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Hier — 19 avril 2024Informatique & geek

NASA may alter Artemis III to have Starship and Orion dock in low-Earth orbit

This image taken by NASA's Orion spacecraft shows its view just before the vehicle flew behind the Moon in 2022.

Enlarge / This image taken by NASA's Orion spacecraft shows its view just before the vehicle flew behind the Moon in 2022. (credit: NASA)

Although NASA is unlikely to speak about it publicly any time soon, the space agency is privately considering modifications to its Artemis plan to land astronauts on the surface of the Moon later this decade.

Multiple sources have confirmed that NASA is studying alternatives to the planned Artemis III landing of two astronauts on the Moon, nominally scheduled for September 2026, due to concerns about hardware readiness and mission complexity.

Under one of the options, astronauts would launch into low-Earth orbit inside an Orion spacecraft and rendezvous there with a Starship vehicle, separately launched by SpaceX. During this mission, similar to Apollo 9, a precursor to the Apollo 11 lunar landing, the crew would validate the ability of Orion and Starship to dock and test habitability inside Starship. The crew would then return to Earth. In another option NASA is considering, a crew would launch in Orion and fly to a small space station near the Moon, the Lunar Gateway, and then return to Earth.

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Pourquoi ces scientifiques ont créé des cafards cyborgs téléguidés ?

Cafard

L'évocation du simple nom de cet insecte provoque du dégoût à un grand nombre de personnes. Pourtant, ils peuvent s'avérer très utiles.

Rocket Report: Starship could save Mars Sample Return; BE-4s for second Vulcan

A BE-4 engine is moved into position on ULA's second Vulcan rocket.

Enlarge / A BE-4 engine is moved into position on ULA's second Vulcan rocket. (credit: United Launch Alliance)

Welcome to Edition 6.40 of the Rocket Report! There was a lot of exciting news this week. For the first time, SpaceX launched a reusable Falcon 9 booster for a 20th flight. A few miles away at Cape Canaveral, Boeing and United Launch Alliance completed one of the final steps before the first crew launch of the Starliner spacecraft. But I think one of the most interesting things that happened was NASA's decision to ask the space industry for more innovative ideas on how to do Mars Sample Return. I have no doubt that space companies will come up with some fascinating concepts, and I can't wait to hear about them.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets, as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Going vertical Down Under. Gilmour Space has raised its privately developed Eris rocket vertical on a launch pad in North Queensland for the first time, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reports. This milestone marks the start of the next phase of launch preparations for Eris, a three-stage rocket powered by hybrid engines. If successful, Eris would become the first Australian-built rocket to reach orbit. Gilmour says the maiden flight of Eris is scheduled for no earlier than May 4, pending launch permit approvals. This presumably refers to a commercial launch license from the Australian government.

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Boeing says it will cut SLS workforce “due to external factors”

The SLS rocket is seen on its launch pad at Kennedy Space Center in August 2022.

Enlarge / The SLS rocket is seen on its launch pad at Kennedy Space Center in August 2022. (credit: Trevor Mahlmann)

On Thursday senior Boeing officials leading the Space Launch System program, including David Dutcher and Steve Snell, convened an all-hands meeting for the more than 1,000 employees who work on the rocket.

According to two people familiar with the meeting, the officials announced that there would be a significant number of layoffs and reassignments of people working on the program. They offered a handful of reasons for the cuts, including the fact that timelines for NASA's Artemis lunar missions that will use the SLS rocket are slipping to the right.

Later on Thursday, in a statement provided to Ars, a Boeing spokesperson confirmed the cuts: "Due to external factors unrelated to our program performance, Boeing is reviewing and adjusting current staffing levels on the Space Launch System program."

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Hospital prices for the same emergency care vary up to 16X, study finds

Par : Beth Mole
Miami Beach, Fire Rescue ambulance at Mt. Sinai Medical Center hospital. ]

Enlarge / Miami Beach, Fire Rescue ambulance at Mt. Sinai Medical Center hospital. ] (credit: Getty | Jeffrey Greenberg/)

Since 2021, federal law has required hospitals to publicly post their prices, allowing Americans to easily anticipate costs and shop around for affordable care—as they would for any other marketed service or product. But hospitals have mostly failed miserably at complying with the law.

A 2023 KFF analysis on compliance found that the pricing information hospitals provided is "messy, inconsistent, and confusing, making it challenging, if not impossible, for patients or researchers to use them for their intended purpose." A February 2024 report from the nonprofit organization Patient Rights Advocate found that only 35 percent of 2,000 US hospitals surveyed were in full compliance with the 2021 rule.

But even if hospitals dramatically improved their price transparency, it likely wouldn't help when patients need emergency trauma care. After an unexpected, major injury, people are sent to the closest hospital and aren't likely to be shopping around for the best price from the back of an ambulance. If they did, though, they might also need to be treated for shock.

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Renovation relic: Man finds hominin jawbone in parents’ travertine kitchen tile

closeup of fossilized jawbone in a piece of travertine tile

Enlarge / Reddit user Kidipadeli75 spotted a fossilized hominin jawbone in his parents' new travertine kitchen tile. (credit: Reddit user Kidipadeli75)

Ah, Reddit! It's a constant source of amazing stories that sound too good to be true... and yet! The latest example comes to us from a user named Kidipadeli75, a dentist who visited his parents after the latter's kitchen renovation and noticed what appeared to be a human-like jawbone embedded in the new travertine tile. Naturally, he posted a photograph to Reddit seeking advice and input. And Reddit was happy to oblige.

