Thursday, September 11, 2014

మహాభారతం యుద్దంలో చనిపోయిన భీమసేన ( భీముడు ) కుమారుడు ఘటోత్కచుడు హస్తిపంజరం 18 అడుగుల పొడవు ... 
హిందూ పురాణాలూ అంత కల్పితం అనే ముర్కులు ఒక సారి ఈ వీడియో చుడండి " ( coverage by national geography).

5 creatures Found below antarcitica


10 Secrets about Banks

Do you think you know enough about the bank you park your money with? Does your bank teller reveal all the profitable options available? Are you aware if there are any loopholes which a bank does not want its customers to know? To work smart on your money matters, you need to probe more into things you did not know about banks.


We bring to you a list of ten things that you must know. Read on for better and safer banking in the future!
Theft and loss protection on your ATM Card

Your bank must tell you about what kind of protection it offers if your ATM card is stolen or lost. It becomes all the more important if you use your card for debit transactions.

You might lose all your money if the card is stolen and not get even half the protection that a credit card customer gets.

Usually, there are better options than just getting an ATM card blocked if you ask for it.

The more you shop, the more they earn

The bank charges you a certain fee every time you shop with your debit card or credit card. Your plastic money is in fact your bank’s wealth too.

Why do you think there are reward points for all you shoppers? The more you swipe, the more is their profit.

It does not always take three days for cheques to clear

Cheque clearance depends on a person’s credibility and the type of cheque issued.

A payroll cheque, for example, is cleared the moment it is deposited. If the customer depositing the check has big bucks in his account, the cheque is likely to be cleared right away.

In case of overdraft, the bank can take your deposited money

Yes! The bank is allowed to compensate itself from your deposited money in the event of your overdrafts (when your account balance is below zero) and other charges. You not only pay the accumulated interest but also lose a part of your deposits to your overdraft loans.

Bank tellers have targets to meet

Bank tellers are like salespersons, who must meet their sales quota for the month. They must get enough number of customers to open accounts in order to meet their performance metrics.

The bottom-line in this case is that, the banks need you as much as you need the bank.

Banks don’t reveal their highest interest-paying accounts

When you sign up with a bank, it is not obliged to tell you about the accounts that pay you the highest interest rate. Therefore, make it a point to inquire about the highest interest-paying options available.

You might end up overdrawn due to bank fees

When signing up with a new bank, make sure to inquire about their fees.

Fees are not the same for all banks. If you do not compare such fees with other banks, you might end up being overdrawn (withdraw money in excess of what the account holds) in 30 days time due to hefty bank fees.

Does your teller brief you on all types of fees?

You pay fees on a lot of banking activities which you may not even be aware of!

Most banks charge fees on ATM service, debit card service, stopped payment, overdrafts, printed feeds, balance enquiry, monthly checking account, cheque writing and wire transfer. Make sure to always check with the bank for such fees.

The overdraft protection fee

The banks charges a fee for every check you overdraft, or debit overdraft. Apart from this fee, you pay an interest on the balance you owe, until you pay it off completely.

In case your credit card is linked to your overdraft account, you may have to pay as much as 18% to 25% interest for your overdrafts.

It is in their interest if you are indebted for a longer term

Banks deliberately encourage you to go for a longer term option for the repayment of your loan. They make you believe that long terms can save you in the event of shortage of funds or unforeseen circumstances. But, it is obvious that the longer you are indebted, the longer they can pocket interest from you. Negotiate wisely on the loan term, after planning your budget carefully.

some of the beautiful banks images














Our brain sorts words as we sleep



Our brain sorts words as we sleep

Vigilance in slumber may explain how meaningful sounds wake a person.


A soundly sleeping brain still monitors and responds to its surroundings, researchers report September 11 in Current Biology. The results, in which a person’s snoozing brain correctly sorts words into categories, represent the latest feat the brain achieves while sleeping (SN: 12/29/12).

Researchers led by Sid Kouider of CNRS, France’s National Center for Scientific Research in Paris, recorded brain signals from awake people as they classified spoken words as either animals or objects. Participants pushed a button with their right hand when they heard an animal name, for instance, and a button with their left hand for objects.

After nodding off, the participants heard a different set of words, and their brains continued sorting the words into their proper categories, EEG recordings revealed. When participants heard “horse,” their brain activity looked as if they were preparing the right hand, not the left, to hit a button.

By describing one way in which the brain stays vigilant during sleep, the results may help explain how meaningful sounds, such as a baby crying or a spoken name, creep unconsciously into the slumbering mind and wake a person more readily than other sounds. 

Apple CEO

Apple CEO Tim Cook.


When you look at the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, the first thing you'll notice is how much larger these phones are than any other iPhone Apple has released. While this is a big shift for Apple, Android device manufacturers have been offering big-screen phones for years.
And they're not shy about telling you that.
Following Apple's iPhone 6 announcement on Tuesday, Samsung and HTC have taken to Twitter to remind you that they've been making big-screened phones for quite some time (via 9to5Google).  Samsung resurrected an old quote from late Apple CEO  and co-founder Steve Jobs about his opinion regarding bigger phones.

