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Showing posts with label NATURE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NATURE. Show all posts

Pictures: Six New Natural Landmarks Named

Written By AbhiShek Kap!L on Sunday, 7 August 2011 | 05:58

Lake Bill Chinook, part of The Island National Natural Landmark

Lake Billy Chinook, Oregon

A prairie in the new Kahlotus Ridgetop National Natural Landmark

Kahlotus Prairie, Washington

A picture of Hanging Lake, Colorado, part of the new Hanging Lake National Natural Landmark

Hanging Lake, Colorado

A picture of Barfoot Mountain, Arizona, part of the new Barfoot Park National Natural Landmark

Barfoot Park, Arizona

A picture of the new Round Top Butte National Natural Landmark

Round Top Butte, Oregon

A picture of a dinosaur footprint, part of the new Morrison-Golden Fossil Areas National Natural Landmark.\

Golden Fossil Areas, Colorado

NASA's Juno Spacecraft Headed to Jupiter Friday


An illustration of the Juno spacecraft.
An artist's rendering shows the Juno spacecraft in orbit above Jupiter.
Illustration courtesy NASA/Caltech
Brian Handwerk
Published August 4, 2011
This Friday a NASA spacecraft is slated to launch on a five-year journey toJupiter.
When it arrives, the craft will probe deeper into the gas giant planet than any previous mission, searching for the unseen core hidden below the thick atmosphere. It will also endure the solar system's strongest radiation zone to study the origins of the giant auroras that dance across Jupiter's poles.
The probe—dubbed Juno—will blast off from Florida aboard an Atlas V rocket, starting a 400-million-mile (644-million-kilometer) trek.
When it arrives at Jupiter in 2016, the spacecraft will spend about one Earth year making 33 elliptical polar orbits, skimming as close as 3,100 miles (5,000 kilometers) above the clouds.
Watch NASA video about the Juno mission.
Carrying a suite of eight main science instruments, Juno will collect data on Jupiter's atmosphere that may be key to understanding the birth of our cosmic neighborhood. (Also see "New Model of Jupiter's Core Ignites Planet Birth Debate.")
"We're really trying to understand the origins of Jupiter—how it formed, the role it played in the formation of the rest of our solar system, and what that can tell us about the solar systems that we're discovering around other stars now," said Juno's principal investigator, Scott Bolton, of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in Colorado.
By delving far beneath the colorful zones and belts of Jupiter's high clouds, the Juno mission also aims to answer some fundamental questions about the planet's mysterious inner workings.
"It's as exciting as learning about the deep ocean," said Timothy Dowling, a planetary-atmosphere expert at the University of Louisville in Kentucky who's not part of the Juno team.
"It has that same feel. All that we see on Jupiter—the light and dark bands, the jets, the enormous storms—we'll explore the foundation underneath all of that."
Jupiter Water May Offer Clues to Planet Birth
Jupiter may already seem well studied, since spacecraft headed elsewhere in the solar system have taken countless pictures as they swung close to the planet to use its gravity like a slingshot. (Related: "Lightning Strikes, Changing Climate Revealed on Jupiter.")
But until now only one other probe, Galileo, has orbited the giant world and attempted to study its composition and activity.
As the largest planet in our solar system, Jupiter could help resolve theories for the process of planet formation.
Current theory states that the planets formed from a dusty disk of material that surrounded the newborn sun roughly 4.6 billion years ago. (Related: "Newborn Planet Found Orbiting Young Star.")
Scientists know that Jupiter is primarily made of hydrogen and helium, like the sun and most of the universe. But the planet is also enriched with heavier elements such as carbon and nitrogen—elements that became the building blocks for not only the rocky planets such as Earth and Mars but also for life.
One theory to explain the heavy elements in Jupiter is that water, in the form of ice, was one of the first multielement molecules to form inside the protoplanetary disk.
This ice clumped together and trapped heavy elements in the dust to make dirty snowballs called planetesimals. In Jupiter's case, an ice ball may have attracted gases as it swept through the disk, building up the planet's mass.
