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Tuesday, February 27, 2007

The energy [r]evolution starts here

The energy [r]evolution starts here

View over Dan Nan wind farm in Nan'ao, China. This province has the  best wind resources in China and is already home to several industrial  scale wind farms. China is investing heavily in wind power to meet its  growing energy needs.

Developing countries like China can develop and grow using renewable energy to avoid the mistakes of old climate-changing energy economies of developed countries.

Tackling dangerous climate change is the biggest challenge facing us all. Fortunately there is an answer to this challenge. Our report: ‘energy [r]evolution’, details how to halve global CO2 emissions by 2050, using existing technology and still providing affordable energy and economic growth. In short - a revolution in energy policy and an evolution in how we use energy.
The debate about climate change is over. Solutions are needed now. The energy [r]evolution is the road map for how to provide power for everyone without fuelling climate change.


We don't need to freeze in the dark. We don't need to build nuclear power plants. We don't need to cripple economic growth. We can make a safe and sustainable world energy scenario a reality.

We can have reliable renewable energy, and use energy more smartly to achieve the cuts in carbon emissions required to prevent dangerous climate change. Crucially this can be done while phasing out damaging and dangerous coal and nuclear energy.

Sven Teske, our energy expert, took a leading role in producing the report: “The Energy Revolution scenario comes as the world is crying out for a road map for tackling the dilemma of how to provide the power we all need, without fuelling climate change. “Renewable energies are competitive, if government's phase-out subsidies for fossil and nuclear fuels and introduce the `polluter-pays principle`. We urge politicians to ban those subsidies by 2010.”

Chinese woman works below 21st century renewable energy technology.

Chinese woman works below 21st century renewable energy technology.

The plan also details how large developing countries like India, China and Brazil can develop and grow using renewable energy to avoid the mistakes of old climate-changing energy economies of developed countries.

The Energy Revolution is not just our vision for the future. It was written with the European Renewable Energy Council (EREC) and in conjunction with specialists from the German Space Agency and more than 30 scientists and engineers from universities, institutes and the renewable energy industry around the world.

Revolution in energy policy


"The stone age did not end for lack of stone, and the oil age will end long before the world runs out of oil."

Sheikh Zaki Yamani, former Saudi oil minister.

It is clear that current 'business as usual' approach to energy supply cannot continue. However the longer we delay making significant change, the tougher those changes will need to be. In the next three years, major energy investment will be made in countries around the world. We have the opportunity to say farewell to old, polluting energy sources and to welcome in a new, more efficient and conflict-free energy future.

Politicians need to grasp this chance with both hands or be the ones whose negligence helped ensure dangerous climate change to be inevitable. You can help ensure a change by voting for politicians who support the Energy [R]evolution.

Evolution in energy use


Governments and industry need to drive a massive change in the way energy is produced. But we as individuals also have to drive a massive change in the way we use energy.

Using energy smartly can double energy efficiency by 2050. With a few simple steps, every one of us can do our bit.

Revolution and evolution are unforgiving forces. Nobody wants to be on the wrong side of either one. But it's time to choose: all of us are either part of the [r]evolution, or we're part of the problem. And unless all of us are part of the solution, all of us have a problem.

Illegal Carve-up of Congo Rainforests

Illegal Carve-up of Congo Rainforests

A logger takes a break in the Democratic Republic of Congo. More than  21 million hectares of rainforest are now allocated to the logging  industry, an area nearly seven times the size of Belgium.

More than 21 million hectares of rainforest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo are now illegally logged, an area nearly seven times the size of Belgium.

Enlarge Image

The second largest rainforest in the world -- after the Amazon -- sits in the Congo basin of Africa. Around 21 million hectares (over 51 million acres) of this pristine forest are being illegally logged. We've released new evidence of the extent of this forest crime.

The Congo Government introduced a moratorium in 2002 forbidding the allocation, extension and renewal of logging titles. But despite the original moratorium being reaffirmed by Presidential decree, it has been widely ignored. We are demanding that the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the World Bank, and other stakeholders take urgent action to stop the expansion of the logging industry in Congo's rainforests, and to fund alternatives to deforestation.

The Congo Rainforest is a critical habitat for the endangered bonobo (a relative of the chimpanzee) and other threatened species such as the forest elephant and the hippopotamus. It is considered to be a priority region for conservation, and is also home to numerous communities of the Twa and Bantu ethnic groups.

A bonobo swings on a tree in a bonobo sanctuary. Bonobos were the last of the great apes to be discovered. They live exclusively in the Democratic Republic of Congo. They are considered to be man's closest relative and organise themselves in sophisticated social groups. They are highly endangered from hunting and loss of habitat.

Greenpeace is highlighting one company which has breached the 2002 moratorium. ITB (Industrie de Transformation de Bois) is actively logging in the region of Lac Tumba, with two logging permits covering 294,000 hectares (726,489 acres) of forests. Both permits were issued after the moratorium was enacted. ITB logs with no forest management plan as it extracts high value species such as Wenge for export to the European market.

Delegates from the Congolese Government, donor community and civil society will meet next week in Brussels to discuss the sustainable management of the forests of the DRC. Greenpeace is demanding that all forest titles allocated by the government -- in breach of its own moratorium -- are cancelled. This would include ITB's. We want an ongoing legal review of all logging titles and an extension of the moratorium until comprehensive land-use planning and sufficient governance capacity is in place in the DRC forest sector.

"Logging companies promise us wonders: work, schools, hospitals, but actually, they seem to be only interested in their own short term profits. What will happen when our forests have been emptied? They will leave and we'll be the ones left with damaged roads, schools with no roofs and hospitals without medicine," said Pasteur Matthieu Yela Bonketo, coordinator of CEDEN, a Congolese NGO active in Equateur province who will be in Brussels for next week's conference. "Industrial logging doesn't bring benefits. The Twa and Bantu people who totally depend on our forests and the local communities who live in them are suffering because of the presence of the industry," he concluded.

