Missing piece found in particle puzzle: scientists

(Reuters) – Research scientists announced on Monday they had identified the missing piece of a major puzzle involving the make-up of the universe by observing a neutrino particle change from one type to another.

Science

The CERN physics research center near Geneva, relaying the announcement from the Gran Sasso laboratory in central Italy, said the breakthrough was a major boost for its own LHC particle collider programme to unveil key secrets of the cosmos.

According to physicists at Gran Sasso, after three years of monitoring multiple billions of muon neutrinos beamed to them through the earth from CERN 730 kms (456 miles) away, they had spotted one that had turned into a tau neutrino.

Behind that scientific terminology lies the long-sought proof that the three varieties of neutrinos — sub-atomic particles that with others form the universe’s basic elements — can switch appearance, like the chameleon lizard.

The discovery is important, scientists say, because it helps explain why neutrinos arrive at earth from the sun in apparently far smaller numbers than they should under the Standard Model of physics that has held sway for some 80 years.

The fact that neutrinos are now proven to switch identities — as posited by two Moscow scientists in the late 1960s based on earlier work by a U.S. physicist — suggests that other types of neutrinos could exist but slip detection.

LIGHT ON DARK MATTER

In its turn, specialists say, this could help shed light on what is the dark matter that makes up about a quarter of the universe alongside the some 5 percent that is observable and the remaining 70 percent invisible “dark energy.”

“This is really exciting because it shows that there are things beyond the Standard Model,” said James Gillies, spokesman for CERN — the European Organization for Nuclear Research on the border between Switzerland and France.

The search for concrete evidence of dark matter and of what it might be is part of the work of CERN’s LHC, or Large Hardon Collider, the world’s biggest scientific machine that began operation near full force at the end of March.

But the beaming of muon neutrinos to the Italian center is not part of the LHC experiment. The beam is directed south under the Alps from another, smaller, CERN particle accelerator.

CERN quoted Lucia Votano, director of the Gran Sasso laboratories near the town of L’Aquila 112 kms south of Rome that was hit by a devastating earthquake in April last year, as saying that its work had achieved its first goal.

Scientists there were confident that the detection in the centre’s OPERA experiment of a tau neutrino would be followed by others showing that neutrinos can change, she said.

Work on the behavior of neutrinos has already brought Nobel prizes to late U.S. scientist Ray Davies, who first recorded in the 1960s that fewer were coming from the sun than current theories of the universe predicted.

He shared the prize in 2002, at the age of 87 and 4 years before his death, with fellow U.S. researcher Ricardo Giacconi and Japanese physicist Masatoshi Koshiba for the contribution to astrophysics.

(Editing by Jon Boyle)

Space technology helps understand Maya urban centres better

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Space technology has greatly revolutionized the archaeological understanding of urban centres built by the Maya.

University of Central Florida researchers led a NASA-funded research project in April 2009 that collected the equivalent of 25 years worth of data in four days.

Aboard a Cessna 337, LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) equipment bounced laser beams to sensors on the ground, penetrating the thick tree canopy and producing images of the ancient settlement and environmental modifications made by the inhabitants of the Maya city of Caracol within 200 square kilometres.

UCF anthropology professors Arlen and Diane Chase have directed archaeological excavations at Caracol for more than 25 years.

The hard work of machete-wielding research scientists and students has resulted in the mapping of some 23 square kilometres of ancient settlement.

The NASA technology aboard the Cessna saw beyond the rainforest and detected thousands of new structures, 11 new causeways, tens of thousands of agricultural terraces and many hidden caves – results beyond anyone”s imagination.

The data also confirm the size of the city (spread over 177 square kilometres) and corroborate the Chases” previous estimates for the size of the population (at least 115,000 people in A.D. 650).

Until now, Maya archaeologists have been limited in exploring large sites and understanding the full nature of ancient Maya landscape modifications because most of those features are hidden within heavily forested and hilly terrain and are difficult to record.

LiDAR effectively removes these obstacles.

Arlen Chase said: “It”s very exciting.

“The images not only reveal topography and built features, but also demonstrate the integration of residential groups, monumental architecture, roadways and agricultural terraces, vividly illustrating a complete communication, transportation and subsistence system.”

UCF Biology Professor John Weishampel designed the unique LiDAR approach.

He has been using lasers to study forests and other vegetation for years, but this was the first time this specific technology fully recorded an archaeological ruin under a tropical rainforest.

Chase said: “Further applications of airborne LiDAR undoubtedly will vastly improve our understanding of ancient Maya settlement patterns and landscape use, as well as effectively render obsolete traditional methods of surveying.”

