Friday, 29 March 2019

The Voyage to Interstellar Space

The Voyage to Interstellar Space

By all means, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 shouldn’t even be here. Now in interstellar space, they are pushing the limits of spacecraft and exploration, journeying through the cosmic neighborhood, giving us our first direct look into the space beyond our star.
But when they launched in 1977, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 had a different mission: to explore the outer solar system and gather observations directly at the source, from outer planets we had only seen with remote studies. But now, four decades after launch, they’ve journeyed farther than any other spacecraft from Earth; into the cold, quiet world of interstellar space.
Originally designed to measure the properties of the giant planets, the instruments on both spacecraft have spent the past few decades painting a picture of the propagation of solar events from our Sun. And the Voyagers' new mission focuses not only on effects on space from within our heliosphere — the giant bubble around the Sun filled up by the constant outflow of solar particles called the solar wind — but from outside of it. Though they once helped us look closer at the planets and their relationship to the Sun, they now give us clues about the nature of interstellar space as the spacecraft continue their journey.
The environment they explore is colder, subtler and more tenuous than ever before, and yet the Voyagers continue on, exploring and measuring the interstellar medium, a smorgasbord of gas, plasma and particles from stars and gas regions not originating from our system. Three of the spacecraft's 10 instruments are the major players that study how space inside the heliosphere differs from interstellar space. Looking at this data together allows scientist to piece together our best-yet picture of the edge of the heliosphere and the interstellar medium. Here are the stories they tell.

The Magnetometer

Illustration of Voyager
Illustration of NASA’s Voyager spacecraft, with the Magnetometer (MAG) instrument and its boom displayed.
Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Mary Pat Hrybyk-Keith
On the Sun Spot, we have been exploring the various instruments on Voyager 2 one at a time, and analyzing how scientists read the individual sets of data sent to Earth from the far-reaching spacecraft. But one instrument we have not yet talked about is Voyager 2’s Magnetometer, or MAG for short.
During the Voyagers' first planetary mission, the MAG was designed to investigate the magnetospheres of planets and their moons, determining the physical mechanics and processes of the interactions of those magnetic fields and the solar wind. After that mission ended, the Voyager spacecraft studied the magnetic field of the heliosphere and beyond, observing the magnetic reach of the Sun and the changes that occur within that reach during solar activity.
Getting the magnetic data as we travel further into space requires an interesting trick. Voyager spins itself around, in a calibration maneuver that allows Voyager to differentiate between the spacecraft's own magnetic field — that goes along for the ride as it spins — and the magnetic fields of the space it’s traveling through.
The initial peek into the magnetic field beyond the Sun’s influence happened when Voyager 1 crossed the heliopause in 2012. Scientists saw that within the heliosphere, the strength of the magnetic field was quite variable, changing and jumping as Voyager 1 moved through the heliosphere. These changes are due to solar activity. But once Voyager 1 crossed into interstellar space, that variability was silenced. Although the strength of the field was similar to what it was inside the heliosphere, it no longer had the variability associated with the Sun’s outbursts.
chart of Voyager MAG data
Magnetometer (MAG) data taken from Voyager 1 during its transition into interstellar space in 2012.
Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Jet Propulsion Laboratory
This graph shows the magnitude, or the strength, of the magnetic field around the heliopause from January 2012 out to May 2014. Before encountering the heliopause, marked by the orange line, the magnetic strength fluctuates quite a bit. After a bumpy ride through the heliopause in 2012, the magnetic strength stops fluctuating and begins to stabilize in 2013, once the spacecraft is far enough out into the interstellar medium.
In November 2018, Voyager 2 also crossed the heliopause and similarly experienced quite the bumpy ride out of the heliopause. Scientists are excited to see how its journey differs from its twin spacecraft.
Scientists are still working through the MAG data from Voyager 2, and are excited to see how Voyager 2’s journey differed from Voyager 1.

