," Cleaver said. "We are still a very long ways off before we could create something to harness that type of energy." But what if we could make ourselves very very small??? I am ready to squeeze myself quite a bit to get really far... :-)
    15
    POPS
    Will NASA Test a Plasma Drive on the ISS?
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  8-8-2008   
     A plasma engine such as the VASIMR uses radio waves to ionize a propellant, and magnetic fields to accelerate or decelerate the resulting plasma to generate thrust. The VASIMR injects a gas such as hydrogen in to an engine that turns it in to plasma. The radio waves are now used to energize the plasma further as it moves through the engine. The plasma, now accelerated and heated, is focused and directed as exhaust using a magnetic nozzle.
    12
    POPS
    The Impact of ET Contact: Europe's Scientists Discuss The Future of Humans in Space
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  8-1-2008   
     No Remarks
    16
    POPS
    Intelligent Robots will Explore Milky Way by 2020
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-29-2008    1
     If we will succeed to create intelligent robots to explore space, will we consider them as our emissaries or just information relaying machines?
    15
    POPS
    Humans Predicted to Make Contact with an Extraterrestrial Civilization Within Two Decades
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-29-2008   
     No Remarks
    12
    POPS
    Nukes Are Not the Best Way to Stop an Asteroid
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-28-2008    1
     No Remarks
    19
    POPS
    Private Space Project Rolls On
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-27-2008   
     White Knight Two will launch SpaceShipTwo, which will be the size of a corporate Gulfstream capable of carrying six passengers and two pilots. Both will be built wholly from ultra-light composite materials.
    23
    POPS
    Is a 'Dark Force' Pushing the Universe Apart?
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-21-2008    6
     Astronomers now recognize that the eventual fate of the universe is inextricably tied to the presence of dark energy and dark matter.The current standard model for cosmology describes a universe that is 70 percent dark energy, 25 percent dark matter, and only 5 percent normal matter.
    14
    POPS
    Ancient Mars Had Widespread Water, Potential To Support Life
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-16-2008   
     "Our whole team is turning our findings into a list of sites where future missions could land to look for organic chemistry and perhaps determine whether life ever existed on Mars,” says APL’s Murchie.
    10
    POPS
    The Next Big Thing for Mars: The Return -Biosecurity will be an Issue
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-15-2008   
     No Remarks
    22
    POPS
    NASA Needs to Take Space Sex Seriously
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-14-2008    7
     The fact remains however, that we are naive of the effects of sex in space, let alone if it is even a pleasurable experience. The mechanics of "human docking procedures" (as described by tests carried out by the Russian space agency) are a lot more complicated when in zero gravity. There are also huge ethical questions hanging over possible pregnancies in space. Zero-G tests on rat embryos produced decreased skeletal and brain development, the effects on a human embryo will remain a mystery. The fact remains that NASA continues to cut back biological research in favor of future Moon missions, so much about human sexuality in space will remain a mystery.
    13
    POPS
    Tau Zero Foundation
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-13-2008   
     A web site promoting the vision of reaching the stars.
    18
    POPS
    State of the plumbing art: 10 examples of cutting-edge bathroom design
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-11-2008    3
     No Remarks
    21
    POPS
    The Shape of Music
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-10-2008    5
     The shapes of the space of chords we have described also reveal deep connections between a wide range of musical genres. It turns out that superficially different styles--Renaissance music, classical and Romantic music, jazz, rock, and other popular forms--all make remarkably similar use of the geometry of chord space. Traditional techniques for manipulating musical scales turn out to be closely analogous to those used to connect individual chords. And some composers have displayed a profound understanding of the higher-dimensional geometry of musical chords. In fact, one can argue that Romantic composers such as Chopin had an intuitive feel for non-Euclidean higher-dimensional spaces that exceeded the explicit understanding of their mathematical contemporaries.
    13
    POPS
    Asteroid Impacts On Earth: A Protection Plan
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-3-2008    2
     Indeed, over billions of years, the Tree of Life here on Earth has been whacked time and time again by what Schweickart labeled as “the crazy cosmic gardener.” “The good news is that we can do something about this,” the former astronaut explained. “The marriage of we human beings and the machines that we’ve created are now at a level of capability which enables us to fire the crazy cosmic gardener. We can stop this process from occurring again.”
