Ants... In... Space 196
Ant writes "The Fowler students picked an experiment with ants, rather than plants, because they wanted to see some activity in space. They have been following the ants' progress on the web. The students and their teachers also have learned that sometimes the best thought-out hypothesis does not pan out in reality. 'We predicted that the ants would tunnel a lot slower in microgravity, but we're finding out they're moving a lot faster,' said Golash. The students have a control group of ants at their school, living in a similar environment except with gravity. After the shuttle returns from its scheduled 16-day flight in early February, the young scientists will have 30 days to put together a preliminary report. Their "Ants in Space" experiment was sponsored by SPACEHAB, an aerospace company that has worked with NASA for many years to design and build hardware for space experiments."
So if ants can lift ten times their body weight... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So if ants can lift ten times their body weight (Score:2, Funny)
I can never tell if people are joking.
Re:So if ants can lift ten times their body weight (Score:5, Insightful)
I could only attribute this to concepts based on hinderences to human's movements in space. They probably assumed that since Humans have a harder time coordinating while in space suits on different worlds that Ants would have a harder time coordinating in small tunnels in a controled environment.
This of course has so far been proved false, because the Ants have several legs and movement through said tunnels would probably be easier with lower gravity in the same way humans could probably move faster in tunnels on the moon than we could here on earth. Think of it this way, we could jump down a cooridor on the moon far faster than we could walk run or crawl through it on earth.
Why Humans Move Slow in Space (Score:5, Insightful)
It wasn't until Buzz Aldrin's EVA during the last Gemini mission that they had worked out a set of maneuvers and restraints to make sure that when an astronaut turned a knob, he didn't turn instead.
Now, an ant is never free floating. She always has something to hold onto, the tunnel. But if we have learned anything in space, you really can't assume anything. You have to observe it and see how it actually behaves.
Take fire for instance. You take it for granted here on earth that you can see the flames. Well, flames are caused by convection, which does't happen in micro-gravity. Hot air has the same "weight" as cold air. Instead the plasma forms a sphere that is tricky to see. Smoke does not rise from the fire for the very same reason.
With that sort of information, NASA found they had to design completely new fire detection systems for the ISS.
Re:Why Humans Move Slow in Space (Score:2)
How would a plant grow in a ball of soil in zero-gravity? For example, you take a seed, and wrap it in a ball of soil complete with nutrients, etc. (and light from every direction) Would it grow multiple stalks in various directions and grow into a giant ball?
Re:Why Humans Move Slow in Space (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So if ants can lift ten times their body weight (Score:2)
Re:So if ants can lift ten times their body weight (Score:3)
Oh, that's just great. Now you made me imagine ants crawling down another kind of tunnel... After poking put my eyes, will somebody please burn my occipital lobe cortex?
Re:GOD DAMN!!! (Score:2)
Bad Science (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Bad Science (Score:3, Interesting)
Thus the term "microgravity." It's not bad science at all, you just don't know what you are talking about.
The question is (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The question is (Score:5, Funny)
-Quick, save the queen!
-Which one of us is the queen?
-I'm the queen!
-No you're not!
-Freedom! Horrible horrible freedom!
You fool! Now we'll never know if ants can be taught to sort tiny screws in space!
Re:The question is (Score:5, Funny)
Kent Brockman: Ladies and gentlemen, er, we've just lost the picture, but, uh, what we've seen speaks for itself. The Corvair spacecraft has been taken over -- "conquered", if you will -- by a master race of giant space ants. It's difficult to tell from this vantage point whether they will consume the captive earth men or merely enslave them. One thing is for certain, there is no stopping them; the ants will soon be here. And I, for one, welcome our new insect overlords. I'd like to remind them that as a trusted TV personality, I can be helpful in rounding up others to toil in their underground sugar caves.
Courtesy of The Simpsons Archive [snpp.com]
Re:The question REALLY is (Score:2, Funny)
New World Order (Score:2, Funny)
Hmm.... (Score:2, Funny)
The Sims (Score:2)
Only available in colonies overrun by giant space ants.
