‘Renee Zellweger meets Bradley Cooper’s parents’

Washington, Sept 4 (ANI): Renee Zellweger’s relationship with Bradley Cooper seems to be heating up, for the actress has met his parents.

The couple was first snapped out in public together last month (Aug09), when Zellweger and Cooper escaped for a low-key break in Barcelona, Spain.

However, after coming back, the ‘Hangover’ star whisked Zellweger off to his native Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to introduce her to his mum and dad.

“Brad and Renee drove from New York to Philly so he could show her off to his parents and old friends. They fell in love with her,” Contactmusic quoted a source as telling National Enquirer.

“Renee poured on her Texas charm, even arriving with flowers and a box of cupcakes she picked up at a local bakery for his parents.

“Hours after the visit, Bradley’s family was on the phone with him, gushing about Renee,” the source added.

Cooper is planning to move from Los Angeles to the Big Apple to be closer to his new girlfriend.

The insider adds, “Bradley is already talking about putting down roots in New York, where Renee lives. They just seem happy to have found each other.” (ANI)

Cairo’s slums get an energy makeover

Washington, August 30 (ANI): Reports indicate that the slums of Cairo, Egypt’s largest city, have got an energy makeover, with solar panels sprouting on apartment rooftops, providing residents with clean power and water and a chance to directly improve their lives.

According to a report in National Geographic News, since 2003, the nonprofit Solar CITIES project has installed 34 solar-powered hot water systems and 5 biogas reactors in Cairo’s poor Coptic Christian and Islamic neighborhoods.

“Our program is unique, in that we’re implementing rural-type solutions in an urban environment,” said project leader Thomas Culhane, an urban planner and 2009 National Geographic emerging explorer.
“It’s the kind of stuff you would do in the Peace Corps in an African village, but we’re doing it right smack dab in the slums of a city,” he added.

Solar CITIES’ hot water systems are constructed from recycled materials and are uniquely tailored to the parts of a city where water and electricity availability are often sporadic.
“The problem with professional solar hot water systems is that they’re made for cities with continuous water,” Culhane said.

By contrast, Solar CITIES’s water heaters use a city’s water when it’s available but draw from a backup storage tank when it’s not.
The setup consists of an insulated rectangular box covered in clear glass or plastic on one side. Inside the box are copper tubes wrapped in sheets of aluminum, which are painted black.
Sunlight striking the darkened aluminum is converted to heat, which is then used to warm water flowing through the pipes.
The glass sheet on top of the box prevents the heat from being carried away by wind.
The water, which can reach temperatures of 176 degrees Fahrenheit (80 degrees Celsius), is then pumped into an insulated plastic barrel for storage.

The water, which remains warm long after sunset, can be connected to an apartment’s plumbing system.
Solar CITIES also installs biogas reactors, which are based on designs Culhane saw while working in India.
The reactors use microbes harvested from animal guts to break down food wastes into flammable gas that can be used for cooking and heating.

If necessary, the reactors can draw hot water from the solar water heaters to maintain the warm temperatures the bacteria need to survive.
By attaching a simple plastic tube to the reactors, gas can be piped down several stories for residents to use.
“In 24 hours, you’ve got 2 hours of cooking gas from yesterday’s cooking garbage,” Culhane said. (ANI)

Fashion may have emerged 80,000 years ago in form of shell beads

London, August 28 (ANI): A new study by an international team of researchers from France, South Africa, Germany, Israel and the UK has confirmed that 80,000-year-old shell beads found in caves in North Africa represent some of the earliest evidence of the use of personal ornamentation, which also points to the dawn of modern human behaviour.

According to a report carried out by the Planet Earth Online, the beads provide evidence that the people alive at the time were acting much like modern humans.

“There is a problem with linking anatomically modern humans with behaviourally modern humans,” said Professor Nick Barton of the University of Oxford UK, and one of the authors of the study. “These people may have looked like us, but were they behaving the same?” he added.

The presence of the beads suggests the people who made and wore them behaved in ways we would recognize.

Using symbolic items like shell beads to communicate ideas about the wearer requires skills found only in modern humans, including a well-developed language and the ability to use abstract concepts.

The researchers analyzed 25 beads from four sites in North Africa from the Middle Palaeolithic period.

The beads, consisting of the shells of sea snails called Nassarius, had been transported some distance from the marine environment in which they’re usually found, and showed evidence of deliberate alterations.

“We found evidence they had been strung together as in a necklace or bracelet,” said Barton.

