Pleased Flower hails KP’s battling top form

London, May 18 (ANI): Andy Flower, the England cricket team’s coach, is a pleased man these days, not so much for the recent laurels acquired on the world stage, but for the battling return to form of key batsman Kevin Pietersen.

Flower has revealed his pleasure at watching a player of Pietersen”s class cope with the pressure of expectation as well as a 72-hour round trip to see his newly enlarged family.

“It speaks volumes for him and for the way he handles pressure,” The Mirror quoted said the England team director, as saying.

“Kevin, more than most, is expected to deliver on most occasions and especially in situations like this. He handles pressure superbly and has made match-winning contributions on a number of occasions through this series so his award was well earned,” Flower added.

“I am really happy for him to get those results, not just because he helps us win but because he had to work so hard on his game over past 12 months and now he can see the fruits of his labours,” Flower said.

A fit and firing Pietersen has made a huge difference, turning a good England Twenty20 side into a great one, but as he acknowledged after the final that he is only part of the puzzle. (ANI)

Herschel finds hole in space – key to star formation puzzle

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Scientists at ESA have found a hole in space through Herschel, an infrared space telescope.

The finding has provided some interesting insights into the theory of end of star formation process.

Stars are born in dense clouds of dust and gas that can now be studied in unprecedented detail with Herschel. Although jets and winds of gas have been seen coming from young stars in the past, it has always been a mystery exactly how a star uses these to blow away its surroundings and emerge from its birth cloud. Now, for the first time, Herschel may be seeing an unexpected step in this process.

A cloud of bright reflective gas known to astronomers as NGC 1999 sits next to a black patch of sky. For most of the 20th century, such black patches have been known to be dense clouds of dust and gas that block light from passing through.

However, the infrared rays of Herschel did not appear to pass through the cloud.

Further investigation revealed that the patch looks black not because it is a dense pocket of gas but because it is truly empty.

“No-one has ever seen a hole like this,” says Tom Megeath, of the University of Toledo, USA. “It’s as surprising as knowing you have worms tunnelling under your lawn, but finding one morning that they have created a huge, yawning pit.”

The astronomers think that the hole must have been opened when the narrow jets of gas from some of the young stars in the region punctured the sheet of dust and gas that forms NGC 1999. The powerful radiation from a nearby mature star may also have helped to clear the hole.

Whatever the case may be, it could be an important glimpse into the way newborn stars disperse their birth clouds. (ANI)

Slow-moving faults may help protect some cities against destructive quakes

Washington, August 29 (ANI): A new research by scientists from the University of Arizona (UA) in Tucson has determined that some slow-moving faults may help protect some regions of Italy and other parts of the world against destructive earthquakes.

Until now, geologists thought when the crack between two pieces of the Earth’s crust was at a very gentle slope, there was no movement along that particular fault line.

“This study is the first to show that low-angle normal faults are definitely active,” said Sigrun Hreinsdottir, UA geosciences research associate.

According to Richard A. Bennett, a UA assistant professor of geosciences, “We can show that the Alto Tiberina fault beneath Perugia is steadily slipping as we speak – fortunately, for Perugia, without producing large earthquakes.”

Perugia is the capital city of Italy’s Umbria region.

Creeping slowly is unusual. Most faults stick, causing strain to build up, and then become unstuck with a big jerk. Big jerks are big earthquakes.

For decades, researchers have known about the Alto Tiberina and similar faults and debated whether such features in the Earth’s crust were faults at all, because they didn’t seem to produce earthquakes.

Hreinsdottir and Bennett have now shown that the gently sloping fault beneath Perugia is moving steadily at the rate of approximately one-tenth of an inch (2.4 mm) a year.

Perugia has not experienced a damaging earthquake in about 2,000 years, according to Hreinsdottir.

“Because the fault is actively slipping, it might not be collecting strain. To have an earthquake, you have to have strain,” she said.

Other towns in the region that lie near steeply sloping faults, including L’Aquila and Assisi, have experienced large earthquakes within the last 20 years.

The UA team became interested in the Alto Tiberina fault because previous research suggested the fault might be moving.

To check on the fault, the UA team measured rock movements in and around Perugia using a technique called geodesy.

The geodesy network can tell where one antenna and its rock are relative to another antenna. Taking repeated measurements over time shows whether the rocks moved relative to one another.