Hrm... (Score:3, Interesting)
From Soviet Russian satellite... (Score:2, Funny)
So... (Score:5, Funny)
I was reading about this a while ago.... (Score:1)
Questions about ants (Score:5, Interesting)
It would really suck if those ants got loose into the shuttle! Though they might find it to be a shocking experience to meet the electrical system (*cheap rim shot*)
I bet that guy from *NSync is really pissed now that even the lowly ant has beaten him out.
Uhhh... It's really late & I'm drunk.
In Soviet Russia, ants launch you into space.
Profit.
==
And for my next trick, I will disappear.
Re:Questions about ants (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Questions about ants (Score:5, Interesting)
In this case, electrical charge. The rocks and pebbles "stick" to each other as a result. Even under the effects of Earth's gravity, this stickyness factor is a greater force than weight.
If you remember, an aerospace engineer is credited with saying that bumblebees can't fly. (It's actually a misquote.) At that scale, air resistance is a greater influence than weight. They are constantly falling, but their terminal velocity is so rediculously slow that their puny little wings can push them up at a greater rate. Kind of like a blimb with a negative bouyancy.
Re:Questions about ants (Score:4, Insightful)
This is why when you jump on the ground, nobody on the opposite side of the planet suddenly feels a bump. The forces disperse to effective nonexistance (since they can't be conceivably detected anymore). Even really really large bumbs like Richter 7.5 earthquakes require very sensitive devices to detect them after a few hundred miles.
The ants live in "Jello" instead of sand / dirt (Score:3, Interesting)
Preliminary Report: (Score:2, Funny)
Their findings (Score:4, Funny)
Simpson's Jokes Aside (Score:5, Insightful)
Launch Preparations: $130 million
Anti-Grav Ant Colony: $2000
The fact that 30 years after we put man on the moon, this is the best NASA can come up with: Unfathomible.
You know, how about we try seeing how ants tunnel in Lunar Regolith, or Martian soil. That would be intersting.
This is great for the kids, but I think it just shows how far NASA has NOT come.
NASA is a waste of money (Score:1, Redundant)
International Space Station? Completely useless, and expensive at that. Come to think of it, NASA doesn't do anything cheap (not that I necessarily want to be on a cheap space shuttle).
NASA needs to stop wasting money on crappy little projects and ant-colonies and do something worthwhile. Then maybe it gets a bit more funding.
Re:NASA is a waste of money (Score:1)
Although the end result of this experiment probably won't contribute to the advancement of "practical" science, it did serve an educational purpose. It got a group of kids interested in science and space. To me, that's worth the expenditure.
Re:NASA is a waste of money (Score:1)
Bleah, you (Score:2)
This just proved that insect based terraforming engines would be possible, whether through mechanical, bio-mechanical, engineered, or just selectively bred.
Not only that, but that ants, and perhaps other insects, do better in low g then in high g; meaning also that they represent a useful mechanical alternative to wheels and other locomotion devices. It also probably means, within unknown constraints due to blood flow, that ants could probably become much larger in space and still function.
None of this is useless; the only reason it is useless is because you, the beholder, haven't the intelligence, creativity, or capbability to put *information* to use.
Re:Simpson's Jokes Aside (Score:2)
You know, how about we try seeing how ants tunnel in Lunar Regolith, or Martian soil. That would be intersting.
Yay, teeny weeny ant spacesuits!
Re:Simpson's Jokes Aside (Score:1)
Custom designed and built for each ant, costing billions.
Re:Simpson's Jokes Aside (Score:2)
Bleah (Score:2)
This is *not* useless. This is *not* uninteresting.
Ant colonies in space are far from worthless.
This just proved that insect based terraforming engines would be possible, whether through mechanical, bio-mechanical, engineered, or just selectively bred.
Not only that, but that ants, and perhaps other insects, do better in low g then in high g; meaning also that they represent a useful mechanical alternative to wheels and other locomotion devices. It also probably means, within unknown constraints due to blood flow, that ants could probably become much larger in space and still function.
None of this is useless; the only reason it is useless is because you, the beholder, haven't the intelligence, creativity, or capbability to put *information* to use.
In your position I see many possibilities. You just see a waste.
