Catalyst simulations for fuel cells may make clean cars a reality

Washington, Sep 18 (ANI): University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers are working towards developing better catalyst for fuel cells in a bid to make clean cars a reality.

If successful, the researchers could make a car that runs on hydrogen from solar power, and produces water instead of carbon emissions.

Materials science and engineering assistant professor Dane Morgan and Ph.D. student Edward (Ted) Holby have developed a computational model that could optimise an important component of fuel cells, making it possible for the technology to have a more widespread use.

The researchers investigated how particle size is related to the overall stability of a material, and showed with their model that increasing the particle size of a fuel cell catalyst decreases degradation and therefore increases the useful lifetime of a fuel cell.

Fuel cells are electrochemical devices that facilitate a reaction between hydrogen and oxygen, producing electrical power and forming water.

In the type of fuel cells Morgan is researching, called proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs), hydrogen is split into a proton and electron at one side of the fuel cell (the anode).

The proton moves through the device while the electron is forced to travel in an external circuit, where it can perform useful work, while at the other side of the fuel cell (the cathode), the protons, electrons and oxygen combine to form water, which is the only waste product.

One of the many hurdles to producing efficient fuel cells for widespread use is the catalyst added to aid the reaction between protons, electrons and oxygen at the cathode.

Current fuel cells use platinum and platinum alloys as a catalyst. While platinum can withstand the corrosive fuel cell environment, it is expensive and not very abundant.

Thus, to maximize platinum use, researchers use catalysts made with platinum particles as small as two nanometers, which are approximately 10 atoms across.

These tiny structures have a large surface area on which the fuel cell reaction occurs.

However, platinum catalysts this small degrade very quickly, which means that the fuel cell doesn’t last long.

The researchers have found a possible solution to the rapid degradation problem-when it comes to catalyst particle size, sometimes smaller isn’t better.

In their modelling work, they showed that if the particle size of a platinum catalyst is increased to four or five nanometers, which is approximately 20 atoms across, the level of degradation significantly decreases.

This means the catalyst and the fuel cell as a whole can continue to function for much longer than if the particle size was only two or three nanometers.

“Fuel cells are just one of many energy technologies – solar, battery, etc. – with enormous potential to reduce our dependence on oil and our carbon emissions. Computer simulation offers a powerful tool to understand and develop new materials at the heart of these energy technologies,” said Morgan. (ANI)

Major fire at CGO complex building

New Delhi, Sept 17 (ANI): A major fire broke out in the Electronic Niketan building in the CGO complex on Lodhi road on Thursday morning.

However, no report of any casualties was reported.

The blaze broke out in the first floor at around 3:45 a.m.

According to fire brigade officials, fire tenders extinguished the flames after battling it for about four hours.

It seems that the fire was caused by a short circuit. (ANI)

Extremely tough to win a Grand Slams now, says Murray

London, Sep.17 (ANI): World Number three Andy Murray is of the view that winning a Grand Slam title in the present day and age is far more tougher than it was before, given the kind of talent on show in the tennis circuit.

He said that when players are competing against the likes of Roger Federer, Raphael Nadal and now Juan Martin Del Potro, winning a title was not easy.

“It’s really, really tough to win the slams now so Del Potro’s effort was pretty good. There’s no question that Roger (Federer) and Rafa (Nadal) are two of the best ever. Roger’s people say he’s the best of all time; that’s not really up for debate. And Rafa, providing he stays healthy, I’d expect to get to double figures on slam wins,” The Telegraph quoted Murray, as saying.

“That’s better than any two rivals have managed together and then behind them the standard is very high. There are guys like (Andy) Roddick who’s only managed to win one slam right at the start of that career and he’s a great player,” he added.

Murray, who exited from the US Open in the fourth-round, also said that he wanted to take his mind off his disappointment and move on.

For the moment, he is only concerned about defeating a couple of Polish journeymen to provide Britain with the platform for a victory which would ensure they do not get demoted to the Davis Cup’s third tier for the first time in 13 years. (ANI)

Giant killer Del Potro believes he is the biggest tennis star on the circuit

New York, Sep.16 (ANI): Argentine tennis player Juan Martin Del Potro still can’t believe he has won this US Open, but now believes he is the biggest new star in tennis.

