Science & Technology
We tend to think of the Moon as a static, dead world, with no atmosphere and no plate tectonics. But there are various signs the Moon has been active - volcanoes and indications of a magnetic field frozen in rocks. Impact craters that flooded with molten rock are also indications of more active periods in the Moon's history. Now, some researchers are suggesting that the residual magnetic fields contain hints that the Moon was once flipped on its side by a violent event.
All evidence indicates that the Moon was formed when a Mars-sized body collided with the early Earth, leaving both in a molten state. This would have left the Moon with a sufficiently molten core that it should have generated a magnetic field for hundreds of millions of years. Remnants of that field should remain trapped in rocks that solidified while it was still in place and remain trapped there to this day.

Jesus on toast? This image may be doctored, but a phenomenon called pareidolia regularly tricks people into seeing faces in burnt bread.
Now, new research reveals the brain processes that underlie these facial false alarms, a phenomenon called "face pareidolia." The findings suggest that expectations matter. When people expect to see a face, these expectations may activate a brain region responsible for processing faces, the researchers report in the April issue of the journal Cortex.
Pareidolia is a well-known phenomenon, responsible for turning a rocky landform on Mars into a face and a water stain on a Chicago underpass into the Virgin Mary. Not all instances of pareidolia result in visions of faces. For example, in 2013, eagle-eyed Internet sleuths swore up and down that NASA's Curiosity Rover had caught a snapshot of a rat on Mars. [Seeing Things On Mars: A History of Martian Illusions]
"People have not paid attention to this in the entire history of scientific research of animals," team leader Jeffrey Mogil told The Verge. "I think that it may have confounded, to whatever degree, some very large subset of existing research."
The study, published in the journal Nature Methods, found that when the animals were exposed to men during experiments, they exhibited signs of pain reduction associated with increased stress levels, as well as body temperature increases.
A red sprite with a classic jellyfish shape viewed Aug. 6, 2013, above Canadian County, Oklahoma.
Sprites form at irregularities in the plasma, or charged particles of gas, in the ionosphere, the layer just above the dense lower atmosphere, about 37 to 56 miles (60 to 90 kilometers) above the Earth's surface, a study found. Since disturbances in the ionosphere can affect radio communication, sprites could be useful for sensing such disturbances remotely, researchers say.
"We would like to know how sprites are initiated and how they develop," Victor Pasko, an electrical engineer at Penn State and author of the study published May 7 in the journal Nature Communications, said in a statement.
Unfortunately, most of these systems have huge drawbacks that would make anyone reticent to use them. GPS systems, for instance, can really only tell you a person's location, not how well they're doing. And cameras infringe on a person's privacy in a big way. That's why researchers have turned to technology that you're much more likely to see in an airport than in your aging parent's home: radar.

Serious security vulnerability could allow hackers to take control of a Windows computer through Internet Explorer, from version IE6 onwards.
Security experts have urged Windows XP users to change browsers owing to a serious bug in Microsoft's Internet Explorer that could threaten over half of all internet users.
The vulnerability is actively being exploited by hackers, Microsoft has warned, and every active version of Internet Explorer is at risk, including IE 6 to IE 11, Windows XP and Windows RT. The bug could allow hackers to gain access to and hijack a Windows computer, including personal data.
Microsoft warned that it was "aware of limited, targeted attacks" currently under way using the security hole in Internet Explorer, which is used by over 55% of internet users globally, according to the latest data from research firm Netmarketshare.
"This issue allows remote code execution if users visit a malicious website with an affected browser. This would typically occur by an attacker convincing someone to click a link in an email or instant message," Dustin Childs, a group manager of Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing department, explained in a blog post.
It sounds like the sort of predictive healthcare that we cannot expect for decades, but British researchers working on a huge collaborative medical research project have said that advances like this are not far away.
The University of Sheffield's Insigneo Institute, which was founded exactly a year ago, comprises 123 academics and clinicians who are working towards a grand European Commission-backed endeavour known as the Virtual Physiological Human programme. Collectively, they have already won more than £20 million in research funding.
The programme's ultimate aim is to create an in silico, or computer simulated, replica of the human body that will allow the virtual testing of treatments on patients based on their own specific needs - potentially predicting future problems they may encounter or eliminating the need for invasive procedures.

Comet C/2013 UQ4, originally discovered as an asteroid, now shows the characteristic coma of a comet. This photo was made on May 7, 2014 from a telescope in Australia.
On May 7, Comet ISON co-discoverer Artyom Novichonok, and Taras Prystavski used a remote telescope located in Siding Spring, Australia to take photos of 2013 UQ4 shortly before dawn in the constellation Cetus. Surprise, surprise. The asteroid had grown a little fuzz, making the move to comethood. No longer a starlike object, 2013 UQ4 now displays a substantial coma or atmosphere about 1.5 arc minutes across with a more compact inner coma measuring 25 arc seconds in diameter. No tail is visible yet, and while its overall magnitude of +13.5 won't make you break out the bottle of champagne, it's still bright enough to see in a 12-inch telescope under dark skies.
"The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter... is not, in fact, stealthy in the eyes of a growing number of Russian and Chinese radars," the Aviation Week recently reported.
The report said the F-35 is not even effective in "jamming enemy radar."
The US Department of Defense is spending "hundreds of billions of dollars" for a "fighter that will need the help of specialized jamming aircraft," the Aviation Week stated in its report.
It said Russian armed forces have been equipped with a "highly counter-stealth radar system" - unveiled at an air show near Moscow in August 2013 - that is able to "track small targets."
The US Department of Defense waived laws in January that ban the use of Chinese-made components on US weapons, including on F-35 warplanes.
Production of the F-35 military aircraft has faced technical issues, cost overruns and delays.
Some experts say flaws in the F-35 fuel tank and fueldraulic systems have left it even more vulnerable to lightning strikes and other fire sources including enemy fire.

Researchers added new letters to the DNA alphabet of an organism, shown here as printing blocks.
All living creatures have a DNA "alphabet" of just four letters, which encode instructions for the proteins that perform most of the key jobs inside cells. But expanding that alphabet to include artificial letters could give organisms the ability to produce new proteins never seen before in nature.
The man-made DNA could be used for everything from the manufacture of new drugs and vaccines to forensics, researchers say.
"What we have done is successfully store increased information in the DNA of a living cell," study leader Floyd Romesberg, a chemical biologist at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, told Live Science. Yet many steps remain before Romesberg and his colleagues can get cells to produce artificial proteins.










Comment: Just what we need -- more electromagnetic frequencies and monitoring under the guise of keeping us "safe".