#Health costs of air pollution from agriculture clarifiedammonia pollution from agricultural sources poses larger health costs than previously estimated according to NASA-funded research.
Harvard university researchers Fabien Paulot and Daniel Jacob used computer models including a NASA model of chemical reactions in the atmosphere to better represent how ammonia interacts in the atmosphere to form harmful particulate matter.
Next they used the NASA GEOS-Chem model of atmospheric composition to simulate the complex chemistry that converts agricultural emissions--in this case ammonia--into fine particulate matter.
The above story is provided based on materials by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
The only thing holding it in is said the ice shelf Robert Thomas a glaciologist at the NASA Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island Va. who was involved not in the study.
This research was funded by a grant from the NASA's Cryospheric Science Program and MEASURES program.
NASA findsa new NASA-led study seven years in the making has confirmed that natural forests in the Amazon remove more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than they emit
Fernando Espã rito-Santo of NASA's Jet propulsion laboratory Pasadena Calif. lead author of the study created new techniques to analyze satellite and other data.
Espã rito-Santo said that the idea for the study arose from a 2006 workshop where scientists from several nations came together to identify NASA satellite instruments that might help them better understand the carbon cycle of the Amazon.
We found that large natural disturbances--the sort not captured by plots--have only a tiny effect on carbon cycling throughout the Amazon said Sassan Saatchi of JPL also a co-author.
and the Carnegie Institute for Science Stanford Calif. NASA monitors Earth's vital signs from land air and space with a fleet of satellites and ambitious airborne and ground-based observation campaigns.
NASA develops new ways to observe and study Earth's interconnected natural systems with long-term data records
For more information about NASA's Earth science activities in 2014 visit: http://www. nasa. gov/earthrightnowstory Source:
The above story is provided based on materials by NASA/Jet propulsion laboratory. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference u
#Reintroduction experiments give new hope for plant on brink of extinctiona critically endangered plant known as marsh sandwort (Arenaria paludicola) is inching back from the brink of extinction thanks to the efforts of a UC
In addition to land purchases the project recruits both local rangers and even former maleo hunters to guard nests from egg poachers.
says academicas part of the Psychology Invited Speakers Seminar Series at the University of Leicester Professor Jason Hughes from the University's Department of sociology will today argue that e-cigarettes which are currently unregulated throughout the United kingdom will soon face legislation that will restrict
Professor Hughes said: In the near future e-cigarette use will be restricted tightly in Europe and perhaps altogether banned in certain public places;
Professor Hughes argues future legislation that positions e-cigarettes as'therapies'which require tight regulation may drastically diminish their appeal.
and profits at a booster-run concession stand in Iowa that offered healthy food items from apples to string cheese over two fall seasons.
In the fall of 2008 the booster club in Muscatine Iowa took a chance. Researchers from the University of Iowa asked
Booster clubs across the United states directly support schools'athletic and extracurricular programs like band and choir.
I don't think without revenue from booster clubs especially with how schools are cutting things how they'd be able to do it says Kate Hansen a former president of the Muskie Boosters.
To date six other school booster clubs in Iowa have added healthy foods to their concession menus following a how-to guide written by Laroche based on her experience in Muscatine.
Booster groups have worried that healthier items wouldn't sell and it's important for them to make money to support student activities Larochesays.
I think what it comes down to is people want to have choices says Hansen who was the Muscatine booster club president during the study.
Their relatively broad wings allow them to fly slowly and to manoeuvre elegantly within the dense forest.
Vegetation cover is estimated using the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) scientific instrument launched into Earth orbit by NASA in 1999 on board Terra (EOS AM) and in 2002 on board the Aqua (EOS PM) satellites.
and aerospace engineering from Princeton in 2010 and is now an assistant professor of materials science and engineering at Arizona State university.
It showed that deformed wing virus (DWV) and the fungal parasite Nosema ceranae--both of which have major negative impacts on honeybee health--can infect worker bumblebees
One of the novel aspects of our study is that we show that deformed wing virus
Kono Lab/Rice university) That said the researchers makes nanotube-based cables an ideal platform for lightweight power transmission in systems where weight is a significant factor like aerospace applications.
#Cosmic roadmap to galactic magnetic field revealedscientists on NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission including a team leader from the University of New hampshire report that recent independent measurements have validated one of the mission
and is an important measurement to be making in tandem with the Voyager 1 spacecraft
To date the only other direct information gathered from the heart of this complex boundary region is from NASA's Voyager satellites.
and Technology who started her career creating a viable Mars colony food system for NASA.
