Invading black holes cause ‘cosmic flashes’

Washington, September 19 (ANI): Mathematicians at the University of Leeds, UK, have determined that cosmic flashes, known as gamma ray bursts, are produced by jets of plasma that originate from invading black holes.

Gamma ray bursts are beams of high-energy radiation that are similar to the radiation emitted by explosions of nuclear weapons.

The orthodox model for this cosmic jet engine involves plasma being heated by neutrinos in a disk of matter that forms around a black hole, which is created when a star collapses.

But, mathematicians at the University of Leeds, have come up with a different explanation: the jets come directly from black holes, which can dive into nearby massive stars and devour them.

Their theory is based on recent observations by the Swift satellite, which indicates that the central jet engine operates for up to 10,000 seconds – much longer than the neutrino model can explain.

Mathematicians believe that this is evidence for an electromagnetic origin of the jets, that is, that the jets come directly from a rotating black hole, and that it is the magnetic stresses caused by the rotation that focus and accelerate the jet’s flow.

For the mechanism to operate, the collapsing star has to be rotating extremely rapidly.

This increases the duration of the star’s collapse as the gravity is opposed by strong centrifugal forces.

One particularly peculiar way of creating the right conditions involves not a collapsing star, but a star invaded by its black hole companion in a binary system.

The black hole acts like a parasite, diving into the normal star, spinning it with gravitational forces on its way to the star’s centre, and finally eating it from the inside.

“The neutrino model cannot explain very long gamma ray bursts and the Swift observations, as the rate at which the black hole swallows the star becomes rather low quite quickly, rendering the neutrino mechanism inefficient, but the magnetic mechanism can,” said Professor Komissarov from the School of Mathematics at the University of Leeds.

“Our knowledge of the amount of the matter that collects around the black hole and the rotation speed of the star allow us to calculate how long these long flashes will be – and the results correlate very well with observations from satellites,” he added. (ANI)

Mystery of odd rotating stars solved by scientists

Washington, September 18 (ANI): A team of scientists has solved a longstanding mystery about a pair of stars called DI Herculis whose peculiar rotation had remained a mystery for three decades.

The shift in the orbit of DI Herculis was a mystery till now.

Now, MIT (Massachusetts Institute Of Technology) researchers and colleagues have determined that the stars are rotating tipped over on their sides, relative to their orbits around each other.

This produces tidal effects that counteract the expected rate for the orbits to shift orientation over time (called precession), finally explaining the mysterious anomaly.

The discrepancy in the rate of precession had been seen as a possible refutation of Einstein’s theory of relativity, so finding a conventional explanation means that relativity has withstood another possible challenge.

This discovery could also help to shed light on how binary stars (about half of all known stars) are formed and how their rotation and orbits evolve over time.

The mystery was solved by postdoctoral researcher Simon Albrecht and assistant professor of physics Joshua Winn and others, who used a high-resolution spectrograph called Sophie on a 1.93-meter telescope at the Observatoire de Haute-Provence in France to make highly detailed observations that revealed the unexpected tilt – one of more than 70 degrees from vertical, the other more than 80 degrees – of the stars’ rotation axes.

The team now hopes to study other unusual binary stars to try to determine how unusual this tipped-over configuration is. (ANI)

Astronomers obtain first detection of magnetic field on bright star Vega

Paris, June 24 (ANI): Astronomers, using the NARVAL spectropolarimeter of the Bernard-Lyot telescope in France, have obtained the first detection of a magnetic field on the bright star Vega.

According to an article in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, astronomers clearly observe the magnetically-induced effect in the spectrum of Vega, thereby showing that the star possesses a magnetic field, something unknown so far.

Using the high-sensitivity NARVAL spectropolarimeter installed at the Bernard-Lyot telescope at the Pic du Midi Observatory in France, a team of astronomers detected the effect of a magnetic field (known as the Zeeman effect) in the light emitted by Vega.

Vega is a famous star among amateur and professional astronomers. Located at only 25 light years from Earth in the Lyra constellation, it is the fifth brightest star in the sky. It has been used as a reference star for brightness comparisons.

Vega is twice as massive as the Sun and has only one-tenth its age.

Because it is both bright and nearby, Vega has been often studied but it is still revealing new aspects when it is observed with more powerful instruments.

Vega rotates in less than a day, while the Sun’s rotation period is 27 days.

