Schumacher says he’s full of drive after “three-year break”

Kuala Lumpur, Apr. 1 (ANI): Returning after a three year break, Formula One legend Michael Schumacher appears full of drive ahead of the Malaysian Formula 1 Grand Prix, beginning this Friday.

“If not for the three-year break, I would not be able or capable to do what I do now…I feel very motivated and I am happy doing what I’m doing. It’s a big challenge and I like challenges,” The Star Online quoted Schumacher, 41, as saying.

Addressing a press conference at the Petronas Pit Pulse VIP marquee, Schumacher pointed out that the weather in Malaysia was “much more exciting” than the winter in Europe.

The seven-time Formula One world champion said he was thankful to his fans who believed “so much” in him.

“I like to satisfy everybody, but mostly myself. I have never taken anything for granted and you need hard work to succeed,” he said.

Asked whether he was disappointed with his performance so far, Schumacher said he was happy with what he was doing.

“Why? You know that is what people like to see at the moment but it’s not what I see. I am sorry that my opinion is different to what some media, at least, feel I should be happy with or not happy with,” he said.

“But it’s a free opinion from everybody. I myself am quite happy. I have made the maximum out of my possibilities and from what we can do,” he added. (ANI)

Ancient oceans yield clues to the origins of animal life on Earth

Washington, September 10 (ANI): Analysis of a rock type found only in the world’s oldest oceans has shed new light on how large animals first got a foothold on the Earth.

By analysing the isotopes of chromium in iron-rich sediments formed in the ancient oceans, a scientific team, led by Professor Robert Frei at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, has found that a rise in atmospheric oxygen levels 580 million years ago was closely followed by the evolution of animal life.

The data offers new insight into how animal life – and ultimately humans – first came to roam the planet.

“Because animals evolved in the sea, most previous research has focussed on oceanic oxygen levels,” explained Newcastle University’s Dr Simon Poulton, one of the authors of the research paper.

“Our research confirms for the first time that a rise in atmospheric oxygen was the driving force for oxygenation of the oceans 580 million years ago, and that this was the catalyst for the evolution of large complex animals,” he added.

Distinctive chromium isotope signals occur when continental rocks are altered and weathered as a result of oxygen levels rising in the atmosphere.

The chromium released by this weathering is then washed into the seas and deposited in the deepest oceans – trapped in iron-rich rocks on the sea bed.

Using this new data, the research team has not only been able to establish the trigger for the evolution of animals, but have also demonstrated that oxygen began to pulse into the atmosphere earlier than previously thought.

“Oxygen levels actually began to rise 2.8 billion years ago,” explained Dr Poulton.

“But, instead of this rise being steady and gradual over time, what we saw in our data was a very unstable situation with short-lived episodes of free oxygen in the atmosphere early in Earth’s history, followed by plummeting levels around 2 billion years ago,” he said.

“It was not until a second rise in atmospheric oxygen 580 million years ago that larger complex animals were able to get a foothold on the Earth,” he added. (ANI)

Scientists using laser light to generate underwater sound

Washington, September 6 (ANI): The United States Naval Research Laboratory is working on a new technology that uses flashes of laser light to remotely create underwater sound.

Researchers behind the project say that the new technology has the potential to expand and improve both Naval and commercial underwater acoustic applications, including undersea communications, navigation, and acoustic imaging.

Dr. Ted Jones, a physicist in the Plasma Physics Division, is leading a team of researchers from the Plasma Physics, Acoustics, and Marine Geosciences Divisions in developing this acoustic source.

The researchers used a 532 nm laser pulse for their study at the Salt Water Tank Facility.

They also used air bubblers and controlled water and air temperatures to create ocean-like conditions in the laboratory.

The research team could efficiently convert light into sound by concentrating the light sufficiently to ionize a small amount of water, which then absorbed laser energy and superheats.

They said that the result was a small explosion of steam that could generate a 220 decibel pulse of sound.

Given that the driving laser pulse has the ability to travel through both air and water, the researchers say that a compact laser on either an underwater or airborne platform can be used for remote acoustic generation.

They believe that their method would be a significant addition to traditional direct backscattering acoustic data. (ANI)

MJ’s doc spent 47 mins making calls after he stopped breathing

London, August 26 (ANI): Michael Jackson’s personal physician Conrad Murray has been accused of spending 47 minutes making calls to another doctor, a lawyer and a mystery associate after the singer stopped breathing.

