Posted Jul 28, 2007 at 12:40AM by Sally B.
Listed in:
News,
Space Exploration,
Spacecraft
Tags:
Virgin Galactic,
SpaceShipTwo,
Burt Rutan,
Scaled Composites,
Paul Allen
Ó
|
What was supposed to be relatively safe testing routine for the rocket motor of SpaceShipTwo went awry as a freak accident caused an explosion that took the lives of three people and injured three others.The accident took place around 2:30 pm last Thursday, in the Mojave Air and Space Port facility in California. Three unnamed personnel were killed, while three others were critically injured. All suffered severe shrapnel wounds, with two of the three people who perished dying at the scene, while another died in the hospital. Burt Rutan, aerospace designer and one of the founders of Scaled Composites, claimed that they were performing a completely safe testing of nitrous oxide flow through an injector for SpaceShipTwo's rocket motor, when the accident happened. "We were doing a test we believe was safe. We don't know why it exploded. We just don't know," he said. The victims of the accident were employees of Scaled Composites, a privately-owned space travel outfit run by Rutan. The rockets were proposed to be used in Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic space venture. Virgin Galactic's president, Will Whitehorn, would not comment on the accident but instead gave the company's sympathy to the bereaved. Stuart Witt, the Mojave airport's general manager, acknowledged the dangers that come with space exploration. What we do is inherently risky," he said. "These are not the days we look forward to, but we deal with it." Rutan's first manned Rocket, the award-winning SpaceShipOne, was the first of its kind to reach space and was privately financed by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen. Rutan's current project, the SpaceShipTwo, has Virgin Galactic's Branson as one of its investors, with investments amounting to at least US$ 202 million. It was planned to be ready within a year, and have its commercial launch in 2009. |
|||
|
|||
Posted Sep 26, 2006 at 09:52PM by Ian C.
Listed in:
Animals and Wildlife,
Diseases,
Genetics
Tags:
Microsoft,
Paul Allen
Page 1
Ó
|
Microsoft Corporation co-founder Paul Allen decided way back in 2002 to make a genetic atlas of mouse brains. 4 years, 21,000 genes, and $100 million dollars later, the study is finally declared complete. Interestingly, the fine-tuned map of 3,000 active genes has already been in use for more than a year already. This 3-D reference atlas of the active genes in a mouse brain is the first project of the Allen Institute for Brain Science. Since mice and humans share more than 90 percent of genes, thus, the Allen Brain Atlas has enormous potential for allowing researchers to better understand human neurological diseases and disorders (like Alzheimer's disease). While studying a mouse brain is critical for basic scientific research (this is, according to Douglas Adams, what the mice would want us to believe), Allen also wants to look at the unique parts of the human brain like the neocortex. Perhaps with this mapping we are a few steps closer to finding the ultimate question to the answer that is 42. |
|||
|
|||
|
QJ.NET Blog Network |
|
| MyQJ | Feed / PDA |
| MyQJ | RSS / PDA |
| Blog of Blogs | Feed / PDA |
| QJ.NET | RSS / PDA |
| Gaming Consoles | Feed / PDA |
| Nintendo DS | RSS / PDA |
| PlayStation 3 | RSS / PDA |
| PSP Updates | RSS / PDA |
| Wii | RSS / PDA |
| Xbox 360 | RSS / PDA |
| PC Gaming | Feed / PDA |
| Age of Conan | RSS / PDA |
| Games for Windows | RSS / PDA |
| MMORPG | RSS / PDA |
| Tabula Rasa | RSS / PDA |
| World of Warcraft | RSS / PDA |
| Science | Feed / PDA |
| Science | RSS / PDA |
| Technology | Feed / PDA |
| Apple | RSS / PDA |
| Gadgets | RSS / PDA |
| iPhone | RSS / PDA |
| Mobile | RSS / PDA |
| Photography | RSS / PDA |
| Tech | RSS / PDA |
User Favorites - October
| Most Commented | |
| No commented articles | |
User Favorites - October
| Top Jumps | |
| No available articles using criteria |
Alternative Energy
(93)Animals and Wildlife
(292)Environmental Campaigns
(152)Environmental Disasters
(36)Geology
(33)Global Warming
(122)Natural Disasters
(31)Natural Resources
(33)Oceans
(53)Paleontology
(62)Plants and Agriculture
(66)Weather
(49)
General Science
Archaeology
(67)Biology
(112)Chemistry
(52)Computer Science
(64)Engineering
(124)Geography
(4)Mathematics
(25)Nanotechnology
(30)Neurology
(32)Physics
(83)Psychology
(48)Site News
(31)
Health Science
Alternative Medicine
(67)Biomedical Technology
(173)Diseases
(202)Genetics
(105)Medical Devices
(72)Mental Health
(148)Self Well-being
(254)
Space
Astrobiology
(30)Astronomy
(204)Astrophysics
(127)Celestial Bodies
(379)International Space Station
(83)Interviews
(2)NASA
(143)News
(468)Space Exploration
(170)Space Missions
(196)Spacecraft
(234)
Archives
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006

