Salma Hayek gives up space travel dream for baby

London, May 15 (ANI): Salma Hayek has abandoned her dreams of space travel with Sir Richard Branson”s Virgin Galactic team – because she”s too concerned for her safety as a mother.

The actress insists that she has stopped taking risks ever since she welcomed daughter Valentina in September 2007, with her husband, French fashion executive Francois-Henri Pinault.

The once-upon-a-time thrill seeking adventurer told U.S. magazine InStyle, “I love scuba diving and used to dive where the sharks were, and now? No more sharks.

“Everything became about the baby. You are in second position, or third… My dream was to go into space.

“I reserved my place with the Virgin (Galactic) expedition. And then I got pregnant. And now I”m a mother. So I”m not going to go.” (ANI)

Newton”s apple tree to travel into zero gravity

London, May 10 (ANI): A piece of the tree, which inspired Sir Isaac Newton’s theory of gravity after an apple fell from it, will be carried into zero gravity space on the next NASA shuttle mission.

The section of wood from Newton”s original apple tree is normally held in the Royal Society”s archives.

It was lent to British-born astronaut Dr Piers Sellers, who will be taking it into orbit, as part of the academic institution”s 350th anniversary celebrations.

The tree sample will be accompanied on its trip into space by an image of Sir Isaac, also donated by the Royal Society.

“We”re delighted to take this piece of Sir Isaac Newton”s apple tree. While it”s up there, it will experience no gravity, so if it had an apple on it, the apple wouldn”t fall,” the Scotsman quoted Sellers, a graduate of Edinburgh University, as saying.

“I”m pretty sure Sir Isaac would have loved to see this, as it would have proved his first law of motion to be correct,” he added. (ANI)

John Cusack says he’d love to travel back to 80s

London, March 29 (ANI): John Cusack has said that he”d love to go back to the 80s

However, the 43-year-old also said that he”d like to travel back in time like his Hot Tub Time Machine character primarily for the music.

The actor stars with Chevy Chase in the comedy, which sees a group of friends go back in time using a hot tub.

“It would be pretty fun if you could go back to when your favourite bands were first playing. Like if you were a drummer, you could go back to Liverpool right when the Beatles fired Pete Best and they”re looking for a drummer and replace Ringo Starr. There could be a couple of historic opportunities there,” the Mirror quoted him as saying.

“Or you could go see the Rolling Stones” first American tour or something, or see David Bowie or see the Sex Pistols when they first came to America. You could do an awesome rock ”n” roll tour and see bands” first explosions,” he added.

However, Cusack admitted that not everything about the 80s was great.

“I think the fashion would have to fall under the terrifying things of the 80s. The legwarmers, the scrunchies, the mullets, the primary colours. The list goes on and on. And I have a wide variety of fashion horror shows myself that”s available on cable, seemingly all the time,” he said. (ANI)

Hypersonic plane passes latest test

The Federal Government says Australian and US defence scientists have successfully tested a hypersonic aircraft for the second time in South Australia’s outback.

The aircraft soared through the atmosphere at more than 5,000 kilometres per hour after taking off from the Woomera Test Range.

The experiment was first conducted in May last year and more tests are planned.

Hypersonic flight could potentially allow people to travel between Sydney and London in just two hours.

Some raindrops travel faster than previously believed

London, May 17 (ANI): Meteorologists may be miscalculating how much it rains, for a new study has found that many raindrops travel at “super-terminal” velocities, faster than was thought possible.

Scientists previously thought that all raindrops fall at terminal velocity, a constant maximum speed that is determined by the interplay of gravity and drag.

The velocity for individual drops is considered to be largely controlled by their size: larger drops fall faster than smaller drops, due to their greater mass.

In the new study, Fernando Garcma-Garcma of the National Autonomous University of Mexico and colleagues measured the shadows of natural raindrops passing through a ray of infrared light.

They found that up to half exceed their terminal velocity. Some travel as much as 10 times faster, for their size.