At Apple's press conference for the iPhone 4 four years ago, Jobs said he believed that no one would be interested in buying a bigger phone.
Big improvements and innovation come with change - even they thought so.
http://t.co/MN89YMdFMn pic.twitter.com/wubl1QhSEJ — Samsung Mobile PH (@SamsungMobilePH) September 9, 2014

HTC also mocked the iPhone 6, given the fact its own One smartphone features a large screen and a premium metal design too. And it launched earlier this year in March.
Bigger screen. Better performance. Elegant design. Welcome to the party #iPhone6.

pic.twitter.com/v45ZXebhbs — HTC (@htc) September 9, 2014

The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus are Apple's biggest phones to date. The standard model comes with a 4.7-inch screen, while the Plus edition features a phablet-sized 5.5-inch display. These sizes are around the same diagonal length as HTC and Samsung's latest flagship phones. The Galaxy S5, for example, features a 5.1-inch screen while the HTC One M8 comes with a 5-inch display.
The iPhone 6 will go on sale starting Sept. 19, but you can preorder it beginning Sept. 12.


Apple iphone 6 and 6 plus

iphone 6 
bigger than bigger

iPhone 6 isn’t simply bigger — it’s better in every way. Larger, yet dramatically thinner. More powerful, but remarkably power efficient. With a smooth metal surface that seamlessly meets the new Retina HD display. It’s one continuous form where hardware and software function in perfect unison, creating a new generation of iPhone that’s better by any measure.


Learn more about the Retina HD display


iPhone at its largest. And thinnest.

Developing an iPhone with a larger, more advanced display meant pushing the edge of design. From the seamless transition of glass and metal to the streamlined profile, every detail was carefully considered to enhance your experience. So while its display is larger, iPhone 6 feels just right.

Not just a bigger display. A better display.



Learn more about Technology
It’s one thing to make a bigger display. It’s something else entirely to make a bigger Multi‑Touch display with brilliant colours and higher contrast at even wider viewing angles. But that’s exactly what we did with the new Retina HD display.

Learn more about the Retina HD display

1334×
750
iPHONE 6 RESOLUTION
1920×                                                                            
1080
iPHONE 6 PLUS RESOLUTION
Hugely powerful. Enormously efficient.


Learn more about Connectivity
Built on 64-bit desktop-class architecture, the new A8 chip delivers more power, even while driving a larger display. The M8 motion coprocessor efficiently gathers data from advanced sensors and a new barometer. And with increased battery life, iPhone 6 lets you do more, for longer than ever.


64-bit

ARCHITECTURE

A8                                
CHIP

M8
MOTION COPROCESSOR

The camera that changed photos now does the same for video.

More people take more photos with iPhone than with any other camera. And now the iSight camera has a new sensor with Focus Pixels and new video features, like 1080p HD at 60 fps, slo-mo at 240 fps, and time-lapse video mode. So you’ll have more reasons to capture more moments on video too.

Faster wireless. Far and wide.


Learn more about Cameras
iPhone 6 supports fast wireless technologies and connects to networks all over the world. And with advanced Wi‑Fi, you’ll experience incredibly fast wireless speeds.


Security. Right at your fingertip.

The breakthrough Touch ID technology lets you securely access your iPhone with the perfect password: your fingerprint. You can also use it to approve purchases from iTunes and the App Store without having to enter your password.

Learn more about Touch ID


The biggest iOS release ever.

iOS 8 is our most advanced mobile operating system. And with incredible new capabilities and features designed to make the most of a larger display, iOS 8 doesn’t just work seamlessly with iPhone 6. It makes every experience feel bigger and better.

Learn more about iOS 8




Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Brain

Learning rewires the brain
In the process, some of the brain’s nerve cells change shape or even fire backwards

Musicians, athletes and quiz bowl champions all have one thing in common: training. Learning to play an instrument or a sport requires time and patience. It is all about steadily mastering new skills. The same is true when it comes to learning information — preparing for that quiz bowl, say, or studying for a big test.

As teachers, coaches and parents everywhere like to say: Practice makes perfect.

Doing something over and over again doesn’t just make it easier. It actually changes the brain. That may not come as a surprise. But exactly how that process happens has long been a mystery. Scientists have known that the brain continues to develop through our teenage years. But these experts used to think that those changes stopped once the brain matured.

No more.

Recent data have been showing that the brain continues to change over the course of our lives. Cells grow. They form connections with new cells. Some stop talking to others. And it’s not just nerve cells that shift and change as we learn. Other brain cells also get into the act.

Scientists have begun unlocking these secrets of how we learn, not only in huge blocks of tissue, but even within individual cells.