Imagine ants 1' across used to terraform asteroids and planetoids! Partner them up with power sources, plants that create oxygen, and you've got a self limiting factory. As soon as the power dies, the oxygen goes, and the ants stop. But the end result is the possibility of miles of usable tunnels. And why 1'? Why not 2'? Or 4'? What's the limits of an ant's heart in zero g?
Of course we don't know. Does that make an experiment of breeding giant ants worthless?
Not at all! It just makes it one more thing we don't know that, if more people like you were in charge, we would *never* know.
Re:Bleah (Score:2)
Re:Bleah (Score:2)
Re:Simpson's Jokes Aside (Score:2)
I believe if you read, you will find that this is an experiment designed by school children. NASA has provided a small cylinder (if I recall it is about the size of a 5 gallon pail) as a sealed payload available to school programs to help interest children in science.
While you are correct (by implication) that every pound of payload costs money in fuel etc. and is therefore expensive, the idea here is that you never know what child is going to be the next Einstein (or Zephram Cochran ;-) ) if given the right opportunities. So we donate a small area to the children.
If you think about it, the kids also have to learn to plan for recording their data, launch and reentry forces, etc. It is no small thing that these kids are learning for themselves. Also, IIRC there is a competetion amongst schools to even receive the opportunity to use the payload space.
So in fact the experience gained by the students may actually prove: Priceless
DSJ attack (Score:2)
That's cool (Score:2)
South Park... (Score:2, Funny)
Newts in space! (space space space) (Score:5, Funny)
When I was 12-14 I was really into model rockets. I lived with my grandmother at the time and her yard had all kinds of newts and salamanders in it.
"OOH ASTRONEWTS!" Was the first thing that popped into my head.
I forget the model number, but it was an estes rocket with a clear payload chamber on it. I placed my "ASTRONEWT!" into the payload chamber, taped the fuse on the bottom of my C6-7 engine and then backed up for safety.
"HOUSTON THIS IS MISSION CONTROL, BEGINNING FINAL COUNTDOWN FOR LAUNCH!" I could see the little critter had no idea he was about to be launched into the stratosphere as he wiggled and squirmed inside of his cramped quarters.
"5-4-3-2-1 MAIN ENGINES ARE GO YOU HAVE CLEARED THE TOWER" This was about the 10th rocket I had built that year, everything on it was perfect, the wings had been sanded down and painted in 2 coats, same went for the body. This thing had to be the most arodynamically sound rocket I had ever built in my life because it just kept climbing and climbing.
"HOUSTON THIS IS MISSION CONTROL, WE ARE SHOWING YOU HAVE DEPLOYED YOUR RE-ENTRY PARACHUTES"
The rocket had flown so high I had to hop on my bike and chase it down. It ended up about 1/2 mile from where it had launched.
"HOUSTON WE HAVE A PROBLEM"
I looked at the rocket, and inside the poor newt wasn't squirming anymore. I don't know if he had died from shock, g forces, or what, but he was dead. I would have guess G forces from the condition of the corpse.
Well, after that I ended the astronewt program. Yeah it was a fucked up thing to do, and I regret it as an adult, but we were talking about animal experiments in space right?
Re:Newts in space! (space space space) (Score:1)
Picture perfect flight. Way high, you know, up so fast you can barely keep track. Then it floated down on parachute into the middle of a small pond on the community college grounds where we lit the rockets off. Eventually, it drifted to shore. Thank god for that clear-coat!
WEIRD! but there were now TWO big grasshoppers in the payload. Totally alive, dry, and happy to be freed onto the summer grass. I will say this, they were clinging to each other when I released them! I still don't understand what happened. I must have included two originally and not noticed. Or that's how I rationalize it.
Re:Newts in space! (space space space) (Score:2)
Stop torturing animals for science ! (Score:2, Funny)
Most animal experiments can be done these days with artificial cell pads and simulations. There is definitely no need to use animals anymore. Furthermore the above mentioned experiment doesn't provide any new information. And it covers a niche of science which is partially useless for real world application anyway like feeding the hungry, stopping wars or curing illnesses.