User MAJOR_Blarg, for instance, is a dentist "with forensic odontology training" and offered the following:

While all old-world monkeys, apes, and hominids share the same dental formula, 2-1-2-3, and the individual molars and premolars can look similar, the specific spacing in the mandible itself is very specifically and characteristically human, or at least related and very recent hominid relative/ancestor. Most likely human given the success of the proliferation of H.s. and the (relatively) rapid formation of travertine.

Against modern Homo sapiens, which may not be entirely relevant, the morphology of the mandible is likely not northern European, but more similar to African, middle Eastern, mainland Asian.

Another user, deamatrona, who claims to hold an anthropology degree, also thought the dentition looked Asiatic, "which could be a significant find." The thread also drew the attention of John Hawks, an anthropologist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and longtime science blogger who provided some valuable context on his own website. (Hawks has been involved with the team that discovered Homo naledi at the Rising Star cave system in 2013.)

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SpaceX and Northrop are working on a constellation of spy satellites

A Falcon 9 rocket launches a Starlink mission in January 2020.

Enlarge / A Falcon 9 rocket launches a Starlink mission in January 2020. (credit: SpaceX)

SpaceX is reportedly working with at least one major US defense contractor, Northrop Grumman, on a constellation of spy satellites for the National Reconnaissance Office.

According to Reuters, development of the network of hundreds of spy satellites by SpaceX is being coordinated with multiple contractors to avoid putting too much control of a highly sensitive intelligence program in the hands of one company.

"It is in the government's interest to not be totally invested in one company run by one person," one of the news agency's sources said, most likely referring to SpaceX founder Elon Musk.

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À partir d’avant-hierInformatique & geek

À Dubaï, une inondation record relance la polémique sur la pluie artificielle

Rain Cloud Desert

Les météorologues affirment que l'ensemencement de nuages n'a rien à voir avec les pluies diluviennes qui ont frappé les Émirats arabes unis.

The largest marine reptile ever could match blue whales in size

The largest marine reptile ever could match blue whales in size

Enlarge (credit: Sergey Krasovskiy)

Blue whales have been considered the largest creatures to ever live on Earth. With a maximum length of nearly 30 meters and weighing nearly 200 tons, they are the all-time undisputed heavyweight champions of the animal kingdom.

Now, digging on a beach in Somerset, UK, a team of British paleontologists found the remains of an ichthyosaur, a marine reptile that could give the whales some competition. “It is quite remarkable to think that gigantic, blue-whale-sized ichthyosaurs were swimming in the oceans around what was the UK during the Triassic Period,” said Dean Lomax, a paleontologist at the University of Manchester who led the study.

Giant jawbones

Ichthyosaurs were found in the seas through much of the Mesozoic era, appearing as early as 250 million years ago. They had four limbs that looked like paddles, vertical tail fins that extended downward in most species, and generally looked like large, reptilian dolphins with elongated narrow jaws lined with teeth. And some of them were really huge. The largest ichthyosaur skeleton so far was found in British Columbia, Canada, measured 21 meters, and belonged to a particularly massive ichthyosaur called Shonisaurus sikanniensis. But it seems they could get even larger than that.

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Deux formes de vie ont fusionné lors d’un événement évolutif rarissime

Endosymbiose Algue Bactérie

Des chercheurs estiment avoir trouvé un nouvel exemple d'endosymbiose primaire, un événement évolutif très rare qui a déjà complètement transformé la vie sur Terre il y a des centaines de millions d'années. Une découverte qui pourrait un jour déboucher sur une révolution de l'agriculture.

The hidden story behind one of SpaceX’s wettest and wildest launches

Is that sooty rocket lifting off with the CRS-3 mission in 2014 a reused booster? No, it is not.

Enlarge / Is that sooty rocket lifting off with the CRS-3 mission in 2014 a reused booster? No, it is not. (credit: SpaceX)

Ten years ago today, when a Falcon 9 rocket took off from Florida, something strange happened. Dramatically, as the rocket lifted off, a fountain of dirty water splashed upward alongside the vehicle, coating the rocket in grime.

Following the ultimately successful liftoff of this third cargo Dragon mission to the International Space Station, SpaceX founder Elon Musk was asked about the incident during a news conference. He offered a fairly generic answer without going into the details.

"We sprayed a bunch of water all around the pad," Musk said. "Essentially what happened is we splashed dirty water on ourselves. So it’s a little embarrassing, but no harm done."

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Buvez-vous trop de café ? Voilà ce que dit la science

Café

Le café est la boisson quotidienne de millions de personnes de par le monde. Quels sont réellement ses impacts sur notre santé cardiovasculaire ?

De la peau imprimée en 3D sera bientôt testée sur les humains

Depuis plusieurs années, une startup bordelaise et l'hôpital public de Marseille travaillent sur la greffe de peau à partir de bio-impression. Les premiers tests sur des patients devraient bientôt démarrer.

Life-threatening rat pee infections reach record levels in NYC

Par : Beth Mole
A rat looks for food while on a subway platform at the Columbus Circle - 59th Street station on May 8, 2023, in New York City.

Enlarge / A rat looks for food while on a subway platform at the Columbus Circle - 59th Street station on May 8, 2023, in New York City. (credit: Getty | Gary Hershorn)

A life-threatening bacterial infection typically spread through rat urine sickened a record number of people in New York City last year—and this year looks on track for another all-time high, the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reports.