“It’s my best sensation,” he said. “Since my childhood I have dreamed of this trophy. I have realised my dream. It is an incredible moment. It’s amazing match, amazing people. Everything is perfect. Maybe tomorrow, maybe next week I will be believing in this. Now, I can’t believe it,” The Mirror quoted Del Potro, as saying.

The 6 ft 6in Argentine caused a massive upset by beating a fustered Roger Federer in five thrilling sets in the US Open final.

The world No.1, the reigning French Open and Wimbledon champion, was seeking his sixth successive title after winning 40 consecutive matches at Flushing Meadows.

But he was simply battered into submission by the 20-yearold with a murderous forehand making his first appearance in a Grand Slam final. Despite a horrible start, Del Potro triumphed 3-6 7-6 (7/5) 4-6 7-6 (7/4) 6-2 in four hours and six minutes – the longest US Open final for 20 years. (ANI)

Scientists make first high-resolution 3D images of a polymer solar cell’s insides

Washington, September 14 (ANI): Researchers from the Eindhoven University of Technology and the University of Ulm in Germany have made the first high-resolution 3D images of the inside of a polymer solar cell.

This gives them important new insights in the nanoscale structure of polymer solar cells and its effect on the performance.

The investigations shed new light on the operational principles of polymer solar cells.

These solar cells do not have the high efficiencies of their silicon counterparts yet. Polymer cells, however, can be printed in roll-to-roll processes, at very high speeds, which makes the technology potentially very cost-effective.

Added to that, polymer cells are flexible and lightweight, and therefore suitable to be used on vehicles or clothing or to be incorporated in the design of objects.

In these hybrid solar cells, a mixture of two different materials, a polymer and a metal oxide are used to create charges at their interface when the mixture is illuminated by the sun.

The degree of mixing of the two materials is essential for its efficiency.

Intimate mixing enhances the area of the interface where charges are formed but at the same time obstructs charge transport because it leads to long and winding roads for the charges to travel.

Larger domains do exactly the opposite.

The vastly different chemical nature of polymers and metal oxides generally makes it very difficult to control the nanoscale structure.

The Eindhoven researchers have been able to largely circumvent this problem by using a precursor compound that mixes with the polymer and is only converted into the metal oxide after it is incorporated in the photoactive layer.

This allows better mixing and enables extracting up to 50 percent of the absorbed photons as charges in an external circuit.

The importance of the degree of mixing was clearly demonstrated by visualization of the structure of these blends in three dimensions.

Traditionally such visualization has been extremely challenging, but by using 3D electron tomography, the team has been able to resolve the mixing with unprecedented detail on a nanoscale.

From these images, the researchers at the Institute of Stochastics in Ulm have been able to extract typical distances between the two components, relating to the efficiency of charge generation, and analyze the percolation pathways, that is, how much of each component is connected to the electrode.

These quantitative analyses of the structure matched perfectly with the observed performance of the solar cells in sunlight. (ANI)

Paris allowed to sue Hallmark over unauthorised image use

Washington, September 1 (ANI): A California court has allowed Paris Hilton to pursue a lawsuit against ‘Hallmark’ over claims that the greeting cards manufacturer used her image without her consent.

The socialite is alleging that the company used her snap and her catchphrase, ‘That’s Hot!’ on a card that read ‘Paris’s First Day as a Waitress.’

Paris claims the card reflects a scene from her hit reality TV show ‘The Simple Life’ and is taking the firm to the court, reports Contactmusic.

Judges at the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals gave the hotel heiress the opportunity to go ahead with the case, turning down Hallmark executives’ claims that the cartoon on the card was of a generic woman and not Hilton.

Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain said: “The basic setting is the same: we see Paris Hilton, born to privilege, working as a waitress. (Hilton) has at least some probability of prevailing on the merits before a trier of fact.” (ANI)

Tone-deaf people lack an important neural pathway

Washington, Aug 19 (ANI): Researchers have found that the nerve fibres that link perception and motor regions of the brain are disconnected in tone-deaf people.

