13 Ekim 2012 Cumartesi

The Mysteries Of Mercury

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Mercury has always been something of a puzzle for planetary scientists. Its close position to the Sun means it is very difficult to observe, but now a series of satellites is getting up close to this fascinating planet. The European Space Agency's BepiColombo mission is among them, and it will offer an unprecedented level of information about the mysterious world of Mercury.

Credit: ESA/Euronews

BepiColombo will provide the best understanding of Mercury to date. It consists of two individual orbiters: the Mercury Planetary Orbiter (MPO) to map the planet, and the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter (MMO) to investigate its magnetosphere.
   
Most of ESA's previous interplanetary missions have been to relatively cold parts of the Solar System. BepiColombo will be the Agency's first experience of sending a planetary probe close to the Sun.
Artist's concept of BepiColombo at MercuryBepiColombo at MercuryCredits: EADS Astrium

BepiColombo’s mission is especially challenging because Mercury's orbit is so close to our star. The planet is hard to observe from a distance, because the Sun is so bright. Furthermore, it is difficult to reach because a spacecraft must lose a lot of energy to ‘fall’ towards the planet from the Earth. The Sun’s enormous gravity presents a challenge in placing a spacecraft into a stable orbit around Mercury.

Only NASA's Mariner 10 and Messenger have visited Mercury so far. Mariner 10 provided the first-ever close-up images of the planet when it flew past three times in 1974-1975. En route to its final destination in orbit around Mercury in 18 March 2011, Messenger flew past the planet 3 times (14 January 2008, 6 October 2008, and 29 September 2009), providing new data and images. Once BepiColombo arrives in 2022, it will help reveal information on the composition and history of Mercury. It should discover more about the formation and the history of the inner planets in general, including Earth.
The BepiColombo mission consists of two individual orbiters: the Mercury Planetary Orbiter (MPO), that will map the planet, and the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter (MMO), that will investigate its magnetosphere.

BepiColombo will help reveal information on the composition and history of Mercury, and the history and formation of the inner planets in general, including Earth.

This artist’s impression provides a view of the two BepiColombo spacecraft, the Mercury Planetary Orbiter (MPO) and the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter (MMO), in their elliptical polar orbits around Mercury.

The MPO will circle the planet along an orbit ranging between 400 and 1500 kilometres above the surface. The MMO orbit ranges between 400 and 12 000 kilometres above the surface. The inclination and the eccentricity of these orbits are optimised for the study of the planet and of its magnetosphere in the very high temperature environment around Mercury.

The MPO will circle the planet along an orbit ranging between 400 and 1500 kilometres distance from the surface. The MMO orbit ranges between 400 and 12000 kilometres from the surface. The inclination and the eccentricity of these orbits are optimised for the study of the planet and of its magnetosphere in the very-high-temperature environment around Mercury. BebiColombo’s planetary orbiterCredits: ESA - image by C.Carreau

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ESA

“Kick-Starting” Male Fertility

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Adding a missing protein to infertile human sperm can ‘kick-start’ its ability to fertilise an egg and dramatically increase the chances of a successful pregnancy, a team of University scientists have uncovered.

The team from the School of Medicine first found that sperm transfers a vital protein, known as PLC-zeta (PLCz), to the egg upon fertilisation. This sperm protein initiates a process called ‘egg activation’ which sets off all the biological processes necessary for development of an embryo.
/Credit: Cardiff University

Now, the team has found that eggs that don’t fertilise because of a defective PLCz, as in some forms of male infertility, can be treated with the active protein to produce egg activation. The added PLCz kick-starts the fertilisation process and significantly improves the chance of a successful pregnancy.

"We know that some men are infertile because their sperm fail to activate eggs. Even though their sperm fuses with the egg, nothing happens. These sperm may lack a proper functioning version of PLCz, which is essential to trigger the next stage in becoming pregnant," said Professor Tony Lai, who together with Professor Karl Swann led the research team at the University’s Institute of Molecular and Experimental Medicine.

"What’s important from our research is that we have used human sperm PLCz to obtain the positive results that we had previously observed only in experiments with mice.

"In the lab we have been able to prepare human PLCz protein that is active. If this protein is inactive or missing from sperm, it fails to trigger the process necessary for egg activation - the next crucial stage of embryo development.

"However, when an unfertilised egg is injected with human PLCz, it responds exactly as it should do at fertilisation, resulting in successful embryo development to the blastocyst stage, vital to pregnancy success," he added.

Published online by the journal Fertility and Sterility (Friday 21stSeptember, 2012) and funded by the Wellcome Trust, the work strengthens the potential use of PLCz in treating male infertility.

Professor Tony Lai adds: "We’ve established that this one sperm protein, PLCz, is absolutely critical at the point where life begins.

"Whilst this was a lab experiment and our method could not be used in a fertility clinic in exactly the same way – there is potential to translate this advance into humans.

"In the future, we could produce the human PLCz protein and use it to stimulate egg activation in a completely natural way. For those couples going through IVF treatment, it could ultimately improve their chances of having a baby and treat male infertility."
Contacts and sources:Cardiff University

Saudi Arabia Has Nazca Like Lines, Strange Stone Circles, Huge Craters And Incredible Crescent Moon Only Visible From The Air

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The Arabia Shield has a volcanic nature inside. A region of the Western Saudi Arabia is in fact covered with vast fields of lava known as harraat. These lands are spotted by many stone circles and other quite interesting archaeological remains of the Neolithic period, such as the “desert kites”, the hunters used to guide the game across the harrah in some corrals. With Google Maps, Italian researcher Amelia Carolina Sparavigna and other researchers at the  Dipartimento di Fisica, Politecnico di Torino were able observe both sceneries, the volcanic nature of the land and a portrait of Arabia during the Neolithic times.

Part of Figure 4: Nazca-like lines, desert kits and strange stone circles in Saudi Arabia

Credit: Amelia Carolina Sparavigna et al.

Geologically, Arabia lies on a tectonic plate of its own, the Arabian Plate, which is moving away from Africa, creating the Red Sea, and crushing northward with the Eurasian plate. The Romans subdivided this peninsula in three regions. One was the Arabia Petraea covering a wide region comprising the southern Syria, Jordan, the Sinai Peninsula and the north-western Saudi Arabia.

Arabia Petraea was a roman province, with Petra as capital. The other two regions were the Arabia Deserta, the desert interior of the peninsula and the Arabia Felix, corresponding to the modern Yemen, which enjoys a more wet climate.

The Arabian peninsula has a central plateau, the Nejd, sloping eastward from the mountains along the coast of the Red Sea, to the shallow waters of the Persian Gulf, with a crescent of sand and gravel deserts toward east. The huge deserts are the stony Nefud in the north, the Dahna and the sands of Rub' Al-Khali. Ranges of mountains run parallel to the Red Sea coast on the west and at the south-eastern end of the peninsula.