The shells had been deliberately perforated using stone tools and the researchers found distinctive wear patterns which suggested they had been rubbing together.

Wear marks around the perforations indicated the shells had been threaded on a string.

Several had also been covered with a pigment called red ochre and one shell showed evidence of heating, possibly to alter its colour.

As to what purpose the coloured beads served, Barton said, “What they were signalling, we’re not entirely sure. Possibly, they were an insurance policy, if you had shared access to certain resources and wanted to identify yourself to members of another group.”

The beads may also have let wearers identify members of the same social group, preventing unnecessary conflicts.

Alternatively, the beads might have provided personal information about the wearer, such as the wearer’s position in the social hierarchy, or that they had passed through puberty and into adulthood.

These beads might have also represented the origins of today’s fashions. (ANI)

Daylight could help fight obesity

Washington, Aug 22 (ANI): A new study, conducted by researchers at The University of Nottingham, has suggested that daylight could help control weight.

Previous studies have revealed that the activity of calorie-burning ‘brown fat’, also known as brown adipose tissue (BAT), is reduced with obesity. Therefore, promoting BAT function could prevent or reduce obesity in some people.

Now, the new study has shown – for the first time – that daylight is a major factor in controlling BAT activity.

“Our research has suggested a previously unknown mechanism for controlling BAT function in humans and this could potentially lead to new treatments for the prevention or reversal of obesity,” said study’s lead author Michael Symonds, Professor of Developmental Physiology in the School of Clincal Sciences at the university.

Winter was traditionally a time of the year that was accompanied with increased thermal demands and thus energy expenditure, but the body’s requirements for BAT has been reduced in recent times by central heating plus global warming.

BAT is capable of producing up to 300 times more heat per unit mass compared with all other tissues.

The researchers studied well over 3500 patients. The presence of BAT was documented and correlated with monthly changes in daylight and ambient temperature.

Their results showed that BAT was more common in females and that changes in BAT activity were more closely associated with day light than ambient temperature.

BAT is activated by the cold and is unique in being able to produce very large amounts of heat – but little is known about the main factors that regulate the amount of BAT in our bodies.

“Our research demonstrates a very strong seasonal variation in the presence of BAT. The study focused on the impact of daylight and ambient temperature, as these are two key factors in determining BAT function in small mammals. Our exciting new findings may help us find novel interventions aimed at promoting BAT activity particularly in the winter,” Symonds said.

The study has been published in the journal Diabetes. (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)

Now, a ‘smart house’ that texts you if you’ve left the front door open

London, July 14 (ANI): Think about a “smart house” that automatically turns the lights and cooling systems off and on as per our needs, and even texts us if we have left the front door open.

Well, this could soon be a reality, thanks to University of Hertfordshire researchers’ latest innovation- InterHome.

The researchers have designed a doll’s house on similar lines to test and demonstrate how much greener and secure our homes could be if they incorporated intelligent technologies that adapt to our daily routine.

The house is fitted with a network of infrared sensors connected to a central computer.

Johann Siau, the project’s coordinator, says that the software algorithms work out which rooms we tend to occupy at different times, and, accordingly, learn when we need the lights, heating or air conditioning systems turned on and when we don’t.

His tests have indicated that such technology could cut carbon emissions, and slash energy bills by an estimated 300 pounds per year, on average.

In fact, InterHome could also boost home security-by connecting door and window lock sensors to the computer, it can send a text message to the homeowner if they have forgotten to lock the front door, for instance.

Texting back will lock any doors or windows in question.

The “smart house” was unveiled in Cairo last week at the finals of the Microsoft Imagine Cup – a competition for technologies designed to solve global problems. (ANI)

Astronomers see high-speed galaxy collision in action

Washington, July 10 (ANI): Astronomers at the Chandra X-ray Observatory have spotted a galaxy collision in action, with one galaxy passing through the core of other galaxies at almost 2 million miles per hour.

The image obtained is of Stephan’s Quintet, a compact group of galaxies discovered about 130 years ago and located about 280 million light years from Earth.

Four of the galaxies in the group are visible in the optical image from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope.

A labeled version identifies these galaxies (NGC 7317, NGC 7318a, NGC 7318b and NGC 7319) as well as a prominent foreground galaxy (NGC 7320) that is not a member of the group.

The galaxy NGC 7318b is passing through the core of galaxies at almost 2 million miles per hour, and is thought to be causing the ridge of X-ray emission by generating a shock wave that heats the gas.

