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Friday, August 1, 2014

5 LIVING THINGS THAT MAKE THEIR OWN SUNBLOCK


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5 Living Things That Make Their Own Sunblock
By Liz Langley, 
Popular Mechanics, 22 July 2014.

We're at that point in the summer where this is how it feels to go outside and get the mail - and heaven forbid you forget your sunscreen and come home looking like something on the menu at the Lobster Shanty. But some lucky animals and plants don't need sunblock: they manufacture their own right inside their bodies.

1. Hippopotamus

New Picture 32

For something with such a silly name, the hippopotamus is a badass. Their bite force can crush a croc, they kill more people per year than sharks, and they appear to sweat blood. However, that sanguine substance is two pigments - one red, one orange - that combine to act as both a natural sunblock and antibiotic, making the hippo its own walking Walgreens.

Perhaps this chemicals double as protection from being eaten - by us. When one biologist suggested barbecuing and eating the problem hippos left behind by drug lord Pablo Escobar in Colombia, Vice's Matt Zuras was leery of the idea, noting their slimy sunblock "probably doesn't make a very good chicharron."

2. Corals and Algae

New Picture 33

It's always nice to have a friend at the beach to help you get that sunblock on your back. The partnership between coral and algae takes that one step further: They help each other make the stuff.

Paul Long of King's College, London led a 2011 study that found "the algae living within the coral makes a compound that we think is transported to the coral, which then modifies it into a sunscreen," which benefits not only them but the fish that eat the coral.

It could also benefit people. Researchers in Australia have developed a sunscreen based on that of the corals of the Great Barrier Reef.

3. Darkling Beetles

New Picture 34

The phrase "waxing your back" has a different meaning to darkling beetles than it does to hirsute humans. A study in the journal Natural History in the 1990s described how a "wax meshwork of the beetles exterior protects it from heat," of the Namib Desert of southwest Africa. And it's not only protective - it's pretty.

A North American beetle species secretes a wax coating that varies in colour depending on the aridity of the air. It's black when the air is humid and pale blue when it's dry. The blue decreases the beetles' absorption of solar energy, lowering its body temperature.

4. Plants

New Picture 35

Plants are stuck. It's not like they can head for the shade of a tiki bar when they get sick of the sunlight. So how do they not get sunburned?

Plants produce their own sunblock, a trick that scientists at the University of Glasgow discovered to be triggered by a protein called UVR8. UV-B light, the kind that causes sunburn and cell damage, triggers a change in the plant's UVR8. That in turn causes a change in the plant's gene expression, causing it to produce its own sunscreen.

Now if flora can learn to make their own Mai Tais, they'll be all set for vacay.

5. Mantis Shrimp

New Picture 36

Mantis shrimp are a fascinating species 400 million years in the making. They're cool-looking. They can throw fast, wicked-strong punches. Oh, and they have the most complicated eyes in the animal world, which can see UV and polarized light.

"They've made them almost nonsensically complex," says biologist Michael Bok, who was part of a team that discovered yet another feature of these triple-decker, independently moving stalked eyes. The team found that the filters in the eye are made of mycosprine-like amino acid pigments (MAAs), which are known to act as a sunblock in other marine animals' skin and exoskeleton.

"They're doing the same thing there, absorbing ultraviolet light," Bok says, and that filtration "narrows the sensitivity of that photoreceptor," making their vision more acute.

But please don't go and put Coppertone in your own eyes. It doesn't work that way.

Related Links:

Top image: Peacock mantis shrimp. Credit: Jens Petersen/Wikimedia Commons.

[Source: Popular Mechanics. Edited. Top image added.]

5 LIVING THINGS THAT MAKE THEIR OWN SUNBLOCK


New Picture 37
5 Living Things That Make Their Own Sunblock
By Liz Langley, 
Popular Mechanics, 22 July 2014.

We're at that point in the summer where this is how it feels to go outside and get the mail - and heaven forbid you forget your sunscreen and come home looking like something on the menu at the Lobster Shanty. But some lucky animals and plants don't need sunblock: they manufacture their own right inside their bodies.

