Women lawmakers outperform male counterparts, says study

Washington, Sep.16 (ANI): A study conducted by Stanford University and the University of Chicago reaerchers has concluded that women lawmakers in Congress introduce more bills, attract more co-sponsors and bring home more money for their districts than their male counterparts do.

The study, accessed by Politico, examined the performance of House members between 1984 and 2004, and found that women delivered roughly nine percent more discretionary spending for their districts than men.

While there are obviously variables beyond gender – seniority, party affiliation, majority/minority status and the differing priorities of a freshman and a veteran lawmaker – the researchers say they’ve accounted for those in making their male-to-female comparisons.

The researchers also found that women introduced more legislation than men who served in their same districts, often hitting the ground running in their first terms.

“We find that, on average, women sponsor about three bills more per Congress per term than their male counterparts. They co-sponsor more bills than other members, and they also obtain more co-sponsors for their own bills,” said one of the researchers.

Since 1789, women have constituted just two percent of the total congressional population. The ratio of female to male representatives has increased in recent years, but the pace is still fairly glacial: Nearly 17 percent of House members are women today, compared with about 3 percent in 1979.

Researchers say the small number of female members may have something to do with their effectiveness. Women who run and win are likely the most politically ambitious and talented of their pool, having potentially overcome hurdles including voter bias and self-doubt about their ability to win.

Female candidates also tend to attract more challengers. Politically eligible women tend to doubt their ability to get elected and raise money more than men do, multiple studies have indicated.

Once women get to Capitol Hill, those hurdles may drive them to perform better, on average, than male counterparts who have faced a less contentious road. (ANI)

Cancer safety fears of most common heartburn treatment rejected

Washington, Sep 10 (ANI): The largest ever study on ‘Proton pump inhibitors’ (PPI)-the second most prescribed group of drugs for heartburn-has dismissed all fears about the cancer causing effects of the treatment.

PPI are the most commonly used treatment for chronic acid reflux, or ‘heartburn’, a painful burning sensation in the chest, neck and throat which is experienced by almost a third of people in developed countries.

Regular and prolonged heartburn is known to cause ‘benign oesophagitis’, a reversible inflammation of the gullet.

However if left untreated a condition called Barrett’s Oesophagus (BE) occurs in around 10 per cent of sufferers, which can in turn develop into a potentially fatal cancer called oesophageal adenocarcinoma.

While PPIs had an excellent safety record, it was unclear if long-term use of these drugs to reduce the discomfort of heartburn could increase the risk of developing either BE or the spread of the associated cancer.

But, the new research carried out at Queen Mary, University of London and Leicester Royal Infirmary, has given the most conclusive evidence yet that this is not the case.

Professor Janusz Jankowski, who co-authored the study, said: “This is one of the most detailed studies investigating both the laboratory and clinical side of proton pump inhibitor drugs. As a consequence we are now better able to inform patients of the good benefit/risk ratio of this commonly prescribed therapy.”

Tests carried out during the two-year study looked at tissue sampled from the oesophagus lining of ninety volunteers, each of whom were given PPI drugs at either a high or low dosage.

Researchers found that there was no difference in the rate at which BE developed, neither was there a change in the number of precancerous cells in either group.

Despite fears about how the treatments might affect people already suffering from BE, the study showed that there was no evidence that this led to any worsening of the condition or any extra incidences of cancer.

PPIs work by blocking the action of gastrin, a hormone that controls acid levels in the stomach, and is known to increase the normal movement of cells in the gastro-intestinal tract.

Since PPI therapy increases the levels of gastrin in the body, it had been thought this could cause expansion of BE affected tissue, but this was not found to be the case.

In fact, the scientists observed neither expansion nor contraction of the abnormal tissue.

The study has been published in the peer reviewed journal Gut. (ANI)

Pakistan’s 11.3 billion-dollar IMF loan in danger

Islamabad, Sep. 5 (ANI): The 11.3 billion-dollar-loan that International Monetary Fund (IMF) was going to grant Pakistan, faces the risk of disruption if the country fails to reform its tax collection system.

The 7.6 billion dollar IMF loan, agreed late last year, and raised subsequently to 11.3 billion dollars, helped Pakistan avoid a default on foreign debt payments.