The infection is leptospirosis, which can cause a range of symptoms, including non-specific ones like fever, headache, chills, muscle aches, vomiting, diarrhea, and cough. But, if left untreated, can become severe, causing kidney failure, liver damage, jaundice, hemorrhage, bloody eyes (conjunctival suffusion), respiratory distress, and potentially death.

The bacteria that causes it—spirochete bacteria of the genus Leptospira—infect rats, which shed the bacteria in their urine. The germs jump to people through direct contact with open wounds or mucous membranes.

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Bodies found in Neolithic pit were likely victims of ritualistic murder

View taken from the upper part of the 255 storage pit showing the three skeletons, with one individual in a central position

Enlarge / Three female skeletons found in a Neolithic storage pit in France show signs of ritualistic human sacrifice. (credit: . Beeching/Ludes et al., 2024)

Archaeologists have discovered the remains of three women in a Neolithic tomb in France, with the positioning of two of the bodies suggesting they may have been ritualistically murdered by asphyxia or self-strangulation, according to a recent paper published in the journal Science Advances.

(WARNING: graphic descriptions below.)

France's Rhône Valley is home to several archaeological sites dating to the end of the Middle Neolithic period (between 4250 and 3600/3500 BCE in the region); the sites include various storage silos, broken grindstones, imported ceramics, animal remains (both from communal meals and sacrifices), and human remains deposited in sepulchral pits. Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux is one such site.

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Climate damages by 2050 will be 6 times the cost of limiting warming to 2°

A worker walks between long rows of solar panels.

Enlarge (credit: Frame Studio)

Almost from the start, arguments about mitigating climate change have included an element of cost-benefit analysis: Would it cost more to move the world off fossil fuels than it would to simply try to adapt to a changing world? A strong consensus has built that the answer to the question is a clear no, capped off by a Nobel in Economics given to one of the people whose work was key to building that consensus.

While most academics may have considered the argument put to rest, it has enjoyed an extended life in the political sphere. Large unknowns remain about both the costs and benefits, which depend in part on the remaining uncertainties in climate science and in part on the assumptions baked into economic models.

In Wednesday's edition of Nature, a small team of researchers analyzed how local economies have responded to the last 40 years of warming and projected those effects forward to 2050. They find that we're already committed to warming that will see the growth of the global economy undercut by 20 percent. That places the cost of even a limited period of climate change at roughly six times the estimated price of putting the world on a path to limit the warming to 2° C.

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L’énigme des origines de la Terre menacée par le réchauffement climatique

Réchauffement climatique

Le réchauffement climatique transforme profondément notre planète, ce n'est plus un mystère. En revanche, le grand public ignore qu'il menace également de nous priver de précieuses clés pour comprendre nos origines cosmiques.

Un trou noir record découvert tout près de la Terre

Une vue d'artiste d'un trou noir

Il s'agit du deuxième plus gros trou noir jamais repéré dans la Voie lactée, juste derrière l'immense Sagittarius A* qui occupe le centre de notre galaxie.

A chunk of metal that tore through a Florida home definitely came from the ISS

NASA has confirmed that the object that fell into a Florida home last month was part of a battery pack released from the International Space Station.

This extraordinary incident opens a new frontier in space law. NASA, the homeowner, and attorneys are navigating little-used legal codes and intergovernmental agreements to determine who should pay for the damages.

Alejandro Otero, owner of the Naples, Florida, home struck by the debris, told Ars he is fairly certain the object came from the space station, even before NASA's confirmation. The circumstances strongly suggested that was the case. The cylindrical piece of metal tore through his roof on March 8, a few minutes after the time US Space Command reported the reentry of a space station cargo pallet and nine decommissioned batteries over the Gulf of Mexico on a trajectory heading forward the coast of southwest Florida.

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Débris spatiaux : quelles sont les chances de les voir atterrir chez vous ?

Débris spatiaux

L'atmosphère terrestre est peuplée de nombreux satellites et autres milliers de débris. À mesure que leur nombre augmente, le risque, bien que minime, de voir ces objets retomber sur Terre inquiète de plus en plus.

Un pas de plus vers l’impensable : la vie artificielle bientôt une réalité ?

Vie artificielle

Des scientifiques ont réussi à créer une molécule d'ARN (Acide ribonucléique) capable de se répliquer.

Peut être une solution pour réduire les acouphènes ?

Par : Korben

Ah les acouphènes, cette bande-son de l’enfer qui nous pourrit la vie ! Perso, j’ai parfois un sifflement strident qui me vrille les tympans et pas de bouton « mute » pour le stopper. Alors ça va, ça m’arrive assez rarement mais si vous faites partie des 8 millions de français à subir ce calvaire, j’ai une bonne nouvelle pour vous.

Figurez-vous que la FDA (l’équivalent américain de notre bon vieille ANSM) a donné son feu vert à un appareil révolutionnaire : le Lenire.

OK, le nom fait un peu penser à un Pokemon, mais ce truc au look tout droit d’un film de science-fiction des années 80 dispose d’un embout buccal bardé d’électrodes en acier inoxydable que vous placez dans votre bouche et qui va littéralement vous envoyer de l’électricité dans la langue !

Wow wow wow, on se calme, c’est pas la chaise électrique non plus hein ^^.