The images taken at the end of the dry season in Belize last April took about 24 hours of flight time to capture and then three weeks to analyse by remote sensing experts from the University of Florida.

Now Caracol”s entire landscape can be viewed in 3-D, and that already offers new clues that promise to expand current understanding of how the Maya were able to build such a huge empire and what may have caused its destruction.

“The ancient Maya designed and maintained sustainable cities long before ”building green” became a modern term,” said Diane Chase, who has worked as co-director of the Caracol Archaeological Project beside her husband for the past 25 years. (ANI)

Here”s why we sigh

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Here””s why we sigh: it is critical for keeping our breathing systems flexible, says a research.

Scientists have found that sighing resets breathing patterns that are getting out of whack and keep our respiratory system flexible.

The study by researchers at the University of Leuven in Belgium involved rigging up eight men and 34 women with sensor-equipped shirts that record their breathing, heart rates and blood carbon dioxide levels over 20 minutes of quiet sitting.

What the scientists were looking for were specific changes over one-minute periods encompassing sighs that could confirm or contradict the ””re-setter hypothesis”” for the function of sighing.

“Our results show that the respiratory dynamics are different before and after a sigh. We hypothesize that a sigh acts as a general re-setter of the respiratory system,” Discovery News quoted Elke Vlemincx and her co-authors as saying.

The re-setter hypothesis is based on the idea that breathing is an inherently dynamic and rather chaotic system, with all sorts of internal and external factors changing how much oxygen we need and keeping our lungs healthy and ready for action.

This sort of system requires a balance of meaningful signals and random noise to operate correctly.

Occasional noise in a physiological system — like the respiratory system — is essential because it enables the body to learn how to respond flexibly to the unexpected, Vlemincx said.

“A sigh can be considered a noise factor because it has a respiratory volume out of range,” said Vlemincx.

In this experiment, a sigh was defined as at least two times as large as the mean breath volume.

“A breath is defined by a specific volume (depth), the amount of air we breathe in and out, and a specific timing, the time it takes to breathe in and out. Both these characteristics vary: from one moment to the next we breathe slower, faster, shallower, deeper,” Vlemincx said.

Vlemincx said that when breathing is in one state for too long, the lungs deteriorate. They become stiffer and less efficient in gas exchange.

Therefore, in times of stress, when breathing is less variable, a sigh can reset the respiratory system and loosen the lung””s air sacs, or alveoli, which may be accompanied by a sensation of relief, Vlemincx said.

The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal Biological Psychology. (ANI)

Sighing keeps our breathing systems flexible

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Here”s why we sigh: it is critical for keeping our breathing systems flexible, says a research.

Scientists have found that sighing resets breathing patterns that are getting out of whack and keep our respiratory system flexible.

The study by researchers at the University of Leuven in Belgium involved rigging up eight men and 34 women with sensor-equipped shirts that record their breathing, heart rates and blood carbon dioxide levels over 20 minutes of quiet sitting.

What the scientists were looking for were specific changes over one-minute periods encompassing sighs that could confirm or contradict the ”re-setter hypothesis” for the function of sighing.

“Our results show that the respiratory dynamics are different before and after a sigh. We hypothesize that a sigh acts as a general re-setter of the respiratory system,” Discovery News quoted Elke Vlemincx and her co-authors as saying.

The re-setter hypothesis is based on the idea that breathing is an inherently dynamic and rather chaotic system, with all sorts of internal and external factors changing how much oxygen we need and keeping our lungs healthy and ready for action.

This sort of system requires a balance of meaningful signals and random noise to operate correctly.

Occasional noise in a physiological system — like the respiratory system — is essential because it enables the body to learn how to respond flexibly to the unexpected, Vlemincx said.

“A sigh can be considered a noise factor because it has a respiratory volume out of range,” said Vlemincx.

In this experiment, a sigh was defined as at least two times as large as the mean breath volume.

“A breath is defined by a specific volume (depth), the amount of air we breathe in and out, and a specific timing, the time it takes to breathe in and out. Both these characteristics vary: from one moment to the next we breathe slower, faster, shallower, deeper,” Vlemincx said.

Vlemincx said that when breathing is in one state for too long, the lungs deteriorate. They become stiffer and less efficient in gas exchange.

Therefore, in times of stress, when breathing is less variable, a sigh can reset the respiratory system and loosen the lung”s air sacs, or alveoli, which may be accompanied by a sensation of relief, Vlemincx said.

The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal Biological Psychology. (ANI)

Diabetes in your genes makes obesity inevitable

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Healthy people with a genetic predisposition to Type 2 diabetes gain more weight overeating over the short term than their non-genetically-prone counterparts, say researchers.