Dr Steven Hoefflin, who treated Jackson for 25 years, alleged Murray phoned fellow medic Arnold Klein for advice on what to do as the King of Pop lay dying.

“Murray definitely called Klein because Klein taught him how to administer propofol,” the Sun quoted Hoefflin as saying.

“There were two in-state calls then one out-of-state. He was calling an attorney – he had to because Michael was dead.

“He tried to cover it up by telling everyone Michael had a weak pulse, but Michael was dead,” he added.

Hoefflin, a respected plastic surgeon, also claimed that Murray rang an attorney before informing a security guard to dial 911 and summon paramedics to Jackson’s Los Angeles home.

But a lawyer representing Murray recently denied claims that the medic left Jackson to make phone calls after giving him powerful anaesthetic Propofol.

Lawyer Ed Chernoff issued a statement seeking to clarify parts of a court affidavit unsealed in Houston, Texas.

The contents came to light as reports claimed that the Los Angeles County coroner had concluded Jackson’s death was homicide and that he had lethal levels of Propofol in his body when he died on June 25. (ANI)

Polio eradication strategy approved

New Delhi, Aug 20 (ANI): The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs today gave its approval for implementation of the polio eradication strategy with an estimated expenditure at Rs.3203.98 crore for the year 2009-2010 to 2011-12.

The main objective of the project is to achieve the goal of zero transmission of polio and obtaining international polio free certification for accomplishment of this goal.

The annual strategy for polio eradication is decided on the basis of the recommendations of the India Expert Advisory Group (IEAG) consisting of national and international experts.

The IEAG has recommended a total of six National Immunization Day (NIDs), Nine Sub National Immunization Day (SNIDs) and forty Mop Up rounds for the period 2009-10 to 2011-12.

Pulse Polio Immunization (PPI) was started in India in 1995-96. This is the largest public health intervention ever taken up anywhere in the world.

The estimated number of children aged between 0-5 years to be vaccinated in a National Immunization Day is around 172 million.

Sub National Immunization Day, in the high risk states/areas will cover about 69 million children between 0-5 years.

Mop Up immunization round will be undertaken in the districts and in the surrounding areas, where polio cases will be reported, covering about 7.5 million target population. (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)

Scientists come a nano-step closer to weighing a single atom

Melbourne, July 28 (ANI): In a new study, a team of scientists has understood how nanoparticles lose energy, thus coming a key step closer towards producing nanoscale detectors for weighing any single atom.

In this study, the team from the University of Melbourne, Argonne’s Center for Nanoscale Materials in Illinois and the University of Chicago synthesized and studied tiny gold rods with a width 5000 times smaller than the thickness of a human hair.

According to Professor John Sader from the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Melbourne, in the same way as a classroom ruler decreases its frequency of vibration when an eraser is attached, nanomechanical mass sensors work by measuring their change in vibration frequency as mass is added.

The sensitivity of such nanomechanical devices is intimately connected to how much energy they displace.

So, researchers needed to understand how damping (loss of energy) is transferred both to the fluid surroundings and within the nanostructures.

It has not previously been possible to determine the rate at which vibrations in metal nanoparticle systems are damped, because of significant variations in the dimensions of the particles that have been studied – which masks the vibrations.

However, by studying a system of bipyramid-shaped gold nanoparticles with highly uniform sizes and shapes, the researchers overcame this limitation.

“Previous measurements of nanomechanical damping have primarily focused on devices where only one- or two-dimensions are nanoscale, such as long nanowires.

Our measurements and calculations provide insight into how energy is dissipated in devices that are truly nanoscale in all three-dimensions,” said Professor Sader.

Illuminating these bipyramidal nanoparticle systems with an ultra-fast laser pulse, set them vibrating mechanically at microwave frequencies.

These vibrations were long-lived and for the first time damping in these nanoparticle systems could be interrogated and characterized.

Moreover, the researchers separated out the portion of damping that is due to the material itself and that surrounding liquid for which they developed a parameter-free theoretical model that quantitatively explains this fluid damping.