The ESA Planck Surveyor Mission

The ESA Planck Surveyor Mission

Since the discovery of the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR) by Penzias and Wilson in 1965, the phenomenon has been studied intensively. By measuring intensity fluctuations in the CMBR, we can obtain unique information on the physical conditions in the early Universe. Just after Big Bang these physical conditions were very extreme, but the expansion of the Universe caused the temperature and density to decrease rapidly. The matter was completely ionised, and, due to the Thomson scattering by the free electrons, the Universe was completely opaque to electromagnetic radiation. Approx. 300.000 years after Big Bang, the temperature has decreased to about 3.000 K. The nuclei (mostly protons) and the free electrons re-combined to form neutral atoms and the Universe were suddenly completely transparent to photons. All these photons have travelled undisturbed through the Universe ever since and are now seen as the cosmic microwave background radiation.

The study of the early evolution of the Universe is a high-priority scientific area in Denmark. In order to combine both the theoretical and the observational efforts, a co-operation between DSRI, Theoretical Astrophysics Center (TAC) and the Niels Bohr Institute for Astronomy, Physics and Geophysics (NBIfAFG) was formed in 1995. As the first observational project, DSRI engaged itself in the US balloon experiment TopHat, described in section 2.5.1 below.

In April 1996, the Planck Surveyor mission was selected as the next ESA medium size mission. The main scientific objective is to study the CMBR with unprecedented sensitivity and angular resolution. DSRI has participated in the preparation of the Planck Surveyor mission since the early phases of the project. As a part of the preparation an appropriation from the Danish Ministry of Research was given to produce a carbon fibre test mirror, in order to demonstrate the Danish capability to produce the optical elements of the required quality. The test mirror was produced by Terma Industries, Grenaa.

The test mirror has been carefully tested. It has been demonstrated that the mirror fulfils the requirements concerning deviations from the optimal surface (rms. <>

The Planck Surveyor Test Mirror

Figure 9: The Planck Surveyor Test Mirror

Planck Surveyor is defined as a "principal investigator" mission, implying that only the parties responsible for the delivery of scientific instrumentation will have access to the scientific data during the long period from the time the data are collected and analysed, till the final maps are delivered to the general astronomical community. In this case, the mirror system is considered a scientific instrument. An agreement on the delivery of the mirror system has been signed between DSRI and ESA. The final approval by the ESA Council was given at the June 2000 meeting. ESA has decided to combine the Planck Surveyor mission and the FIRST missions on the same ARIANE 5 launch, planned for the first quarter of 2007.

A Danish Planck consortium with 3 member institutes as those taking part in the TopHat project has been established. The consortium is led by a steering committee with 2 representatives from each institute. Support has been obtained from the Danish Natural Science Research Council and the Danish Committee for ESA-related research.

UW scientists unlock major number theory puzzle

Mathematicians have finally laid to rest the legendary mystery surrounding an elusive group of numerical expressions known as the "mock theta functions."

Number theorists have struggled to understand the functions ever since the great Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan first alluded to them in a letter written on his deathbed, in 1920.

Now, using mathematical techniques that emerged well after Ramanujan's death, two number theorists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have pieced together an explanatory framework that for the first time illustrates what mock theta functions are, and exactly how to derive them.

Their new theory is proving invaluable in the resolution of long-standing open questions in number theory. In addition, the UW-Madison advance will for the first time enable researchers to apply mock theta functions to problems in a variety of fields, including physics, chemistry and several branches of mathematics. The findings appear in a series of three papers, the third appearing today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"It's extremely gratifying to be able to say we solved the 'final problem' of Ramanujan," says co-author Ken Ono, UW-Madison Manasse Professor of Letters and Science, who is widely noted for contributions to number theory. "We simply got really lucky."

Ono worked in collaboration with German mathematician Kathrin Bringmann, a postdoctoral researcher at UW-Madison.

"This is something I really didn't expect anybody to do," says George Andrews, a leading number theorist at Pennsylvania State University who in 2000 called mock theta functions one of the most difficult math puzzles of the new millennium. "It is an outstanding piece of work, a breathtakingly wonderful achievement."

Working from Ramanujan's letter, number theorists believed that mock theta functions are related to a well-understood class of mathematical expressions-the 'theta' functions-that have been in use for centuries. Theta functions constitute a certain sequence of numbers that has proved useful in various problems of mathematical analysis.

Mock theta functions similarly constitute an infinite series of numbers. But what has been completely baffling is what it is about mock theta series that make them so rich and powerful. Over the decades-much to the amazement of mathematicians everywhere-mock theta functions have cropped up amidst calculations in a number of fields, including mathematics, physics, chemistry, and even cancer research.

What made mock theta functions all the more inscrutable was the fact that the first few pages of Ramanujan's letter were lost. Those pages may have contained more clues, but in their absence, the letter merely presented 17 examples of the functions. What's missing is any definition of what the functions are, any hints on how to derive them, and any indication of why they are even important. All those secrets died with Ramanujan just two months after he wrote the letter, when he succumbed to tuberculosis at the age of 32.

"Imagine stringing together a thousand random words and then saying you've come up with the most beautiful poetry," says Ono. "That's essentially what Ramanujan did to us."

Bringmann and Ono made sense of it all by finding a way to represent the power of mock theta functions through another relatively new family of mathematical expressions known as the Harmonic Maass Forms.

A Dutch mathematician named Sander Zwegers had already made that important connection in 2002, but he had focused only on Ramanujan's examples.

It was during a flight to New Hampshire that Ono realized the full depth and meaning of Zwegers' work. Skimming a journal to pass the time, Ono happened upon an old article by George Andrews on mock theta functions. Suddenly, he noticed that some of the mathematics in the paper seemed to resonate with parts of the Harmonic Maass theory, which he and Bringmann just happened to be developing at the time, for other reasons.

