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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 84 declined, 23 accepted (107 total, 21.50% accepted)

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Submission + - Cryogenic afterlife isn't all it's cracked up to b (msnbc.com) 2

mknewman writes: The New York Daily News is reporting that Red Sox Hall of Famer Ted Williamsâ(TM) severed head was mistreated at an Arizona cryonics facility, according to details from a new book.

In âoeFrozen,â Larry Johnson, a former executive at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz., writes that Williamsâ(TM) head, which had been severed and frozen for storage, was abused at the facility. Johnson claims a technician took baseball-like swings at Williamsâ(TM) frozen head with a monkey wrench.

Johnson writes that technicians with no medical certification photographed and used crude equipment to decapitate Williams.

Williams' severed head was then frozen, and even used for batting practice by a technician trying to dislodge it from a tuna fish can.

Johnson told the Daily News that he wired himself with an audio recorder for his last three months at Alcor, stole internal records and took gruesome photographs that are reproduced in the book.

NASA

Submission + - Shuttle returns to Edwards again

mknewman writes: "The space shuttle Discovery and its seven astronauts took a cross-country detour and landed safely in California on Friday after stormy weather kept them from returning home to Florida for the second day in a row.

Stormy weather made it too risky to bring Discovery back to its home port Thursday, and conditions were even worse Friday. So flight director Richard Jones opted for the sunny skies of the Mojave Desert."
NASA

Submission + - Armadillo Aerospace accomplishes rocket powered ro

mknewman writes: "Armadillo Aerospace qualified to win a million dollars of NASA's money today by accomplishing a rocket-powered round trip modeled after a moon landing. The team's remote-controlled Scorpius rocket (formerly known as the Super Mod) blasted off from its Texas launch pad, rose into the sky and floated over to set down on a mock moon landing pad. After refueling, Scorpius blasted off again for what one observer called a "perfect flight" back to the original launch pad.

The judges confirmed that Armadillo satisfied all the contest requirements. Scorpius made pinpoint landings within a meter of each landing pad's center target, according to William Pomerantz, the director of space prizes for the X Prize Foundation.

That means the million-dollar top prize in the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge will definitely be given away this year. But Armadillo's rocketeers will still have to wait another month and a half to find out if they won, while other entrants in the competition try to do the same feat better.

Rainy conditions posed a challenge for the flight, and for a while it looked as if the prospects for flying today were slim. A fortunate break in the weather gave Armadillo a chance to go for the gold."
Power

Submission + - Radar could save bats from wind turbines

mknewman writes: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32034204/ns/technology_and_science-science/

Bats use sonar to navigate and hunt. Many have been killed by wind turbines, however, which their sonar doesn't seem to recognize as a danger. Surprisingly, radar signals could help keep bats away from wind turbines, scientists have now discovered.

Although wind power promises to be a clean source of energy, some researchers have raised concerns that wind turbines inadvertently kill bats and other flying creatures. For instance, in 2004, over the course of six weeks, roughly 1,764 and 2,900 bats were killed at two wind farms in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, respectively. The bats might not be killed by the wind turbine blades directly, but instead by the sudden drop in air pressure the swinging rotors induce, which in turn cause their lungs to over-expand and burst surrounding blood vessels.

The researchers discovered that radar helped keep bats away, reducing bat activity by 30 to 40 percent. The radar did not keep insects away, which suggests that however the radar works as a deterrent, it does so by influencing the bats directly and not just their food.

Radar signals can lead to small but rapid spikes of heat in the head that generate sound waves, which in turn stimulate the ear.

"A bat's hearing is much more sensitive than ours," Racey noted. "It may be so sensitive that even a tiny amount of sound caused by electromagnetic radiation is enough to drive them out of there."

Future research can design a radar system optimized at deterring bats.

So how does radar keep bats away? The researchers explained that a great deal of research suggests that people can actually hear radar pulses.

"This was noticed when radar arrays first started up during World War II," Racey said. "A portion of radar operators said they heard clicks in their ears when they were switched on."
Announcements

Submission + - Digitally remastered Beatles coming in September

mknewman writes: http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Music/04/07/beatles.remastered.catalogue/index.html

Apple Corps Ltd. and EMI Music have announced that as the date for the release of the entire original Beatles catalogue, digitally remastered.

That includes all 12 Beatles albums in stereo, with track listings and artwork as originally released in the UK. The package will also contain the LP version of "Magical Mystery Tour" (initially released as a double-EP in Britain, though available on CD since 1987) and the collections "Past Masters Vol. I and II" combined as one title

In acknowledgment of the more technologically advanced listeners, each CD will contain, for a limited time, an embedded brief documentary film about the album.

The documentaries contain archival footage, rare photographs and never-before-released studio chat from the Beatles.
Space

Submission + - Oops: Colbert wins space station name contest 2

mknewman writes: NASA's online contest to name a new room at the international space station went awry. Comedian Stephen Colbert won.

The name "Colbert" beat out NASA's four suggested options in the space agency's effort to have the public help name the addition. The new room will be launched later this year.