Such ultrasensitive measurements could ultimately be used in areas such as medical research and diagnostics, enabling the detection of minuscule disease-causing agents such as viruses and prions at the single molecule level. (ANI)

Laser technology creates new forms of metal and enhances aircraft performance

Washington, July 16 (ANI): A team of scientists is using laser light technology to create new forms of metal and enhance aircraft performance.

The laser light technology is being used by AFOSR (Air Force Office of Scientific Research) funded researchers at the University of Rochester to help the military create new forms of metal that may guide, attract and repel liquids and cool small electronic devices.

Dr. Chunlei Guo and his team of researchers for the project discovered a way to transform a shiny piece of metal into one that is pitch black, not by paint, but by using incredibly intense bursts of laser light.

The black metal created, absorbs all radiation that shines upon it.

“With the creation of the black metal, an entirely new class of material becomes available to us, which may open up a whole new horizon for various applications,” said Guo.

“To do this, we looked at the reverse process of light absorption or light radiation and transformed the incandescent lamp into a bulb that glows twice as brightly as a regular light source, while consuming the same amount of energy,” Guo added.

The key to creating this super-filament is an ultra-brief, ultra-intense beam of light called a femtosecond laser pulse.

The laser burst lasts only a few quadrillionths of a second.

That intense blast forces the surface of the metal to form nano-structures and micro-structures that dramatically alter how efficiently light can radiate from the filament.

In addition to increasing the brightness of a bulb, Guo’s process can be used to tune the color of the light as well.

In addition to this research, Guo and his team have been working on creating technology that may enable the Air Force to create an additional kind of metal.

They are able to do this by using the femtosecond laser once again to alter the surface of metal and create unique nano- and micro-scale structures on the metal.

The unique nano-structures which are created from the laser affect the way liquid molecules interact with metal molecules.

The liquid spreads out over the metal because the nano-structures attach themselves to the liquid’s molecules more readily than the liquid’s molecules bond to each other.

The end result is the formation of a new kind of metal that can cool the plane’s electronic brain and heat pumps and allow the craft to retain dominance over any enemy that is also in flight. (ANI)

‘Laser dazzler’ to stop careless drivers without blinding them

London, July 2 (ANI): Reports indicate that the Pentagon is developing a laser dazzler that will force drivers to stop without harming their eyes.

When a vehicle approaches a checkpoint at speed, ignoring warning signs to slow down, troops do not know whether the driver is simply careless or a suicide bomber.

This makes it necessary for troops to have a clear and harmless way of forcing drivers to stop.

Green laser dazzlers designed to temporarily blind drivers were sent to US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan for just this purpose.

But at short range they can damage the eye, and a number of US troops and civilians have ended up in hospital with eye injuries after “friendly fire” incidents.

US troops and civilians have been sent to hospital with eye injuries after ‘friendly fire’ incidents.

Now, according to a report in New Scientist, the US Department of Defense’s Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate (JNLWD) in Quantico, Virginia is developing a pulsed laser designed to prevent eye damage.

Its wavelength means a portion of the light is absorbed by the vehicle windscreen, vaporising the outer layer of the glass and producing a plasma.

This absorbs the rest of the pulse and re-emits the energy as a brilliant white light that is dazzling but harmless.

Because the light is emitted from the windscreen, the effect on the driver’s eyes should be the same regardless of the vehicle’s distance from the laser.

According to Scott Griffiths of the JNLWD, a working prototype could be ready by next year. (ANI)

Unconscious Jackson still had pulse when doctor found him

New York, June 29 (ANI): Michael Jackson’s personal doctor has told officials that the King of Pop was unconscious when he reached him but still had a pulse, according to the doctor’s lawyers.

Dr Conrad Murray was quizzed for three hours by the Los Angeles Police Department on June 27.

He is suspected of injecting the singer with the potent painkiller Demerol before the star collapsed in his home.

Murray is also believed to have plunged a syringe into Jackson’s heart in his failed attempts to save him.

But, according to his lawyer Matthew B. Alford, Murray has told investigators that, contrary to reports, he did not give the 50-year-old the powerful painkillers in the hours before his death on June 25.

“He doesn’t know what caused this,” the New York Times quoted Alford as saying.

Homicide detectives investigating the death have insisted it is not a criminal investigation, and that they interviewed Murray to know what happened in the finals moments of Jackson’s life.