Juno will help test that theory using a device called a passive microwave radiometer, which will measure how much water is in Jupiter's deep atmosphere. In this region, gravity is so intense that much of the primordial solar material that formed the planets is probably still trapped.
"I think it's a very fundamental mission, in the sense that we're tying to go back and look at the first step in the solar system's history after the sun formed and investigate why the planets are the way they are," SwRI's Bolton said.
Juno Probing Jupiter's Depths
Other instruments on Juno will map the circulation, composition, temperature, and other features deeper in Jupiter's atmosphere than any previous experiments.
"Essentially we'll be unraveling basic aspects of how meteorology works in an alien environment, thereby extending our understanding of atmospheric circulation and climate beyond the confines of Earth," said Adam Showman, of the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.
"I think that's pretty exciting, especially because gas giants like Jupiter are among the most common planetary environments in the universe."
And while Jupiter is nearly all atmosphere, the planet should have some kind of solid core far beneath the swirling clouds, where atmospheric pressures are millions of times greater than at sea level on Earth.
By precisely measuring the way Juno gets pulled and pushed by the massive planet's gravity field, scientists may finally be able to detect and measure the planet's core.
"This mission is very unique," said the University of Louisville's Dowling. "We've never tried to probe into the heart of a planet like Jupiter. It's basically the first time we'll see an MRI of a gas giant."
Juno Needs "Radiation Vault" to Survive
In addition to peering far below Jupiter's surface, Juno will be gazing high above the clouds, studying the origins of the planet's intense magnetic field and how it interacts with the Jovian atmosphere.
The biggest and strongest magnetic dynamo in the solar system, Jupiter's magnetic field creates spectacular "hyperauroras," which Juno will see in unprecedented detail.
Juno will also sample the charged particles that create the auroras and will observe them in ultraviolet light. In addition, the spacecraft will capture color photos of the poles with its JunoCam—sure to be one of the mission's most popular features.
"That camera is really for the public, and the data will be immediately made available for the public—but I want to see a picture of the poles too," SwRI's Bolton said.
But the magnetic field that drives Jupiter's auroras also traps charged particles in a bubble around the planet, creating the strongest radiation zone in the solar system, something that would fricassee the spacecraft without special precautions.
"We basically have a radiation vault—a titanium box in the middle of the spacecraft—and the sensitive electronics are inside that box, like an armored tank going to Jupiter," Bolton said.
At Mission's End, Juno to Plunge Into Jupiter
In the end, Jupiter's radiation will degrade the solar cells on Juno's arrays, putting limits on the lifetime of the mission.
Unlike previous deep-space missions, which used nuclear power, Juno will operate entirely on sunlight. When it reaches Jupiter, it will be the most distant solar-powered spacecraft yet launched.
The craft's three superefficient arrays—each 9 by 30 feet (2.7 by 9.1 meters)—will allow it to work in sunlight that's about 25 times weaker than the light here on Earth.
When Juno's mission ends, NASA scientists will instruct the craft to deorbit over Jupiter so that Juno burns up in the giant planet's atmosphere. This way, the defunct spacecraft won't be left to wander the Jovian system and potentially crash on one of the planet's many moons, contaminating worlds such as Europa with watery habitats that possibly host life.
Ultimately, the Juno mission will provide scientists with a wealth of data for understanding not just our own solar system but also the scores of gas giants scattered across the galaxy.
"Jupiter is our prototype giant planet," the University of Arizona's Showman said. "So the understanding we gain from Juno about Jupiter will lend great insights to our understanding of the hundreds of giant planets being discovered around other stars."

