Slow motion as NZ edge Sri Lanka in US bow

New Zealand beat Sri Lanka by 28 runs in the first of two Twenty20 matches as international cricket made a historic attempt to break into the American market.

However, the format’s reputation as a carnival of brutal power-hitting suffered on a slow, lifeless pitch at the 20,000-capacity Central Broward Regional Park Stadium at Lauderhill on Saturday.

New Zealand struggled to a modest 120-7 off their 20 overs before Sri Lanka were bowled out for just 92.

On a day of tough batting and bowling conditions, only two sixes were hit in the entire match, which was hardly the kind of advertisement the International Cricket Council (ICC) would have wanted.

Yesterday’s match and a second on Sunday are the first cricket games on US soil between two ICC full members.

Only two Sri Lankan batsmen managed to adapt to the conditions with skipper Kumar Sangakkara making 17 and Angelo Mathews top-scoring with 27 before the 2009 World Twenty20 runners-up lost their last six wickets for just 30 runs.

Experienced medium pacer Scott Styris did the damage with 3-10 off three overs.

Styris said: “It wasn’t too bad, this wicket suited me.”

Ross Taylor top-scored for New Zealand with 27 off 30 balls with skipper Daniel Vettori contributing 21.

For Sri Lanka, spinner Ajantha Mendis starred with the ball, taking 2-18 off his four overs.

Vettori admitted his team’s batting had been a worry.

“It wasn’t much of a total, but we bowled well. We bowl well on these wickets, and the big boundary helped us too, you can’t just hit a couple of sixes any time.”

Sangakkara praised the Kiwis.

“They got a great start, they pushed us back in the first six overs, and New Zealand were a bit more disciplined than us, both with the bat in the field.”

Slow motion testing probes how full-scale buildings collapse in earthquakes

Washington, August 26 (ANI): Scientists have recently tried an innovative “slow motion earthquake” testing that may provide a safer, far less expensive way to learn about how and why full-scale buildings collapse during quakes.

The method was developed by researchers at the University at Buffalo (UB) and Japan’s Kyoto University.

“One of the key issues in earthquake engineering is how much damage structures can sustain before collapsing so people can safely evacuate,” explained principal investigator Gilberto Mosqueda, UB assistant professor of civil, structural and environmental engineering.

“We don’t really know the answer because testing buildings to collapse is so difficult. With this hybrid approach, it appears that we have a safe, economic way to test realistic buildings at large scales to collapse,” he said.

The UB/Kyoto team’s positive results could enable engineers to significantly improve their understanding of the mechanisms leading to collapse without the limitations of cost, reduced scale and simplified models necessary for shake table testing in the US.

In the unusual “slow motion earthquake” test conducted in late July, UB and Kyoto engineers successfully used the hybrid approach to mimic a landmark, full-scale experiment conducted in 2007 on the E-Defense shake table at the Miki City, Japan, facility.

In that test, a four-story steel building was subjected to a simulation of ground motions that occurred during the 1995 Kobe earthquake.

But, instead of using a full-scale steel building, this time, the researchers developed a hybrid representation of that test by combining experimental techniques carried out in earthquake engineering labs in Buffalo and Kyoto with numerical simulations conducted over the Internet.

The landmark data from the E-Defense test was used to verify the effectiveness of the hybrid approach.

Only the parts of the buildings that were expected to initiate collapse were tested experimentally.

“If this had been a real building, it would have toppled over,” said Mosqueda.

That presents a real problem in a laboratory.

“You can’t allow a structure to collapse completely on a shake table. You need to have support mechanisms in place, like scaffolds, to catch the falling structure,” said Mosqueda.

According to Mosqueda, the hybrid test paves the way for additional experiments that will allow researchers to more precisely learn about the nature of structural collapse.

“We want to know, for example, what is the probability that a building will collapse in the next expected earthquake,” he said.

“First, we need to develop this capability to understand and simulate how they collapse. Then, we can determine how to improve new construction or retrofit existing buildings so that they are less likely to collapse,” he added. (ANI)

ICC failed to deal with Muralitharan’s chucking: Richardson

Christchurch, Aug 24 (ANI): Former New Zealand opener Mark Richardson has accused the Sri Lankan off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan of breaching the 15 degree flexion rule.

Richardson said Muralitharan often bends his arm beyond the 15-degree norm even though he felt it was not the spinner but the indifferent International Cricket Council (ICC), which was at fault.

“There is no easy way to put this, no soft way to broach it, so here goes – Muttiah Muralitharan is throwing the ball,” Richardson wrote in Herald on Sunday.

“I know he’s been tested, re-tested, tested again and cleared. And I know, with the special makeup of his limbs to the naked eye, his action looks worse than it is. But, for goodness sake, half of cricket is now not watched with the naked eye, thanks to the invention of super-slow-motion cameras, hot-spots, snicko and hawk-eyes.

“Many of the slow-motion replays I’ve seen of Murali have only strengthened my conviction he is exceeding the 15 degrees bending and straightening allowance. Is it not meant to be the other way round? Isn’t the hi-tech equipment meant to alleviate my fears?” he asked.

Unlike former New Zealand captain Martin Crowe, who often flays Muralitharan, Richardson didn’t blame the offie, but opined ICC had failed to deal with the issue.