Western economists are concerned about the current year’s deficit, which stood at 5.2 percent rather than the 4.3 percent as agreed with the IMF.

Pakistani officials attributed it to the fallout from the military campaign in Swat.

However, western economists seem to think otherwise.

“The deficit shows a chronic problem with the Pakistani economy. The challenge is that of a very narrow base for tax collection,” the Daily Times quoted an economist as saying.

During its last review, the IMF gave a waiver on the fiscal deficit. But it will be difficult for Pakistan to keep on getting waivers. The tax to GDP ratio last year was 9 percent – the lowest in South Asia. (ANI)

Eating more and using less energy made dinos gigantic

Sydney, July 9 (ANI): A US scientist has said that some dinosaurs grew larger than today’s elephants because they ate more and used less energy.

According to a report in ABC Science, the study suggests two factors, energy expenditure and food intake, influence the size of animals.

Using a mathematical model, study author Dr Brian McNab of the University of Florida, determined that animals that expend more energy and have a faster metabolism, which is typically linked to temperature regulation, have a smaller body mass.

Fast metabolism is a characteristic of large warm blooded animals. They use food to generate heat and maintain a constant body temperature, he writes.

Cold blooded animals, like most reptiles, have a slow metabolism and rely on the environment for body warmth.

McNab has proposed that, rather than use all their energy to maintain body temperature the way warm-blooded animals do, large dinosaurs used their energy to grow.

Large present-day mammals, like the African elephant, haven’t reached sizes similar to dinosaurs because they use most of their energy on temperature regulation, he added.

McNab said that due to their size, large dinosaurs were able to maintain a constant body temperature through thermal inertia and a small surface-to-volume ratio.

As a result, McNab concludes that dinosaurs like sauropods were homeothermic – had an intermediate body temperature.

Palaeontologist Dr John Long, of Museum Victoria, said that the idea that dinosaurs had intermediate body temperatures is not unusual.

He said that some large cold blooded animals can maintain a constant body temperature regardless of the environment – much like warm blooded animals.

“If you think of the giant turtles that live in the cold waters of the Atlantic they can have much higher body temperatures than the sea water around them,” said Long.

He said that the bigger an animal is, the less energy it takes to maintain a constant and higher body temperature.

“They can generate heat through their muscle metabolism,” he said. (ANI)

Coimbatore experts bring perfect pictures closer to reality

Washington, July 9 (ANI): Coimbatore-based experts have turned to neural networks to help photographers clean up blur’s noise and distortion in images.

S. Uma of the Coimbatore Institute of Technology and S. Annadurai of the Government College of Technology say that their approach can significantly reduce information loss while reversing blurring caused by lens aberrations and faults and reducing noise that distorts the appearance of an image.

They suggest that distortions in an image due to atmospheric disturbances between camera and distant subjects could be unravelled and a photo taken on a hot, hazy day made acceptable.

The researchers point out that earlier attempts at this kind of inverse filtering of an image rely on the image having a high signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio.

According to them, other approaches require huge amounts of computing power and are generally untenable.

They say that this is especially true in the fledgling field of artificial vision, whether robotic or prosthetic.

However, they add, some success with neural networks has been achieved.

Uma and Annadurai have developed a modified recurrent Hopfield neural network that builds and extends the work of others to allow them to quickly process an image, and reduce distortion, noise and blurring.

When they tested their approach on square grayscale images just 256 pixels across, they were able to reverse severe blurring and noise deliberately added to the original photographic sample to much more acceptable levels in a short time using limited computing resources than was possible with previous neural network approaches or any other inverse filtering techniques.

An analysis of the before and after quality shows that quality is improved by between 39 and 67 per cent using the team’s approach, and results take half the time of other methods that produce lesser improvements.

The success bodes well for image processing, in various fields including vision research, art, homeland security, and science.

A research article describing the new approach has been published in the journal International Journal of Signal and Imaging Systems Engineering. (ANI)

Patients with lower urinary tract symptoms ‘at increased metabolic syndrome risk’

Washington, June 20 (ANI): A new study has revealed that patients with severe to mild lower urinary tract (LUT) symptoms are at a greater risk of developing metabolic syndrome, a collection of cardiovascular risk factors.

