Monthly Archives: September 2013

Water Found on Mars!

H2 oh my: NASA’s Curiosity rover finds water in Mars dirt

By Mike Wall

Published September 26, 2013

  • curiosity-mosaic-sol-85

    SA’s Mars rover Curiosity is a mosaic of photos taken by the rover’s Mars Hand Lends Imager taken on Sol 85, the rover’s 85th Martian day, as Curiosity was sampling rocks at a stop dubbed Rocknest in Gale Crater. Image released Sept. 26, 2013.(NASA/JPL-CALTECH/MALIN SPACE SCIENCE SYSTEMS)

  • curiosity-rocknest-closeup

    At left, a closeup view of the Mars rock target Rocknest taken by the Curiosity rover showing its sandy surface and shadows that were disrupted by the rover’s front left wheel. At right, a view of Mars samples from Curiosity’s third dirt scoop (SCIENCE/AAAS)

  • curiosity-chemin-science-result

    This image depicts the science result from the Mars rover Curiosity’s CheMin instrument, showing an X-ray diffraction of the rover’s fifth scoop of Martian dirt. The black semi-circle at the bottom is the shadow of the beam stop. Image released(SCIENCE/AAAS)

Future Mars explorers may be able to get all the water they need out of the red dirt beneath their boots, a new study suggests.

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has found that surface soil on the Red Planet contains about 2 percent water by weight. That means astronaut pioneers could extract roughly 2 pints of water out of every cubic foot of Martian dirt they dig up, said study lead author Laurie Leshin, of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y.

“For me, that was a big ‘wow’ moment,” Leshin told SPACE.com. “I was really happy when we saw that there’s easily accessible water here in the dirt beneath your feet. And it’s probably true anywhere you go on Mars.” [The Search for Water on Mars (Photos)]

The new study is one of five papers published in the journal ScienceThursday that report what researchers have learned about Martian surface materials from the work Curiosity did during its first 100 days on the Red Planet.

Soaking up atmospheric water
C
uriosity touched down inside Mars’ huge Gale Crater in August 2012, kicking off a planned two-year surface mission to determine if the Red Planet could ever have supported microbial life. It achieved that goal in March, when it found that a spot near its landing site called Yellowknife Bay was indeed habitable billions of years ago.

‘The dirt is acting like a bit of a sponge and absorbing water from the atmosphere.’

– Laurie Leshin, of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 

But Curiosity did quite a bit of science work before getting to Yellowknife Bay. Leshin and her colleagues looked at the results of Curiosity’s first extensive Mars soil analyses, which the 1-ton rover performed on dirt that it scooped up at a sandy site called Rocknest in November 2012.

Using its Sample Analysis at Mars instrument, or SAM, Curiosity heated this dirt to a temperature of 1,535 degrees Fahrenheit, and then identified the gases that boiled off. SAM saw significant amounts of carbon dioxide, oxygen and sulfur compounds — and lots of water on Mars.

SAM also determined that the soil water is rich in deuterium, a “heavy” isotope of hydrogen that contains one neutron and one proton (as opposed to “normal” hydrogen atoms, which have no neutrons). The water in Mars’ thin air sports a similar deuterium ratio, Leshin said.

“That tells us that the dirt is acting like a bit of a sponge and absorbing water from the atmosphere,” she said.

Some bad news for manned exploration
SAM detected some organic compounds in the Rocknest sample as well — carbon-containing chemicals that are the building blocks of life here on Earth. But as mission scientists reported late last year, these are simple, chlorinated organics that likely have nothing to do with Martian life. [The Hunt for Martian Life: A Photo Timeline]

Instead, Leshin said, they were probably produced when organics that hitched a ride from Earth reacted with chlorine atoms released by a toxic chemical in the sample called perchlorate.

Perchlorate is known to exist in Martian dirt; NASA’s Phoenix lander spotted it near the planet’s north pole in 2008. Curiosity has now found evidence of it near the equator, suggesting that the chemical is common across the planet. (Indeed, observations by a variety of robotic Mars explorers indicate that Red Planet dirt is likely similar from place to place, distributed in a global layer across the surface, Leshin said.)

The presence of perchlorate is a challenge that architects of futuremanned Mars missions will have to overcome, Leshin said.

“Perchlorate is not good for people. We have to figure out, if humans are going to come into contact with the soil, how to deal with that,” she said.