    17
    POPS
    Is Helium 3 Exploitation China's Hidden Lunar Agenda?
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-2-2008    3
     UN Treaties in place state that the moon and its minerals are the common heritage of mankind, so the quest to use Helium-3 as an energy source would likely demand joint international co-operation. Hopefully, exploitation of the moon's resources will be viewed as a solution for the world, rather than an out-moded nation-state solution.
    12
    POPS
    Proposed NASA Mission Could Explore Twisted Space Around Black Holes
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  7-1-2008   
     No Remarks
    16
    POPS
    Scientists Discover Planet's Natural Radio Emissions a Signal to Exo-Worlds
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-30-2008   
     No Remarks
    12
    POPS
    Mars Soil Sample Reveals Presence of Nutrients for Plants to Grow
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-27-2008    1
     “We basically have found what appears to be the requirements, the nutrients, to support life whether past, present or future,” said Samuel P. Kounaves during a telephone news conference on Thursday. “The sort of soil you have there is the type of soil you’d probably have in your backyard.”
    14
    POPS
    Space Experts Call for ‘Fewer Astronauts, More Robots’
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-27-2008    1
     The suggestion sure makes a lot of economical sense. Resources should be focused to develop better technologies to carry load into orbit and beyond, because this is the real bottle neck of space exploration as of now. On the other hand, we cannot overlook the fact that sending men and women to space, ignites the imagination and inspires the coming generations. Space is the next frontier of adventure and mystery. The myth and the story are not less important than the economical aspect.
    15
    POPS
    Using Causality to Solve the Puzzle of Quantum Spacetime
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-26-2008    2
     Space time fabric at the tiniest scale is fractal and with variable dimensionality. The interesting thing here is that the very fundamental aspects of reality are described as mathematical entities, and do not possess any intrinsic properties besides causation as an organizing principle. This is where physics and metaphysics meet....
    25
    POPS
    How did the Universe Begin ?
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-24-2008    5
     The no-boundary wave function also states that space-time was not what we see today at the outset of universal expansion. “When the universe started out,” Hartle explains, “there wasn’t ordinary space-time. Instead of three space directions, as we have now, there were four space directions. At some point, a transition was made to ordinary space-time.”
    12
    POPS
    Beaming Solar Power from Massive Satellites Gains Global Momentum
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  6-2-2008    5
     It is time to leave behind our primitive smoky and polluting methods of energy production. Only question left is why are we so late? is it a technological barrier, an economical one? or just a political one?
    12
    POPS
    Spacecraft reveals look at Mars' polar region
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  5-26-2008    1
     No Remarks
    9
    POPS
    Phoenix probe lands on Mars
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  5-26-2008    2
     I've been waiting to make this clip :-) Hurray !!
    8
    POPS
    Physicists Demonstrate How Information Can Escape From Black Holes
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  5-14-2008   
     Hawking's idea was generally accepted by physicists until the late 1990s, when many began to doubt the assertion. Even Hawking himself renounced the idea in 2004. Yet no one, until now, has been able to provide a plausible mechanism for how information might escape from a black hole. A team of physicists led by Abhay Ashtekar, Holder of the Eberly Family Chair in Physics and director of the Penn State Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos, now has discovered such a mechanism. Broadly, their findings expand space-time beyond its assumed size, thus providing room for information to reappear.
    9
    POPS
    Will giant vegetables help solve world food shortage?
    Silkweaver
    by Silkweaver  5-12-2008    4
     Scientists have yet to offer a definitive explanation of why space causes the seeds to mutate but they believe that cosmic radiation, micro-gravity and magnetic fields may play a part. Mr Lo said: "After space travel the genetic sequence may change from 1,2,3,4 to 1,2,4,3 or a gene may even disappear so 1,2,3,4 becomes 1, 2, and 4. "We don't think there is any threat to human health because the genes themselves do not mutate, just their sequence changes. "With genetically-modified crops you have seen environmental problems because they have added genes that can damage other organisms. "But with space seeds they don't gain genes, they can only lose them."
    — end of the list —

    Silkweaver space

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