“These findings have important diagnostic and management implications,” said the authors.

“Patients who present with components of metabolic dysfunction should be routinely queried with respect to urological function, particularly voiding symptoms such as intermittency, incomplete emptying and nocturia, as well as the degree of associated bother.

“Sexual dysfunction symptoms, particularly erectile dysfunction, are similarly reported by the majority of men with MetS and should be routinely evaluated,” they added.

During the study, the researchers interviewed 2,301 men 30 to 79 years old. They found an increased odds ratio of 1.68 for metabolic syndrome was observed in men with mild to severe LUTS symptoms compared to those with few or no symptoms.

They also found increased odds of the metabolic syndrome even with mild symptoms, primarily for incomplete emptying, intermittency and nocturia.

The study appears in The Journal of Urology. (ANI)

Younus Khan backs Pak to win World Twenty20 championship this time around

Karachi, May 29 (ANI): Pakistan cricket captain Younus Khan has said that his team could win the World Twenty20 Championship this time around.

Pakistan was defeated by arch rivals India in the final match of the inaugural World Twenty20 Championship by five runs in Johannesburg two years ago.

“We want to win the title. We have the talent, but it’s a tough competition where other eleven teams will do their best to finish at the top,” Khan said.

Khan hoped that his team carries on from where it left against Australia in the Twenty 20 match played in the UAE recently.

“We beat Australia in the Twenty20 match which was a good morale booster and then had a good conditioning camp and some practice matches which tuned us well for England,” he said.

Pakistan has the best winning ratio in Twenty20 games when compared to other top teams, as it has won eight of its last 11 international games, The News reports.

Pakistan would take on England on June 7 in its first match of the tournament which is scheduled to begin from June 5.

It would then take on Netherlands two days later.(ANI)

Motor sports fans are riskier drivers

Washington, May 23 (ANI): Those employing drivers for their cars most likely ensure that the persons they choose are sober and possess valid driving licences, but the findings of an Australian study now suggest that people better make an addition to their checklists-he should not have any interest in motor sports.

Paul Tranter and James Warn, of the University of New South Wales, have found that being a race fan increases a person’s likelihood of speeding in the car, and seeing nothing wrong in it.

The researchers point out that several factors have been found to influence a driver’s attitude towards speeding and aggressive driving, including age, gender and what psychologists call “sensation seeking propensity”.

According to them, this thrill-seeking behaviour may also be a result of a driver’s environment.

Tranter and Warn wanted to see whether following professional motor sports as a fan added to the need to be fast and furious, and specifically considered whether social cognitive theory explained a fan’s need to imitate their favourite drivers by pushing the limits on public roads.

In their latest study, the researchers looked only at drivers 25 and older with at least 2 years driving experience, who are considered to be a much safer population by insurance companies.

The researchers asked residents of a small NSW town for three things: their level of interest in motor sports; their attitudes toward speeding and traffic laws; and their own self-reported negative driving habits.

The strongest correlation in the group was between an interest in racing and a pro-speeding attitude.

The researchers said that even among the safer, older group of fans, an intentional lead foot was found to exist.

“There remains a need to get the message out to the driving community that speed is linked to accidents, and that attitudes that condone speeding are a road safety problem,” Live Science quoted Tranter as writing.

He adds that another idea would be to shift a young driver’s need for risk taking to other sports, such as downhill skiing or mountain biking, which that have a more positive “thrill to bad outcome” ratio.

The study has been published in the journal Accident Analysis and Prevention. (ANI)

Pak favorites to win Twenty20 World Cup: Akram

Lahore, May 22 (ANI): Former captain Wasim Akram has said that Pakistan are favorites to win the next Twenty20 World Cup beginning in England from June 5.

Akram said Pakistan has the best track record in the Twenty20 format of the game as compared to other teams in the world, which makes it the favourites to win the coveted title.

“Pakistan has the best winning ratio of all the teams in the Twenty20 cricket. If they keep that consistency then they can lift the coveted title in England,” The Daily Times quoted Akram, as saying.