The Cosmic Ray Subsystem

Illustration of Voyager
Illustration of NASA’s Voyager spacecraft, with the Cosmic Ray Subsystem (CRS) highlighted.
Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Mary Pat Hrybyk-Keith
Much like the MAG, the Cosmic Ray Subsystem — called CRS — was originally designed to measure planetary systems. The CRS focused on the compositions of energetic particles in the magnetospheres of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Scientists used it to study the charged particles within the solar system and their distribution between the planets. Since it passed the planets, however, the CRS has been studying the heliosphere’s charged particles and — now — the particles in the interstellar medium. 
The CRS measures the count rate, or how many particles detected per second. It does this by using two telescopes: the High Energy Telescope, which measures high energy particles (70MeV) identifiable as interstellar particles, and the Low Energy Telescope, which measures low-energy particles (5MeV) that originate from our Sun. You can think of these particles like a bowling ball hitting a bowling pin versus a bullet hitting the same pin — both will make a measurable impact on the detector, but they're moving at vastly different speeds. By measuring the amounts of the two kinds of particles, Voyager can provide a sense of the space environment it’s traveling through.
charts from CRS instruments on Voyager 1 and Voyager 2
Scientists compared data from Voyager 1 with its 2012 crossing of the heliopause to watch for clue for when Voyager 2 would cross. In November 2018, the first clues came from the Cosmic Ray Subsystem!
Credits: NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory/NASA Headquarters/Patrick Koehn
These graphs show the count rate — how many particles per second are interacting with the CRS on average each day — of the galactic ray particles measured by the High Energy Telescope (top graph) and the heliospheric particles measured by the Low Energy Telescope (bottom graph). The line in red shows the data from Voyager 1, time shifted forward 6.32 years from 2012 to match up with the data from Voyager around November 2018, shown in blue.
CRS data from Voyager 2 on Nov. 5, 2018, showed the interstellar particle count rate of the High Energy Telescope increasing to count rates similar to what Voyager 1 saw then leveling out. Similarly, the Low Energy Telescope shows a severe decrease in heliospheric originating particles. This was a key indication that Voyager 2 had moved into interstellar space. Scientists can keep watching these counts to see if the composition of interstellar space particles changes along the journey.

The Plasma Instrument

Illustration of Voyager
Illustration of NASA’s Voyager spacecraft, with the Plasma Science Instrument (PLS) displayed.
Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Mary Pat Hrybyk-Keith
The Plasma Science instrument, or PLS, was made to measure plasma and ionized particles around the outer planets and to measure the solar wind’s influence on those planets. The PLS is made up of four Faraday cups, an instrument that measures the plasma as it passes through the cups and calculates the plasma’s speed, direction and density.
The plasma instrument on Voyager 1 was damaged during a fly-by of Saturn and had to be shut off long before Voyager 1 exited the heliosphere, making it unable to measure the interstellar medium’s plasma properties. With Voyager 2's crossing, scientists will get the first-ever plasma measurements of the interstellar medium.
Scientists predicted that interstellar plasma measured by Voyager 2 would be higher in density but lower in temperature and speed than plasma inside the heliosphere. And in November 2018, the instrument saw just that for the first time. This suggests that the plasma in this region is getting colder and slower, and, like cars slowing down on a freeway, is beginning to pile up around the heliopause and into the interstellar medium.
And now, thanks to Voyager 2’s PLS, we have a never-before-seen perspective on our heliosphere: The plasma velocity from Earth to the heliopause.
Voyager 2 PLS data chart
With Voyager 2 crossing the heliopause, scientists now have a new view of solar wind plasma across the heliosphere.
Credits: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory/ Michigan Institute of Technology/John Richardson
These three graphs tell an amazing story, summarizing a journey of 42 years in one plot. The top section of this graph shows the plasma velocity, how fast the plasma across the heliosphere is moving, against the distance out from Earth. The distance is in astronomical units; one astronomical unit is the average distance between the Sun and Earth, about 93 million miles. For context, Saturn is 10 AU from Earth, while Pluto is about 40 AU away.
The heliopause crossing happened at 120 AU, when the velocity of plasma coming out from the Sun drops to zero (seen on the top graph), and the outward flow of the plasma is diverted — seen in the increase in the two bottom graphs, which show the upwards and downward speeds (the normal velocity, middle graph) and the sideways speed of the solar wind (the tangential velocity, bottom graph) of the solar wind plasma, respectively. This means as the solar wind begins to interact with the interstellar medium, it is pushed out and away, like a wave hitting the side of a cliff.  
Looking at each instrument in isolation, however, does not tell the full story of what interstellar space at the heliopause looks like. Together, these instruments tell a story of the transition from the turbulent, active space within our Sun's influence to the relatively calm waters on the edge of interstellar space.
The MAG shows that the magnetic field strength decreases sharply in the interstellar medium. The CRS data shows an increase in interstellar cosmic rays, and a decrease in heliospheric particles. And finally, the PLS shows that there’s no longer any detectable solar wind.
Now that the Voyagers are outside of the heliosphere, their new perspective will provide new information about the formation and state of our Sun and how it interacts with interstellar space, along with insight into how other stars interact with the interstellar medium.
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are providing our first look at the space we would have to pass through if humanity ever were to travel beyond our home star — a glimpse of our neighborhood in space.

