Science & TechnologyS


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Triceratops gets a cousin: Researchers identify another horned dinosaur species

Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis
© Han, et al.This is the reconstructed skull of the holotype specimen of Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis (IVPP V18641).
The Ceratopsia family is growing again. Researchers have described a new species of plant-eating dinosaur, Hualianceratops wucaiwanensis, that stood on its hind feet and was about the size of a spaniel. It is similar in age to the oldest-known member of the "horned dinosaurs," Yinlong downsi, although both are hornless.

The findings will be published in PLOS ONE on Dec. 9.

Hualianceratops was robust and heavily built, like a chunky version of Yinlong, which was discovered by the same group in 2002. Led by James Clark, Ronald Weintraub Associate Professor of Biology at the George Washington University and Xu Xing, professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the group discovered the two species in the same fossil beds in Xinjiang Province, China. Working from a partial skull and foot, scientists have reconstructed the new dinosaur and compared it to other ceratopsians.

Satellite

Russia successfully launches military satellite into orbit

Launch of Proton-M carrier rocket
© Sputnik/ Oleg UrusovFile photo: Launch of Proton-M carrier rocket
According to Russia's Defense Ministry, a military satellite launched on the Proton-M carrier rocket has been put into orbit.

Russian Proton-M carrier rocket has successfully put into orbit a military satellite following the launch from the Baikonur space center, the Defense Ministry press service said Sunday.

"The satellite, launched in the interests of the Russian Defense Ministry at 03:19 a.m. [Moscow time, 00:19 GMT] on December 13 on the Proton-M carrier rocket from the Baikonur space center, is operated by the Main Test Space Center named after German Titov of the Aerospace Forces," the ministry said.

According to the ministry, the launch of the carrier rocket and putting the satellite into orbit were carried out on schedule.

Rocket

Soyuz spacecraft ready for launch with 1st Brit on board since 1991

Soyuz crew module
© PAUL RINCON/BBCThe Soyuz crew module was attached to its rocket on Saturday
A rocket powering a Soyuz spacecraft has been rolled out and set up on a launch pad in Baikonur. Space veterans, Yuri Malenchenko of Roscosmos and Timothy L. Kopra of NASA, will be joined by ESA astronaut Tim Peak, who will become the first Briton to go to space since 1991.

On Sunday morning, all stages of the rocket carrier were assembled at Baikonur launch pad in Kazakhstan. The rocket is scheduled for lift-off next Thursday at 14.03 Moscow time, from the pad used in 1961 to launch Vostok with Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin.

Russia's Malenchenko is one of the most experienced cosmonauts - he has spent some 641 days in space during his five flights and even got married during one of his missions. NASA's Timothy L. Kopra spent a little less than 60 days as a flight engineer of Expedition 20 on the ISS in 2009.

Major Tim Peake is the first British astronaut from the European Space Agency (ESA) and will be making his maiden flight into space on board the Soyuz TMA-19M. He will become the second British astronaut after Helen Sharman's flight in 1991.

Fireball 3

Geminids meteor shower; Here's how to watch

Geminids
Geminids
Tonight's Geminids are going to be the biggest meteor shower of this year, and you absolutely should not miss it. Here's when, where, and how to watch the Geminid meteor shower—and what you should be looking for when you do.

What are the Geminids?

The Geminids are a mid-December meteor shower (this year peaking Sunday, December 13th) formed by the debris of comet 3200 Phaeton burning up in our atmosphere. Phaeton is unusual in that it was only recently recognized as a comet at all.

For many years, astronomers thought that Phaethon was really a large asteroid, due to its total lack of ice. Eventually, researchers figured out that Phaethon's lack of ice was simply due to how close its path was to the sun, and they reclassified it as an extinct comet or a "rock comet." That extinct comet is responsible for the Geminids you'll see this weekend.

Star

Is there evidence of massive planets in the far reaches of our Solar System?

Planet artist conception
A pair of new studies claim to have discovered two of the most distant objects ever seen in the outer reaches of the Solar System, including a "Super Earth" located six times further away than Pluto. It's an extraordinary claim — and it's also highly unlikely.

Before we dive in, it's important to point out that neither study has gone through peer review, though both papers have been submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics. The studies have already received considerable attention, however, owing to their remarkable claims.

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Why focusing on a visual task will make us deaf to our surroundings

Neuron
© abhijith3747 / FotoliaNeuron illustration. With regard to the phenomenon of 'inattentional deafness', where we fail to notice sounds when concentrating on other things, new research suggests that the senses of hearing and vision share a limited neural resource.
Concentrating attention on a visual task can render you momentarily 'deaf' to sounds at normal levels, reports a new UCL study funded by the Wellcome Trust.

The study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, suggests that the senses of hearing and vision share a limited neural resource. Brain scans from 13 volunteers found that when they were engaged in a demanding visual task, the brain response to sound was significantly reduced. Examination of people's ability to detect sounds during the visual demanding task also showed a higher rate of failures to detect sounds, even though the sounds were clearly audible and people did detect them when the visual task was easy.