1. Hippopotamus

New Picture 32

For something with such a silly name, the hippopotamus is a badass. Their bite force can crush a croc, they kill more people per year than sharks, and they appear to sweat blood. However, that sanguine substance is two pigments - one red, one orange - that combine to act as both a natural sunblock and antibiotic, making the hippo its own walking Walgreens.

Perhaps this chemicals double as protection from being eaten - by us. When one biologist suggested barbecuing and eating the problem hippos left behind by drug lord Pablo Escobar in Colombia, Vice's Matt Zuras was leery of the idea, noting their slimy sunblock "probably doesn't make a very good chicharron."

2. Corals and Algae

New Picture 33

It's always nice to have a friend at the beach to help you get that sunblock on your back. The partnership between coral and algae takes that one step further: They help each other make the stuff.

Paul Long of King's College, London led a 2011 study that found "the algae living within the coral makes a compound that we think is transported to the coral, which then modifies it into a sunscreen," which benefits not only them but the fish that eat the coral.

It could also benefit people. Researchers in Australia have developed a sunscreen based on that of the corals of the Great Barrier Reef.

3. Darkling Beetles

New Picture 34

The phrase "waxing your back" has a different meaning to darkling beetles than it does to hirsute humans. A study in the journal Natural History in the 1990s described how a "wax meshwork of the beetles exterior protects it from heat," of the Namib Desert of southwest Africa. And it's not only protective - it's pretty.

A North American beetle species secretes a wax coating that varies in colour depending on the aridity of the air. It's black when the air is humid and pale blue when it's dry. The blue decreases the beetles' absorption of solar energy, lowering its body temperature.

4. Plants

New Picture 35

Plants are stuck. It's not like they can head for the shade of a tiki bar when they get sick of the sunlight. So how do they not get sunburned?

Plants produce their own sunblock, a trick that scientists at the University of Glasgow discovered to be triggered by a protein called UVR8. UV-B light, the kind that causes sunburn and cell damage, triggers a change in the plant's UVR8. That in turn causes a change in the plant's gene expression, causing it to produce its own sunscreen.

Now if flora can learn to make their own Mai Tais, they'll be all set for vacay.

5. Mantis Shrimp

New Picture 36

Mantis shrimp are a fascinating species 400 million years in the making. They're cool-looking. They can throw fast, wicked-strong punches. Oh, and they have the most complicated eyes in the animal world, which can see UV and polarized light.

"They've made them almost nonsensically complex," says biologist Michael Bok, who was part of a team that discovered yet another feature of these triple-decker, independently moving stalked eyes. The team found that the filters in the eye are made of mycosprine-like amino acid pigments (MAAs), which are known to act as a sunblock in other marine animals' skin and exoskeleton.

"They're doing the same thing there, absorbing ultraviolet light," Bok says, and that filtration "narrows the sensitivity of that photoreceptor," making their vision more acute.

But please don't go and put Coppertone in your own eyes. It doesn't work that way.

Related Links:

Top image: Peacock mantis shrimp. Credit: Jens Petersen/Wikimedia Commons.

[Source: Popular Mechanics. Edited. Top image added.]

5 MASSIVE NEW TELESCOPES THAT WILL CHANGE ASTRONOMY FOREVER


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The 5 Massive New Telescopes That Will Change Astronomy Forever
By Sarah Zhang, 
Gizmodo, 25 July 2014.

The biggest building boom in the history of astronomy is upon us. In Chile and Hawaii and in space, astronomers are getting powerful telescopes that dwarf the current state-of-the-art instruments. When the mountain blasting and the mirror polishing are all done, we will have the clearest and most detailed views of outer space ever.

This boom has long been in the works for years, as billion-dollar telescopes don't just fund and plan themselves. Now, these telescopes are starting to break ground. "If it all plays out as expected and budgeted," writes Dennis Overbye in the New York Times, "astronomers of the 2020s will be swimming in petabytes of data streaming from space and the ground." Let's take a closer took at what these billion-dollar telescopes can do for astronomy in the decades to come.