Most of the Arabian rivers are wadis, that is rivers which are dry except during the rainy season. The presence of several aquifers creates the oases, when the flow of water reaches the surface of the desert. Under the sand of deserts, in 1932, oil was found. It could then happen that Arabia is imagined with a stereotype of sand-and-gravel deserts, punctured by oases and oil-wells, neglecting a quite important aspect of the region. This is the volcanic nature of the Arabian Shield, the geological name for much of the western Arabian peninsula. The Western Arabia is not only covered with sand, it is also clad with vast fields of lava. In Arabic, these lava fields are known as harraat (singular, harrah; before a name, harrat). Harraat together are creating large alkali basalt regions, covering some several thousand of square kilometers.

Part of Figure 4:   Stone Circles and "desert kits" or triangles.


In 1256 an eruption threatened the city of Medinah, covering previous lava flows. The lava field near Madinah, which is known as Harrat Rahat is due to a volcanic activity of two million of years which is still active. The most recent eruptions on the Arabian Peninsula occurred in 1937, on a harrah near the town of Dhamar, in the north of Yemen. Before that, in 1846 an eruption took place on a volcanic Red Sea island. By counting the number of eruptions that have occurred on the northern Harrat Rahat, volcanologists estimate that, during the past 4,500 years, there have been 13 major eruptions, one every 346 years, on average. The Arabian peninsula is then subjected to hazards coming from volcanic eruptions and from much more frequent earthquakes.

A survey with Google Maps shows the extensive lava fields covering the peninsula. Satellite imagery reveals the extent of harraat, with different colors of magma extruded in past epochs. Jetblack indicates the most recent flows. White areas are also observable, revealing places covered by silt and salt, which are residues of seasonal lakes, created by the lava flows that blocked some wadi rivers.

In Arabia, the maar craters, the land forms created by explosive eruptions, are huge: an explosion, generated by the mixture of basaltic magma with subterranean water, produced the maar crater of al-Wahbah on the western margins of Harrat Kashib. According to P. Harrigan, it is the Harrat Khaybar which is having the most distinctive volcanic scenery in all of Arabia, with the white cones of JabalBayda’ and Jabal Abyad.

As a result of their detailed harraat research on-site work, V. Camp and M. Roobol discovered new continental rifting activity, corresponding to a long volcanic system, the Makkah–Madinah–Nufud line, created by an active mantle up-welling. According to these researches, there is a fracture with crustal rifting in Arabia, which is much more recent than the Red Sea rift.

Figure 1 shows some of the craters in Arabia: one of them is crossed by a road and has a town, As
Sayl, inside. The images are obtained from Google Maps, enhanced with image processing methods.  Several other volcanic cones can be observed. One cone is attracting the attention because of its almost perfect shape and a close valley full of sand, with a crescent moon shape (see Figure 2, low panel)

Figure 1: Some craters in Arabia. One of them has a road and a town, As Sayl, inside. Coordinates
and scales are give in each panel. The images have been obtained after enhancing the Google Maps
corresponding images.







Credit: Amelia Carolina Sparavigna et al.

In fact, zooming the images to observe more details  of the cone and its closer area, we can see small circles with diameters ranging from 10 to 15 meters, with a mound of stones inside. Knowing that near Titicaca Lake, worship places were composed by cairns of stones inside stone enclosures [9], I searched other such structures near the region of the crescent-moon valley, in particular, those which are clearly man-made.

Figure 2 shows the result of this search, limited to the area with high-resolution satellite imagery: the markers are denoting the positions of stone circles. Of course, Figure 2 is not claiming to be exhaustive: surely more places have to be marked in this map. The figure is just trying to determine a rough distribution of these places.

Figure 2: The lower panel shows an almost perfect volcanic cone and a near valley which seems a crescent moon. The upper panel shows the locations of stone circles and other stone enclosures. The position of the volcanic cone is inside the white square.





Credit: Amelia Carolina Sparavigna et al.

Figure 3 shows in more detail the positions of stone circles on a landform which seems a peninsula on a lake of sand. The following Figure 4 gives some pictures of these stone circles.

Figure 3: Positions of some stone circles.


Credit: Amelia Carolina Sparavigna et al.

Figure 4: Some stone circles



Credit: Amelia Carolina Sparavigna et al.

As a result of their detailed harraat research on-site work, Camp and Roobol discovered a new continental rifting activity [5,6], corresponding to a long volcanic system, the Makkah–Madinah–Nufud line, created by an active mantle up-welling. According to these researches, there is a fracture with crustal rifting in Arabia, which is much more recent of the Red Sea rift.

Figure 1 shows some of the craters in Arabia: one of them is crossed by a road and has a town, As Sayl, inside. The images are obtained from Google Maps, enhanced with image processing methods, as discussed in Ref. 7 and 8. Several other volcanic cones can be observed. One cone is attracting the attention because of its almost perfect shape and a close valley full of sand, with a crescent moon shape (see Figure 2, low panel).

 In fact, zooming the images to observe more details of the cone and its closer area, we can see small circles with diameters ranging from 10 to 15 meters, with a mound of stones inside. Knowing that near Titicaca Lake, worship places were composed by cairns of stones inside stone enclosures [9], I searched other such structures near the region of the crescent-moon valley, in particular, those which are clearly man-made. Figure 2 showsthe result of this search, limited to the area with high-resolution satellite imagery: the markers are denoting the positions of stone circles.

Of course, Figure 2 is not claiming to be exhaustive: surely more places have to be marked in this map. The figure is just trying to determine a rough distribution of these places. Figure 3 shows in more detail the positions of stone circles on a landform which seems a peninsula on a lake of sand. The following Figure 4 gives some pictures of these stone circles.

After searching with Google for details and references about possible stone circles in Arabia, some interesting web pages have been found. These pages show the archaeological evidence of the Neolithic period in Arabia. Among the Neolithic structures there are stone circles, lines and “desert kites”, which were kite-shaped Neolithic stone fences, probably used as animal traps. There is also abundant archaeological evidence of Neolithic communities over harraat of Rahat and Khaybar, where thousands of tumuli and stone fences, keyhole-shaped, kite-shaped and circular, cover extensive areas. The absolute time period of Neolithic in Arabia was 11,000-5,750 before present. For the bulk of the peninsula the term Neolithic is used to cover the period from 8,000 to 5,750 before present.

One quite interesting web page is Ref.11: the author, pen-name KenGrok, is discussing his researches of the Neolithic stone structures, using the satellite imagery. He found stone circles and other figures all situated at the peaks of hills or at the edges of plateaus. In  Neolithic sites in Arabia and East Africa  an article is reported, published in 1977 by the Sydney Morning Herald, telling that "enigmatic circular stone formations, reminiscent of those found in Europe, are scattered throughout this arid country on hilltops and valleys remote from human habitation. The rings are formed by stone walls that are 30 to 60 centimeters tall and range in diameter from five meters to more than 100 meters.