Rewiring

The brain is not one big blob of tissue. Just six to seven weeks into the development of a human embryo, the brain starts to form into different parts. Later, these areas will each take on different roles. Consider the prefrontal cortex. It’s the region right behind your forehead. That’s where you solve problems. Other parts of the cortex (the outer layer of the brain) help process sights and sounds. Deep in the brain, the hippocampus helps store memories. It also helps you figure out where things are located around you.

Scientists can see what part of the brain is active by using functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI. At the heart of every fMRI device is a strong magnet. It allows the device to detect changes in blood flow. Now, when a scientist asks a volunteer to perform a particular task — such as playing a game or learning something new — the machine reveals where blood flow within the brain is highest. That boost in blood flow highlights which cells are busy working.



Many brain scientists use fMRI to map brain activity. Others use another type of brain scan, known as positron emission tomography, or PET. Experts have

performed dozens of such studies. Each looked at how specific areas of the brain responded to specific tasks.

Nathan Spreng did something a little different: He decided to study the studies. Spreng is a neuroscientist at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. A neuroscientist studies the brain and nervous system. Spreng wanted to know how the brain changes — how it morphs a little bit — as we learn.

He teamed up with two other researchers. Together, they analyzed 38 of those earlier studies. Each study had used an fMRI or PET scan to probe which regions of the brain turn on when people learn new tasks.

Areas that allow people to pay attention became most active as someone began a new task. But those attention areas became less active over time. Meanwhile, areas of the brain linked with daydreaming and mind-wandering became more active as people became more familiar with a task.

“At the beginning, you require a lot of focused attention,” Spreng says. Learning to swing a bat requires a great deal of focus when you first try to hit a ball. But the more you practice, Spreng says, the less you have to think about what you’re doing.

Extensive practice can even allow a person to perform a task while thinking about other things — or about nothing at all. A professional pianist, for example, can play a complex piece of music without thinking about which notes to play next. In fact, stopping to think about the task can actually interfere with a flawless performance. This is what musicians, athletes and others often refer to as being “in the zone.”

Cells that fire together, wire together

Spreng’s findings involve the whole brain. However, those changes actually reflect what’s happening at the level of individual cells.

The brain is made up of billions of nerve cells, called neurons. These cells are chatty. They “talk” to each other, mostly using chemical messengers. Incoming signals cause a listening neuron to fire or send signals of its own. A cell fires when an electrical signal travels through it. The signal moves away from what is called the cell body, down through a long structure called an axon. When the signal reaches the end of the axon, it triggers the release of those chemical messengers. The chemicals then leap across a tiny gap. This triggers the next cell to fire. And on it goes.

As we learn something new, cells that send and receive information about the task become more and more efficient. It takes less effort for them to signal the next cell about what’s going on. In a sense, the neurons become wired together.

Spreng detected that wiring. As cells in a brain area related to some task became more efficient, they used less energy to chat. This allowed more neurons in the “daydreaming” region of the brain to rev up their activity.

Neurons can signal to several neighbors at once. For example, one neuron might transmit information about the location of a baseball pitch that’s flying toward you. Meanwhile, other neurons alert your muscles to get ready to swing the bat. When those neurons fire at the same time, connections between them strengthen. That improves your ability to connect with the ball.

Learning while you slumber

The brain doesn’t shut down overnight. In fact, catching some zzz’s can dramatically improve learning. That’s because as we sleep, our brains store memories and new information from the previous day. So a poor night’s sleep can hurt our ability to remember new things. Until recently, however, researchers didn’t know why.

A group of scientists at the University of Heidelberg in Germany provided the first clues. Specific cells in the hippocampus — that region involved in storing memories — fired when mice slept, the scientists found. But the cells didn’t fire normally. Instead, electrical signals spontaneously fired near the middle of an axon, then traveled back in the direction of the cell body. In other words, the cells fired in reverse.

This boosted learning. It did so by making connections between cells stronger. Again, the action sort of wired together the cells. Research by Olena Bukalo and Doug Fields showed how it happens. They are neuroscientists at the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development in Bethesda, Md.

Working with tissue from rat brains, the scientists electrically stimulated nerve axons. Carefully, they stimulated them just in the middle. The electrical signals then traveled in reverse. That is just what the German scientists had seen.

This reverse signaling made the neuron less sensitive to signals from its neighbors, the experts found. This made it harder for the cell to fire, which gave the neuron a chance to recharge, Bukalo explains. When she then applied electric stimulation near the cell body, the neuron fired. And it did so even more strongly than it had before.

Cells involved in learning new information are most likely to fire in reverse during sleep, Bukalo says. The next day, they will be wired more tightly to each other. Although scientists don’t know for certain, it is likely that repeated cycles of reverse firing create a strong network of neurons. The neurons relay information faster and more efficiently, just as Spreng found in his study. As a result, those networks reflect an improvement in understanding or physical skill.
Working with tissue from rat brains, the scientists electrically stimulated nerve axons. Carefully, they stimulated them just in the middle. The electrical signals then traveled in reverse. That is just what the German scientists had seen.