En fait, ça envoie des mini stimulations pour « chatouiller » votre langue, comme si une armée de petites fourmis faisait la fiesta sur votre muscle lingual. Pendant ce temps-là, vous avez un casque sur les oreilles qui diffuse des sons aussi apaisants que le ressac sur une plage de sable blanc et le combo fait que les acouphènes se réduisent. Dans une étude clinique portant sur 326 patients, 84% des participants ont constaté une amélioration significative après 12 semaines d’utilisation du Lenire. C’est quand même un sacré bond en avant quand on sait qu’avant, y avait pas grand chose pour soulager les gens.

Alors comment ça fonctionne ?

Et bien en gros, votre cerveau, c’est comme un projecteur qui est toujours braqué sur ce qui est important. Quand vous avez des acouphènes, c’est comme si le projecteur était bloqué sur le bruit parasite en mode « alerte rouge, défcon 1, on va tous mourir !« . Du coup, impossible de penser à autre chose, ça vous pourrit le ciboulot. Eh ben figurez-vous que cet appareil, c’est le copain qui viendrait vous secouer en mode « hey, regarde plutôt ça, c’est carrément plus intéressant !« . En stimulant votre langue et vos oreilles simultanément, il force donc votre cerveau à changer de focus. Résultat, votre projecteur mental n’est plus obnubilé par les acouphènes !

Après, c’est pas donné… comptez dans les 4000 balles pour vous offrir cette petite merveille. Mais pour les gens qui ont les oreilles qui sifflent à longueur de journée, on est prêt à tout pour retrouver un peu de répit, même à vendre un rein au marché noir (non, je déconne, faites pas !). Après y’a surement moyen de faire un équivalent DIY avec une pile et un casque à réduction de bruit, j’sais pas…

Bref, y’a de l’espoir pour tous les acouphéniques en galère et c’est ce que je voulais partager avec vous aujourd’hui ;-).

Source

Bogus Botox poisoning outbreak spreads to 9 states, CDC says

Par : Beth Mole
A package of counterfeit Botox.

A package of counterfeit Botox. (credit: FDA)

At least 19 women across nine US states appear to have been poisoned by bogus injections of Botox, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported late Monday.

Nine of the 19 cases—47 percent—were hospitalized and four—21 percent—were treated with botulinum anti-toxin. The CDC's alert and outbreak investigation follows reports in recent days of botulism-like illnesses linked to shady injections in Tennessee, where officials reported four cases, and Illinois, where there were two. The CDC now reports that the list of affected states also includes: Colorado, Florida, Kentucky, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, and Washington.

In a separate alert Tuesday, the Food and Drug Administration said that "unsafe, counterfeit" versions of Botox had been found in several states, and the toxic fakes were administered by unlicensed or untrained people and/or in non-medical or unlicensed settings, such as homes or spas. The counterfeit products appeared to have come from an unlicensed source, generally raising the risks that they're "misbranded, adulterated, counterfeit, contaminated, improperly stored and transported, ineffective and/or unsafe," the FDA said.

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Studies reveal new clues to how tardigrades can survive intense radiation

SEM Micrograph of a tardigrade, commonly known as a water bear

Enlarge / SEM Micrograph of a tardigrade, more commonly known as a "water bear" or "moss piglet." (credit: Cultura RM Exclusive/Gregory S. Paulson/Getty Images)

Since the 1960s, scientists have known that the tiny tardigrade can withstand very intense radiation blasts 1,000 times stronger than what most other animals could endure. According to a new paper published in the journal Current Biology, it's not that such ionizing radiation doesn't damage tardigrades' DNA; rather, the tardigrades are able to rapidly repair any such damage. The findings complement those of a separate study published in January that also explored tardigrades' response to radiation.

“These animals are mounting an incredible response to radiation, and that seems to be a secret to their extreme survival abilities,” said co-author Courtney Clark-Hachtel, who was a postdoc in Bob Goldstein's lab at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, which has been conducting research into tardigrades for 25 years. “What we are learning about how tardigrades overcome radiation stress can lead to new ideas about how we might try to protect other animals and microorganisms from damaging radiation.”

As reported previously, tardigrades are micro-animals that can survive in the harshest conditions: extreme pressure, extreme temperature, radiation, dehydration, starvation—even exposure to the vacuum of outer space. The creatures were first described by German zoologist Johann Goeze in 1773. They were dubbed tardigrada ("slow steppers" or "slow walkers") four years later by Lazzaro Spallanzani, an Italian biologist. That's because tardigrades tend to lumber along like a bear. Since they can survive almost anywhere, they can be found in lots of places: deep-sea trenches, salt and freshwater sediments, tropical rain forests, the Antarctic, mud volcanoes, sand dunes, beaches, and lichen and moss. (Another name for them is "moss piglets.")

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Tetris : un nouvel outil thérapeutique pour combattre le stress post-traumatique ?

Cerveau Tetris

Le célèbre jeu de puzzle, Tetris, pourrait recéler des qualités insoupçonnées dans un cadre thérapeutique.

Que faire face à une allergie au Soleil ?

soleil lunettes été

Au sortir de l'hiver, notre peau n'est plus habituée au soleil. On peut être sujet à des réactions cutanées temporaires, il convient alors de se protéger. Cet article de The Conversation revient sur les allergies au soleil et les moyens de s'en prémunir.