NASA study points to infrared-herring in apparent Amazon green-upfor the past eight years scientists have been working to make sense of why some satellite data seemed to show the Amazon rain forest greening-up during the region's dry season each year from June to October.
Now a new NASA study published today in the journal Nature shows that the appearance of canopy greening is caused not by a biophysical change in Amazon forests
Correcting for this artifact in the data Doug Morton of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt Md
or Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer sensors that fly aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites make daily observations over the huge expanse of Amazon forests.
They culled satellite observations from MODIS and NASA's Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite (ICESAT) Geosciences Laser Altimeter System (GLAS)
The above story is provided based on materials by NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Rebecca De Santis and Ruth Schmitz-Streit of University of Kiel in Germany and Monica Balsera of the Institute of Natural resources and Agrobiology of Salamanca in Spain also worked on the projectgrants from the National Science Foundation the National aeronautics and space administration
Using the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies Model-E2 global Earth system model the researchers were able to simulate the terrestrial ecosystem emissions and atmospheric chemical composition of the Pliocene and the preindustrial era.
To field test the device the Rice team installed it on a mobile laboratory used during NASA's DISCOVER-AQ campaign which analyzed pollution on the ground and from the air last September.
is a booster for urban agriculture. The American Institute of Architects also agrees that Detroit is suited particularly well to become a pioneer in urban agriculture at a commercial scale.
Apple submits detailed proposal for'Spaceship'campusas NASA puts its historic spaceship mission to rest,
revealing more details and drawings of what the Spaceship campus will look like. The Apple Campus 2 is expected to be completed by 2015.
Å It â¢s a little like a spaceship landed,  Jobs said in June,
Apple Spaceship campus to hold 12,000 employees and run on green energy via the City of Cupertino and Macrumors
it often those cleaning the jet engines who find the debris, called snarge. And that what is placed in a Ziploc
Turns out it was remained all that from a Brazilian freetail bat from a Southwest Airlines flight from Sacramento, a Boeing 737 that departed at dusk.
'saves 9, 500 gallons of fuel per yearsouthwest Airlines has announced the world's first green plane, a Boeing 737-700 that's 472 lbs. lighter than a conventional model and saves
To lighten the Boeing 737-700's load, the company is installing recyclable Interfaceflor carpet, weight-saving seat covers and life vest pouches,
and NASA engineers together, they also would have come up with a milk crate. It one cubic foot
NASA Goddard Photo and Video/Flickr) via: The New york times
The 10 best cities for parks in the worldas the earth's population explodes at a barely comprehensible rate,
Thanks to Charis Atlas Heelan at Frommer's here is a list of the world's ten best cities for parks:
aerospace, agriculture surge; computing leadsif you could measure 2010 in terms of brainpower, it was a banner year.
from aerospace to telecommunications, showing an increase from 2009. That's according to Thomson Reuters'2010 Innovation Report,
According to the report, aerospace showed the strongest surge in patent activity between 2009 and 2010, with an astounding 25 percent boost.
Aerospace: 32,622 patents in 2010; up 25%from 2009. Agrochemicals & Agriculture: 22,726 patents in 2010;
Aerospace The industry's year-over-year success was driven by a 108 percent increase in Space vehicle and Satellite Technologies,
This type of metal is used also in aerospace, but planes have very long life cycles. The aluminum industry is likely gearing up for growth based both on the trend toward more aluminum in cars generally,
Lockheed martin debuts maple seed-inspired dronemaple seeds. Most people admire them for being pretty and delicate
This week, Lockheed martin is debuting an unmanned military drone that could be useful for information-gathering based on these silent, strong, one-winged, helicopter-like flyers.
A foot long, the SAMARAI (after samara, the name for maple seeds) also has one wing
maple seeds fly by creating a vortex over the leading edge of the wing. Reducing the pressure above the wing's surface like this creates a mini sideways tornado
and the low pressure pulls the wing up, giving it twice the lift it would normally have.
Because of this action, when maple seeds swirl to the ground, they go much more slowly
We printed a space shuttle out of two Play-Doh colors. They were blown just away. Kids might not learn in the abstract,
Back in October, NASA satellites spotted a massive crack that cuts across the floating ice shelf of Pine Island Glacier in Antarctica.
The crack was discovered by a team of NASA scientists assigned to Operation Icebridge, a six year study of changes in the Arctic and Antarctic.
