Wednesday, December 1, 2010

In Flyby of Saturn's Moon Rhea, Cassini Probe Gets First Whiff of Non-Earthly Oxygen

NASA's Cassini spacecraft has taken a breath of oxygen while passing over the icy surface of Saturn's second-largest moon, marking the first time a spacecraft has directly sampled oxygen in the atmosphere of another body. Cruising just 60 miles above Rhea, one of more than 60 moons orbiting Saturn, Cassini found an extremely thin atmosphere of oxygen and carbon dioxide likely sustained by high-energy particles slamming into the moon's frozen surface.

Rhea's isn't the only other atmosphere in the universe, but it is so thin that Cassini had to fly through it just to confirm that it was there at all (other atmosphere's have been detected and studied from afar by tools like the Hubble Space Telescope). According to Cassini's onboard science instruments, Rhea's atmosphere contains something like 50 billion oxygen molecules per cubic meter, matched by 20 billion carbon dioxide molecules.

Rhea and it's larger brother Titan are the only two of Saturn's moons with enough mass to maintain atmospheres, but Titan's is largely composed to nitrogen and methane. Exactly where the gasses on Rhea come from is uncertain, though it's suspected that they might originate from collisions between high-energy particles and water ice on Rhea itself, which is thought to be made nearly entirely of ice.

Rhea's atmosphere is far too thin - and the moon is far too distant and cold - to have any near-term implications for space missions beyond the usual unmanned variety. But the discovery is significant in that it proves that chemistry involving oxygen occurs naturally elsewhere in our own solar system, and could be quite common outside of it as well.

[Guardian]

Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2010-11/cassini-gets-whiff-oxygen-flyby-saturns-moon-rhea

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Do Small Businesses Need to Communicate Mission

Do Small Businesses Need to Communicate Mission

This content from: Duct Tape Marketing

Do Small Businesses Need to Communicate MissionThis content from: Duct Tape Marketing Marketing podcast with John Spence (Click to play or right click and “Save As” to download – Subscribe now via iTunes or subscribe via other RSS device (Google Listen) Many small business owner don’t pay much heed to some of the routinely accepted [...]

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How to Nurture Your Creativity

This guest post is by Ali Luke, from The Creativity Toolbox. How creative are you? A lot of bloggers feel that they’re not very creative people. Perhaps they come from a technical background. Perhaps they’ve never picked up a paintbrush in their life, and think that means they?re not creative. Perhaps they see creativity as [...]

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How to Nurture Your Creativity

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FBI Celebrates That It Prevented FBI's Own Bomb Plot

With all of the new security procedures we keep hearing about, it's important for the government to keep convincing us that we're under a very real immediate threat that could put us at risk at any moment. Along those lines, you may have heard over the weekend about how the FBI supposedly stopped a terrorism bomb plot in Portland, Oregon. Except it appears more and more people are scratching beneath the surface and realizing that the entire plot appears to have been cooked up by the FBI itself. Yes, it sounds like they found a dumb kid who was willing to carry out a bombing. But there doesn't appear to be any evidence that he actually had any ability to actually do so... until the FBI came along and provided him with all the details.

Of course, this is hardly new. There appears to have been a very similar story just a month ago, involving a guy in DC who wanted to bomb Metro stations, but the only actual plotting he was able to do was after federal authorities stepped in and helped him plan everything.

Even that is hardly new. I remember a fascinating episode of This American Life back from the summer of 2009 describing (in great detail) a very similar story of a supposed "arms dealer" that the Justice Department championed as a success story when it arrested and prosecuted him for selling missiles to terrorists. The only problem is that the deeper you dig, the more you realize that the whole plot was also set up by the feds. The guy had no way to get a missile. It was actually provided by the feds themselves.

As that report notes, this is how the government has acted since 9/11. It basically creates its own terrorist plots, and then searches for willing participants... and then arrests them, and hypes how it prevented a terrorist attack, even if there's absolutely no indication that anyone involved would have actually been able to carry out any sort of attack (or arms deal) without the aid of the US government.

We've talked about "security theater," but this appears to be law enforcement theater, complete with actors and props. Feel safer yet?

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Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20101130/05014712057/fbi-celebrates-that-it-prevented-fbis-own-bomb-plot.shtml

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Oddities: Apple Doesn't Use DMCA Safe Harbors In Response To iBird Copyright Lawsuit

Back in June we wrote about a somewhat odd copyright lawsuit, involving a guy who has spent many years recording bird sounds. Some of those sounds appeared (without his permission) in an iPhone app called "iBird" and so the guy sued both the developer of iBird and Apple. Of course, he also had only just filed for a copyright on the recordings, which would make it impossible to get any statutory damages. With the initial lawsuit, I noted that it wasn't clear that recordings of birds chirping could even qualify for copyright, but more importantly there was the question of why he was suing Apple, which would appear to be protected by the DMCA's safe harbors, since it wasn't the one who created the app.

Venkat Balasubramani has an update on the case, noting that the late timing of the copyright registration has indeed backfired on the guy, but what's odd is that Apple has not raised the DMCA's safe harbors in its own defense. This seems really strange, and Venkat is also at a loss as to why Apple would not raise such a defense. I'd be curious if anyone here has any ideas why Apple would avoid such an easy "get out of lawsuit" card?

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Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20101129/02251212036/oddities-apple-doesnt-use-dmca-safe-harbors-response-to-ibird-copyright-lawsuit.shtml

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Russia Invests $2 Billion To Clean Up Space Debris

Russia's Space Pod Could Help Clean This Up keithfiore on Flickr

Hare-brained schemes for cleaning up space debris have been batted around for some time, but Russia has finally put some money down on a real project. Russia's space corporation, Energia, is going to invest $2 billion to build a space pod to fly around and knock the junk out of orbit and out of our way. Hopefully it will burn up in the atmosphere, or land in the ocean, and not rain down on Chinese villagers.

This pod could help reopen orbits that are currently inaccessible to future spacecraft due to the amount of shredded metal and empty hulls of dead satellites floating around. Using an ion drive, it will gently nudge these useless scraps out of orbit. Energia plans to have completed testing on the pod, which will have a nuclear power core, by 2020, and have it in service no later than three years after. It will have a lifespan of about 15 years, enough time to make a significant dent in our space debris problem.

Energia is also working on developing an "interceptor" spacecraft using similar technology. This craft would be able to derail any incoming comets or other outer-space projectiles that might be hurtling towards Earth, and change their trajectory just enough that they miss us.

[Space Daily via Fast Company]

Source: http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2010-11/russia-invests-2-billion-clean-space-debris

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