Pointing towards the team’s stupendous performance against Australia in the Twenty20 match in Dubai last month, Akram said Pakistan posses a strong bowling line-up that could create trouble for even the world’s best team.

“I thought Australia would thrash them in the one-off Twenty20 match in Dubai but it was the other way round, with Umar Gul, Shoail Tanvir and Rao Iftikhar Anjum, Pakistan have the best bowling attack backed by quality spin of Shahid Afridi,” he said.

Akram added that batting was the worrying factor for the team, as the senior players were struggling with their rhythm.

“Batting can let Pakistan down, as it has always done in the past, so there will be more responsibility on Younis Khan, Shoaib Malik, Misbahul Haq and Shahid Afridi,” he said.

ommenting on the defending champion India’s chances of winning the trophy once again, Akram said Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s dream of winning the championship for the second time could suffer, as the Indian players would be going into the event after a hectic season.

“I think Pakistan has played less cricket and will be fresh, while Indian players could be fatigued after playing in the Indian Premier League (IPL),” Akram added. (ANI)

New technique standardizes brightness of cosmology’s best standard candles

Washington, May 19 (ANI): Scientists have found a new technique that establishes the intrinsic brightness of Type Ia supernovae, which are considered the best standard candles for measuring cosmic distances, more accurately than ever before.
The technique has been found by members of the international Nearby Supernova Factory (SNfactory), a collaboration between the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, a consortium of French laboratories, and Yale University.

SNfactory member Stephen Bailey, formerly at Berkeley Lab and now at the Laboratory of Nuclear and High-Energy Physics (LPNHE) in Paris, France, searched the spectra of 58 Type Ia supernovae in the SNfactory’s dataset and found a key spectroscopic ratio.

Simply by measuring the ratio of the flux (visible power, or brightness) between two specific regions in the spectrum of a Type Ia supernova taken on a single night, that supernova’s distance can be determined to better than 6 percent uncertainty.

The new brightness-ratio correction appears to hold no matter what the supernova’s age or metallicity (mix of elements), its type of host galaxy, or how much it has been dimmed by intervening dust.

Using classic methods, which are based on a supernova’s color and the shape of its light curve – the time it takes to reach maximum brightness and then fade away – the distance to Type Ia supernovae can be measured with a typical uncertainty of 8 to 10 percent.

But, obtaining a light curve takes up to two months of high-precision observations.

The new method provides better correction with a single night’s full spectrum, which can be scheduled based on a much less precise light curve.

According to Bailey, the Snfactory’s library of high-quality spectra is what made his successful results possible.

“Every supernova image the SNfactory takes is a full spectrum,” he said. “Our dataset is by far the world’s largest collection of excellent Type Ia time series, totaling some 2,500 spectra,” he added.

According to Saul Permutter, a cofounder of the SNfactory and leader of the Supernova Cosmology Project, “Our longstanding goal has been to make use of all the information a supernova gives us about its physical condition as it brightens and fades away, and we get to see deeper and deeper into its atmosphere.”

“Finally, we’ve built a dataset with the size and quality to allow us to do this. These spectra open the possibility of many kinds of new measurements from the ground and in space,” he said. (ANI)

Triple drug therapy shows promise in treating breast cancer

Washington, May 16 (ANI): Mayo researchers have suggested a triple drug therapy that may offer a promising new option for breast cancer.

They said that combining two chemotherapy drugs with trastuzumab (Herceptin) to treat women who have metastatic HER2+ breast cancer might offer physicians another choice in their treatment options.

“This is a very well tolerated regimen. The combination is a good example of an excellent therapeutic ratio: good activity and low toxicity,” said study’s senior investigator, Dr Edith Perez, director of Mayo Clinic’s Breast Center in Jacksonville.
Dr Winston Tan, a medical oncologist at Mayo Clinic said that the chemotherapy regimen was previously tested in Europe and demonstrated good anti-tumour activity and low toxicity, so Mayo researchers combined it with Herceptin.

They found that 67pct of the 45 patients responded to treatment, with their tumours decreasing in size by at least 30 percent.

“The results are encouraging, and would support a larger, randomized Phase III study,” he said.