Earth Had Two Moons, New Model Suggests


The moon, as seen by Apollo astronauts.
The near side of the moon (right) is much smoother than the far side.
Photograph courtesy NASA
Ker Than
Published August 3, 2011
Earth may have once had two moons, but one was destroyed in a slow-motion collision that left our current lunar orb lumpier on one side than the other, scientists say.
Astronomers have long been puzzled by the differences between the side of the moon that always faces Earth—the near side—and the side that always faces away, the far side. The topography of the near side is relatively low and flat, while that of the far side is high and mountainous with a much thicker crust.
According to a new computer model, this discrepancy can be explained if a smaller "companion moon" collided with our moon's far side early in its history. Such a collision would have left the far side splattered with especially hard rocky material that now forms the current lunar highlands.
For the theory to work, the smaller moon must have crashed into the larger one at about 4,400 miles (7,081 kilometers) an hour.
"This is the slowest possible collision the two massive bodies could have if they fell into each other’s gravity," explained study co-author Erik Asphaug, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC).
At this relatively slow speed, the far-side collision wouldn’t have been energetic enough to melt rock or carve out a crater. But it would have been forceful enough to plaster material from the smaller moon onto the larger moon.
"It's like a car crash, where you have crumpled bumpers but you don't melt the cars as they're colliding," Asphaug said. "This is the same kind of phenomenon."
Moon Collision Created Meteor Shower
The new theory, by Asphaug and UCSC postdoctoral researcher Martin Jutzi, is detailed in the current issue of the journal Nature.
According to their model, the two moons coexisted peacefully for about 80 million years, each in its own stable orbit. The moons were the same color and composition, but one was about three times larger than the other, Asphaug said.
"Our moon looked like a big dinner plate in the sky ... and when it set, there was this other moon trailing it by about 60 degrees," he said.
This brief period of lunar harmony was shattered, according to the model, when natural gravitational interactions with Earth caused both moons to drift farther away from our planet. The sun's gravitational tug then destabilized the smaller moon’s orbit and caused it to fall into its larger sibling.
Though not very energetic, the collision would have ejected trillions of tons of lunar debris into space, obscuring both moons for several days.
"When the dust cleared, you had one moon that might have looked similar to our moon today," Asphaug said.
For up to a million years after the event, Earth would have been bombarded by moon bits of various sizes, the biggest of which could have been as much as 62 miles (100 kilometers) across.
"You'd have meteors raining down all over the sky for a long period of time," Asphaug said, though there probably would have been no life yet on Earth to witness the spectacular sky shows.
Lunar Smashup Opens Up "Cool Problems"
Astronomer Jeffrey Taylor of the University of Hawaii said the new moon theory is very interesting and worth further investigation.
Asphaug and Jutzi's model not only accounts for the moon's asymmetry, Taylor said, but the findings also explain the fates of the smaller, companion satellites that another theory predicts should have formed alongside our moon.
One of the leading theories for how our moon formed is that it was born after a Mars-size planet crashed into Earth shortly after the solar system's formation about 4.5 billion years ago. (See "Earth-Asteroid Collision Formed Moon Later Than Thought.")
Scientists think the earlier smashup created a ring of molten rock debris around Earth, which eventually coalesced into several bodies, including our current moon. (Related: "The Moon Has Shrunk, and May Still Be Contracting.")
But "if that's the case, what happened [to the smaller moons]? This is one thing that could have happened to them," said Taylor, who was not involved in the study.
The new theory isn't without its problems, however. For example, it doesn't explain why the lumpy far side of our moon shows a high concentration of aluminum, Taylor said.
If the two moons had formed from the same material, as is assumed, the companion moon—and its splatterings—should have been low in aluminum, like our own moon's interior.
However, this problem could be resolved by future lunar studies, Taylor said, and it's not a serious enough reason to dismiss the theory.
"If anything," he said, "it just opens up more cool problems to work on.

3D Box Office Revenue More than Doubled in 2010


According to a study done by iSuppli, the global box-office revenue for 3D movies in 2010 more than doubled to $6.1 billion, up from $2.5 billion generated in 2009. The 3D format launched in 2005. The international market accounted for $3.9 billion, or 63.9 percent of the market, up from 53.8 percent in 2009. The rest of the 3D movie market, or 36.1 percent is represented by North America, including the United States and Canada. The surge in international 3D box office revenue was almost threefold, up from $1.4 billion in 2009, driven by a corresponding hike in investment of digital 3D technology by key international exhibitors, in tandem with the influx in new 3D movie releases.
3D surged in cinema last year
3D surged in cinema last year


More than 30,000 3D screens now exist in the world as of June 2011, more than double the number at the same point last year; at least one in four of the world’s screens are now 3D-capable. The global market still is dominated by U.S. products, which accounted for more than 90 percent of revenues coming from international 3D screens.

LG Accused of Selling Defective Optimus 2X (G2X) Handsets

Written By AbhiShek Kap!L on Thursday, 21 July 2011 | 21:27


Popular consumer electronics brand, LG has an impending court trial in the U.S District Court for Southern District of California in the wake of large scale defects being spotted on the T-Mobile’s version of Optimus 2X (G2X). Being sued at the Californian court, LG’s smartphones were found to randomly freeze, or shut down causing a lot of inconvenience to the users. These defects, the complaint stated occurred even when a call was on. If that was not enough, then the screen’s poor display qualities were exposed too making watching videos a hellish experience. As per the consumer complaints, the smartphone’s back light bled into the screen, thereby exposing its faults. The errors have been spotted on the T-Mobiles USA version of the prestigious Optimus 2X for a cool $250.
lg_optimus_final_211733238521_640x360.jpg
Defective?