The intense centrifugal force induced by this rapid rotation flattens its poles and generates temperature variations of more than 1000 degrees Celsius between the polar (warmer) and the equatorial regions of its surface.

Astronomers analyzed the polarization of light emitted by Vega and detected a weak magnetic field at its surface.

This is really not a big surprise because one knows that the charged particle motions inside stars can generate magnetic fields, and this is how solar and terrestrial magnetic fields are produced.

However, for more massive stars than the Sun, such as Vega, theoretical models cannot predict the intensity and the structure of the magnetic field, so that astronomers had no clue to the strength of the signal they were looking for.

After many unsuccessful attempts in past decades, both the high sensitivity of NARVAL and the full dedication of an observing campaign to Vega have made this first detection possible.

he strength of Vega magnetic field is about 50 micro-tesla, which is close to that of the mean field on Earth and on the Sun.

This first observational constraint opens the way to in-depth theoretical studies about the origin of magnetic fields in massive stars.

Astronomers believe that this discovery will be a key step in understanding stellar magnetic fields and their influence on stellar evolution. (ANI)

Land management practices in agricultural watersheds can affect carbon losses

Washington, June 20 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have determined that specific land management practices in agricultural watersheds, such as manure application, can affect carbon losses.

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) losses from tile drains are an underquantified portion of the terrestrial carbon cycle.

This is particularly important in the eastern corn belt where tile drainage dominates the agricultural landscape.

Specific land management practices, such as manure application, can play a large role in the export of DOC as soluble organic carbon is applied to or injected into the soil surface.

As animal agriculture intensifies in the upper Midwest, measuring DOC exported through tile drains is important when evaluating carbon budgets and carbon sequestration potential.

Scientists at Purdue University have investigated the impacts of manure application, crop rotation, and nitrogen application rate on DOC losses from tile drains.

Research was conducted over a six-year span (1998-2004) at Purdue University’s Water Quality Field Station, which was designed specifically to measure drainflow and solute losses from agricultural practices.

Forty-eight drainage lysimeters were established at the field site in 1992.

Twelve field treatments included a restored prairie grass, continuous corn rotations and corn-soybean rotations fertilized at three nitrogen rates, and continuous corn rotations fertilized with lagooned swine effluent applied in the spring or fall of each year.

The study determined that annual losses of DOC were not affected by any crop management practice.

However, when drainage-inducing rainfall occurred with one month of manure application, the monthly DOC concentration of the manured plot was greater than that of non-manured plots.

Overall, drainage hydrology was determined to be the largest sole driver of DOC loss.

Greater daily drainflows were associated with higher DOC concentrations compared to lower daily drainflows.

This indicates that larger storms effectively “flush” DOC from the soil systems.

According to Dr. Matt Ruark, now an Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, “Understanding the concentrations and amounts of DOC contributed to surface waters from tile drains is essential for evaluating the overall aquatic ecology of a watershed.

“This is of particular importance in the eastern corn belt, where up to 80 percent of the land in agricultural watersheds are tile drained,” he added.

Further research is required to evaluate the fate of tile drainage-exported DOC once it enters the surface water system.

The effect of manure management on the availability of DOC leached into subsurface soil is currently being investigated. (ANI)

Cabbage fuel-powered jets can cut carbon emissions by 84pct

Washington, June 20 (ANI): Jet fuel’s grave carbon emissions can be reduced by about 84 per cent by refining it from the seeds of a lowly weed, which is a cousin to the cabbage, says a Michigan Technological University researcher.

David Shonnard, Robbins Chair Professor of Chemical Engineering, came to this conclusion after analysing the carbon dioxide emissions of jet fuel made from camelina oil over the course of its life cycle, from planting to tailpipe.

“Camelina jet fuel exhibits one of the largest greenhouse gas emission reductions of any agricultural feedstock-derived biofuel I’ve ever seen. This is the result of the unique attributes of the crop-its low fertilizer requirements, high oil yield, and the availability of its coproducts, such as meal and biomass, for other uses,” he said.

Originated in Europe, Camelina sativa is a member of the mustard family, along with broccoli, cabbage and canola.

Also known as false flax or gold-of-pleasure, it thrives in the semi-arid conditions of the Northern Plains. The camelina used for the research was grown in Montana.