This reverse signaling made the neuron less sensitive to signals from its neighbors, the experts found. This made it harder for the cell to fire, which gave the neuron a chance to recharge, Bukalo explains. When she then applied electric stimulation near the cell body, the neuron fired. And it did so even more strongly than it had before.

Cells involved in learning new information are most likely to fire in reverse during sleep, Bukalo says. The next day, they will be wired more tightly to each other. Although scientists don’t know for certain, it is likely that repeated cycles of reverse firing create a strong network of neurons. The neurons relay information faster and more efficiently, just as Spreng found in his study. As a result, those networks reflect an improvement in understanding or physical skill.



Firing faster

Neurons are the best-known cells in the brain. But they are far from the only ones. Another type, called glia, actually makes up a whopping 85 percent of brain cells. For a long time, scientists thought that glia simply held neurons together. (Indeed, “glia” take their name from the Greek word for glue.) But recent research by Fields, Bukalo’s colleague at the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development, reveals that glial cells also become active during learning.

One type of glial cell wraps around nerve axons. (Note: Not all axons have this wrapping.) These wrapping cells create what’s known as a myelin sheath. Myelin is made of protein and fatty substances. It insulates the axons. Myelin is a bit like the plastic coating that jackets the copper wires in your home. That insulation prevents electrical signals from inappropriately leaking out of one wire (or axon) and into another.

In axons, the myelin sheath has a second role: It actually speeds the electrical signals along. That’s because glial cells force a signal to jump from one spot on the axon to the next. As it hops between glial cells, the signal moves faster. It’s kind of like flying from one spot to the next, instead of taking the train.

Fields has found that when new skills are learned, the amount of myelin insulating an axon increases. This happens as the size of individual glial cells increases. New glial cells also may be added to bare axons. These changes improve the ability of a neuron to signal. And that leads to better learning.

A thicker myelin sheath helps improve all types of brainy tasks. These include reading, creating memories, playing a musical instrument and more. A thicker sheath is also linked with better decision-making.

Nerve cells continue to add myelin well into adulthood, as our brains continue to grow and develop. The prefrontal cortex, for example — that area where decisions are made — gains myelin well into a person’s 20s. This may explain why teens don’t always make the best decisions. They’re not finished sheathing their nerve cells. But there is hope. And getting enough sleep certainly can help. Glial cells, like neurons, seem to change most during certain stages of sleep.

Exactly what causes the glial cells to change remains a mystery. Fields and his colleagues are hard at work to figure that out. It’s exciting, he says, to launch into a whole new field of research.

Slow and steady

These changes in the brain allow for faster, stronger signaling between neurons as the brain gains new skills. But the best way to speed up those signals is to introduce new information to our noggins — slowly.

Many students instead try to memorize lots of information the night before a test. Cramming may get them through the test. But the students won’t remember the information for very long, says Hadley Bergstrom. He is a neuroscientist at the National Institutes of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism in Rockville, Md.

It’s important to spread out learning over many days, his work shows. That means learning a little bit at a time. Doing so allows links between neurons to steadily strengthen. It also allows glial cells time to better insulate axons.

Even an “aha!” moment — when something suddenly becomes clear — doesn’t come out of nowhere. Instead, it is the result of a steady accumulation of information. That’s because adding new information opens up memories associated with the task. Once those memory neurons are active, they can form new connections, explains Bergstrom. They also can form stronger connections within an existing network. Over time, your level of understanding increases until you suddenly “get” it.

Like Fields and Bukalo, Bergstrom stresses the importance of sleep in forming the new memories needed to gain knowledge. So the next time you study for a test, start learning new information a few days ahead of time. The night before, give your brain a break and go to bed early. It will allow your brain a chance to cement that new information into its cells. And that should boost your chances of doing well.

Power Words

axon  The long, tail-like extension of a neuron that conducts electrical signals away from the cell.

cell body  The compact section of a neuron (nerve cell) where its nucleus is located.

cortex  The outermost layer of neural tissue of the brain.

fMRI  (short for functional magnetic resonance imaging)  A special type of machine used to study brain activity. It uses a strong magnetic field to monitor blood flow in the brain. Tracking the movement of blood can tell researchers which brain regions are active.

glia  Non-nerve cells, these make up 85 percent of the cells in the brain. Some glial cells wrap around axons. This speeds the rate of neural signaling and helps to prevent confusing “cross-talk” between neighboring nerve cells.

hippocampus  A seahorse-shaped region of the brain. It is thought to be the center of emotion, memory and the involuntary nervous system.

myelin  (as inmyelin sheath)  A layer of fatty cells, called glia, that wraps around nerve-cell axons. The myelin sheath insulates axons, speeding the rate at which signals speed down them. The addition of this sheath is a process known as myelination or myelinating.

neuron (or nerve cell)  Any of the impulse-conducting cells that make up the brain, spinal column and nervous system. These specialized cells transmit information to other neurons in the form of electrical signals.

neuroscience  Science that deals with the structure or function of the brain and other parts of the nervous system. Researchers in this field are known as neuroscientists.

