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17-Year-Old Corrects NASA Mistake In Data From The ISS (bbc.com)

"A British teenager has contacted scientists at NASA to point out an error in a set of their own data," writes the BBC. An anonymous reader quotes their report. A-level student Miles Soloman found that radiation sensors on the International Space Station (ISS) were recording false data... The correction was said to be "appreciated" by NASA, which invited him to help analyse the problem... The research was part of the TimPix project from the Institute for Research in Schools (IRIS), which gives students across the UK the chance to work on data from the space station, looking for anomalies and patterns that might lead to further discoveries. What Miles had noticed was that when nothing hit the detector, a negative reading was being recorded. But you cannot get negative energy... It turned out that Miles had noticed something no-one else had -- including the NASA experts. NASA said it was aware of the error, but believed it was only happening once or twice a year. Miles had found it was actually happening multiple times a day.
There's a video of the student -- and his teacher -- describing the discovery, a story which Miles says his friends at high school listen to with "a mixture of jealousy and boredom"

4 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Re:PERSECUTION by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The moderators are persecuting me for being a Christian. Modding my posts down is blatant persecution.

    If someone walks into your church during a service and starts shouting, is it persecution to escort them out? Of course not! It doesn't matter what they believe, you're simply removing them for being disruptive.

    Same here with you. You've entered a space for nerds to talk about news for nerds, then started shouting about something completely unrelated. As such, they're modding you down for interrupting the discussion with talk about something that's grossly off-topic. Mind you, I say all of this as someone who agrees with much of what you've said regarding the topic you raised, but that topic simply has no place in this conversation.

    If you want to get your message out, you should find more effective ways, like speaking with people in a loving, patient manner on a personal level, rather than shouting at them in a public forum. When I talk about that topic with others, more often than not, I have to spend the first half of the discussion explaining that we're not all crazies who hate them, because they've had a bad taste left in their mouths after encounters with people like you.

  2. Re:PERSECUTION by sky_khan72 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Do we come to your church and tell latest scientific or technological findings after every sentence of priest ? Your posts are and will always be -1, because your rubbish off-topic posts are not belong here. Now go away and dont turn back.

  3. How is this Newsworthy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Many types of radiation sensor have an average count they pick up in their sampling window. This is then subtracted to get an reading which, on average, is zero but which for any given reading could be negative if the count fluctuates low when there is no particle incident. It might be that they had an issue with the pedestal fluctuating.

    All this guy did was look at a column in an Excel spreadsheet, saw that there were negative numbers for the energy and contacted NASA to ask about it. Has the standard of A' level science fallen so far in the UK that this is now newsworthy or is this just an indication of the appallingly low level of science at the BBC?

  4. Re:There are moments in every business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reaction on Slashdot: 50% jealous, 40% offtopic ranting, 10% insightful.

    Parent qualifies as "jealous". Sheesh, the boy noticed something NASA - by their own account - didn't. That doesn't make him a total badass, but it's more of a contribution than you or I have made. Give him some credit.