The mathematicians found the connection held up beautifully. "We knew we were onto something right away," says Ono. "It was an uncanny set of coincidences that lead us to this solution. It was as if it all just fell into our lap and now we are serendipitously applying our theory to longstanding open problems."

Friday, February 9, 2007

'Doomsday' vault design unveiled

'Doomsday' vault design unveiled
By Mark Kinver
Science and nature reporter, BBC News

Artist's impression of the entrance to the vault

The final design for a "doomsday" vault that will house seeds from all known varieties of food crops has been unveiled by the Norwegian government.

The Svalbard International Seed Vault will be built into a mountainside on a remote island near the North Pole.

The vault aims to safeguard the world's agriculture from future catastrophes, such as nuclear war, asteroid strikes and climate change.

Construction begins in March, and the seed bank is scheduled to open in 2008.

The Norwegian government is paying the $5m (£2.5m) construction costs of the vault, which will have enough space to house three million seed samples.

The collection and maintenance of the collection is being organised by the Global Crop Diversity Trust, which has responsibility of ensuring the "conservation of crop diversity in perpetuity".

"We want a safety net because we do not want to take too many chances with crop biodiversity," said Cary Fowler, the Trust's executive director.

"Can you imagine an effective, efficient, sustainable response to climate change, water shortages, food security issues without what is going to go in the vault - it is the raw material of agriculture."

Future proof

The seed vault will be built 120m (364ft) inside a mountain on Spitsbergen, one of four islands that make up Svalbard.

Map showing location of Svalbard (Image: BBC)

Dr Fowler said Svalbard, 1,000km (621 miles) north of mainland Norway, was chosen as the location for the vault because it was very remote and it also offered the level of stability required for the long-term project.

"We looked very far into the future. We looked at radiation levels inside the mountain, and we looked at the area's geological structure," he told BBC News.

"We also modelled climate change in a drastic form 200 years into future, which included the melting of ice sheets at the North and South Poles, and Greenland, to make sure that this site was above the resulting water level."

By building the vault deep inside the mountain, the surrounding permafrost would continue to provide natural refrigeration if the mechanical system failed, explained Dr Fowler.

'Living Fort Knox'

The Arctic vault will act as a back-up store for a global network of seed banks financially supported by the trust.

Dr Fowler said that a proportion of the seeds housed at these banks would be deposited at Svalbard, which will act as a "living Fort Knox".

Although the vault was designed to protect the specimens from catastrophic events, he added that it could also be used to replenish national seed banks.

"One example happened in September when a typhoon ripped through the Philippines and destroyed its seed bank," Dr Fowler recalled.

"The storm brought two feet of water and mud into the bank, and that is the last thing you want in a seed bank."

Low maintenance

Once inside the vault, the samples will be stored at -18C (0F). The length of time that seeds kept in a frozen state maintain their ability to germinate depends on the species.

Freshwater ice (Image: P.Vermeij/Crop Diversity Trust)
The Arctic conditions will help keep the seeds in a frozen state
Some crops, such as peas, may only survive for 20-30 years. Others, such as sunflowers and grain crops, are understood to last for many decades or even hundreds of years.

Once the collection has been established at Svalbard, Dr Fowler said the facility would operate with very little human intervention.

"Somebody will go up there once every year to physically check inside to see that everything is OK, but there will be no full-time staff," he explained.

"If you design a facility to be used in worst-case scenarios, then you cannot actually have too much dependency on human beings."

Cross-section of the 'doomsday' seed vault (Image: BBC)

Brain scan 'can read your mind'

Brain scan 'can read your mind'

An fMRI scan of the brain

The researchers used scans of the brain to predict decisions
Brain scans have been developed which it is claimed can predict what a person is about to do.

German, British and Japanese scientists were able to "read minds" using sophisticated functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) and computer programs.

Current Biology reported people were asked to think about adding or subtracting - scientists were able to read intentions in 70% of cases.

A UK expert advised caution, but said such technologies would develop.


We shouldn't go overboard about the power of these technologies at the moment
Professor Colin Blakemore, Medical Research Council

Such techniques could be used to help people who are paralysed - there are already some steps being taken towards helping people using computer-assisted prosthetic devices linked to computers.

But this research might also allow abstract thoughts and intentions to be read.

It may even be possible to carry out instructions such as "send email" simply by thinking them - with a scanner picking up the wish and translating it in a way that the computer can act on.

'Spatial pattern'

The researchers, led by scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, in Leipzig, asked people to hold their mathematical decision in their minds until they were shown two numbers on a computer screen.

The fMRI scans monitored brain activity for the few seconds they were thinking about their sum, and it was on this information that the scientists made their predictions.

The researchers used a method called "multivariate pattern recognition".

A computer is programmed to recognise characteristic activation patterns in the brain that typically occur in association with specific thoughts.

Once this computer has been "trained" it can be used to predict the decisions of subjects solely from their brain activity alone.

Dr John-Dylan Haynes, who led the research, said: "It has been previously assumed that freely selected plans might be stored in the middle regions of the prefrontal cortex, whereas plans following external instructions could be stored on the surface of the brain.

"We were able to confirm this theory in our experiments."

He added: "The experiments show that intentions are not encoded in single neurons but in a whole spatial pattern of brain activity."

It appears regions towards the front of the brain store the intention until it is executed, whereas regions further back take over when subjects become active and start doing the calculation.

Professor Colin Blakemore, director of the Medical Research Council, said: "We shouldn't go overboard about the power of these technologies at the moment.

"But what you can be absolutely sure of is that these will continue to roll out and we will have more and more ability to probe people's intentions, minds, background thoughts, hopes and emotions."

He added: "Some of that is extremely desirable, because it will help with diagnosis, education and so on, but we need to be thinking the ethical issues through.