Additional heating by supernova explosions and stellar winds has also probably taken place in Stephan’s Quintet.

A larger halo of X-ray emission, detected by ESA’s (European Space Agency’s) XMM-Newton could be evidence of shock heating by previous collisions between galaxies in this group.

Some of the X-ray emissions are likely caused by binary systems containing massive stars that are losing material to neutron stars or black holes.

Stephan’s Quintet provides a rare opportunity to observe a galaxy group in the process of evolving from an X-ray faint system dominated by spiral galaxies to a more developed system dominated by elliptical galaxies and bright X-ray emission.

According to scientists, being able to witness the dramatic effect of collisions in causing this evolution is important for increasing the understanding of the origins of the hot, X-ray bright halos of gas in groups of galaxies.

Stephan’s Quintet shows an additional sign of complex interactions in the past, notably the long tails visible in the optical image.

These features were probably caused by one or more passages through the galaxy group by NGC 7317. (ANI)

“Cosmic blobs” a result of growing supermassive black holes

Washington, June 25 (ANI): New data obtained from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and other telescopes has pinpointed the source of “cosmic blobs” as growing supermassive black holes.

This discovery helps resolve the true nature of gigantic blobs of gas observed around very young galaxies.

About a decade ago, astronomers discovered immense reservoirs of hydrogen gas, which they named “blobs”, while conducting surveys of young distant galaxies.

The blobs are glowing brightly in optical light, but the source of immense energy required to power this glow and the nature of these objects were unclear.

A long observation from Chandra has identified the source of this energy for the first time.

The X-ray data show that a significant source of power within these colossal structures is from growing supermassive black holes partially obscured by dense layers of dust and gas.

The fireworks of star formation in galaxies are also seen to play an important role, thanks to Spitzer Space Telescope and ground-based observations.

“For ten years, the secrets of the blobs had been buried from view, but now we’ve uncovered their power source,” said James Geach of Durham University in the United Kingdom, who led the study.

“Now, we can settle some important arguments about what role they played in the original construction of galaxies and black holes,” he added.

Galaxies are believed to form when gas flows inwards under the pull of gravity and cools by emitting radiation.

This process should stop when the gas is heated by radiation and outflows from galaxies and their black holes.

Blobs could be a sign of this first stage, or of the second.

Based on the new data and theoretical arguments, Geach and his colleagues show that heating of gas by growing supermassive black holes and bursts of star formation, rather than cooling of gas, most likely powers the blobs.

The implication is that blobs represent a stage when the galaxies and black holes are just starting to switch off their rapid growth because of these heating processes.

This is a crucial stage of the evolution of galaxies and black holes – known as “feedback” – and one that astronomers have long been trying to understand.

“We’re seeing signs that the galaxies and black holes inside these blobs are coming of age and are now pushing back on the infalling gas to prevent further growth,” said coauthor Bret Lehmer, also of Durham.

“Massive galaxies must go through a stage like this or they would form too many stars and so end up ridiculously large by the present day,” he added. (ANI)

Hilarious campaign makes ‘world’s worst hotel’ a hit with travellers!

Melbourne, June 25 (ANI): Owing to a rather ‘ironical’ ad campaign, an Amsterdam hotel, which claimed to be ‘the worst hotel in the world’, has become a huge hit with travellers in the city.

The campaign, by advertising agency KesselsKramer, paints the Hans Brinker budget hotel in Amsterdam as dirty, uncomfortable and lacking basic necessities such as beds.

Although the advertisers promoted the hotel in dog poo, the 650-bed hotel is attracting customers in large numbers and runs at around 80 per cent occupancy even in the low season.

The hotel’s success is fully attributed the advertising campaign, which “takes honesty to the extreme” and are “revered and reviled in equal measure”, said the company’s website.

The ads promote the hotel as “similar to hell, but without proper heating”.

Dave Bell, Creative Director and Partner at KesselsKramer, said that the hotel has found a unique selling-point.

“Everybody is always trying to be the best, but there are merits in being the worst. May be more people should strive to be the worst at something, when you’re the worst you have a lot more room to be creative and do your own thing,” News.com.au quoted Bell as saying.

In a YouTube video, the hotel promotes itself as “accidentally eco-friendly”- having a lack of services such as cleaning and elevators that are out of order means it uses less energy.

“The Hans Brinker budget hotel has been helping the planet, unintentionally, since 1970,” said one advertisement.