NASA's mistake was allowing write-ins. Colbert urged viewers of his Comedy Central show, "The Colbert Report" to write in his name. And they complied, with 230,539 votes. That clobbered Serenity, one of the NASA choices, by more than 40,000 votes. Nearly 1.2 million votes were cast by the time the contest ended Friday.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29841715/
The Military

Submission + - Coast Guard to no longer process analog locators

mknewman writes: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/6230782.html

The Coast Guard is urging boaters and flyers to obtain digital emergency beacons to better help rescuers find them when trouble strikes.

Beginning Feb. 1,the Coast Guard will only receive distress alerts from 406-MHz Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons or EPIRBs, that transmit signals to satellites.

The devices help rescuers pinpoint locations more effectively than analog distress signals, which have been commonly used.

The satellites the Coast Guard monitors will no longer process analog signals transmitted on beacons using 121.5 or 243.0 MHz, said USCG Petty Officer 3rd Class Tom Atkeson.

Officials said that rescuers will continue to receive analog signals. But they urge people to have a secondary method of contacting rescuers, such as marine radio.

The 406-MHz beacons are nearly 50 times more powerful than the 121.5 or 243.0 MHz beacons. A GPS-embedded 406-MHz EPIRB can shrink a search area to about 100 yards while an analog beacon offers an initial search area of 500 square miles.

Also, the newer beacons can reduce the number of false emergency alerts because satellites recognize digital distress signals but are unable to distinguish between analog signals that are emitted by emergency beacons and other items that use analog frequencies, such as ATMs, pizza ovens and stadium scoreboards.

With analog beacons, the only way to determine if an alert is an actual emergency is to send rescue crews to the area.

For information on EPIRBs and the switch over from analog signals to digital signals, please visit http://www.sarsat.noaa.gov/.
Space

Submission + - No more space tourists after 2009, Russia says

mknewman writes: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28773091/

MOSCOW — Russia's space chief says there won't be any more tourists headed to the international space station after this year.

Anatoly Perminov told the government newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta that there will be no room for paying tourists because the space station's crew is expanding from three members to six.
Power

Submission + - Positive results for Polywell Fusion at EMC2

mknewman writes: http://www.talk-polywell.org/bb/viewtopic.php?t=965

Aparently the late Robert Bussard's Polywell Fusion project is proceeding, with positive results of WB-6.

"The team has turned in its final report, and it's been double-checked by a peer-review panel, Nebel told me today. Although he couldn't go into the details, he said the verdict was positive."
Books

Submission + - Sci-fi's grand old man Forrest J Ackerman dies

mknewman writes: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28073967/

Forrest J Ackerman, the sometime actor, literary agent, magazine editor and full-time bon vivant who discovered author Ray Bradbury and was widely credited with coining the term "sci-fi," has died. He was 92.

Ackerman died Thursday of heart failure at his Los Angeles home, said Kevin Burns, head of Prometheus Entertainment and a trustee of Ackerman's estate.

His greatest achievement, however, was likely discovering Bradbury, author of the literary classics "Fahrenheit 451" and "The Martian Chronicles." Ackerman had placed a flyer in a Los Angeles bookstore for a science-fiction club he was founding and a teenage Bradbury showed up.

Later, Ackerman gave Bradbury the money to start his own science-fiction magazine, Futuria Fantasia, and paid the author's way to New York for an authors meeting that Bradbury said helped launch his career.

"I hadn't published yet, and I met a lot of these people who encouraged me and helped me get my career started, and that was all because of Forry Ackerman," the author told the AP in 2005.
Space

Submission + - Hubble stops sending data; mission on hold (chron.com)

mknewman writes: The Hubble Space Telescope has stopped sending science data, forcing NASA to regroup and possibly delay the space shuttle mission planned in just two weeks to upgrade the telescope.

NASA is reviewing whether the mission should be delayed a couple of months so that plans can be made to send up a replacement part for the failed component, said NASA spokesman Michael Curie.

Curie stressed that the telescope is not in trouble; it's just that it cannot send science information to ground controllers. That means NASA is unable to receive the dramatic pictures Hubble is known for.

Space

Submission + - Russian invasion of Georgia jeopardizes ISS access

mknewman writes: http://www.chron.com/commons/readerblogs/cosmosphere.html?plckController=Blog&plckScript=blogScript&plckElementId=blogDest&plckBlogPage=BlogViewPost&plckPostId=Blog%3A4b3304c4-0e93-4f03-a9bd-acc2d4d503e1Post%3Aaa58c207-8e8d-4aa1-a98f-7b6003fe0c85&plckCommentSortOrder=TimeStampAscending

Sen. Bill Nelson, one of NASA's biggest proponents on the Hill, is openly questioning how Russia's military intervention in Georgia will affect our access to the space station after the Shuttle is retired in 2010. Currently, NASA is able to use Soyuz vehicles for crew access and lifeboat operations thanks to an exemption from the Iran Non-Proliferation Act. The exemption expires in 2011, only one year after the Shuttle is due to head to the museums.

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