Shockingly so, according to reports, these issues haven’t cropped up in a day. They have been around since the very beginning and LG too is aware of it, only that instead of addressing the issue, they chose to ignore it. Now, although a complaint has been filed solely under Terry Horvarth, it voices the displeasures of several other irate consumers. The complaint is a detailed account of Terry’s ordeal that began just days after he purchased his smartphone. Strangely, the problems persisted even after Terry got his model replaced. 

So either LG has to face a humiliating court trial or compensate the users - a number which is easily in thousands - in an out of court settlement, neither of which is going to help its image in the market.

Weather May Play Spoilsport Ahead of Atlantis’ Launch

Written By AbhiShek Kap!L on Thursday, 7 July 2011 | 17:23

On July 8th, 2011, Space shuttle Atlantis is scheduled to embark on what is going to be the last in NASA’s glorious 30-year space shuttle program history. Carrying a team of four astronauts, and a supply package, along with spare parts to the International Space Station, Atlantis is scheduled to launch from Launch Pad 39A, Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral.
Shrouded in uncertainty...
Shrouded in uncertainty...


However, on the eve of the NASA’s final shuttle, according to a report on Space.com, worries of the weather not being compliant, may lead to scrapping of the scheduled launch, and setting it to another day. But, the officials are optimistic and believe that all they need to make that perfect launch is that one hole in the cloud. And, quoting Launch Director, Mike Leinbach who disregards delays, “We want to play the game Friday.” So, a Friday is all that we wait for.

Leh, a sight-seeing paradise

Written By AbhiShek Kap!L on Wednesday, 6 July 2011 | 18:46

You’re in Leh embraced by its beauty and charm. Basking in nature and serenity. Falling in love with its rustic exquisiteness. But now enough admired, its time to get out and explore the fun side of this tranquil town.

Read on to find out more about the fun sight-seeing spots you must visit when in Leh.


Monastry
Monastry


Leh Palace, Namgyal Tsemo Hill

The nine-storey high Leh Palace is one magnificent edifice, which was built by King Sengge Namgyal in the 17th century with an uncanny resemblance to the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet. With the Ladakh mountain range as its backdrop towards the north, the Leh Palace is an architectural marvel that opens up sprawling views of the entire town and its surrounding areas from the rooftop.

Further up from the Leh Palace, the Namgyal Tsemo Hill rises over it like a kingly ceremonial headgear and is the resting ground for an ancient fort ruin. This fort is said to have been the earliest royal residence of the Namgyal dynasty and is flanked by some temples built in veneration of the guardian deities.

Excursion to Khardung La Top
Khardung La or Khardung Pass – a much romanticized high altitude adventure trail – happens to be the gateway to Nubra and Shyok Valleys. Standing proud at an altitude of 5359 meters (17,582 feet), contrary to the signage and the local voice claiming it to be 5602 meters (18,380 feet) high, Khardung Pass is the road that’s sporadically trod by adventure-streaked bikers. Known by locals as Khardong La and even Khardzong La, it has a mesmerizing effect on people who visit it. So much so that sometimes tourists hang around patiently for days, waiting for the accursed road-blocking snow to shy away and leave the stage for some breathtaking tripping.

Shanti Stupa
This is an astonishingly unique structure that rests at an altitude of 4,267 meters (14,000 feet) on a hilltop in Changspa village, about 5 kilometers (3.1 miles) from Leh. Overlooking the Leh Palace from the steep hill (which can be reached by treading 500 steps), the white domed structure heralds the spread of a noble spiritual effort that began way back in 1914 in Japan.

Choglamsar SOS Village, Stok Palace
The SOS Tibetan children’s village (TCV), a milestone achievement and an enthusiastic foray into social development, is an institutional effort at spreading child education initiated through a joint collaboration of his Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Indian Govt.

Widescreen: Sudan Splits

Sudan's south will become an independent country on July 9, but fighting along the ill-defined border has raised tension ahead of the split. North and south have yet to resolve issues such as how to manage the oil industry and divide debt. Here’s a look at the current situation in Sudan through Reuters photographer Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah’s lens.
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
A Sudanese from the south, who stayed in the north for 21 years, stands outside her shelter at Mandela camp,
 in the outskirts of Khartoum, July 4, 2011.

 
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
A Sudanese from the south who was born in the north, plays near a shelter at Mandela camp in the outskirts 
of Khartoum July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
A Sudanese from the south who was born in the north, plays near a shelter at Mandela camp in the outskirts of
 Khartoum July 4, 2011.

