SpinCam: High-Gravity (100G) Camera 21
An anonymous reader writes "Centrifuge-cameras began exploration of genetic changes at the extremes of high gravity-- in the only animal with a completely sequenced gene library. Students at Harvey Mudd designed the 100G camera, Stanford is doing the gene array and NASA is spinning the 1 millimeter worms that are the model system for how to adapt and survive 100-times your terrestrial weight. Accelerated aging and slowed DNA repair are just two biological consequences of gravity changes. The Japanese (NASDA) are building the space station centrifuge for 2006. What other garden-variety objects can be photographed in that kind of ultra-spindryer?"
"accelerated aging" (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:"accelerated aging" (Score:2, Insightful)
i was sort of wondering about this as well, from the article ilnked to in the post on astrobio.net (link [astrobio.net]) it stated the following: Astronauts can suffer from motion sickness, bone loss, muscle degeneration (atrophy) and blood vessel problems during weightlessness.
so apparently the sci.fi is er. sci.fi... :) although if i remember correctly JR Hadden from "Contact" the movie based upon Sagan's book had said that the 0 gravity slowed his cancer, which probably has some biological merit if it were actually in the book (instead of just the movie), which it probably was as Sagan worked very closely with the screen writers et al. (i personally haven't read the book, but believe the movie was one of the last things Sagan took part in, and unfortunately he was unable to see the movie as he died of cancer shortly before its debut...). hmmm... offtopic, but yea, :)
to the best of my [limited] knowledge anyway, please correct me if i'm wrong.
-tid242
Re:"accelerated aging" (Score:1)
Isn't this just the body adapting to the new environment? In low-g you don't need strong bones and muscles to support your weight and the blood vessels need not to be as strong as they don't have to support the hydrostatic pressure. By getting rid of unnecessary structures the body conserves resources - maybe that way one is able to survive with a lower metabolic turnover rate (which, according to research done on animals, could make a longer living-span possible).
Re:"accelerated aging" (Score:1)
Excuse me (Score:2, Interesting)
I believe that the human genome project also has a complete sequence [ibiblio.org] of our genome as well.
Re:Excuse me (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Excuse me (Score:3, Informative)
Whoops (Score:3, Funny)
quickly removes wet laundry
100G? (Score:2, Funny)
Is there anything left from the worms, after the thing stops?
Except for the wet spots, I mean
Greetings
Stefan
Re:100G? (Score:2, Informative)
stupid engineering? (Score:2)
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:1)
I've heard thats about what you get if you drop something hard from 3 or 4 feet onto a concrete floor. I don't know many cameras that would survive that kind of force contiuously.
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:2)
I'm not sure how shock and vibration ratings translate to continious G ratings, or if theres any relation at all. It seems that a shock pulse would be more damaging than gentle acceleration, as it is transmitted through the material, causing intense local deformation (relative to slowly rising acceleration).
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:1)
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:1)
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:1)
Re:stupid engineering? (Score:1)
Harvey Mudd College Link (Score:1)
http://www.hmc.edu
http://www.eng.hmc.edu (Engineering Department)
Re:Harvey Mudd College Link (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.hmc.edu [hmc.edu]
http://www.eng.hmc.edu [hmc.edu] (Engineering Department)
I'm surprised (Score:3, Funny)