No legends cast light on their origins or purpose and theories are myriad. Amateur archaeologists have noted that many of the rings have “tails,” one or more appendages that sometimes stretch out for hundreds of meters across the wilderness. ... The English-language daily newspaper Arab News has speculated that a cluster of stone rings 60 km north of the Red Sea port of Jedda may be ancient grave sites.

The walls were too low to have served as sheep or goat pens, the newspaper reasoned. Mr. Ron Worl, of the US Geological Survey, concluded that the stone rings could be the desert equivalent of rock carvings, ancient signposts that point the way to freshwater springs or caravan routes. Several of the “tails” led to water or old desert paths".

After his survey with satellite, the author of noted that only basic shapes were used and that these structures are not distributed evenly or at random. They appear most often along what must have been travel routes, usually found at prominent points of sorts (see for instance, Figure 3).

In Neolithic sites in Arabia and East Africa, the different shapes of these Neolithic structures are listed: stone circles, often perfectly  round with a cairn at the centre, stone circles with triangles, triangles and mounds of two kinds, round with flat top or with a depression or hole in the middle. In fact, as observed by Ken Grok, some mounds may be small volcano vents or cones, because from satellite imagery only, it is hard to tell whether they are man-made or geological features. Other structures have the shape of needles, lines or tails. There are enclosures, sometimes with round structures or irregulars: according to Ken Grok, these enclosures were very old dwelling and/or livestock areas.

Arabia is also spotted by the so-called "desert kites". Soon after air travel began over the Arabian peninsula pilots reported these big structures, and perhaps, this is why these objects result as quite deeply studied. Several area in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Iraq are covered with these man-made prehistoric kites, that sometimes are spanning kilometers of desert. Some researchers date them to Neolithic periods, and agree on the fact that they were used as hunting traps, to herd game in the ending enclosure of the kite.

Desert kites are basically triangular shapes with one end opened. It consist of two converging more or less straight walls, that create a funnel which ends with a narrow passage to a sort of pen. Typically there are two, three or more circular enclosures on the edge of this corral. There are archaeological rock art images defining these structures as hunting traps and depicting the true role of the ‘walls’ of kites, that lead to ending enclosure. These walls are low and then not able to stop any game. These walls are not walls at all: they are the basements, in rocky harraat, to stick some poles in the ground and build a fence with branches.

Moreover, as told in  Khaybar Desert Kites,  these hunting traps where not designed to just capture and then kill animals, but also for the conservation of food, keeping the game alive, in small huts at the end of the kites. "What we have here is evidently a first attempt of domestication of animals … We probably do not speak of real  domestication, but a stepbetween hunting and organized intentional raising of animals". Of course, some scholars do not agree with such conclusions.

Another interesting point is raised in Khaybar Desert Kites. In the Khaybar area, there are remains of Neolithic villages very close to the hunting desert kites. Linking the desert kites with the remains of houses and villages could be then a mistake, because wild animals are avoiding places where people live. Khaybar area is full with ancient burial structures, sometimes placed inside the desert kites.

A possible conclusion in  Khaybar Desert Kites is that these burial mounds are from later periods, quite after the creation of the desert kites that could be placed in the early Neolithic times, when people settled and started to domesticate animals. These conclusions on burial places and kites have been obtained just using satellite images. It seems then that satellites can make a portrait of a form of collective hunting in its early stages of evolution into animal domestication.

As the Italian researchers concluded in  Andean terraced hills  the use of Google Map in general or of satellite services devoted to the analysis of “landscapes and built environments”, can give useful information for archaeological and historical studies, for those locations well-preserved and not destroyed by natural or human activities.

Contacts and sources:
Amelia Carolina SparavignaDipartimento di Fisica, Politecnico di Torino
Citation: Arabia: from craters to stone circles

References

[1] Arabian Peninsula, Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary, 3rd Edition.

[2] Quaternary Deserts and Climatic Change, A.S. Alsharhan, IGCP Project 349, page 279.

[3] Arabia. Britannica Online Encyclopedia.

[4] Volcanic Arabia, P. Harrigan, pages 2-13 of the March/April 2006 print edition of Saudi

Aramco World, also http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200602/volcanic.arabia.htm

[5] Upwelling asthenosphere beneath western Arabia and its regional implications, V.E. Camp, M.J.

Roobol, 1992, Journal of Geophysical Research, volume 97, number B11, pages 15,255-15,271, see

also The lava fields of Saudi Arabia: an interview with Dr. John Roobol, and references therein,

2005, by John and Susy Pint, http://www.saudicaves.com/lava/introobl.htm

[6] Form and growth of an embryonic continental rift: InSAR observations and modeling of the

2009 western Arabia rifting episode, G. Baer, Y. Hamiel, Geophysical Journal International,

Volume 182, Issue 1, pages 155–167, July 2010.

[7] Enhancing the Google imagery using a wavelet filter, A.C. Sparavigna, Geophysics

(physics.geo-ph); Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP), arXiv:1009.1590

[8] Crater-like landform in Bayuda desert (a processing of satellite images), A.C. Sparavigna,

Geophysics (physics.geo-ph); Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP), arXiv:1008.0500

[9] Andean terraced hills (a use of satellite imagery), A.C. Sparavigna, Geophysics (physics.geoph),

arXiv:1010.5142

[10] Early Arabian Pastoral, Encyclopedia of Prehistory: South and Southwest Asia, P.N.

Peregrine, M. Ember, 2003.

[11] Neolithic sites in Arabia and East Africa, a post by Ken Grok, Germany, August 2009,

http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=1250382]

[12] Mapping Arabia, J.V. Parry, Saudi Aramco World, January/February 2004, pag.20-37, also

http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200401/mapping.arabia.htm

[13] Riddle of Arabia’s stone rings, Sydney Morning Herald, 31 December 1977.

[14] The function of "Desert Kites" - Uniting or livestock husbandry? B. Rosen, A. Perevolotsky,

Paléorient, Vol.24, Pag. 107-111, 1998.

[15] The Desert "Kites" of the Badiyat Esh-Sham and North Arabia, A.V.G. Betts, S. Helms,

Paléorient, Vol.13, Pag. 41-67, 1987.

[16] Khaybar Desert Kites, Vanja Janeži�, alsahra.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/khaybar-desertkites.

pdf


The iPad of 1935

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There’s no denying that devices like the iPad, Kindle and Nook have dramatically changed the way that many people consume media. Last year, online retailer Amazon announced that electronic book sales had surpassed print book sales for the first time in history.

The book reader of the future (April, 1935 issue of Everyday Science and Mechanics)
The future of the book has quite a few failed predictions in its wake. From Thomas Edison’s belief that books of the future would be printed on leaves of nickel, to a 1959 prediction that the text of a book would be projected on the ceiling of your home, no one knew for sure what was in store for the printed word.