La Nasa ne tient pas à se ruiner en ramenant des échantillons martiens

Mars Sample Return

La mission Mars Sample Return prévoit de ramener des échantillons du sol martien sur la Terre. Problème : le plan actuel est trop long et trop cher. La Nasa doit proposer une nouvelle approche, pour tenir correctement les délais et le budget.

L’épisode de Doctor Who avec les Beatles a un problème génial

L'un des prochains épisodes de Doctor Who avec Ncuti Gatwa mettra en scène les Beatles... sans leur musique. Mais ce n'est pas un obstacle pour Russel T. Davies, le showrunner.

Cette startup veut livrer du matériel depuis l’orbite façon Helldivers

Sierra Ghost

Le Ghost de Sierra Space pourrait servir de soutien logistique pour les armées partout sur la planète, mais aussi aider à répondre rapidement à des catastrophes humanitaires.

Song lyrics are getting more repetitive, angrier

A female singer gestures towards an enthusiastic crowd.

Enlarge (credit: Henrik Sorensen)

From ‘80s new wave to ‘90s grunge to the latest pop single, music has changed a lot over the decades. Those changes have come not only in terms of sound, though; lyrics have also evolved as time has passed.

So what has changed about the lyrics we can’t get out of our heads? After analyzing 12,000 English-language pop, rock, rap, R&B, and country songs released between 1970 and 2020, researcher Eva Zangerle of Innsbruck University and her team have found that lyrics have been getting simpler and more repetitive over time. This trend is especially evident in rap and rock, but it applies to other genres as well. Another thing Zangerle’s team discovered is that lyrics tend to be more personal and emotionally charged now than they were over 50 years ago.

Know the words…

“Just as literature can be considered a portrayal of society, lyrics also provide a reflection of a society’s shifting norms, emotions, and values over time,” the researchers wrote in a study recently published in Scientific Reports.

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C’est la toute première photo de l’ombre d’une éclipse solaire sur la Terre

Les photos d'éclipse sont désormais monnaie courante. Plus rares en revanche sont les clichés montrant, depuis l'espace, les effets de ce phénomène, avec l'ombre de la Lune sur la Terre. C'est un Français, Jean-Pierre Haigneré, qui est crédité comme le premier à avoir capturé en photo cet évènement. C'était en 1999.

Sleeping more flushes junk out of the brain

Abstract image of a pink brain against a blue background.

Enlarge (credit: OsakaWayne Studios)

As if we didn’t have enough reasons to get at least eight hours of sleep, there is now one more. Neurons are still active during sleep. We may not realize it, but the brain takes advantage of this recharging period to get rid of junk that was accumulating during waking hours.

Sleep is something like a soft reboot. We knew that slow brainwaves had something to do with restful sleep; researchers at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have now found out why. When we are awake, our neurons require energy to fuel complex tasks such as problem-solving and committing things to memory. The problem is that debris gets left behind after they consume these nutrients. As we sleep, neurons use these rhythmic waves to help move cerebrospinal fluid through brain tissue, carrying out metabolic waste in the process.

In other words, neurons need to take out the trash so it doesn’t accumulate and potentially contribute to neurodegenerative diseases. “Neurons serve as master organizers for brain clearance,” the WUSTL research team said in a study recently published in Nature.

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Why do some people always get lost?

Scientists are homing in on how navigation skills develop.

Enlarge / Scientists are homing in on how navigation skills develop. (credit: Knowable Magazine (CC BY-ND))

Like many of the researchers who study how people find their way from place to place, David Uttal is a poor navigator. “When I was 13 years old, I got lost on a Boy Scout hike, and I was lost for two and a half days,” recalls the Northwestern University cognitive scientist. And he’s still bad at finding his way around.

The world is full of people like Uttal—and their opposites, the folks who always seem to know exactly where they are and how to get where they want to go. Scientists sometimes measure navigational ability by asking someone to point toward an out-of-sight location—or, more challenging, to imagine they are someplace else and point in the direction of a third location—and it’s immediately obvious that some people are better at it than others.

“People are never perfect, but they can be as accurate as single-digit degrees off, which is incredibly accurate,” says Nora Newcombe, a cognitive psychologist at Temple University who coauthored a look at how navigational ability develops in the 2022 Annual Review of Developmental Psychology. But others, when asked to indicate the target’s direction, seem to point at random. “They have literally no idea where it is.”

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Des laboratoires dans les nuages : les ballons stratosphériques, outils cruciaux pour la science

photo ballon

À quelques dizaines de kilomètres d'altitude, l'atmosphère accueille parfois des ballons stratosphériques. Véritables laboratoires, ils sont des vigies essentielles pour les scientifiques étudiant le changement climatique, note cet article de The Conversation.

How new tech is making geothermal energy a more versatile power source

The Nesjavellir Geothermal Power Station. Geothermal power has long been popular in volcanic countries like Iceland, where hot water bubbles from the ground.

Enlarge / The Nesjavellir Geothermal Power Station. Geothermal power has long been popular in volcanic countries like Iceland, where hot water bubbles from the ground. (credit: Gretar Ívarsson/Wikimedia Commons)

Glistening in the dry expanses of the Nevada desert is an unusual kind of power plant that harnesses energy not from the sun or wind, but from the Earth itself.

Known as Project Red, it pumps water thousands of feet into the ground, down where rocks are hot enough to roast a turkey. Around the clock, the plant sucks the heated water back up to power generators. Since last November, this carbon-free, Earth-borne power has been flowing onto a local grid in Nevada.