In a 28-day study undertaken at Sydney”s Garvan Institute of Medical Research, scientists set out to mimic the kind of overfeeding that typically takes place during feasting periods like Christmas.

Seventeen (otherwise healthy) people with a family history of Type 2 diabetes, along with 24 people without any family history, took part in the research. The groups were matched for age, weight and lifestyle.

Each person was asked to eat 1,250 calories a day beyond their energy requirements – all carefully calculated in advance. They were given a variety of high-fat snacks such as crisps, chocolate bars and dairy desserts to supplement their normal diets. Their weight, fat distribution and blood insulin levels were measured at the start of the project, after 3 days and at 28 days.

On average, the people with a family history of diabetes gained over a kilogram more than the rest (3.4 kg as opposed to 2.2 kg) over 28 days. They also had more insulin circulating in their systems after only 3 days, before they showed any detectable difference in weight gain from the other group.

Dr Dorit Samocha-Bonet, Dr Leonie Heilbronn and Professor Lesley Campbell have published their findings in the international journal Diabetologia, now online.

“It”s already well-known that relatives of people with Type 2 diabetes are more likely to develop it themselves,” said Professor Campbell, senior researcher at Garvan and Director St Vincent”s Diabetes Services.

“We wanted to challenge these individuals with overfeeding while they were still young and healthy, without any metabolic impairments.”

“Our study shows just how quickly the body reacts to overeating, and how harmful it can be in susceptible people. While we expected differences between the two groups, we were surprised by the amount of extra weight the diabetes-prone group gained.”

An early warning sign of diabetes is the development of ”insulin resistance”, usually triggered by excess body fat. Insulin is a hormone made by the pancreas, which helps the body use glucose for energy. Insulin resistant muscle cannot respond properly to insulin from the bloodstream, leading to high levels of sugar in the blood.

High blood sugar levels damage tissues and organs, so the body works very hard to reduce them by producing more insulin. Eventually, the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas become exhausted and Type 2 diabetes develops.

“Insulin resistance can start to develop at least a decade before clinical diabetes, and this study helps us examine its very early stages in healthy adults,” said Dr Samocha-Bonet. (ANI)

Sudden temperature drop, not comet strike, behind extinction of dinos

Washington, April 24 (ANI): A sudden drop in global temperatures, and not a comet strike, led to the mass extinction of dinosaurs, according to a new research.

Scientists are now advising the constant monitoring of the present warning signs like influxes of fresh water into the North Atlantic, and slowdowns of the Atlantic Gulf Stream, lest the temperature shift may occur again.

While some theories blame the dinosaurs” extinction on an asteroid hit or volcano eruption, new research appearing in Nature Geoscience and the journal Geology, says climate was responsible.

According to the study, the greenhouse climate of the Cretaceous period experienced a sudden drop in world temperatures.

“We believe dinosaurs were most likely to be cold-blooded creatures and would have needed the warmth to keep them alive. If they were unable to migrate south, they could have been wiped out,” Discovery News quoted Gregory Price of the University of Plymouth, as telling the Daily Mail.

“Climate change is now very much on the agenda in trying to determine how the dinosaurs became extinct,” he added.

Scientists believe the first big Cretaceous temperature drop took place 137 million years ago and caused ocean temperatures to fall as low as 4 degrees centigrade.

Although it is difficult to imagine such a dramatic ocean cooling now, given global warming, climate change is said to cause extreme shifts of all kinds, from harsher than normal storms to this type of major ocean temperature shift.

Price and his team examined fossils for dinosaurs that once lived at Svalbard in the Arctic Circle.

This region during the Cretaceous was characterized by warm, shallow seas and swamps before the ocean changes took place.

Price said: “At certain times in the geological past, the world has been dominated by greenhouse conditions with elevated CO2 levels and warm Polar Regions, and hence, these are seen as analogues of future global climate.

“But this research suggests that for short periods of time, the Earth plunged back to colder temperatures, which not only poses interesting questions in terms of how the dinosaurs might have coped, but also over the nature of climate change itself.”

Price and his team arrived at their conclusions after examining the Svalbard dinosaur fossils and those for giant marine reptiles like pliosaurs and icthyosaurs.

Price said: “The flourishing of the dinosaurs and a range of other data indicates that the Cretaceous period was considerably warmer and boasted a high degree of CO2 in the atmosphere.

“But over a period of a few hundred or a few thousand years, ocean temperatures fell from an average of 13 degrees centigrade to between eight and four degrees.

“Although a short episode of cool polar conditions is potentially at odds with a high CO2 world, our data demonstrates the variability of climate over long timescales.” (ANI)

Elephants’ legs work like four-wheel drive in a car!

