Barrage of small meteorite impacts cause the moon to “hum”

London, September 9 (ANI): A new research has suggested that a steady barrage of small meteorite impacts cause the moon to “hum”.

But, no seismometers sent to the moon to date have been sensitive enough to hear the “hum”.

According to a report in New Scientist, Philippe Lognonne at the Institute of Earth Physics of Paris and colleagues decided to work out how loud the ring is.

The team estimated the meteorite population in the solar neighbourhood, and calculated the likely seismic signals that would be created by a range of meteorite sizes and velocities as they strike the moon.

To determine how the vibrations from these impacts would be seen by seismometers, the team used data taken by Apollo seismometers four decades ago.

These measured the vibrations created by the landings of lunar modules and spent rocket stages.

Since the precise locations and timing of these landings were known, they could be used to gauge how long it would take vibrations caused by meteorite impacts to travel through the moon, and how much the signals might dim.

Their calculations revealed space rocks with masses ranging from a gram to a kilogram do indeed create a hum, but it is subtle.

Earth’s hum, created by pounding waves, is more than 1000 times louder.

“This shows that all planets may hum, those with and those without atmosphere,” said Lognonne.

“The moon-hum’s quietness means future lunar seismometers should be able to peek deep within the moon without the hum creating problematic background noise, he added.

Instead, seismometers can focus on measuring waves created by moonquakes, tremors created by a variety of sources, including the tidal tug of the Earth.

Because seismic waves are sensitive to the type, arrangement and density of rocks they pass through, studying the quakes can reveal more about the moon’s interior.

The network of seismometers left by the Apollo missions has been shut down since 1977, so Lognonne hopes more sensitive instruments will be sent to the moon soon.

These could reach deeper than the Apollo network to measure the size of the moon’s core.

“I think the study is a great idea,” said Clive Neal of the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, who was not associated with the research.

“Estimating the actual background noise is critical for designing the next generation of seismometers to go to the moon,” he added. (ANI)

Phoenix pastor who prays for Obama’s death faces flak

Washington, Sep. 1 (ANI): Protestors have started voicing their opposition outside the congregation of a Phoenix-based pastor, who tells his parishioners that he prays for President Obama’s death.

Phoenix-based Pastor Steven Anderson attracted widespread attention after he delivered a sermon titled, “Why I Hate Barack Obama,” and encouraged his parishioners to join him in praying for the president’s death.

“I hope that God strikes Barack Obama with brain cancer so he can die like Ted Kennedy and I hope it happens today,” Fox News quoted him, as saying.

He called his message “spiritual warfare” and said he does not condone killing.

However, some protesters gathered around his church on Sunday, calling Anderson’s words “incomprehensible.”

According to the report, Anderson has also received some death threats.

Anderson’s provocative message stems from Obama’s abortion-rights stance.

In his controversial sermon, delivered at his Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe before Obama arrived for a speech in Phoenix earlier in the month, the pastor had said he wants the president to “melt like a snail” with salt on it.

“I’m gonna pray that he dies and goes to hell when I go to bed tonight. That’s what I’m gonna pray,” he told his congregation.

The last time fierce opposition to Obama’s abortion position drew widespread attention was when Obama delivered the commencement address at the University of Notre Dame, the report said.

The Anderson sermon was also in news after it was reported that one man carrying an assault rifle outside the Phoenix arena where Obama spoke was a member of Anderson’s church, the report added. (ANI)

When Rupert Grint met Michelle Obama

Washington, Jun 30 (ANI): Brit actor Rupert Grint has revealed that he was left awestruck after U.S. First Lady Michelle Obama made a secret visit to the set of the latest Harry Potter movie.

Grint, 20, was busy with the shooting of ‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows’ earlier this month, when Michelle and her two daughters, Malia, 10, and 8-year-old Sasha arrived on the set.

The actor, who plays Ron Weasley in the wizard series, revealed that he is not easily impressed by famous people, despite working with well-known actors like Sir Michael Gambon, Helena Bonham Carter and Dame Maggie Smith, but he was left in awe of the First Lady.

“I’m not easily impressed by famous people, but nothing’s matched this. I didn’t think I was going to be nervous, then this huge motorcade pulled up at the studio and Michelle stepped out of a black Range Rover and everybody was speechless,” Contactmusic quoted him as telling Live magazine.

“It’s hard to imagine (British Prime Minister) Gordon Brown having that kind of effect,” he said.

Michelle revealed that America’s First Family was huge fans of the Harry Potter movies – and that she was more thrilled about visiting the set than she had been about meeting British Royal Queen Elizabeth II.