The UA team analyzed data from 19 GPS stations within approximately a 30-mile (50 km) radius around Perugia.

“Having such closely spaced stations and several years of data were key for detecting the fault’s tiny motions,” said Hreinsdottir.

“This study is one more piece in the puzzle to understand seismic hazards in the region and can apply to other regions of the world that have low-angle normal faults,” she added. (ANI)

Non-lethal blast waves can cause brain injuries even without direct head impacts

Washington, August 27 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have discovered that non-lethal blast waves can cause human brain injury even without direct head impacts, which could lead to an enhanced understanding of head injuries and improved military helmet design.

Using numerical hydrodynamic computer simulations, Lawrence Livermore scientists Willy Moss and Michael King, along with University of Rochester colleague Eric Blackman, have discovered that non-lethal blasts can induce enough skull flexure to generate potentially damaging loads in the brain, even without direct head impact.

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) results from mechanical loads in the brain, often without skull fracture, and causes complex, long-lasting symptoms.

TBI in civilians is usually caused by direct head impacts resulting from motor vehicle and sports accidents. TBI also has emerged among military combat personnel exposed to blast waves.

As modern body armor has substantially reduced soldier fatalities from explosive attacks, the lower mortality rates have revealed the high prevalence of TBI.

But, TBIs resulting from blast waves without head impacts have not been well understood.

To tackle this puzzle, the research team used three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations to prove that direct action of the blast wave on the head causes skull flexure, producing mechanical loads in brain tissue comparable to those in an injury-inducing impact, even at non-lethal blast pressures as low as 1 bar above atmospheric pressure.

The Army’s Advanced Combat Helmet replaced the older Personal Armor System for Ground Troops helmet.

Its Kevlar shell provides ballistic and impact protection, and its reduced edge cut, although reducing area of coverage, improves soldiers’ field of vision and hearing.

In particular, the team showed that blast waves affect the brain very differently from direct impacts.

The primary source of injury from direct impacts is the force resulting from the bulk acceleration of the head.

In contrast, a blast wave squeezes the skull, creating pressures as large as an injury-inducing impact and pressure gradients in the brain that are much larger.

This occurs even when the bulk head accelerations induced by a blast wave are much smaller than from a direct impact.

“The blast wave sweeps over the skull like a rolling pin going over dough,” said King, LLNL co-principal investigator.

Although the simulations show that the skull is deformed only about 50 microns, “this is large enough to generate potentially damaging loads in the brain,” according to Moss.

“The possibility that blasts may contribute to traumatic brain injury has implications for injury diagnosis and improved armor design,” he added. (ANI)

Plants saved planet Earth from freezing over during last ice age

Washington, July 2 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have suggested that plants may have played a crucial role in putting a limit on the last ice age.

When glaciers advanced over much of the Earth’s surface during the last ice age, the planet did not freeze over entirely.

This has been a puzzle to climate scientists because leading models have indicated that over the past 24 million years geological conditions should have caused carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere to plummet, possibly leading to runaway “icehouse” conditions.

Now, scientists report on the missing piece of the puzzle – plants.

“Atmospheric CO2 concentrations have been remarkably stable over the last 20 or 25 million years despite other changes in the environment,” said research co-author Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution’s Department of Global Ecology.

“We can look to land plants as the primary buffering agent that’s held CO2 in such a narrow range during this time,” he added.

The research team, led by Mark Pagani of Yale University, found that the critical role of plants in the chemical breakdown and weathering of rocks and soil gave them a strong influence on carbon dioxide levels.

It was a link that earlier studies had missed.

The rise of the Andes, Himalayas, Tibetan Plateau, and mountain ranges in western North America over the past 25 million years would have been expected to have cause faster weathering and erosion, and therefore a faster burial of carbon drawn from the atmosphere.

But the stability of carbon dioxide levels indicate that this didn’t happen.

This is where the plants come in.

“The rates of weathering reactions are largely controlled by plants. Their roots secrete acids that dissolve minerals, they hold soils, and they increase the amount of carbon dissolved in groundwater,” said Caldeira.

“But when levels of carbon dioxide get too low, the plants basically suffocate and the weathering slows down. That means less sediment is eroded from the uplands and less carbon can be buried. It’s a negative feedback on the system that has kept carbon dioxide levels from dropping too low,” he added.