"It adds a whole new gloss to personal medical data and how it can be used."

Monday, January 29, 2007

Frozen sea may harbour Mars life

Elysium's frozen sea may be one of the best places to look for life

A frozen sea found on Mars is one of the most promising places to look for life on the Red Planet, scientists say.
But planned missions designed to search for microbes below the Martian surface will not drill deep enough to find living cells, the UK team has said.

Researchers at University College London say that microbes in the first couple of metres of Martian soil would be killed off by intense radiation.

Life might survive deeper down, where conditions are more benign, they think.


It just isn't plausible that dormant life is still surviving in the near-subsurface of Mars
Lewis Dartnell, UCL
But these depths were beyond the reach of drills envisaged for missions to Mars, said Lewis Dartnell, from UCL's Centre for Mathematics and Physics in the Life Sciences & Experimental Biology (Complex).

These missions - such as Europe's ExoMars rover - could find hints that life once existed there - such as proteins, DNA fragments or fossils, explained Mr Dartnell; and that "would be a major discovery in itself".

But he added: "The Holy Grail for astrobiologists is finding a living cell that we can warm up, feed nutrients and reawaken for study.

"It just isn't plausible that dormant life is still surviving in the near-subsurface of Mars - within the first couple of metres below the surface - in the face of the ionizing radiation field.

"Finding life on Mars depends on liquid water surfacing on Mars, but the last time liquid water was widespread on Mars was billions of years ago."

Survival times

The study, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, maps out the likely cosmic radiation levels at various depths, taking into account different surface conditions on Mars.

Unlike Earth, Mars is not protected by a global magnetic field or thick atmosphere and for billions of years it has been laid bare to radiation from space.

Exomars rover Image: Esa
Can Europe's rover drill deep enough to find life?
Mr Dartnell's calculations suggest survival times near the surface reach only a few million years. This would mean that the chance of finding life with the planned probes is slim.

Scientists would need to dig deeper and target very specific, hard-to-reach areas such as recent craters or areas where water has recently surfaced.

The research suggested that one of the best places to look for living cells on Mars would be within the frozen sea in Mars' near-equatorial Elysium region.

This is because the ice is relatively recent - it is believed to have surfaced in the last five million years - and so has been exposed to radiation for a relatively short amount of time.

Icy secrets

Water provides an ideal shield of hydrogen to protect life on Mars from destructive cosmic radiation particles.

Ice also holds an advantage because it is far easier to drill through than rock.

But, even here, surviving cells might be out of the reach of proposed drills. Other ideal sites include recent craters, because their surfaces have been exposed to less radiation, and the gullies recently discovered in the sides of some of these craters, as they are thought to have flowed with water in the last five years.

The discovery of a vast frozen sea just below the Martian surface was announced by scientists in 2005.

Their assessment was based on pictures from Europe's Mars Express that showed plated and rutted features across an area 800km by 900km.

John Murray, from the Open University, Jan-Peter Muller, from UCL, and others said a catastrophic event probably flooded the landscape five million years ago. The floodwaters then froze out and were covered with dust or ash, they argue.

Some researchers point to the lack of "ground truth" about the radiation environment on Mars' surface to assess life's chances there.

Monday, January 22, 2007

Dog-owners 'lead healthier lives'

If you want to live a healthier life get a dog, research suggests.

The companionship offered by many pets is thought to be good for you, but the benefits of owning a dog outstrip those of cat owners, the study says.

A psychologist from Queen's University, Belfast, said dog owners tended to have lower blood pressure and cholesterol.

Writing in the British Journal of Health Psychology, she says that regular 'walkies' may partly explain the difference.

Dr Deborah Wells reviewed dozens of earlier research papers which looked at the health benefits of pet ownership.

In some cases, the social support offered by an animal is greater than the support than another human could offer
Dr June McNicholas
Health psychologist

She confirmed that pet owners tended in general to be healthier than the average member of the population.

However, her research suggested that dog ownership produced more positive influence than cat ownership.

As well as lower blood pressure and cholesterol, she said dog-owners suffered fewer minor ailments and serious medical problems.

There was also the suggestion that dogs could aid recovery from serious illnesses such as heart attacks, and act as 'early warning' to detect an approaching epileptic seizure.

Stress-busting

Dr Wells said the precise reason for the benefits was not totally clear.

"It is possible that dogs can directly promote our well-being by buffering us from stress, one of the major risk factors associated with ill-health.

"The ownership of a dog can also lead to increases in physical activity and facilitate the development of social contacts, which may enhance both physiological and psychological human health in a more indirect manner."

Dr June McNicholas, a health psychologist who has specialised on research into the health effects of pet ownership said that an important reason for the improved health of dog-owners was not just the exercise received while taking it for walks, but the opportunity for social contact with other dog-owners.

She said: "For older people, an animal can fulfil the 'need to be needed', perhaps after children have left home.

"In some cases, the social support offered by an animal is greater than the support than another human could offer."


Indian capsule returns from space


Indian space capsule launched on 10 January
The rocket carrying the capsule was launched on 10 January
India says it has successfully tested the technology which ensures the safe return of astronauts from space after an orbiting capsule returned to Earth.

The capsule splashed down in the Bay of Bengal off the east coast after 11 days orbiting the earth, the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) said.

Isro chief Madhavan Nair said it was a key step in India's plan to send an unmanned mission to the moon in 2008.

The test's success also paves the way for future manned missions, he said.

Crucial phases

An Indian-built rocket launched the 500kg satellite, Space Capsule Recovery Experiment, and three other satellites, from Sriharikota in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh on 10 January.

The coastguard was in the process of recovering the space capsule, Isro confirmed.

The BBC's Habib Beary in Bangalore says the re-entry and recovery phases of a spacecraft are essential for any manned mission to space.

