PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Moon radiation findings may reduce health risks to astronauts

2013-06-12
(Press-News.org) DURHAM, N.H. –- Space scientists from the University of New Hampshire (UNH) and the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) report that data gathered by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) show lighter materials like plastics provide effective shielding against the radiation hazards faced by astronauts during extended space travel. The finding could help reduce health risks to humans on future missions into deep space.

Aluminum has always been the primary material in spacecraft construction, but it provides relatively little protection against high-energy cosmic rays and can add so much mass to spacecraft that they become cost-prohibitive to launch.

The scientists have published their findings online in the American Geophysical Union journal Space Weather. Titled "Measurements of Galactic Cosmic Ray Shielding with the CRaTER Instrument," the work is based on observations made by the Cosmic Ray Telescope for the Effects of Radiation (CRaTER) on board the LRO spacecraft. Lead author of the paper is Cary Zeitlin of the SwRI Earth, Oceans, and Space Department at UNH. Co-author Nathan Schwadron of the UNH Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space is the principal investigator for CRaTER.

Says Zeitlin, "This is the first study using observations from space to confirm what has been thought for some time—that plastics and other lightweight materials are pound-for-pound more effective for shielding against cosmic radiation than aluminum. Shielding can't entirely solve the radiation exposure problem in deep space, but there are clear differences in effectiveness of different materials."

The plastic-aluminum comparison was made in earlier ground-based tests using beams of heavy particles to simulate cosmic rays. "The shielding effectiveness of the plastic in space is very much in line with what we discovered from the beam experiments, so we've gained a lot of confidence in the conclusions we drew from that work," says Zeitlin. "Anything with high hydrogen content, including water, would work well."

The space-based results were a product of CRaTER's ability to accurately gauge the radiation dose of cosmic rays after passing through a material known as "tissue-equivalent plastic," which simulates human muscle tissue. Prior to CRaTER and recent measurements by the Radiation Assessment Detector (RAD) on the Mars rover Curiosity, the effects of thick shielding on cosmic rays had only been simulated in computer models and in particle accelerators, with little observational data from deep space.

The CRaTER observations have validated the models and the ground-based measurements, meaning that lightweight shielding materials could safely be used for long missions, provided their structural properties can be made adequate to withstand the rigors of spaceflight.

Since LRO's launch in 2009, the CRaTER instrument has been measuring energetic charged particles—particles that can travel at nearly the speed of light and may cause detrimental health effects—from galactic cosmic rays and solar particle events. Fortunately, Earth's thick atmosphere and strong magnetic field provide adequate shielding against these dangerous high-energy particles.

### The NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. developed and manages the LRO mission. LRO's current science mission is implemented for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. NASA's Exploration Systems Mission Directorate sponsored LRO's initial one-year exploration mission that concluded in September 2010.

To view the Space Weather article, visit http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/swe.20043/abstract

For more on the CRaTER instrument, visit http://crater.sr.unh.edu/ and for the LRO mission visit http://lunar.gsfc.nasa.gov/mission.html.

The University of New Hampshire, founded in 1866, is a world-class public research university with the feel of a New England liberal arts college. A land, sea, and space-grant university, UNH is the state's flagship public institution, enrolling 12,200 undergraduate and 2,300 graduate students.

Image to download: http://www.eos.unh.edu/newsimage/lro3_lg.jpg

Caption: Artist's conception of NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter above the Moon. The Cosmic Ray Telescope for the Effects of Radiation (CRaTER) instrument is visible in the center of the image at the bottom left corner of the spacecraft. Image courtesy of NASA.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Cloud computing user privacy in serious need of reform, scholars say

2013-06-12
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — When Web surfers sign up for a new online service or download a Web application for their smartphone or tablet, the service typically requires them to click a seemingly innocuous box and accept the company's terms of service and privacy policy. But agreeing to terms without reading them beforehand can adversely affect a user's legal rights, says a new paper by a University of Illinois expert in technology and legal issues. Law professor Jay P. Kesan says the current "non-negotiable approach" to user privacy is in need of serious revision, especially ...

Scripps Research Institute scientists uncover new details of natural anticancer mechanism

2013-06-12
LA JOLLA, CA – June 11, 2013 – Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have identified key triggers of an important cancer-blocking mechanism in cells. Termed "oncogene-induced senescence," this mechanism can block most cancer types, and is commonly experienced when incipient skin cancers turn instead into slow-growing moles. Tumors that achieve malignancy often do so by defeating or circumventing this growth barrier—which is why scientists have been eager to find out precisely how it works. "We have known about some of the molecular signals that mediate ...

Workers do not quit due to mandatory flu shot, says Loyola study

2013-06-12
Mandatory influenza (flu) vaccination, as a condition of employment, does not lead to excessive voluntary termination, according to a four-year analysis of vaccination rates at Loyola University Health System in Chicago. "First do no harm is our mandate as health care workers," said Jorge Parada, MD, MPH, FACP, FIDSA, study author and professor of medicine at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine. "We have a fiduciary responsibility to perform hand hygiene and adhere to contact precautions, and flu vaccines should be considered in the same vein – meaning ...

Bacterium that causes gum disease packs a 1-2 punch to the jaw

2013-06-12
ANN ARBOR—The newly discovered bacterium that causes gum disease delivers a one-two punch by also triggering normally protective proteins in the mouth to actually destroy more bone, a University of Michigan study found. Scientists and oral health care providers have known for decades that bacteria are responsible for periodontitis, or gum disease. Until now, however, they hadn't identified the bacterium. "Identifying the mechanism that is responsible for periodontitis is a major discovery," said Yizu Jiao, a postdoctoral fellow at the U-M Health System, and lead author ...