PET  (short for positron emission tomography)  A technology that uses radiation to create three-dimensional images of the inside of the body. The individual receives a radioactive “tracer” chemical in the blood that shows up during the scan. As the tracer moves through the body, it will accumulate in certain organs. This allows researchers and doctors to see create X-ray-like details of those organs.

prefrontal cortex  A region containing some of the brain’s gray matter. Located behind the forehead, it plays a role in making decisions and other complex mental activities, in emotions and in behaviors.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

technology and cars: Cave of the Winds

technology and cars: Cave of the Winds: Cave of the Winds Follow Vinyan's board Places to Visit on Pinterest. By Joseph R. Chambers ...

Cave of the Winds

Cave of the Winds

By Joseph R. Chambers
The huge Langley Full-Scale Tunnel building dominated the skyline of Langley Air Force Base for 81 years (1930–2011). The Full-Scale Tunnel was constructed by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) during an era when biplanes and dirigibles dominated aviation. The results of critical tests conducted within its massive test section contributed to many of the Nation's most important aeronautics and space programs. The historical significance of the Full-Scale Tunnel was formally recognized when it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1985 by the National Park Service.
› Kindle readers: MOBI [72.8 MB]
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NASA

Student Winners of OPTIMUS PRIME Spinoff Contest to Receive Scholarships


As students prepare to return to school for the 2014-2015 academic year, the Innovative Technology Partnerships Office at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland is pleased to announce educational scholarships for top-placing students in NASA's most recent OPTIMUS PRIME Spinoff Video Contest. The scholarships for the first, second and third place winners in each age category (elementary, middle school and high school) are being sponsored by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Foundation and may be used to support current and future educational pursuits.
“Our support of the contest aligns with our goal of promoting the many disciplines of science and engineering available to students,” said Matt Schatzle, executive director, ASME Foundation. “The ASME Foundation is committed to supporting the continued growth of technical professions with our scholarships.”
The NASA OPTIMUS PRIME Spinoff Video Contest challenged students to submit videos describing their favorite NASA spinoff.  Spinoffs are technologies originally created for space and modified into everyday products used on Earth.  Examples include items such as memory foam, invisible braces and scratch-resistant lenses for eyeglasses.   
“The OPTIMUS PRIME Spinoff Contest is an innovative way of building a dialogue with the public regarding the benefits of NASA research and development outcomes," said Nona Cheeks, chief of Goddard's Innovative Technology Partnerships Office.  "The students’ creativity and skill demonstrated in each of the videos helps NASA to be more effective at raising public understanding of how our technologies provide benefits as space applications as well as in industries such as environmental, medical and manufacturing.”
For information about NASA and agency programs, please visit:  http://www.nasa.gov and http://technology.nasa.gov/
For more information about ITPO, please visit:  http://itpo.gsfc.nasa.gov
For more information about the upcoming challenge, please visit:  http://itpo.gsfc.nasa.gov/optimus

NASA

On September 6, 2013, NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) was launched on board a Minotaur V rocket at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility. The LADEE mission's goal was to orbit the moon to gather detailed information about the lunar atmosphere, conditions near the surface, and environmental influences on lunar dust. The data collected from LADEE is being used to reveal the composition of, and variations in, the lunar atmosphere, as well as give insight into the amount of lunar dust in the atmosphere. The LADEE mission ended on April 17, 2014, with a planned impact with the surface of the moon.

LADEE News and Features


NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE)- pronounced "laddie" - was a robotic mission that orbited the moon to gather detailed information about the structure and composition of the thin lunar atmosphere, and determine whether dust is lofted into the lunar sky. A thorough understanding of these characteristics of our nearest celestial neighbor will help researchers understand other bodies in the solar system, such as large asteroids, Mercury, and the moons of outer planets.
The LADEE spacecraft's modular common spacecraft bus, or body, innovated away from custom designs and transitioned toward multi-use designs and assembly-line production, which could drastically reduce the cost of spacecraft development, just as the Ford Model T did for automobiles. NASA's Ames Research Center designed, developed, built, and tested the spacecraft and managed mission operations.