Extremely low carbon dioxide levels would have reduced the atmosphere’s ability to retain heat, putting the planet into a deep freeze.

“So you could say that by limiting the drawdown of CO2 by chemical weathering and sedimentation, plants saved the planet from freezing over,” said Caldeira. (ANI)

‘DNA Sudoku’ to revolutionise genome sequencing, medical genetics

Washington, June 25 (ANI): Sudoku, the popular mathematics puzzle that has taken people by storm, is now set to revolutionize the world of genome sequencing and the field of medical genetics, according to a new study.

Researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) have combined 2,000-year-old Chinese math theorem with concepts from cryptologyto develop what they dubbed as the “DNA Sudoku”, because of its similarity to the logic and combinatorial number-placement rules used in the popular game.

The strategy allows tens of thousands of DNA samples to be combined, and their sequences – the order in which the letters of the DNA alphabet (A, T, G, and C) line up in the genome – to be determined all at once.

The accomplishment is quiet contrary to past approaches that allowed only a single DNA sample to be sequenced at a time.

It also has an upper hand on current approaches that, at best, can combine hundreds of samples for sequencing.

“In theory, it is possible to use the Sudoku method to sequence more than a hundred thousand DNA samples,” said CSHL Professor Gregory Hannon, leader of the team that invented the “Sudoku” approach.

With such efficiency, the approach promises to reduce costs dramatically.

The new method has tremendous potential for clinical applications. It can be used, for example to analyse specific regions of the genomes of a large population and identify individuals who carry mutations that cause genetic diseases – a process known as genotyping.

The key to the team’s innovation is the pooling strategy, which is based on the 2,000-year-old Chinese remainder theorem.

The method is currently best suited for genotype analyses that require only short segments of an individual’s genome to be sequenced to find out if the individual is carrying a certain variant of a gene or a rare mutation.

However, with the improvement in sequencing technologies and researchers gaining the ability to generate sequences for longer segments of the genome, Hannon envisions wider clinical applications for their method such as HLA typing, already an important diagnostic tool for autoimmune diseases, cancer, and for predicting the risk of organ transplantation.

The report will be published as the cover story in the July 1 issue of the journal Genome Research.(ANI)

Teleportation may soon be a reality!

Sydney, June 22 (ANI): Australian scientists have developed a new method for transmitting data with light that may lead to the development of teleportation technology and super-fast quantum computers.

According to a report in www.news.com.au, the research team, from the Australian National University, developed a new approach to generating quantum entanglement in beams of light using only two parts.

Quantum entanglement is a process in which two objects are linked together in such a way that any changes to the properties of one can be measured from the other regardless of the distance between them.

This process of linking particles has existed for a few years, but according to team leader Dr Jiri Janousek, this new method allows it to be achieved in a much simpler way.

“Usually, when you want to generate entanglement you need a lot of sources of light and a lot of receivers but we found a way to use only one source and one receiver to generate and measure entanglement,” Dr Janousek said.

Dr Janousek and his team’s new method involves entangling two specially modified beams of light so that changes to the amplitude or phase of one beam can be measured with the other.

Dr Janousek said that by only using two parts, it allows the technology to be more easily scaled up opening a number of potential uses in technologies ranging from computing, communications and even teleportation.

“This finding is one more piece in the puzzle towards the future realisation of quantum computers, which would be many times faster and more powerful than existing computers,” he said.

“For teleportation, you again need a source of entangled beams; so in effect, it could be used for teleportation as well,” he added.

But, Dr Janousek said that it will be a while before this technology works its way into any consumer devices.

“We always talk about 50 years as where we could get real machines that could use the technologies which we have developed so far,” he said. (ANI)

Gene linked to autism risk identified

Washington, May 20 (ANI): A new study from University of California, Los Angeles has identified a genetic variant that may increase a child’s risk of developing autism, particularly boys.

The research team has discovered a variant of a gene called CACNA1G that, according to the researchers, that makes boys four times more likely to develop autism, than girls.

“This is a strong finding,” said Dr. Stanley Nelson, professor of human genetics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

“No one has scrutinized the role that CACNA1G plays in autism.

“We found that a common form of the gene occurs more frequently in the DNA of families that have two or more sons affected by autism, but no affected daughters.

“Our study may explain why boys are more susceptible to the disorder than girls,” he added.

