Anonymous ID: 3b0e19 Nov. 23, 2024, 6:38 a.m. No.22043056   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3087 >>3184 >>3284 >>3399

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

November 23, 2024

 

Interplanetary Earth

 

In an interplanetary first, on July 19, 2013 Earth was photographed on the same day from two other worlds of the Solar System, innermost planet Mercury and ringed gas giant Saturn. Pictured on the left, Earth is the pale blue dot just below the rings of Saturn, as captured by the robotic Cassini spacecraft then orbiting the outermost gas giant. On that same day people across planet Earth snapped many of their own pictures of Saturn. On the right, the Earth-Moon system is seen against the dark background of space as captured by the sunward MESSENGER spacecraft, then in Mercury orbit. MESSENGER took its image as part of a search for small natural satellites of Mercury, moons that would be expected to be quite dim. In the MESSENGER image, the brighter Earth and Moon are both overexposed and shine brightly with reflected sunlight. Destined not to return to their home world, both Cassini and MESSENGER have since retired from their missions of Solar System exploration.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html

Anonymous ID: 3b0e19 Nov. 23, 2024, 6:47 a.m. No.22043089   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3184 >>3284 >>3399

NASA Langley Employees Earn Silver Snoopy Awards

Nov 21, 2024

 

Two employees from NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia recently earned the prestigious Silver Snoopy award, an honor given to NASA employees and contractors across the agency for outstanding achievements related to astronaut safety or mission success.

Dr. Shih-Yung Lin and Dr. Peter Parker received the awards during a Space Flight Awareness (SFA) award ceremony at Langley on Nov. 21. Lin earned the award for exceptional engineering and technical leadership contributions to the Orion program.

Parker earned the award for outstanding leadership and technical contributions in support of the International Space Station (ISS).

 

NASA astronaut Victor Glover visited Langley to present the awards.

Glover is currently assigned as the pilot of NASA’s Artemis II mission to the Moon.

He piloted the SpaceX Crew 1 mission to the International Space Station in 2018 and served as a flight engineer on expeditions 64 and 65.

 

“This, for me, feels like how I felt when I received my astronaut pin. This is us giving you our team pin,” said Glover.

He later added, “This is something to wear with honor. You are a very special part of our safety and mission assurance culture.”

 

The Silver Snoopy is the astronauts’ personal award and is presented to less than one percent of the total NASA workforce annually.

The significance of the award was not lost on the honorees, who both brought family members to share in the moment.

 

“I’m involved with lots of research projects, but they don’t all involve loss of human life,” said Parker.

“It definitely is a more prestigious, more impactful, more consequential type of project that I’m being recognized for.”

 

Lin, who recently retired, echoed that sentiment.

 

“You set a very high standard in order to achieve the safest conditions for all the astronauts,” he said.

“For me, if we get a good mission out of it, or multiple missions, I would consider that my personal lifetime goal for my career. That’s what it means to me.”

 

Lin and Parker each received a sterling Silver Snoopy lapel pin that has flown in space, plus a certificate of appreciation signed by Glover and an authentication letter.

The pins awarded to Langley’s recipients flew aboard Space Shuttle Endeavour during an assembly mission to the International Space Station, STS-118, August 8-21, 2007.

The award depicts Snoopy, a character from the “Peanuts” comic strip created by Charles Schulz.

 

An avid supporter of the U.S. space program, Schulz gave NASA astronauts permission to adopt Snoopy as their personal safety symbol during the Apollo era and has long served to promote excellence in every phase of space flight to help ensure the success of NASA missions. The Snoopy emblem reflects NASA and industry’s sense of responsibility and continuing concern for astronaut flight safety.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/nasa-langley-employees-earn-silver-snoopy-awards/

Anonymous ID: 3b0e19 Nov. 23, 2024, 7:04 a.m. No.22043135   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3184 >>3284 >>3399

Rare Asteroid Sample Contaminated by Microorganisms Despite Scientists’ Best Efforts

November 23, 2024

 

Researchers found evidence of microbial life in what should have been a pristine sample of an asteroid, a frustrating sign that avoiding earthly contamination may be harder than we thought.

