When a parrot stole a British tourist’s passport in New Zealand

London, May 29 (ANI): A British tourist was left in the lurch after a large wild parrot known as the kea stole his passport in New Zealand.

According to the police, the Scottish visitor lodged his complaint of theft from a tour bus on its way to Milford Sound, a coastal beauty spot in South Island’s rugged Fiordland region.

And a police spokesman in Te Anau, the nearest town, has revealed that the kea had swept off a brightly coloured courier bag containing the man’s passport, just when the coach made a stop and the driver opened the luggage compartment.

While the passport has not been recovered as yet, officers find it difficult to trace it down, given the 4,600 square mile size of Fiordland’s alpine national park.

The Scotsman, on the condition of anonymity, said that the British High Commission in Wellington has told him that he might have to wait for up to six weeks before receiving a replacement passport.

He said that he was planning to return home to Scotland in August.

“Being Scottish, I’ve got a sense of humour, so I did take it with humour, but obviously there is a side of me that is still raging,” the Telegraph quoted him as telling the Southland Times newspaper.

He added: “My passport is somewhere out there in Fiordland. The kea is probably using it for fraudulent claims or something.” (ANI)

Cameraman filming Titanic sister ship dies

Cameraman filming Titanic sister ship diesAthens – A member of a National Geographic team filming the wreckage of Britannic, the Titanic’s sister ship, off the coast of Kea in the Aegean died of decompression sickness, reports said Monday.

The 37-year-old diver, identified as Carl Spencer, was taken by helicopter from the small island to a Greek navy hospital in Athens Sunday after losing consciousness, but doctors there were unable to revive him.

The British man was part of 17-member National Geographic crew filming the Britannic wreckage.

He was an experienced diver who led a similar expedition to the Britannic, a former White Star ocean liner and sister ship to the Titanic, in 2003.

The 53,000-ton Britannic was turned into a floating hospital in Wold War 1 but ended up sinking off the coast of Kea in 1916 after hitting a German mine.

The diver had also taken part in an exploration of the Titanic wreckage as part of a Discovery Channel expedition led by filmmaker James Cameron, who directed the 1997 blockbuster “Titanic.” (dpa)

Astronomers spot most distant object in the Universe

London, April 28 (ANI): Astronomers have spotted the most distant object yet confirmed in the universe, which is a self-destructing star that exploded 13.1 billion light years from Earth.

According to a report in New Scientist, it detonated just 640 million years after the big bang, around the end of the cosmic “dark ages”, when the first stars and galaxies were lighting up space.

The object is a gamma-ray burst (GRB) – the brightest type of stellar explosion.

GRBs occur when massive, spinning stars collapse to form black holes and spew out jets of gas at nearly the speed of light.

These jets send gamma rays our way, along with “afterglows” at other wavelengths, which are produced when the jet heats up surrounding gas.

The burst, dubbed GRB 090423 for the date of its discovery on April 23, was originally spotted by NASA’s Swift satellite at 0755 GMT.

Within an hour, astronomers began training ground-based telescopes on the same patch of sky to study the burst’s infrared afterglow.

Some of the first observations were made on Mauna Kea in Hawaii with the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope and the Gemini North telescope.

Other telescopes later measured the spectrum of the afterglow, revealing that the burst detonated about 13.1 billion light years from Earth.

“It’s the most distance gamma-ray burst, but it’s also the most distant object in the universe overall,” said Edo Berger of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, a member of the team that observed the afterglow with Gemini North.

This burst lies at a redshift of 8.2, more distant than the previous GRB record holder, which lay at a redshift of 6.7.

Other astronomers have claimed to find galaxies at even greater distances – at redshifts of 10 and 9, but those findings are still ambiguous, according to Joshua Bloom of the University of California, Berkeley, who observed the afterglow using the Gemini South telescope in Chile.

Until now, the record holder for the farthest galaxy had a spectroscopically confirmed redshift of 6.96.

The burst’s immense distance makes the now-dead star the earliest object to be discovered from an era called ‘reionisation’, which occurred within the first billion years after the big bang.

At that time, an obscuring fog of neutral hydrogen atoms was being burned off by radiation from the first stars and galaxies, and possibly also from the annihilation of dark matter particles.