According to experts’ estimates, at least 10 percent of the population may be tone deaf – unable to sing in tune.

The new finding has pinpointed a particular brain circuit that is believed to be absent in these individuals.

“The anomaly suggests that tone-deafness may be a previously undetected neurological syndrome similar to other speech and language disorders, in which connections between perceptual and motor regions are impaired,” said Dr. Psyche Loui, of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, one of the study’s authors.

For the study, the researchers used an MRI-based technique called diffusion tensor imaging to examine connections between the right temporal and frontal lobes.

It is known that this region, a neural “highway” called the arcuate fasciculus, is involved in linking music and language perception with vocal production.

They took brain images of 20 people, half of whom had been identified as tone-deaf through listening tests.

The arcuate fasciculus was smaller in volume, and had a lower fibre count in the tone-deaf individuals.

Particularly, the superior branch of the arcuate fasciculus in the right hemisphere could not be detected in the tone-deaf individuals.

Thus, the researchers speculated that this could mean the branch is missing entirely, or is so abnormally deformed that it appears invisible to even the most advanced neuroimaging methods.

“The findings are clear. They show that the arcuate fasciculus, a structure long-known to join perceptual and motor areas, has reduced connectivity in individuals with tone deafness. Beyond improving our understanding of the anatomical underpinnings of tone-deafness, this study provides new insight into a person’s ability to detect pitch,” said Dr. Nina Kraus, at Northwestern University.

The findings add to previous work by the same researchers demonstrating that tone-deaf people could not consciously hear their own singing, and work by other researchers indicating abnormalities in brain regions that affect sound perception and production.

The study has been published in the latest issue of The Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)

Organic electronics that allows transport of both positive and negative charges developed

Washington, August 18 (ANI): A new research from the University of Washington scientists has described an approach to organic electronics that allows transport of both positive and negative charges.

Until now, however, circuits built with organic materials have allowed only one type of charge to move through them.

Now, new research from the University of Washington makes charges flow both ways.

“The organic semiconductors developed over the past 20 years have one important drawback. It’s very difficult to get electrons to move through,” said lead author Samson Jenekhe, a UW professor of chemical engineering.

“By now having polymer semiconductors that can transmit both positive and negative charges, it broadens the available approaches. This would certainly change the way we do things,” he added.

A major drawback with existing organic semiconductors is most transmit only positive charges.

In the last decade, a few organic materials have been developed that can transport only electrons.

But, making a working organic circuit has meant carefully layering two complicated patterns on top of one another, one that transports electrons and another one that transports holes.

“Because current organic semiconductors have this limitation, the way they’re currently used has to compensate for that, which has led to all kinds of complex processes and complications,” Jenekhe said.

Over the past few years, Jenekhe’s lab has created polymers with a donor and an acceptor part, and carefully adjusted the strength of each one.

In collaboration with Watson’s lab, they have now developed an organic molecule that works to transport both positive and negative charges.

“What we have shown in this paper is that you don’t have to use two separate organic semiconductors. You can use one material to create electronic circuits,” Jenekhe said.

The material would allow organic transistors and other information-processing devices to be built more simply, in a way that is more similar to how inorganic circuits are now made.

The group used the new material to build a transistor designed in the same way as a silicon model and the results show that both electrons and holes move through the device quickly.

The results represent the best performance ever seen in a single-component organic polymer semiconductor, according to Jenekhe.

Electrons moved five to eight times faster through the UW device than in any other such polymer transistor.

A circuit, which consists of two or more integrated devices, generated a voltage gain two to five times greater than previously seen in a polymer circuit.

“We expect people to use this approach. We’ve opened the way for people to know how to do it,” Jenekhe said. (ANI)

Scientists use camera flash to turn insulating material into conductor

Washington, Aug 13 (ANI): Can camera flash actually turn an insulating material into a conductor? Yes, if Northwestern University researchers are to be believed.

Lead researcher Jiaxing Huang, assistant professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science have found a novel way of turning graphite oxide – a low-cost insulator made by oxidizing graphite powder-into graphene, a material that conducts electricity.

Materials scientists previously have used high-temperature heating or chemical reduction to produce graphene from graphite oxide.