Saturday, 2 June 2018

Blood test offers hope of finding cancers before symptoms develop

Promising new research enables scientists to use a blood test to screen for different types of cancers at early stages.
The test, known as a liquid biopsy, is used to screen for DNA from cancer cells and was able to detect 10 different cancers with good accuracy.
Dr. Eric Klein from the Taussig Cancer Institute at Cleveland Clinic in the United States led the research, which is to be presented at the annual conference of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago, the largest gathering of oncologists worldwide.
    Most cancers are detected at advanced stages when treatment is more complicated and cure rates are low, the conference abstract states.
    The non-invasive DNA blood test isn't yet ready to use in practice, but the test would enable cancers to be detected in the early stages, before symptoms begin, when treatment is more likely to succeed. These types of tests could become part of a universal screening process for cancer.
    "Detecting cancer early, before it has spread is one of the most powerful ways to ensure more people are offered treatments which give them a better chance of beating the disease," said Fiona Osgun of Cancer Research UK, who was not part of the study.
    The research sampled 1,627 participants, of which 749 were cancer-free and 878 had various types of newly detected, untreated cancer
    The blood test involved three tests on the participants' blood samples and showed sensitivity in detecting 10 different types of cancer, including pancreatic, ovarian, lung and esophageal cancer, among others.
    The results showed that the test most accurately diagnosed ovarian cancer, with 90% accuracy, followed by hepatobiliary -- a highly lethal cancer that attacks the liver and gallbladder -- and pancreatic cancer, with 80% accuracy.
    The test's high sensitivity to pancreatic cancer is especially promising. Pancreatic cancer is usually diagnosed when the cancer is too advanced to be operated on, said Dr. Chris Abbosh, a clinical research associate at University College London's Cancer Institute.
    However, it's important to note that the number of people in which these cancers were detected was small. For both ovarian and pancreatic cancer, only 10 cases were detected, while only five people with hepatobiliary cancer were identified.
    Head and neck cancer as well as lung cancer were detected with the least accuracy, at 56% and 59%, respectively.
    But the results are promising. The ability to diagnose cancer early on and then offer patients effective treatment for their disease will likely save many lives, according to Dr. Nickolas Papadopoulos, professor of oncology and pathology at Johns Hopkins Medicine and senior author of a study on blood tests for the early detection of cancer.
    For many common cancers, rates of survival triple when diagnosed at an early stage, according to Cancer Research UK.
    .
    There's more work to do before it can be used regularly, though.
    "There's still a lot more research needed to achieve this goal. This blood test was better at picking up certain cancers than others so we need further trials to test its accuracy and also determine whether it will help save lives," said Osgun.
    Gerhardt Attard, John Black Charitable Foundation Endowed Chair in Urological Cancer Research at University College London, believes that this may soon become a common method for cancer screening.
    "This is moving exceptionally fast. I think that in the next few five to 10 years, if this continues to work like this, we may see this coming through into normal practice," Attard said.
    But Abbosh notes several caveats around the research.
    "To match the promise of being able to screen for cancer, this test must be able to identify patients who do not have symptoms or signs of cancer. Finally, it will be important to establish how good this test is at identifying patients with the earliest stage of cancer. In stage I disease, surgical interventions are most likely to remove all a patient's cancer and result in a cure -- this data is no yet available," Abbosh said.
    Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, professor of medicine at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, said that the analysis involved in these tests is "extraordinarily complex."
    "There are a lot of steps in a liquid biopsy and much potential for things to go awry," he said.