 

A team from Imperial College London discovered a population of microorganisms in samples of the asteroid Ryugu, which were retrieved by Japan’s Hayabusa2 mission in 2019.

The microbial life turned out to have terrestrial origins, indicating that the asteroid sample was contaminated during its time on our planet.

The findings are detailed in a study published in Meteoritics and Planetary Science.

 

Usually, studies of space rocks involve meteorites, which have plunged through Earth’s atmosphere and hit the ground.

Those samples can tell us a lot about the composition of objects in space, but by the time scientists study them, they’ve been thoroughly contaminated by the environment of Earth.

But two recent missions—Japan’s Hayabusa2 and NASA’s OSIRIS-REx—collected bits of asteroid directly from outer space.

Those samples were brought to Earth and intensely protected, in the hopes that researchers would have a chance to study material unaffected by our atmosphere and microbial life.

 

The Japanese space agency (JAXA)’s Hayabusa2 collected 5.4 grams (about a teaspoon’s worth) of rock, pebbles, and dust from the Ryugu asteroid when it was nearly 200 million miles from Earth.

The spacecraft dropped off the samples in 2020, which were sealed within a capsule that made a soft landing at the Woomera Range Complex in the South Australian outback.

 

The capsule was then transported to a facility in Sagamihara, Japan, built especially to accommodate the asteroid samples.

It was first opened inside a vacuum room, located inside a clean room, and later sent to a pressurized room with a constant flow of nitrogen meant to keep out Earthly contaminants.

Bits of the sample were then placed inside nitrogen-filled containers and sent out to researchers around the world for analysis.

 

The team behind the recent discovery received their own piece of Ryugu. After scanning the asteroid sample, they found rods and filaments of organic matter, which were interpreted as thin, thread-like microorganisms.

The microbial community originated through terrestrial contamination and did not have extraterrestrial origins, the researchers determined.

The discovery suggests that the strict protocols in place to avoid bacterial contamination just weren’t good enough.

 

In 2020, a NASA spacecraft retrieved samples from the asteroid Bennu and dropped them off on Earth in 2023.

The space agency followed similar protocols to JAXA to protect the asteroid material, and no Earthly bacteria has been reported on the bits of Bennu yet.

 

Ryugu is a carbonaceous asteroid, a group thought to be the rocky building blocks of the solar system.

By analyzing these asteroids in a lab, scientists might better understand how the solar system formed and how life later emerged on Earth.

An earlier analysis of Ryugu samples found organic molecules on the space rock, suggesting that the ingredients for life came to Earth by way of meteorite and asteroid impacts.

 

Sample return missions can provide unprecedented access and insight to nature of our solar system, but keeping that material pure is proving to be more challenging than initially believed.

 

https://gizmodo.com/rare-asteroid-sample-contaminated-by-microorganisms-despite-scientists-best-efforts-2000528691

Anonymous ID: 3b0e19 Nov. 23, 2024, 7:19 a.m. No.22043194   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3284 >>3399

Stem Cells Grown in Space Turn Out to Have a Surprise Advantage

23 November 2024

 

Stem cells are special in the way they can keep on replicating, and turn themselves into many other types of cell. Now scientists have discovered how their superpowers get a remarkable boost when they're grown in space.

The microgravity environment increases some of the regenerative capacities of stem cells even further, researchers from the Mayo Clinic in Florida have found, based on experiments carried out on the International Space Station (ISS).

As stem cells play such a crucial role in the body's repair process, with their ability to quickly replicate and differentiate, these findings could help in the study of disease prevention and treatment.

 

"Studying stem cells in space has uncovered cell mechanisms that would otherwise be undetected or unknown within the presence of normal gravity," says pathologist Abba Zubair, from the Mayo Clinic.

"That discovery indicates a broader scientific value to this research, including potential clinical applications."

 

On board the ISS, the team specifically looked at the behavior of adult stem cells, which are more limited in how they divide and transform compared to embryonic stem cells.