The April, 1935 issue of Everyday Science and Mechanics included this nifty invention which was to be the next logical step in the world of publishing. Basically a microfilm reader mounted on a large pole, the media device was supposed to let you sit back in your favorite chair while reading your latest tome of choice.
Source and more: http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/paleofuture/2012/03/the-ipad-of-1935/

Ten Inventions Inspired by Science Fiction

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The innovators behind objects like the cellphone or the helicopter took inspiration from works like "Star Trek" and War of the Worlds

Known as the father of the modern submarine, American inventor Simon Lake had been captivated by the idea of undersea travel and exploration ever since he read Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea in 1870. Lake’s innovations included ballast tanks, divers’ compartments and the periscope. His company built the Argonaut—the first submarine to operate successfully in the open ocean, in 1898—earning him a congratulatory note from Verne.
The Argonaut, an early experiment in submarine design, has three wheels to draw it around the bottom of a river, lake, or sea. The design was not successful. | Located in: Mariners' Museum.

Submarine
© The Mariners' Museum / CORBIS)  
Helicopter

While Jules Verne is perhaps most famous for his fictional submarine, the Nautilus, the French author also envisioned the future of flight. Igor Sikorsky, inventor of the modern helicopter, was inspired by a Verne book, Clipper of the Clouds, which he had read as a young boy. Sikorsky often quoted Jules Verne, saying “Anything that one man can imagine, another man can make real.”

The VS-300, created by Igor Sikorsky, became the first successful helicopter after its historic tethered flight on September 14, 1939.
Helicopter
(© Bettmann / CORBIS)

By Mark Straus,   Smithsonian.comRead more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/Ten-Inventions-Inspired-by-Science-Fiction.html#ixzz29DIvUAGe

12 Ekim 2012 Cuma

Glommy Day's and aSociete.

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Turquoise Chain Necklace C/O aSociete/ Jeffrey Campbell Lita/ H&M Knit/ Brandy Melville Skirt
  
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Polka Dot's and Wedges.

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I'll Wear my Sunnies Even In the Dark.

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Gifted Leopard Shorts/ Vintage Sunnies + Bag/ UO Corset/ Deena & Ozzy Booties
I've been really into Leopard print lately especially when I received these amazing Leopard Short! I think leopard print will never go out of style and I also think you can pull off wearing it during any season, just depends on how and what you wear it with. In another note, I wanted to thank all my new followers and thank you guys for all the great comments and support.

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H&M sweater/ UO platform/ Brandy Melville Bucket bag/ Cotton on Hat
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Out of the 70's.

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One Sleeve Dress c/o SugarLips / Vintage Bag & Sunnies / Jessica Simpson Dany
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11 Ekim 2012 Perşembe

Researchers Score an Advance in Manipulating T-Cells

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Until recently, medical researchers had little hope of experimentally manipulating naïve T cells to study their crucial roles in immune function, because they were largely impenetrable, says polymer scientist Gregory Tew of the University of Massachusetts Amherst: “So far off limits we could not readily get inside to investigate their workings.”
Molecular TherapyUMass Amherst polymer scientist, Gregory Tew
Credit: University of Massachusetts Amherst:

Now, he and colleagues including immunologist Lisa Minter have found a way not only to get inside naïve T cells, but to deliver bio-active cargo such as proteins and synthetic molecules across that long-locked cell membrane, by using a new synthetic protein transduction domain (PTD) that mimics natural ones. Tew and colleagues call their new macromolecules “PTD mimics” (PTDMs). They are able to slip through the T cell’s membrane and deliver a payload of therapeutic small interfering RNA (siRNA).

The invention is “something like a master key, because we can get into cells without their permission, and into difficult-to-access cell types like human T cells,” says Tew. “We think it will lead to new advances in fundamental immunology and it also holds great potential for therapeutic applications in the clinic. We hope every immunologist on the planet hears about this delivery breakthrough, because now they can begin to study T cell function in new ways.”

Earlier methods required electroporation or the use of viruses, which either decrease cell viability or pose unacceptable risks to patients in a treatment setting, he adds. Tew and Minter’s work appears in the current issue of Molecular Therapy.

T lymphocytes are a subset of white blood cells that play a critical role in cell-mediated immunity, fighting against invading infections, cancer and HIV, for example. There are several different types of T cells, so named because they mature in the thymus gland. For years, scientists have wanted to study naïve T cells in particular, those that can respond to pathogens the immune system has not yet seen.

Tew, Minter and colleagues saw an unmet need for non-viral, efficient and easily prepared reagents for use in delivering siRNA into difficult-to-enter cell types such as human T cells. Successfully delivering siRNA into naïve T cells would demonstrate efficient gene knockdown without toxicity and provide a powerful new immunologic tool.

The UMass Amherst team leaders say one of the things they tried to pioneer is being inspired by what nature does, then building synthetic mimics of that. “We felt that if we were not limited to the usual amino acid alphabet of proteins, we could do it better. That turned out to be true; we used biomimetic design principles to make PTDMs that are less toxic and more effective for moving cargo across the cell membrane than natural ones.”

“What we modify is the chemical structure,” Tew explains. “We’ve built the principles of a natural PTD into a new macromolecule that’s bigger, longer, has more dense groups and different architecture. It slips into the T cell without damaging it, and can carry cargo, in this case siRNA, across that membrane.”

They accomplished this by first identifying key features of natural PTDs, then capturing some of their chemical properties in new macromolecular synthetic polymer mimics. Specifically, they designed and studied two different PTDMs inspired by polyarginines and amphiphilic (able to cross both water and lipid membranes) peptides to deliver siRNA into two hard-to-transfect cell types: Cells from a line of immortalized human T lymphocytes and human peripheral blood cells from three different donors.

As one of several tests of effectiveness, they targeted knockdown of NOTCH1, a gene-controlling transmembrane receptor that also plays a role in T cell development, proliferation and differentiation. The authors report achieving 50 percent knockdown of NOTCH1 protein expression in both cell types for up to 72 hours after one treatment.

“The T cell goes about its business. It looks normal except that it has much less NOTCH1,” says Tew. “With this new tool, we expect we can fine-tune T cell activation. In the case of cancer surveillance, you may want to turn it up to stimulate immune responses, but with autoimmune diseases it would be beneficial to turn it down.”

This work was funded by grants from the National Science Foundation and the American Heart Association.


Contacts and sources:University of Massachusetts Amherst

Bouncing On Titan

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ESA’s Huygens probe bounced, slid and wobbled its way to rest in the 10 seconds after touching down on Saturn’s moon, Titan, in January 2005, a new analysis reveals. The findings provide novel insight into the nature of the moon’s surface.

