ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
Well, on the one hand, it would be a shame to wipe out a nascent ecosystem with a tardigrade apocalypse.
On the other hand, "Tardigrade Apocalypse" would be a rockin name for a band.
I'm not sure where I'm going with this.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
I would totally watch a shitty SyFy movie about a tardigrade experiment gone horribly wrong.
I mean, I watched Night of the Lepus. Have you seen a tardigrade? The Wikipedia page is basically a synopsis for a horror flick as-is.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
Personally I am all for shooting SCIENCE! at planets and seeing what happens.
I don't get why we're not just launching random shit at Mars on a daily basis.
"Hey, it's a new breed of corn. Let's shoot it at Mars."
"Brett, grab me that new robo-dog. Fucker's going to Mars."
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This is a few days old but I though it was pretty neat:
Here we have a picture taken by the Rosetta probe's lander to check one of the solar panels. In the background is comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko, which it's going to land on in a couple of moths.
We launched this probe 10 years ago and it's about to land on a goddamn comet.
NEAT
life's a game that you're bound to lose / like using a hammer to pound in screws
fuck up once and you break your thumb / if you're happy at all then you're god damn dumb
that's right we're on a fucked up cruise / God is dead but at least we have booze
bad things happen, no one knows why / the sun burns out and everyone dies
Tardigrades are tough, but like almost all known life forms they still need liquid water. Spewing them into space would just kill them slowly.
Moreover, there have been enough asteroid impacts on Earth over the years that this has quite probably already happened.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
I told my daughter about tardigrades and now she wants to fire some at Mars for her science fair project.
I submitted an entry to Lego Ideas, and if 10,000 people support me, it'll be turned into an actual Lego set!If you'd like to see and support my submission, follow this link.
Tardigrades are tough, but like almost all known life forms they still need liquid water. Spewing them into space would just kill them slowly.
Well
they apparently need very little water, Wikipedia said they could go a decade w/o the stuff, so... like maybe we could just put them in a plastic bag filled with water before throwing them out the ISS airlock in the general direction of Europa.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
That was kind of my thinking. Ten years is enough time to reach a fair number of bodies, so they don't have to survive in icy vacuum forever.
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To be fair, there's a good bit of speculation that in the very early solar system when Venus, Earth, and Mars may have all possessed a fair bit of liquid water at the same time and were all still pounded regularly by asteroids that the mathematical odds of microbes being evenly spread between the three - regardless of which developed life first - was extremely high. As I recall, the new Cosmos (episode 11 I think) discusses this yet-to-be-confirmed possibility of both this and the larger scale concept of panspermia (for example, there's been totally enough time for ejecta from the Chicxulub impact to reach other nearby solar systems by now, the only question being whether they have been fully sterilized by cosmic radiation between their departure and arrival dates).
Tardigrades are tough, but like almost all known life forms they still need liquid water. Spewing them into space would just kill them slowly.
Well
they apparently need very little water, Wikipedia said they could go a decade w/o the stuff, so... like maybe we could just put them in a plastic bag filled with water before throwing them out the ISS airlock in the general direction of Europa.
They can survive for some time without it, but they're not going to be doing anything else.
The real problem is that there's nowhere for them to go. Earth is the only known or suspected location in the solar system where liquid water is stable at the surface. Europa, probably Ganymede, and maybe some of the other outer solar system moons have oceans of liquid water, but these are far beneath the surface. Mars may have transient surface water (as far as I know it's never been proven or disproven), but if it does it is little more than a trickle and extremely brief.
Bacteria to Venus! We should totally make this happen. It's why commercial launch costs going down is exciting - once you're in orbit, you can get pretty damn far using relatively cheap and easy to assemble ion and arc thrusters.
Might already be there some there I thought? Venuses upper atmosphere is a long way away from the traditionally thought of hellish conditions of the surface, sure I've read some articles speculating that there might be some simple life up in the clouds due to the presence of a few unusual gases up there (in the same way that you'd not usually expect to find oxygen in the atmosphere of a planet like earth without some very complicated reactions going on that are good markers for biology).
Here we go, should probably double check that these places don't have stuff there already before we go Cane Toading the solar system up with Tardigrades.
I think it's cool to look for life on other planets, I really hope we find some. However I keep thinking that the search for new life is slowing our ability to spread old life, and that as a version of life we sort of owe it to the universe to spread out and seed other bodies with life (not necessarily human life) in order to prevent its disappearance from the universe.