London, Mar 30 (ANI): Elephants move like a 4×4 vehicle with all four legs used to accelerate and brake, boffins have found.

In their research, scientists discovered that elephants eliminate the separation of functions of the front and back legs despite having an anatomy very similar to other four-legged animals.

Power is applied independently to each limb, reports The Daily Express.

Other animals that walk on all fours use the hind limbs for power and their forelegs for braking.

“Elephant legs function in very strange and probably unique ways,” said Dr John Hutchinson, of the Royal Veterinary College, London.

Earlier it was thought that elephants needed rigid pillar-like legs to support their weight but in fact they flex like humans. (ANI)

Guinea pigs not ‘dumbed down’ by domestication

Washington, March 26 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found out that guinea pigs have not ‘dumbed down’ due to domestication.

Researchers writing in BioMed Central’s open access journal Frontiers in Zoology tested domesticated and wild animals and found that they both performed well at a test in navigating a water maze, with the domestic animals actually being slightly superior.

Lars Lewejohann worked with a team of researchers from the University of Munster, Germany, to investigate the differing abilities of the two types of guinea pig.

“Both wild and domestic guinea pigs were able to learn the water maze task. Interestingly, it seems that domesticated animals had the advantage in spatial orientation, while wild cavies were the stronger swimmers,” he said.

“This suggests an adaptation to the man-made environment in domesticated animals that allows more efficient problem solving,” he added.

The researchers used 15 male domestic guinea pigs, 13 female domestic guinea pigs, 13 male cavies, and 13 female cavies.

They had to find a platform hidden under the surface of a circular pool of water using symbols on the walls of the tank for guidance.

Wild animals were significantly stronger swimmers than domestic.

Domestic guinea pigs, however, were better at deciphering the guidance symbols and using them to swim straight to the target area.

According to Lewejohann, “Overall, our findings indicate that these animals will be suitable for further investigations of learning and memory.” (ANI)

Why hot water freezes faster than cold

London, March 26 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have suggested that hot water may sometimes freeze faster than cold because of random impurities in the water.

Fast-freezing of hot water is known as the Mpemba effect, after a Tanzanian schoolboy called Erasto Mpemba.

Physicists have come up with several possible explanations, including faster evaporation reducing the volume of hot water, a layer of frost insulating the cooler water, and differing concentration of solutes.

But the answer has been very hard to pin down because the effect is unreliable – cold water is just as likely to freeze faster.

According to a report in New Scientist, James Brownridge, who is radiation safety officer for the State University of New York at Binghamton, believes that this randomness is crucial.

Over the past 10 years, he has carried out hundreds of experiments on the Mpemba effect in his spare time, and has evidence that the effect is based on the shifty phenomenon of supercooling.

“Water hardly ever freezes at 0 degree Celsius. It usually supercools, and only begins freezing at a lower temperature,” said Brownridge.

The freezing point depends on impurities in the water which seed the formation of ice crystals.

Typically, water may contain several types of impurity, from dust particles to dissolved salts and bacteria, each of which triggers freezing at a characteristic temperature.

The impurity with the highest nucleation temperature determines the temperature at which the water freezes.

Brownridge starts with two samples of water at the same temperature – say, tap water at 20 degrees C – in covered test tubes and cools them in a freezer.

One will freeze first, presumably because its random mix of impurities give it a higher freezing point.

If the difference is large enough, the Mpemba effect will appear.

Brownridge selects the sample with the higher natural freezing temperature to heat to 80 degrees C, warming the other to only room temperature, then puts the test tubes back in the freezer.

“The hot water will always freeze faster than the cold water if its freezing point is at least 5 degrees C higher,” Brownridge said.

The bigger the temperature difference between an object and its surroundings, the faster it cools.

So, the hot sample will do most of its cooling very quickly, helping it to reach its own freezing point of -2 degrees C, say, before the cooler water gets to its freezing point of -7 degrees C. (ANI)

Soon, operate your cellphone without touching it

Washington, Mar 23 (ANI): You could soon operate your cellphone just at the point of a finger, without even having to touch the display—thanks to touchless control made of printable polymer sensors.

The sensors, just like human skin, react to the tiniest fluctuations in temperature and differences in pressure and recognize the finger as it approaches.

And the feat has been achieved, owing to the efforts of the research scientists involved in the EU project 3Plast, which stands for ‘Printable pyroelectrical and piezoelectrical large area sensor technology’.

The companies and institutes involved from industry and research have set themselves the goal of mass producing pressure and temperature sensors which can be cheaply printed onto plastic film and flexibly affixed to a wide range of everyday objects, such as electronic equipment.