“That’s the reason we send robotic explorers before we send humans — to try to really understand both the opportunities and the good stuff, and the challenges we need to work through,” Leshin added.

A wealth of discoveries
The four other papers published in Science today report exciting results as well.

For example, Curiosity’s laser-firing ChemCam instrument found a strong hydrogen signal in fine-grained Martian soils along the rover’s route, reinforcing the SAM data and further suggesting that water is common in dirt across the planet (since such fine soils are globally distributed).

Another study reveals more intriguing details about a rock Curiosity studied in October 2012. This stone — which scientists dubbed “Jake Matijevic” in honor of a mission team member who died two weeks after the rover touched down — is a type of volcanic rock never before seen on Mars.

However, rocks similar to Jake Matijevic are commonly observed here on Earth, especially on oceanic islands and in rifts where the planet’s crust is thinning out.

“Of all the Martian rocks, this one is the most Earth-like. It’s kind of amazing,” said Curiosity lead scientist John Grotzinger, a geologist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. “What it indicates is that the planet is more evolved than we thought it was, more differentiated.”

The five new studies showcase the diversity and scientific value ofGale Crater, Grotzinger said. They also highlight how well Curiosity’s 10 science instruments have worked together, returning huge amounts of data that will keep the mission team busy for years to come.

“The amount of information that comes out of this rover just blows me away, all the time,” Grotzinger told SPACE.com. “We’re getting better at using Curiosity, and she just keeps telling us more and more. One year into the mission, we still feel like we’re drinking from a fire hose.”

The road to Mount Sharp
The pace of discovery could pick up even more. This past July, Curiosity left the Yellowknife Bay area and headed for Mount Sharp, which rises 3.4 miles into the Martian sky from Gale Crater’s center.

Mount Sharp has been Curiosity’s main destination since before the rover’s November 2011 launch. Mission scientists want the rover to climb up through the mountain’s foothills, reading the terrain’s many layers along the way.

“As we go through the rock layers, we’re basically looking at the history of ancient environments and how they may be changing,” Grotzinger said. “So what we’ll really be able to do for the first time is get a relative chronology of some substantial part of Martian history, which should be pretty cool.”

Curiosity has covered about 20 percent of the planned 5.3-mile trek to Mount Sharp. The rover, which is doing science work as it goes, may reach the base of the mountain around the middle of next year, Grotzinger said.

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Human Smurf Dies from Heart Condition

Man with completely blue skin dies at 62

Published September 25, 2013

FoxNews.com

Paul Karason, a man made famous after his skin turned permanently blue 15 years ago, has passed away at 62 after suffering a heart attack, according to The Christian Post.

Karason’s skin turned blue after he used colloidal silver, a liquid made by extracting silver from metal, to treat his dermatitis – a condition that causes swollen, red and itchy skin. Karason reportedly drank the silver-based remedy and rubbed it on his skin.

“The change was so gradual that I didn’t perceive it and other people around me likewise,” said Karason in an earlier interview. “It wasn’t until a friend I hadn’t seen in several months came by my parent’s place to see me and he asked me, ‘What did you do?’”

After turning blue, Karason led a reclusive life until appearing on the Today show in 2008.

Karason suffered from heart problems and underwent a triple bypass five years ago, according to the Christian Post. He had also recently suffered a bout of severe pneumonia and a stroke.

The use of colloidal silver in oral drugs has since been banned by the FDA, according to the National Institute of Health.

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Items for Keen Halloween!

Here are some pictures of the cool things my wife is making for our table – number 7, at Keen Halloween this weekend.  If you look closely, you will see some of my books for sale too – the Twisted Nightmares anthology for instance!  My wife is practicing her table set up.  What do you think?  Click each one to enlarge…

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More Crossovers

Crossovers, or mash-ups, are where you take one or more things, usually pop culture items, and mix them together, hopefully with comic or thought provoking results.  For more of these, type “crossover” into the search box on my home page.  Enjoy!

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Vote for Kip Mussatt and Toni Darling!