1. Thirty Meter Telescope, Hawaii

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Image credit: Thirty Meter Telescope

The most powerful light telescopes today are about 10 meters - or just over 30 feet - in diameter. TheThirty Meter Telescope is, well, exactly what it says. This massive telescope will join 12 others already on the top of Mauna Kea in Hawaii, and a ground-breaking is scheduled for October.

The Thirty Meter Telescope's will let in more light than any existing telescope, allowing astronomers look at more distant and fainter objects in the sky. That includes exoplanets and black holes and clues let over from the early universe.

2. European Extremely Large Telescope, Chile

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The European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT) is even bigger than Hawaii's Thirty Meter Telescope. At 39 meters in diameter, it will be the largest light telescope in the world. But there is a part of its name that is less straightforward: E-ELT is not in Europe. The name comes from the consortium that operates it, the European Southern Observatory (ESO) made up of 14 European countries and Brazil. In the Chilean desert, where high and dry conditions are optimal for astronomy, the ESO already operates 8 telescopes including the Very Large Telescope and ALMA, an array of radio telescopes.

To that, ESO will add the European Extremely Large Telescope. (Where do you go from Very Large, after all?) On June 20 of this year, the official construction of E-ELT began by blasting away the mountaintop where it will stand. E-ELT will be the world's largest light telescope when it is completed a decade from now, and it can gather 13 times more light than today's telescopes. With that power, E-ELT will look for planets of distant stars and signs of dark energy among other things.

3. James Webb Space Telescope

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6 of the 18 mirror segments that will make up the James Webb Space Telescope. Credit: NASA.

The long-awaited - and long-delayed - James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was supposed to launch this year. Since blowing past its initial budget and launch data, NASA promises the ambitious project is on-track for 2018. And it better, because astronomers are eagerly awaiting its data.

Like its predecessor the Hubble Space Telescope, JWST will travel through space, where it won't have to deal with the distortion effects of Earth's atmosphere. Unlike the Hubble, its primary mirror is three times as big. And instead of detecting visible light, JWST is specialized to detect the infrared spectrum. That's because JWST is designed to probe the origins of the early universe. As objects in an expanding universe move away from us, the light that comes from them is red-shifted due to the Doppler effect. Incidentally, an infrared camera is also great for detecting heat coming from possible exoplanets.

4. Giant Magellan Telescope, Chile

New Picture 38
Image credit: Giant Magellan Telescope

The Giant Magellan Telescope is made of seven round mirrors, which combined are equivalent to a telescope of 25 meters or 80 feet in diameter. The mountaintop blasting at Las Campanas in Chile happened two years ago, and astronomers are now awaiting the casting and polishing of the 7 mirrors. Because of their size, each mirror can take up to four years to be cooled and polished.

Like the Thirty Meter Telescope and E-ELT, the Giant Magellan Telescope's main asset in its size. It'll also explore topics from all over physics, including exoplanets and the evolution of stars and galaxies.

5. Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, Chile

New Picture 39
Image credit: LSST Corporation

At just 8.4 meters in diameter, the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) might seem puny compared to other new telescopes in development. Its primary advantage is not size but speed. From the Pachón Mountain in Chile, the LSST will scan the entire sky every few days. Over years, astronomers will have a movie of objects in the sky evolving and changing. Object of especial interest include asteroids, supernovae, and icy objects past Neptune.

The mountain for LSST was blasted back in 2011, and construction was supposed to begin this month, but red tape has held up the project. Like big huge infrastructure project backed by an even bigger bureaucracy, massive new telescopes are prone to delays and unanticipated costs. But there's been an extraordinary effort to get these telescopes off the ground, and should everything go to plan, astronomers of the future will have more data than their predecessors could have ever dreamed. [New York Times]

Top image: The Giant Magellan Telescope, Chile. Credit: Giant Magellan Telescope.

[Source: Gizmodo. Edited. Some links added.]