“This is a Phase II study of this triple combination, so we would need to study this treatment against the standard best two-drug treatment in a randomized Phase III study to know if this triplet is more effective.

“This regimen seems to be a very reasonable choice, and it offers the added advantage that women who use it do not lose their hair,” he says. The drug combination used most commonly for patients with HER2+ breast cancer that has spread – paclitaxel or docetaxel with trastuzumab – always causes hair loss,” he added.

The study was presented at the 45th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO). (ANI)

Swine flu virus may be as lethal as the one found in the 1957 pandemic

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Scientists say that the new strain of influenza A (H1N1), which is said to be behind the swine flu cases reported in Mexico, may be as lethal as the one found in the 1957 pandemic.

Imperial College London researchers came to this conclusion after analysing the pandemic potential of swine flu in collaboration with the World Health Organisation and public health agencies in Mexico.

The researchers’ best estimate is that in Mexico, influenza A (H1N1) is fatal in around 4 in 1,000 cases, which suggests that it may be as lethal as the influenza strain found in the 1957 pandemic.

The epidemic of influenza A (H1N1) presumably started in Mexico on February 15, and the data suggests that by the end of April, around 23,000 people were infected with the virus in Mexico. The researchers point out that 91 of those died as a result of infection.

However, the figures are uncertain because some mild cases might have gone unreported.

According to the researchers, the numbers infected could be as low as 6,000 people or as high as 32,000 people.

They say that the uncertainty around the numbers of people who have been infected with influenza A (H1N1) in Mexico means that the case fatality ratio (CFR) of 0.4 per cent, that is 4 deaths per 1000 infected persons, cannot be definitely established.

While the CFR is currently in the range of 0.3 to 1.5 per cent, the researchers believe that 0.4 per cent is the most likely.

The team say for every person infected, it is likely that there will be between 1.2 and 1.6 secondary cases, which is high as compared to normal seasonal influenza in which around 10-15 per cent of the population are likely to become infected.

However, it is lower than would be expected for pandemic influenza, where 20-30 percent of the population are likely to become infected.

Analysing an outbreak in an isolated village called La Gloria in Mexico, the researchers also observed that children were twice as likely to become infected as adults, with 61 per cent of those aged under 15 becoming infected, compared with 29 per cent of those over 15.

Based on that observation, the researchers surmise that adults have some degree of immunity against infection because of having been previously infected with a related strain of influenza, or it may mean that children are more susceptible to infection because they interact much more closely together, such as in school, than adults.

Professor Neil Ferguson, the corresponding author of today’s research from the MRC Centre for Outbreak Analysis and Modelling at Imperial College London, said:

“Our study shows that this virus is spreading just as we would expect for the early stages of a flu pandemic. So far, it has been following a very similar pattern to the flu pandemic in 1957, in terms of the proportion of people who are becoming infected and the percentage of potentially fatal cases that we are seeing.”

Furguson added: “What we’re seeing is not the same as seasonal flu and there is still cause for concern – we would expect this pandemic to at least double the burden on our healthcare systems. However, this initial modelling suggests that the H1N1 virus is not as easily transmitted or as lethal as that found in the flu pandemic in 1918,” added Professor Ferguson.” (ANI)

Haj pilgrims in Uttar Pradesh to be chosen by computerised lots

Lucknow, May 6 (ANI): The Haj Committee for Uttar Pradesh has come up with a novel mode of computerised system through which the aspiring devout Muslims will be chosen by lots for the pilgrimage to Mecca and Madina, known as the Haj.

The first list of pilgrims chosen through such lots was released in Lucknow on Tuesday.

Thousands of aspiring pilgrims waited anxiously to hear their names confirmed from the data that was compiled by the Haj Committee and uploaded on its website, prior to the draw of lots.

Sheikh Mohammad Khan, an applicant contended that it is the Lord Almighty’s call when one’s name gets selected through the online system of lots.

“What a better moment of happiness can we get? This is such an opportunity, which only a fortunate person can get. A lot of this fortune depends on the blessings of Lord Allah. A person experiences a divine feeling when he gets selected through the computerised system of lots,” he said.