    Friday, 1 June 2018

    Riding the world's most luxurious train with the visionary designer who built i

    while Japan's bullet trains may be famed for their speed, there is a train in Japan that has garnered a more exclusive reputation. Demand is often so high for a trip on this luxury sleeper train -- and space"Everything is unique and custom-made for the train," said Seven Stars' 70-year-old designer, Eiji Mitooka. "From the seats, to the lighting, to the furniture, our theme was to mix elements like mandalas -- drawing inspiration from East and West -- to come up with something we've never seen."
    From delicate, handmade porcelain sinks to framed miniature paintings by Mitooka himself, which are hung along the corridors, no detail has been overlooked. In the lounge, a panel of "kumiko," traditional Japanese woodwork, is backlit to showcase its intricate lattice patterns. A star motif is used throughout: the gold symbols adorn ceiling tiles, are carved into table lamps, and colored onto stained glass.
    When Mitooka was first approached to design the train, he took inspiration from the Orient Express, but he wanted to create something that would resonate with older Japanese travelers, creating a sense of nostalgia.
    Upon boarding the Cruise Train Seven Stars at the busy Hakata Station in the city of Fukuoka, passengers step into another world. The train's warm wooden interiors and classic design elements evoke another time.

    "I think, for a long time, Japanese people believed the greatest journey was to travel to Europe or America; to experience different cultures, see the best things there, eat the best food there," he said.
    "But for those of us in our 50s, 60s and 70s, the most comfortable and relaxing journey is one where Japanese is spoken, we can enjoy Japanese food, served in the Japanese way. We can rediscover Japan."


    Friday, 20 April 2018

    New species of 'exploding ants' discovered in Southeast Asia


    Fifteen new species of “exploding ants” – including one entirely new to science – have been discovered in Southeast Asia, Gizmodo reported, citing the results of a survey published Thursday in the science journal ZooKeys.
    These new species, dubbed “Colobopsis explodens” are capable of rupturing their abdominal walls to secrete a sticky toxic liquid that kills predators and themselves.
    Scientists have surveyed other species of “exploding ants” for decades but a deficit of new evidence since 1935 prompted a multi-disciplinary team of Viennese scientists to explore Southeast Asia.
    The researchers observed the ants displaying an array of behavioral patterns that served the interests of their colonies rather than themselves. The drive to perpetuate their own genes, like most creatures, were secondary to the needs of the colony.
    The ants were observed creating bridges or life rafts with their bodies, transporting other wounded ants, and even providing “medical care” in some instances.
    Self-sacrifice was most commonly carried out among so-called minor workers, the survey detailed. In some instances, the ants blew themselves when the scientists got too close.
    The ants feed upon algae, most, fungi, dead insects, fruit, and fish, the survey showed

    Wednesday, 18 April 2018

    Google Launches Chrome 66 For Windows, Mac, Linux, Android And iOS

    Google has announced the promotion of the Chrome 66 browser to the stable channel for Windows, Mac, Linux, Android and iOS. The updated Google Chrome browser is being rolled out over the next few weeks. Some of the new features in Chrome 66 include media auto-play changes, the ability to export passwords and several security fixes.
    One of the biggest features added in Chrome 66 is the auto-playing of content being switched off by default. For example, I immediately noticed that YouTube videos no longer automatically played when I opened those links in new tabs and I switched to those tabs in the latest version of Chrome.
    Google has been working on ways to provide better control over audio in its browser for a while now. Last year, Google Software Engineer Mounir Lamouri wrote that one of the most frequent user concerns is “unexpected media playback,” which consumes data and power along with causing unwanted noise while browsing. So back in January 2018, Google Chrome 64 added the ability to disable sound for specific sites by right-clicking on a tab and tapping on “Mute Site.”
    Google also added an option to “Export Passwords.” This can be found under Settings > Advanced > Passwords and forms > Manage passwords > Saved Passwords menu:
    Tapping on this option prompts users to input their computer password. After authorizing the download, the passwords you have saved on Chrome will be exported as a CSV file.
    Google Chrome 66 for Android and iOS also supports the ability to export passwords. On Android and iOS, you can see this option by tapping on the overflow icon in the Passwords menu and a system Share sheet appears when you select it. Chrome will ask you to verify your identity through passcodes, facial recognition, fingerprint scan, etc. Here is what the feature looks like on iOS:

    From a developer standpoint, Chrome 66 has a new rendering context that streamlines the display of ImageBitmap objects by mitigating memory duplication. Chrome 66 also implements the CSS Typed Object Model (OM) Level 1 -- which “reduces this burden on both the developer and browser by exposing CSS values as typed JavaScript objects rather than strings.” And there is a new asynchronous Clipboard API that provides a “promise-based means of reading from and writing to the clipboard.
    It's also worth mentioning that Google Chrome 66 includes a small percentage trial of Site Isolation in order to prepare for a broader upcoming launch. Google said that Site Isolation improves the security of Chrome and mitigates the risks posed by side-channel attack techniques such as Spectre/Meltdown.
    9to5Google pointed out that the “Chrome Home” bottom bar has been redesigned and replaced with the “Chrome Home Duplex” in the Android version of Chrome 66. And a new bottom toolbar can be slid up to open a New Tab.
    At the Chrome Dev Summit in November 2016, Google revealed that Chrome hit 2 billion installs in active use across desktops and mobile devices. That figure should not be confused from the number of total users, which is somewhere north of 1 billion.
    You can update to the latest version of Chrome by going to google.com/chrome. Or go to Settings > About Chrome to see if your version is up to date. And The full changelog of Chrome 66 can be found on Google Git.