LADEE Project Scientist Update: The Legacy Lives On!
April 22, 2014
NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) spacecraft has impacted the Moon, capping an extremely successful operational mission. Science analysis will continue for months, as the science teams churn through the data and write papers about their findings. So LADEE is gone, but its science legacy lives on!
LADEE ran its science instruments almost non-stop right up to impact the evening of April 17, 2014, in an effort to gather as much low-altitude data as possible. Further study of the returned data will reveal what the instruments saw at these amazingly low orbits, just a few kilometers above the surface. Early results suggest that LADEE was low enough to see some new things, including increased dust density and possibly new atmospheric species. In an incredible race with time, LADEE’s Real Time Operations team queued and downloaded all science files just minutes prior to LADEE's impact.
As the clock was running out on the LADEE mission, we took advantage of an opportunity to replicate observations by the Apollo astronauts more than 40 years ago. (We hinted at this in an earlier update). We used one of the star tracker cameras to gaze out over the Moon's horizon, while LADEE was in the deep darkness of the lunar night and over the far side where no Earthshine can reach.
Sunrise over the surface of the moon
A series of star tracker images taken by LADEE Saturday, April 12. The lunar horizon is ahead, a few minutes before orbital sunrise.
Image Credit: 
NASA Ames
In the minutes before orbital sunrise, when LADEE emerged from shadow into sunlight, we commanded the spacecraft to take a series of images. We wanted to see the same scene the astronauts saw, with the sun just below the horizon. In this configuration, we could view anything that might scatter sunlight. On Earth, "rosy-fingered dawn" paints the sky prior to sunrise because aerosols and dust particles suspended in the atmosphere scatter the sunlight. With the sun below the horizon, the reflected and scattered light makes the sunrise glow for an observer to see in the dark shadow beyond. However, the very low dust densities that LADEE's Lunar Dust Experiment (LDEX) measured should not produce such a sunrise glow – there were just too few particles along the line of sight to scatter measurable light. Yet some Apollo astronauts reported a pre–sunrise glow and even rays of light, as if the sun was shining through notches of the lunar mountains, and the light was scattered by…something. Could LADEE spot this? 
Shown here is a series of images taken on one such occasion, Saturday, April 12. The series begins with LADEE viewing the lunar horizon ahead, a few minutes before orbital sunrise. At this position, there is already a glow in the sky above the completely dark surface of the Moon (right), though the sun is many degrees below the horizon. LADEE’s orbital motion makes the stars appear to move to the left. The same motion brings the sun closer to the horizon ahead and the glow gets brighter. In fact, the glow becomes so bright, parts of the image are saturated. Finally, sunrise fully saturates the camera image. This sequence is the closest thing to the astronaut's orbital viewpoint that LADEE could provide!
A good example of zodiacal light
A good example of zodiacal light.
Image Credit: 
Copyright: Yuri Beletsky (ESO)
The shape of this glow is familiar; we've seen it before. The images reveal a phenomenon that even we can see during a dark, clear night after sunset here on Earth – the zodiacal light. What is zodiacal light? It is the scattered sunlight from billions upon billions of dust grains, not at the Moon, but in the innermost reaches of the solar system. The origin of this dust appears to be comets, which shed gas and dust in their orbital progress around the sun. The lenticular shape of the zodiacal light, seen in the LADEE star tracker images, results from the tendency of the dust to be more concentrated near the orbital plane of the planets.
Unlike Eugene Cernan's sketches from his vantage point in the Apollo 17 command module, America, LADEE saw no rays or other strange features - just good old zodiacal light, plus possibly the outer fringes of the sun's corona. LADEE took several sequences of these orbital sunrise images, and for now, nothing has shown up that clearly is lunar in origin.  In the coming weeks and months, we'll carefully analyze these images, and perhaps something related to levitated lunar dust will emerge.
But it sure looks like sunrise is just as impressive from LADEE's vantage point as it is to us on Earth.

LADEE Project Scientist Update: The Legacy Lives On!

The LADEE spacecraft has impacted the Moon, capping an extremely successful operational mission. Science analysis will continue for months, as the ...

NASA Completes LADEE Mission with Planned Impact on Moon's Surface

Ground controllers at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., have confirmed that NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer ...

