Wednesday, August 10
More From the Webb Telescope
“Artemis I shows that we can do big things. Things that unite people, things that benefit humanity. Things like Apollo that inspire the world.” — Bill Nelson, NASA Administrator
That was followed two days later with a deeper dive into the mission’s timeline and operations from our Johnson Space Center.
This image of the Cartwheel and its companion galaxies is a composite from Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI), which reveals details that are difficult to see in the individual images alone.
This galaxy formed as the result of a high-speed collision that occurred about 400 million years ago. The Cartwheel is composed of two rings, a bright inner ring, and a colorful outer ring.
Common Viruses and Alzheimer's
Varicella zoster virus (VZV), which commonly causes chickenpox and shingles, activates herpes simplex virus (HSV) from dormancy in neural tissue grown in vitro, which then leads to an increase in plaque deposits and decrease in neural signaling — hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. Credit: Tufts University
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia in older adults and the 7th leading cause of death in the United States, according to the National Institute on Aging.
It can begin almost imperceptibly, often masquerading in the early months or years as forgetfulness that is very common in older age. What causes Alzheimer’s disease remains largely a mystery.
But researchers using a three-dimensional human tissue culture model mimicking the brain, have shown that varicella zoster virus (VZV), which commonly causes chickenpox and shingles, may activate herpes simplex (HSV), another common virus, to set in motion the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
Tuesday, August 9
Living in Tennessee
This morning, FOX News had a segment on the hundreds of people that were leaving Democratic-controlled states and moving to Tennessee, specifically NASHVILLE. But, the state of Tennessee is not just about Nashville...
- When I think of Nashville, I think of the home of Country Music...
- When I think of Memphis, I think of the home of Elvis Presley...
- When I think of Bristol, I think of the home of NASCAR....
- When I think of Knoxville, I think of the home of Oak Ridge National Laboratories...
- When I think of Chattanooga, I think of Glenn Miller's Chattanooga Choo Choo and the revitalized riverfront, similar to the riverfront in San Antonio, Texas...
- Pidgeon Forge
- Dollywood
- Gatlinburg
Relax... Don't Worry...
Dan Bongino took Rush Limbaugh's spot on talk radio and moved from NYC to Florida and is a regular guest on FOX News... Today he was interviewed on FOX News as a result of the FBI's raid of former President Trump's home in Florida... claiming that Trump took classified documents when he left the Whitehouse, knowing that his defense would be, I declassified them before I left office... but they did the deed anyway.
Dan was LIVID, to say the least and while he said that he was a conservative and therefore a Republican but not because of the current Republicans in Congress because they are a DO NOTHING group of politicians and need to immediately be removed. Dan said the GOP now TALKS BOLD AND BIG but when it comes to action, they accomplish nothing.
Dan Bongino pretty much reflects my sentiments about all of the Congressional Republicans except for Lindsey Graham and a couple of others that FOX News interviews regularly...
The Democrats play dirty but piss, bitch, and moan when others play dirty against them...
The Democrats lie and really do not feel guilty about their lies as they continue to make these lies daily...
The Democrats are moving closer and closer to a Socialistic form of government where the government provides you with everything -- just like the movie/show STAR TREK...
The Democrats have mainstream media covering the ASSES, networks like CNN, CBS, ABC, MSNBC, PBR...
If this is the kind of government that you want... then have it... and, the reason that I say this is because HISTORICALLY all socialistic governments FAIL...
History always repeats itself whether we like it or not and regardless if this is what some of want or don't want...
In order to have a socialistic government, two things have to happen.
First - the government must insure that it can collect taxes from the WEALTHY in order to pay for the socialistic society... USA millionaires and billionaires already have their money shelter away from taxes in the Grand Caymans.
Second - the government must insure that ALL BUSINESSES will be willing to pay their fair share of whatever... or be taken over (OWNED) by the federal government... then the government can manage the business any way they like.
Do you really think first or second will happen in the US of A?
Right now, about 70% of what we receive is considered to already be SOCIALISTIC in nature, such as:
- Public Education
- Public Transportation
- Public Parks and Recreation
- Social Security
- Medicare
- Unemployment Insurance
These programs already cost the country so much money that we are ASSHOLE deep in debt with CHINA owning ONE-THIRD of that debt... can you imagine that China owns 1/3 of our debt?