Adult stem cells are often grown outside the body by scientists to study and treat disease, but it's a challenging, time-consuming, and expensive process.

What this study shows is that space labs could solve some of these issues.

A variety of stem cell types were tested, with positive results for all of them: mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), for example, were shown to be better at managing immune system responses and reducing inflammation when grown in microgravity.

 

For several of the stem cell types tested, the scientists observed general improvements in the way the cells were expanding, and in the stability of their replication, even after their return to Earth.

There's lots more work to do here, but the potential is there to grow stem cells in greater numbers and more quickly in microgravity.

"The space environment offers an advantage to the growth of stem cells by providing a more natural three-dimensional state for their expansion, which closely resembles growth of cells in the human body," says Zubair.

 

"That's in comparison to the two-dimensional culture environment available on Earth that is less likely to imitate human tissue."

Ordinarily, our adult stem cells are up to the job of managing normal wear and tear on the body.

However, when something goes wrong an extra infusion of lab-grown cells can make all the difference – as numerous emerging therapies have shown.

 

The team behind the research is also confident that space-grown cells will help in the treatment of conditions related to growing older, including strokes, cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases like dementia.

"The space research conducted so far is just a starting point," says Zubair. "A broader perspective about stem cell applications is possible as research continues to explore the use of space to advance regenerative medicine."

 

https://www.sciencealert.com/stem-cells-grown-in-space-turn-out-to-have-a-surprise-advantage

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41526-024-00425-0

Anonymous ID: 3b0e19 Nov. 23, 2024, 7:32 a.m. No.22043263   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3284 >>3399

Chinese desktop PC chipmaker Loongson now has chips running the Tiangong Space Station

November 23, 2024

 

Loongson - the Chinese chipmaker gunning for Intel and AMD - has joined the cosmic competition (literally) as its chips are now available in space.

ITHome reports that China's latest Tianzhou-8 spacecraft was packaged with a space-based system powered by Loongson processors - reportedly fabbed using an unnamed "advanced" process node.

This cargo spacecraft delivered six tons of supplies and materials to the Tiangong Space Station and successfully docked within three hours of flight.

 

The new space-computing platform was dispatched via the Tianzhou-8 payload and successfully installed on docking with the Tiangong Space Station.

This is a major step forward for China as it looks to achieve self-sufficiency in the semiconductor realm.

A domestic and locally produced chip mitigates the risks associated with foreign supply and reduces China's dependence on Western hardware.

 

While the report doesn't go into specifics about the processor - it is likely based on a modified version of the MIPS ISA (Instruction Set Architecture).

There are also various mentions that this Loongson chip leverages a cloud computing setup - though that could be a mistranslation.

As per the details, the chips are equipped to undergo self-testing and offer on-orbit processing.

They have dedicated storage, networking capabilities, and a thermal management system.

 

The report suggests that the chip is designed to execute tasks such as ground radiation source identification, which is likely to detect fissile material on Earth, optical remote sensing, monitoring electromagnetic radiation emitted or reflected from the Earth, and image capturing.

The key notion here is that the Loongson chips do all this while in orbit under harsh space conditions - including but not limited to cosmic radiation exposure and limited power resources.

 

he payload also delivered several utilities and packages to the astronauts - like birthday gifts and other seasonal offerings for the Spring Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, and the Dragon Boat Festival to keep the indigenous cultural spirit alive - even in space.

The supplies also included lunar regolith simulant, which is essentially synthetic moon dust and is currently being employed to study the feasibility of space stations on the moon.

 

The Chinese chip industry still faces several hurdles - primarily the inability to source EUV equipment.

This has crippled progress for SMIC and even Huawei, whose flagship Ascend AI chips are now limited to 7nm technology until 2026 - per rumors.

While this is a step in the right direction, China must find breakthroughs in EUV technology if it wishes to stay competitive against global players.

 

https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/chinese-desktop-pc-chipmaker-loongson-now-has-chips-running-the-tiangong-space-station-enabling-optical-remote-sensing-image-capturing-and-radiation-source-identification