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 Ad Astra touts itself as having help from NASA, so presumably someone somewhere gave them some advice. Still, there are plenty of ways science advising can go wrong鈥?miscommunication, script conflicts, misconceptions, and outright mistakes. In Ad Astra, those mistakes range from wrong ideas about space travel to inaccuracies about basic astronomy.     In Ad Astra, astronaut Roy McBride  Brad Pitt  is serving on a communications tower that extends above the atmosphere when an explosion from space causes a catastrophe. Space Command informs him that his father, Clifford M stanley flask cBride  Tommy Lee Jones , thought dead for 16 years, may still be alive out at Neptune and may have something to do  stanley mug with the explosion. Roy must travel to the Moon and then Mars to send a message to his father. Along the way he has to do battle with Moon pirates, space monkeys, incompetent astronauts, the secretive Space Command, and his own personal demons. The core of the Ad Astra story is that theres a massive push to look for life outside of Earth. Looking for alien life is great, but everyone in this universe tak stanley tumbler es exceedingly bad approaches. Image: 20th Century Fox Looking for life in all the wrong places The movie:聽Years ago, Clifford McBride and crew set out on a decades-long journey to Neptune to search for life around other star systems. They say they are going  to the edge of the heliosphere so that the Suns magnetic field wont affect our instruments.  Reality: This makes no sense at all. The heliosp Paxr Talk To Me Is Almost the Perfect Horror Franchise Starter
 Non-destructive x-ray and CT scans are a boon to medical scientists and healthcare practitioners, but theyre also an indispensable tool for archaeologists who try not to disturb ancient remains any more than they have to. When it comes to studying ancient mummies, these scanning techniques have been used to sketch the rough outlines of soft tissue and hair, and even to reveal interior features such as muscles and bones.     A new proof-of-concept study published this week in Radiology shows a modified version of CT sc stanley fr anning, called phase-contrast CT scanning, can be used to do microscopic-scale imagi stanley cup becher ng of s stanley mug oft-tissue in human mummies. This imaging technique detects the absorption and phase shift  similar to how light changes direction when it passes through a lens  that happens when x-rays pass through a solid object. The resulting images feature a higher level of contrast than traditional x-ray images. This method, which has been around for about 10 years, is particularly good at capturing the high contrast needed to visualize soft tissues, but up until now its only been used in medicine to scan the insides of such things as livers, hearts, and veins. For the new study, Jenny Romell and her colleagues at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden wanted to evaluate the effectiveness of using phase-contrast CT scanning on mummies. The researchers scanned a mummified human right hand from ancient Egypt. The hand was lent to them by the Museum of Mediterranean and Near Eas