“Here is a hotel where the light bulbs don’t work. A hotel whose showers have less hot water than is standard. Where elevators stay out of order for days. And whose vacuum cleaners’ buttons are rarely switched on,” the hotel said in the YouTube video.

“To lessen our impact on the environment staff do as little as possible for guests. An eco-elevator ensures that the only energy spent going to the room is your own,” said a poster.

“Leave the towel on the rack. We won’t wash it. Leave the towel on the floor. We still won’t wash it,” said another poster. (ANI)

New plasma torch may improve root canal treatment, reduce infection rates

Melbourne, June 24 (ANI): Scientists at the University of Southern California (USC) have come up with the world’s smallest plasma torch that may one day make root canal treatment faster and less painful, besides reducing the chance of infection after the procedure.

“Our goal is to guarantee that you won’t have to see a doctor for a follow-up visit,” ABC Science quoted says Professor Chunqi Jiang Jiang, who has reported this work in the online edition of the journal Plasma Processes and Polymers, as saying.

“One problem is that between 8 per cent and 10 per cent of patients have an infection post-operation. This is intended to eliminate the chance of an infection,” the researcher added.

Plasma, or ionized gas, is one of the four basic states of matter, the other three being solid, liquid and gas.

The researchers reveal that the trick to creating plasma at room temperature is to pulse it. They say that a continuous stream of plasma very quickly heats up the surrounding air.

According to them, pulsing the plasma allows the tiny electrons in it to heat up and move around, while keeping the much larger and heavier atom nucleus from heating up.

“If you have a piece of paper with bacteria on it and you apply cold plasma to it, the paper won’t burn but the bacteria will die,” says Professor Mounir Laroussi, of Old Dominion University in Virginia, who has studied the effect of cold plasmas for years.

“Cold plasma can kill bacteria on a variety of surfaces such as teeth or skin,” Laroussi adds.

The researchers say that upon being used in the mouth, the free electrons of plasma create single atoms of pure oxygen, ozone and other reactive forms of oxygen, all of which search for other atoms to bind with in the organic biofilms inside decayed teeth.

Biofilms are basically walled colonies of bacteria. In the human body, they can trigger the onset of an infection, and even protect the harmful bacteria from the most powerful antibiotics.

The researchers have revealed that cool, pulsed and purple plasma takes about five to ten minutes to clear an infected tooth of biofilms as compared to bleach, the conventional method for cleaning an infected tooth, which takes 30 minutes.

While about 10 per cent of patients treated with bleach are still infected, tests using the plasma torch on a few dozen human teeth have shown no signs of infection.

The plasma torch is also not as expensive as laser systems that are used as high-tech solutions to biofilms.

While laser systems costing up to 25,000 dollars, the plasma torch could retail for as little as 1,000 dollars, provided it passes official clinical trials.

Laroussi, who used to test cold plasmas effect on teeth, skin and wound healing, says that the trick to regulatory acceptance and commercialisation is ensuring that only harmful cells are killed.

“We can kill bacteria on teeth and on wounds. But we have to ensure that we are not creating a worse problem in nearby healthy cells as well,” says Laroussi.

Initial tests have shown that surrounding healthy tissue remains intact, although more testing is needed to definitively prove this.

Meanwhile, the USC researchers are concentrating on getting the funding necessary to continue with their research. (ANI)

Giant laser reactor aims to create nuclear fusion for first time

Washington, May 30 (ANI): A giant laser reactor has been unveiled in California, US, which scientists hope will accomplish nuclear fusion, the Holy Grail of energy sources, which was once thought impossible.

According to a report in Fox News, the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory will focus 192 laser beams on a hydrogen pellet the size of a bead, heating it to incredible temperatures in an attempt to recreate the power of the sun.

Nuclear fusion would create huge amounts of energy from tiny amounts of fuel. It would produce far less radioactive waste than conventional nuclear reactors.

But, it takes huge amounts of energy to trigger, and so far humans have managed to do so only by detonating atomic bombs.

“We have this big ball, right?” Ed Moses, program director of the National Ignition Facility, explained to Fox News. “And we hold our little targets inside of there, and the light focuses on there, and that’s where all the action happens,” he added.

The “action” aims to trigger a tiny thermonuclear explosion inside the huge target chamber, a blast sparked by the lasers, which bounce off a series of lenses and mirrors, intensifying and multiplying with each pass.

“Pretty soon, you have a lot of ‘em, and we have enough energy to drive our targets, to a point where they get to over 100 million degrees and it’s a pretty warm day,” said Moses.

