Science & Technology

One of the first images of the re-entry of the European Space Agency's space freighter, Jules Verne, over the Pacific Ocean
The planned burn followed the craft's six-month mission to the space station to provide the crew there with a fresh shipment of food, fuel and supplies. The crew reloaded the freighter with 2.5 tonnes of garbage before launching it back into space.

A large band of ancient rocks in northern Quebec, known as the Nuvvuagittuq greenstone belt, has produced what may be the oldest rock on Earth – at 4.28 billion years old
Finding the oldest rocks on Earth is important because they should help scientists solve one of geology's great mysteries: how the surface of our planet was transformed from the ocean of magma that existed in the Hadean - the earliest era in Earth's history - into the floating tectonic plates we have today.

Laboratory experiments show that obstacles arranged in fluids in certain patterns can effectively make objects they surround invisible to waves. If it works as well in in scaled-up versions, it could lead to new ways to protect ocean-based platforms and coasts from devastating tsunamis.

Changes in the rate of expansion since the universe's birth 15 billion years ago. The more shallow the curve, the faster the rate of expansion. The curve changes noticeably about 7.5 billion years ago, when objects in the universe began flying apart at a faster rate. Astronomers theorize that the faster expansion rate is due to a mysterious, dark force that is pulling galaxies apart.
Although dark energy may seem a bit contrived to some, the Oxford theorists are proposing an even more outrageous alternative. They point out that it's possible that we simply live in a very special place in the universe - specifically, we're in a huge void where the density of matter is particularly low. The suggestion flies in the face of the Copernican Principle, which is one of the most useful and widely held tenants in physics.
Don't call them perverts, but when two New Mexico paleontologists found a spiked opening on a fossilized 210 million-year-old animal - - in a place the sun doesn't generally shine -- they realized they had discovered something exciting.
The creature, called a Typothorax, appears to have had a protective cover over its naughty bits, although the actual purpose of the spikes hasn't quite been determined, they said.
"Is it an ancient chastity belt? Is it a clasper-type adaptation used in sexual activity? We just don't know yet," said Andy Heckert, an assistant geology professor at Appalachian State University in North Carolina and former geosciences collection manager at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.

Jewelry found in a woman’s grave at Pella, northern Greece, dates to between 650 and 279 BC. Under Alexander’s conquests, Macedonia stretched as far as India.
The excavations at the vast cemetery uncovered 43 graves dating from 650 to 279 BC, shedding new light on the early development of the Macedonian kingdom, which stretched as far as India under Alexander's conquests.
The results are published online this week and appear in the October issue of Nature Neuroscience.
The protein beta-catenin acts like a Velcro strap, fastening cells' internal skeletons to proteins on their external membranes that connect them with other cells. In species ranging from flies to frogs to mice, it also can transmit early signals that separate an embryo into front and back or top and bottom.
The group found the 46th known Mersenne prime last month on a network of 75 computers running Windows XP. The number was verified by a different computer system running a different algorithm.
"We're delighted," said UCLA's Edson Smith, the leader of the effort. "Now we're looking for the next one, despite the odds."

Dense clusters of crack-like structures called deformation bands form the linear ridges prominent in this image from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
"Groundwater often flows along fractures such as these, and knowing that these are deformation bands helps us understand how the underground plumbing may have worked within these layered deposits," said Chris Okubo of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Ariz.
Visible effects of water on the color and texture of rock along the fractures provide evidence that groundwater flowed extensively along the fractures.