Researchers zeroed in on a region of Chromosome 17 that previous studies have tied to autism.

They scoured the DNA of 1,046 members of families with at least two sons affected by autism for common gene variants and identified genetic markers to CACNA1G, which helps move calcium between the cells.

They discovered that the gene has a common variant that appears in the DNA of nearly 40 percent of the population.

“This alternate form of CACNA1G consistently increased the correlation to autism spectrum disorder, suggesting that inheriting the gene may heighten a child’s risk of developing autism,” said Nelson.

“This variant is a single piece of the puzzle. We need a larger sample size to identify all of the genes involved in autism and to solve the whole puzzle of this disease,” he added.

The study appears in journal Molecular Psychiatry. (ANI)

Afghan forces will start leading in another 2 to 4 years: Gates

Washington, May 18 (ANI): US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said that it will take another two to four years before Afghan forces start leading their military operations on their own.

“War is inherently unpredictable. Okay? And the enemy always has a vote. But that would be our anticipation. I think what the people in the United States want to see is the momentum shifting to see that the strategies that we’re following are working. And that’s why I’ve said in nine months to a year, we need to evaluate how we’re doing,” Gates told CBS.

Gates expressed his disappointment over NATO’s response to this U.S. requests on Afghanistan ever since he became Defense Secretary.

“NATO as an alliance, if you exclude the United States, has almost two million men under arms. Why they can’t get more than 32,000 to Afghanistan has always been a puzzle to me. Frustrating,” The Politico quoted Gates, as saying.

Gates, who is the only Bush holdover in the Obama Cabinet, said he regretted his March 2008 comment that Obama was “somewhat more analytical” than Bush.

“That’s something I wished I hadn’t said. I really have been very disciplined about not drawing those kinds of comparisons,” he said after being asked his views now.

Having vowed not to draw comparisons between the two American presidents, Gates described Bush as “committed, questioning, eager to make a decision and move on.”

While he termed Obama as “deliberative, decisive and calm.”

When asked if enjoys his job, Gates said, “The truth of the matter is being Secretary of War in a time of war is a very painful thing. And it’s not a job anybody should like. How can you like a job when you go to Walter Reed and you know you sent those young men and women in harm’s way? So, no, I don’t enjoy my job.” (ANI)

Afghan forces will start leading in another 2 to 4 years: Gates

Washington, May 18 (ANI): US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said that it will take another two to four years before Afghan forces start leading their military operations on their own.

“War is inherently unpredictable. Okay? And the enemy always has a vote. But that would be our anticipation. I think what the people in the United States want to see is the momentum shifting to see that the strategies that we’re following are working. And that’s why I’ve said in nine months to a year, we need to evaluate how we’re doing,” Gates told CBS.

Gates expressed his disappointment over NATO’s response to this U.S. requests on Afghanistan ever since he became Defense Secretary.

“NATO as an alliance, if you exclude the United States, has almost two million men under arms. Why they can’t get more than 32,000 to Afghanistan has always been a puzzle to me. Frustrating,” The Politico quoted Gates, as saying.

Gates, who is the only Bush holdover in the Obama Cabinet, said he regretted his March 2008 comment that Obama was “somewhat more analytical” than Bush.

“That’s something I wished I hadn’t said. I really have been very disciplined about not drawing those kinds of comparisons,” he said after being asked his views now.

Having vowed not to draw comparisons between the two American presidents, Gates described Bush as “committed, questioning, eager to make a decision and move on.”

While he termed Obama as “deliberative, decisive and calm.”

When asked if enjoys his job, Gates said, “The truth of the matter is being Secretary of War in a time of war is a very painful thing. And it’s not a job anybody should like. How can you like a job when you go to Walter Reed and you know you sent those young men and women in harm’s way? So, no, I don’t enjoy my job.” (ANI)

Symonds has less than a week to force his way into Ashes squad

Melbourne, May 14 (ANI): Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds has one week and a handful of Indian Premier League games to force his way into the Ashes squad.

Symonds has three Twenty20 matches for the Deccan Chargers to win over the national selectors and unseat fellow all rounders Shane Watson or Andrew McDonald in the touring party to be named next Wednesday.

Symonds, who turns 34 next month, still has that X-factor quality that has allowed him to be easily forgiven for sins that would have ended a lesser cricketer’s career.

