Nothing is the bridge between the future and the further future. Nothing is certainty. Nothing is any definition of anything.

— Peter Hammill

Astronomy

'No Man's Sky' receives fishing, diving, and exo-skiffs via 'Aquarius' update (video)

Space.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 4:30pm
After another major universe refresh, No Man's Sky continues its journey to become the ultimate time sink space game by adding alien fishing.
Categories: Astronomy

Learn How Astronauts Take Photos from NASA Flight Engineer Matthew Dominick

Scientific American.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 4:30pm

NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick speaks with Science Quickly host Rachel Feltman about how he captures jaw-dropping images from space

Categories: Astronomy

Scientists Make Living Mice’s Skin Transparent with Simple Food Dye

Scientific American.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 4:30pm

New research harnessed the highly absorbent dye tartrazine, used as the common food coloring Yellow No. 5, to turn tissues in living mice clear—temporarily revealing organs and vessels inside the animals

Categories: Astronomy

Archaeological Methods Reveal How Astronauts Work on the International Space Station

Universe Today - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:02pm

Archaeology is the study of human prehistory, so it seems incongruous to use its methods to study how humans behave in space. But that’s what astronauts aboard the International Space Station are doing.

When the ISS was designed, it was built around specific tasks and needs. Living areas like latrines, exercise spaces, and food preparation and eating spaces are designed to make the space station an effective and agreeable place to work and live. But it’s impossible to get these things right in any kind of facility. The people who end up working and living on the ISS find their own ways to use the spaces, which might not align with the intended purpose.

In an effort to understand how astronauts really use the spaces on the ISS, astronauts adapted methods used in archaeology. A team led by Justin Walsh of Chapman University in California had astronauts on the ISS take daily photos to see how different areas on the station are really used. They published their results in research titled “Archaeology in space: The Sampling Quadrangle Assemblages Research Experiment (SQuARE) on the International Space Station. Report 1: Squares 03 and 05” in the journal PLOS One.

SQuARE is part of the International Space Station Archaeological Project (ISSAP.)

“ISSAP aims to fill a gap in social science investigation into the human experience of long-duration spaceflight. As the largest, most intensively inhabited space station to date, with over 270 visitors from 23 countries during more than 23 years of continuous habitation, the International Space Station (ISS) is the ideal example of a new kind of spacefaring community—”a micro-society in a mini-world,” the authors explain.

“Our primary goal is to identify how humans adapt to life in a new environment for which our species has not evolved, one characterized by isolation, confinement, and especially microgravity,” the researchers write. The microgravity is especially interesting. Its benefits are the ability to work and move in 360 degrees and to do experiments that are impossible on Earth. The downside is that anything unrestrained simply floats away.

According to the authors, this is the first time archaeological fieldwork has been used in space. SQuARE had four goals:

  • To develop a new understanding of how humans adapt to life in an environmental context for which we are not evolutionarily adapted, using evidence from the observation of material culture;
  • To identify disjunctions between planned and actual usage of facilities on a space station;
  • To develop and test techniques that enable archaeological research at a distance; and
  • To demonstrate the relevance of social science methods and perspectives for improving life in space.

SQuARE adapted a method archaeologists use to study archaeological sites called the shovel test pit. Shovel test pits are shallow pits excavated in a grid overlain a site to see what artifacts might be underground. They’re used in the first phase of an archaeological study and help scientists determine where to dig deeper in subsequent phases.

Obviously, nobody’s digging actual holes into the space station. Instead of holes, the ISS crew took pictures of six locations on the ISS every day for 60 days—between January and March 2022—to determine how they were being used. These images go beyond interviewing astronauts to see how they adapt to such an unusual working/living situation. The human mind being what it is, interviews can leave out details that might seem irrelevant but are actually revealing.

The research article in PLOS One concerns two of the six areas: the latrine/exercise equipment area and the maintenance area.

This cutaway image of the International Space Station’s US Orbital Segment shows the locations of Square 03 (at upper center, in yellow) and 05 (at lower right, in orange). Square 03 is the maintenance area, and Square 05 is the latrine/exercise area. Image Credit: Walsh et al. 2024.

“Using the photographs and an innovative web tool, we identified 5,438 instances of items, labelling them by type and function,” the authors explain in their research article. The ‘artifacts’ in the images included Post-It notes, writing tools, and an augmented reality headset. The research also includes astronaut activity reports which allowed for chronological cross-referencing.

This image shows Square 03 in the starboard Maintenance Work Area of the International Space Station. An open crew berth is on the right. The researchers developed an image analysis platform to process the images and identify artifacts. Image Credit: Walsh et al. 2024.

The results show that an area near the latrine/exercise space without a designated purpose was used to store toiletries, resealable bags, and a seldom-used computer. The maintenance area was repurposed. No maintenance was done there, and the space was mostly used for storage.

This image shows Square 05, the latrine/exercise area. The Advanced Resistive Exercise Device is at the far upper right on the overhead wall. The Treadmill with Vibration Isolation Stabilization System is outside of the image on the left. The Waste and Hygiene Compartment is directly behind the photographer. Image Credit: Walsh et al. 2024.

“One of the project goals is understanding cultural adaptations to the microgravity environment,” the authors explain in their research. They were especially interested in what they call ‘gravity surrogates,’ simple items used to keep things in their place. On Earth, we can just set a pen down on our desk, and it stays there until we need it again. But in microgravity, astronauts have to adapt.