Shonnard points out that it is possible to convert oil from camelina to a hydrocarbon green jet fuel that meets or exceeds all petroleum jet fuel specifications.

According to the researcher, the fuel is a “drop-in” replacement that is compatible with the existing fuel infrastructure, from storage and transportation to aircraft fleet technology.

“It is almost an exact replacement for fossil fuel. Jets can’t use oxygenated fuels like ethanol; they have to use hydrocarbon replacements,” Shonnard said.

Given that camelina needs little water or nitrogen to flourish, Shonnard says that it can be grown on marginal agricultural lands.

“Unlike ethanol made from corn or biodiesel made from soy, it won’t compete with food crops. And it may be used as a rotation crop for wheat, to increase the health of the soil,” the researcher added.

Shonnard conducted the life cycle analysis for UOP LLC, of Des Plaines, Ill., a subsidiary of Honeywell and a provider of oil refining technology.

When asked whether people will soon be flying in plant-powered aircraft, Tom Kalnes, a senior development associate for UOP in its renewable energy and chemicals research group, said: “It depends.”

Kalnes added: “There are a few critical issues. The most critical is the price and availability of commercial-scale quantities of second generation feedstocks.”

He further said that more farmers would be require to be convinced to grow a new crop, and refiners must want to process it.

“But if it can create jobs and income opportunities in rural areas, that would be wonderful,” he said. (ANI)

Planck satellite all set to measure the Big Bang

Berlin, May 13 (ANI): Together with ESA’s (European Space Agency’s) Space Telescope Herschel, Planck is all set to go into orbit on May 14, to begin its studies of the cosmic microwave radiation and of the clues it gives about the Big Bang, the earliest phases of the cosmic history, and the structure and composition of the Universe. ccording to the standard model of cosmology, our Universe began 13.7 billions years ago in a Big Bang, the origin of Space and Time.

The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) is the relic heat from this Big Bang, released 380,000 years after beginning and still traveling freely through space today.

At that early time, weak fluctuations of matter density were present, which are seen as variations of temperature in the CMB.

By observing these fluctuations, cosmologists can infer how the large-scale structure of today’s Universe – galaxies, galaxy clusters and filaments – were formed.

The Planck satellite will be placed at the second Lagrangian point of the Sun-Earth-Moon system (L2), located about 1.5 million kilometers away from the Earth – four times the distance to the Moon.

It will spin around its own axis, which will always point towards the Sun, with each rotation recording another strip of the sky and mapping its temperature to an accuracy of about one million of a degree.

The data are sent to Earth and turned into temperature maps of the sky in data processing centers in France and Italy.

What the maps look like depends on certain characteristics of the Universe, for example on the curvature of space.

For hypothetic Universes with specified properties, computer simulations using the MPA software generate virtual maps, which will be compared with maps of the real sky.

“From the comparison, we can draw conclusions about the structure of our own Universe, for example how much ordinary matter and dark energy exist in it,” explained Torsten Ensslin, head of the Planck group at MPA (The Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics).

From their computer simulations, MPA cosmologists have shown how the CMB has influenced the gravitational field of dark matter.

The unseen structures of dark matter can therefore be deduced from temperature variations in the CMB.

The mission is expected to detect thousands of distant objects in a frequency range barely studied so far, and so to offer new insights into the physics of galaxies, Active Galactic Nuclei and quasars in the submillimeter domain.

These will show Planck scientists energetic processes in the immediate vicinity of massive black holes.

Planck may also help us to understand the birth of the first stars in the Universe and the structure of our own galaxy, the Milky Way. (ANI)

Missing planets proof of destructive power of stars’ tides

Washington, April 28 (ANI): Astronomers have come across first time evidence of the destructive power of stars’ tides, in the form of missing planets outside our solar system.

According to University of Washington astronomer Rory Barnes, the idea that gravitational forces might pull a planet into its parent star has been predicted by computer models only in the last year or so, and this is the first evidence that such planet destruction has already occurred.

“When we look at the observed properties of extrasolar planets, we can see that this has already happened. Some extrasolar planets have already fallen into their stars,” he said.

Computer models can show where planets should line up in a particular star system, but direct observations show that some systems are missing planets close to the stars where models say they should be.

The research involves planets that are close to their parent stars. Such planets can be detected relatively easily by changes in brightness as their orbits pass in front of the stars.