Eventually turning ultraviolet, the beams push a million miles an hour toward the tiny hydrogen-fuel pellet in the center.

The resulting burst of energy should be so powerful, it could light up the entire country – but for only a split second.

“The facility is designed to do experiments that are confined within in the target chamber,” said project director Brian MacGowen.

“There has been a very thorough analysis of the potential impact of those experiments on the rest of the building and the community. They have all been reviewed extensively and the experiments are perfectly safe,” he added.

But, researchers here are confident their efforts will pay off – and be the game changer for meeting the world’s energy needs.

“It would change how we look at global warming. It would change pollution,” said Moses. “It would change all of those things. This is a small investment for that great payback,” he added. (ANI)

How to clean the air inside houses to reduce asthma, allergy symptoms

Washington, May 24 (ANI): Health experts say that having clean indoor air is crucial to managing symptoms among people with allergies and asthma.

The suggestion comes from Allergy and Asthma Network Mothers of Asthmatics (AANMA), the sole organization whose mission is to eliminate suffering and death due to asthma, allergies and related conditions.

The non-profit organization has even come up with five tips for spring-cleaning the air inside houses, which will make it lung friendly by reducing allergens and irritants.

These tips are:

1. Smoking: Ask family members or visitors not to smoke in your home.

2. Mold: Search under sinks, around tubs and showers, on windowsills and in laundry areas for any signs of dampness and mold. Track the source of water, plug it up and clean up visible mold. Purchase and use a dehumidifier in basement areas.

3. Air it out: Give your bedroom a thorough airing out-wash curtains, linens and bedspreads, and make sure to clean anywhere dust and allergens collect.

4. Use a HEPA vacuum: If you don’t have one already, consider getting a HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) vacuum. These vacuums have special filters that keep dust and allergens from blowing back into the air in your home.

5. Replace HVAC filters: Replace your furnace filters before air-conditioning season. And since the filter that comes with your HVAC (heating, ventilating and air conditioning) system isn’t designed to help you breathe better (it simply keeps dust and debris from clogging parts of the system) look into a high-efficiency filter or an air-cleaning unit. (ANI)

Asteroids may have boosted life on Earth 3.9 billion years ago

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A new study has indicated that the bombardment of Earth by asteroids 3.9 billion years ago may have enhanced early life rather then wipe it out.

The study, by University of Colorado at Boulder researchers, determined that the bombardment of Earth nearly 4 billion years ago by asteroids as large as the US state of Kansas would not have had the firepower to extinguish potential early life on the planet and may even have given it a boost.

Impact evidence from lunar samples, meteorites and the pockmarked surfaces of the inner planets paints a picture of a violent environment in the solar system during the Hadean Eon 4.5 to 3.8 billion years ago, particularly through a cataclysmic event known as the Late Heavy Bombardment about 3.9 million years ago.

Although many believe the bombardment would have sterilized Earth, the new study shows it would have melted only a fraction of Earth’s crust, and that microbes could well have survived in subsurface habitats, insulated from the destruction.

“These new results push back the possible beginnings of life on Earth to well before the bombardment period 3.9 billion years ago,” said CU-Boulder Research Associate Oleg Abramov.

“It opens up the possibility that life emerged as far back as 4.4 billion years ago, about the time the first oceans are thought to have formed,” he added.

The researchers used data from Apollo moon rocks, impact records from the moon, Mars and Mercury, and previous theoretical studies to build three-dimensional computer models that replicate the bombardment.

Abramov and CU-Boulder geological sciences Professor Stephen Mojzsis plugged in asteroid size, frequency and distribution estimates into their simulations to chart the damage to the Earth during the Late Heavy Bombardment, which is thought to have lasted for 20 million to 200 million years.

The 3-D models allowed Abramov and Mojzsis to monitor temperatures beneath individual craters to assess heating and cooling of the crust following large impacts in order to evaluate habitability.

The study indicated that less than 25 percent of Earth’s crust would have melted during such a bombardment.

“Even under the most extreme conditions we imposed, Earth would not have been completely sterilized by the bombardment,” said Abramov.

Instead, hydrothermal vents may have provided sanctuaries for extreme, heat-loving microbes known as “hyperthermophilic bacteria” following bombardments, said Mojzsis.

Even if life had not emerged by 3.9 billion years ago, such underground havens could still have provided a “crucible” for life’s origin on Earth, Mojzsis added. (ANI)

Fire and water to unlock ‘internal clocks’ of archaeological objects

Washington, May 20 (ANI): A team of scientists has developed a new way of dating archaeological objects, by using fire and water to unlock their ‘internal clocks’.