Yeah, just think that Tardigrades are the wrong way to do it - Bacteria on Venus that remove the acid from the atmosphere so we can live in the clouds, all good in my book! Just move earth stuff about seems a bit reckless.
Wish I could find the original article, but sure I've seen a plan that showed how to terraform Mars in about 70 years. Cost is tredemendous, but then everything government's do is expensive and compared to the Iraq war...70 years is a long time to spread that stuff out.
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TraceGNU Terry Pratchett; GNU Gus; GNU Carrie Fisher; GNU Adam WeRegistered Userregular
I submitted an entry to Lego Ideas, and if 10,000 people support me, it'll be turned into an actual Lego set!If you'd like to see and support my submission, follow this link.
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ElJeffeRoaming the streets, waving his mod gun around.Moderator, ClubPAMod Emeritus
I mean, c'mon, this just looks like a cartoon wang:
I submitted an entry to Lego Ideas, and if 10,000 people support me, it'll be turned into an actual Lego set!If you'd like to see and support my submission, follow this link.
I believe Alzheimer's has a higher correlation with European ancestry. I think I read that somewhere. Also, there are European specific types of Anemia. I know my paternal grandmother has hereditary spherocytosis (round blood cells, it can cause anemia).
Looking this up, the first thing I found was this:
which indicates that Alzheimer's is negatively correlated with being white as opposed to black/hispanic.
Native Americans have even lower incidence, though.
A perfect example of why "I think I read" or "hear d a guy say" isn't scientific. Best to look into it yourself.
But yes there are generally European heritable diseases, like spherocytosis.
There are two types main types of AD.
The first can be considered heritable or inherited Alzheimer's disease. A lot of times we call it "Familial AD".
There are at least six variants of the gene APP which goes awry in Alzheimer's Disease.
We call them Iowa, Arctic, Flemish, Italian, Dutch and so forth. The majority of the known and traced heritable AD cases are clustered in Europe and there is a very strong correlation IRT European ancestry and familial AD.
Now, that does not address sporadic cases (these occur because old). Sporadic cases happen disproportionately to the elderly and ALL elderly are at risk for AD and Dementia. I guarantee that the majority of the studies in that book did not sample brains post-mortem to confirm AD so they can only call it phenotypic Dementia. We can't really say much about the incidence of Alzheimer's between races from a lot of the studies in that book.
Also, neat bit from a question is that the two contracts are identical but SpaceX is still only asking for half as much money to achieve the same results.
Damn was it too much to ask for that boeing got its comeupance for gouging the US all these years?
I agree, but to be fair the Atlas V is an incredibly reliable vehicle. Overpriced? Most likely. But there is definitely something to be said for 100% launch success across all 48 launches for the vehicle, which is understandably attractive to NASA.
Even though Boeing got picked, it looks like Sierra Nevada is going to do pretty well. They're currently in talks with JAXA to potentially be the supplier of manned vehicles for Japan's home-built rocket.
Damn was it too much to ask for that boeing got its comeupance for gouging the US all these years?
I agree, but to be fair the Atlas V is an incredibly reliable vehicle. Overpriced? Most likely. But there is definitely something to be said for 100% launch success across all 48 launches for the vehicle, which is understandably attractive to NASA.
For a while it seemed like the only news from SpaceX was "SpaceX $umpteen million vehicle explodes on launch pad/in midair". Boeing seems to have their shit together as far as launches go.
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Mr_Rose83 Blue Ridge Protects the HolyRegistered Userregular
Damn was it too much to ask for that boeing got its comeupance for gouging the US all these years?
I agree, but to be fair the Atlas V is an incredibly reliable vehicle. Overpriced? Most likely. But there is definitely something to be said for 100% launch success across all 48 launches for the vehicle, which is understandably attractive to NASA.
Even though Boeing got picked, it looks like Sierra Nevada is going to do pretty well. They're currently in talks with JAXA to potentially be the supplier of manned vehicles for Japan's home-built rocket.
Yeah, with numbers like that I'm thinking they want to put people on the ultra-reliable one and give the much more frequent cargo-only runs to the cheap option.
The numbers are misleading though. For example Boeing shot two milsats into the wrong orbit with an early shutdown not too long ago, and the Falcon 9 didn't explode it was destroyed by range safety, while being tested with highly experimental landing gear on it.
