Archive for October, 2015

New Bio Suits for Humans in Space

Space travel is not simple and even when you get to your destination, such as the closest planet, you may still be uncomfortable because of the bulky space suits that you need to wear. In an effort to make it easier to move around in what is sure to be an unfamiliar and somewhat hostile terrain, Dava Newman is working on a science project to design skin tight space suits.

The aeronautics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is hoping to create a liveable atmospheric pressure in the weightless vacuum of space. Currently the space suits in use by astronauts are gas inflated, bulky and weight over 300 pounds. The new skin tight suit that professor Newman is working on weighs just a fraction of that at about 45 pounds.

In the space suits in use today, a rip would cause a drastic drop in pressure in no time at all and would cause any mission outside the craft to be aborted. Another advantage of the new space suits will be the fact that a rip in the suit can be patched up in real time using a galactic elastic bandage. The suits will be constructed out of plastic, elastic and shape retaining “memory alloys”.

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Is Your Dog Happy or Nervous?

A dog wagging its tail has long been associated with an expression of happiness and joy on part of the dog. Apparently there is more to the wag of its tail than its owner knew about. At least that’s what the researchers at the University of Trento claim to have found under the guidance of neuro-scientist Giorgio Vallortigara.

In an experiment conducted at the University the research team was astonished to find that when viewed in slow motion the wagging of a dog’s tail leans more to one side or the other of the body. Closer examination of the back and forth wagging brought the fact into attention that when a dog is simply excited to see its owner, or a friendly dog teh tail was likely to lean more to the right side of the body.

If the dog was wagging with its tail leaning more towards the left side of the body he was often nervous, and was perceiving the person before him or strange dog as a potential threat. Vallortigara said that the change in movements were a result of cognitive asymmetry, where one side of the brain controls the other side of the body.  One thing this science project brought to the fore was that by watching a dog carefully you can decipher its mood based on a few flicks of its tail.

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