The scientists, from the University of Manchester and the University of Edinburgh, call this technique as ‘rehydroxylation dating’, which can be used to date fired clay ceramics like bricks, tile and pottery.

Working with The Museum of London, the team has been able to date brick samples from Roman, medieval and modern periods with remarkable accuracy.

They have established that their technique can be used to determine the age of objects up to 2,000 years old – but believe it has the potential to be used to date objects around 10,000 years old.

The method relies on the fact that fired clay ceramic material will start to chemically react with atmospheric moisture as soon as it is removed from the kiln after firing.

This continues over its lifetime causing it to increase in weight. The older the material, the greater the weight gain.

In 2003, the Manchester and Edinburgh team discovered a new law that precisely defines how the rate of reaction between ceramic and water varies over time.

The application of this law underpins the new dating method because the amount of water that is chemically combined with a ceramic provides an’internal clock’ that can be accessed to determine its age.

The technique involves measuring the mass of a sample of ceramic and then heating it to around 500 degrees Celsius in a furnace, which removes the water.

The sample is then monitored in a super-accurate measuring device known as a microbalance, to determine the precise rate at which the ceramic will combine with water over time.

Using the time law, it is possible to extrapolate the information collected to calculate the time it will take to regain the mass lost on heating – revealing the sample’s age.

According to Lead author Dr Moira Wilson, Senior Lecturer in the School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering (MACE), “We are extremely excited by the potential of this new technique, which could become an established way of determining the age of ceramic artifacts of archaeological interest.”

“The method could also be turned on its head and used to establish the mean temperature of a material over its lifetime, if a precise date of firing were known. This could potentially be useful in climate change studies,” Dr Wilson added. (ANI)

Tiny crystals in frozen comets created by outbursts from stars

Washington, May 14 (ANI): Astronomers have used NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope to determine that outbursts from stars create tiny silicate crystals in frozen comets.

Scientists have long wondered how tiny silicate crystals, which need sizzling high temperatures to form, have found their way into frozen comets, born in the deep freeze of the solar system’s outer edges.

The crystals would have begun as non-crystallized silicate particles, part of the mix of gas and dust from which the solar system developed.

Now, a team of astronomers believes they have found a new explanation for both where and how these crystals may have been created, by using NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope to observe the growing pains of a young, Sun-like star.

The researchers from Germany, Hungary and the Netherlands found that silicate appears to have been transformed into crystalline form by an outburst from a star.

They detected the infrared signature of silicate crystals on the disk of dust and gas surrounding the star EX Lupi during one of its frequent flare-ups, or outbursts, seen by Spitzer in April 2008.

These crystals were not present in Spitzer’s previous observations of the star’s disk during one of its quiet periods.

“We believe that we have observed, for the first time, ongoing crystal formation,” said Attila Juhasz of the Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany, one of the research paper’s authors.

“We think that the crystals were formed by thermal annealing of small particles on the surface layer of the star’s inner disk by heat from the outburst. This is a completely new scenario about how this material could be created,” Juhasz added.

Annealing is a process in which a material is heated to a certain temperature at which some of its bonds break and then re-form, changing the material’s physical properties.

The crystals appear to be forsterite, a material often found in comets and in protoplanetary disks.

The crystals also appear hot, evidence that they were created in a high-temperature process, but not by shock heating.

“At outburst, EX Lupi became about 100 times more luminous,” said Juhasz.

“Crystals formed in the surface layer of the disk but just at the distance from the star where the temperature was high enough to anneal the silicate – about 1,000 Kelvin – but still lower than 1,500 Kelvin. Above that, the dust grains will evaporate,” Juhasz added.

The radius of this crystal formation zone, the researchers note, is comparable to that of the terrestrial-planet region in the solar system. (ANI)

Canadian vote could decide carbon tax’s future

British Columbia campaign officially starts

* Seen as test on economy and carbon tax

* Candidates must compete with NHL playoffs

By Allan Dowd

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, April 14 (Reuters) – Politicians on Canada’s Pacific Coast hit the campaign trail on Tuesday for the start of a provincial election that could decide the fate of North America’s first comprehensive carbon tax.

British Columbia is the first province to hold an election since Canada slid into recession, although polls indicate the governing Liberal Party is headed for another victory over the New Democratic Party when voters cast their ballots on May 12.

