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NASA Finds New Form of Life
NASA astrobiologists have discovered a microorganism in California that is doing something completely novel: substituting arsenic for phosphorus in its chemical makeup.
Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur are the six basic building blocks of all known forms of life on Earth. Phosphorus is part of the chemical backbone of DNA and RNA, the structures that carry genetic instructions for life, and is considered an essential element for all living cells. Arsenic, which is chemically similar to phosphorus, is poisonous for most life on Earth. Arsenic disrupts metabolic pathways because chemically it behaves similarly to phosphate. 
It’s been known for a while that some microbes can metabolise arsenic, but what this organism is doing is building parts of itself out of arsenic, something no other known life forms can do. ”If something here on Earth can do something so unexpected,” asks Felisa Wolfe-Simon, a NASA Astrobiology Research Fellow, “What else can life do that we haven’t seen yet?”
This will change the way astrobiologists look for life on other planets, including where they look (arsenic-rich atmospheres were previously considered off-limits) and what the definition of life really is (right now, we only know that life exists the way it does on Earth, so finding out that life can exist very differently and using different chemicals will expand what we think of when we think of “life”). This is the first alternative biology we’ve ever known to exist; previously, the idea of alternative biologies has been mere speculation, more common in the realms of pop-science and science fiction.
• Source: NASA. Photo via Gizmodo. More info at NASA astrobiology.
Reblogged from fuckyeahspace

unknownskywalker:

NASA Finds New Form of Life

NASA astrobiologists have discovered a microorganism in California that is doing something completely novel: substituting arsenic for phosphorus in its chemical makeup.

Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur are the six basic building blocks of all known forms of life on Earth. Phosphorus is part of the chemical backbone of DNA and RNA, the structures that carry genetic instructions for life, and is considered an essential element for all living cells. Arsenic, which is chemically similar to phosphorus, is poisonous for most life on Earth. Arsenic disrupts metabolic pathways because chemically it behaves similarly to phosphate.

It’s been known for a while that some microbes can metabolise arsenic, but what this organism is doing is building parts of itself out of arsenic, something no other known life forms can do. ”If something here on Earth can do something so unexpected,” asks Felisa Wolfe-Simon, a NASA Astrobiology Research Fellow, “What else can life do that we haven’t seen yet?”

This will change the way astrobiologists look for life on other planets, including where they look (arsenic-rich atmospheres were previously considered off-limits) and what the definition of life really is (right now, we only know that life exists the way it does on Earth, so finding out that life can exist very differently and using different chemicals will expand what we think of when we think of “life”). This is the first alternative biology we’ve ever known to exist; previously, the idea of alternative biologies has been mere speculation, more common in the realms of pop-science and science fiction.

• Source: NASA. Photo via Gizmodo. More info at NASA astrobiology.

Reblogged from fuckyeahspace

1 year ago

December 3, 2010
reblogged via unknownskywalker
photo dihard:

After a discussion over whiskey last night about the need for a better measure of value than GDP, I was pleased to come upon the Human Development Index - a global index based on health, education and wealth - in the Economist.
The Economist combined the global UN Development Program’s HDI by country with the American Human Development Project’s HDI by state to see where America’s states would rank if they were countries. That’s above.
You can check out your city’s HDI by zipcode at the American Human Development Project. Mine is below.

dihard:

After a discussion over whiskey last night about the need for a better measure of value than GDP, I was pleased to come upon the Human Development Index - a global index based on health, education and wealth - in the Economist.

The Economist combined the global UN Development Program’s HDI by country with the American Human Development Project’s HDI by state to see where America’s states would rank if they were countries. That’s above.

You can check out your city’s HDI by zipcode at the American Human Development Project. Mine is below.


1 year ago

November 18, 2010
reblogged via dihard
text

Daily Friday: A Choice

This week I encountered an interesting situation. I received a letter from the University of California, Merced saying that I had been accepted into their engineering school and that I had to reply by June 16 if I was interested. The strange thing was that I was had never applied for UCM, and what makes this even stranger was that I wasn’t accepted into any of the UCs that I did apply for; so I can only make guesses as to how or why they chose me.

The thought of moving back to California was very appealing; I often wonder what it would be like to live in northern California. I had been to Davis last Thanksgiving to visit family, and it was a serene place that put me at ease with its relatively slow pace compared to Los Angeles or San Diego.

When I first came to Florida, I hated it. I arrived at night by plane* a couple of days before class started, so my room mates hadn’t showed up yet. and I felt sort of foolish for moving to Florida on such a short notice. I slept in an empty dorm suite on top of a spring mattress with no pillows or blankets. I felt sad and alone.

A lot has changed since that night. Despite my expectations, I met people that I could get along with, and I like the professors that I’ve worked with.

Both schools have good programs (albeit UCM only has mechanical engineering and isn’t ABET accredited yet) with research in my field of interests. I’m leaning towards staying in Florida; one, because I think the program is more rigorous and in the end I’ll be more educated, and two, I simply haven’t been here long enough yet. When I thought about the time when I first moved to San Diego, a city which I’ve come to love, I didn’t like it either. I think it would be foolish to cut my time here short on an insecurity like ‘not being in California’ or ‘the people here are weird.’

If it’s one thing I learned from moving out, it’s to go out and explore your environment; something that I’ve been bad about in the past. But I’m slowly learning.

I haven’t completely shut UCM down as a possibility, and since I have a week to think about it, I would appreciate any thoughts or opinions.

*Note: Originally my sister and her husband were going to fly out with me so they could help me move and see the campus, but Delta royally screwed everything up; that’s a story for another time.