Bouncing on Titan Video
How Huygens landed on Titanvideo
Scientists reconstructed the chain of events by analysing data from a variety of instruments that were active during the impact, in particular changes in the acceleration experienced by the probe.

Titan first images - slideshow





The instrument data were compared with results from computer simulations and a drop test using a model of Huygens designed to replicate the landing.

The analysis reveals that, on first contact with Titan’s surface, Huygens dug a hole 12 cm deep, before bouncing out onto a flat surface.

The probe, tilted by about 10 degrees in the direction of motion, then slid 30–40 cm across the surface.

It slowed due to friction with the surface and, upon coming to its final resting place, wobbled back and forth five times, with each wobble about half as large as the previous one.

Huygens’ sensors continued to detect small vibrations for another two seconds, until motion subsided nearly 10 seconds after touchdown.

“A spike in the acceleration data suggests that during the first wobble, the probe likely encountered a pebble protruding by around 2 cm from the surface of Titan, and may have even pushed it into the ground, suggesting that the surface had a consistency of soft, damp sand,” describes Dr Stefan Schröder of the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, lead author of the paper reporting the results inPlanetary and Space Science.

Had the probe impacted a wet, mud-like substance, its instruments would have recorded a ‘splat’ with no further indication of bouncing or sliding.

The surface must have therefore been soft enough to allow the probe to make a hole, but hard enough to support Huygens rocking back and forth.

“We also see in the Huygens landing data evidence of a ‘fluffy’ dust-like material – most likely organic aerosols that are known to drizzle out of the Titan atmosphere – being thrown up and suspended for around four seconds after the impact,” says Dr Schröder.

Since the dust was easily lifted, it was most likely dry, suggesting that there had not been any ‘rain’ of liquid ethane or methane for some time prior to the landing.

“This study takes us back to the historical moment of Huygens touching down on the most remote alien world ever visited by a landing probe,” adds ESA’s Cassini-Huygens project scientist, Nicolas Altobelli.

“Huygens data, even years after mission completion, are providing us with a new dynamical ‘feeling’ for these crucial first seconds of landing.”

Sounds of Titan

1. Speeding through Titan's haze
This recording is a laboratory reconstruction of the sounds heard by Huygens' microphones. Several sound samples, taken at different times during the descent, are here combined together and give a realistic reproduction of what a traveller on board Huygens would have heard during one minute of the descent through Titan's atmosphere.
File 1 : acoustic during descent

2. Radar echos from Titan's surface
This recording was produced by converting into audible sounds some of the radar echoes received by Huygens during the last few kilometres of its descent onto Titan. As the probe approaches the ground, both the pitch and intensity increase. Scientists will use intensity of the echoes to speculate about the nature of the surface.
File 2 : radar conversion

Contacts and sources:
Markus Bauer
European Space Agency
Citation: “Bouncing on Titan: Motion of the Huygens Probe in the Seconds After Landing,” by S. Schröder, E. Karkoschka and R. Lorenz is published inPlanetary and Space Science, DOI 10.1016/j.pss.2012.08.007.

Terrorism Risk Greatest For Subway/Rail Commuters, Says MIT Paper At INFORMS Conference

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Despite homeland security improvements since September 11, 2001, subway and rail commuters face higher risks of falling victim to terrorists and mass violence than frequent flyers or those engaged in virtually any other activity. And while successful criminal and terrorist acts against aviation have fallen sharply, those against subways and commuter trains have surged. These are among the findings of a new study by Arnold Barnett, George Eastman Professor of Management Science at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, who will deliver a presentation titled “Has Terror Gone to Ground?” at the INFORMS Annual Meeting in Phoenix on October 15. 
New York City Subway TrainFile:NYC Subway R160A 9237 on the E.jpgCredit: Wikipedia

Barnett found that during the period 1982-91 deliberate acts of malice caused 1,327 deaths worldwide among air travelers, but none on subways/commuter trains. But between 2002-11, the pattern reversed: there were 203 aviation deaths and 804 among subway/rail commuters.

Further statistics depict the implications of this reversal. A recent subway/rail commuter in the Developed World has faced twice the annual death risk of a frequent flyer, while the risk per mile traveled by subway/commuter rail was ten times as high as by air. Criminal and terrorist acts account for about 8% of the overall death risk of air travel, but they account for 88% of the mortality risk on subways and commuter railroads.

Barnett contends that this reversal does not imply that aviation security measures are less necessary; instead, it might suggest that the success of such measures has displaced criminal/terrorist activity to other venues like commuter rail systems.

Barnett paid special attention to the events on 9/11. He noted that the number of air passengers killed on that day—at 232—was similar to the death tolls in later bombings on the commuter rail systems of Madrid and Mumbai, and in an arson attack on a South Korean subway. What made 9/11 singularly horrible was the enormous death toll on the ground (2,700 killed).

Subsequent measures to secure airline cockpits may be the reason that there have been no further attacks that used commercial airlines as weapons. Indeed, Barnett notes, the most publicized of the recent air-terror plots—the shoe bomber, the underwear bomber, the liquid-explosives plot, the ink-cartridge bombs—have reverted to trying to blow up airplanes, the primary tactic that was used before 9/11 with greater success.

Barnett notes that even among subway/rail commuters, the risk of falling victim to terrorism or mass violence was very low in the last decade, at approximately 1 in 2 million per year. But because successful terrorism has such far-reaching consequences, Barnett argues, the prevention of rail terrorism warrants high priority. Stopping attackers once they reach stations and trains has proved difficult, so the most realistic way to prevent attacks might be to uncover and thwart terror plots at earlier stages. It was good intelligence work that averted a planned 2009 attack on the New York subway, not security measures at Times Square or Grand Central Terminal.

The INFORMS annual meeting will take place in Phoenix from Sunday, October 15-Wednesday, October 17. Over 4,000 academics and professionals are scheduled to attend the conference.
About INFORMS

The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS®) is the leading professional association for professionals in advanced analytics. INFORMS is an international scientific society with 10,000 members, including Nobel Prize laureates, dedicated to applying scientific methods to help improve decision-making, management, and operations. Members of INFORMS work in business, government, and academia. They are represented in fields as diverse as airlines, health care, law enforcement, the military, financial engineering, and telecommunications. INFORMS serves the scientific and professional needs of operations research analysts, experts in analytics, consultants, scientists, students, educators, and managers, as well as their institutions, by publishing a variety of journals that describe the latest research in operations research. Further information about INFORMS, analytics, and operations research is at www.informs.org.
Contacts and sources:  Barry List
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences

Earth Sunblock Only Needed If Planet Warms Easily Says National Lab

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An increasing number of scientists are studying ways to temporarily reduce the amount of sunlight reaching the earth to potentially stave off some of the worst effects of climate change. Because these sunlight reduction methods would only temporarily reduce temperatures, do nothing for the health of the oceans and affect different regions unevenly, researchers do not see it as a permanent fix. Most theoretical studies have examined this strategy by itself, in the absence of looking at simultaneous attempts to reduce emissions.