“The sensor consists of pyroelectrical and piezoelectrical polymers which can now be processed in high volumes by screen printing, for example. The sensor is combined with an organic transistor, which strengthens the sensor signal. It”s strongest where the finger is. The special thing about our sensor is that the transistor can also be printed,” explained Gerhard Domann, who is in charge of the project.

The production of polymer sensors still poses a number of challenges.

To produce printable transistors, the insulation materials have to be very thin.

However, the experts at the ISC have succeeded in producing an insulator, which is only 100 nanometers thick.

The first sensors have already been printed onto film.

The research scientists are currently working on optimised transistors, which can amplify rapid changes in temperature and pressure.

“By providing everyday objects with information about their environment – for example whether a person is approaching – by means of pressure and temperature sensors, we can create and market new devices that can be controlled just by pointing a finger,” said Domann. (ANI)

Helium rain explains scarcity of neon in Jupiter’s atmosphere

Washington, March 23 (ANI): In a new research, scientists at the UC (University of California) Berkeley, US, have suggested that helium rain is the best way to explain the scarcity of neon in the outer layers of Jupiter.

Neon dissolves in the helium raindrops and falls towards the deeper interior where it re-dissolves, depleting the upper layers of both elements, consistent with observations.

“Helium condenses initially as a mist in the upper layer, like a cloud, and as the droplets get larger, they fall toward the deeper interior,” said UC Berkeley post-doctoral fellow Hugh Wilson, co-author of the research paper.

“Neon dissolves in the helium and falls with it. So, our study links the observed missing neon in the atmosphere to another proposed process, helium rain,” he added.

Wilson’s co-author, Burkhard Militzer, UC Berkeley assistant professor of earth and planetary science and of astronomy, noted that “rain” – the water droplets that fall on Earth – is an imperfect analogy to what happens in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

The helium droplets form about 10,000 to 13,000 kilometers (6,000-8,000 miles) below the tops of Jupiter’s hydrogen clouds, under pressures and temperatures so high that “you can’t tell if hydrogen and helium are a gas or a liquid,” he said.

They’re all fluids, so the rain is really droplets of fluid helium mixed with neon falling through a fluid of metallic hydrogen.

The two modelers embarked on their current research because of a discovery by the Galileo probe that descended through Jupiter’s atmosphere in 1995 and sent back measurements of temperature, pressure and elemental abundances until it was crushed under the weight of the atmosphere.

All elements seemed to be as slightly enriched compared to the abundance on the sun, which is assumed to be similar to the elemental abundances 4.56 billion years ago when the solar system formed, except for helium and neon.

Neon stood out because it was one-tenth as abundant as it is in the sun.

Their simulations showed that the only way neon could be removed from the upper atmosphere is to have it fall out with helium, since neon and helium mix easily, like alcohol and water.

Militzer and Wilson’s calculations suggest that at about 10,000 to 13,000 kilometers into the planet, where the temperature about 5,000 degrees Celsius and the pressure is 1 to 2 million times the atmospheric pressure on Earth, hydrogen turns into a conductive metal.

Helium, not yet a metal, does not mix with metallic hydrogen, so it forms drops, like drops of oil in water.

This provided an explanation for the removal of neon from the upper atmosphere. (ANI)

How the nuclear bomb can tell if wine vintages are fake or not

Washington, March 22 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found that radioactive carbon dioxide (CO2) produced from atomic bomb tests in the atmosphere absorbed by grapes can be used to accurately determine if wine vintages are fake or not.

The new technique is similar to radio-carbon dating, used for years to estimate the age of prehistoric objects.

It works by comparing the amount of carbon-14 (C-14), a less common form of atmospheric carbon, to carbon-12 (C-12), which is more stable and abundant.

The ratio of these two carbon forms, or isotopes, has remained constant in the atmosphere for thousands of years.

“Until the late 1940’s all carbon-14 in the Earth’s biosphere was produced by the interaction between cosmic rays and nitrogen in the upper atmosphere,” Jones said.

“This changed in the late 1940”s up to 1963 when atmospheric atomic explosions significantly increased the amount of C-14 in the atmosphere. When the tests stopped in 1963, a clock was set ticking — that of the dilution of this “bomb-pulse” C-14 by CO2 formed by the burning of fossil fuels,” he added.

He explained that traces of radioactive carbon are captured by the grape plants through the absorption of carbon dioxide and eventually transformed into alcohol and other carbon-based components of the wine.

The “bomb-pulse” of the atmosphere is eventually absorbed into the wine.

“The year that the grapes were grown fixes the age or vintage of the wine,” Jones said.

“The carbon-14 isotope ratio of the wine alcohol can therefore be used to determine the vintage of a wine,” he added.