His selection for June’s World Twenty20 showed he is still well thought of and skipper Ricky Ponting has shown enormous faith in him in the past.

“He’s coming to the Twenty20 tournament, so I guess that’s another opportunity to stake a claim for the Ashes,” Fox Sports quoted vice-captain Michael Clarke, as saying.

“I’d definitely support him if he was selected,” Clarke added.

Symonds’ path to the Ashes looked to have been cleared when Watson injured his groin in the United Arab Emirates this month. But Cricket Australia medical staff cleared him of a serious injury on Wednesday.

The other piece in the puzzle is Andrew McDonald.

The Victorian won a fan in Ponting by sticking to his role with the ball in Australia’s surprise 2-1 Test series win in South Africa in March.

He also showed signs of finding his feet with the bat with a half century in the final Test in Cape Town although his talents are not of the same calibre as Watson and Symonds.

The rest of the squad looks to be fairly straight forward. (ANI)

World’s biggest puzzle being made in ancient house in Turkey

Istanbul, May 13 (ANI): The marble hall of the palace-like house in which the Roman consul lived in the city of Efes in Turkey in 275 A.D. has begun to be restored, putting back together 350-square-meter walls that are now broken into 120,000 pieces, in what is probably the world’s biggest puzzle.

According to a report in Today’s Zaman, the deputy supervisor of the ongoing excavations in Efes, Sabine Ladstatter, said this method was used in Italy once before, but with such a large-scale assembly will be the first in history.

Excavations have been ongoing in this city, which is one of the biggest ancient cities of the Mediterranean, for 138 years.

The hillside houses where the richest people lived are seen as the most exciting sites for excavation and restoration.

Considered to be the most important of the hillside houses, the palatial house of Gaius Flavius Furius Aptus, the city consul, is drawing attention as a focus of excavation and restoration projects.

Its magnificent 178-square-meter salon, whose walls were clothed with marble, is witnessing a major restoration.

The plan is to begin with the restoration of the salon’s walls. The walls had sunk deep into the soil over time due to numerous earthquakes.

The pieces of the walls have been found through the extensive excavations, which have been going on for years.

Presently, there are about 120,000 pieces that are going to be used for the restoration, funded by Borusan Holding.

Ladstatter said they believe those pieces constitute 90 percent of the walls.

She added that they are going to use laser screening to find the proper piece to put into the proper place in the wall.

“What we are going to do here now is an effort to complete a puzzle composed of 120,000 pieces,” said Ladstatter.

The restoration is expected to cost 300,000 dollars. (ANI)

Keeping mentally fit: the daily crossword is not enough

Bonn, Germany – A man sits on a train solving a crossword puzzle, a woman broods over a Sudoku grid while an ad for an electronic memory game flashes across a television screen. There is no shortage of ways to improve the brain’s memory powers – after all, lots of people want to improve their mental abilities.

But are Sudoku, crosswords and other training games any good at improving memory? Are they really effective in training the mind or just a nice way of passing the time?

“If you train your brain, you can improve your performance,” says Carsten Brandenburg from Germany’s Memory Training Association. But not every exercise can radically change a person’s ability to remember things.

“If you repeat the same kind of exercise, your mind gets into a routine, and there is no challenge anymore,” says Brandenburg.

Sudoku is most effective in the initial stages. “The brain is not used to thinking in that manner and that’s why new connections are made between the individual nerve cells,” explains Brandenburg.

The chairwoman of the Professional Association of German Psychiatrists, Christa Roth-Sackenheim says, “We have recently come to understand that the human brain can make new connections and even new paths.”

That explains why Sudoku and computer memory games can have a positive effect on the brain’s memory performance. “You don’t just improve your concentration, you also practice strategic thinking and how to link different facts,” explains the psychiatrist. That ability can be useful in daily life.

The most effective puzzles are those that test more than your existing knowledge which excludes puzzles such as crosswords.

There are a number of books and games for electronic consoles that go in that direction, according to Brandenburg, who also works as a memory coach at Germany’s Memory Clinic in Essen.

“The best exercises are well designed and gradually become more challenging as they progress,” he says.

But computer games and electronic memory puzzles are not all-purpose weapons against memory loss, says psychiatrist Michael Rapp from Berlin’s Charite University Hospital.