With the success of the experiment India joined the select club of nations - the US, France, Russia, China and Japan - who have mastered the technology.

Last July India failed to launch its heaviest communications satellite and test-fire its longest-range nuclear-capable ballistic missile.

Valiant Murray succumbs to Nadal



World number two Rafael Nadal held off a lion-hearted performance from Scotland's Andy Murray to reach the Australian Open quarter-finals.

Nadal battled to a 6-7 (3-7) 6-4 4-6 6-3 6-1 victory to set up a last eight meeting with Fernando Gonzalez.

Murray claimed an enthralling opening set on the tie-break, but dropped off the pace as Nadal won the second set.

The Scot won the next set but paid the price for not converting break points as Nadal took the fourth and fifth.

Highlights: Murray ousted by Nadal
Interview: Andy Murray

The players' body language at the start of the match made for fascinating viewing as they came together at the net like two boxers receiving their instructions before a title fight.

Nadal was a bundle of energy, jogging on the spot as he tried to make eye contact with his opponent, while Murray looked nervous and avoided the Spaniard's gaze.

But when the action got under way at the Rod Laver Arena, Murray stood toe-to-toe with the French Open champion.

Every service game was held in the opener, although Murray did have to save one break point before forcing the tie-break.

And Murray rose to the challenge brilliantly as he took it 7-3 thanks to an awesome serve and two correct Hawkeye challenges.

Both players went for a "comfort break" at the end of the set, but it was Murray who looked the more comfortable on their return as he held the next game to love.

Rafael Nadal
Nadal had too much strength for Murray in the final set

Murray went from strength to strength as he secured a break to claim a commanding 4-1 lead.

But Nadal, far too good a player to stay in the doldrums for long, suddenly found his best form, winning the next five games in a row to turn the set on its head.

Murray's serve fell apart as he seemed to struggle with a side strain.

And his malaise carried over to the start of the third set as two double faults in succession handed Nadal another break and a 3-1 lead.

But with his prospects looking bleak, Murray turned things around in astonishing style as he broke back before snatching the set with another break in the 10th game.

With the clocks ticking well past midnight in Melbourne, a rejuvenated Murray held serve twice


606: DEBATE
No disgrace in Murray losing to the world No.2, especially as he took 2 sets

SG
606: Have your say

But a crucial turning point came in the fourth game of the set as five break points came and went for Murray, allowing Nadal to hold for a vital psychological boost.

Nadal took full advantage of the let-off, breaking twice to set up a final-set decider.

The fifth set proved a let down for Murray and his enthusiastic band of followers but it could have all been different had Murray managed to convert the break points that came his way.

Instead it was Nadal who took his chances on Murray's serve to give a cruel twist to the scoreline which the 19-year-old's brave performance did not deserve.

Saturday, January 13, 2007

First stars in telescope's sights

The Hubble Space Telescope is a hard act to follow.


Since it was launched in 1990, the telescope has become one of the most important instruments in the history of astronomy, making critical discoveries that have vastly enriched our understanding of the cosmos.

John Mather is only too aware of this legacy. He is senior project scientist on Hubble's designated successor, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

Dr Mather, 60, has been involved with JWST from the start and is busy directing construction of it at Nasa's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

He is also a Nobel Laureate - Nasa's first. Mather shared the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics with George Smoot for their work on the Cosmic Background Explorer (Cobe) satellite.

John Mather (Nasa)
Everybody needs the successor to Hubble. If it were not here, people would be moaning and crying into their beer every day
John Mather, JWST senior project scientist
Cobe detected subtle temperature variations in the cosmic microwave background radiation - the "afterglow of the Big Bang".

These variations pointed to the density differences that ultimately gave rise to the first galaxies and stars, something Stephen Hawking called "the most important discovery of the century, if not of all time".

Speaking to BBC News at the American Astronomical Society's winter meeting in Seattle, Dr Mather said there were great expectations for JWST from the astronomical community and the public.

"Everybody needs the successor to Hubble. If it were not here, people would be moaning and crying into their beer every day. So we know that we have to have something," he explained.

"It was identified as the top priority for the nation - so we're doing it."

Red light

But the James Webb Space Telescope, named after a former administrator of Nasa, is not going to repeat the science carried out by its predecessor.

While Hubble gazed at the Universe in optical and ultra-violet wavelengths, JWST will look primarily in the infrared.

"This telescope extends the science that Hubble has pioneered, but it covers different wavelength regions," Dr Mather said.

"The infrared is where the new science seems to be, and where this mission has a special and unique advantage."

Hubble Space Telescope
Hubble will be a tough act to follow

Infrared astronomy is particularly important for understanding about the processes that went on in the early Universe.

Distant objects in the Universe are moving away from us at very fast speeds - and this has an interesting effect on the light they emit. It gets shifted to longer wavelengths: the "red" part of the spectrum.

The infrared is therefore essential to seeing the farthest - and therefore the earliest - objects to form in the Universe, a consideration that was one of the most important driving factors behind the design of the telescope.

"We know what the theories are predicting about these early objects, we know how bright and how far away they are supposed to be and what kind of telescope it would take to see them," said John Mather.

"So we said, 'it can't be a small telescope, it has to be a big one, and it has to work at certain infrared wavelengths'."

Two views of the Eagle Nebula
Eagle Nebula: In the infrared (L) and at Hubble's visible wavelengths
Infrared wavelengths are also good for seeing through the cocoons of dust that often obscure stars and planets in the process of formation.

But infrared light does not penetrate the Earth's atmosphere very well. This was one reason why an infrared telescope was needed in space, says Dr Mather.

In addition, the telescope needs to be cold, otherwise it will emit its own infrared radiation, swamping faint astronomical signals.

"It's designed to operate at cryogenic temperatures, on the order of 40 Kelvin (-233C, -388F)," said Dr Mark Clampin, observatory project scientist for JWST.