The scientists used a highly-sensitive analytical device called an accelerator mass spectrometer to determine the C-14 levels in the alcohol components of 20 Australian red wines with vintages from 1958 to 1997 and then compared these measurements to the radioactivity levels of known atmospheric samples.

They found that the method could reliably determine the vintage of wines to within the vintage year.

In addition to testing alcohol, measuring the age of other wine components, such as tartaric acid and various phenolic substances, can help improve the reliability of the technique for detecting fraud, according to Jones. (ANI)

Genetically modified flowers will not lose fragrance due to global warming, say scientists

Kuala Lumpur, March 22 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have suggested that flowers might be losing their fragrance due to global warming, and the only way out is introducing genetically modified flowers.

According to a report in New Strait Times, genetically modified flowers as the way out has been suggested by Dr Abdul Latif Mohamad, the Science and Technology Professor Emeritus at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia.

Climate change is also the reason Kuala Lumpur City Hall is increasingly turning to shady trees, because flowers which previously formed the centrepiece of its beautification programme have been wilting fast.

Datuk Bandar Datuk Ahmad Fuad Ismail said City Hall used to spend RM1.5 million a month to plant and maintain flowers in the city, but the contractor”s services were terminated in March last year.

City Hall has taken over the planting, opting for bou-gainvillea and the tropical shrubs, Ixora, for their durability and cheaper cost.

Under the previous arrangement, some of the small flowers cost RM3.50 per seedling.

“It was getting too costly to beautify the city. Flowers were dying fast,” he said, adding that City Hall would continue to plant shady trees more suited for soaking up the increasing pollution and coping with global warming.

Latif said UKM might have offered plausible reasons as to why some pollinators were not spreading flower seeds, a pattern caused by the missing “scent trail” with scent tissues burning easily due to global warming.

“The aroma producing chemical compounds in flowers dry up faster now compared with before,” he said.

“The only way out was to genetically modify the flowers so that the effects would not be permanent and the future generation would not be robbed of nature’s beauty,” he said.

“The act is almost like producing essential oils. Scientists add on certain chemicals for stronger scent,” he added.

He said that cents in flowers last longer in colder climate as plants can hold on to their essential oils longer.

“The flowers may still have strong scents in colder climate. But locally, we fear this might be lost forever,” he said.

According to Latif, Malaysians could no longer rely on nature to heal itself without the help of science.

He said Malaysia needed to follow in the footsteps of Japan, Europe, the United States, China and South Korea which have invested millions in the research of genetically modified seeds. (ANI)

Mini-laboratory to provide test-results in minutes

Washington, Mar 20 (ANI): Forget waiting for days for the results of laboratory tests, for patients will soon be able to get complex analyses done on the spot—thanks to a new system developed by Fraunhofer research scientists

The researchers have created a modular platform for in vitro diagnosis, which enables various types of bioanalysis – of blood and saliva for example – to be conducted in the doctor’s surgery.

“Thanks to its modular design our IVD platform is so flexible that it can be used for all possible bioanalytical tasks,” said Dr. Eva Ehrentreich-Forster from the Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering (IBMT) in Potsdam-Golm.

The core element of the mini-laboratory is a disposable cartridge made of plastic, which can be fitted with various types of sensor.

For an analysis the doctor fills the cartridge with reagents – binding agents which indicate the presence of certain substances such as antigens in the specimen material.

Various tests or assays are available for different types of analysis.

To perform an assay, the doctor only has to place the relevant substances in the cartridge and the test then takes place automatically.

“We have optimized the assays so that up to 500 assay reactions can be conducted in parallel in a single analysis step,” explained Ehrentreich-Forster.

Even in the case of complex analyses the doctor obtains a result within about 30 minutes.

In fact, there is a new module on the reverse side of the cartridge, which also makes it possible to analyse the specimen material at DNA level.

Once the cartridge has been prepared, the doctor places it in the measurement system and one can read out the results with either optical or electrochemical biosensors.

The researchers have installed a readout window for both methods in the measurement system, which features a bypass through which the specimen is pumped.

The scientists are presenting the IVD platform at the Analytica trade show in Munich. (ANI)

Dinos didn’t die over long period of time

Washington, March 19 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have proven that non-avian dinosaurs did not die off over a long period of time.

A detailed look at dinosaur bones, tracks and eggs located at 29 archaeological sites located in the Catalan Pyrenees reveals that there was a large diversity of dinosaur species living there just before the fatal K-T extinction event 65 million years ago, which many scientists believe was caused by several large meteors hitting Earth.

Dinosaurs thrived outside of this part of Spain as well before 65 million years ago, such as in North America, but this particular research focused on the Catalan region, a former dinosaur hotbed.