I think our society has come to a very bad point when scientists make sick experiments with animals just for curiosity or to feel power.
Hmph. (Score:2, Troll)
But, hey, maybe I can still milk this article for more Karma.
"I don't understand, it was non-alcoholic champagne."
or maybe...
"You mean I waxed my bikini zone for NOTHING?"
---
Preliminary report.. (Score:3, Insightful)
2. We probably wasted thousands of tax dollars on this experiment.
Re:Preliminary report.. (Score:2)
But on a less obtrusive note, the research data that we could get from this ant experiment is far from valueless. By observing how different species adapts to microgravity environments, we can better determine how human beings might better adapt to weightlessness. We can, and do, learn a lot from studying nature's inventions, and the hope is that we can learn from her and improve ourselves.
You forgot something... (Score:1)
Though I can't imagine how
The expierment went pretty well... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:The expierment went pretty well... (Score:2)
Since when was an appropriate Simpsons reference off topic?
In other news..... (Score:5, Funny)
"Eh, its a job." one beetle was reported as saying, before munching on a space turd.
Seriously, I'm all for getting kids involved in science and mathematics, but this is probably one of the dumbest experiments I've ever heard of. Unless the ants evolve into giant mutant space ants before the shuttle returns, I don't see how this can be of any practical value.
I'm trying and I really can't think of any solid benefits from trying this. Couldn't they have tried to design something a little more practical, or was this just dumbing down the project for lower-level students, like all schools do?
I imagine some of the smarter students had some more interesting ideas, but they weren't accepted, cause lil john and jane wouldn't have a clue what was going on. God forbid we actually challenge kids to learn something advanced.
Re:In other news..... (Score:2)
I don't really thing giant mutant space ants are going to be very practical are they, I mean what do we feed them for one, and can you imagine a 600' high anthill? , that's definitely going to bring some complaints from the neighbours
Re:In other news..... (Score:2)
Well, not on Earth (they would die from the weak materials which make up the weight of their own weak exoskeletons) but they could have usage as low gravity allows them to grow, they are controlled by pheromone signals to which they mindlessly submit, they are devoted workers and can maintain crop farming (as some ants do). In space they could easily grow quite large.
The downside is that robots and automated systems could also easily outperform any giant ant in strength & durability so the idea is of course moot.
But... if someone really wants to carry the thought out further I could see giant ants doing work under moon domes if we ignore the fact that the giant ants would most likely tunnel to the outside and kill their colony & the moon dome. Otherwise it does seem a pretty useless experiment.
Re:In other news..... (Score:2)
And you're assuming that there's other more important science waiting to be done that this experiment is preventing? I get the distinct impression that there simply aren't that many scientists particularly interested in zero-G experiments any more.
Re:In other news..... (Score:1)
"It's not applied science. We're not going to find a cure for cancer, but there may be a lot of indirect results."
"Someday something we learned may help in an ecosystem in space, or even on another planet."
"The real value is connecting what kids do in math and science to a bigger world."
The only redeeming feature is that the article gives the impression of an unmanned spacecraft, so at least an oaf won't screw up the experiments. Children should learn, but not by spending mountains of tax dollars on watching insects fly in space.
Re:In other news..... (Score:1)
Bad Assumptions (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm trying and I really can't think of any solid benefits from trying this.
This statement could have two interpretations. One, that there are no direct benefits to what could be derived from this experiment. Two, that there are no benefits at all, scientific or otherwise.
I agree with number one. I disagree with number two. And furthermore, I think the assumption behind number one is faulty.
I believe there are practical, non-scientific benefits from doing this. You mention that you are in favor of getting kids involved in science. What better way then having them directly involved in real science? With real scientific equipment? This appears to me to be a valid scientific effort, albeit of little practical value. But is will no doubt have an immense effect on the self esteem of the kids involved. And don't tell me that you went through high school as a geek and couldn't have used a boost to your self esteem. (Another post in this thread complained of wasted tax dollars for field trips from NY to CO. I see no differnce between this and elite sports teams travelling for interstate games.)