The technology builds on what we've done with Hubble, but takes it to the next level
Mark Clampin, observatory project scientist, JWST
"By doing that, we get the background of the telescope down so that we're looking at red light coming from the early Universe."

The large shield that visually dominates the spacecraft is designed to block light from the Sun, Earth and Moon that would otherwise heat up the telescope.

For this to work, it cannot be put in low-Earth orbit like Hubble. It must be in an orbit where all three of these objects are in about the same direction.

The most convenient place is "L2", one of five gravitational balance points in space, where it can stay fixed in the same spot relative to the Earth and the Sun.

JWST's primary mirror will be 6.6m (22ft) in diameter, compared with Hubble's 2.4m (7.9ft) mirror.

This is important because it determines the amount of light the telescope can collect, and therefore its ability to detect dim objects.

Performance tweak

"Hubble is a conventional telescope. It has a 2m primary mirror with a secondary mirror. JWST has a segmented primary mirror comprised of 18 individual elements," said Mark Clampin.

Construction of JWST mirror
JWST's mirror will be much bigger than Hubble's

"It gives us a lot more flexibility during its lifetime because we can actually tweak up the performance of the telescope.

"A lot of the technology builds on what we've done with Hubble, but takes it to the next level."

Although its primary mission is due to last five years, it is hoped this will be extended as it has been again and again in the case of Hubble.

It is even possible that when Nasa's new manned vehicle, the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) enters use, JWST could be serviced to upgrade it and extend its life.

The mission aims to examine every stage in cosmic history and the science priorities are organised into four main themes:

  • the end of the cosmic "Dark Ages"
  • the assembly of galaxies
  • the birth of the first stars and protoplanetary systems
  • planetary systems and the origin of life
"We think we know the initial conditions of the Universe now, at least in a statistical way," said John Mather.

"We have international agreement that our theories work up until the first stars start to form. The minute that interesting things start to happen, that stars light up and galaxies are forming, then all of those theories are no longer sufficient.

"We get into the complexity of immense chaotic processes. It's like going from climate prediction to tornado prediction."

Cosmic digging

Many aspects about the formation of the first stars are unknown, as are the processes by which the earliest clusters of stars started to organise themselves into galaxies like our own Milky Way.

"We'd like to do cosmic archaeology," said John Mather.

"Astronomers are lucky in the sense that we can see things as they were by looking very far away. Light travels so slowly that it takes a long time to get here from those distant objects.

"People think that light travels fast. But for cosmologists, it's just the right speed. It lets us look back into the earliest Universe if we can build the right kind of telescope."

We just know we can do more with something better
John Mather
JWST should also be able to detect extrasolar planets through the transit technique and examine the formation of planetary systems, a puzzle that has occupied astronomers for more than 50 years. And it even aims to shed light on the origins of life.

"We may be able to see something about the atmospheric chemistry of planets. If the planet's small enough, we may be able to learn about organic chemistry on an Earth-like object," said John Mather.

"We need luck on this one. We need people to go and survey all the nearby stars for planets and select the best targets. Maybe we'll get lucky."

Tough times

The project has survived through some turbulent times at Nasa.

As the agency has been re-structured to pay for President Bush's Vision for Space Exploration - which involves returning humans to the Moon by 2020 - science budgets have been slashed, resulting in many robotic missions being dropped.

JWST has been protected, partly through the patronage of influential executives within Nasa.

The telescope is due to launch on a European Ariane 5 from Kourou in 2013. With its tennis court-sized sunshield and huge mirror, JWST is so big it has to be folded up to get it into the rocket fairing.

The process of unfurling it in space is extremely complicated, and engineers are modelling this through computer simulations.

"Once we get to orbit, we first put out the transmitter and solar panels," said Mark Clampin.

"Then we deploy the sunshield so we can protect the primary mirror, then we unfold two wings with additional segments for the primary mirror, followed by the secondary mirror."

"It's very different from anything that's been done in the past."

Dr Mather said: "It's an elaborate process, but a butterfly comes out of the cocoon and unfolds its wings."

He said he hoped the telescope would eventually prove as important to astronomy as Hubble has been.

"Hubble has been so brilliantly successful," he said, "and we just know we can do more with something better."

THE JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE
JWST schematic (Nasa)
JWST is named after James E Webb, Nasa Administrator during the Apollo lunar exploration era; he served from 1961 to 1968
It will be placed 1.5m km from Earth, at Lagrange Point 2, an area of gravitational balance between the Earth and the Sun
The telescope will be shaded from sunlight by a shield, enabling it to stay cold, increasing its sensitivity to infrared radiation
Three principal instruments will gather images of the Universe in the infrared region of the spectrum
These will yield new information about how stars and galaxies first formed a few hundred million years after the Big Bang

Lung cancer vaccine to be tested

A large-scale trial to test a vaccine against the most common form of lung cancer has been launched.

More than 1,300 patients worldwide will help test Stimuvax, which in preliminary trials substantially increased survival time for many.

There were more than 37,000 people diagnosed with lung cancer in the UK in 2003, and death rates remain high.

The vaccine works by stimulating the body's own immune system to attack cancer cells.

It is aimed at the non-small cell type of lung cancer, which accounts for four-fifths of cases in the UK.

Currently, patients receive combinations of surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

Targeted vaccines are an exciting approach that could potentially offer new treatment options for major types of cancer
Dr Keith Blundy
Cancer Research Technology

Half of the people taking part in the worldwide trial will get this treatment, plus the vaccine, while the other half will get just the treatment, and a dummy vaccine called a placebo, so that scientists can compare survival in the two groups.

The vaccine was developed following research funded by Cancer Research UK, and the technology was licensed to be developed by Canadian biotech firm Biomira.

Dr Keith Blundy, chief operating officer of Cancer Research Technology, the charity's commercial arm, said: "Targeted vaccines are an exciting approach that could potentially offer new treatment options for major types of cancer."