Geothermal energy, though it’s continuously radiating from Earth’s super-hot core, has long been a relatively niche source of electricity, largely limited to volcanic regions like Iceland where hot springs bubble from the ground. But geothermal enthusiasts have dreamed of sourcing Earth power in places without such specific geological conditions—like Project Red’s Nevada site, developed by energy startup Fervo Energy.

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Un film de science-fiction tourné entièrement dans un appartement !

Par : Korben

Vous pensez que pour faire un film de science-fiction dans l’espace, il faut absolument un budget de dingue avec des effets spéciaux de fou ? Eh ben détrompez-vous ! La réalisatrice Caroline Klidonas vient de prouver qu’on peut faire un truc génial sans quitter son appart.

Son court-métrage « I made a SPACE MOVIE 🚀 without leaving my apartment » nous embarque dans une mission spatiale qui tourne mal, le tout filmé intégralement entre les quatre murs de son appartement. Pas de décors grandioses, pas d’images de synthèse ultra-sophistiquées, que dalle ! Juste la débrouille, la créativité et une bonne dose de kiff.

Pour réaliser ce film sans quitter son appart, Caroline a utilisé de vrais objets et décors pour créer les visuels, plutôt que de compter sur des images générées par ordinateur, ce qui donne un effet « comique » et contraste avec le sérieux du scénario.

Franchement, quand j’ai vu ça, j’étais sur le cul. Comment elle a réussi à nous faire croire qu’on était dans un vaisseau spatial avec trois fois rien ? C’est dingue ce qu’on peut faire avec un peu d’imagination et de bidouille. Les effets spéciaux à l’ancienne, les trucages bien sentis, ça a un charme fou je trouve.

Donc voilà, je voulais partager ça avec vous parce que je trouve ça cool. Ça me donne presque envie de ressortir mon vieux caméscope et de tourner un bon gros nanar à la maison…. Mais bon, j’ai pas le temps 🙂

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US drug shortages reach record high with 323 meds now in short supply

Par : Beth Mole
US drug shortages reach record high with 323 meds now in short supply

Enlarge (credit: Getty | George Frey)

Drug shortages in the US have reached an all-time high, with 323 active and ongoing shortages already tallied this year, according to data collected by the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP).

The current drug shortage total surpasses the previous record of 320, set in 2014, and is the highest recorded since ASHP began tracking shortages in 2001.

"All drug classes are vulnerable to shortages," ASHP CEO Paul Abramowitz said in a statement Thursday. "Some of the most worrying shortages involve generic sterile injectable medications, including cancer chemotherapy drugs and emergency medications stored in hospital crash carts and procedural areas. Ongoing national shortages of therapies for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [ADHD] also remain a serious challenge for clinicians and patients."

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Texas surgeon accused of secretly blocking patients from getting transplants

Par : Beth Mole
Texas surgeon accused of secretly blocking patients from getting transplants

Enlarge (credit: LinkedIn)

An accomplished and prominent transplant surgeon in Texas allegedly falsified patient data in a government transplant waiting list, which may have prevented his own patients from receiving lifesaving liver transplants, according to media reports and hospital statements.

Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center halted its liver transplant program on April 3 after finding "irregularities" with donor acceptance criteria, the Houston Chronicle reported based on a statement from the hospital. At the time there were 38 patients on the hospital's wait list for a liver. Earlier this week, the hospital also halted its kidney transplant program, telling the Chronicle that it was pausing operations to "evaluate a new physician leadership structure."

Memorial Hermann has not named the surgeon behind the "inappropriate changes," but The New York Times identified him as Dr. Steve Bynon, a surgeon who has received numerous accolades and, at one point, appears to have been featured on a billboard. Bynon oversaw both the liver and kidney transplant programs at Memorial Hermann.

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SpaceX’s most-flown reusable rocket will go for its 20th launch tonight

File photo of a Falcon 9 rocket rolling out of its hangar at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida.

Enlarge / File photo of a Falcon 9 rocket rolling out of its hangar at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida. (credit: SpaceX)

For the first time, SpaceX will launch one of its reusable Falcon 9 boosters for a 20th time Friday night on a flight to deliver 23 more Starlink Internet satellites to orbit.

This milestone mission is scheduled to lift off at 9:22 pm EDT Friday (01:22 UTC Saturday) from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida. Forecasters from the US Space Force predict "excellent" weather for the primetime launch.

Falcon 9 will blaze a familiar trail into space, following the same profile as dozens of past Starlink missions.

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Rocket Report: Delta IV’s grand finale; Angara flies another dummy payload

The Angara A5 rocket launched this week from Vostochny for the first time.

Enlarge / The Angara A5 rocket launched this week from Vostochny for the first time. (credit: Roscosmos)

Welcome to Edition 6.39 of the Rocket Report! The big news this week came from United Launch Alliance, and the final mission of its Delta IV Heavy rocket. Both Stephen and I had thoughts about this launch, which is bittersweet, and we expressed them in stories linked below. It's been a little less than 20 years since this big rocket debuted, and interesting to think how very much the launch industry has changed since then.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Rocket Lab to reuse flight tank. On Wednesday Rocket Lab said it is returning a previously flown Electron rocket first stage tank to the production line for the first time in preparation for reflying the stage. The company characterized this as a "significant" milestone as it seeks to make Electron the world's first reusable small rocket. This stage was successfully launched and recovered as part of the ‘Four of a Kind’ mission earlier this year on January 31.