According to official figures of Central Haj Committee, the total number of Haj seats allotted to India during 2009 is 1,60,000 of which 45,000 will be earmarked for Haj trips organised by private operators.

Out of the 160 thousand, 27,378 Haj pilgrims are from the state of Uttar Pradesh itself.

Another applicant Haleem Farooqi mentioned that his family and friends have been praying for him so that he gets an opportunity to undertake this holy pilgrimage.

The escalated number of applicants in India had created a problem for the respective Haj Committees in various states in finalising the list of pilgrims.

To overcome this bottleneck and crisis, the choosing of names through computerised lots was introduced in 2007.

Saudi Arabia grants Haj visas to countries based on certain strict ratio of quotas but has increased the numbers over the past couple of years.

Haj, one of the largest manifestations of religious devotion in the world, retraces the path of Prophet Mohammad 14 centuries ago after he defeated pagan forces in Mecca. (ANI)

“Sails” to guide satellites and used rockets back to Earth

London, May 4 (ANI): Soon, satellites and spent rocket stages could deploy “sails” to guide them back to Earth much faster than they would otherwise fall out of the sky.

With space becoming ever more crowded, there is a need to remove redundant objects that could pose a collision threat to operational missions.

According to a report by BBC News, extending a sail on an old spacecraft would increase drag and pull it into the Earth’s atmosphere to burn up.

Major European space firm EADS Astrium says the scheme has great potential.

“It is an interesting solution, especially for the satellite that has no propulsion system at the end of its life,” scientist Brice Santerre told BBC News.

Santerre and colleague Max Cerf have been working on what they call the Innovative DEorbiting Aerobrake System (IDEAS).

The concept involves extending booms and sheeting from spacecraft to increase the amount of drag they experience from the residual air molecules still present at altitudes up to even 750km (470 miles).

“The principle of aerobraking is to increase the surface over mass ratio of an orbital object, to accelerate the fall-out by increasing the drag on the system,” Santerre said.

“To do that, we need to deploy a very light structure. That’s why we chose to use ‘gossamer structures’. These are composed of booms and very thin membranes,” he added.

Santerre and Serf have been developing an aerobraking sail concept for the forthcoming French Microscope satellite.

Microscope is a science mission that will investigate the force of gravity and the behaviour of free-falling objects in a test of what has become known as the equivalence principle.

The satellite will take about a year to make its measurements and will then have no further purpose.

Ideally, such a spacecraft would be removed from orbit, especially since it will be circling at an altitude where many important Earth observation satellites also operate.

“Microscope has no propulsion system so it cannot de-orbit by itself. If we were to do nothing, the fall-out duration would be between 50 and 100 years,” said Santerre.

By erecting their boom and membrane mechanism, Santerre and Serf believe Microscope could be brought out of the sky in less than 25 years, which meets international orbital junk mitigation guidelines. (ANI)

Bharti sees operating margin as sustainable

New Delhi, Apr 29 (ANI): India’s top mobile operator, Bharti Airtel, sees its current operating margin as sustainable, director Akhil Gupta said on Wednesday.

“I think anything around 40 per cent is pretty decent with this bond. But of course, if you do anything more in terms of converting opex into capex or vice-versa, this ratio can change,” said Gupta.harti, which announced its March quarter results earlier, recorded an operating margin of 40.7 per cent in the March quarter.

It reported a forecast-beating 21 per cent rise in quarterly profit, as it added more users in the world’s fastest-growing wireless market and kept tariffs steady unlike its rivals.

Bharti, in which Southeast Asia’s top phone firm SingTel owns about 31 per cent, said January-March net profit rose to 22.39 billion rupees under U.S. accounting standards from 18.52 billion a year ago.

New Delhi-based Bharti added 8.3 million mobile users last quarter to boost its total customer base to nearly 94 million. The company has a market share of about 24 percent.

Shares in Bharti fell 13 percent in January-March, under performing a 0.6 per cent rise in the broader market. (ANI)

Comets may have provided key ingredients for life on Earth

Tel Aviv, April 29 (ANI): A new study by researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel has suggested that comets might have provided the elements for the emergence of life on our planet.

