The WOW Science Thread

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pharvey
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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James Cameron - first solo dive to the bottom of the Mariana trench.....7 miles down.





The Hollywood director spoke with reporters after he successfully reached the Mariana Trench – seven miles below the ocean's surface.

"My feeling was one of complete isolation from all of humanity. I felt as though literally in the space of one day, I've gone to another planet and come back," said Cameron.

The dive follows seven years of planning and the design and construction of a specialised submarine that allowed Cameron to withstand the immense pressure at the ocean floor.

"The whole sub actually squeezes down almost three inches in length just because of the pressure. The sphere that I'm in actually shrinks. The window that I look out actually pushes in towards me under 16,000 pounds per square inch of pressure."

Cameron said that there were no large creatures there – only small shrimp-like animals that were an inch in length.

"Any of the animals that live there are adapted to this extreme pressure, this total darkness. They're usually white, they have no pigment. Some of them have eyes to see bioluminescence, some of them have no eyes at all. It's a completely alien world."

Cameron is the first person to make a solo dive to the trench. He spent around three hours on the bottom collecting research samples for marine biology, geology and geophysics and taking still photographs and video footage of the trench.


:cheers: :cheers:
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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I'm not sure if this falls under "WOW Science" or "Amazing Nature"... but because of Nasa's ability to even get the photo I put it here.

Don't anyone dare say this is caused by man made "solar" warming! :P :P :P

"Supermassive swirling solar tornado 5 times the size of Earth

Image
We're not sure your standard tornado shelter will keep you safe from this one

Tornadoes can be absolutely devastating here on Earth, costing billions of dollars yearly in property damage. But even the most severe of Earthly tornadoes has nothing on this behemoth: Scientists have recently discovered a massive supertornado on the surface of the Sun five times bigger than our own planet.

The swirling gas was discovered by NASA's Solar Dynamic Observatory satellite in September 2011. News of the tornado's existence was presented to the National Astronomy Meeting 2012 today in England. Clocking in at 186,000 miles per hour, the speeds of this tornado absolutely dwarf those of a storm on Earth. Terrestrial storms don't exactly get as hot as this tornado either: The solar storm's temperature ranges between 90,000 and 3.6 million degrees Fahrenheit.

While scientists have viewed large solar tornadoes in the past, this one is easily the biggest ever observed. The cause of the storm is believed to be the twisting of the Sun's magnetic field. A video of a similar storm is available below.

[Image source: NASA]"
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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Some really good video of the space shuttle Discovery arriving in Washington DC. Pete :cheers:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-17745802

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-17743804
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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Some really good video of the space shuttle Discovery arriving in Washington DC...
I was impressed with the flypast they did over the runway in Florida which you can see near the start of this clip:
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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_59772420_philipsledbulb.jpg
_59772420_philipsledbulb.jpg (7.5 KiB) Viewed 784 times
LED bulbs should last about 100,000 hours - giving them a life of about 20 years


US introduces $60 LED light bulb

http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-17788178

A prize-winning light bulb that lasts for 20 years is going on sale in the US on Sunday - also known as Earth Day.

Made by Dutch electronics giant Philips, the bulb swaps filaments for light-emitting diodes to provide illumination.

Using LEDs endows the light with a long life and a hefty price tag. The first versions are set to cost $60 (£37).

Philips has arranged discounts with shops that will sell the bulb meaning some could buy it for only $20 (£12).

The bulb triumphed in the Bright Tomorrow competition run by the US Department of Energy that aimed to find an energy efficient alternative to the 60-watt incandescent light bulb.

The DoE challenged firms to develop a design that gave out a warm light similar to that from an incandescent bulbs but was much more energy efficient.

Philips was the only entrant for the competition and its design underwent 18 months of testing before being declared a winner.

A cheaper and less efficient version of the LED bulb is already sold by Philips in the US and Europe.

LED bulbs face competition from compact fluorescent lights which are almost as energy efficient and cost a lot less.

