Tag Archives: Cassini

Winning Science April 16, 2014

The Cassini spacecraft has discovered what appears to be a new moon being formed in the rings of Saturn. The new moon, named Peggy, is being formed from the ice that makes up Saturn’s rings. While this baby moon is still currently too small to see, the gravitational effects on the rings are visible. Peggy joins the 62 other moons that Saturn has, both official and provisional.

peggy

The moon might be named after a real person, but all I can think about is the guy from the Capital One commercial.

Leave it to the folks at MIT to determine that our furniture is too lazy. They seem to think it should be doing more for us. The Transform projects created a table-ish structure that moves and responds to people. The system senses when a person is nearby using a Kinect (from an Xbox). The table uses 1,152 plastic pins to provide motion. There is also a fantastic video of the table rolling a ball around. Yes, you just read that right, the surface is moving a ball around, in a controlled and complex manner.

rs_560x415-130327085118-1024.wolverine.ls_.32713

Maybe it won’t be too long until we have hospital beds like Yashida’s in The Wolverine. Seems like it could be comfy.

Scientists in Russia have successfully grown a new esophagus and implanted it in a rat.  What is an esophagus? When you drink something and you start coughing because it went “down the wrong pipe,” it should have gone down the esophagus. It’s the part of the body that takes food and liquids (e.g. beer) from the mouth to the stomach. The Russian scientists were able to accomplish this by using a scaffold of existing cells and then allowing stem cells to develop around that scaffold. Not only is this a fascinating advance, but an interesting technique for doing it as well.

40532_1

I’m pretty partial to my own esophagus because of the whole loving beer and food thing.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Weekly, Winning Science

Winning Science July 24, 2013

Here is an interesting experiment recently performed in Scotland using dolphins. It seems that dolphins might actually respond to unique whistles like we would our own name. Additionally, they suspect that we are underestimating the complexity of dolphin interactions. This is way better than the experiments they use to do with dolphins.

I have no words to describe this, just laughter.

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft was able to take a rare, long distance shot of Earth. This feat is rare because it turns out the earth is usually to close to the sun to take a picture, at least from Cassini’s perspective.

201307_Cassini_Earth_SaturnI understand Cassini cost $3.27 billion, but that’s a fantastic picture, especially from 900 million miles away.  I can’t get my camera to take pictures that clear from 9 ft away.

In preparation for future production of Google Glass, Google has purchased a stake in a Taiwanese firm which manufactures some of the most necessary components for the tech device. They are preparing for an expected 2 million units in annual production. That’s crazy!

google glass

These glasses are really cool, but I’m still on the fence about them.  As companies spend the next few years attempting to give us the next big thing, commercialism is going to get very interesting.

Leave a comment

Filed under Winning Science