While investigating the chemical make-up of comets, Professor Akiva Bar-Nun of the Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences at Tel Aviv University found they were the source of missing ingredients needed for life in Earth’s ancient primordial soup.

“When comets slammed into the Earth through the atmosphere about four billion years ago, they delivered a payload of organic materials to the young Earth, adding materials that combined with Earth’s own large reservoir of organics and led to the emergence of life,” said Professor Bar-Nun.

It was the chemical composition of comets that allowed them to kickstart life, he added.

Using a one-of-a-kind machine built at Tel Aviv University, researchers were able to simulate comet ice, and found that comets contain ingredients necessary for providing the basic nutrients of life.

Specifically, Prof. Bar-Nun looked at the noble gases Argon, Krypton and Xenon, because they do not interact with any other elements and are not destroyed by Earth’s oxygen.

These elements have maintained stable proportions in the Earth’s atmosphere throughout the lifetime of the planet, he explained.

“Now, if we look at these elements in the atmosphere of the Earth and in meteorites, we see that neither is identical to the ratio in the sun’s composition. Moreover, the ratios in the atmosphere are vastly different than the ratios in meteorites which make up the bulk of the Earth,” said Bar-Nun.

“So we need another source of noble gases which, when added to these meteorites or asteroid influx, could change the ratio. And this came from comets,” he added.

During the comets’ formation, the porous ice trapped gases and organic chemicals that were present in outer space.

“The pattern of trapping of noble gases in the ice gives a certain ratio of Argon to Krypton to Xenon, and this ratio – together with the ratio of gases that come from rocky bodies – gives us the ratio that we observe in the atmosphere of the Earth,” said Bar-Nun.

Thus, the arrival on Earth of comets and asteroids led to the necessary ratio of materials for organic life, “which eventually were dissolved in the ocean and started the long process leading to the emergence of life on Earth,” he added. (ANI)

KLD Energy Technologies launches Pilot Partner Program targeting Asian vehicle manufacturers

Austin, Apr 28 (ANI/Business Wire India): In response to growing demand, Austin-based KLD Energy Technologies, Inc. announced the launch of a new Pilot Partner Program, dubbed P3, for two- and three-wheeled vehicle manufacturers worldwide.

Targeting manufacturers based in India and China, the program enables selected companies to test KLD Energy Technologies’ patented, high-frequency, high torque-at-low RPM, transmissionless motor system to ensure it meets key design specifications.

“Leading vehicle manufacturers recognize our motor system represents a paradigm shift in electric motors. We are targeting India and China because of the unparalleled growth of the market for scooters in these countries. Manufacturers are looking for affordable, high-performance solutions to replace gas-powered vehicles,” said Christian Okonsky, founder and CEO of KLD Energy Technologies and its subsidiary, KLD Motors America, Inc. (KMA).

Through P3, vehicle OEM manufacturers can determine the motor’s capabilities and specifications prior to executing larger volume orders. Vijay Davar, president and vice president of worldwide sales and marketing for KLD Energy Technologies and KMA, is implementing the program on behalf of the company.

“We are excited to announce the P3 program. It demonstrates our support and commitment to early partners in building successful and lucrative alliances,” said Davar.

“Our cutting-edge technology provides leading manufacturers with a solution to key performance challenges inherent to traditional electric motor propulsion systems for all vehicles,” added Davar.

Leveraging a patented technology, KLD Energy Technologies and KMA have launched a high-performance motor system, which uses nano-crystalline composite materials to achieve lower power and greater efficiency than traditional, iron-core motors.

The high-frequency to low RPM ratio eliminates the need for any transmission, substantially increasing the efficiency of vehicles. The highly responsive system enables electric vehicles to attain the same speeds and performance levels available in gas-powered vehicles at lower costs of operation and ownership.

Scooters of all types are replacing bicycles as a primary mode of transportation in Asian cities and other densely populated regions. Increasingly, leading Asian nations are striving to curb dangerous levels of pollution and are instituting a range of strategies, including promoting the adoption of electric scooters.