Sales of more energy efficient bulbs are being aided by official moves to end production of higher wattage incandescent bulbs.

Production of 100 watt bulbs has ceased in the US and Europe. Production of 60 watt bulbs has been stopped in Europe and is being phased out in the US. From 2014, incandescent bulbs of 40 watts or above will be banned in the US.
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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Japan tsunami debris moves towards US and Canada

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/ma ... -us-canada

Wreckage including lumber, footballs, parts of roofs and factories, and even bikes will soon start coming ashore in North America

Wreckage from Japan's tsunami – fishing gear and furniture, footballs and ships – has swept across the Pacific far faster than expected, with thousands of tonnes projected to land on North American shores this year.

Scientists believe lighter objects such as buoys and oil drums began reaching land last November or December. The rest is spread over thousands of miles of ocean between the Midway atoll and the northern islands of Hawaii.

About 95% will probably never come ashore and is destined for that massive swirl of floating plastic known as the north Pacific garbage patch. The remaining fraction is due to reach the west coast of the US and Canada in October.

No one expects to wake up one morning to a tsunami of rubbish. "It is not like you are going to be standing on the beach looking at the horizon and see a wall of debris come in," said Nicholas Mallos, a marine debris expert at the Ocean Conservancy.

But there have already been some bizarre finds. This week a beachcomber in British Columbia found a moving crate containing a rusting Harley-Davidson motorcycle registered to Japan's Miyagi prefecture, which absorbed the brunt of the tsunami. The crate also contained a set of golf clubs.

Last month a a football washed up on an uninhabited island off Alaska and was traced to its owner, a Japanese schoolboy from the town of Rikuzentakata which was almost flattened by the tsunami. A 160ft fishing boat, the Ryou-Un Maru, drifting to within 300 miles of the British Columbia coast before it was deemed a hazard to shipping and sunk by the US coastguard, was also found.

Washington state officials last week put up posters advising residents what may arrive on their beaches, from common litter to aluminium canisters possibly containing insecticide, and derelict boats.

Personal belongings should be treated with respect, the posters said. "It is extremely unlikely any human remains from the tsunami will reach the US," they added, but if people did find a body they should call the authorities.

The wreckage stems from a vast stretch of Japan's northern coast and was swept away several days before the meltdown at the Fukushima reactor, so radiation is not seen as a potential hazard, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa).

The Japanese government estimates 4.8m tonnes of debris – parts of factorybuildings, houses, cars and trees – were swept into the ocean during the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

Heavy items sank to the ocean floor close to shore. But at least 1.5m tonnes of debris, including small ships, lumber, and even steel beams was carried off by currents and began making the 4,500-mile journey across the Pacific. Within a month of the tsunami, the debris had dispersed and now stretches across 4,000 nautical miles of the north Pacific. Scientists have only a sketchy notion of what is still out there, how fast it is travelling, and where and when it might land.

"Most people probably think there is a huge pile of debris moving across the ocean like a carpet," said Jan Hafner, of the International Pacific Research Centre, in Honolulu, Hawaii. "But it is very sparse, very patchy."

Projections made by Nikolai Maximenko and Hafner suggested most of the wreckage would reach North America between March 2013 and March 2014.

But that did not account for buoyant materials, such as oyster floats, foot- and volleyballs and lightbulbs, which bobbed on the water, and were propelled by winds and the ocean current.

A football or a big float sitting on the water exposed to the wind is carried by the wind more than the currents," Hafner said. "Wind blows faster than the typical surface current so those types of debris are moving faster."

Officials logged hundreds of reports of those outliers from Oregon, Washington state, and British Columbia before conceding it was tsunami wreckage.

They argued many of the findings could not be definitively identified. People were overly excited, said Kinji Shinoda, the deputy consul general in Vancouver. "Several newspapers were reporting that they found pop bottles or cans," he said. "But in some of the photos the bottles actually had Chinese characters, not Japanese, so nobody knows where it came from."