The faulty asssumption is that scientific research needs to have immediate practical application. Because this assumption is so widely held, and in many cases not recognized as such, we have the situation where funding for basic fundemental research continues to shrink.
Consider the fate of the Superconducting Supercollider. The SSC designed to answer questions in physics that would have little or no immediate practical applications. But because of the assumption that all science has to be for something now, it failed to secure funding.
What that Newton, Maxwell, or Faraday had been forced to work under such constraints? Can you imagine Newton in a publish or perish environment? I'd have loved to have been a fly on the wall for Newton's response to, "Yes, yes Issac, we all know prisms make pretty colors. But as to giving you money to play with such toys, well ...". And I believe it was Faraday who when asked what use his work was replied, "Of what use is a newborn baby?" (I have seen this quote attributed to both Faraday and Ben Franklin.)
But without the basic work done by Faraday, Maxwell, et al, we would not have had the understanding of electromagnetism that many years later allows us to use computers to post comments on /.. Without the work done early in the last century on quantum mechanics we wouldn't have transistors or integrated circuits.
Consider the Michelson-Morley experiment. No immediate practical benefit at all. And furthermore, one that obtained a negative result. They expected to measure the effect of the ether and did not. Imagine how it would be reported today? Experiment to measure ether a failure, no effect found. It was Edison who said, "I have not failed. I have found 10,000 ways that don't work." No well thought out and performed scientific experiment is ever a 'failure'. Unless your assumption is that all experiments should have the predictable result for practical benefits, stated in advance as justification in the funding grant request.
The faulty assumption of immediate practical benefit precludes doing fumdemental research of possible long term benefit. So what knowledge that we haven't gained because the SSC was canceled would have been useful in 2050?
There is a difference between basic research and applied research. The faulty assumption is that all research is/should be applied. This has the practical (i.e. in practise) result that in general, only those projects that have immediate payoffs get funded. This is a bad thing.
Steve M
Re:Bad Assumptions (Score:1)
Re:Bad Assumptions (Score:2)
My understanding is that a larger insect would be unable to survive today because it would be incapable of absorbing enough oxygen to support such a large body. This is because, barring some recent discoveries, insects by-and-large respirate simply by diffusion (there was a recent article in SciAm which showed that there are insects which use a pumped mechanism as well). As a result, they would be unable to transfer enough oxygen into their blood to survive.
The hypothesis that I've read which explains the change in insect size is that, in the past, oxygen concentration in the atmosphere was higher than it is now (and this is supported by ice core sample evidence, IIRC). As a result, larger insects could survive, as their respiratory needs would be met. This may also help to explain why other "giant" creatures, like the dinosaurs, were able to survive, and yet nothing on the same scale exists today.
Re:Bad Assumptions (Score:1)
Side rant, I hate those Discovery episodes that say, "If you were as strong as an ant, you could carry a tank!" It's ridiculous, the materials that an ant are constructed of aren't terribly strong in human terms. If you were as strong as ant, you'd rip your arms out of their sockets.
Re:In other news..... (Score:1)
You think this is dumb, you should see some of the experiments the adults come up with.
The manned space program as it stands now is a hammer in search of a nail. We have all this expensive hardware floating around up here....now what? Tang II?
I'd like to see much more done with unmanned probes to the moon and other planets. We brought back some rocks 30 years ago and have been content to stay in earth orbit ever since.
I bet once the Chinese get a man in orbit and start talking about their own lunar landing NASA will suddenly pop up and say "HEY, lets go back to the moon!". Sometimes it seems it all more PR and showmanship than real substance doesn't it?
Ants? (Score:5, Interesting)
Kids from 6 countries participate with 6 projects in this. WTF is so special with ants that hasn't been done before [fas.org]? Is it because "Fowler Highschool" is more easily pronounced than "Liechtenstein Gymnasium" for some people, or what?
Re:Ants? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ants? (Score:2)
My post was more meant as an observation on CNN reporting (and Slashdot regurgitating) on The American Project and not even mentioning the other at least as interesting projects. The myopic way this is reported in is appropriate for a local newspaper in Syracuse, NY, USA, or the Fowler High Pupils' Magazine. You know, so the parents can collect newspaper clippings about their kids and their damn ants.