Earlier this year KMA announced a deal with Sufat, the leading Vietnamese scooter manufacturer, to produce its high-performance motor for a new line of scooters. Production of the motors is slated to begin in the fourth quarter at KMA’s manufacturing facility in Hanoi, Vietnam. The manufacturing of electronic controls is based in Austin, Texas. (ANI)

RBI cuts repo, reverse repo rates by 25 bps

Mumbai, Apr 21 (ANI): The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) revealed the annual monetary policy here on Tuesday.

According to the report, the short-term lending (repo) rate and borrowing (reverse repo) rates have been reduced by 25 basis points.

The repo rate, thus stands at 3.25 per cent while reverse repo rate stands at 4.75 per cent.

The RBI has said that there is scope for banks to cut lending rates and has asked banks to review their benchmark prime lending rates (BPLR).

A committee has now been formed to review the BPLR system.

Since October last year, the RBI has cut its repo rate by 4 percent and the reverse repo by 2.5 percent.

However, the cash reserve ratio (CRR), the percentage of deposits, which the commercial banks have to keep with the apex bank, remained unchanged at 5 percent.

The RBI has projected the economic growth for the fiscal year 2009-2010 at 6 percent and the average inflation at 3 percent for the medium term.

It was further revealed that the credit growth in the current financial year (ending March 2010) could touch 20 percent while deposit growth is estimated at 18 per cent.

Concerned over the current recessionary trends, the RBI warned that the slowdown could lead to an increase in the non-performing loans for banks.

It advised the banks to maintain credit quality. (ANI)

Nikkei dips 0.4 percent as techs fall

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average fell 0.4 percent on Monday, weighed down by Toshiba Corp’s (6502.T) tumble after a report on its plans to raise capital, while a stronger yen hurt shares in exporters.

Consumer lender Promise (8574.T) tumbled 16.2 percent to 1,310 yen after warning it faces an annual net loss of $1.3 billion as it sets aside more money to meet repayment claims from customers.

Despite upbeat results from banks such as Citigroup (C.N), Japanese banking shares fell. A top adviser to President Barack Obama said on Sunday that stress tests of the top 19 U.S. banks would expose some “very serious problems” but the administration has what it needs to confront the challenge.

“Investors can’t cheer U.S. bank earnings without qualms because although their profits from core operations appear to be improving, the issue of bad assets still remains,” said Takahiko Murai, general manager at Nozomi Securities.

“Ahead of U.S. banks’ earnings peak this week, investors are cautious and taking a wait-and-see stance.”

U.S. banks, which began reporting earnings last week, will continue to be in the spotlight, with results including Bank of America (BAC.N), Wells Fargo (WFC.N) and Bank of New York Mellon (BK.N).

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 slipped 37.07 points to 8,870.51. It had climbed 1.7 percent on Friday but lost 0.6 percent on the week, snapping a five-week rising streak.

The broader Topix .TOPIX inched down 0.3 percent to 843.20.

The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI finished up 0.1 percent on Friday, after General Electric (GE.N) and Citigroup (C.N) both posted better-than-expected results, lifting the broader market. .N

The Dow rose 22.7 percent over the past six weeks, making advances each week for the largest six-week gain since July 29, 1938.

Toshiba shares fell 6 percent to 312 yen after a newspaper said it plans to raise about 500 billion yen ($5 billion) in capital as early as June to prop up its finances, battered by loss-making chip operations and tax credit costs.

On Friday it widened its net loss estimate for the year ended March 31 by 25 percent to 350 billion yen after writing down 85 billion yen in deferred tax assets, cutting its shareholders’ equity ratio by more than half from a year ago to 8.2 percent.

Japan’s top lender Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (8306.T) fell 1.8 percent to 503 yen.

Advantest, the world’s biggest maker of semiconductor testers, declined 0.7 percent to 1,585 yen, Tokyo Electron Ltd (8035.T) fell 0.5 percent to 4,270 yen and Nikon Corp (7731.T) slid 2.8 percent to 1,290 yen.

The book-to-bill ratio for Japanese chip-making equipment hit a record low in March, an industry group said on Friday, as chip makers continued to cut spending as demand for electronics goods stayed weak.

Investors fret over a firmer yen as it curbs exporter profits when repatriated. In early Asia trade, the euro struck a three-week trough versus the yen.

(Reporting by Aiko Hayashi; Editing by Michael Watson)