But, because they are so close to each other, the planet and star begin pulling on each other with increasingly strong gravitational force, misshaping the star’s surface with rising tides from its gaseous surface.

“Tides distort the shape of a star. The bigger the tidal distortion, the more quickly the tide will pull the planet in,” Jackson said.

According to Jackson, the destruction is slow but inevitable.

“The orbits of these tidally evolving planets change very slowly, over timescales of tens of millions of years,” Jackson said.

“Eventually, the planet’s orbit brings it close enough to the star that the star’s gravity begins tearing the planet apart,” he added.

“So, either the planet will be torn apart before it ever reaches the surface of the star, or in the process of being torn apart, its orbit eventually will intersect the star’s atmosphere and the heat from the star will obliterate the planet,” he further added.

Jackson hopes new observations will provide new lines of evidence to investigate how a star’s tides can destroy planets.

“For example, the rotation rates of stars tend to drop, so older stars tend to spin more slowly than younger stars,” he said.

“However, if a star has recently consumed a planet, the addition of the planet’s orbital angular momentum will cause the star to rapidly increase its spin rate. So, we would like to look for stars that are spinning too fast for their age,” he added. (ANI)

Buddhist deity meditation temporarily boosts visuospatial abilities

Washington, April 28 (ANI): A specific method of meditation may temporarily boost visuospatial abilities, the ability to retain an image in visual memory for a long time, according to a new study.

The study suggests that the meditation allows practitioners to access a heightened state of visual-spatial awareness that lasts for a limited period of time.

A team of researchers, led by psychologist Maria Kozhevnikov of George Mason University, investigated the effects of different styles of Buddhist meditation on visuospatial skills.

The researchers focused on two styles of meditation: Deity Yoga (DY) and Open Presence (OP).

During DY meditation, the practitioner focuses intently on an image of deity and his or her entourage. This requires coming up with an immensely detailed, three-dimensional image of the deity, and also focusing on the deity’s emotions and environment.

On the other hand, practitioners of OP meditation believe that pure awareness cannot be achieved by focusing on a specific image and therefore, they attempt to evenly distribute their attention while meditating, without dwelling on or analysing any experiences, images, or thoughts that may arise.

In these experiments, experienced DY or OP meditation practitioners along with nonmeditators participated in two types of visuospatial tasks, testing mental rotation abilities (e.g., being able to mentally rotate a 3-D structure) and visual memory (e.g., being shown an image, retaining it in memory and then having to identify it among a number of other, related images).

All of the participants completed the tasks, meditators meditated for 20 minutes, while others rested or performed non-meditative acitivities, and then completed a second round of the tasks.

The results revealed that all of the participants performed similarly on the initial set of tests, suggesting that meditation does not result in an overall, long-lasting improvement of visuospatial abilities.

However, following the meditation period, practitioners of the DY style of meditation showed a dramatic improvement on both the mental rotation task and the visual memory task compared to OP practitioners and controls.

These results indicate that DY meditation allows practitioners to access greater levels of visuospatial memory resources, compared to when they are not meditating.

According to researchers, this finding “has many implications for therapy, treatment of memory loss, and mental training.” Although, they conclude, future studies will need to examine if these results are specific to DY meditation, or if these effects can also occur using other visual meditation techniques.

The study is published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. (ANI)

IAEA says inspectors have left North Korea

IAEA inspectors departed the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) on April 16,” International Atomic Energy Agency spokesman, Marc Vidricaire, said in a statement.

The watchdog’s two-man team of inspectors had removed all IAEA seals and switched off surveillance cameras at the Yongbyon nuclear facility on Wednesday.

“This follows the DPRK informing the inspectors, on April 14, that it had decided to cease all cooperation with the IAEA, requested removal of containment and surveillance equipment and required the inspectors to leave the DPRK at the earliest possible time,” Virdricaire said.

In addition to the two inspectors at Yongbyon, a second two-man team of IAEA inspectors had been in Pyongyang.

Originally, they had been scheduled to take over from the first team as part of normal rotation of inspection duties.

But following North Korea’s announcement that it was terminating cooperation with the IAEA on Tuesday, the second team did not proceed to Yongbyon.

All four inspectors had now departed from North Korea, the IAEA said.