“We sat around, ate cake and chatted. She said that the President is a big fan of the films and loves the books, and that she’d met the Queen the day before – but visiting the Potter set was far more exciting, that we were a lot cooler,” Grint revealed.

“It was hard to take it all in. I kept thinking, ‘Here I am talking to the First Lady’,” he added. (ANI)

Ancient granaries preceded Agricultural Revolution

Washington, June 23 (ANI): A new study has determined that it apparently took a long time to get the Agricultural Revolution off the ground, with discoveries at a Jordan site indicating that ancient granaries, more than 11,000 years old, preceded the advent of modern agriculture.

Excavations at Dhra’ near the Dead Sea in Jordan have uncovered remnants of four sophisticated granaries built between 11,300 and 11,175 years ago, about a millennium before domesticated plants were known to have been cultivated there.

Radiocarbon measurements from charred wood indicate that each structure was used to store wild plants for no more than 50 years, the first beginning around 11,300 years ago and the second starting shortly after abandonment of the first.

The excavations were carried out by archaeologists Ian Kuijt of the University of Notre Dame and Bill Finlayson of the Council for British Research in the Levant in Amman, Jordan.

Microscopic pieces of silica from barley husks were identified in one structure.

Though intact cereal grains have yet to be found, the granaries were situated between oval-shaped buildings where the researchers found stone tools for grinding wild plants.

Discoveries at Dhra’ represent the oldest known evidence for systematic storage of wild grains, according to the researchers.

A nearby site dating to at least 12,800 years ago contains pits that may have held wild plants, but no food remains have been found there.

Ancient residents of Dhra’ and several nearby settlements sowed wild cereals in fields and stored surplus food in granaries, making it possible to establish permanent communities before farming of domesticated plants began, Kuijt and Finlayson propose.

“The most important implication of our findings is that fundamental social changes occurred before plant domestication, including the establishment of fairly permanent settlements, with communal labor and storage, based on cultivated wild plants,” Kuijt said.

Researchers now generally accept that people in the Middle East and Asia must have cultivated wild plants for between 1,000 and 2,000 years, with annual harvests in the fall, before domesticated species appeared, remarked Harvard University archaeologist Ofer Bar-Yosef.

“The discovery in Dhra’ provides us with one of the earliest well-built examples of a food-storage structure from before plants were domesticated,” Bar-Yosef said.

Storage structures there support the argument that the sowing of wild plants beginning as early as 14,000 to 15,000 years ago led to agriculture, according to archaeologist Mordechai Kislev of Bar-Ilan University in Ramat-Gan, Israel. (ANI)

New cast of Calendar Girls’ West End stage show unveiled

London, June 20 (ANI): Jerry Hall, June Brown and Jill Halfpenny will be forming the new line up for the West End stage show based on the story of Calendar Girls.

Actress Hall, who stripped for the stage production of The Graduate in 2001, will portray the role of Miss September in the stage show, which tells the true story of a group of Women’s Institute members who stripped off for charity.

The 52-year-old will reportedly be sporting just a set of pearls while strategically standing behind a piano, reports The Telegraph.

The glamorous new cast will also feature Anita Dobson, 60, Jill Halfpenny, 33, Sara Crowe, 43, Gemma Atkinson, 24, Richenda Carey, 61, and Jill Baker, 57, for the show running from July to October.ut it was June Brown who was dubbed as the “grande dame of the cast”.

Producer David Pugh said: “Sian uses balls of wool and something that has been crocheted to cover her – so for June I’m thinking smaller balls of yarn and a slightly smaller piece of knitting.”

The 1.50 pound booking fee, royalties and profits are set to go to leukaemia research, for which the real Calendar Girls raised funds.

The show is based on the story of Angela Baker and Tricia Stewart, who came up with the idea of a naked charity calendar to raise money after Baker’s husband died from cancer.

They enlisted fellow members of the Rylstone Women”s Institute in North Yorkshire and hoped to raise a few hundred pounds for their local hospital.

Their story gained recognition with an award winning film in 2003 starring Dame Helen Mirren and Julie Walters before landing as a West end production. (ANI)

Roemer nominated as US envoy to India

New Delhi, May 28 (ANI): President Barack Obama has announced his intent to nominate Timothy J. Roemer as the new U.S. Ambassador to India.