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A supernova caused the BOAT gamma ray burst, JWST data confirms

Artist's visualization of GRB 221009A showing the narrow relativistic jets — emerging from a central black hole — that gave rise to the brightest gamma ray burst yet detected.

Enlarge / Artist's visualization of GRB 221009A showing the narrow relativistic jets—emerging from a central black hole—that gave rise to the brightest gamma-ray burst yet detected. (credit: Aaron M. Geller/Northwestern/CIERA/ ITRC&DS)

In October 2022, several space-based detectors picked up a powerful gamma-ray burst so energetic that astronomers nicknamed it the BOAT (Brightest Of All Time). Now they've confirmed that the GRB came from a supernova, according to a new paper published in the journal Nature Astronomy. However, they did not find evidence of heavy elements like platinum and gold one would expect from a supernova explosion, which bears on the longstanding question of the origin of such elements in the universe.

As we've reported previously, gamma-ray bursts are extremely high-energy explosions in distant galaxies lasting between mere milliseconds to several hours. There are two classes of gamma-ray bursts. Most (70 percent) are long bursts lasting more than two seconds, often with a bright afterglow. These are usually linked to galaxies with rapid star formation. Astronomers think that long bursts are tied to the deaths of massive stars collapsing to form a neutron star or black hole (or, alternatively, a newly formed magnetar). The baby black hole would produce jets of highly energetic particles moving near the speed of light, powerful enough to pierce through the remains of the progenitor star, emitting X-rays and gamma rays.

Those gamma-ray bursts lasting less than two seconds (about 30 percent) are deemed short bursts, usually emitting from regions with very little star formation. Astronomers think these gamma-ray bursts are the result of mergers between two neutron stars, or a neutron star merging with a black hole, comprising a "kilonova." That hypothesis was confirmed in 2017 when the LIGO collaboration picked up the gravitational wave signal of two neutron stars merging, accompanied by the powerful gamma-ray bursts associated with a kilonova.

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The Space Force is planning what could be the first military exercise in orbit

Artist's illustration of two satellites performing rendezvous and proximity operations in low-Earth orbit.

Enlarge / Artist's illustration of two satellites performing rendezvous and proximity operations in low-Earth orbit. (credit: True Anomaly)

The US Space Force announced Thursday it is partnering with two companies, Rocket Lab and True Anomaly, for a first-of-its-kind mission to demonstrate how the military might counter "on-orbit aggression."

On this mission, a spacecraft built and launched by Rocket Lab will chase down another satellite made by True Anomaly, a Colorado-based startup. "The vendors will exercise a realistic threat response scenario in an on-orbit space domain awareness demonstration called Victus Haze," the Space Force's Space Systems Command said in a statement.

This threat scenario could involve a satellite performing maneuvers that approach a US spacecraft or a satellite doing something else unusual or unexpected. In such a scenario, the Space Force wants to have the capability to respond, either to deter an adversary from taking action or to defend a US satellite from an attack.

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Researchers find a new organelle evolving

Image of a single celled algae.

Enlarge / A photo of Braarudosphaera bigelowii with the nitroplast indicated by an arrowhead. (credit: Tyler Coale)

The complex cells that underlie animals and plants have a large collection of what are called organelles—compartments surrounded by membranes that perform specialized functions. Two of these were formed through a process called endosymbiosis, in which a once free-living organism is incorporated into a cell. These are the mitochondrion, where a former bacteria now handles the task of converting chemical energy into useful forms, and the chloroplast, where photosynthesis happens.

The fact that there are only a few cases of organelles that evolved through endosymbiosis suggests that it's an extremely rare event. Yet researchers may have found a new case in which an organelle devoted to fixing nitrogen from the atmosphere is in the process of evolving. The resulting organelle, termed a nitroplast, is still in the process of specialization.

Getting nitrogen

Nitrogen is one of the elements central to life. Every DNA base, every amino acid in a protein contains at least one, and often several, nitrogen atoms. But nitrogen is remarkably difficult for life to get ahold of. N2 molecules might be extremely abundant in our atmosphere, but they're extremely difficult to break apart. The enzymes that can, called nitrogenases, are only found in bacteria, and they don't work in the presence of oxygen. Other organisms have to get nitrogen from their environment, which is one of the reasons we use so much energy to supply nitrogen fertilizers to many crops.

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Sketchy Botox shots spark multistate outbreak of botulism-like condition

Par : Beth Mole
A woman in New Jersey receiving a Botox treatment at a Botox party in a New Jersey salon hosted by a radio station.

Enlarge / A woman in New Jersey receiving a Botox treatment at a Botox party in a New Jersey salon hosted by a radio station. (credit: Getty | mark peterson)

Sketchy cosmetic injections of what seem to be counterfeit Botox are behind a multistate outbreak of botulism-like illnesses, state health officials report.

So far, at least six people have fallen ill in two states: four in Tennessee and two in Illinois. Four of the six people required hospitalization for their condition (two in Tennessee and both cases in Illinois).

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is reportedly planning a nationwide alert to notify clinicians of the potentially counterfeit Botox and advise them to be on the lookout for botulism-like illnesses. The agency did not immediately respond to Ars' request for information.

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Le Problème à Trois Corps de Netflix divise les fans et serait moins bon que la version chinoise

Par : Korben

Si vous êtes passionnés de science-fiction, laissez-moi vous parler de la dernière sensation qui agite la toile : l’adaptation par Netflix du monument de la SF chinoise, Le Problème à Trois Corps de Liu Cixin.