“I don’t blame Murali for this situation. Murali can only do what he does – and what he does he does as a champion, and unlike the other great spinner of my time, Murali does it with good grace and gentlemanly conduct,” Richardson said.

“The problem lies with the inappropriate way in which the ICC has decided to police throwing. A player is suspected of throwing and then, for want of a better term, tested in a laboratory. We’ve all seen the pictures of Murali lit up with bulbs. To his credit he volunteered for this. Apparently he proved he wasn’t a chucker.
“But did he really? What he proved is that he can bowl within limitation, not that in the heat of battle he actually does,” The Dawn quoted him, as saying.

He said that the way the ICC has gone about dealing with this situation, too many bowlers now appear to have suspect actions and can operate for too long before there is any reaction. (ANI)

Bursting bubble captured on camera

London, July 13 (ANI): An awe-inspiring photograph of the exact moment when a bubble is burst has been captured with a slow-motion camera.

The picture clicked by Richard Heeks, of Exeter, shows a soap bubble bursting into the distinctive pattern of streaks, while its other half remains perfectly formed.

“There’s something so satisfying about picturing something in your head and then finally seeing it on the camera,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying.It would be great to record the sound of a bubble popping, slow it down and play it over slow-motion footage of a bubble bursting.

“The ripping action reminds me of a storm front passing across land. It must be like a wave,” he added.eeks’ wife Sarah provided the finger to burst the bubbles as he used a 1/500th of a second shutter speed on a day with “absolutely perfect” weather conditions.

“There was absolutely no wind, the bubbles just hung in the air,” he said.

He took a series of pictures showing the bubble bursting into tiny droplets.

However, Heeks insists that the photographs are genuine, and not created with the help of computer technology.

“This is a real photo of a soap bubble bursting. I’ve made slight edits to raise colour and light, but this is just to add some punch. This is not a Photoshop creation,” he added. (ANI)

Water snakes startle fish to make them flee into their jaws

Washington, June 19 : A tentacled snake from South East Asia has developed a unique line of attack to catch its prey-it startles a fish in a way that the prey turns toward the snake”s head to flee instead of turning away.

In fact, the fish”s reaction is so predictable that the snake, instead of tracking its movement, actually aims its strike at the position where the fish”s head will be.

“I haven”t been able to find reports of any other predators that exhibit a similar ability to influence and predict the future behaviour of their prey,” said Kenneth Catania, associate professor of biological sciences at Vanderbilt University.

Catania used high-speed video to deconstruct the snake”s unusual hunting technique.

“Before I begin a study on a new species, it is my practice to spend some time simply observing its basic behaviour,” he explained.

While fishing, the snake forms an unusual “J” shape with its head at the bottom of the “J”.

It remains completely motionless until a fish swims into the area near the hook of the “J” and that”s when the snake strikes.

The snakes” motions take only a few hundredths of a second, and are too fast for the human eye to follow, but its prey reacts even faster- in a few thousandths of a second.

The studies have found that many fish have a special circuit in their brains that initiates the escape, which biologists call the “C-start”.

Fish ears sense the sound pressure on each side of their body. When the ear on one side detects a disturbance, it sends a message to the fishes” muscles causing its body to bend into a C-shape facing in the opposite direction so it can begin swimming away from danger as quickly as possible.

When Catania began examining the movements of the snake and its prey in slow motion, he saw something peculiar-when the fish that the snake targets turn to flee, most of them turn toward the snake”s head and many literally swim into its jaws!

After a closer study of the snake”s actions, he found that when the snake strikes, it doesn”t aim for the fish”s initial position and then adjust its direction as the fish moves – the way most predators do.

Instead, it heads directly for the location where it expects the fish”s head to be.

“The best evidence for this is the cases when the snake misses. Not all the targeted fish react with a C-start and the snake almost always misses those that don”t react reflexively,” said Catania.

The study has been published in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Astronomers take best image of chaotic duo of interwoven galaxies

Munich, March 17 (ANI): The European Southern Observatory’s (ESO’s) Very Large Telescope has taken the best image ever of a strange and chaotic duo of interwoven galaxies.

Known as Arp 261, the pair of galaxies has been imaged in more detail than ever before using the FORS2 instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope.

The image proves to contain several surprises.

Arp 261 lies about 70 million light-years distant in the constellation of Libra, the Scales.

Its chaotic and very unusual structure is created by the interaction of two galaxies that are engaged in a slow motion, but highly disruptive close encounter.

Although individual stars are very unlikely to collide in such an event, the huge clouds of gas and dust certainly do crash into each other at high speed, leading to the formation of bright new clusters of very hot stars that are clearly seen in the picture.

The paths of the existing stars in the galaxies are also dramatically disrupted, creating the faint swirls extending to the upper left and lower right of the image.

Both interacting galaxies were probably dwarfs not unlike the Magellanic Clouds orbiting our own galaxy.

The images used to create this picture were not actually taken to study the interacting galaxies at all, but to investigate the properties of the inconspicuous object just to the right of the brightest part of Arp 261 and close to the centre of the image.

This is an unusual exploding star, called SN 1995N, that is thought to be the result of the final collapse of a massive star at the end of its life, a so-called core collapse supernova. (ANI)