Announcing nominations to several key administration posts on May 27, the President said “I am grateful that these distinguished Americans have agreed to help represent the United States and strengthen our partnerships abroad at this critical time for our nation and the world. I am confident they will advance American diplomacy as we work to meet the challenges of the 21st century. I look forward to working with them in the years and months ahead.”

A statement issued by the US Embassy in New Delhi said Roemer is President of the Center for National Policy (CNP) in Washington, D.C.

Before joining the CNP, he represented the 3rd District of Indiana for six terms as a U.S. Congressman, from 1991 to 2003.

Congressman Roemer served as a member of the 9/11 Commission, as well as the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction, Proliferation and Terrorism. He currently serves on the Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Presidential Task Force on Combating the Ideology of Radical Extremism, and the National Parks Second Century Commission.

As a distinguished scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, Congressman Roemer works with Members of Congress and staff to improve public policy outcomes by teaching on the legislative branch and policy analysis.

Congressman Roemer holds a B.A. from the University of California, San Diego and a M.A. and PhD. from the University of Notre Dame.(ANI)

Notre Dame High School San Jose Announces New Vice President of Advancement Katie…

Notre Dame High School San Jose Announces New Vice President of Advancement
Katie Heagerty Zazueta (Class of ’87)

SAN JOSE, Calif., April 14 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Katie Heagerty Zazueta
joins Notre Dame High School San Jose as Vice President of Advancement,
following her position as Vice President of Operations with Coakley Heagerty
Integrated Marketing Communications of San Jose.

(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090414/DC99092)

As Vice President of Advancement, Katie Heagerty Zazueta assumes
responsibilities of fund development, donor stewardship, marketing
communications, alumnae and community relations.

“Katie is a perfect example of the type of confident, civic-minded leader
Notre Dame graduates. Her passion for and commitment to the school along with
her proven marketing abilities and connections to her fellow alumnae and the
greater community will allow her to communicate the benefits of a Notre Dame
education,” says Ann Skeet, President, Notre Dame High School San Jose.

Zazueta, a Notre Dame Alumna, said “joining Notre Dame brings me full-circle
to my dream of supporting women leaders. This job will allow me to further
communicate to the general community the wonderful education and well-rounded
spirit I received from the best kept secret in the diocese, Notre Dame High
School San Jose.”

Zazueta is a graduate of Notre Dame High School San Jose and Loyola Marymount
University in Los Angeles. She has served on the Board of St. Joseph’s
Cathedral, where she helped implement the fundraising gala for the Cathedral’s
200th year anniversary and is active in the St. Christopher Parish.

Notre Dame High School San Jose
Established in 1851, Notre Dame High School is a Catholic secondary school
that educates young women in the tradition of the Sisters of Notre Dame de
Namur, founded by St. Julie Billiart. The school provides a challenging,
college-preparatory curriculum, which integrates classroom learning with
downtown educational opportunities in culture, science and technology. Notre
Dame prepares young women to live as well educated, self-confident and
socially responsible women, sustained by religious faith and guided by
spiritual values.

Notre Dame High School, 596 South Second Street, San Jose, CA 95112
408-294-1113 www.ndsj.org

CONTACT: Catherine Pandori,
Director of Communications,
Notre Dame High School,
Office: +1-408-294-1113 ext. 2117

SOURCE Notre Dame High School San Jose

Catherine Pandori, Director of Communications, Notre Dame High School, Office:
+1-408-294-1113 ext. 2117, Cell: +1-408-390-8390, CPandori@ndsj.org

UK’s National Trust sets up campaign to make couch potatoes ‘get dirty’

London, February 22 (ANI): Brit National Trust has set up a campaign to encourage TV-stricken kids to play outdoors and ‘get dirty’.

The trust is set to teach children about native wildlife by setting up properties around the country to offering more than 1,000 different events.

The Wild Child campaign would tempt kids with activities such as pond dipping, making compost, search for bats at night or just simply strolling through woodlands.

Dame Fiona Reynolds, the trust’s director general, said the decision was made following fears that a lot of kids were far from experiencing a healthy active childhood due to their time spent watching TV or playing games on the computer.

“It is responding to the fact that a lot of parents say that one of the reasons they bring their children to National Trust properties is because they do not know about danger because they are discouraged from getting their hands dirty or getting involved,” the Telegraph quoted Dame as saying.

“The National Trust is one of the few places you can come out of your cocoon and get real access to nature, experience it and take part in something, where children are encouraged to run around outdoors,” Dame added. (ANI)

How new species emerge

Washington, Feb 6 (ANI): A new research paper has offered important insights into how new species come to be.