Ganguly’s fans protest against captaincy rotation

Kolkata, Mar 27 (ANI): Fans of Sourav Ganguly, who led Kolkata Knight Riders’ in the 2008 edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL), burnt the effigy of coach John Buchanan against his decision to rotate captains during the Twenty20 league.

Ganguly’s fans said they would not accept anyone else in his place.There will be only one captain in Knight Riders and he is Sourav Ganguly. He is the only successful captain in India. In any team where we have Ganguly, we need not have four or five captains. If there are four or five captains, we will also have five coaches,” said Bablu Haldar, one of the fans.

With at least three successful captains in its list, Kolkata Knight Riders have decided to go for a rotation of skippers.

The decision came after the coach analysed the strength of the teams, which boasts of international players like Chris Gayle (West Indies), Brendon McCullum (New Zealand) who have led their sides in the past to victory.

This would eventually ease pressure on Ganguly.

Ganguly on Wednesday said he accepted the decision, as he would be able to focus more on his batting and bowling skills.

Earlier, organisers of the Twenty20 tournament announced the eight-team league would be staged in South Africa from April 18 due to security reasons and would return to India next season.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) decided to stage the event overseas after failing to get government clearance for security cover as the tournament’s dates clash with the general elections. (ANI)

Cricketers’ injuries take a toll on Australian line-up in Durban

Sydney, Mar 5 (ANI): With fast bowlers Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus doubtful to participate in the second cricket Test against South Africa commencing from March 6, Australia has needed to shore up its fast-bowling stocks by calling up yet another new boy to their squad.

Australian Cricket Team led by Ricky Ponting began their tour of South Africa without injured Test pace regulars Stuart Clark and Brett Lee. Fast-bowling all-rounder Shane Watson was also on the sick list.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Mitchell Johnson was seen as the best choice for a match starter, followed by Siddle and Hilfenhaus, who were the fourth and fifth in the pecking order and Doug Bollinger sixth.

With Brett Geeves a late cover for the struggling Bollinger, Australia are down to their seventh- and eight-choice quicks.

McDonald’s bowling has been decent in his first two Tests, but he has struggled with the bat.

Since Johnson’s would not be able to serve the Durban matches with his exceptional batting skills, the temptation will be to drop McDonald and play a fourth specialist bowler Bryce McGain.

Rookie Australian opener Phillip Hughes faced rants from his competitor Proteas paceman Morne Morkel in his Test debut at Johannesburg, but is still unwilling to back down.

Sydney Morning Herald quoted him as saying, “The end of day three, I was 36 not out at the end of the day’s play, and a few blokes came over and obviously there was a lot of words said. They came very hard in that last session. I was batting with Simon Katich and then Ricky Ponting came out, and it was great batting with those two.”

Meanwhile, Cricket Australia boss James Sutherland and his South African counterpart, Gerald Majola, have discussed capitalising on the rivalry between the world No.1 and No.2 nations by playing every year.

The three-year rotation for Tests will probably continue but there are plans for one-day and Twenty20 series to be staged annually. Also discussed was the possibility of a five-Test series. (ANI)

Q+A – What is happening in Israeli coalition talks?

Benjamin Netanyahu met Roni Bar-On, finance minister in the outgoing Israeli government and a member of the centrist Kadima party, on Tuesday.

The right-wing Likud leader, nominated to be prime minister after a Feb. 10 parliamentary election, was continuing efforts to build a broad coalition government despite an initial rejection from Kadima leader Tzipi Livni.

Here are some questions on the challenges Netanyahu faces in forming a government:

WHAT ARE NETANYAHU’S CHANCES?

On paper, the Likud leader has the support of 65 legislators from right-wing and Jewish religious parties in the 120-member parliament. So Netanyahu, asked by President Shimon Peres on Feb. 20 to try to form a government, might be able to do so well within the 42-day period mandated by law. But a narrow, rightist coalition could put Netanyahu on a collision course with the Obama administration in Washington, which has pledged swift pursuit of Palestinian statehood, because of the smaller parties’ opposition to concessions to the Palestinians. Netanyahu is therefore seeking a broad, middle-of-the-road coalition: a unity government that would include the Kadima and centre-left Labour, which are the core of the outgoing administration.

IS A UNITY GOVERNMENT POSSIBLE?