Ship exhaust creates long streaks of clouds across the ocean's dark surface, making the sky brighter and reducing the amount of heat trapped in the atmosphere.Some researchers are exploring ways to make clouds brighter to reflect more sunlight back into space. 
Photo courtesy of NASA.
Now, a new computer analysis of future climate change that considers emissions reductions together with sunlight reduction shows that such drastic steps to cool the earth would only be necessary if the planet heats up easily with added greenhouse gases. The analysis, reported in the journal Climatic Change, might help future policymakers plan for a changing climate.

The study by researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory explored sunlight reduction methods, or solar radiation management, in a computer model that followed emissions' effect on climate. The analysis shows there is a fundamental connection between the need for emissions reductions and the potential need for some sort of solar dimming.

"It's a what-if scenario analysis," said Steven Smith with the Joint Global Change Research Institute in College Park, Md,, a joint venture between PNNL and the University of Maryland. "The conditions under which policymakers might want to manage the amount of sun reaching earth depends on how sensitive the climate is to atmospheric greenhouse gases, and we just don't know that yet."

The analysis started with computer-based virtual worlds, or scenarios, that describe different potential pathways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, which limits the amount of heat in the earth system due to greenhouse gas accumulation. The researchers combined these scenarios with solar radiation management, a type of geoengineering method that might include shading the earth from the sun's heat by either brightening clouds, mimicking the atmospheric cooling from volcanic eruptions or putting mirrors in space.

"Solar radiation management doesn't eliminate the need to reduce emissions. We do not want to dim sunlight over the long term — that doesn't address the root cause of the problem and might also have negative regional effects. This study shows that the same conditions that would call for solar radiation management also require substantial emission reductions in order to meet the climate goals set by the world community," said Smith.

How much sun blocking might be needed depends on an uncertain factor called climate sensitivity. Much like beachgoers in the summer, the earth might be very sensitive to carbon dioxide, like someone who burns easily and constantly slathers on the sunscreen, or not, like someone who can get away with SPF 5 or 10.

Scientists measure climate sensitivity by how many degrees the atmosphere warms up if the concentration of carbon dioxide doubles. Smith said if the climate has a medium sensitivity of about 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) per doubling of carbon dioxide, "it's less likely we'd need solar radiation management at all. We'd have time to stabilize the climate if we get going on reducing emissions. But if it's highly sensitive, say 4.5 degrees Celsius (8.1 degrees Fahrenheit) per doubling, we're going to need to use solar radiation management if we want to limit temperature changes."

According to NOAA's August report, the earth's temperature has already risen about 0.62 degrees Celsius (1.12 degrees Fahrenheit) since the beginning of the 20th century as the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has grown from 290 parts per million to 379 parts per million.

But the atmosphere hasn't reached equilibrium yet — even if humans stopped putting more carbon dioxide into the air, the climate would still continue to change for a while longer. Scientists do not know what temperature the earth will reach at equilibrium, because they don't know how sensitive the planet is to greenhouse gases.

Further, the study showed that, when coupled with emission reductions, the amount of solar radiation management needed could be far less than the amount generally considered by researchers so far.

"Much of the current research has examined solar radiation management that is used as the sole means of offsetting a doubling of carbon dioxide concentrations. What we showed is that when coupled with emissions reductions, only a fraction of that amount of 'solar dimming' will be needed. This means that potential adverse impacts would be that much lower," said Smith. "This is all still in the research phase. We do not know enough about the impacts of potential solar radiation management technologies to use them at this time."

The study will also help decision-makers evaluate solar reduction technologies side-by-side, if it comes to that. Smith and his coauthor, PNNL atmospheric scientist and Laboratory Fellow Phil Rasch, devised a metric to quantify how much solar radiation management will be needed to keep warming under a particular temperature change threshold. Called degree-years, this metric can be used to evaluate the need for potential sunlight dimming technologies.

Whether such technologies will be needed at all, time will tell.

This work was supported by the non-profit Fund for Innovative Climate and Energy Research.


Contacts and sources:
Mary Beckman
DOE/Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

NASA and IHMC Develop Robotic Exoskeleton for Space and Possible Use on Earth

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A new robotic space technology spinoff derived from NASA's Robonaut 2 project someday may help astronauts stay healthier in space and aid paraplegics in walking here on Earth. Robonaut 2, the first humanoid robot in space, currently is working with astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

Commander Dan Burbank works with Robonaut 2. The robot humanoid demonstrated its dexterity performing sign language. Commander Dan Burbank and Robonaut 2Credit: NASA TV

NASA and The Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (IHMC) of Pensacola, Fla., with the help of engineers from Oceaneering Space Systems of Houston, have jointly developed a robotic exoskeleton called X1. The 57-pound device is a robot that a human could wear over his or her body either to assist or inhibit movement in leg joints.

In the inhibit mode, the robotic device would be used as an in-space exercise machine to supply resistance against leg movement. The same technology could be used in reverse on the ground, potentially helping some individuals walk for the first time.

X1 Exoskeleton

Credit: IHMC

"Robotics is playing a key role aboard the International Space Station and will be critical in our future human exploration of deep space," said Michael Gazarik, director of NASA's Space Technology Program."What's extraordinary about space technology and our work with projects like Robonaut are the unexpected possibilities space tech spinoffs may have right here on Earth. It's exciting to see a NASA-developed technology might one day help people with serious ambulatory needs to begin to walk again, or even walk for the first time. That's the sort of return on investment NASA is proud to give back to America and the world."

Worn over the legs with a harness that reaches up the back and around the shoulders, X1 has 10 degrees of freedom, or joints -- four motorized joints at the hips and the knees, and six passive joints that allow for sidestepping, turning and pointing, and flexing a foot. There also are multiple adjustment points, allowing the X1 to be used in many different ways.

X1 currently is in a research and development phase, where the primary focus is development, evaluation and improvement of the technology. NASA is examining the potential for the X1 as an exercise device to improve crew health both aboard the space station and during future long-duration missions to an asteroid or Mars. Without taking up valuable space or weight during missions, X1 could replicate common crew exercises, which are vital to keeping astronauts healthy in microgravity. In addition, the device has the ability to measure, record and stream back in real-time data to flight controllers on Earth, giving doctors better insight into the crew's exercise.

X1 also could provide a robotic power boost to astronauts as they work on the surface of distant planetary bodies. Coupled with a spacesuit, X1 could provide additional force when needed during surface exploration, providing even more bang for its small bulk.

Here on Earth, IHMC is interested in developing and using X1 as an assistive walking device. Using NASA technology and walking algorithms developed at IHMC, X1 has the potential to produce high torques to allow for assisted walking over varied terrain, as well as stair climbing. Preliminary studies using X1 for this purpose have already started at IHMC.