Ground controllers at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., have confirmed that NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) spacecraft impacted the surface of the moon, as planned, between 9:30 and 10:22 p.m. PDT Thursday, April 17.
LADEE lacked fuel to maintain a long-term lunar orbit or continue science operations and was intentionally sent into the lunar surface. The spacecraft's orbit naturally decayed following the mission's final low-altitude science phase.
During impact, engineers believe the LADEE spacecraft, the size of a vending machine, broke apart, with most of the spacecraft’s material heating up several hundred degrees – or even vaporizing – at the surface. Any material that remained is likely buried in shallow craters.
"At the time of impact, LADEE was traveling at a speed of 3,600 miles per hour – about three times the speed of a high-powered rifle bullet," said Rick Elphic, LADEE project scientist at Ames. "There’s nothing gentle about impact at these speeds – it’s just a question of whether LADEE made a localized craterlet on a hillside or scattered debris across a flat area. It will be interesting to see what kind of feature LADEE has created."
NASA completes the LADEE mission.
Image Credit: 
NASA Ames
In early April, the spacecraft was commanded to carry out maneuvers that would lower its closest approach to the lunar surface. The new orbit brought LADEE to altitudes below one mile (two kilometers) above the lunar surface. This is lower than most commercial airliners fly above Earth, enabling scientists to gather unprecedented science measurements.
On April 11, LADEE performed a final maneuver to ensure a trajectory that caused the spacecraft to impact the far side of the moon, which is not in view of Earth or near any previous lunar mission landings. LADEE also survived the total lunar eclipse on April 14 to 15. This demonstrated the spacecraft's ability to endure low temperatures and a drain on batteries as it, and the moon, passed through Earth's deep shadow.
In the coming months, mission controllers will determine the exact time and location of LADEE's impact and work with the agency’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) team to possibly capture an image of the impact site. Launched in June 2009, LRO provides data and detailed images of the lunar surface.
"It's bittersweet knowing we have received the final transmission from the LADEE spacecraft after spending years building it in-house at Ames, and then being in constant contact as it circled the moon for the last several months," said Butler Hine, LADEE project manager at Ames.
Launched in September 2013 from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia, LADEE began orbiting the moon Oct. 6 and gathering science data Nov. 10. The spacecraft entered its science orbit around the moon's equator on Nov. 20, and in March 2014, LADEE extended its mission operations following a highly successful 100-day primary science phase.
LADEE also hosted NASA’s first dedicated system for two-way communication using laser instead of radio waves. The Lunar Laser Communication Demonstration (LLCD) made history using a pulsed laser beam to transmit data over the 239,000 miles from the moon to the Earth at a record-breaking download rate of 622 megabits-per-second (Mbps). In addition, an error-free data upload rate of 20 Mbps was transmitted from the primary ground station in New Mexico to the Laser Communications Space Terminal aboard LADEE.
LADEE gathered detailed information about the structure and composition of the thin lunar atmosphere. In addition, scientists hope to use the data to address a long-standing question: Was lunar dust, electrically charged by sunlight, responsible for the pre-sunrise glow seen above the lunar horizon during several Apollo missions?
"LADEE was a mission of firsts, achieving yet another first by successfully flying more than 100 orbits at extremely low altitudes," said Joan Salute, LADEE program executive, at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Although a risky decision, we're already seeing evidence that the risk was worth taking.”
A thorough understanding of the characteristics of our nearest celestial neighbor will help researchers understand other bodies in the solar system, such as large asteroids, Mercury and the moons of outer planets.
NASA also included the public in the final chapter of the LADEE story. A “Take the Plunge” contest provided an opportunity for the public to guess the date and time of the spacecraft’s impact via the internet. Thousands submitted predictions. NASA will provide winners a digital congratulatory certificate.
NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington funds the LADEE mission. Ames was responsible for spacecraft design, development, testing and mission operations, in addition to managing the overall mission. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., managed the science instruments, technology demonstration payload and science operations center, and provided mission support. Goddard also manages the LRO mission. Wallops was responsible for launch vehicle integration, launch services and operations. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., managed LADEE within the Lunar Quest Program Office.
For more information about the LADEE mission, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/ladee
For more information about LLCD, visit: http://llcd.gsfc.nasa.gov
 

Text issued as Ames news release 14-031AR
Rachel Hoover
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
650-930-6149
rachel.hoover@nasa.gov
Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726
dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov
Dewayne Washington
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-0040
dewayne.a.washington@nasa.gov