Please sign up at this site so you can vote for Kip Mussatt and Toni Darling, both awesome people!  Toni Darling cosplays Lady Thor among other characters and Kipp Mussatt (Kipsworld) is the artist responsible for the painting below as well as many other great art pieces.  Here is here post, which I am re-posting here:

Hey so I’m in another art contest to be in a book. Toni and I would both appreciate your support. The popular vote will end up being on one of the covers + cash prize. I could still end up being selected to be in the book as I was with my image of Toni as “D’Mitra”, but it would be really nice to be on the cover 

You can vote here (only once):
http://www.infectedbyart.com/contestpiece.asp?piece=1246

So I submitted this piece along with a few others a while back to another book contest.  Voting ends in Nov.  You can only vote once per piece and only on a few pieces.  I would greatly appreciate your support.  If I end up on one of the covers I will be giving away a few copies to some lucky fans!

Here is the image of @[101686536618661:274:Toni Darling] "Avenger" that I would like you to support!  Thanks.

http://www.infectedbyart.com/contestpiece.asp?piece=1246
So I submitted this piece along with a few others a while back to another book contest. Voting ends in Nov. You can only vote once per piece and only on a few pieces. I would greatly appreciate your support. If I end up on one of the covers I will be giving away a few copies to some lucky fans!

Here is the image of Toni Darling “Avenger” that I would like you to support! Thanks.

http://www.infectedbyart.com/contestpiece.asp?piece=1246

 

 

 

 

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Very Unusual Trees

Removed by request.

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Price versus Value

I must first confess that although my nerd/geek credentials are solid, I hold a Master’s Degree in Managerial Economics.  Oddly, your fields of study and your career warp your thinking.  When I was managing 7-11 stores I thought in terms of inventory, rack spacing, sales turn and shrinkage (product shrinkage not the kind you are snickering about).  When I received my electronic engineering degree and worked on avionics systems, it was voltage, current, flow, resistance, capacitance and reaction.  When I received my degree in Computer Science, it was all input, processing, output, feedback.  With economics it was all about maximizing your utils by matching marginal costs with marginal demand.  These studies have to a degree hard-wired my brain.

Price-vs-Value-Adelante-Live

Culture has the same effect on us all.  The constant stream of advertising and consumerism has created a sense of price but has neglected value.  I used to try to explain to my wife the difference between price and value when I was managing portfolios.  For instance, price of a stock can go down because of factors in the overall market and rumors.  The value of the stock may be higher.  People can take their capital away from a sector or the whole market due to unrelated circumstances.  If a company still has great sales, products, or even assets, it is worth more than its price.  Once I owned stock in a company with stock valuation less than the auction price of its plants, land and equipment.  Basically, if the company never made another dime, it could have liquidated and been worth more than its price.  Other times companies look like they have great prices – for instance penny stocks – but are not worth it.  A company in the red and going under is worth a negative amount and a penny per share is too much.

price-and-value

So it is with my life.  I used to chase the almighty dollar and a big part of me still wants that.  I learned that my wife, kids, friends, dogs and pursuit of writing are higher in value.  Still, there is that constant cultural nagging for me to jump back in and make the big bucks.  I was thinking about this as I dusted off the top of one of my comic book boxes.  It is a long skinny white box made specifically for storing them.  I have some really nice X-Men, Wolverine, Cable, Superman and other comics in there from twenty years ago.  I put them all with backing, special plastic slips and rigid upright dividers.  I plan to reread them and I realized how anal and OCB I am about it.  I am not willing to get any stain or crease in them.  My kids, adults now, probably have horrible memories about having to read the comics on a flat clean surface and turn the pages just so in order not to crease them.

comic books

The funny thing is that I have no intention of ever selling them and I never bought any collectibles as an “investment.”  Even so, I am compulsive about keeping them in mint condition.  I value my collections of books, comic books, postage stamps, figurines and sports cards completely with their emotional and sentimental value, but still society has implanted this thought that I must preserve them so their price will be high.  Strange.

My older relatives were upset when I was just a child because my Grandfather gave me his extensive stamp collection.  Think early American stamps – like all of them – in this collection.  His own sons wanted them bad.  Why did he give them to me, just a little kid?  In his words, “I know Michael will never sell them.”  It’s true.  I’m over 50 now and still have every stamp.  I’ll never get rid of them.  My goal is to find someone who loves them as much as me and pass them on.

stamp collection

Thinking about these things in detail is how I remind myself to focus on value, not price.  To focus on a good life, not a financially wealthy one.  It surprises me how hard it is to walk away from a life that was literally killing me with stress and producing no legacy.  I was leaving footprints on the beach only to be washed away by the next wave.  I know this has been a rambling post, but I hope it will help to inspire and remind you as well to pursue the things that are important to you and resist the mindset created by consumerism.