Mysterious site spotted from space Mysterious Ëoenazca Lines ruins discovered in Saudi desert China s massive Ëoepollution cloud can be seen from space NASA satellites unearth Egypt s lost
Interactive map reveals effects of climate change in your neighborhood NASA video shows global warming is real Rare photos of Ëoeuncontacted tribe reveal a disappearing society Infographic:
It currently has two piece of its hardware on the International Space station and two on the Space shuttle mission.
It could be sponsored a NASA scientist, and then theyd decide what hardware they need and theyd use us as the payload developer.
We support quite a few NASA-sponsored scientists. We also partner with commercial companies to fly certain science experiments.
Countryman loading a butterfly experiment that flew on STS-129 Tell me about some of the hardware youve developed to put the experiments on a spacecraft.
called a CGBA (commercial generic bioprocessing apparatus). We have two on the International Space station and two units on the shuttle, each about the size of a mid-deck locker.
So when our payloads are up and running on the Space station, we can communicate directly,
What does the end of the Space shuttle era mean for you guys? Honestly, our center has a long history of fling on the shuttle.
STS-135 was our 39th shuttle mission. Were part of the University of Colorado, and we train mostly masters students.
On one hand, with the shuttle program ending, it definitely impacts how we educate our students. Our students who come through the center are highly sought after by corporations
and NASA because they get hands-on experience in developing the hardware, see the scientists load the science into the hardware,
There are other space programs--Japanese, European and Russian vehicles and the commercial vehicles that hopefully will come online in 2012.
We know the NASA paperwork and the flying systems but we dont know that, for instance, with the Japanese.
An astronaut on STS-126 activating an experiment Tell me about the spider in space for your K-12 program.
native to southern parts of the United states. Theyre on the Space station, coming back on the 135 shuttle.
Now that the shuttle is retired, its hard for the life sciences. The model is that we send our experiments to space
Without the shuttle we dont have that capability anymore. There is some hardware being developed to do some analysis in space while on the station,
We built this big space station, and it was supposed to be a science platform, and Id really like to see it used as a science platform
Turning algae into oil the NASA way Scientists create high-capacity batteries from algae Pressure-cooking method makes an algae-based biofuel Plane takes first flight on 100
at George washington University and Embry Riddle Aeronautical University and author of the AUVSI report. Jenkins observes that drones can be readily mass-produced
& Environmental Research center at the University of North dakota once worked on technology to convert waste from a space station and future Martian bases into heat and power.
Lufthansa passenger flights taking off Airbus and Europe map jet biofuel goal Will the real biofuel Lindbergh please stand up?
Former NASA, Apple engineers unveil $11, 000 coffee makerah...what great lengths we wouldn't go through for the perfect cup of joe.
Born out of a collaborative effort of former NASA, Apple and BMW engineers the $11, 000 Blossom One Limited features the kind of high-tech precision that's sure to appease the taste buds of even the most discriminate of coffee snobs.
Lufthansa passenger flights taking off Airbus and Europe map jet biofuel goal Will the real biofuel Lindbergh please stand up
Turning algae into oil the NASA way Growing the next'green'fuel Algae could be jet fuel of the future The algae bloom of alternative energy The Algaeus algae-fueled Prius hits
Smaller operators offering more deluxe accommodations, such as Limoliner, Lux Bus America and New york Shuttle also expanded service in 2011.
while nearby, a young couple, Wing and Eddie, took care of a small section of land that they rented for US$20 per month.
How to feed an astronaut: a talk with NASA's space food managerwhile it's not exactly five-star cuisine,
astronauts survive on more than the freeze-dried space food found in museum gift shops. To get a look inside NASA's kitchen,
I spoke last week with Michele Perchonok, Shuttle Food System manager at Johnson Space center. How has evolved astronaut food over the years?
In the beginning, we didn't even know if people could swallow in microgravity. We didn't know how much was due to the muscles contracting
and how much was due to gravity. The good news is they can eat and digest their food in microgravity.
Early astronaut food was basically tubes and cubes: pureed applesauce in a toothpaste tube or compressed cubes of sandwiches or breads or desserts.
The astronauts said it tasted OK, but it just wasn't satisfying because it wasn't close to
what they were used to. We started developing some products or taking commercial products that were appropriate
About the year 2000 when we were starting to be on International Space station up to six months,
When we started on International Space station the crew was on a four-day menu cycle.
Half the food on International Space station is U s. food and half is Russian food. We're now up to a 16-day menu cycle.
In addition, it's very difficult to transfer food from Point A to Point B. The astronauts eat their food within the food package most of the time.
We want the astronauts to be able to eat out of the food package with utensils.
