When Catharine Conley started her job at NASA, her predecessor gave her a pair of dark Ray Ban sunglasses. It’s only fitting — Conley is a real-life version of the famously shaded title characters in the 1997 movie Men in Black. Part of her job as planetary protection officer is to keep Earth safe from alien life. But, as far as we know, Earthlings are the ones regularly hopping around the solar system, so most of her job is to protect aliens from the human race.
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Could the days of custom clavicles and bespoke bladders produced just in the knick of time for suffering patients be around the corner?
While keeping an eye on tissue engineering studies, we’ve been seeing some significant wins in the lab that are bringing the sci-fi future of on-demand 3-D printed organs, bone and blood vessels closer.
Harvard and Brown bioengineers are taking their own routes to build complex tissues in customized 3-D printers. And just the other week, we reported on newly unveiled work at the University of Florida to print complex soft structures in baths that could one day birth replacement human parts along with soft robots.
Now, Carnegie Mellon engineers reported on Friday that they had successfully printed simplified proof-of-concept anatomical structures like mini femurs, blood vessels and brains suspended in soft gelatin. Learn more and see a video below.
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latest photos of Pluto and it’s moon.
Astronomy Photo of the Day: 11/23/15 - The Plieades
November is the month of the Pleiades. When the leaves turn orange and begin to fall in the North, look to the skies, and you will see the Seven Sisters.
Ultimately, the ‘Seven Sisters’ is the common name given to this open star cluster. It stems from the fact that, although the region is dominated by a number of middleaged stars, most nights, only 6 or 7 are bright enough to see.
In fact, the Pleiades contains over 3000 stars.
The cluster is located in the constellation Taurus. It’s is one of the nearest star clusters to Earth and is also the cluster most obvious to the naked eye in the night sky.
Image credit: Marco Lorenzi http://www.glitteringlights.com
I should never have downloaded NASA’s Eyes. Now all I want to do is watch planets and galaxies all day.
Nor should I have checked out Experience Curiosity. Now I wanna cruise all over Mars.
Or the website where you can see the ISS (International Space Station) orbiting Earth in real time.
And yes, I linked all of those because I want everyone to join in the “oooh, shiny planets and galaxies!” :D
@geometrynerd, @ultranos
(From top to bottom and the order in which they went into space)
Dr. Mae C. Jemison
Stephanie D. Wilson
Joan Higginbotham
Dr. Yvonne Cagle
Jeanette J. Epps
Source: 5 Black Female Astronauts You Should Know
Google’s Superhuman Computer Can Tell Where Neany Any Photo Was Taken
Google knows where your photos were taken… http://futurism.com/world-googles-superhuman-computer-knows-photo-taken/
How do electric guitars work? Learn more about the materials that make it possible with today’s graphic: http://wp.me/s4aPLT-guitar
I never take selfies let alone smiling selfies and I’m hardly ever happy. Lemme see if this actually works
Video Explaining Orbital Mechanics
WATCH: A Tornado of Fire Filmed in Slow Motion (video)