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Re: Science News

Jupiter's Moon Europa Has Plate Tectonics like Earth Does
The discovery could buoy bids for a mission to the Jovian moon
Sep 8, 2014 |By Alexandra Witze and Nature magazine

Some of the scars on the Jovian moon Europa could be the result of subducting plates.
Credit: Ted Stryk/Galileo Project/JPL/NASA
If you have got an idea for how to study Europa, then NASA wants to hear from you.
The agency has no official plans for a mission to the Jovian moon, whose icy crust covers a watery ocean in which life could theoretically exist. But spurred by intense congressional interest and several recent discoveries, NASA is seeking ideas for instruments that could fly on a mission to Europa. The possibilities range from a stripped-down probe that would zip past the moon, to a carefully designed Jupiter orbiter that would explore ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...A_SPC_20140911
NASA to Send 3-D Printer to Space
The machine is expected to let astronauts create parts to order
Sep 10, 2014 |By Alexandra Witze and Nature magazine

Engineers test a 3D printer under microgravity conditions aboard a modified aircraft in parabolic flight.
Credit: Made In Space
In one small step towards space manufacturing, NASA is sending a 3D printer to the International Space Station. Astronauts will be able to make plastic objects of almost any shape they like inside a box about the size of a microwave oven — enabling them to print new parts to replace broken ones, and perhaps even to invent useful tools.
The launch, slated for around September 19, will be the first time that a 3D printer flies in space. The agency has already embraced ground-based 3D printing as a fast, cheap way to make ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...A_SPC_20140911
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Re: Science News

Fact or Fiction?: The Ebola Virus Will Go Airborne
Why do some viruses go airborne? Will the pathogen causing the west African outbreak be one of them?
Sep 16, 2014 |By Dina Fine Maron

Credit: Photodisk
Could Ebola go airborne? That’s the fear set off last week by a New York Times op-ed entitled “What We’re Afraid to Say about Ebola” from Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota. Although clinicians readily agree that the Ebola virus leaps from one person to the next via close contact with blood and other bodily fluids, Osterholm warned that the risk of airborne transmission is “real” and “until we consider it, the world will not be prepared to do what is necessary to end the epidemic.”
But interviews with several infectious diseases experts reveal that whereas such a mutation—or more likely series of mutations—might physically be possible, it’s highly unlikely. In fact, there’s almost no historical precedent for ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar..._HLTH_20140916
Vaginal Microbe Yields Novel Antibiotic
A new drug is one of thousands of drug-like molecules that may be produced by our microbiome
Sep 11, 2014 |By Erika Check Hayden and Nature magazine

The antibiotic lactocillin was isolated from a Lactobacillus bacterium .
Credit: BSIP SA / Alamy
Bacteria living on human bodies contain genes that are likely to code for a vast number of drug-like molecules — including a new antibiotic made by bacteria that live in the vagina, researchers report in this week's issue of Cell.
The drug, lactocillin, hints at the untapped medical potential of this microbial landscape.
“They have shown that there is a huge ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar..._HLTH_20140916
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Re: Science News

How Diversity Makes Us Smarter
Being around people who are different from us makes us more creative, more diligent and harder-working
Sep 16, 2014 |By Katherine W. Phillips

Edel Rodriguez
The first thing to acknowledge about diversity is that it can be difficult. In the U.S., where the dialogue of inclusion is relatively advanced, even the mention of the word “diversity” can lead to anxiety and conflict. Supreme Court justices disagree on the virtues of diversity and the means for achieving it. Corporations spend billions of dollars to attract and manage diversity both internally and externally, yet they still face discrimination lawsuits, and the leadership ranks of the business world remain predominantly white and male.
It is reasonable to ask what good diversity does us. Diversity of expertise confers benefits that ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...SA_MB_20140917
Virtual-Reality Headset Is Reinventing Exposure Therapy
Researchers are using the Oculus Rift to test immersion treatments for PTSD and phobias
Sep 16, 2014 |By Corinne Iozzio