LADEE Project Scientist Update: Citius, propius, occupatus

NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) performed its final orbital maintenance maneuver (OMM-22) last Friday evening, April 11. This was the 22nd maneuver during the science mission, designed to keep the spacecraft at the desired altitudes for the three science instruments to obtain their best data. After the primary mission concluded in March, we have been allowing the spacecraft to go much lower in altitude, in order to obtain the really high-value science data, accepting the risk of flying barely above the lunar terrain. We flew very close – approximately two miles (3.2 kilometers) above the surface – on April 5, and made it through just fine.
After safely flying through our close approach on April 5, we barely had time to breathe a sigh of relief when we had to face a most nerve-wracking moment on April 14: the day of a unusually long lunar eclipse, which the spacecraft was not designed to survive.  The launch date in September 2013, and the primary science mission were chosen so that we could complete everything prior to this long eclipse. However, with our extended mission, not only are we able to gather valuable extra science data, but also conduct an engineering test by flying LADEE through the eclipse.
The total lunar eclipse, showing a coppery moon, the bright star Spica, and the planet Mars.
Image Credit: 
NASA Ames/Lynn Hoffland
An eclipse like the one April 14-15, is challenging because there is no sunlight to power the spacecraft and heaters, or recharge the battery. The low temperatures mean the spacecraft needs power to keep itself from freezing. LADEE normally experiences a period of eclipse-like darkness that lasts about an hour every time it orbits the moon, but this extended eclipse lasted four hours. We watched telemetry as the spacecraft lost sunlight and then began to cool down. The battery discharged as the heaters kicked in, and we started receiving yellow and red alarms from the spacecraft as the power dropped and everything got colder. Once the eclipse ended, and the spacecraft started charging up again, the alarms gradually cleared and everything returned to normal. Aside from a couple of sensors getting too cold, everything looked good and we were once again able to gather science data. LADEE had survived the eclipse!
The OMM-22 maneuver was designed to get LADEE as low as we could for science measurements, but also placed the spacecraft on a trajectory that will naturally decay to the planned impact on the moon's far side on April 21. Now LADEE is in the final low-altitude passes prior to its planned impact. These altitudes are very low to the surface and so close to the walls of lunar craters and mountain ridges that there is a good chance the spacecraft may impact a few days ahead of that on April 17 or 18. This risk is definitely worth it, however, as it gives us the chance to collect really valuable science data at low altitudes that normally are impossible to safely achieve. If LADEE gets through these low altitudes by the evening of April 18, then the spacecraft will stay on its final path to for a planned impact in the night on Sunday, April 20 or early morning on Monday, April 21.
Not exactly the Olympic motto, but appropriate! On March 1, 2014, NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) successfully completed its full 100-day science mission. But LADEE has not been resting on its laurels! LADEE’s flight has been faster, lower and busier than ever. The science instruments have continued to acquire data for another bonus lunation – or a complete lunar day that lasts 29.5 Earth days – during the mission extension. It turns out that this extra time is important to understanding the sources and drivers of the tenuous lunar atmosphere, because conditions are never exactly the same from month to month. Plus, the more we learn about the moon, its dust and exosphere, the more skilled we become in planning precise instrument measurements at just the right times. We've also increased the duty cycle of our instrument operations and are burning more science hours per orbit than ever before.  
This series of images portrays the moon’s surface illuminated by a nearly full Earth.
This series of images portrays the moon’s surface illuminated by a nearly full Earth.
Image Credit: 
NASA/Ames
LADEE’s star trackers have taken more cool images. This recent series portrays the Moon’s surface illuminated by a nearly full Earth. The images, taken once a minute, show the changes in lighting and terrain as LADEE approaches the boundary of the nearside and far side, where light from the bright Earth does not reach. The transition from smooth mare plains to the rugged, heavily cratered highlands is clear. In this series, Earth’s illumination angle changes from high to very low – the last image shows a few lonely mountain tops illuminated by the rays of the distant Earth, off to the left. You may notice that the stars above the limb never move – LADEE was in a fixed inertial attitude at the time, downloading science data to a ground station.
Taking images is an unusual task for a star tracker, since its main purpose is to determine where in space it is looking, like a navigator, so the spacecraft can know its attitude relative to sun, moon and Earth. It so happens that the star trackers are able to compress and save images every eight seconds. If those images contain not just stars, but the dark limb of the unlit moon, an interesting possibility presents itself: what if we could reproduce the famous view that Apollo astronaut Eugene Cernan sketched more than 40 years ago? What if we could see a horizon glow just before orbital sunrise? Might we see levitated dust, illuminated by sunshine while LADEE is in the dark shadow of the moon? More on this soon!
Gene Cernan sketch
This is a sketch of the lunar sunrise seen from orbit by Apollo 17 astronaut Eugene Cernan. Highlights in the right image show the sources of the scattered light.
Image Credit: 
NASA
LADEE has been flying lower than ever before, exploring new regions near the bottom of the moon's tenuous atmosphere and thin dust veil. In recent days we have flown as low as three kilometers (two miles) above the lunar terrain. Imagine the view from the Appennine Mountains at the eastern edge of Mare Imbrium, as LADEE races by at 1,650 meters per second (3,690 miles per hour, more than three times the speed of a high-powered rifle bullet) and 3,100 meters (10,000 feet) overhead. 
Now LADEE's orbit is naturally evolving toward higher altitudes, but only temporarily – the end is near! LADEE will perform its 22nd and final orbit maintenance maneuver in the evening of Friday, April 11. This maneuver will lower periapsis – or the spacecraft's closest approach to the moon’s surface – to a few kilometers again, providing a second opportunity to acquire high-value science at low altitudes over a different part of the moon.
To make things even more interesting, there is a total lunar eclipse, a beautiful event visible from the United States, the night of April 14 to 15. But in lunar orbit NASA's LADEE, Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and the two Acceleration, Reconnection, Turbulence and Electrodynamics of the Moon’s Interaction with the Sun (ARTEMIS) spacecraft must survive harsh conditions as they and the moon pass through Earth's deep shadow. Starved of sunlight for power and enduring deep cold, they will rely on batteries to see them through. Like the other missions, LADEE is expected to survive – but it wasn't designed to, and this is space, so surprises can occur. Keep little LADEE in your prayers as you gaze up at the beautiful eclipsing moon late Monday night!
It's not often that we get a chance to see our planet's shadow, but a lunar eclipse gives us a fleeting glimpse. During these rare events, the full Moon rapidly darkens and then glows red. Though a lunar eclipse can be seen only at night, it's worth staying up to catch the show.
Image Credit: 
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center