Autant vous dire que ça fait des vagues, surtout en Chine où les fans sont en ébullition !

Bon, déjà, petit rappel pour ceux qui vivraient dans une grotte (ou qui n’auraient pas encore eu la chance de découvrir cette pépite) : Le Problème à Trois Corps, c’est LE roman de hard SF qui a propulsé Liu Cixin au rang de légende vivante. Il s’agit d’une fresque épique qui nous embarque dans une histoire de premier contact avec une civilisation extraterrestre, le tout saupoudré de physique quantique, de sociologie et de réflexions sur la nature humaine. Bref, du lourd comme j’aime.

Donc forcément, quand Netflix a annoncé qu’ils allaient adapter ce mastodonte en série, il y a eu de l’excitation dans l’air. Sauf que voilà, en Chine, Netflix n’est pas vraiment le bienvenu. Mais vous croyez que ça arrête les fans ? Que nenni ! VPN, sites de streaming illégaux… ils ont plus d’un tour dans leur sac pour mettre la main sur les épisodes. Et là, c’est le drame…

Déjà, il faut savoir que les Chinois vouent un culte quasi religieux à l’œuvre de Liu Cixin. Chaque détail, chaque virgule est sacré. Alors forcément, quand ils ont vu que Netflix avait pris quelques libertés avec l’œuvre originale, ça a fait des étincelles ! Changements dans l’intrigue, personnages modifiés, voire carrément remplacés… Pour certains puristes, c’est un scandale, une hérésie, un crime de lèse-majesté !

Mais en même temps, il y a aussi pas mal de fans qui sont ravis de voir leur roman fétiche adapté par une grosse machine hollywoodienne et propulsé sur le devant de la scène internationale. Faut dire que les adaptations chinoises précédentes, bien que plus fidèles, n’avaient pas vraiment le même impact.

Et puis il y a ceux qui s’interrogent sur la façon dont la Chine est représentée dans la série. Parce que mine de rien, Le Problème à Trois Corps a une sacrée portée politique et historique. Ça parle de la Révolution Culturelle, des relations sino-américaines, de la place de la science dans la société… Pas vraiment des sujets anodins. Alors quand ils voient que les gentils sont joués par des acteurs occidentaux et les méchants par des chinois, certains crient au complot et à la propagande anti-chinoise. Faut les comprendre aussi…

Mais pour moi, l’essentiel est ailleurs.

OK, la série de Netflix n’est pas une adaptation littérale du bouquin. Mais est-ce vraiment un problème ? L’important, c’est que ça permet à un public encore plus large de découvrir l’univers fascinant de Liu Cixin et les questionnements vertigineux qu’il soulève sur notre place dans le cosmos. Et ça, c’est quand même sacrément excitant !

Après, je ne vais pas vous mentir, je viens de découvrir la version chinoise sortie l’année dernière et à ce qu’il parait, elle est incroyablement fidèle au bouquin. D’ailleurs, je ne remercierai jamais assez P5Lawrence de m’avoir fait découvrir cette pépite ! Figurez-vous que tous les épisodes sont dispos gratuitement sur Viki, la plateforme de streaming de Rakuten, avec des sous-titres en français s’il vous plaît.

Donc je vais faire confiance à mes followers Twitter et stopper immédiatement mon visionnage sur Netflix et je vais basculer sur cette version. Ensuite, on verra, mais je pense que je me ferais quand même celle de Netflix juste pour pouvoir comparer.

Allez, je vous laisse, j’ai un rendez-vous ce marathon de SF chinoise (30 épisodes quand même…).

Et n’oubliez pas de toujours garder un œil sur le ciel, on ne sait jamais qui pourrait nous rendre visite ! D’ailleurs, je crois que c’est prévu pour cette année ^^.

Les éclipses solaires étaient des batailles entre les dieux pour les Mayas

maya Chichen Itza

Dans la civilisation maya, les éclipses solaires -- comme celle du 8 avril 2024 -- étaient le signe d'un affrontement céleste entre les dieux. Une interprétation sur laquelle revient cet article de The Conversation.

Why are there so many species of beetles?

A box of beetles

Enlarge (credit: Laurie Rubin via Getty)

Caroline Chaboo’s eyes light up when she talks about tortoise beetles. Like gems, they exist in myriad bright colors: shiny blue, red, orange, leaf green and transparent flecked with gold. They’re members of a group of 40,000 species of leaf beetles, the Chrysomelidae, one of the most species-rich branches of the vast beetle order, Coleoptera. “You have your weevils, longhorns, and leaf beetles,” she says. “That’s really the trio that dominates beetle diversity.”

An entomologist at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Chaboo has long wondered why the kingdom of life is so skewed toward beetles: The tough-bodied creatures make up about a quarter of all animal species. Many biologists have wondered the same thing, for a long time. “Darwin was a beetle collector,” Chaboo notes.

Of the roughly 1 million named insect species on Earth, about 400,000 are beetles. And that’s just the beetles described so far. Scientists typically describe thousands of new species each year. So—why so many beetle species? “We don’t know the precise answer,” says Chaboo. But clues are emerging.

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3 choses à absolument savoir sur l’éclipse totale de ce lundi

Eclipse Solaire Espace Sciences

Ce lundi 8 avril, le continent nord-américain devrai assister à une éclipse totale, un phénomène rarissime.
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