Other researchers are looking at the potential for the same vaccine to tackle other types of cancer.

It works by priming the body's immune system to attack a chemical called MUC-1, which is found only on the surface of cancer cells.

Once this has happened, the body should be able to destroy cancer cells while leaving healthy cells unaffected.

Survival time 'increased'

Smaller-scale trials, involving 171 patients who had responded to conventional treatment, suggested that the vaccine might be helping some patients in their fight against the cancer.

Again, half the patients received normal treatment plus the vaccine, half got treatment and a dummy vaccine.

The patients were then monitored as they returned for check-ups over the next few years.

In the placebo group, half the patients survived 13 months or longer. In the vaccine group, half survived 30 months or longer.

If these large-scale trials yield similarly positive results, the vaccine could eventually be made more widely available to lung cancer patients.

Harpal Kumar, the chief operating officer of Cancer Research UK, said: "The 'translation' of basic research into patient benefit is the major focus of our work and we hope that new ventures will lead to many more such drugs entering trials in the future."

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

avast! 4 Professional Edition

avast! 4 Professional Edition


avast! 4 Professional Edition is a complete ICSA certified antivirus package for business and office use - from SOHO to largest corporations. avast! 4 obtained multiple VB100% awards in Virus Bulletin comparative reviews under Microsoft Windows. avast! 4 was awarded as "The Best Anti-Malware Solution" by Secure Computing Magazine Europe in April 2006

avast! 4 scans and protects your computers against viruses, worms and Trojans on any PC running Microsoft Windows workstation OS.

avast! 4 Professional Edition includes the following components:

  • On Demand Scanner - with two user interfaces:
  • Windows like or Skinnable Simple Interface - just select what do you want to scan in which way and press the Play button
  • Enhanced User Interface - Outlook like UI allows user to set any feature of avast!, prepare and run tasks, store and check task's results
  • On Access Scanner - resident scanning of all files being opened, read and written and behavior blocker monitoring dangerous actions of viruses or even users themself
  • E-mail scanner easily integrates with most mail clients and it checks both incoming and outgoing mails, it provides heuristic analysis of mail content to protect against new Worms, it supports multiple SMTP servers
  • Instant messaging protection - checks communication over MSN Messenger, ICQ, mIRC, Yahoo Messenger, AIM, Trillian etc.
  • P2P protection - scans all files exchanged over Kazaa, Kazaa Lite, Direct Connect, DC++, WinMX etc.
  • Network Shield - analyses all network traffic and scans it for malicious contents (Intenet Worms as Sasser, Blaster, SQL Slammer etc). It can be also taken as a lightweight firewall - or more precisely, an IDS (Intrusion Detection System) (on NT/2000/XP only)
  • Script Blocker - checks all scripts running under Windows Scripting Host and Web browsers
  • Boot Time Scanner - scans disks in the same way and in the same time as Windows CHKDSK does (on NT/2000/XP only)
  • Explorer Scanner - right click on the object allows you to scan it
  • Screen Saver scanner - integrates with your Screen Saver to scan PC during your coffee breaks
  • Integrated Virus Cleaner - removes the most of the dangerous virus/worm including Sobig, Klez, Yaha etc.
  • Virus Chest - safety isolated folder to store infected, suspicious and even some system files - to restore them
Our true incremental updates are based on iAVS technology and they are available for virus definition file update and for program upgrade.

  • You can download and install updates by simple clicking on the iAVS icon, it can be checked and done automatically when you are On-line, and by our exclusive PUSH technology.
  • The update files of size under 100 KB are available at least twice a week and within couple of hours in the case of emergency of new virus. They are automatically downloaded, installed and loaded to avast! without restart or logoff.
  • Program upgrades are available to incorporate new features time to time, they are incremental too (about 300 KB)
  • Updates and program upgrades are included for the selected length of contract (1, 2 or 3 years). Following years will be available for about 60% of the one year price.
avast! 4 is available in English, Bulgarian, Chineese Simplified and Traditional, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Spanish and Turkish languages. You can download other installation files and documentation from our download site. You will download a 60 days fully functional demo. You will obtain the license key by E-mail after the purchase. Download, install, try, buy, register, update and relax!

avast! 4 Professional Edition cannot be installed under Windows NT/2000/2003 server or Windows Small Business Server. Such customers should use avast! 4 Server Edition or avast! 4 SBS Edition



productpicture
Platform:
Windows 95, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows 98, Windows ME
Version:
4.7
Language:
English, German, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, French

Monday, January 1, 2007

Shah Rukh Khan in 'Dhoom 3'


The latest buzz in the industry is that King Khan will act in the third edition of the Yash Raj film ‘Dhoom’.

Bollywood is going to experience part III of a movie for the very first time. After Dhoom and Dhoom2, Aditya Chopra of Yash Raj Films has announced Dhoom3. The concept of two parts of a movie or the sequel of the movie after its success is not a new one. This concept can be seen in Nagin and Nageena, Koi Mil Gaya - Krrish, Munna Bhai MBBS - Lage Raho Munna Bhai, Hera Pheri - Phir Hera Pheri etc. Aditya Chopra's decision of making Dhoom3 may lead to a new trend in bollywood.

Part I of the sequel Dhoom was a super duper hit movie, the Sanjay Gadhavi directed movie was a new concept and the movie has started the craze of racing bikes among youngsters. This has raised the sale of power bikes and even bike modiers have made good money out of the craze. After the immense success Aditya Chopra has decided to produce Dhoom2 sequel of the movie Dhoom. Dhoom2 is big budget movie which is not even released and is in news, and stands top on the list of awaited movies. Before the release of Dhoom2, Aditya Chopra is confident about the success of the movie and has announced the third part of the sequel Dhoom3. One interesting about the movie is Shahrukh Khan who is playing the role of a lover guy for Yash Raj Films, will be seen in negative role in the movie. His name has also been decided Rahul/ Mr R.