“Others had detected this before, but everybody disregarded it, blaming it on an error,” New Scientist quoted Garcia-Garcia as saying.

The researchers believe that the super-terminal drops may be fragments of larger drops broken apart as they fall.

“If a large drop breaks into several fragments, each drop will have the speed of the large drop, at least temporarily, until the smaller drops slow to their new terminal velocity,” Garcma-Garcma said.

Researchers say that because of this, meteorologists may be overestimating total rainfall by up to 20 per cent.

The study is published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. (ANI)

How proteins travel in the brain

London, Apr 22 (ANI): While proteins are known to be at the centre of every life process, and carry out all sorts of work by going to the cell, what guides these basic molecules towards their target cells in the brain has been unknown, until now.

Don Arnold- a molecular and computational biologist at USC College-and colleagues have now solved the mystery for key proteins in the brain.

“There’s no little man sitting there, putting the protein in the right place. Proteins have to have in them encoded information that tells them where to go in the cell,” Nature quoted Arnold as saying.

Neurons have separate structures for receiving signals (dendrites) and for sending them (axons).

The electrical properties of both types of neurons depend on different proteins.

But the proteins travel in bubbles, or vesicles, powered by motors known as kinesins that travel along tiny molecular paths.

Even though the paths point to both axons and dendrites, dendritic proteins end up in dendrites, and axonal proteins go to the axons.

The researchers discovered a crude but effective sorting mechanism, in which firstly kinesins blindly carry both types of proteins towards the axon.

But, dendritic proteins enable the vesicles transporting them to bind to a second motor, known as myosin, that walks them back into the dendrite.

The filter ensures that only axonal proteins make it into the axon, while the others are caught by the second motor and diverted to the dendrite.

“This mechanism fishes these things out of the axon,” said Arnold.

Once in the dendrite, the proteins either land in a place where they can do their electrical work or they move back towards the axon, only to be fished out again.

Arnold said that the process looks inefficient, “but it is very effective.”

The discovery could allow finer control over neurons for basic research or for treatment of neurological disorders.

Also, scientists could target only dendrites or axons in a neuron for studying its outgoing or incoming impulses.

Apart from these applications, the study contributes a lot to the understanding of the brain and of protein transport in general.

“It’s a very basic question, something people have been wondering about for a long time,” said Arnold.

The study is appearing online this week in Nature Neuroscience. (ANI)

France, Brazil to propose system of world governance

Paris, April 1 (DPA) French President Nicolas Sarkozy and his Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Wednesday that their countries were preparing a proposal for a new world governance to prevent future economic crises caused by a lack of regulation.

‘We want (at least) a minimum of regulation in the face of the disaster that has been caused by total deregulation,’ Sarkozy told journalists in Paris after a meeting with Lula just hours before the two were to travel on to London for the G20 summit.

The proposal will be a ‘joint contribution’, Sarkozy said, to be prepared and presented by the foreign ministries of the two countries.

Lula said that the current crisis was ‘the result of a lack of governance, a lack of responsibility’.

The Brazilian president also said that the task of politicians was ‘to restore credit in the world. Only this will restore confidence to consumers in the world’.

But he cautioned that the G20 summit will not be easy.

‘The meeting will be a meeting of friends, but a difficult meeting, because all the friends do not necessarily think the same way,’ he said.

A successful result, Lula said, would be to leave the summit with ‘at least one proposition that would encourage the millions of human beings who expect… us to take measures that will lead them to believe that, in a few days, the economy will find its normal way again, and that they will find work, and have the means to eat and to dress themselves.’

Russian president to meet Merkel in Berlin

Berlin – German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev are to meet in Berlin on March 31, a German government spokesman said Wednesday.

The talks will cover bilateral issues and ways to deal with the global economic and financial crisis, spokesman Thomas Steg said.

The meeting comes a day before the two leaders travel to London for the Group of 20 summit of the world’s major economies on April 2.

In addition to the talks with Merkel, Medvedev will also meet German business leaders in the automobile, energy and steel sectors. (dpa)