That’s still unclear. Netanyahu held talks on Sunday with Livni, who said there were still “substantial differences” between her party and Likud. But she agreed to meet again. Much could depend on whether she comes under pressure from within Kadima, many of whose leaders, like Livni, once belonged to Likud, to agree to a political alliance. As Israel’s chief negotiator with the Palestinians, Livni has been pursuing a land-for-peace deal. Netanyahu wants to shift the focus of talks to economic matters. As for the Labour party, its leader, Defence Minister Ehud Barak, met Netanyahu on Monday. Barak reaffirmed that Labour would go into opposition, but said he and Netanyahu were likely to hold further discussions.

WHAT ABOUT A NETANYAHU-LIVNI “ROTATION” ARRANGEMENT?

Netanyahu has publicly rejected the idea of sharing the prime minister’s post with Livni, whose party finished one seat ahead of Likud in the inconclusive Feb. 10 election. But Israeli politics produces strange bedfellows — as in 1984, after a similarly inconclusive election, when Peres, Labour leader at the time, served as prime minister for two years before “rotating” with Likud’s hardliner, Yitzhak Shamir.

WHAT’S NEXT?

A lot of coalition negotiating, in public and in back rooms. In Israel, the bargaining over cabinet posts and government policy usually goes down to the wire. Netanyahu has until April 3 to put together a government.

AND IF HE FAILS?

Then Peres asks another legislator to try for a period of up to 28 days. If he or she fails, Peres, acting on a written request from a majority of legislators, assigns someone else to the task, which would need to be completed within 14 days. If that fails, a parliamentary election is held within 90 days.

Three in five Israelis want Kadima-Likud unity government

Jerusalem, Feb.17 (ANI): Three out of every five Israelis want a unity government in the country, The Jerusalem Post quotes a survey, as saying.

The survey was conducted among 498 Israelis who voted in last week’s general election and ahead of the “Forming a Government” gathering to be held on Tuesday in ZOA House in Tel Aviv.

According to the survey, 47 percent of the people questioned thought a day after the elections that Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu should form the next government, while 39 percent thought Kadima leader Tzipi Livni should.

Sixty-five percent said they would like to see Kadima and Likud in a unity government and 54 percent of them, most of whom were Netanyahu supporters, said it should not be a rotation government.

More than half of those surveyed said Labor should stay in the opposition, but 55 percent said they wanted its chairman Ehud Barak to keep the Defense portfolio.

“The survey proves that most people don’t think they erred in the way they voted and therefore another general election in the near future is not necessary,” said Yigal Tzahor, the director of The Ideological and Educational Center of Berl Katznelson Fund, who initiated the survey and will host the convention in Tel Aviv. (ANI)

Lillee summoned to save Oz pacer Watson’s career

Sydney, Feb.15 (ANI): Former Australian fast bowler Dennis Lillee has been called in to help Shane Watson resurrect his injury-plagued career.

According to Fox Sports, Watson has battled 11 injuries in the past six years, the latest being stress fractures in his back that cruelled the Queenslander’s hopes of winning selection for the upcoming South African tour.

Watson is charting a carefully constructed recovery plan in the hope of bowling by the end of April – and Australia pace great Lillee shapes as a key figure in returning the 27-year-old to the Test arena.

Lillee took 355 Test scalps but was crippled by stress fractures early in his career, forcing him to spend six weeks of the winter of 1973 with his back in a plaster cast.

Australia bowling coach Troy Cooley said Lillee would play a vital role in advising Watson.

“Dennis has been great with Shane; he did a little bit of work with Shane a long time ago with his first stress fracture. We’re accumulating our knowledge and basically trying to get the best result for Shane Watson, who is a great talent,” Cooley said.

“Basically we’ve had a good look at Shane, we got some 3D information on him. We’re basically going to pull his action apart and see if there’s anything we need to do in regards to that.”

Leading Brisbane physiotherapist Victor Popov, who helped implement the core stability program that guided Watson through an injury-free tour of India last October, said Lillee had detected a rotational flaw.

“He needs to sort out a little issue with his technique so he’ll be working with Dennis and Troy Cooley,” Popov said.

“Dennis Lillee was the guy who identified a minor rotation that he thought could be part of the problem.

“Dennis and Troy will work on that, just in case it’s part of the issue. We’re dotting the Is and crossing the Ts with Shane.

“Troy will do most of the work but Dennis will be consulted and have his input. Someone with Dennis’s history is very valuable for Shane.”