After charming John Abraham in Dhoom and handsome Hrithik Roshan in Dhoom2, Shahrukh Khan will be playing the role odd main villan in Dhoom3. Even before the release of Dhoom2, Dhoom3 has been anounced and this time Aditya Chopra has selected Shahrukh Khan as villan. His name has also been decided for the movie, Rahul/Mr. R.

Shahrukh has done lover guy kind of roles for Yash Raj films in the movies Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, Dil to Pagal Hai and Mohabatein, and all these movies were superhits and Shahrukh has been awarded as best actor award for the movies. After doing lot of lover guy roles for Yash raj Films banner, and this time he will can be seen in a negative role, after Bazigar, Darr and DON.

Ranbir Sonam Jodi

Ranbir Kapoor and Sonam Kapoor can be seen opposite each other for the second time in the movie Dhoom3, before this they are working in there debut movie Sanwariya. Ranbir Kapoor the son of Rishi Kapoor and Sonam Kapoor the daughter of Anil Kapoor are good friends and they enjoy working together. They are quite lucky, that they have got a chance to work with Yash Raj Films in there second film, it is not an easy task to get a chance to work with the banner, somepeople are looking for a chance from years, and they are not getting it.

One important thing about there character is they both are playing negative role in the movie along with Shahrukh Khan.


A Reason Why Video Games Are Hard To Give Up

Kids and adults will stay glued to video games this holiday season because the fun of playing actually is rooted in fulfilling their basic psychological needs.


Psychologists at the University of Rochester, in collaboration with Immersyve, Inc., a virtual environment think tank, asked 1,000 gamers what motivates them to keep playing. The results published in the journal Motivation and Emotion this month suggest that people enjoy video games because they find them intrinsically satisfying.

"We think there's a deeper theory than the fun of playing," says Richard M. Ryan, a motivational psychologist at the University and lead investigator in the four new studies about gaming. Players reported feeling best when the games produced positive experiences and challenges that connected to what they know in the real world.

The research found that games can provide opportunities for achievement, freedom, and even a connection to other players. Those benefits trumped a shallow sense of fun, which doesn't keep players as interested.

"It's our contention that the psychological 'pull' of games is largely due to their capacity to engender feelings of autonomy, competence, and relatedness," says Ryan. The researchers believe that some video games not only motivate further play but "also can be experienced as enhancing psychological wellness, at least short-term," he says.

Ryan and coauthors Andrew Przybylski, a graduate student at the University of Rochester, and Scott Rigby, the president of Immersyve who earned a doctorate in psychology at Rochester, aimed to evaluate players' motivation in virtual environments. Study volunteers answered pre- and post-game questionnaires that were applied from a psychological measure based on Self-Determination Theory, a widely researched theory of motivation developed at the University of Rochester.

Rather than dissect the actual games, which other researchers have done, the Rochester team looked at the underlying motives and satisfactions that can spark players' interests and sustain them during play.

Revenues from video games—even before the latest Wii, PlayStation 3, and Xbox systems emerged—surpass the money made from Hollywood films annually. A range of demographic groups plays video games, and key to understanding their enjoyment is the motivational pull of the games.

Four groups of people were asked to play different games, including one group tackling "massively multiplayer online" games—MMO for short, which are considered the fastest growing segment of the computer gaming industry. MMOs are capable of supporting hundreds of thousands of players simultaneously. For those playing MMOs, the need for relatedness emerged "as an important satisfaction that promotes a sense of presence, game enjoyment, and an intention for future play," the researchers found.

Though different types of games and game environments were studied, Ryan points out that "not all video games are created equal" in their ability to satisfy basic psychological needs. "But those that do may be the best at keeping players coming back."

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University of Rochester.

Link Between Insomnia And Hypersomnia, Depression In Children

According to a study published in the January 1st issue of the journal SLEEP, sleep-disturbed children are more severely depressed and have more depressive symptoms and comorbid anxiety disorders compared with children without sleep disturbance. To ensure the most effective care, parents of sleep-disturbed children are advised to first consult with the child's pediatrician, who may issue a referral to a sleep specialist for comprehensive testing and treatment.

The study, authored by Xianchen Liu, MD, PhD, and colleagues of the University of Pittsburgh, was conducted on 553 children with a depressive disorder. Out of this study group, 72.7 percent had sleep disturbance, of which 53.5 percent had insomnia alone, nine percent had hypersomnia alone and 10.1 percent had both disturbances. Depressed girls were more likely to have sleep disturbance than boys, but age had no significant effects.

Furthermore, the study found that across sleep-disturbed children, those with both insomnia and hypersomnia had a longer history of illness, were more severely depressed and were more likely to have anhedonia, weight loss, psychomotor retardation and fatigue than those with either insomnia or hypersomnia.

"We know that depression is associated with sleep problems. But what this study shows is that, in depressed youths, not all sleep problems are the same," said Liu. "Insomnia is the most common problem, but having a combination of insomnia and sleepiness is 'double trouble'. Youths having both of these had more severe depression than youths with just one sleep problem. This means that we should carefully ask depressed youths about the specific type of sleep problem they're having. It may also mean that we should think about different treatments to specifically target an individual's sleep problem."

Experts recommend that grammar school-aged children get between 10-11 hours of sleep a night to achieve good health and optimum performance, while children in pre-school should sleep between 11-13 hours a night.

SLEEP is the official journal of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, LLC, a joint venture of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) and the Sleep Research Society.

SleepEducation.com, a Web site maintained by the AASM, provides information about the various sleep disorders that exist, the forms of treatment available, recent news on the topic of sleep, sleep studies that have been conducted and a listing of sleep facilities.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by American Academy of Sleep Medicine.