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Just_Bri_ThanksSeething with ragefrom a handbasket.Registered User, ClubPAregular
edited September 2014
Plus the one they fail-safed was purely an experimental vehicle, not the Falcon 9 first stage that they have flown successfully a dozen times.
Edit: SpaceX has publicly stated that if it was a full-on falcon 9 first stage it wouldn't have failed the way it did because the falcon 9 has redundancies that the grasshopper does not have.
Just_Bri_Thanks on
...and when you are done with that; take a folding
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
The numbers are misleading though. For example Boeing shot two milsats into the wrong orbit with an early shutdown not too long ago, and the Falcon 9 didn't explode it was destroyed by range safety, while being tested with highly experimental landing gear on it.
Plus the one they fail-safed was purely an experimental vehicle, not the Falcon 9 first stage that they have flown successfully a dozen times.
Edit: SpaceX has publicly stated that if it was a full-on falcon 9 first stage it wouldn't have failed the way it did because the falcon 9 has redundancies that the grasshopper does not have.
I was more going with the Space Shuttle's flight record; using simpler, dedicated vehicles for crew and heavy lift rockets for cargo rather than trying to combine the two is bound to be a safer method of space travel.
I'm happy SpaceX didn't get all the marbles cause I think Elon Musk is a fucking shyster.
life's a game that you're bound to lose / like using a hammer to pound in screws
fuck up once and you break your thumb / if you're happy at all then you're god damn dumb
that's right we're on a fucked up cruise / God is dead but at least we have booze
bad things happen, no one knows why / the sun burns out and everyone dies
The numbers are misleading though. For example Boeing shot two milsats into the wrong orbit with an early shutdown not too long ago, and the Falcon 9 didn't explode it was destroyed by range safety, while being tested with highly experimental landing gear on it.
Plus the one they fail-safed was purely an experimental vehicle, not the Falcon 9 first stage that they have flown successfully a dozen times.
Edit: SpaceX has publicly stated that if it was a full-on falcon 9 first stage it wouldn't have failed the way it did because the falcon 9 has redundancies that the grasshopper does not have.
I was more going with the Space Shuttle's flight record; using simpler, dedicated vehicles for crew and heavy lift rockets for cargo rather than trying to combine the two is bound to be a safer method of space travel.
This doesn't really tally. Having one vehicle you really understand will be safer. Conventionally that's not done because the smaller vehicle we usually launch more, so that's the one we understand. The larger vehicle is built because the smaller one can't meet payload requirements. But SpaceX really only have the Falcon 9. Eventually they'll have the F9-Heavy and whatever comes after that, so the distinction will naturally shake out.
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Just_Bri_ThanksSeething with ragefrom a handbasket.Registered User, ClubPAregular
edited September 2014
And the Falcon 9 heavy will be 3 falcon 9 first stages attached, so they ought to REALLY understand it.
I'm happy SpaceX didn't get all the marbles cause I think Elon Musk is a fucking shyster.
Can you elaborate on what part of his companies, or public statements gives you this impression?
Just_Bri_Thanks on
...and when you are done with that; take a folding
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
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Just_Bri_ThanksSeething with ragefrom a handbasket.Registered User, ClubPAregular
Honestly though? SpaceX is eating Boeing's lunch, and I think the only reason Boeing got a seat at the table is because they have spent so gawdalful much money on the thing it would be embarrassing to back out.
...and when you are done with that; take a folding
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
Posts
On the other hand, "Tardigrade Apocalypse" would be a rockin name for a band.
I'm not sure where I'm going with this.
Unfortunately, the name might get snagged for a shitty made for syfy movie about an experiment with tardigrades gone horribly wrong.
I mean, I watched Night of the Lepus. Have you seen a tardigrade? The Wikipedia page is basically a synopsis for a horror flick as-is.
I don't get why we're not just launching random shit at Mars on a daily basis.
"Hey, it's a new breed of corn. Let's shoot it at Mars."
"Brett, grab me that new robo-dog. Fucker's going to Mars."
The industry calls this "The Cave Johnson Method"
We have discovered bacteria that can metabolize the atmosphere of Venus. Some of them might live. It would be super keen.
Here we have a picture taken by the Rosetta probe's lander to check one of the solar panels. In the background is comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko, which it's going to land on in a couple of moths.
We launched this probe 10 years ago and it's about to land on a goddamn comet.