Cooley said he couldn’t guarantee Watson would not encounter further injuries but is adamant the all-rounder will not have to give up bowling. (ANI)

Ponting needs greater say on Cricket Australia’s player rotation policy

Sydney, Feb 13 (ANI): Skipper Ricky Ponting is not happy with player management of the Australian team, and believes that getting the issue right is the key to success in the big series this year, including the Ashes.

Ponting through his comments on Thursday made it obvious that he would like more say in the resting and rotational policy of the team as the side prepares for what he said would be the busiest period of his career.

The Australian skipper was not happy at being forced to rest for the second match of the series, and was rushed back early after New Zealand took a 2-0 lead, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.

He suggested he needed a bigger say on Cricket Australia’s policy, which is run by management and selectors.

“I think it’s important that we’ve got guys at their freshest mentally and physically for when we really need them,” Ponting said.

“It’s a hard one to get right. It’s probably no coincidence that over the past couple of games we’ve had a settled team and played our best cricket in this series. It’s something we need to keep looking at, making the overall policy a bit better and tighter.

“I have some say, like I do in some selections. We all have a little bit of a say but, at the end of the day, a lot of those bigger decisions are made without me so that’s just the way it is at the moment,” Ponting said.

There is also a chance Clarke could be ruled out of Sunday’s Twenty20 clash against the Kiwis in Sydney. Selectors had planned to rest Ponting from that game as the Australian Test squad leaves for South Africa the following day.

While Ponting said he was “feeling OK physically,” the 34-year-old refused to indicate whether he would like to sit out that match after playing non-stop since the Indian Test series last September, save for the one rested game. (ANI)

Plant and forestry waste might replace a third of gasoline use by 2030

Washington, Feb 11 (ANI): If a new study is to believed, plant and forestry waste and dedicated energy crops could sustainably replace nearly a third of gasoline use by the year 2030.

The study was conducted by researchers at the Sandia National Laboratories and General Motors Corp.

The goal of the “90-Billion Gallon Biofuel Deployment Study” was to assess whether and how a large volume of cellulosic biofuel could be sustainably produced, assuming technical and scientific progress continues at expected rates.

Researchers assessed the feasibility, implications, limitations, and enablers of annually producing 90 billion gallons of ethanol – sufficient to replace more than 60 billion of the estimated 180 billion gallons of gasoline expected to be used annually by 2030.

The “90 Billion Gallon Study” assumes 75 billion gallons would be ethanol made from nonfood cellulosic feedstocks and 15 billion gallons from corn-based ethanol.

The study examined four sources of biofuels: agricultural residue, such as corn stover and wheat straw; forest residue; dedicated energy crops, including switchgrass; and short rotation woody crops, such as willow and poplar trees.

It examines the costs of producing, harvesting, storing and transporting these sources to newly built biorefineries.

Using a newly developed tool known as the Biofuels Deployment Model, or BDM, Sandia researchers determined that 21 billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol could be produced per year by 2022 without displacing current crops.

The Renewable Fuels Standard, part of the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, calls for ramping up biofuels production to 36 billion gallons a year by 2022.

The study, which focused only on starch-based and cellulosic ethanol, found that an increase to 90 billion gallons of ethanol could be sustainably achieved by 2030 within real-world economic and environmental parameters.

It concluded that 90 billion gallons per year of biomass-derived ethanol can be produced and distributed with enduring government commitment and continued technological progress. (ANI)

Plant and forestry waste might replace a third of gasoline use by 2030

Washington, Feb 11 (ANI): If a new study is to believed, plant and forestry waste and dedicated energy crops could sustainably replace nearly a third of gasoline use by the year 2030.

The study was conducted by researchers at the Sandia National Laboratories and General Motors Corp.

The goal of the “90-Billion Gallon Biofuel Deployment Study” was to assess whether and how a large volume of cellulosic biofuel could be sustainably produced, assuming technical and scientific progress continues at expected rates.

Researchers assessed the feasibility, implications, limitations, and enablers of annually producing 90 billion gallons of ethanol – sufficient to replace more than 60 billion of the estimated 180 billion gallons of gasoline expected to be used annually by 2030.

The “90 Billion Gallon Study” assumes 75 billion gallons would be ethanol made from nonfood cellulosic feedstocks and 15 billion gallons from corn-based ethanol.