What do we do when they DEMAND their money back?
What I do...
I have been writing poetry since 1972, opinion articles since 2000, and novels since 2015... but, I am not saying that any of my writing is actually any good because none of it has been published yet and I doubt that it ever will but that does not deter me from writing.
I have also had professional art classes at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington DC in: charcoal, oils, acrylics, and oils. I also spent 8 years (4-5 hours a week) receiving training in photography from a professional photographer who had a studio connected to the building in which I was working.
So... what all did this do for me?
Not much of anything actually... although, I have something to do each day that I have been retired and continue to be retired.
I suppose that the more I write the better I get at communicating both orally and written... and, I am sure that has helped me in my career and personal life... but, other than that, I don't suppose it has made any difference at all... still, I am obsessed with writing every day.
Do I think having an ability to write is important?
YES!
But.... verbal communications is much more important... as when one speaks, one can motivate or demotivate people... using the wrong word can send the wrong signals. I remember a northern plant manager came down here to the south and made some comment about his employees being "rednecks" because he thought that was an appropriate word to use... and, 1,500 people held that against him for over a year.
This plant manager did not know his audience...
When you get to be my age you have all kinds of stories to tell based upon one's experiences... these stories can be learning experiences if the listener is open-minded and willing to learn.
All Around Me
Dead at the age of 73... is Olivia Newton-John... only one year younger than me...
I saw a video clip online today of a middle-aged woman holding a sand crab in her hand that started to walk up her arm...
Another photo of a younger female laying on a tree limb twice as big as she was with both arms wrapped around hugging it...
An advertisement flashed on my monitor screen that I could rent a two-bedroom, 800-1000 square feet for about $1,000 in Knoxville, TN... based upon the location because the range of prices for the same basic apartment went from $800 to over $1,500...
Life is operating all around me... the good... the bad... and the indifferent... and, I can see it if I want to look for it...
I went to therapy for my left hip area today and was told that I have bursitis... I was shown an exercise to do that immediately helped me walk up steps... I was impressed...
How often do we take for granted that which we have all around us? And, why is it, do you suppose, that we do this? Are we just too busy to see? Do we not care about life around us, instead focusing on ourselves?
It seems, at least to me, that all we care about these days is:
- getting out of school
- finding somewhere to work not necessarily a career
- finding a spouse and having children
- drinking alcohol and having sex
- watching sports of all kinds
- owning a pickup truck or SUV
- having fun when not working
- not worrying about getting a serious disease
- not thinking about one's future nor really planning (or caring) about retirement
- millions of people around the world live in poverty
- millions of people around the world do not have enough to eat daily
- millions of people around the world are homeless
- millions of people around the world have had no education
Americans Relocating to Europe
With rising interest rates, the COVID-19 pandemic that gave many a new perspective on life and the sting of inflation, more Americans are now looking to Europe for a more relaxed lifestyle.
Countries such as Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece are luring in overseas buyers seeking more of the calm, sun-filled beach days, according to a report by Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices.
The rising interest in moving to these countries can be contributed to many workers who are still working remotely since the onset of the pandemic.
“We don’t expect activity to be near the levels we saw in 2021 or the first part of 2022, but the Spanish market has been very resilient,” Ugo Bagration, head of business expansion at the agency’s office in Marbella, said in the report. “It’s proving to be a hub and destination for foreign investment within the real estate market.”
Spain has seen an influx of buyers from North America due its affordability, Bagration explained. That being said, because of the high property taxes in the country, others are opting for countries with less of a burden, such as Italy.
Rome in particular, is seeing more high-net-worth families investing in property, as many residences have been updated in recent years, according to Marcus Benussi, managing partner at Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices. READ MORE...
We Were Ocean Dwellers in Early Life
By studying the genetic tree of life, scientists have determined that the first life on Earth may have lived underwater, where it would be shielded from harmful ultraviolet light from the sun.
The origin of life on Earth remains a mystery, but scientists are slowly putting together genetic puzzle pieces to learn more about how the first life on Earth lived, between 2.5 and 4 billion years ago. Now, scientists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of California, Riverside, have used machine learning to trace the evolutionary development of a protein-based molecule called rhodopsin back to some of the most ancient microbial life-forms to have existed on Earth. The results may also inform the search for life beyond Earth, the scientists argue.
