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Messenger En Route To Mercury

Soft writes "NASA's Messenger space probe has lifted off on its second try on a Delta 2-Heavy rocket. As mentioned earlier on Slashdot, it is poised to orbit Mercury in 2011 after three flybys, as well as two flybys of Venus and one of Earth for course corrections. It will be the first probe to visit the innermost planet since Mariner 10 in 1974 and 1975. Stories on the BBC and SpaceflightNow."

6 of 120 comments (clear)

  1. eka posti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    !!!1 ha ha

  2. ALCOHOL SHARPENS YOUR BRAIN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    YET ANOTHER QUALITY STORY fuckdot rejected!

    Alcohol sharpens your brain, say researchers
    By Robert Matthews, Science Correspondent
    (Filed: 01/08/2004)

    It is news guaranteed to raise a cheer among those who enjoy a glass or two: drinking half a bottle of wine a day can make your brain work better, especially if you are a woman.

    Research to be published tomorrow by academics at University College London has found that those who even drink only one glass of wine a week have significantly sharper thought processes than teetotallers.

    Sir Michael Marmot of UCL led the study

    The benefits of alcohol, which are thought to be linked to its effect on the flow of blood to the brain, can be detected when a person drinks up to 30 units of alcohol - about four to five bottles of wine - per week.

    The researchers were unable to test the effect of higher levels of alcohol consumption, although drunkenness probably negates any positive effects on the brain.

    The findings have surprised health officials, who issued yet another warning last week about the dangers of overdrinking.

    According to figures released by the Office for National Statistics, one in six women now drinks more than the Government's recommended limit of 14 units of alcohol a week - an increase of 70 per cent since the late 1980s. The recommended maximum weekly intake for men is 21 units.

    The latest findings on the benefits of alcohol are drawn from a study of the long-term health of 10,000 British civil servants. Known as the Whitehall Study, it was originally set up in 1967 to identify links between health and factors ranging from smoking and obesity to age and social status.

    In the latest research, a team led by Sir Michael Marmot, a professor of epidemiology and public health at University College London, gave psychometric tests to more than 6,000 civil servants.

    The questions ranged from verbal and mathematical reasoning problems to tests of short-term memory. The civil servants' performance was then matched against their drinking habits.

    The study took into account all alcohol consumption and was not specific to wine. However, the results showed that those having even a single glass of wine a week scored significantly higher in the tests than more abstemious drinkers. Teetotallers were twice as likely as occasional drinkers to achieve the lowest scores.

    The benefits were most marked among women drinkers and, to the researchers' surprise, showed no sign of flattening out with increasing consumption.

    Those who downed the equivalent of half a bottle of wine or two pints of beer a day scored best of all. The effects were apparent even after the results had been adjusted to take into account factors such as physical and mental health.

    "Our results appear to suggest some specificity in the association between alcohol consumption and cognitive ability," said the team. "Frequent drinking may be more beneficial than drinking only on special occasions."

    The team, whose findings are being reported in the American Journal of Epidemiology, suggests that the results may reflect the fact that alcohol can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and increase blood flow to the brain - factors linked to improved mental function.

    The researchers also speculate that women might benefit more because of the different way in which they metabolise alcohol. However, they acknowledge that the benefits of alcohol can be outweighed by the increased risks of getting diseases such as cancer and cirrhosis, and that the findings should not be used as an excuse for heavier drinking.

    Dr Guy Ratcliffe, the medical director of the Medical Council on Alcohol, said that the study would add to earlier evidence that moderate drinking could be beneficial - offering advantages such as a reduced risk of heart disease and

  3. At first glance by Viceice · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    At first glance, I though MSN Messenger got 0wnz...

    --
    Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
  4. Bad choice of OS by XemonerdX · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    From the linked BBC article:
    Mercury Messenger carries seven scientific instruments to characterise the properties of its target planet.
    Not sure what OS the software is running on, but it's not Quantian.

  5. That's all we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    more space junk floating around due to Messenger popups

  6. When Making Lame Jokes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Beware of the Moderators near Uranus...