The coroner’s examination recently ruled out foul play though the exact cause of the singer’s death is yet to be determined.

A spokesman confirmed that Jackson was on prescription medicine, but refused to say whether that might have led to the singer’s demise.

The Jackson family reportedly carried out their own private second autopsy to gather evidence for a legal battle if anybody found to be responsible was not brought to justice. (ANI)

Melanie Oudin – Jelena Jankovic – Melanie Oudin Photo – Wimbledon 2009 – Melanie Oudin in Wimbledon 2009 – American teen Melanie Oudin eliminates Jelena Jankovic

Melanie Oudin – Jelena Jankovic – Melanie Oudin Photo – Wimbledon 2009 – Melanie Oudin in Wimbledon 2009 – American teen Melanie Oudin eliminates Jelena Jankovic

Wimbledon, England (AP) – Teenage qualifier Melanie Oudin of Marietta, Ga., has advanced to the fourth round in her first Wimbledon by upsetting former No. 1 Jelena Jankovic, 6-7 (8), 7-5, 6-2

The No. 6-seeded Jankovic struggled with the heat on a sunny, 82-degree Saturday. When the 66-minute first set ended, a trainer and doctor came on court to check Jankovic’s pulse and blood pressure.

She rested on a towel while being treated, and after several minutes sat up while ice was applied to her neck and midsection. Play resumed after a 12-minute delay, and Oudin was the steadier player from the baseline the rest of the way.

The 17-year-old Oudin had an 0-2 record in Grand Slam matches before making her Wimbledon debut this week.

Britain considered dropping millions of poisoned darts on German troops in final stages of WW II

London, June 26 (ANI): During the final stages of the Second World War, Britain considered dropping millions of poisoned darts packed into bombs and released from the air on German troops with the potential to kill or incapacitate anyone within 10,000 sq yds, according to released secret files.

Created by British and Canadian scientists, the designs show three different types of dart. One looks like a fountain pen, the others like a flat penknife. The Singer sewing machine company was even approached to “unwittingly” provide needles for the weapon.

Records show that they were tested on sheep and goats in Canada to establish the effectiveness of dropping the projectiles from high and low altitudes, The Times reported.

Documents released by the National Archives under the Freedom of Information Act include letters and notes collected over four years that demonstrate how close the British Government came to deploying the deadly darts.

Listed as “Top Secret”, it was written by an official from Porton Down, in Salisbury, which was then a government research centre for chemical and biological weapons. Scientists were working on the initiative with their counterparts at Suffield, a similar site in Canada.

The teams explored the most effective poison for the dart, comparing variations of urethane that caused death within 30 minutes with another substance, referred to only as “X” that killed its victim within 24 hours, The Times reported.

Sheep and goats were again used in the tests, showing that the poison induced muscle twitching, salivation, sweating, defecation and retching. The pulse rate slowed and blood pressure fell as the animals collapsed and died.

Death would occur if a dart stayed in the body for more than 50 seconds. If it was taken out sooner, the victim might suffer a temporary collapse. (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)

Nicole Scherzinger ‘Hush Hush-ly’ strips naked for bath

London, May 28 (ANI): Pussycat dolls vocalist Nicole Scherzinger has set the pulse racing with a revealing new video for Hush Hush; Hush Hush.

The 30-year-old singer, who’s dating F1 star Lewis Hamilton, is seen singing naked in the bath tube in the new video, reports the Sun.

Meanwhile, American pop star is reportedly hunting for a dazzling engagement ring for her forthcoming engagement ceremony with beau Lewis Hamilton.

Nicole is currently hunting for an exquisite diamond ring, and has been visiting multifarious jewellery stores to buy one for the occasion.

Nicole has been dating Brit formula one racer Hamilton for a year. (ANI)

4-Year-Old Ashish Dies After Polio Vaccination; Case Filed

Four-year-old Ashish, a resident of Todapur village near Patel Nagar, died hours after he was given pulse polio drops in West Delhi on Sunday.

However, the authorities called the death of the child as a coincidence as Ashish, who was reportedly suffering from malnutrition, was given vial together with 150 other children, including Ashish’s two siblings.

No other case of any complication has been reported thus far.

A case has already been lodged at the Trilokpuri police station.