However, these techniques could be problematic when graphite oxide is mixed with something else, such as a polymer, because the polymer component may not survive the high-temperature treatment or could block the reducing chemical from reacting with graphite oxide.

During the study researchers simply held a consumer camera flash over the graphite oxide and, a flash later, the material became piece of fluffy graphene.

“The light pulse offers very efficient heating through the photothermal process, which is rapid, energy efficient and chemical-free,” said Huang.

When using a light pulse, photothermal heating not only reduces the graphite oxide, it also fuses the insulating polymer with the graphene sheets, resulting in a welded conducting composite.

Using patterns printed on a simple overhead transparency film as a photo-mask, flash reduction creates patterned graphene films. This process creates electronically conducting patterns on the insulating graphite oxide film-essentially a flexible circuit.

The research group hopes to next create smaller circuits on a single graphite-oxide sheet at the single-atom layer level.

“If we can make a nano circuit on a single piece of graphite oxide. It will hold great promise for patterning electronic devices,” said Huang.

The study is published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. (ANI)

Watson’s Granger role voted ‘Most Beloved Character in Harry Potter Franchise’

Washington, July 15 (ANI): Emma Watson’s Hermione Granger role has been voted the ‘Most Beloved Character in the Harry Potter Franchise’ in a new poll.

Fans of the wizard tales said that the bushy-haired academic is their favourite member in the Harry Potter gang, reports Contactmusic.

Fans are convinced that the British actress will have the most successful career after the films come to an end in 2011.

According to 51 per cent of the fans, Watson would enjoy a more lucrative future than her co-stars Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint, with 39 per cent insisting she’d become a sex symbol.

The 19-year-old actress has already proved a hit on the fashion circuit, landing modelling jobs with high-class design house Burberry. (ANI)

How practice improves zebra finch’s singing performance

Washington, July 7 (ANI): A study on zebra finches conducted by neuroscientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has shed some light on how practice improves performance.

The researchers say that studying the chirps of zebra finches helped them determine that as these tiny songbirds fine-tune their songs, their brains initially store improvements in one brain pathway, before transferring this learned information to the motor pathway for long-term storage.

They believe that their findings may further scientists’ understanding of the complicated circuitry of the basal ganglia, brain structures that play a key role in learning and habit formation in humans.

The basal ganglia are also linked to disorders like Parkinson’s disease, obsessive-compulsive disorder and drug addiction.

“Birds provide a great system to study the fundamental mechanisms of how the basal ganglia contributes to learning. Our results support the idea that the basal ganglia are the gateway through which newly acquired information affects our actions,” said senior author Michale Fee, an investigator in the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT.

The researchers point out that young zebra finches learn to sing by mimicking their fathers, whose song contains multiple syllables in a particular sequence.

Like the babbling of human babies, young birds initially produce a disorganized stream of tones, but after practicing thousands of times they master the syllables and rhythms of their father’s song.

Studies conducted in the past have identified two distinct brain circuits that contribute to this behaviour in zebra flinches.

A motor pathway is responsible for producing the song, and a separate pathway is essential for learning to imitate the father. The learning pathway, called the anterior forebrain pathway (AFP), has similarities to basal ganglia circuits in humans.

“For this study, we wanted to know how these two pathways work together as the bird is learning. So we trained the birds to learn a new variation in their song and then we inactivated the AFP circuit to see how it was contributing to the learning,” said first author Aaron Andalman, a graduate student in Fee’s lab.

With a view to training the birds, the research team monitored their singing and delivered white noise whenever a bird sang a particular syllable at a lower pitch than usual.

“The bird hears this unexpected noise, thinks it made a ‘mistake’, and on future attempts gradually adjusts the pitch of that syllable upward to avoid repeating that error. Over many days we can train the bird to move the pitch of the syllable up and down the musical scale,” Fee said.

On a particular day, after four hours of training in which the birds learned to raise the pitch, the researchers temporarily inactivated the AFP with a drug. The pitch immediately slipped back to where it had been at the start of that day’s training session – suggesting that the recently learned changes were stored within the AFP.