A more definitive picture of the debris is unlikely to emerge before June or July when two privately-funded expeditions are due to travel into the north Pacific. But the latest computer models from the Japanese government and Noaa suggest most of the wreckage that will make landfall will begin washing up this October and continue into late 2013.

Washington, Oregon, British Columbia and Alaska will get much of the debris, while most of California will be protected by currents pushing objects back out to sea. Hawaii, however, is in line for several deposits of tsunami trash.

"It's going to bounce off the western shore of North America, swing back south and come back towards Hawaii and enter that big circular area called the North Pacific Garbage Patch," said Bill Francis, board president of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation in Long Beach, California, which will be leading one expedition. "I heard someone say it's like a big toilet that never flushes. Anything that floats is going to stay out there and stay out there."

The US navy and coastguard will be tracking accumulations of debris which could pose a danger to shipping.

The tsunami swept as much debris into the ocean in one day as is usually dumped in a year, threatening wildlife and the Pacific's ecology, conservationists said. Coral is smothered by plastic, fish get trapped in drifting nets. Birds die from eating plastic.

"It is clearly already an ocean problem. We know that all of these hundreds of tonnes of debris are in the ocean. We know that actually all of the plastic debris contains a lot of toxins, and we know there are other types of toxins that would have got into the ocean from the tsunami and so all of this debris represents a hazard to navigation and a terrible distress to the ocean ecosystem," said Mary Crowley, founder of the Ocean Voyages Institute, which will also be leading an expedition.
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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ah sweet sweet Schadenfreude

Highly Religious People Are Less Motivated by Compassion Than Are Non-Believers

ScienceDaily (Apr. 30, 2012) — "Love thy neighbor" is preached from many a pulpit. But new research from the University of California, Berkeley, suggests that the highly religious are less motivated by compassion when helping a stranger than are atheists, agnostics and less religious people.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 140035.htm

:neener: :neener: :neener:
"Science flew men to the moon. Religion flew men into buildings."

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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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My parents were highly religious, and to use a Brit term... bollocks!
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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hhf
You can use the 'European' version of that - it is bolleaux
or
The Asian version is - Borrox

Good to see you picking up the lingo :wink:
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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The Origin of Mysterious, Dark-Skinned Blonds Discovered
LiveScience.comBy Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer | LiveScience.com – Thu, May 3, 2012



A blond-haired Solomon Island child gives the camera two thumbs up. Research published in the journal Science has uncovered the gene responsible for these fair tresses. http://news.yahoo.com/origin-mysterious ... 39858.html

Residents of the Solomon Islands in the Pacific have some of the darkest skin seen outside of Africa. They also have the highest occurrence of blond hair seen in any population outside of Europe. Now, researchers have found the single gene that explains these fair tresses.

A single mutation is responsible for almost half of the variation in Solomon Islanders' hair color, the scientists reported Thursday (May 3) in the journal Science. Most strikingly, this gene mutation seems to have arisen in the Pacific, not been brought in by fair-haired Europeans intermarrying with islanders.

"[T]he human characteristic of blond hair arose independently in equatorial Oceania," study researcher Eimear Kenny, a postodoctoral scholar at the Stanford University School of Medicine, said in a statement. "That's quite unexpected and fascinating."

Kenny and her colleagues traveled to the remote Solomon islands, where study co-author Sean Myles, now a professor at Nova Scotia Agricultural College, had previously noted a surprising number of blonds.

"They have this very dark skin and bright blond hair. It was mind-blowing," Myles said in a statement. "As a geneticist on the beach watching the kids playing, you count up the frequency of kids with blond hair, and say, 'Wow, it's 5 to 10 percent.'" [Photos of Beautiful Beaches]

That's not very far off from the proportion of blond-haired people in Europe, Kenny said. The researchers gathered saliva from 43 blond and 42 dark-haired Solomon Islanders to analyze for clues to the genes behind their hair color.