Dr. CM Khanijo, officer on special duty, Pulse Polio Programme said, “We were told the boy was very weak and had to be carried in his mother’s arms. A four-year-old should ideally come walking.”

Physicians at RML Hospital also stated that Ashish’s death because of the vaccine was doubtful.

A senior doctor at RML Hospital said, “The child must have had an underlying medical condition and the death after the polio dose was administered appears to be a coincidence.”

The postmortem will be conducted on Tuesday at the RML Hospital, and the officials are waiting for the postmortem report before taking any action.

Dr. Khanijo said, “Soon after the matter was brought to our notice, we visited the family in Todapur village. We are told the child was malnourished. In fact, his siblings, who were also administered OPV, suffer from some bone disease and are not very healthy. His siblings as well as the over 145 children who were given the vaccine are doing fine. The chances of death resulting from the vaccine are less, but we’re waiting for the postmortem report.”

Delhi Health Minister Kiran Walia said, “We have asked the Drug Control Authority to check the quality of the polio vaccine.”

She, however, said the child did not die because of the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) as 150 other children were also administered the polio drops from the same vial.

“None of these children have reported any complications. The child did not die because of the vaccine. Even the child’s brother and sister were given drops from the same vial,” Walia said.

She said the government was waiting for the post-mortem report.

Officials said Union Health Ministry has been informed about the incident.

Magnetic therapy to treat chronic migraine developed

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): A new therapy that uses magnetic pulses has shown promise in treating chronic migraine sufferers, say researchers.

The new therapy is called transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS.

During the study conducted in rats, the University of California, San Francisco researchers focused on understanding the mechanism of action of TMS therapy — how the treatment interacted with the brain to produce the pain-free outcomes of patients.

They identified potential opportunities to enhance treatment strategies in patients.

The study team noted that factors such as time and peak intensity of stimulation may be important components in the brain’s response to TMS.

“The data demonstrate a biological rationale for the use of TMS to treat migraine aura,” said Peter Goadsby, lead investigator of the study, professor and director of the UCSF Headache Centre.

“We found that cortical spreading depression, known as CSD and the animal correlate of migraine aura, was susceptible to TMS therapy, with the wave of neuronal excitation blocked on over 50 percent of occasions,” he added.

The study showed that migraine aura, a condition in which a variety of mostly visual sensations come before or accompany the pain of a migraine attack, responds to magnetic stimulation.

The magnetic pulses block the wave of neuronal excitation, which is a biological system through which neurons become stimulated to fire.

TMS creates a focused magnetic pulse that passes noninvasively through the skull, inducing an electric current to disrupt the abnormal brain waves believed to be associated with migraine, including CSD. CSD in humans precedes migraine with aura.

The researchers hope that the findings give neurologists a potential new treatment option for migraine sufferers unable to tolerate medication.

The findings were presented during the annual American Academy of Neurology scientific meeting in Seattle. (ANI)

Listening To Music Is Good For Heart Patients

A new study has disclosed that listening to some types of music could help patients suffering from heart disease to lessen their stress levels.

The study was conducted by scientists at Temple University in Philadelphia.

The researchers looked at over 1,400 patients and found that listening to certain kinds of music lowered blood pressure levels, pulse rate and anxiousness in patients having heart troubles.

The report, published in the latest issue of The Cochrane Library, said that the soothing effects were largest when the heart patients picked tunes of their choice.

Researcher Joke Bradt, assistant director of the Arts and Quality of Life Research Center at Temple University, said, “So we do know from clinical experience that if people select music they like, and the music has sedative qualities such as slow tempo, predictable harmonies and absence of sudden changes, they will be better able to relax to the music.”

The review viewed earlier studies on how music therapy has an effect on patients with heart disease, either during a cardiac procedure or within two days of hospitalization.

According to physicians, less strain decreases the likelihood of other symptoms produced by strain in heart patients.

However, researchers said that the topic needs further research.

Soon, microwaves that could defuse bombs

London, Apr 17 (ANI): US researchers are designing a laser-guided microwave blaster to destroy explosives.

The weapon, called the Multimode Directed Energy Armament System, could destroy the electronic fuse of an explosive device or missile, such as a roadside bomb, or immobilise a vehicle by disabling its ignition system, reports New Scientist.