"It's like taking the DNA of many grandchildren to reproduce the DNA of their grandparents," astrobiologist Edward Schwieterman of the University of California Riverside, a co-author on the new research, said in a statement(opens in new tab).
The researchers suspect that rhodopsin provided the battery power for early life, turning light from the sun into energy. On modern Earth, rhodopsin can absorb blue, green, yellow and orange light. (It is also tangentially related to the light-absorbing rods and cones that our eyes use to see the world.)
Schwieterman and his colleagues began by using machine learning to look for the genes that control rhodopsin in as wide a swathe of life on Earth as possible, then identifying those genes that had the longest lineages.
This analysis suggested that ancient rhodopsin absorbed just blue and green light. This reduced capability makes sense in a scenario in which early life may have originated in the ocean, where blue and green wavelengths of light penetrate deeper into a column of water than other optical wavelengths: Being able to absorb these wavelengths to derive energy would have been vitally important. READ MORE...
Room Temperature Superconductivity
Less than two years after shocking the science world with the discovery of a material capable of room-temperature superconductivity, a team of UNLV physicists has upped the ante once again by reproducing the feat at the lowest pressure ever recorded.
In other words, science is closer than it's ever been to a usable, replicable material that could one day revolutionize how energy is transported. UNLV physicist Ashkan Salamat and colleague Ranga Dias, a physicist with the University of Rochester, made international headlines in 2020 by reporting room-temperature superconductivity for the first time. To achieve the feat, the scientists chemically synthesized a mix of carbon, sulfur, and hydrogen first into a metallic state, and then even further into a room-temperature superconducting state using extreme pressure—267 gigapascals—conditions you'd only find in nature near the center of the Earth. Fast forward less than two years, and the team is now able to complete the feat at just 91 GPa—roughly one-third the pressure initially reported. The new findings were published this month as an advance article in the journal Chemical Communications.
A super discovery
Through a detailed tuning of the composition of carbon, sulfur, and hydrogen used in the original breakthrough, scientists are able to produce a material at a lower pressure that retains its state of superconductivity.
"These are pressures at a level difficult to comprehend and evaluate outside of the lab, but our current trajectory shows that it's possible achieve relatively high superconducting temperatures at consistently lower pressures—which is our ultimate goal," said study lead author Gregory Alexander Smith, a graduate student researcher with UNLV's Nevada Extreme Conditions Laboratory (NEXCL). "At the end of the day, if we want to make devices beneficial to societal needs, then we have to reduce the pressure needed to create them." READ MORE...
Monday, August 8
USA Makes Discovery Then Gives It To China
When a group of engineers and researchers gathered in a warehouse in Mukilteo, Wash., 10 years ago, they knew they were onto something big. They scrounged up tables and chairs, cleared out space in the parking lot for experiments and got to work.
They were building a battery — a vanadium redox flow battery — based on a design created by two dozen U.S. scientists at a government lab. The batteries were about the size of a refrigerator, held enough energy to power a house, and could be used for decades.
"It was beyond promise," said Chris Howard, one of the engineers who worked there for a U.S. company called UniEnergy. "We were seeing it functioning as designed, as expected."
But that's not what happened. Instead of the batteries becoming the next great American success story, the warehouse is now shuttered and empty. All the employees who worked there were laid off.
Restoring Cell & Organ Function After Death
Yale-developed technology restores cell and organ function in pigs after death, a potential organ transplant breakthrough.
Within just minutes of the final heartbeat, a cascade of biochemical events triggered by a lack of blood flow, nutrients, and oxygen begins to destroy a body’s cells and organs. However, a team of researchers at Yale University has discovered that massive and permanent cellular failure doesn’t have to happen so quickly.
Using a new technology the scientists developed that delivers a specially designed cell-protective fluid to organs and tissues, the team restored blood circulation and other cellular functions in pigs a full hour after their deaths. They report their findings in the August 3 edition of the journal Nature.
Their results may help extend the health of human organs during surgery and expand the availability of donor organs, the authors said.
“All cells do not die immediately, there is a more protracted series of events,” said David Andrijevic, associate research scientist in neuroscience at Yale School of Medicine and co-lead author of the study. “It is a process in which you can intervene, stop, and restore some cellular function.” READ MORE...