"This was an experimental lab study which is one of the ways that we can establish cause and effect. We found that when volunteers were performing the demanding visual task, they were unable to hear sounds that they would normally hear," explains study co-author Dr Maria Chait (UCL Ear Institute). "The brain scans showed that people were not only ignoring or filtering out the sounds, they were not actually hearing them in the first place."

Satellite

NASA telescopes detect Jupiter-like storm on small star

W1906+40
© NASA/JPL-CaltechThis illustration shows a cool star, called W1906+40, marked by a raging storm near one of its poles. The storm is thought to be similar to the Great Red Spot on Jupiter. Scientists discovered it using NASA's Kepler and Spitzer space telescopes.
Astronomers have discovered what appears to be a tiny star with a giant, cloudy storm, using data from NASA's Spitzer and Kepler space telescopes. The dark storm is akin to Jupiter's Great Red Spot: a persistent, raging storm larger than Earth.

"The star is the size of Jupiter, and its storm is the size of Jupiter's Great Red Spot," said John Gizis of the University of Delaware, Newark. "We know this newfound storm has lasted at least two years, and probably longer." Gizis is the lead author of a new study appearing in The Astrophysical Journal.

While planets have been known to have cloudy storms, this is the best evidence yet for a star that has one. The star, referred to as W1906+40, belongs to a thermally cool class of objects called L-dwarfs. Some L-dwarfs are considered stars because they fuse atoms and generate light, as our sun does, while others, called brown dwarfs, are known as "failed stars" for their lack of atomic fusion.

The L-dwarf in the study, W1906+40, is thought to be a star based on estimates of its age (the older the L-dwarf, the more likely it is a star). Its temperature is about 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit (2,200 Kelvin). That may sound scorching hot, but as far as stars go, it is relatively cool. Cool enough, in fact, for clouds to form in its atmosphere.

Satellite

NASA releases close-up, hi-res photos of Pluto's landscape

Pluto images
© NASA
NASA continues to thrill space lovers with some of its sharpest photos of Pluto - now in super high-resolution color. The agency has released new close-up pictures, zooming in the planet's landscape and its mosaic patterns.

The fresh pictures are portions of images that NASA's New Horizons spacecraft snapped during its closest-ever flyby of Pluto on July 14. Thanks to a resolution of about 250-280 feet (77-85 meters) per pixel, features smaller than half a city block on Pluto's surface are perfectly visible. NASA just slightly enhanced the pictures with color data of a lower resolution - about 2,066 feet, or 630 meters, per pixel.


In fact, the pictures are colorful versions of black-and-white images that NASA already showed last week.

"The images form a strip 50 miles (80 kilometers) wide, trending (top to bottom) from the edge of 'badlands' northwest of the informally named Sputnik Planum, across the al-Idrisi mountains, onto the shoreline of Pluto's 'heart feature, and just into its icy plains," NASA explained in a press release.

Stormtrooper

Star Wars is here! First hoverbike being developed

hoverbike
Anyone still not familiar with the concept of a Hoverbike that was popularized by Star Wars will have a chance to see it in the new feature to be released in movie theaters on December 18th. It seems science reality is catching up to science fiction.

A successful 2014 Kickstarter campaign raised nearly $100,000 to help make the world's first Hoverbike a reality, and all indicators point to it arriving sooner rather than later.

Designers from Malloy Aeronautics employed the mechanics of a quadcopter drone to create a proof of concept that could revolutionize transportation ... or at the very least provide some serious fun.

Comment: It will likely be used, whether by police forces or the military, to hunt and kill humans.


Igloo

Melting Scandinavian glaciers offer clues to Younger Dryas mystery

Melting Glacier
© Flickr/Vincent MoschettiA combination of fossilised midges and climate modelling suggest that melting ice sheets in Scandinavia triggered a dramatic 1,000-year long cold snap in Europe 12,800 years ago.
Temporary and extreme climate changes punctuated the warming of the Northern Hemisphere as the Earth escaped the icy grip of the last Ice Age.

One such event occurred 12,800 years ago--the so-called Younger Dryas--when Europe was suddenly plunged back into near-Ice Age conditions. The ensuing cold struck Europe and Russia quickly, and hard. But how and why remained a mystery.

Now, a new study has an answer: melting glaciers in Scandinavia set key environmental changes in motion and initiated this dramatic 1,000-year long cold snap.

"The Fennoscandian Ice Sheet in Northern Europe has always been considered an underdog [compared to ice sheets in Greenland and north America] and has received little or no attention in the specialised literature," says lead-author Francesco Muschitiello from Stockholm University, Sweden in an email to ScienceNordic.

But Muschitiello's new research puts the Scandinavian ice sheet at the heart of the mystery. According to him, it is the missing link to understanding this major climate event, which is a key benchmark to understanding how climate can change so suddenly.

The results are published in the journal Nature Communications.