Sites at towns like Tremp and Aren are rich in dinosaur bones, while those in Vallcebre contain many dinosaur tracks.

Excavations at the town of Coll de Nargó have also unearthed many fossilized dinosaur eggs.

These date to the Maastrichtian, the last stage of the Cretaceous period.

The researchers could even see incredible dino diversification in the upper layers of the Maastrichtian, just before non-avian dinosaurs disappeared off the face of the planet.

The research also shows for the first time that the Sauropod titanosaurus (an herbivorous quadruped that grew to enormous sizes), as well as the nodosaurid dinosaurs (armoured herbivores), preferred swampy habitats, while other dinosaurs such as the dromaeosaurids (relatively small-sized carnivores, closely related to birds) lived in practically all types of environments.

For the Autonomous University of Barcelona’s Violeta Riera, who worked on the project, studying dinosaurs in Catalonia is a privilege, given that “the dinosaurs found here are the last specimens that lived on Earth.”

“The Pyrenees are the only place in Europe where quality research can be carried out on the period in which they became extinct,” she affirmed.

No other European mountain range offers such rich sites since “at that time, Europe was a large archipelago with not much land for dinosaurs,” she said. (ANI)

Tropical ants use their legs as rudders to glide to safety from predators3

Washington, March 17 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found that tropical ants that nest in the forest canopy, but launch themselves into the air when predators arrive, can glide back to their trees using their back legs as rudders.

The arboreal ants, Cephalotes atratus, build elaborate nests in the trunks and branches of tall trees, but are sometimes dislodged by strong winds and tropical downpours, or jump to safety when lizards and birds approach.

Rather than fall directly to the ground, the ants flip their bodies in mid-air and glide backwards, usually to the tree from which they fell, while peering between their legs to see where they are going.

Their elongated hind legs are used to adjust their trajectory and latch onto the tree when they land, scientists said.

According to a report in the Guardian, researchers used video to study the centimetre-long ants in flight after dropping them from treetops at a field station run by the US Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute on Barro Colorado Island in the Panama canal.

The ants’ acrobatic behaviour was confirmed in the laboratory using a high-speed video camera to observe their mid-air manoeuvres.

“For these ants, to fall out of the forest canopy, either into leaf litter or water, would be a really big problem because they’d wind up being eaten,” said Stephen Yanoviak at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, who led the study.

“By gliding, they can steer their way back to a tree, climb back up and go home,” he added.

If gliding ants become agitated, for example if they are attacked by a predator, they release an alarm pheromone that makes neighbouring ants leap to safety.

To find out how gliding ants steer, Yanoviak collected some of the insects and painted them white with nail polish to make them easier to see.

He then climbed up to the forest canopy, plucked a leg or two off each, and compared how well they glided when released.

“If you take the rear legs off the ants, they can still glide back to the tree, but they”re not nearly as good at it,” Yanoviak said.

In tests, a control group of intact ants landed on a tree trunk more than 90 percent of the time.

When their hindlegs were removed, however, they made it back to the tree roughly 40 percent of the time.

Removing the ants’ midlegs reduced their success to less than 70 percent. (ANI)

Dinos may have choked on ozone after asteroid impact 65 mln yrs ago

Washington, March 17 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have determined that after a giant asteroid slammed into Earth some 65 million years ago, the dinosaurs choked on ozone and were eventually killed off.

Ozone (O3) is a gas that is just three little oxygen atoms bounds together, which doesn’t make it a candidate for a potent mass murderer.

That’s also because the ozone layer is high in the stratosphere. In fact, its ultraviolet-shielding effect makes it very helpful for life.

But, the problems start when you bring ozone down near the surface.

Mix together a soup of hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides, and sunlight, and we can find ourselves swimming in the stuff, especially in urban areas.

No one knows what safe levels are, but medical studies suggest that lung tissue gets inflamed and damaged quickly at or around 100 parts per billion of O3.

Now, according to a report in Discovery News, a new study puts forth the idea that the Chicxulub impact, long blamed for the extinction of the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous era 65 million years ago, could have done them in by flinging huge amounts of ozone precursor chemicals – nitrogen oxides, methane, and other hydrocarbons – into the air.

According to the researchers’ simulation, the impact could have produced enough ozone to raise concentrations in the atmosphere to over 1,000 parts per billion (or 1 part per million), about 10 times the dangerous level for people.

These high O3 levels were probably enough to cause the dinosaurs to keel over in a fit of wheezing and respiratory distress.