The research group, however, observed that over the course of 24 hours, the brain had transferred the newly learned information from the AFP to the motor pathway. The motor pathway was storing all of the accumulated pitch changes from previous training sessions. (ANI)

Ecclestone says his comments on Hitler have been misunderstood

London, July 7 (ANI): Formula One commercial rights holder Bernie Ecclestone has claimed that there has been a “big misunderstanding” over his comments about Nazi dictator Hitler that appeared in the press over the weekend.

Ecclestone had said that Hitler was a “man who could get things done” during an interview in which he expressed strong views on dictators.

His comments were met with widespread negative reaction, particularly from the Jewish community. He now insists that he never meant to hurt anybody and added: “Many of my closest friends are Jews.”

Speaking to German newspaper Bild, Ecclestone said: “This was all a big misunderstanding. I did not put Hitler forward as a positive example, but simply noted that, before his appalling crimes, he acted successfully against unemployment and the economic crisis.”

According to The Guardian, Ecclestone claimed that it was never his intention to “hurt the feelings of a community, and added that many of his closest friends are Jews.

Jewish groups worldwide have called on Ecclestone to resign, and he faces further trouble this Sunday at the German grand prix at the Nürburgring circuit.

A senior German Jewish official was quoted by the Handelsblatt daily as calling for a boycott of Ecclestone by Formula One teams. (ANI)

Army soldier embarks on a cycle expedition

Bangalore, July 2 (ANI): Undeterred by handicaps, a former Indian Army soldier, Probhojit Singh embarked on a bicycle tour across the country to spread the message of peace and harmony.

Singh,41, once a soldier of Jammu Kashmir Rifles, had to leave his battalion in 1989 when he met with a train accident and lost his left arm and toe of his right foot. But he refused to live in a state of helplessness, and decided to do something different.

He embarked on a bicycle tour across India.

Starting his journey from Ambala Cant in Haryana on January 19, 2009 he has since visited across 18 states, covering almost 9646 kilometers.

Through his tour, Singh wants to spread the message of peace and harmony belief in oneself.

“I want to spread the message of peace and harmony, but that takes a second priority, as the message of overcoming all odds forms the first priority of my tour. I want to send across a message to the people that when I being physically challenged can strive to embark on such a tour, then anybody can overcome their impediments to achieve something in life,” he said.

He rests at the local police stations and gets support from army regiments wherever he goes. The Indian army officers believe that Singh represents the spirit of the army, of never giving up.

“He truly reflects the indomitable spirit of the Indian soldier. And we are proud of him. He has already completed 9000 kilometres of the circuit and is on the road for almost 98 days or so,” said Brigadier R.N. Mittal commandant Madras Engineering Group, Bangalore.

Moving through the traffic in cities and towns across the country, Singh displays an undying spirit characteristic of the Indian Army.

He hopes that his endeavor would inspire many to maintain peace and harmony in the country. By Jaipal Sharma(ANI)

Roller-skating catches the fancy of Kolkata kids

Kolkata, June 29 (ANI): Roller-skating is rapidly catching the fancy of youngsters in Kolkata.

With the Roller Skating Club now has 500 registered members. It was started up in 2001.

“It is absolutely an aerobic sport. So, because it is an aerobic sport, it helps you in endurance and stamina. Secondly you are dealing mostly with your leg. So, for that all the leg muscles get benefited. The body gets toned and total physical fitness of your body comes up,” said Akash Mondal, the founder of the Roller Skating Club.

The basic level of the training includes confidence building, balance, walking, falling and recovering, E brakes and cross over basics. While, the intermediate level includes stamina building, road skating, hand synchronization and bending styles.

The basic course is taught indoors, the intermediate and advanced levels are trained outdoors. While at the advanced level the skaters go through increased road sessions, speed training, circuit training, competition training, down hill, figure skating, full camel, straight spread eagle, barrel roll and spins.

“It (skating) has lot of benefits because it is completely a body building sport. There is no need for any other kind of exercises because skating makes the body completely fit,” said Lipika Biswas, an advance learner.

Skaters use different types of skates, varying from Quads which have four wheels in the four corners, In lines or blades, which have four to five wheels in one straight line. (ANI)

Scientists identify alcohol-binding site in the brain

London, June 29 (ANI): Scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have a step closer to understanding how alcohol alters the way brain cells work.