“There is no exercise that can make a person more intelligent overall,” says the head of the clinic’s geriatric psychiatry working group.

You don’t need to buy expensive games to keep your brain fit. If you follow a few pointers every day, you will improve your memory or at the very least, keep it at the present level.

“Communicating is essential,” says Brandenburg, adding, “That’s how you learn to query things, gain new knowledge and grapple with questions.”

Another way of improving memory is to learn a new language, according to Roth-Sackenheim. Listening to music, doing domestic chores alone or pursuing a hobby can also help.

“Engaging in physical exercise is important for all age groups,” says Roth-Sackenheim. “That’s because sport trains the brain because you have to remember certain physical movements and practice your coordination.”

There is another alternative – keeping busy with your grandchildren. When elderly people try to understand young people’s lives, they also exercise their brains. (dpa)

How the brain handles words

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): How the brain gives meaning to letters on a page has been a mystery for scientists. Now, a new study has tried to solve the puzzle.

Neuroscientists at Georgetown University Medical Center have found that an area known to be important for reading in the left visual cortex contains neurons that are specialized to process written words as whole word units.

Although some theories of reading as well as neuropsychological and experimental data have argued for the existence of a neural representation for whole written real words (an “orthographic lexicon”), evidence for this has been elusive.

“Reading relies on neural representations that are experience dependent,” says senior author Maximilian Riesenhuber, PhD, of the GUMC Laboratory for Computational Cognitive Neuroscience.

“Evolution did not provide each of us with a little dictionary in our heads,” the expert added.

Because the findings, published in the April 30 issue of Neuron, shed light on how written words are processed in the brain, they also provide clues as to how reading disorders such as dyslexia could arise, Riesenhuber says.

“Previous studies have shown that this brain area is affected in reading disorders such as dyslexia, but it is unclear what the mechanisms involved are. Our data suggest that looking at the neuronal selectivity in this area might provide new insight. For instance, we would expect reading difficulties if neurons never become well tuned to words, making reading a slow, arduous process, just like it would be if reading all nonwords,” the expert added.

The GUMC researchers – Riesenhuber, first author Laurie S. Glezer, MA, and Xiong Jiang, PhD – set up a series of experiments with the participation of volunteers. They showed the participants pairings of words, and used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to measure brain blood flow in an area in the left visual cortex called the “visual word form area” while the participants performed a reading task.

Most other studies using fMRI to examine the “visual word form area” have used the averaged neuronal response in which many word stimuli are presented and the change in activity is measured, but this approach does not tease out the response neurons have to individual words, Riesenhuber says. However, by using the technique of fMRI rapid adaptation, in which the stimuli are shown in pairs, it is possible to measure the selectivity of neurons for individual words.

In their experiments, the researchers looked at the response between two visually similar normal words that shared all letters but one (i.e. ‘boat’ and ‘coat’) and found that the neural response to this condition “looked just like when participants saw two words that shared no letters, for example ‘coat’ and ‘fish’,” says Glezer.

“This shows that the neurons in this area of the brain are very selective for individual words. Even though the two words shared all letters but one, there is no overlap in the neural representation, just like when the two words are completely different,” the expert said.

The researchers then looked at the brain’s response to sets of nonwords in which the stimuli look like real words but have never been seen before (i.e. tarm). They found that the response to nonwords was not selective, with similar nonwords appearing to have overlapping neural representations. (ANI)

Asteroids age quickly because of a ‘sun tan’

Munich, April 23 (ANI): A new study has revealed that asteroid surfaces age and redden much faster than previously thought – in less than a million years, all thanks to solar winds.

“Asteroids seem to get a ‘sun tan’ very quickly,” said lead author Pierre Vernazza. “But not, as for people, from an overdose of the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation, but from the effects of its powerful wind,” he added.

It has long been known that asteroid surfaces alter in appearance with time.

The observed asteroids are much redder than the interior of meteorites found on Earth, but the actual processes of this “space weathering” and the timescales involved were controversial.

Thanks to observations of different families of asteroids using ESO’s New Technology Telescope at La Silla and the Very Large Telescope at Paranal, as well as telescopes in Spain and Hawaii, Vernazza’s team have now solved the puzzle.

When two asteroids collide, they create a family of fragments with “fresh” surfaces.

The astronomers found that these newly exposed surfaces are quickly altered and change color in less than a million years – a very short time compared to the age of the Solar System.