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Artists stencil 9,000 bodies onto Normandy beach to mark Peace Day

Haunting reminder of millions of lives lost in war as artists stencil 9,000 bodies onto Normandy beach to mark Peace Day

  • British led project covered the famous coastline in poignant silhouettes
  • A team of 500 artists and volunteers contributed the moving installation
  • The ‘fallen’ were left to be washed away by the tide at the end of the day

By AARON SHARP

PUBLISHED: 08:05 EST, 23 September 2013 | UPDATED: 12:20 EST, 23 September 2013

A pair of British artists have created this stunning installation of 9,000 silhouettes on a D-Day Landings beach to mark international Peace Day.

The project, named, ‘The Fallen’ is a tribute to the civilians, German forces and Allies who lost their lives during the Operation Neptune landing on June 6, 1944.

The design was the brainchild of Jamie Wardley, 33, and Andy Moss, 50.

Together with a team of volunteers the pair travelled to Arromanches beach, Normandy, to create the silhouettes, which were individually drawn into the sand.

Peace Day tribute on the Arromanches beach of NormandyMoving: The Peace Day tribute is a poignant reminder the thousands who died during Operation Overlord

D-Day tributes on the Arromanches beach, NormandyConcept: According to artists Jamie Wardley, 33, and Andy Moss, 50, the idea behind the piece was to create a visual representation of loss on an unimaginable scale

 

Those taking part made the shape of a person by putting down a stencil and raking the surface to create a distinctive figure.

The shapes were then left to the mercy of the tide which washed away the ‘fallen’ after around four and a half hours.

Speaking of the idea behind the project Wardley said: ‘The Fallen is a sobering reminder of what happens when peace is not present.

‘The idea is to create a visual representation of what is otherwise unimaginable, the thousands of human lives lost during the hours of the tide during the Second World War Normandy landings.

‘People understand that so many lives were lost that day but it’s incredibly difficult to picture that number.

D-Day tribute created by artists on the Arromanches beach in NormandySand men: The team of artists and volunteers created 9,000 of the shadows which were eventually reclaimed by the sea 

D-Day tribute on the Arromanches beach in normandyTeamwork: The project was originally made of 60 people, but after locals learned about the tribute they quickly joined in

 

D-Day tribute on the Arromanches beach in normandyLending a hand: By the end of the day it is estimated that 500 people had chipped in to create the stunning beach art

 

‘You could see the horrific casualty of war when you stood on the cliff looking down at the beach.

‘Watching the tide come in and wash the bodies away was symbolic of all the lives lost in all wars, not just during the Normandy Landings.’

Veterans and families, including some who have lost loved ones in recent conflicts have been involved in the project.

Wardley, who has been working with partner since 2009, said: ‘We turned up to the beach with a team of 60 people but by the end we had over 500 people taking part.

‘There were people from all over the world who had heard about the event and travelled all the way to France to take part.

D-Day tributes on the Arromanches beach in NormandyUnity: Operation Neptune is remembered as one of the great showings of wartime unity as the Allied forced launched their assault on Nazi occupied France

 

D-Day tribute on the Arromanches beach, NormandyReclaimed: The installation was designed so that the sea would wash over the bodies and wipe them from the beach in a moving reminder of the tragedy of war

 

Artists Andy Moss, right and Jamie WardleyAchievement: Artists Andy Moss, right and Jamie Wardley, left said they hoped their art would remind people of the value of peace.

‘There were others who happened to be walking by and wanted to get involved.

‘It showed that people from all over totally understood the message behind it and I found it very overwhelming.

‘Some people told us that they had lost family in the Second World War and others said they had lost loved ones in Afghanistan and wanted to pay a tribute to them.

‘We finished all the stencils at about 7.30pm and everyone gathered and waited for the tide to come in.

‘The last silhouette was washed away at about 10pm and it was incredibly moving.”

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2429903/Peace-Day-Reminder-millions-lives-lost-war-artists-stencil-9-000-bodies-Normandy-beach.html#ixzz2fxxYUOE3
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Funny Signs, Headlines and Stories

For your mid-week enterntainment:

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True Elegance and Beauty

Audrey Hepburn and Grace Kelly – class.  I hope and believe had they lived today they would be the same elegant women they were in their era.  In a world with Lady Gaga, Madonna, Britney Spears, Lindsay Lohan and Miley Cyrus twerking, will we ever see a scene of such elegance and beauty again:

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