The researchers suggest it may explain why the extinction was selective – it killed off 50 percent of all land animals, but spared large crocodiles, frogs, and mammals. (ANI)

Environment may influence apes” ability to understand declarative communication

Washington, March 16 (ANI): A new study indicates that apes may have the potential for understanding declarative communication and this potential may be achieved in specific environments.

Numerous studies have tried to determine if great apes (for example, chimpanzees and bonobos) are able to understand declarative communication, but results have been mixed.

In the new research, scientists Heidi Lyn and William Hopkins from Agnes Scott College and Jamie Russell from the Yerkes National Primate Research Center examined if exposure to different human communicative environments would affect understanding of declarative signals in chimpanzees and bonobos.

Three groups of apes were tested in this study. One group consisted of chimpanzees that had been raised in standard laboratory housing; although they had regular contact with humans, these interactions were limited to basic animal-care contexts such as feeding.

The other two groups of apes consisted of chimpanzees and bonobos that had been raised in socio-linguistically rich environments, where they were routinely exposed to complex communicative interactions with humans.

In the current experiment, the apes participated in an object-choice task – they had to choose between two containers, one of which contained a food reward.

The placement of the food in one of the containers was hidden from the apes, and a researcher indicated the correct container by pointing, vocalizing, or both.

The results indicate interesting differences between chimps and bonobos raised in socio-linguistically rich environments and chimps raised in standard laboratory housing.

The bonobos and chimps that had been reared in the highly communicative environments performed significantly better than chimps that had been reared in standard laboratory settings in the pointing, vocalizing, and pointing-and-vocalizing conditions.

Further analysis revealed that the best results occurred when the researcher simultaneously pointed and vocalized towards the correct container. This finding supports earlier studies that suggest visual cues enhance performance on auditory tasks.

“Because the ability to acquire declarative comprehension is common to both apes and humans, researchers must look elsewhere for a candidate biological change that allowed for the evolution of human language and cognition,” the authors said.

The study has been reported in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. (ANI)

Women outperform men when it comes to ironing

London, March 16 (ANI): Want your shirt ironed quickly? Well then ask a woman to do it. But if you want a plug changed in a rush, it’s a man’s job.

These are the findings of a new research.

Scientists conducted a series of three-minute trials between the sexes to see which tasks are more male or female friendly, reports the Daily Express.

Women outperformed men at ironing two shirts, threading six needles and making a bed from scratch.

However, they were also found to be better at negotiating a discount, winning an argument and arranging appointments within the 180-second timeframe.

On the other hand, men are better at changing a wheel, rewiring a plug and surprisingly faster at changing a nappy.

The tests were carried out by research analysts MindLab International.

It found clear divisions in what men and women could complete in just three minutes.

Women excelled in jobs which needed speedy hand-to-eye co-ordination and verbal reasoning.

Men did better at those jobs, which needed what researchers call spatial awareness, such as map reading, understanding self-assembly instructions and putting up a tent. (ANI)

Snakes have ‘night vision’ to hunt for prey in the dark

London, March 15 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have discovered the receptors that allow snakes to find prey in the dark.

Vipers, pythons and boas have holes on their faces called pit organs, which contain a membrane that can detect infrared radiation from warm bodies up to one metre away.

At night, the pit organs allow snakes to ‘see’ an image of their predator or prey — as an infrared camera does — giving them a unique extra sense.

According to a report by Nature News, a study by US researchers, has now revealed how this works at a molecular level.

Nerve cells in the pit organ contain an ion channel called TRPA1 — an infrared receptor that detects infrared radiation as heat, rather than as light, thus confirming theories of pit-organ function long held by behavioural ecologists.

The receptors are also found inside the heads of mammals, where TRPA1 channels, also known as wasabi receptors, detect pungent irritants from mustard plants or other sources.

The pit organ contains nerve fibres known as trigeminal ganglia.

The researchers reasoned that a good way to home in on the organ””s molecular heat detectors would be to compare the trigeminal ganglia with the dorsal root ganglia.

The latter supply the brain with sensory input from the neck down and would be less likely to produce proteins that only pit-organs need to detect heat.

The team looked at the different RNAs produced by each type of nerve — an indication of which genes are active and producing proteins.

They found only one, TRPA1, which was being expressed differently in the two types of ganglia, with the gene in the trigeminal ganglia producing 400 times more RNA than that in the dorsal root ganglia.

According to the team’s observations, rattlesnake TRPA1 is activated by temperatures higher than about 28 degree Celsius — roughly the temperature a snake would ‘feel’ from a mouse or a squirrel about a metre away.

“Although aspects of the findings contradict known behavioural and physiological work, the use of molecular genetic techniques is a new step in understanding how the facial pits work,” said herpetologist Aaron Krochmal from Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland. (ANI)