It works by creating a plasma channel that acts as a waveguide for the stream of microwaves, and uses a high-power laser to ionise the air.

The project is the brainchild of the US army’s Armament Research, Development and Engineering Centre (ARDEC).

The weapon’s range will depend on the laser-generated channel.

“The concept is solid and the only issues are with engineering – the physics works,” says Carlo Kopp, who researches electromagnetic pulse weapons at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia.

The army expects to have a prototype weapon working outside the lab by 2011. (ANI)

Punished by teacher, 11-year-old girl dies in hospital

New Delhi, Apr 17 (ANI): Shannoo Khan, who had slipped into coma after she was hit by her teacher and made to stand in the sun for over two hours, died at a hospital here on Friday.

Shannoo was undergoing treatment for “ventilatory failure” in the intensive care unit (ICU) of the Lok Nayak Hospital.

She was a student of Class two at the ND Primary School in Narela, North Delhi.

The incident allegedly occurred on Thursday when Shannoo failed to recite the English alphabet in class. Angered by this, the teacher allegedly hit Shannoo’s head against the table and made her stand in the sun for over two hours. Unable to stand the heat, Shannoo fainted and was found unconscious by her younger sister, who studies in the same school.

The girl then informed their mother, Rihanna, who rushed Shannoo to Maharshi Valmiki Hospital. Shannoo’s father, Ayub Khan, who works as a waiter in a catering company, was away in Haryana for work.

“Doctors at Maharshi Valmiki hospital told me that Shannoo’s condition was critical and she might not survive,” said Khan.

The 11-year-old was subsequently shifted to the pediatric ICU of the Lok Nayak Hospital on Thursday afternoon.

“She was brought to our hospital in a critical condition. We have examined the child and her blood pressure is very low due to which she remains in a state of shock. Her pulse is very weak too. She is on a ventilator and we can comment on her condition only tomorrow,” said Dr. A. P. Dubey, head of the department, pediatrics, Lok Nayak Hospital.

“The child was admitted in with severe seizure and her condition further deteriorated before she slipped into a coma. She was shifted to LNJP in critical condition,” said Dr. KK Deuri, medical superintendent of Maharshi Valmiki hospital. MCD officials, however, denied that the girl was punished and said she suffered from frequent seizures.

Earlier in the day, the Delhi Government and the Centre promised they would take strict action against those involved in the incident.

Union Minister for Women and Child Welfare Renuka Chowdhury promised justice would be done.

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) has ordered an inquiry into the incident.

The principal and the teacher have been suspended.

The Chairman of the MCD Education Committee Prithiviraj Sahni had earlier said, “The girl has been detained for shortage of attendance. She has been irregular with her classes because of fits. On Wednesday too, she had fits, following which her parents were informed.”

Municipal Commissioner K. S. Mehra has asked the Director of Primary Education to conduct an inquiry and submit a report within three days.

The principal of the school has been identified as Dhanpati, while the teacher has been identified as Manju.

Police said they have confirmed that the child was punished at school. Atul Katiyar, DCP, (outer), said: “We have confirmed from various sources that the child did face corporal punishment and investigations are on. We will file an FIR only after we receive the medical reports.” (ANI)

Recession-proof education sector beckoning PE, VC funds!

Despite the fact that the global downturn has virtually hit every sector of the economy, the education sector has largely escaped any major blows; and is beckoning private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) funds!

According to a “Private Equity Pulse – Education” report by Venture Intelligence – a research service tracking private equity and M and A activity in India – the PE, VC investors are targeting the domestic education firms, after they have noticed a huge potential in the education arena.

Talking about the inclination of the investors towards the recession-proof education sector, Venture Intelligence CEO Arun Natarajan said: “In the current uncertain economic environment, the attractive and predictable rates of return of the education industry, is serving as a magnet for PE investors.”

Statistics indicate that more than 80 percent of fund managers are considering the option of investing in education companies in the coming months. While the education sector has, thus far, seen investments of nearly $300 million; the latent market size for private institutions is expected to be a whopping $40 billion!

Moreover, there has been a clear shift in the education-related investment activity. While it earlier centered on the outsourcing aspect, the present focus is on training institutes offering a domestic market opportunity – as is apparent from the recent investments by Gaja Capital partners, Helix and SAIF.