If they're on International Space station there's a little suction where the garbage goes. The astronauts can sit over that,
so the crumbs will go right into the suction. All of our beverages are formulated pre. If you drink your coffee with cream and sugar,
--even though it's a wonderful and exciting opportunity--astronauts are separated from family and friends. You may crave comfort foods you grew up with,
Do astronauts determine their own menus? We have approximately 180 items on our food list.
They do have choices on shuttle. Do you want to develop your own menu? Do you want to take a menu and change a few items?
On International Space station, they get'preference bonus containers, 'which are items they like on the official food list
Many crews will host a special meal with the International Space station crew. For example, the crew that's hopefully going up in the beginning of December is hosting a meal
What are some of the most popular food items for astronauts? Shrimp cocktail is very popular.
or they forget to transfer it over for International Space station, it could get soft before it's ready.
I'm working with the astronauts. I'm developing food for Mars. It makes the job very special.
astronauts exploring Mars will build hydroponic growth labs where vegetables can be grown. These crops will provide the crew with added nutrition and variety./
/Courtesy of NASA Image, bottom: Michele Perchonok
How to improve crop yields while reducing climate changewith a one-two punch aimed at reducing climate change and improving crop yields worldwide, the for-profit company re:
NASA has culled available data from its network of satellites to generate a map that depicts the amount
To create the map, the research team used data from the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System lidar on NASA's ICESAT satellite.
This was achieved using NASA imagery from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument on NASA's Terra spacecraft, the Quikscat scatterometer satellite and the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission.
topography and the history of human or natural disturbance of the forests, said Sassan Saatchi of NASA's Jet propulsion laboratory in Pasadena,
via NASA) Related on Smartplanet: How NASA satellites unearthed Egypt s lost pyramids How satellite technology may have tracked down Bin laden Video:
space station s streaming webcam to let users spy on earthlings More interactive maps and graphics:
Infographic: Interactive map shows where HIV cases are most prevalent Infographic: Just how safe is your neighborhood?
Its flight feature depends on a large, stowable glider wing and a rear-mounted propellor for thrust.
NASA: Road transportation a'key driver'of global warminganalyzing impact by economic sector rather than chemical species, NASA scientists have determined that motor vehicles are the greatest contributor to atmospheric warming, now and in the near term.
In a new study led by Nadine Unger of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies,
researchers used a climate model to analyze how 13 different sectors of the economy will impact global warming from the year 2000 to 2100.
a river was cut in the science classroom floor which actually flows with water when it rains, thanks to the new science wing's rainwater harvesting system.
Scientist gets climate data off NASA satellite before it diesan assistant professor at Colorado State university, Michael Lefsky, has combined data from three NASA satellites to produce a global map of the height of the world's forests.
Knowing how tall the forests are will help scientists figure out how much carbon the trees can capture
On July 14, NASA flight controllers finished firing ICESAT's thrusters to lower its orbit so gravity can drag it back to Earth.
About 90 percent of the satellite is expected to burn up in the atmosphere--NASA claims there's little harm from the rest,
More later on what NASA plans to do in the meantime. ICESAT was using a laser technology similar to radar, called lidar,
From NASA: Lidar can capture vertical slices of forest canopy height by shooting pulses of light at the ground
From NASA: The new results show that temperate conifer forests--which are extremely moist and contain massive trees such as Douglas fir, western hemlock, redwoods,
according to NASA, is what happens to 2 billion tons per year of missing carbon dioxide, considering that humans generate 7 billion tons
Mr. Torcellini greenhouse wouldn t look out of place on a wayward space station where pioneers have gone to escape the cannibal gangs back On earth.
In the March-April 2009 issue of THE FUTURIST, Dennis Bushnell, a chief research scientist at NASA
and NASA showed periodic interest in the idea as a way of feeding astronauts on extremely long space missions.
The smart industrial gear includes jet engines, bridges and oil rigs that alert their human minders when they need repairs,
Computers track sensor data on operating performance of a jet engine, or slight structural changes in an oil rig, looking for telltale patterns that signal coming trouble.
If you re not familiar with Lely Astronaut A4 robotic milking system, it essentially a boxed area that the cows walk into and are milked at their leisure.
The appeal of the Astronaut A4 isn t only that it automates the milking process,
According to Lely, the Astronaut system produces 10 to 15 percent more milk than conventional farmers who typically milk twice a day.
which users produced videos showing how they use the Lely Astronaut system and how it affects their farm.
The hands off milking system that the Astronaut A4 provides allows farmers to spend less time milking
we wouldn't have Nasa engineers getting us there. We use that narrative as inspiration
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