Mount Sinai researchers provide 1st prospective characterization of a genetic subtype of autism

2013-06-12
In the first prospective study of its kind, Seaver Autism Center researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai provide new evidence of the severity of intellectual, motor, and speech impairments in a subtype of autism called Phelan-McDermid Syndrome (PMS). The data are published online in the June 11 issue of the journal Molecular Autism. Mutation or deletion of a gene known as SHANK3 is one of the more common single-gene causes of autism spectrum disorders and is critical to the development of PMS, a severe type of autism. To date, clinicians have relied ...

Video gamers really do see more

2013-06-12
DURHAM, N.C. -- Hours spent at the video gaming console not only train a player's hands to work the buttons on the controller, they probably also train the brain to make better and faster use of visual input, according to Duke University researchers. "Gamers see the world differently," said Greg Appelbaum, an assistant professor of psychiatry in the Duke School of Medicine. "They are able to extract more information from a visual scene." It can be difficult to find non-gamers among college students these days, but from among a pool of subjects participating in a much ...

FASEB highlights the negative impacts of inconsistent regulation of the research enterprise

2013-06-12
Bethesda, MD - The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) has submitted comments in response to the National Science Board's (NSB) Task Force on Administrative Burdens Request for Information (RFI) on reducing investigators administrative workload for federally funded research. The NSB will use the information collected from the RFI to develop recommendations to reduce administrative workload for researchers and institutions. In its response (http://bit.ly/117IDix), FASEB identified three major themes of administrative burden and made six broad ...

Landsat satellite looks back at El Paso, forward to a new mission

2013-06-12
VIDEO: Landsat satellites have captured hundreds of images of the region surrounding El Paso, Texas. On May 30, 2013, Landsat 8 began adding to the program's extensive image archive. Click here for more information. Landsat has seen a lot in its day. In one spot of desert, where the Rio Grande marks the border between the United States and Mexico, the satellite program captured hundreds of images of fields turning green with the season, new developments expanding from El Paso, ...

New therapy target for kids' fever-induced seizures

2013-06-12
CHICAGO -– Fever-induced childhood seizures, known as febrile seizures, can be terrifying for parents to witness. The full-body convulsions, which mostly affect children six months to five years old, can last from mere seconds up to more than 40 minutes. Currently, children are not treated with daily anticonvulsant medication to prevent these seizures even when they recur repeatedly because toxic side effects of existing treatments outweigh potential benefits. While scientists know these seizures typically occur when a fever is above 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees ...

Moderate-intensity walking timed just right might help protect against Type 2 diabetes

2013-06-12
Contact: Kathy Fackelmann kfackelmann@gwu.edu 202-994-8354 George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services Moderate-intensity walking timed just right might help protect against Type 2 diabetes 15-minute walks taken after meals helped curb risky rise in blood sugar, new study says WASHINGTON, DC (June 12, 2013)—A fifteen minute walk after each meal appears to help older people regulate blood sugar levels and could reduce their risk of developing type 2 diabetes, according to a new study by researchers at the George Washington University ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Blood cancer therapy: DKMS John Hansen Research Grant 2026 supports innovative research projects with almost €1 million

A hospital imaging technique used in cancer care improves the monitoring and treatment of atherosclerosis

Parents may have been more likely to cheat than non-parents during the COVID-19 pandemic

US clinicians are more likely to question credibility of Black than White patients in medical notes

Binge gaming was associated with depression, anxiety, and poor sleep, with boys more likely to report binge gaming than girls, in Hong Kong survey of 2,592 children and adolescents

North American monarch butterflies use magnetic fields to migrate to and from their overwintering sites - using cold temperatures to tune how they use magnetic fields - per experimental study, which m

Specially adapted drones successfully use a "tap and go" approach to apply monitoring tags to whales, speeding up the process and avoiding human interference

Analyzing the micromovements of recovering alcoholics in response to stimuli, along with their reaction times, might help predict if they will relapse following treatment

Stalagmites in Mexican caves reveal duration and severity of drought during the Maya collapse

Research Alert: A genetic twist that sets humans apart

Arctic reindeer populations could decline by 80 per cent by 2100

Cornell researchers explore alternatives to harmful insecticide

Fermentation method transforms unripe fruits into specialty coffees

Oncology, primary care coordination necessary for best cancer patient outcomes

Breakthrough discovery sparks new hope for breathing recovery after spinal cord injuries

Can officials say what they need to say about a health emergency in 280 characters?

United for answers: leading ALS organizations announce ‘Champion Insights’ to unlock why athletes and military members face higher ALS risk

Up to $5.2 million in federal funds will enable WashU to develop new biomanufacturing capabilities

AI-informed approach to CAR design enhances bi-specific CAR T cells

Discovery confirms early species of hominins co-existed in Ethiopia

‘Controlled evolution’ dramatically boosts pDNA production for biomedical manufacturing

Ultrasound AI publishes landmark study demonstrating breakthrough in predicting delivery timing using AI and ultrasound images

Scientists get back to basics with minimal plant genomes

‘Revolutionary’ seafloor fiber sensing reveals how falling ice drives glacial retreat in Greenland

Two-dose therapy for S. aureus bloodstream infections on par with standard treatment

Quitting smoking is associated with recovery from other addictions

Overhaul global food systems to avert worsening land crisis: Scientists

ASU scientists uncover new fossils – and a new species of ancient human ancestor

Would you like that coffee with iron?

County-level cervical cancer screening coverage and differences in incidence and mortality

[Press-News.org] Moon radiation findings may reduce health risks to astronauts