NDP leader Carole James called on voters to punish Premier Gordon Campbell’s Liberals for mishandling the economic downturn, which has pushed unemployment in the province’s largely resource-based economy to 7.4 percent.

“British Columbia has had the worst job losses in the country. We need a change,” James told a rally near Vancouver.

The Liberals, who have governed the province since 2001, say the New Democrats mismanaged British Columbia’s finances when the economy was doing well in the 1990s and cannot be trusted to handle it now when times are tough.

“British Columbians know this election is critical to their future and that the progress we have made could all be lost in a heartbeat if they make the wrong choice on May 12,” Campbell said in a written statement.

A survey released by research firm Mustel Group showed the right-of-center Liberals with 52 percent support among decided voters, compared with 35 percent for the left-leaning NDP and 12 percent for the Green Party.

The campaign has created an unusual dilemma for the province’s environmental activists. They have traditionally sided with the New Democrats but now object to the NDP’s plans to scrap the carbon tax launched by the Liberals last year.

The tax applies to nearly all fossil fuels, including gasoline and home heating fuel, starting at C$10 per tonne of carbon emissions in 2008 and increasing by C$5 a tonne annually for four years.

The tax became a lightning rod for criticism when it was launched in July, when energy prices were already at record highs and drivers began paying an additional 2.41 Canadian cents on a litre of gasoline (about 9.13 cents per U.S. gallon).

The NDP’s “Axe the Tax” campaign coincided with a rise in the polls that briefly had them neck and neck with the Liberals in November, garnering particular support in rural areas of the province.

The NDP plans to replace the carbon tax with other caps on emissions aimed at industrial sources, but environmental groups complain that will do little to reduce greenhouse gasses and could end up costing jobs.

British Columbia is already part of the Western Climate Initiative, a coalition of U.S. states and Canadian provinces that have agreed to adopt a cap and trade system for carbon emissions starting in 2012.

Candidates from both main parties will also have to compete for voters attention with a high-profile, non-political distraction: the Vancouver Canucks begin their National Hockey League playoffs this week in a quest for the Stanley Cup.

($1=$1.21 Canadian) (Reporting Allan Dowd, editing by Rob Wilson)

NASA selects material for heat shield that will protect next gen space explorers

Washington, April 8 (ANI): NASA has chosen the material for a heat shield that will protect a new generation of space explorers when they return from the moon.

After extensive study, NASA has selected the Avcoat ablator system for the Orion crew module.

Orion is part of the Constellation Program that is developing the next-generation spacecraft system for human exploration of the moon and further destinations in the solar system.

The Orion crew module, which will launch atop an Ares I rocket, is targeted to begin carrying astronauts to the International Space Station in 2015 and to the moon in 2020.

Orion will face extreme conditions during its voyage to the moon and on the journey home. On the blistering return through Earth’s atmosphere, the module will encounter temperatures as high as 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit.

Heating rates may be up to five times more extreme than rates for missions returning from the International Space Station.

Orion’s heat shield, the dish-shaped thermal protection system at the base of the spacecraft, will endure the most heat and will erode, or “ablate,” in a controlled fashion, transporting heat away from the crew module during its descent through the atmosphere.

To protect the spacecraft and its crew from such severe conditions, the Orion Project Office at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston identified a team to develop the thermal protection system, or TPS, heat shield.

For more than three years, NASA’s Orion Thermal Protection System Advanced Development Project considered eight different candidate materials, including the two final candidates, Avcoat and Phenolic Impregnated Carbon Ablator, or PICA, both of which have proven successful in previous space missions.

Avcoat was used for the Apollo capsule heat shield and on select regions of the space shuttle orbiter in its earliest flights. It was put back into production for the study.

It is made of silica fibers with an epoxy-novalic resin filled in a fiberglass-phenolic honeycomb and is manufactured directly onto the heat shield substructure and attached as a unit to the crew module during spacecraft assembly.

NASA, working with Orion prime contractor Lockheed Martin, recommended Avcoat as the more robust, reliable and mature system.

“The biggest challenge with Avcoat has been reviving the technology to manufacture the material such that its performance is similar to what was demonstrated during the Apollo missions,” said John Kowal, Orion’s thermal protection system manager at Johnson.

“Once that had been accomplished, the system evaluations clearly indicated that Avcoat was the preferred system,” he added. (ANI)

U.S. experts say much rides on North Korean rocket

North Korea would demonstrate an ability to hit much of the United States with a long-range missile if it succeeds in launching a satellite in space, the former head of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency said on Friday.