AP Photo / Pete Muller
AP Photo / Pete Muller
Southern Sudanese boys take shelter from afternoon rains that disrupted rehearsal for independence day celebrations in the capital city of Juba on Monday, July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
Sudanese children from the south who were born in the north, play near a shelter at Mandela camp in the outskirts
 of Khartoum July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
A Sudanese child from the south, wearing a t-shirt with the picture of U.S. President Barack Obama, stands near
 a shelter at Mandela camp, in the outskirts of Khartoum, July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
Sudanese children from the south play at Mandela camp, in the outskirts of Khartoum, July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
Sudanese from the south load belongings onto a truck bound for southern Sudan at Mandela camp, in the outskirts
 of Khartoum, July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
Sudanese from the south load belongings onto a truck bound for southern Sudan at Mandela camp, in the outskirts
 of Khartoum, July 4, 2011.

REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
REUTERS / Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah
Sudanese from the south load belongings onto a truck bound for southern Sudan at Mandela camp, in the outskirts
 of Khartoum, July 4, 2011.

Photos of the Week 27th June-3rd July

Written By AbhiShek Kap!L on Monday, 4 July 2011 | 20:14

A Hindu holy man takes a dip in the River Ganges, which appears muddy and swollen after heavy rains in upstream areas, in Allahabad, Thursday, June 30, 2011. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)
Artists perform during the opening ceremony of the 2011 Copa America at Estadio Unico in La Plata, Argentina, Friday July 1, 2011. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Israeli border police officers, fire tear gas canisters towards Palestinians protesters during a demonstration  against the expansion of a nearby Jewish settlement, in the West Bank village of Deir Qa
People are dwarfed by the structure of "Supertrees" seen against the financial skyline of Singapore on Wednesday June 29, 2011. These "Supertrees" are vertical gardens, embedded with environmentally s
Italian police officers in riot gear clash with demonstrators during a protest against proposed plans to build the Turin-Lyon high-speed train line and a tunnel in the Italian "Val di Susa" valley, in
A person performs with fire during the annual Gay Pride Parade in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday June 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Andre Penner)
A couple look at a heart painted by smoke from L-39 jets of the "Russ" aerobatic team during an air show at the International Maritime Defence show in St.Petersburg, Russia, Sunday, July 3, 2011. (AP
A dissident blogger holds Vietnamese national flags during an anti-China demonstration near the Chinese embassy in Hanoi
Kvitova beats Sharapova to win Wimbledon title
Germany's kitchen robots learn to be more human
Muslim men stir a mutton dish while preparing for a traditional prayer in the village of Dolni Voden
Hindu devotees pull the "Rath" or chariot of Lord Jagannath during the 134th annual Rath Yatra in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad
Dancers sit as a fellow dancer get her make-up done during the inauguration ceremony of the Baphuon temple in Siem Reap
French PM Fillon attends the inauguration ceremony of the Baphuon temple in Siem Reap

"Exceptional" Giant Squid Found Dying off Florida


A 25-foot-long squid.