COURTESY OF OCULUS
Albert “Skip” Rizzo of the University of Southern California began studying virtual reality (VR) as psychological treatment in 1993. Since then, dozens of studies, his included, have shown the immersion technique to be effective for everything from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and anxiety to phobias and addiction. But a lack of practical hardware has kept VR out of reach for clinicians. The requirements for a VR headset seem simple—a high-resolution, fast-reacting screen, a field of vision that is wide enough to convince patients they are in another world and a reasonable price tag—yet such a product has proved elusive. Says Rizzo, “It's been 20 frustrating years.”
In 2013 VR stepped into the consumer spotlight in the form of a prototype head-mounted display called ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...SA_MB_20140917
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Re: Science News

India Spacecraft Successfully Arrives at Mars
The Mangalyaan probe, the country's first mission to another world, has entered the Red Planet's orbit
Sep 24, 2014 |By Sanjay Kumar and Nature magazine

Artist rendering of the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), informally called Mangalyaan (Sanskrit: मङ्गलयान, English: Mars-craft) is a Mars orbiter that was successfully launched on 5th November 2013 by the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO).
Credit: Nesnad via Wikimedia Commons
India joined the distinguished club of Mars explorers on 24 September, as its Mangalyaan probe maneuvered into the red planet's orbit according to plan. Until then, only the United States, the former Soviet Union and the European Space Agency had conducted missions that successfully reached Mars. India's space program is the first to do so on its first attempt.
“History has been created today,” declared Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) mission control room in Bangalore. “The odds were stacked against us but we have prevailed and have achieved the near impossible,” he added.
As the news of the probe's successful insertion into orbit poured in, the ISRO control room ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...A_SPC_20140925
One more to F$.
Betting Against Gravitational Waves: Q&A with Cosmologist Neil Turok
Failure to discover primordial spacetime ripples could open the way for a physicist’s alternative theory
Sep 23, 2014 |By Clara Moskowitz

The BICEP2 telescope at the South Pole.
Steffen Richter, Harvard University
Many physicists were disheartened at the news that the apparent discovery of gravitational waves from the big bang was likely an error. But a cosmologist from the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Ontario felt a bit vindicated.
Neil Turok has been betting all along that primordial gravitational waves—ripples in the fabric of spacetime—would never be seen. Turok expressed little surprise that new results from the Planck satellite observing light from the big bang show that the supposed observation of gravitational waves from the South Pole’s BICEP2 experiment in March was probably contaminated by a haze of dust in our galaxy.
Gravitational waves, if confirmed, would be proof that the baby universe ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...A_SPC_20140925
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Re: Science News

Transparent Rats Give Scientists Clear View to Innards
New technique turns rodent bodies transparent
Sep 16, 2014 |By Julia Calderone

Credit: Thomas Fuchs
One thing is clear: peering inside animals leads to scientific discovery. In the 1960s and 1970s genetic and developmental biology research exploded after laboratories began studying naturally transparent critters, such as the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and the zebra fish Danio rerio. With them, scientists could watch young cells develop into a full organism. Now, for the first time, they can see through mammalian bodies, thanks to a technique that can make mice and rats— and perhaps larger animals—clear.
Scientists have been able to render tissues such as the mammal brain transparent, but the procedure ...
More on http://www.scientificamerican.com/ar...SA_BS_20140926
Extrapolation Gone Wrong: the Case of the Fermat Primes
By Evelyn Lamb | September 26, 2014 | Comments3
The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Sorry, Pierre, but not all Fermat numbers are primes. Image: Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
Samuel Arbesman recently wrote about incorrect mathematical conjectures. I wanted to add one of my favorites, which came up in my math history class a couple weeks ago. Unlike the disproven conjectures Arbesman wrote about, which fail only for very large numbers, this one fails at 5.
Pierre de Fermat was an amateur number theorist who is now most famous (or perhaps infamous) for a note he scribbled in a margin that led to a 400-year quest to prove what is known as Fermat’s Last Theorem.
Fermat’s conjecture about primes, however, was resolved more quickly, in under a century. Fermat noticed that 221+1, which equals 5, is prime, 222+1, or 17, is prime, and more generally, 22n+1 is prime when n=0,1,2,3, or 4. Numbers of the form Fn=22n are now called Fermat numbers, and ...
More on http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/...fermat-primes/
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