A genome-wide analysis turned up a shockingly clear result, rare in the world of genetics where a single trait can be influenced by dozens or more genes. A gene called TYRP1, which resides on the ninth chromosome of human's 23 pairs of chromosomes, explained 46.4 percent of the variation in the islanders' hair color. (Chromosomes are coiled packets of DNA.) A mutation in this gene affects an enzyme known to be involved in human pigmentation, the researchers found.

This mutation doesn't appear in European genomes, an analysis of genomes from 52 human populations around the world revealed. Rather, it seems to have arisen independently and persisted in the Melanesian population.

That makes the gene different from the one responsible for blue eyes, which arose from a single common ancestor between 6,000 and 10,000 years ago. Before then, there were no blue eyes, they said.

The find solves a nifty genetic mystery, but it also highlights the dangers of assuming that genome findings from one population will translate to another, said study author Carlos Bustamante, a professor of genetics at Stanford.

"If we're going to be designing the next generation of medical treatments using genetic information and we don't have a really broad spectrum of populations included, you could disproportionately benefit some populations and harm others," Bustamante said.

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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^ I spent a month (over two trips) in the Solomon Islands and besides the underwater life (best in the world IMHO) those cute little dark brown kids with big blond(e) afros were one of the most amazing sites I've seen anywhere. Both times I was with a group of divers and everyone probably shot more film of the kids than of the sea life.
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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Google's driverless car passes Nevada test
May 9, 2012 4:29 pm

Las Vegas - Google has cleared a major road block in its quest to introduce self-driving cars to the roads of the world.

The Nevada Motor Vehicles Department has given one of the company’s prototypes the first-ever license to drive itself, after test runs down the bustling Las Vegas Strip and other streets showed the vehicle to be as safe - or safer - than human drivers.

The modified Toyota Prius, steered by sophisticated software using sensors, radar and cameras, was issued a special red licence plate with an infinity symbol and the words Autonomous Car to differentiate it from regular vehicles.

"When there comes a time that vehicle manufacturers market autonomous vehicles to the public, that infinity symbol will appear on a green license plate," Department Director Bruce Breslow said.

Nevada became the first state in the country to develop licensing criteria for self-driving cars when it unveiled the new regulations in March.

Until now Google’s test fleet of self-driving cars always carried a human driver ready to intervene in emergencies, but its new status in Nevada will allow the company to start testing cars with no humans aboard.//DPA
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Re: The WOW Science Thread

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...showed the vehicle to be as safe - or safer - than human drivers.
This is a very good point; when you see how badly many people drive, automated cars have got to be an improvement. I've worked on aircraft autopilots for years and they don't attempt to do the types of dumb things that people try to do on the road every day.
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The Antikythera mechanism

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The Antikythera mechanism

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
280px-NAMA_Machine_d'Anticythère_1.jpg
280px-NAMA_Machine_d'Anticythère_1.jpg (27.57 KiB) Viewed 657 times
This device was discovered by chance by divers in 1900 off a Greek island (Antikythera).
I've just watched a truly fascinating BBC4 documentary called THE TWO THOUSAND-YEAR-OLD COMPUTER, which explains how modern technology has finally unravelled exactly how this amazing piece of machinery works and, probably, who made it.

Definitely not to be missed.
This is the way
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Re: The Antikythera mechanism

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dtaai-maai wrote:The Antikythera mechanism

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
280px-NAMA_Machine_d'Anticythère_1.jpg
This device was discovered by chance by divers in 1900 off a Greek island (Antikythera).
I've just watched a truly fascinating BBC4 documentary called THE TWO THOUSAND-YEAR-OLD COMPUTER, which explains how modern technology has finally unravelled exactly how this amazing piece of machinery works and, probably, who made it.

Definitely not to be missed.
Thanks for the heads up DM - will have to watch out for this one. :cheers: :cheers:
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