The researchers say that they have identified a binding site for alcohol in an ion channel that plays a key role in several brain functions associated with drugs of abuse and seizures.

They believe that their results could lead to the development of novel treatments for alcoholism, drug addiction, and epilepsy.

Ethanol, the alcohol in intoxicating beverages, is known to alter the communication between brain cells.

“There’s been a lot of interest in the field to find out how alcohol acts in the brain,” Nature magazine quoted Dr. Paul A. Slesinger, an associate professor in the Peptide Biology Laboratory at the Salk Institute, as saying.

“One of several views held that ethanol works by interacting directly with ion channel proteins, but there were no studies that visualized the site of association,” added the lead researcher.

He says that his study has shown that alcohols directly interact with a specific nook contained within a channel protein.

According to him, this ion channel plays a key role in several brain functions associated with drugs of abuse and seizures.

In their previous research, Slesinger’s team focused on the neural function of these ion channels, called GIRK channels, which open up during periods of chemical communication between neurons and dampen the signal, creating the equivalent of a short circuit.

“When GIRKs open in response to neurotransmitter activation, potassium ions leak out of the neuron, decreasing neuronal activity,” says UCSD Biology graduate student and first author Prafulla Aryal.

While alcohols have been previously shown to open up GIRK channels, no study ever determined whether this was a direct effect or whether this was the by-product of other molecular changes in the cell.

The researchers say that the identification of the location of a physical alcohol-binding site important for GIRK channel activation could point to new strategies for treating related brain diseases.

They believe that this protein structure may be used to develop a drug that antagonizes the actions of alcohol for the treatment of alcohol dependence.

“(Alternatively) If we could find a novel drug that fits the alcohol-binding site and then activate GIRK channels, this would dampen overall neuronal excitability in the brain and perhaps provide a new tool for treating epilepsy,” says Slesinger.

A research article describing the study has been published in the journal Nature Neuroscience. (ANI)

Minor fire at Taj Mahal hotel of Mumbai

Mumbai, June 27 (ANI): Six fire tenders and eight water tankers were rushed to the Taj Mahal hotel on Saturday after a minor fire broke out in the basement area of the hotel.

The incident, which took place due to short-circuit, however, did not involve any casualty and the fire was soon brought under control.

“Fire down at the basement near the main locker room, has been put out under control, there was lot of smoke nobody injured, nobody hurt. We are just clearing out the whole thing. By evening we should be back in operations,” Krishnakant, vice chairman, Taj Hotel told media.

Fire officials said the fire was because of the short circuit detected near the staff locker room.

“The fire was there in the basement, mainly in the cable shaft, the cable caught fire so there was lot of smoke. We went inside and the fire is now totally under control,” said Uday Tatkare, deputy chief officer of Fire Brigade department.

The same hotel bore the brunt of the militant attack on November 26, 2008. (ANI)

Scientists create first acoustic metamaterial ‘superlens’

Washington, June 25 (ANI): A team of researchers at the University of Illinois (U. of I.) has created the world’s first acoustic “superlens,” an innovation that could have practical implications for high-resolution ultrasound imaging, non-destructive structural testing of buildings and bridges, and novel underwater stealth technology.

The team, led by Nicholas X. Fang, a professor of mechanical science and engineering at Illinois, successfully focused ultrasound waves through a flat metamaterial lens on a spot roughly half the width of a wavelength at 60.5 kHz using a network of fluid-filled Helmholtz resonators.

According to the results, the acoustic system is analogous to an inductor-capacitor circuit.

The transmission channels act as a series of inductors, and the Helmholtz resonators, which Fang describes as cavities that house resonating waves and oscillate at certain sonic frequencies almost as a musical instrument would, act as capacitors.

Fang said acoustic imaging is somewhat analogous to optical imaging in that bending sound is similar to bending light.

But, compared with optical and X-ray imaging, creating an image from sound is “a lot safer, which is why we use sonography on pregnant women,” said Shu Zhang, a U. of I. graduate student who along with Leilei Yin, a microscopist at the Beckman Institute, are co-authors of the research paper.