“For astronomy, this is a watershed event,” Bloom told New Scientist. “This is the beginning of the study of the universe as it was before most of the structure that we know about today came into being,” he added. (ANI)

Use the net to go ‘around the world in 80 telescopes’

London, April 3 (ANI): In a live 24-hour webcast today, anyone on the Internet will get a unique opportunity to explore some of the most advanced astronomical observatories both on and off the planet, as part of the International Year of Astronomy (IYA2009) initiative ‘Around the World in 80 Telescopes’.

The webcast would start with a broadcast from the Gemini North Telescope in Hawaii at 10am BST, night time in Hawaii, moving around the globe for whistle-stop tours of the international observatories, while the large telescopes are exploring night skies, observing distant galaxies, searching for extrasolar planets around other stars, or studying our own solar system.

It starts off at the Mauna Kea peak in Hawaii, one of the best places in the world for observatories thanks to the altitude and clear air conditions and the home of UK participating telescopes like the United Kingdom Infra-Red Telescope (UKIRT) and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT).

The telescopes include gravitational-wave detectors such as GEO600 which search for ripples in space-time, space-borne telescopes like SWIFT, STEREO and XMM-NEWTON, and ground-based telescopes such as the Very Large Telescope VLT at the European Southern Observatory’s site in Chile, plus the Jodrell Bank radio telescope in Cheshire.

According to Robin Clegg, Head of Science in Society at STFC (Science and Technology Facilities Council), said, “Exciting astronomical discoveries and indeed the range of telescopes in use are inspirational and stimulate young people to get engaged with science and technology subjects at school,” Clegg added.

As the Earth turns on its axis and the sun rises on Hawaii, the webcast moves around the world, visiting the Anglo-Australian Telescope at 1pm BST, Jodrell Bank Observatory near Manchester at 6pm BST, the William Herschel Telescope in the Canary Islands at 12.10am BST (Saturday morning), finishing up at the Palomar Observatory in California at 09.40am BST, along with dozens of other observatories in between.

“As thousands of local events are being held around the country to celebrate the 400 years since Galileo made his first revolutionary observations and sketches of the Moon, Around the World in 80 Telescopes gives everyone the chance to see the amazing work that professional astronomers do, furthering the boundaries of our knowledge and helping us understand our place in the Universe,” said Steve Owens, UK coordinator for IYA 2009.

Around the World in 80 Telescopes is happening as part of the IYA 2009′s 100 Hours of Astronomy project, which runs from 2-5 April. (ANI)

“World”s biggest laser pointer” to unravel mystery behind birth and death of stars

Sydney, Jan 5 (ANI): Astronomers are using what they say is the “world”s biggest laser pointer” to unravel the mystery behind the birth and death of stars.

According to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, the international team of astronomers is led by Stuart Ryder from the Anglo-Australian Observatory, near Coonabarabran.

“We are using a laser 10,000 times more powerful than the ones you can have in NSW (New South Wales),” said Ryder, who is seeking to explain a mystery threatening to undermine science”s understanding of how stars are born and how they die.

The mystery is that about 250 million light years away, two galaxies are colliding, slamming massive clouds of gas together to give birth to new stars.

Large stars end their lives in massive explosions called supernovae. Inside the colliding galaxies, however, there is an absence of any stellar death.

“We are seeing only a few per cent of the supernovae we should be seeing,” said Dr Ryder. “There should be many, many more stars dying,” he added.

One possible explanation is that science”s understanding of stars is wrong.

Another is that dying stars, “like cockroaches dying unseen under the couch”, are easily missed.

To discover which is right, Dr Ryder is using sophisticated new technology called laser guide star adaptive optics at the giant Gemini telescope, atop Hawaii”s 4200-metre Mauna Kea.

Adaptive optics allows astronomers to produce extraordinarily sharp images by canceling the blurring effect of Earth”s atmosphere, which also makes stars twinkle.

A 10-watt laser is blasted 90 kilometers into the sky, causing atoms to glow, creating “an artificial star”.

The atmosphere also blurs the artificial star.

“We know what shape it ought to be,” said Dr Ryder, adding that by watching it twinkle, they can plot the atmospheric distortions.

Computers then use the information to manipulate the telescope”s galactic observations, removing the distortions.

By comparing Gemini images snapped this year with ones shot by the Hubble telescope in 2004, Dr Ryder”s team, including Finnish and South African scientists, has already spotted one previously unseen supernova.

With only a third of the two-year project completed, he expects to find at least a dozen more.

“It shows we are on the right track,” said Ryder. (ANI)