    Monday, 16 April 2018

    Andhra transforming its capital into world class city

    Andhra transforming its capital into world class city

    In its post bifurcation scenario, the state of Andhra Pradesh is constructing a world-class city in its capital Amaravati.

    Approximately 3840 apartments in 61 towers are being built in the Amaravati capital region. Three companies – Shapurji Pallonji, Larsen & Toubro and Nagarjuna Construction Company are building these towers.
    Shapurji Palonji is building 21 towers – 1440 apartments for Type 1, Type 2 government officers and Group D employees. L&T is building 22 towers with 1968 apartments for NGOs. All these 43 towers are under construction at Nelapadu village.
    Nagarjuna Construction Company is building up 18 towers having 432 apartments for MLAs, MLCs and All India Services Officers at Rayapudi village.
    The Department of Municipal Administration and Urban Development led by minister P Narayana is looking after this urbanization project.
    The complete construction of these buildings is expected to finish by the end of this year

    NASA's New Planet-Hunter To Seek Closer, Earth-Like Worlds

    The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, is scheduled to launch Monday at 6:32 pm (2232 GMT) atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

    TAMPA, UNITED STATES:  NASA is poised to launch a $337 million washing machine-sized spacecraft that aims to vastly expand mankind's search for planets beyond our solar system, particularly closer, Earth-sized ones that might harbor life.
    NASA's New Planet-Hunter To Seek Closer, Earth-Like Worlds
    NASA predicts that TESS will discover 20,000 exoplanets -- or planets outside the solar system

    The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS, is scheduled to launch Monday at 6:32 pm (2232 GMT) atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

    Its main goal over the next two years is to scan more than 200,000 of the brightest stars for signs of planets circling them and causing a dip in brightness known as a transit.

    NASA predicts that TESS will discover 20,000 exoplanets -- or planets outside the solar system -- including more than 50 Earth-sized planets and up to 500 planets less than twice the size of Earth.

    "They are going to be orbiting the nearest, brightest stars," Elisa Quintana, TESS scientist at NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center, told reporters on Sunday.

    "We might even find planets that orbit stars that we can even see with the naked eye," she added.

    "So in the next few years we might even be able to walk outside and point at a star and know that it has a planet. This is the future."

    Follow-on to Kepler

    TESS is designed as a follow-on to the US space agency's Kepler spacecraft, which was the first of its kind and launched in 2009. Now, the aging spacecraft is low on fuel and near the end of its life.

    Kepler found a massive trove of exoplanets by focusing on one patch of sky, which contained about 150,000 stars like the Sun.

    The Kepler mission found 2,300 confirmed exoplanets and nearly 4,500 candidates. But many were too distant and dim to study further.

    TESS, with its four advanced cameras, will scan an area that is 350 times larger, comprising 85 percent of the sky in the first two years alone.

    "By looking at such a large section of the sky -- this kind of stellar real estate -- we open up the ability to cherry-pick the best stars to do follow up science," said Jenn Burt, a postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

    "On average the stars that TESS finds observes be 30-100 times brighter and 10 times closer than the stars that Kepler focused on."

    Since TESS uses the same method as Kepler for finding potential planets, by tracking the dimming of light when a celestial body passes in front of a star, the next step is for ground-based and space telescopes to peer closer.

    The Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space telescope, scheduled to launch in 2020, should be able to reveal more about planets' mass, density and the makeup of their atmosphere.

    "TESS forms a bridge from what we have learned about exoplanets to date and where we are headed in the future," said Jeff Volosin, TESS project manager at NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center.

    By focusing on planets dozens to hundreds of light-years way, TESS should be a stepping stone to future breakthroughs, he said.

    "With the hope that someday, in the next decades, we will be able to identify the potential for life to exist outside the solar system."

    COMMENTS
    Weather was expected to be 80 percent favorable for launch.