Floating about 12 miles (19 kilometers) off Port Salerno (map), Florida, a stirring, intact giant squid gave a small fishing party a shock around 11 a.m. Sunday—and could give researchers new insights into the species, which has never been studied alive, scientists say.
"We looked at it [and] all three of us were like, Holy mackerel!" recreational fisher Robby Benz told WPTV. "It didn't seem it had been dead long, the tentacles were still moving and it was sticking to you when we got it in" the fishing boat.
After reaching shore, the men called wildlife authorities, and the then dead giant squid soon found a home at the Florida Museum of Natural History in Gainesville.
Giant squid, the world's largest invertebrates, are thought to reach lengths of up to about 60 feet (18 meters) and can weigh nearly a ton. The Florida specimen, though, is about 25 feet (8 meters) long and weighs about 200 pounds (90 kilograms).
Like other giant squid, the new catch is white with patches of red skin, which contains chromatophores—pigment-containing cells that can change colors rapidly, presumably for communication or camouflage
"Very Rare" Squid
Giant squid are found in oceans worldwide, but the animals have seldom been spotted in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida, said Roger Portell, an invertebrate paleontologist at the natural history museum, who's helping to preserve the squid.
"These are very rare animals," Portell told National Geographic News. "They tend to be in very deep waters, so we don't see them normally."
The new specimen, he added, is "exceptional."
"There was very little trauma to it," he said. Though it was missing a tentacle, the squid doesn't look to have been attacked, he added.
Though not the sea monsters they were once depicted as, giant squid have been known to battle sperm whales in the deep.
Since the giant squid appears to have been intact yet on the verge of death when it was found, Portell thinks the new specimen—the gender of which is still unknown—may have just reproduced.
"As a general rule in cephalopods"—including, squid, octopuses, and cuttlefish—"both males and females die shortly after reproducing. It is assumed that this is what also happens in this species."
The fishers, ha added, deserve credit for the specimen's rare state of preservation, he added.
"They collected it right away, brought it to shore right away, and called the authorities, who put it on ice right away. So it worked out very well," Portell said.
Benz, the fisher, said he was partly motivated to haul in his giant catch because he didn't think anyone would believe him if he didn't.
"Nobody believes a fisherman," he told WPTV.
Giant Squid Body Saved for Science
At the museum, the specimen has been injected with a preservative called Formalin and is soaking in a chemical solution
Once the two-week preservation process is finished, the squid will become part of the museum's research collection. Its genetic data should be of particular interest to researchers trying to determine whether the beast we call the giant squid—Architeuthis dux—is actually more than one species, Portell said.
"We've already had some researchers contact us about coming down to look at it," he said.

Black Hole Caught Eating a Star, Gamma-Ray Flash Hints

Image: A star being distorted by its close passage to a supermassive black hole at the centre of a galaxy
A huge "belch" of radiation from a supermassive black hole indicates that the cosmic monster recently devoured a star, scientists say.
Earlier this year astronomers spied a burst of high-energy gamma rays emanating from the center of a dwarf galaxy 3.8 billion light-years away. The odd flash, dubbed Sw 1644+57, is one is the brightest and longest gamma ray bursts (GRBs) yet seen.
In visible light and infrared wavelengths, the burst is as bright as a hundred billion suns.
"We believe this explosive event was caused by a supermassive black hole ten million times the mass of the sun shredding a star that got too close to its gravitational pull," said study leader Joshua Bloom, an astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley.
"The mass of the star fell into the black hole, but along the way it heated up and produced a burst of energy in the form of a powerful jet of radiation, [which] we were able to detect through space-based observatories."

While supermassive black holes are thought to be lurking at the hearts of most large galaxies, events such as a star getting eaten may happen only once every hundred million years in any given galaxy.
"What makes this event even more rare is that we didn't just get a burst of x-ray emissions from the infalling stellar gas, but some of it actually got spit out by the black hole in the form of a gamma ray jet, and we just happen to be looking down the barrel of that jet," Bloom said.
"So I would say it's a combination of actually catching a monster black hole in the process of feeding on an unfortunate star that got too close to it, and because we are in a fairly special geometry."
Star's Death Caused Uncommon Flare
NASA's Swift satellite first detected the burst on March 28, 2011, and both the Hubble Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory followed the burst's progress.
The explosive event was initially thought to be an ordinary gamma ray burst. Originating billions of light-years away, these events are seen every few days across the universe, and they're thought to occur when very massive stars blow up or when two giant stars collide.
"Most of these [common gamma ray bursts] are detected and quickly fade away within the course of a day," Bloom said.

"But now after two and half months, this new GRB is still going strong. Because it stands out so much observationally, this decidedly makes it something different from any other GRB we have ever seen before."
In addition, common gamma ray bursts are normally spied off-center in the main bodies of galaxies. But Sw 1644+57 was found in an unusual location—at the core of a galaxy.
"That's the prime reason we started suspecting early on that a supermassive black hole was involved, because we know [galactic cores are] where these beasts reside."
Scientists already knew that actively feeding galactic black holes emit huge amounts of radiation, because material falling in gets superheated as it nears the black hole's maw. Sw 1644+57 is surprising, though, because of its spontaneous nature.
"What's amazing," Bloom said, "is that we have here an otherwise quiescent, starving black hole that has decided to go on a sudden feeding frenzy for a short period of time."
Our own Milky Way also has a quiet supermassive black hole at its center. The new discovery shows it's possible for our cosmic monster to spew powerful radiation jets should a star fall in, Bloom added.
Still, because such events are so rare—and the resulting jets are so narrowly focused—it's unlikely we'd detect anything like Sw 1644+57 shooting from our galaxy for millions of years.
The black hole eating a star is described in this week's issue of the journal Science.