"We greatly value our collaboration with NASA," said Ken Ford, IHMC's director and CEO. "The X1's high-performance capabilities will enable IHMC to continue performing cutting-edge research in mobility assistance and expand into rehabilitation."

The potential of X1 extends to other applications, including rehabilitation, gait modification and offloading large amounts of weight from the wearer. Preliminary studies by IHMC have shown X1 to be more comfortable, easier to adjust, and easier to put on than older exoskeleton devices. Researchers plan on improving on the X1 design, adding more active joints to areas such as the ankle and hip, increasing the potential uses for the device.

Designed in an extremely short timeframe, X1 came from technology developed for Robonaut 2 and IHMC's Mina exoskeleton. NASA's work in robotic exoskeleton systems complements work done by other government agencies, such as the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency's Exoskeletons for Human Performance Augmentation Program.

NASA's Game Changing Development Program, part of NASA's Space Technology Program, funds the X1 work. NASA's Space Technology Program focuses on maturing advanced space technologies that may lead to entirely new approaches for space missions and solutions to significant national needs.

Contacts and sources:Dan Huot
Johnson Space Center, Houston   

For additional information about IHMC, visit:
http://www.ihmc.us
For information about the X1 and Robonaut, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/robonaut

10 Ekim 2012 Çarşamba

Weather Report - September 12, 2012

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Changes Will Be Felt Today

I suppose you could say it's back to reality today. Heat and humidity will begin to be felt today and we will bring in a slight chance for showers and t-storms. Highs will stay near 90° for the next several days and morning lows will also begin to slowly increase. A 20-30% chance for showers and storms will continue from today into the first half of the weekend. Another cool front will try to work its way into South Louisiana during the weekend. Rain chances will increase Sunday and Monday as the front moves overhead. The front will be nothing like this past front this time around. We won't see any noticable change in temperatures as we move through next week. - Jeff Morrow & Diane Deaton / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - September 13, 2012

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Dodge a Shower or Two Today

The weather will remain hot and humid over the next several days. Highs will be around 90° through the weekend. Morning lows will also stay generally around 70°. Sct'd showers and storms will be possible today, but Friday and Saturday will stay mainly dry. The best rain chance over the coming days will be Sunday and Monday as a weak cool front enters the viewing area. The front won't leave behind any nice weather this time around. The only big change after the front passes on Monday will be somewhat drier weather by the middle of next week. - Jeff Morrow & Diane Deaton / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - September 14, 2012

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Mainly Dry Today and Tomorrow

We will stay mainly dry today and tomorrow. And while it will be hot with highs in the low 90°s, conditions won’t be as humid with dewpoints in the low to mid 60°s. Just a 10% chance for showers and storms on Saturday meaning we won’t see many weather problems for the LSU festivities. The second half of the weekend could be wet though. A trough will push into South Louisiana bringing sct’d showers and storms Sunday. An even higher chance for rain will exist on Monday as the trough moves overhead. A cool front will be on the heels of this trough and will usher in some nice weather by the middle of next week. - Jeff Morrow / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - September 17, 2012

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Heavy Rain Likely Monday

We are certainly saying goodbye to the dry weather over the next 24 to 48 hours. A series of storm systems will impact the region bringing periods of heavy rains and even a few strong storms. The best chance for heavy rains will be late Monday morning into the early afternoon. Majority of the rain will fall on Monday, but we will keep a 30% chance for showers on Tuesday as we await another cool front passage. The front passes ending the rains with most people picking up an average of 1” with isolated spots picking up as much as 3”. Cooler and drier air will be behind the front making for a nice premature entrance to autumn. Fall officially arrives next Saturday and once again the weather will cooperate. -- Jeff Morrow / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - October 10, 2012

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Goodbye, Autumn Chill!

Metro Baton Rouge's "taste of the 40°s" is over, at least for the time being. A weakening "cool" front sags into the WAFB viewing area on Wednesday, but it fizzles out before it can generate any rain. Nor does it provide us with a reinforcing surge of cool air. So it looks like the 50°s and 60°s for lows for the rest of the week and right through the weekend. And it will be the mid and upper 80°s for most of us through the next five to seven days. Jay Grymes / WAFB Storm Team

9 Ekim 2012 Salı

Weather Report - September 18, 2012

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Cool Front Arrives Tuesday

Isolated showers will remain possible overnight into Tuesday as we await the arrival of a cool front. However, widespread rains are now well to our east and any lingering rainfall through late Tuesday should be rather modest. We'll enjoy a nice stretch of autumn weather beginning Wednesday and continuing through the end of the week. Lows will dip into the 50°s, with highs generally in the low to mid 80°s. Somewhat warmer weather, along with a slight chance of showers, returns on Saturday in association with another cool front. Saturday's front should help to reinforce our nice weather, with cooler and drier conditions returning Sunday and persisting into early next week. Enjoy! - Jay Grymes & Steve Caparotta / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - September 24, 2012

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Patchy Morning Fog Monday

There will be very little change in the weather over the coming days. An anticipated cool front passage will not happen which will keep warm temperatures and slightly humid conditions in the forecast as we start the work week. Highs will top out again in the low 90°s Monday and Tuesday. Patchy morning fog will also be possible since drier air will fall to reach South Louisiana. The weather will stay dry over the first half of the work week. Thursday will introduce a chance at an iso’d shower or two. Slightly better rain chances will exist Friday and into the weekend. The increased cloud cover and rain chance should help drop highs a couple of degrees. - Jeff Morrow / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - September 25, 2012

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More Warm Autumn Weather Ahead ...

Over the course of the past several days, we have reached an afternoon high at, or slightly above, 90 degrees! Certainly not as "autumn-like" as we had hoped ... even during the early morning, lows are running a handful of degrees "warmer than normal" for late September. As far as any rainfall is concerned - we'll keep the forecast basically dry through Thursday; 30% rain chance Friday; increasing to 50-50 Saturday! - Diane Deaton, WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - September 26, 2012

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Staying Warm and Mainly Dry for Now...

Dry weather will continue to prevail over the next couple of days. That is all thanks to high pressure staying in the neighborhood. As a result temperatures will remain warm with slightly humid conditions. The high will begin to move away by the end of the week bringing a 20% rain chance into the forecast Friday and a 60% chance on Saturday. An area of low pressure will drag a cool front across South Louisiana on Sunday keeping sct'd showers and storms in the forecast. Cooler and less humid air will begin to work into the area by the start of our next work week. - Jeff Morrow & Diane Deaton / WAFB Storm Team

Weather Report - October 8, 2012

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Cool Starts Monday and Tuesday

The next few morning starts are going to be rather cool. The kids will need some jackets for morning bus stops Monday and Tuesday. Mornings lows will be in the upper 40°s to low 50°s both days under mostly clear skies. Highs will remain very nice as well ranging from the mid 70°s Monday to the low 80°s on Tuesday as we see mostly sunny to fair skies. A warming trend will occur by mid week increasing temperatures to the mid 80°s for highs and the mid 60°s for lows. Clouds will increase during this time but we'll stay dry. The next chance for rain may come next Sunday as our next cool front moves into South Louisiana. -- Jeff Morrow / WAFB Storm Team

8 Ekim 2012 Pazartesi

mission impossible

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life is a hard, true, more than I care for it to be true and yet it still is...