The image of Square 05 shows an example of how astronauts adapt to their surroundings in unforeseen ways. The blue bar is a metal handrail used to help astronauts move around the ISS, but as NASA acknowledges, “they also serve as convenient locations for temporary mounting, affixing, or restraint of loose equipment and as attachment points for equipment.” The blue bar is just one of many examples of things with other uses serving as restraints in microgravity.

This figure from the research shows the number and type of artifacts in square 03. Restraints are the most plentiful objects. Image Credit: Walsh et al. 2024.

SQuARE shows how spaces get used in unintended ways. Square 03 was intended for maintenance work but is used differently. “But much of the time, there was nobody working here—a fact that is not captured by historic photos of the area precisely because nothing is happening,” the authors explain.

Instead it’s used as a pegboard, like one mounted on a wall in a home. It’s a convenient place to store all types of items, some of which aren’t even used in the space because there are so many attachment points.

The authors say that their work provides “insights into material culture,” and that their results can be used in future spacecraft design. They can also help them study the rest of the squares more effectively.

“The experiment is the first archaeology ever to happen off of the planet Earth. By applying a very traditional method for sampling a site to a completely new kind of archaeological context, we show how the ISS crew uses different areas of the space station in ways that diverge from designs and mission plans. Architects and planners of future space stations can learn valuable lessons from this work,” the researchers conclude.

The post Archaeological Methods Reveal How Astronauts Work on the International Space Station appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Astronomy

Bat die-off led to more insecticide use and more infant deaths in US

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
In counties in the US affected by a bat-killing disease, there has been a 31 per cent increase in insecticide use and an 8 per cent rise in infant mortality
Categories: Astronomy

Bat die-off led to more insecticide use and more infant deaths in US

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
In counties in the US affected by a bat-killing disease, there has been a 31 per cent increase in insecticide use and an 8 per cent rise in infant mortality
Categories: Astronomy

Mice turned see-through by a dye that lets you watch their organs

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
Rubbing a common yellow food dye onto a mouse's skin turns it temporarily transparent, so we can monitor its insides without harming the animal
Categories: Astronomy

Mice turned see-through by a dye that lets you watch their organs

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
Rubbing a common yellow food dye onto a mouse's skin turns it temporarily transparent, so we can monitor its insides without harming the animal
Categories: Astronomy

Even simple bacteria can anticipate the changing seasons

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
Cyanobacteria exposed to shorter days are better at surviving cold conditions, showing that even simple organisms can prepare for the arrival or summer and winter
Categories: Astronomy

Even simple bacteria can anticipate the changing seasons

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
Cyanobacteria exposed to shorter days are better at surviving cold conditions, showing that even simple organisms can prepare for the arrival or summer and winter
Categories: Astronomy

The 1st Milky Way black hole image was groundbreaking — the next could be even better

Space.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 3:00pm
By demonstrating the ability for joint observations at the short radio wavelength of 0.87mm, the Event Horizon Telescope has improved its observational acuity by half.
Categories: Astronomy

NASA astronauts can't wear Boeing Starliner spacesuits in SpaceX's Dragon. Here's why

Space.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 1:59pm
NASA's Starliner astronauts will temporarily have an emergency spot available on a SpaceX Crew Dragon, but they can't wear spacesuits there. That will change in a few weeks.
Categories: Astronomy

Used SpaceX rocket launches 7,001st Starlink satellite (and 20 others), lands at sea (video)

Space.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 1:09pm
A SpaceX rocket carrying the 7,001st Starlink internet satellite launched into orbit from Florida today (Sept. 5), then aced its landing at sea.
Categories: Astronomy

Meet Phaethon, a weird asteroid that thinks it's a comet – our new research may explain what's going on

Space.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 12:59pm
Meet Phaethon, a "rock comet" that blurs the definitions between asteroid and comet, and learn why it will be worth paying attention to this fascinating object in the coming years.
Categories: Astronomy

Can we spot every incoming asteroid before they hit Earth?

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 12:44pm
News of the asteroid 2024 RW1 impacting near the Philippines may have come as a shock this week, but space agencies and astronomers around the world are keeping an eye out to protect us
Categories: Astronomy

Can we spot every incoming asteroid before they hit Earth?

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 12:44pm
News of the asteroid 2024 RW1 impacting near the Philippines may have come as a shock this week, but space agencies and astronomers around the world are keeping an eye out to protect us
Categories: Astronomy

The Andromeda Galaxy glows rosy red in gorgeous new Hubble Telescope image

Space.com - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 11:59am
The reddish structures of our neighboring galaxy glow brightly in a new image from the Hubble Space Telescope.
Categories: Astronomy

Rejecting standard cancer treatment like Elle Macpherson is a big risk

New Scientist Space - Cosmology - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 11:50am
People with cancer may have understandable reasons to follow Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson in declining chemotherapy, but the odds aren’t in their favour, warns Elle Hunt
Categories: Astronomy

Rejecting standard cancer treatment like Elle Macpherson is a big risk

New Scientist Space - Space Headlines - Thu, 09/05/2024 - 11:50am
People with cancer may have understandable reasons to follow Australian supermodel Elle Macpherson in declining chemotherapy, but the odds aren’t in their favour, warns Elle Hunt
Categories: Astronomy