Acoustic imaging can be used for tumor detection.

“In the body, tumors are often surrounded by hard tissues with high contrast, so you can’t see them clearly, and acoustic imaging may provide more details than optical imaging methods,” said Fang.Fang said that the application of acoustic imaging technology goes beyond medicine.

Eventually, the technology could lead to “a completely new suite of data that previously wasn’t available to us using just natural materials,” he said.

In the field of non-destructive testing, the structural soundness of a building or a bridge could be checked for hairline cracks with acoustic imaging, as could other deeply embedded flaws invisible to the eye or unable to be detected by optical imaging.

“Acoustic imaging is a different means of detecting and probing things, beyond optical imaging,” Fang said.

Fang said acoustic imaging could also lead to better underwater stealth technology, possibly even an “acoustic cloak” that would act as camouflage for submarines.

“Right now, the goal is to bring this ‘lab science’ out of the lab and create a practical device or system that will allow us to use acoustic imaging in a variety of situations,” he said. (ANI)

Serena ‘Williamsova’ doesn’t recognize flood of Russian new-ovas!

London, June 23 (ANI): In a bizarre attack on the growing Russian crowd in the tennis arena, Serena Williams has labelled the Eastern Europeans players as a bunch of nobodies.

“I just know the standard: everyone is from Russia,” the Daily Express quoted her, as saying.

Williams wrote on her Twitter page that she doesn’t “really recognize anyone,” and is so swamped by Eastern bloc-sounding names that she has started considering herself Russian.

“Sometimes I think I’m from Russia, too. I feel like, you know, OK, all these new-ovas. I don’t know anyone. I don’t really recognize anyone. You know, that’s just how it is. I think my name must be Williamsova,” she wrote.

Earlier in the day, she came through the first round with a 6-1, 7-5 victory over Neuza Silva of Portugal at Wimbledon.

The two-time Wimbledon singles champion admitted that she is never going to be a popular member on the women’s circuit, and claimed that she did not invite the “drama” that followed her.

Her father Richard compares her with Mike Tyson, in that both have that aggressive edge, and Serena said: “I’m like one of those girls on a reality show that has all the drama and everyone in the house hates them.

“No matter what they do, drama follows them. I don’t want to be that girl. I don’t want drama in my career. There always seems to be something happening so people don’t support me,” she said. (ANI)

Fire in cracker godown engulfs commercial complex in Agra

Agra (Uttar Pradesh), June 20(ANI): A massive fire engulfed a firecracker godown in Jatni Bagh commercial complex of Agra in Uttar Pradesh on Saturday.

The fire engulfed several shops in the complex and gutted some of them, causing panic amongst the people.

The fire, which broke out around midnight in the godown owned by Manoj Jain, was eventually brought under control at six in the morning.

Initial reports suggest an electrical short circuit.

“We received information at around midnight that some fire flames and bursting of firecrackers were noticed in Jatni Bagh commercial complex. Immediately, fire brigade tenders were rushed to the spot,” said Badri Prasad Singh, DIG of Agra Range.

“We tried to douse the fire but the fire kept on spreading since the godown consisted of a good lot of firecrackers. The fire also reached the neighbouring plastic shop. As a precautionary measure we asked help from the army. Their fire brigade vehicles had also reached the spot,” he added.

The inferno has reportedly caused damage to property and goods worth nearly Rs 15 lakh. (ANI)

Major fire leaves 8000 transformers gutted in Punjab

Kotkapura (Punjab), May 24 (ANI): A major fire destroyed a power sub-station at Kotkapura near Faridkot on Saturday. Although the inferno caused enormous damage, there have been no casualties reported.

The fire broke out at around 6′o clock in the evening reportedly by a short circuit at the 132 KV power grid sub-station and gutted around 8,000 old and new transformers, power cables and property worth millions of rupees.

More than seven fire brigade tenders including a couple from the military were rushed to the spot.

Since the power service station is close to a residential area, authorities asked the residents to vacate immediately.

Meanwhile, the district administration is taking stock of the situation to investigate the cause of the devastating fire. (ANI)