The paper has been authored by a team led by University of Notre Dame researchers Andrew Forbes, Thomas Powell, and Jeffrey Feder.

“This study is important because it shows how biodiversity itself can be a major generator of biodiversity,” Feder said.

“As new species form, they can create new opportunities for others to take advantage of, which, in turn, can lead to a chain reaction of ever more new species,” he added.

In the research paper, Forbes, Powell, Feder and colleagues demonstrate that the parasitic wasp Diachasma alloeum is evolving into a new incipient species as a result of specializing on the Rhagoletis fruit flies that they attack.

These Rhagoletis flies are themselves actively diversifying and forming new species. For the flies, the process begins with a shift to a new host plant.

Rhagoletis pomonella flies originally attacked the fruit of hawthorn trees. But about 150 years ago, a portion of the hawthorn fly population shifted and began to feed on apples.

In ecologically adapting to apples as a new host plant, apple flies are becoming genetically distinct and reproductively isolated from hawthorn flies.

The apple race of Rgagoletis flies is now a major pest of apples in the United States and is the proverbial “worm in the apple.”

The Notre Dame researchers show that the Diachasma wasp that parasitizes Rhagoletis has also shifted to use the fly larvae that feed within the apple as a new food resource.

Indeed, the wasp has evolved many of the same types of ecological adaptations to live on flies in apples that the apple fly evolved before it.

In a plot twist, the apple wasp’s ancestors appear to have come from a Rhagoletis fly infesting blueberries rather than hawthorns – one turn does not always lead directly to another.

“The idea that there are ‘speciation cascades’ operating in nature has important applications not only for understanding the process of speciation, but also for theories concerning how biodiversity reforms following mass extinction events, for why certain groups of organisms with certain lifestyles may be more diverse than others, and for why certain areas of biotic regions may have more life forms than others,” Feder said. (ANI)

Oldest zircon from lunar rock suggests molten moon solidified 90 million years after creation

London, Jan 27 (ANI): Scientists have found the oldest known zircon on Earth from a lunar rock sample, dating back to 4.42 billion years, which has helped pinpoint the age at which the molten moon solidified as 90 million years after the impact that created it.

According to a report in New Scientist, a team of scientists recovered a speck of the mineral zircon, that’s older than any yet found on Earth, from a rock sample brought back by Apollo 17 astronauts.

“Lunar zircons were not studied at the time of the Apollo missions because the technology to date them did not exist,” said geologist Clive Neal of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. “It’s serendipitous to find this, and really emphasizes the (value) of sample returns,” he added.

Until now, the zircon found in lunar rocks was between 3.90 and 4.35 billion years old, the same as the oldest zircon found on Earth.

But, many of these lunar grains came from low-lying areas on the moon, where the crust had been resurfaced after being melted by meteorite impacts.

The new sample, found by Alexander Nemchin at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Australia, and colleagues, is 4.42 billion years old, and came from the lunar highlands.

That means it crystallized after the crust first solidified, within 100 million years of the moon’s formation.

The grain sets limits on the moon’s age, according to Dianne Taylor of the University of California, Los Angeles, who has studied similar samples.

The moon is thought to have formed from debris ejected by a giant impact between Earth and a smaller body between 10 and 100 million years after the formation of the solar system, 4.57 billion years ago.

According to Taylor, the lunar crust formed within 90 million years of the impact, which tallies well with the age of the zircon. (ANI)

Winter babies ‘are less educated and less healthy’

Washington, Jan 8 (ANI): People born in the months of December, January and February are, on average, less educated, less intelligent, less healthy and lower paid than people born in other seasons, according to a new study by researchers the University of Notre Dame.

Kasey Buckles and Daniel Hungerman said that individuals born in these months have some real disadvantages.

Buckles and Hungerman came to this conclusion after analysing U.S census data and birth certificates to determine if the typical woman giving birth in winter is any different from the typical woman giving birth at other times of the year.

They discovered that babies born in the winter are more likely to have mothers who are unmarried, who are teenagers or who lack a high school diploma.

One explanation for the seasonal patterns in births is that summer”s high temperatures inhibit sperm production.

This seems to affect lower socio-economic status women more adversely, which could explain why there are relatively fewer births to these women in the spring and early summer.

The researchers also point out that there could be a ‘prom babies’ effect, with winter births occurring nine moths after end-of-year school celebrations.

The researchers also note that survey data has shown that women consider winter the least desirable season in which to give birth.

They suggest that women who are wealthier and more educated are better able to time their births to more desirable seasons. (ANI)