Re:Ants? (Score:1)
Re:Ants? (Score:2)
However, I never saw it posted unless I overlooked it.
Dupe? (Score:2)
However, I never saw it posted unless I overlooked it.
WTF? I looked on your user page, and this story is a dupe [slashdot.org] (surprise!
Michael, what are you doing?
Re:Dupe? (Score:2)
Re:Dupe? (Score:2)
Oh well. Maybe we should be happy that the janitors here don't search for dupes before posting stories, if the old stories never actually have been published...
Does anyone remember seeing "Animal Experiments in STS-107 (NASA)" [slashdot.org] on 23/1?
Re:Dupe? (Score:1)
Or 22/1 (Wednesday), if you live East of CET...
Re:Dupe? (Score:1)
Doh. West. I'll shut up now.
Slow Down Cowboy!
Slashdot requires you to wait 2 minutes between each successful posting of a comment to allow everyone a fair chance at posting a comment.
Re:Ants? (Score:2)
Re:Ants? (Score:1)
Re:Ants? (Score:2, Interesting)
antquarium (Score:2, Informative)
Re:antquarium (Score:2)
Or when cultivating bacteria... Oh. Never mind. Didn't mean to be redundant.
Ants in space... (Score:1)
This will be the start of the mutated ant race that will attach earth in a couple of years from now.
I have warned you all.
Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:2)
Re:Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:3, Insightful)
Cripes, I'm 47, and I still enjoy watching ants. These kids don't know what they're missing.
Re:Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:1)
Didn't your parents give you any toys as a child?
The most time I ever spent with ants was trying to burn them up with a magnafiying glass...
Re:Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:2)
Re:Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:2)
Re:Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:2)
Re:Experiment discussion on my message board... (Score:2)
Our desert ants would think nothing of a mere trek into space. I've seen 'em move an entire colony over 100 feet, just to get closer to water. That's what in human terms, low orbit?
Of course they can tunnel faster (Score:2)
What we are seeing, ladies and gentlemen, is the birth of a new race of giant space ant. I strongly advise that they are destroyed or at least kept under very strict quarantine on the station. I mean, what if they get out? Wait, what's that noise? Oh NO THEY'RE BREAKING THROUGH! OMYGOD THEY'RE...AAAARGHBLBLBL !!! sadfgW^W$£^GR;;;;
Zanti Misfits (Score:1)
"There is nothing wrong with your television set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission..."
Chris
Houston, We Have A Problem... (Score:1, Redundant)
- Protect the Queen! - Which one's the Queen? - I'm the Queen. - No you're not. - Freedom! - Horrible, horrible freedom!
well... (Score:1)
That's because (Score:2)
and here is the link (Score:1)
Re:what will we learn from this? (Score:1, Funny)
Damn...to late.
Re:what will we learn from this? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:what will we learn from this? (Score:1)
It looks like it is a good design because you have 6 points of anchorage and the mandibles to dig with. In a gravitational situation like this, one would expect the extra stability and manueverability would help. (The students probably didn't compare stabilty like that and just extrapolated our two legged problem.)
IMarv
Re:If not me, then someone else... (Score:1)
Re:If not me, then someone else... (Score:1)
I do not know why I am even replying to such an obvious troll.
Re:Ants + Zero Gravity + Bag of Chips = Disaster (Score:3, Funny)
Kent: We're just about to get our first pictures from inside the
spacecraft with "average-naut" Homer Simpson, and we'd like to
-- aah!
[Camera shows a close-up of an ant floating in front of the
three astronauts]
Kent: Ladies and gentlemen, er, we've just lost the picture, but,
uh, what we've seen speaks for itself. The Corvair spacecraft
has been taken over -- "conquered", if you will -- by a master
race of giant space ants. It's difficult to tell from this
vantage point whether they will consume the captive earth men
or merely enslave them. One thing is for certain, there is no
stopping them; the ants will soon be here.
And I, for one, welcome our new insect overlords. I'd like to
remind them that as a trusted TV personality, I can be helpful
in rounding up others to toil in their underground sugar
caves.