“The charged, fast moving particles in the solar wind damage the asteroid’s surface at an amazing rate,” said Vernazza.

Unlike human skin, which is damaged and aged by repeated overexposure to sunlight, it is, perhaps rather surprisingly, the first moments of exposure (on the timescale considered) – the first million years – that causes most of the aging in asteroids.

By studying different families of asteroids, the team has also shown that an asteroid’s surface composition is an important factor in how red its surface can become.

After the first million years, the surface “tans” much more slowly. At that stage, the color depends more on composition than on age.

Moreover, the observations reveal that collisions cannot be the main mechanism behind the high proportion of “fresh” surfaces seen among near-Earth asteroids.

Instead, these “fresh-looking” surfaces may be the results of planetary encounters, where the tug of a planet has “shaken” the asteroid, exposing unaltered material.

Thanks to these results, astronomers will now be able to understand better how the surface of an asteroid, which often is the only thing we can observe, reflects its history. (ANI)

Ozone hole caused increased growth in Antarctic sea ice

Washington, April 22 (ANI): A new research has determined that increased growth in Antarctic sea ice during the past 30 years is a result of changing weather patterns caused by the ozone hole.

The research, done by scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and NASA, indicates that while there has been a dramatic loss of Arctic sea ice, Antarctic sea ice has increased by a small amount as a result of the ozone hole delaying the impact of greenhouse gas increases on the climate of the continent.

Sea ice plays a key role in the global environment – reflecting heat from the sun and providing a habitat for marine life. At both poles sea ice cover is at its minimum during summer.

However, during the winter freeze in Antarctica this ice cover expands to an area roughly twice the size of Europe.

Ranging in thickness from less than a meter to several meters, the ice insulates the warm ocean from the frigid atmosphere above.

Satellite images show that since the 1970s the extent of Antarctic sea ice has increased at a rate of 100,000 square kilometers a decade.

The new research helps explain why observed changes in the amount of sea-ice cover are so different in both polar regions.

According to lead author Professor John Turner of BAS, “Our results show the complexity of climate change across the Earth. While there is increasing evidence that the loss of sea ice in the Arctic has occurred due to human activity, in the Antarctic, human influence through the ozone hole has had the reverse effect and resulted in more ice.”

“Although the ozone hole is in many ways holding back the effects of greenhouse gas increases on the Antarctic, this will not last, as we expect ozone levels to recover by the end of the 21st Century. By then, there is likely to be around one third less Antarctic sea ice,” he said.

Using satellite images of sea ice and computer models, the scientists discovered that the ozone hole has strengthened surface winds around Antarctica and deepened the storms in the South Pacific area of the Southern Ocean that surrounds the continent.

This resulted in greater flow of cold air over the Ross Sea (West Antarctica) leading to more ice production in this region.

“This new research helps us solve some of the puzzle of why sea-ice is shrinking is some areas and growing in others,” said Turner. (ANI)

Madonna’s former cook blasts her Malawian adoption bid

Washington, Apr 16 (ANI): Madonna’s former cook has blasted her Malawian adoption bid, claiming that the superstar ignores the children she already has.

Currently, the Material Girl is mounting an appeal after a judge turned down her attempt to adopt 4-year-old Mercy James from the African nation earlier this month, reports Contactmusic.

However, Eric Ienco, who once worked for Madonna as her cook and house manager, claims the 50-year-old star should spend more time with her three kids Lourdes, 12, Rocco, eight and adopted three-year-old David, instead of dedicating all her spare time to keeping fit.

Ienco tells the National Enquirer, “When she’s with the children, she is a devoted mum. She just doesn’t spend much time with them.

“It’s a puzzle why she wants to adopt again. She’s hardly ever with her children. She’s got two full-time nannies and one part-time nanny. So why adopt a kid when somebody else is raising them?

“She gets up and has a coffee, then she does two hours of yoga. Then there’s two hours of pilates and exercise. That’s six days a week. After that she deals with her email, her calls and the rest of her business. And after that, she spends maybe half an hour with the kids.

“Madonna puts herself before the kids. When she adopted little David, he arrived at her home from Africa, and three hours later, she left to do pilates. Wouldn’t you think she’d want to spend the entire day with her new son?”

He also blames David’s adoption in 2006 for wrecking Madonna’s marriage to director Guy Ritchie.