Photo of the Day Springbok, Namibia

Photo: A herd of springbok

Top 5 Exercises that can be Done at Home

Written By AbhiShek Kap!L on Sunday, 3 July 2011 | 18:11

altWe understand that you have an extremely busy schedule. We also understand that there is not a good gym where you live or maybe you don’t really like going to one. So we tell about the top 5 exercises which can be
easily done at home. No excuses now!
Here are 5 great exercises that you can do at home, without the need for any equipment:

 

alt

Push-ups

This is one of the most useful exercises that can be easily done at home. If done correctly it can rev up your stamina and build your pecs and triceps.
How to do it: Lie face down with your palms on the floor about shoulder width apart from each other. Push your whole body up with your back and legs in a straight line and then lower yourself back down towards the floor. To strengthen your chest more place your arms wider apart. To strengthen your triceps and back more, move your arms closer together.
Muscles involved: Chest muscles and triceps

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Sit-ups

This is another great exercise to do in the house and can be done almost everywhere. This can help in the strengthening of the hip flexors and abdominal muscles.
How to do it: Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat on the floor. Cross your arms across your chest and raise your body up to try and meet your knees. This can cause strain on the back, so if you have a weak back it may be better to do a crunch instead.
Muscles involved: Abdominal muscles and back muscles

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Jumping on the Spot

This might sound a bit silly but it’s a great workout and is used to get the heart pumping and build stamina. This can also build your leg muscles.
How to do it: Literally just jump up and down raising your whole body off the ground by at least 5-6 inch or more.
Muscles involved: Calf muscles and thigh muscles

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Squats

It is another easy but very useful exercise for your thighs and buttocks. It helps to shape your buttocks, strengthen thighs and build stamina.
How to do it: Stand up straight , bend your knees with your arms stretched outright parallel to the floor. Bend until your thighs are parallel to the floor.
Muscles involved: Thigh muscles and buttocks muscles.

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Back Extension

Back extension is a strength training exercise. It is done for strengthening lower back muscles.
How to do it: Lie face down with your arms at your side. Slowly lift your head toward the ceiling and look up as far as you can go. You can extend this by lifting your legs and your head up as far as you can and hold for 5 seconds and release.
Muscles involved: Stomach muscles and Back muscles. (MensXP.com)

Five Fruits to keep you Cool this Summer

These are time of scorching heat. Sun is ruthless and the heat wave unsparing. But these are also the time when
exotic fruits bloom in plenty.
And these fruits can have an immensely chilling effect on us. But the problem comes when an entire generation falls for Coke and Pepsi and gets estranged with the bounties of nature. People are quite oblivious about the health properties of these fruits. And even if they know, few care about procuring them.
MensXP recommends these five summer fruits to beat the heat this summer:

Black Plum or Jambul


The fruit is useful in spleen enlargement. The seed of the fruit is well-known diabetes. It reduces the quantity of sugar in the urine and quenches the maddening thirst. The fruit is also a good source of antioxidants.

Litchi


The luscious litchi/lychee or Chinese Hazelnut is a very delicious fruit. People eagerly wait for its arrival during the summers. May-June is the best season for the fruit. This sub-tropical fruit has very good cooling, demulcent and aphrodisiac properties. It is also a good thirst-quencher.

Mango


It's not for nothing that Mango is called the 'King of Fruits' in India. The vastly delicious fruit is a storehouse of vitamins A and C. The ripe mango tones the heart, improves complexion, stimulates hunger, improves vision and is greatly helpful in liver disorders, loss of weight and physical abnormalities. The popular mango powder (amchur) made from green/unripe mango is very beneficial in scurvy and pyorrhea.

Muskmelon


Muskmelon is a popular tropical fruit which is readily available during the summers. The fruit contains Vitamin A, B, C and minerals like magnesium, sodium and potassium. It has zero cholesterol and is safe for blood cholesterol patients. When consumed with jaggery, it helps in the curing of skin diseases. It greatly reduces the body heat when consumed regularly.

Watermelon


The succulent, scarlet-red watermelon is a delicious and health-building fruit. It contains large quantities of easily assimilable sugar. Being an alkaline fruit, it can be easily enjoyed by persons with acidosis. Its juice quench the thirst like anything. Rich in vitamin A,B, and C, products based on its juice can serve as wonderful cooling drinks. The fruit is also beneficial for combating hypertension. (MensXP.com)
 
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