The study examined four sources of biofuels: agricultural residue, such as corn stover and wheat straw; forest residue; dedicated energy crops, including switchgrass; and short rotation woody crops, such as willow and poplar trees.

It examines the costs of producing, harvesting, storing and transporting these sources to newly built biorefineries.

Using a newly developed tool known as the Biofuels Deployment Model, or BDM, Sandia researchers determined that 21 billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol could be produced per year by 2022 without displacing current crops.

The Renewable Fuels Standard, part of the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, calls for ramping up biofuels production to 36 billion gallons a year by 2022.

The study, which focused only on starch-based and cellulosic ethanol, found that an increase to 90 billion gallons of ethanol could be sustainably achieved by 2030 within real-world economic and environmental parameters.

It concluded that 90 billion gallons per year of biomass-derived ethanol can be produced and distributed with enduring government commitment and continued technological progress. (ANI)

Plant and forestry waste might replace a third of gasoline use by 2030

Washington, Feb 11 (ANI): If a new study is to believed, plant and forestry waste and dedicated energy crops could sustainably replace nearly a third of gasoline use by the year 2030.

The study was conducted by researchers at the Sandia National Laboratories and General Motors Corp.

The goal of the “90-Billion Gallon Biofuel Deployment Study” was to assess whether and how a large volume of cellulosic biofuel could be sustainably produced, assuming technical and scientific progress continues at expected rates.

Researchers assessed the feasibility, implications, limitations, and enablers of annually producing 90 billion gallons of ethanol – sufficient to replace more than 60 billion of the estimated 180 billion gallons of gasoline expected to be used annually by 2030.

The “90 Billion Gallon Study” assumes 75 billion gallons would be ethanol made from nonfood cellulosic feedstocks and 15 billion gallons from corn-based ethanol.

The study examined four sources of biofuels: agricultural residue, such as corn stover and wheat straw; forest residue; dedicated energy crops, including switchgrass; and short rotation woody crops, such as willow and poplar trees.

It examines the costs of producing, harvesting, storing and transporting these sources to newly built biorefineries.

Using a newly developed tool known as the Biofuels Deployment Model, or BDM, Sandia researchers determined that 21 billion gallons of cellulosic ethanol could be produced per year by 2022 without displacing current crops.

The Renewable Fuels Standard, part of the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, calls for ramping up biofuels production to 36 billion gallons a year by 2022.

The study, which focused only on starch-based and cellulosic ethanol, found that an increase to 90 billion gallons of ethanol could be sustainably achieved by 2030 within real-world economic and environmental parameters.

It concluded that 90 billion gallons per year of biomass-derived ethanol can be produced and distributed with enduring government commitment and continued technological progress. (ANI)

Steyn, Ntini not to feature in Perth ODI

Perth, Jan.28 (ANI): The South African cricket team management has decided to rest key pacers Dale Steyn and Makhaya Ntini in Friday’s fifth and final one-day international to be played against Australia at the WACA Ground.

According to The Australian, all-rounder Wayne Parnell, 19, and left-arm fast bowler Lonwabo Tsotsobe, 24, will make their one-day international debuts for the Proteas.

South Africa’s bowling coach Vinnie Barnes admitted Steyn and Ntini wouldn’t have been rested had the series been tied at two apiece. But he said their omission shouldn’t be taken as a sign the Proteas were treating the game as little more than a practice hit-out.

“It’s just part of our rotation policy. We are looking long-term. We have to rest players, we are committed to that. We are not going to go into Friday’s game thinking about losing or taking it as an ordinary game, there’s a huge commitment from everybody,” Barnes was quoted, as saying.

“We’ve got a couple of young players coming in who want to make an impact and secure their future so Friday night’s game is as important as the game we’ve just played,” he added.

Barnes said left-handed batsman Vaughn van Jaarsveld, who made his debut in the first one-dayer, was also in line for a recall.

But the 23-year-old, who made just four before being run-out by Ricky Ponting, must first overcome an ankle injury.

Doubts also surround the fitness of all-rounder Jacques Kallis, who batted in Adelaide but didn’t bowl due to a side strain. Barnes said Kallis would undergo a fitness test on Thursday before a decision was made on his availability.

South Africa would leapfrog Australia into top spot in the one-day rankings with a win in Perth. The Proteas lead the series three games to one. (ANI)