“If they have a successful Taepodong-2 space launch shot they should be able to range most of northwestern United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, as well as part of the mainland, even with a two-stage missile,” said retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Henry Obering, who ran U.S. missile-defense development until Jan. 1.

Much depends on whether Pyongyang has succeeded in developing advanced propellants for the rocket that satellite images show it is readying to launch as soon as Saturday.

South Korea and Japan have said the North’s declared goal — sending a communications satellite into orbit — is mere cover for a test of the long-range Taepodong-2 missile.

A similar missile blew apart about 40 seconds after launch in July 2006.

If the North successfully puts a satellite in space using a three-stage missile, as many experts predict it will try to do, “they would be able to range about half of the continental United States,” Obering said. “And with advanced propellants … they could range all of the United States.”

“That’s one of the reasons that we have our ears up and (are) very alert — because it’s a major step forward,” he told a briefing organized by the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance, a grass-roots- and industry-funded group that backs a layered anti-missile shield the Bush administration began deploying in 2004.

The extent of North Korea’s mastery of advanced rocket propellants was uncertain at the time he left the U.S. government, Obering said. “But we do know that they have demonstrated the ability to go beyond the basic SCUD-propellant technology from the 1980s.”

North Korea also is estimated to have enough ingredients for at least half a dozen nuclear weapons, the U.S. Congressional Research Service said in a Feb. 12 report.

A successful space shot would show the North was “closer to gaining a capability that can be used to hold hostage a number of American cities — and thereby in a regional crisis in the future, serve as a weapon of intimidation,” said Robert Joseph, the State Department’s top arms-control official during part of

President George W. Bush’s administration.

“When you watch North Korea … you should be thinking of Iran,” he said. “In the ballistic missile business, these two countries are tied together at the hip.”

Joseph Bermudez, who analyzes North Korea’s missile program for Jane’s, a publisher of authoritative weapons-related reference material, said converting a space launch vehicle to deliver a warhead involved “trading out just the tip of the system.”

But the production of a reliable ballistic missile warhead is “extremely difficult,” he said. “You have to solve the problem of extreme vibration, rapid acceleration and deceleration as well as big swings in heating and cooling.”

Oil rises above $49 in Asia

SINGAPORE (AP) Oil rose above $49 a barrel Thursday in Asia as glimmers of hope that the U.S. economy may be stabilizing were weighed against concerns that global demand remains weak. Benchmark crude for May delivery rose 94 cents to $49.33 a barrel by afternoon in Singapore in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The contract fell $1.27 on Wednesday to settle at $48.39. Oil prices have pulled back from 3-month highs of above $54 a barrel last month as investor optimism that the global recession may be bottoming has waned.

Still, some investors have taken heart from improving U.S. housing data that the worst could be over. Pending home sales rebounded in February from a record low, the National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday, while the Institute for Supply Management’s index of manufacturing activity contracted in March but by a bit less than anticipated.

“You see bright spots here and there,” said Jonathan Kornafel, Asia director for market maker Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore. “But I think the supply and demand fundamentals will push us lower.

” The Energy Department reported Wednesday that crude inventories continued to rise last week, and gasoline stockpiles jumped despite predictions for a steep drop. Crude inventories grew by 2.8 million barrels, or 0.8 percent, to 359.4 million barrels for the week ended March 27, the department’s Energy Information Administration said in its weekly report.

Oil stockpiles have not been this high since July 1993, according to EIA data. They’re also 15.5 percent above year-ago levels.

Worsening jobs data is also dimming hope that crude demand could rebound soon. The ADP National Employment Report said Wednesday that private sector employment dropped by 742,000 in March, higher than anticipated.

Supply cuts by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have helped bolster prices this year. OPEC has pledged to reduce output quotas by 4.2 million barrels a day since September.

Oil will likely trade between $40 and $50 a barrel for the next few months until investors get a clearer picture of whether massive stimulus packages across the globe can spark a second-half recovery, Kornafel said. “There’s been enough supply removed and it seems we’ve hit economic bottom,” Kornafel said.

“I don’t think oil belongs below $40, just as it doesn’t belong above $50.” In other Nymex trading, gasoline for May delivery rose 0.85 cent to $1.38 a gallon and heating oil gained 1.67 cents to $1.36 a gallon.

Natural gas for May delivery was steady at $3.70 per 1,000 cubic feet. In London, Brent prices rose 85 cents to $49.29 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.