Ienco adds, “Madonna thought (David) would bring them together, but Guy was dead against adopting, so, for the marriage, it was the final nail in the coffin.” (ANI)

Indian meteorological department perfects weather prediction

Pune, Apr 8 (ANI): The Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) generates and collects scientific knowledge about meteorology and atmospheric sciences.

It functions as a national centre for basic and applied research in monsoon meteorology.

Indian climate and weather has experienced drastic changes. Fatal weather events like severe thunderstorms, cyclones, flash floods and snow avalanches need prior information.

But predictions for such radical weather events are most difficult to forecast. Monsoon prediction is important, forecast of total seasonal rainfall is necessary.

Meteorological department play a significant role to understand such erratic weather conditions and to give predictions about them beforehand.

The IITM is one such premiere research institute in Pune. It generates and collects scientific knowledge about meteorology and atmospheric sciences. It functions as a national centre for basic and applied research in monsoon meteorology.

“The IITM is an autonomous institution under the Ministry of Arts Sciences. It has been started with very important decision by Indian Met Department in 1962, to set up a separate wing to do basic research required for improving the forecast of weather and climate”, said Prof. B N Goswami, Director, IITM.

IITM scientists have done new findings, which have received attention of the national and international scientific community.

IITM have made contribution to the international programmes such as the World Climate research Program (WCRP), the International Geosphere – Biosphere Programme (IGBP), the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and others.

According to the director, IITM has been conducting various fundamental researches to improve the forecast of both weather and climate. Most of the research is largely on climate.

The IITM has been instrumental in finding important predictors for seasonal mean monsoon, which has been used by the IMD over years.

The IITM has also developed ‘regional climate model’, which is capable of predicting monsoons towards the end of the century, where monsoons are expected to intensify to five to ten per cent.

“We know temperature over Indian region has been increasing as shown in the figure over the last 100 years, but monsoon rainfall is not increasing. Total quantum of rainfall over last 100 years is quite steady. This was a bit of a puzzle for long time and over the last few years, we have done study that while the mean monsoon is not changing, but distribution of rainfall is changing,” said Goswami.

The IITM plans to widen its scope and research activities for providing information relating to various aspects of atmosphere. By Shivaji (ANI)

Indian meteorological department perfects weather prediction

Pune, Apr 8 (ANI): The Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) generates and collects scientific knowledge about meteorology and atmospheric sciences.

It functions as a national centre for basic and applied research in monsoon meteorology.

Indian climate and weather has experienced drastic changes. Fatal weather events like severe thunderstorms, cyclones, flash floods and snow avalanches need prior information.

But predictions for such radical weather events are most difficult to forecast. Monsoon prediction is important, forecast of total seasonal rainfall is necessary.

Meteorological department play a significant role to understand such erratic weather conditions and to give predictions about them beforehand.
The IITM is one such premiere research institute in Pune. It generates and collects scientific knowledge about meteorology and atmospheric sciences. It functions as a national centre for basic and applied research in monsoon meteorology.

“The IITM is an autonomous institution under the Ministry of Arts Sciences. It has been started with very important decision by Indian Met Department in 1962, to set up a separate wing to do basic research required for improving the forecast of weather and climate”, said Prof. B N Goswami, Director, IITM.

IITM scientists have done new findings, which have received attention of the national and international scientific community.

IITM have made contribution to the international programmes such as the Worldlimate research Program (WCRP), the International Geosphere – Biosphere Programme (IGBP), the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and others.

According to the director, IITM has been conducting various fundamental researches to improve the forecast of both weather and climate. Most of the research is largely on climate.

The IITM has been instrumental in finding important predictors for seasonal mean monsoon, which has been used by the IMD over years.

The IITM has also developed ‘regional climate model’, which is capable of predicting monsoons towards the end of the century, where monsoons are expected to intensify to five to ten per cent.

“We know temperature over Indian region has been increasing as shown in the figure over the last 100 years, but monsoon rainfall is not increasing. Total quantum of rainfall over last 100 years is quite steady. This was a bit of a puzzle for long time and over the last few years, we have done study that while the mean monsoon is not changing, but distribution of rainfall is changing,” said Goswami.

The IITM plans to widen its scope and research activities for providing information relating to various aspects of atmosphere. By Shivaji (ANI)