NEAT
fuck up once and you break your thumb / if you're happy at all then you're god damn dumb
that's right we're on a fucked up cruise / God is dead but at least we have booze
bad things happen, no one knows why / the sun burns out and everyone dies
Moreover, there have been enough asteroid impacts on Earth over the years that this has quite probably already happened.
they apparently need very little water, Wikipedia said they could go a decade w/o the stuff, so... like maybe we could just put them in a plastic bag filled with water before throwing them out the ISS airlock in the general direction of Europa.
but first I should go to bed before my posts get even dummer
The real problem is that there's nowhere for them to go. Earth is the only known or suspected location in the solar system where liquid water is stable at the surface. Europa, probably Ganymede, and maybe some of the other outer solar system moons have oceans of liquid water, but these are far beneath the surface. Mars may have transient surface water (as far as I know it's never been proven or disproven), but if it does it is little more than a trickle and extremely brief.
Here we go, should probably double check that these places don't have stuff there already before we go Cane Toading the solar system up with Tardigrades.
Wish I could find the original article, but sure I've seen a plan that showed how to terraform Mars in about 70 years. Cost is tredemendous, but then everything government's do is expensive and compared to the Iraq war...70 years is a long time to spread that stuff out.
Have you looked at flatworms yet?
They are the cutest.
Rumors state a poster was spotted arriving at the announcement location with SpaceX & Sierra Nevada on it, but no Boeing.
Sorry, tardigrades win.
The first can be considered heritable or inherited Alzheimer's disease. A lot of times we call it "Familial AD".
There are at least six variants of the gene APP which goes awry in Alzheimer's Disease.
We call them Iowa, Arctic, Flemish, Italian, Dutch and so forth. The majority of the known and traced heritable AD cases are clustered in Europe and there is a very strong correlation IRT European ancestry and familial AD.
Now, that does not address sporadic cases (these occur because old). Sporadic cases happen disproportionately to the elderly and ALL elderly are at risk for AD and Dementia. I guarantee that the majority of the studies in that book did not sample brains post-mortem to confirm AD so they can only call it phenotypic Dementia. We can't really say much about the incidence of Alzheimer's between races from a lot of the studies in that book.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdQfdKkr46U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cf_-g3UWQ04
EDIT - Ongoing news conference (as of 4:30 PM EST)
Also, neat bit from a question is that the two contracts are identical but SpaceX is still only asking for half as much money to achieve the same results.
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
I agree, but to be fair the Atlas V is an incredibly reliable vehicle. Overpriced? Most likely. But there is definitely something to be said for 100% launch success across all 48 launches for the vehicle, which is understandably attractive to NASA.
Even though Boeing got picked, it looks like Sierra Nevada is going to do pretty well. They're currently in talks with JAXA to potentially be the supplier of manned vehicles for Japan's home-built rocket.
For a while it seemed like the only news from SpaceX was "SpaceX $umpteen million vehicle explodes on launch pad/in midair". Boeing seems to have their shit together as far as launches go.
Yeah, with numbers like that I'm thinking they want to put people on the ultra-reliable one and give the much more frequent cargo-only runs to the cheap option.
Nintendo Network ID: AzraelRose
DropBox invite link - get 500MB extra free.
Edit: SpaceX has publicly stated that if it was a full-on falcon 9 first stage it wouldn't have failed the way it did because the falcon 9 has redundancies that the grasshopper does not have.
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
I feel like it loses something in translation to plush toy
The fact that it has real life googly eyes is what gives it all the personality.
-edit-
Also, non-parasitic! These little guys just tool around looking for stray particles of organic matter to eat, they are not leeches despite the shape.
I was more going with the Space Shuttle's flight record; using simpler, dedicated vehicles for crew and heavy lift rockets for cargo rather than trying to combine the two is bound to be a safer method of space travel.
fuck up once and you break your thumb / if you're happy at all then you're god damn dumb
that's right we're on a fucked up cruise / God is dead but at least we have booze
bad things happen, no one knows why / the sun burns out and everyone dies
This doesn't really tally. Having one vehicle you really understand will be safer. Conventionally that's not done because the smaller vehicle we usually launch more, so that's the one we understand. The larger vehicle is built because the smaller one can't meet payload requirements. But SpaceX really only have the Falcon 9. Eventually they'll have the F9-Heavy and whatever comes after that, so the distinction will naturally shake out.
Can you elaborate on what part of his companies, or public statements gives you this impression?
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.
chair to Creation and then suplex the Void.