Im still breathing....Choosing to let my heart beat whilst the walls, built to protect me and all I love, crumble from the weight of being asked to do the impossible...


fix it, build it, create it and then give it away to someone who doesn't know or even care too really... they just want with their hands out, taking what they can get while they can get it....


having sex and calling it love, marking their territory... 


putting the importance to rest on "mine" vs "yours" and forgetting all together what "Ours" would even look like....


because they wont protect him... or care to care about what I know...


Because for me right now, spectacular is the view form the highest cliff that took all day to climb.... just before you let your self fall

Im glad you came...

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"The sun goes down the stars come outand all that counts is here and nowmy universe will never be the sameIm glad you came.."The Wanted


"Time is going so fast." I said it half to myself and half to him, both of us staring at the stars from the porch of the mountain side cabin that we had made our home for the weekend. Where I live you sacrifice the stars for an ocean view. The thick sea water air falling over my town like a blanket attempting to comfort us from the reality that we are small against the infinite universe...
"I know." He agreed, never breaking his skyward gaze and only vaguely understanding what I meant. And all I wanted to do was touch him. Reach out and put my hand to his arm to remind me of the warmth and to bring me back to earth. But I didn't. Couldn't. All of the months and days, hours and moments that lead me to this one, where it was more than O.K for my skin to touch his, counted for nothing in this one aching evening. Each day, each second spent with him was independent of the next. Each one an introduction to a person I thought I knew. 


We are strangers...
The week before we went out for sushi with Yoda. It was after a particularly sad Wednesday that I didn't really want to talk about so we drank instead. I found the one straight bartender, ordered a rum and coke and told him to keep them coming. 
And he did, until the drink glass became a water glass so he could make it stronger and not have to come back to our corner of the bar as often. Flipper decided to beat his own sake drinking record while Yoda sat between us, shaking his head and eating the food that we were supposedly there for...
An hour or so later we were drunk and wobbling back to his place which was thankfully located right around the corner from the bar... Yoda went inside and we followed. In my earlier grief I had made about twelve dozen cookies and brought them to the boys. When Im sad I bake...He grabbed a fist full and sat on the couch, Flipper grabbed his cigarettes and nodded at the door in a silent understanding that I was to follow him out to the patio...
You see, there is a small window with this boy where he is just drunk enough to hear me when I speak and too drunk to remember the details in the morning...I crawled through it in that moment while smoke curled around us in the dark... I told him I was tired of being invisible and he assured me that I wasn't. He told me I was loved and pulled the necklace I bought him for Christmas out from his shirt, held it up like evidence he was telling the truth.
And between sips of whiskey and cloudy attempts at star gazing,  I apologized for falling in love with him and ruining the friendship we could have had if the lines were not blurred and my intentions were pure... When your heart is at stake, it is hard to see clear to what is best for the other person. Its even harder to admit that it may not be you. That the cosmic alignment you've believe in completely may be nothing more than hormones and a poets heart wanting what was never meant to be... He hugged me and pulled me inside to look for my phone which had disappeared somewhere between here and there... I told him to call me and in his dramatic, prove a point way, with the cocky smile I both love and hate, showed me I was listed as a "favorite" before hitting send exposing my phones hiding place between the couch cushions...

And I stood there next to him, unsure of what to do next as driving home in my condition was not an option... He looked up from his phone and asked me if I had to work the next day.
I said 'yes' and he replied..'Good. Me too. Lets get out of here.' I thought I had misunderstood so I asked what he meant. He said he wanted to sleep under the stars, to drive till we got where we were going and simply be somewhere else for the night. He got more and more excited as he spoke, gathering sweatshirts and blankets, buzzing around the apartment while Yoda passed out in his room... I started to protest, listing the reasons we should stay home, including the fact that in a mere ten days we would be tucked in a cabin in the mountains a good three hours from home...


He stopped me,and said.."Please. Just say yes." The tone was laced with anticipatory disappointment, almost prepared for me to try and talk him out of it...


"Yes."


And nothing more was said. He smiled, handed me blankets and we left. I thought for a moment about Yoda who would wake up the next morning, see my car patiently waiting out front and no me on the couch, mentioned it to Flipper who dismissed it and took my hand as we drove up the freeway to who knows where...


Still drunk, I sent a text to work telling them I wasn't well, and to a friend trying to explain what we were doing, confusing east with west and getting the response of "you know if you drive west from here you will end up at the bottom of the ocean..." I'm from the east coast, so to me, the ocean is on the wrong side out here....


We drove for over an hour, until freeway became twisting mountain road, the stars were our street lights and cell service a memory. We pulled into a camp ground-ish place that was questionable at best but it made him happy and I could tell so I kept quiet... He set up the tent, quietly sharing stories of the many adventures he and the tent had experienced together...


And I listened, taking in every detail he was willing to share with me, trying not to show my hunger for his history...


We sat at an old picnic table, sipping whiskey, listening to water trickling somewhere in the darkness, allowing the moment to be what it was... and I savored it. Before long he said we should go to sleep. The combination of late night and too much alcohol made laying down sound amazing and we nestled under blankets in the cool night air...


Side by side, tucked in to each other for warmth, I couldn't sleep. I wanted to stay awake. I wanted time to stand still while I was the person he chose to runaway with, while he was laying next to me...


So I did. I laid there, listening to the water and the sound of his breath, to the sounds of the animals that make their way in the world at night... I moved only when he did, allowed myself to be pulled in and pushed away as this man that I love in spite of myself, tried to make himself comfortable. At one point I found myself with my forehead to his chest, his sweet whiskey breath breathing down on me...


I watched the moon through the roof of the tent and marked time by the changing sounds as bullfrogs became birds chirping and I knew the sun rise was not far behind... I was the only witness.


Eventually it was over...


The night took the magic with it when it left and the face that had looked me in the eye with the silent understanding of all we shared, of all we knew the night before, was replaced with face of a man who wanted to be close to no one, known to no one but himself...


I expressed my understanding by saying nothing. By packing our things into his car and taking in the details of that place in the daylight, by finding the stream fed lake whose flow had kept me company through the night while he slept and I kept watch... 


We drove away, down the mountain and into the city as I willed myself to stay awake till I was back in my house and my bed...


We hugged goodbye and went our separate ways, knowing that he would let me know him again soon enough when we made our way to a cabin to watch the stars...


But that's a story for another day...