সোমবার, ২৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Sky Crane - how to land Curiosity on the surface of Mars

On 26th November 2011 at 15:02, NASA? launched its Mars Science Laboratory mission.

Bird's eye view of MER rover Spirit combines self portrait and mosaic of the surface surrounding the rover. Credit: NASA/courtesy of nasaimages.org.

MSL is the latest in the organization?s nearly four decade long robotic presence on the red planet. Its payload, the rover Curiosity, will explore and tell us more about our cosmic neighbor. But Curiosity isn?t the most interesting part of the mission. It?s how the rover will land that?s spectacular. A lander won?t deliver Curiosity to the Martian surface; a descent module called the Sky Crane will lower the rover from a tether. Curiosity will touch down directly with its wheels, ready to rove. Risky? Perhaps. Ingenious? Absolutely. It?s also crucial that the Sky Crane work perfectly. A failure of the system could set the next decade of planned Martian exploration back years.

Challenges of Landing on Mars

Rover Sojourner on the surface of Mars. Credit: NASA/courtesy of nasaimages.org.

Landing on Mars isn?t easy; it?s practically a robot graveyard. Two thirds of all landers sent there have crashed or lost contact with Earth, and half of the missions launched haven?t made it to the planet at all. Successful entry, descent, and landing ? or EDL ? on Mars poses a real challenge for engineers.

Mars? whole surface area is only about as large as the Earth?s land masses put together. Its small size gives the planet a weaker gravitational pull, only about one-third that felt on Earth. Mars does have an atmosphere. It?s composed largely of carbon dioxide with traces of nitrogen and argon and is only one percent as thick as Earth?s.

Mars? thin atmosphere makes landings more difficult, much more so than landing on a body with no atmosphere like our Moon. As a spacecraft falls through Mars? thin atmosphere, it generates friction and heat, but not enough to significantly slow the spacecraft. The thin atmosphere also means there are fewer air molecules to inflate a parachute, rendering yet another braking method only moderately effective.

The time delay in communications between engineers on Earth and their spacecraft on Mars is another challenge. Radio signals take roughly 20 minutes to travel one way between the two planets. A spacecraft only has six minutes between first coming into contact with the Martian atmosphere and reaching the surface, so real-time adjustments to a landing sequence are out of the question. Whatever EDL engineers devise, it has six minutes to work autonomously.

As a final hurdle, there is no way to simulate a Martian landing on Earth. There?s no way to test a lander in one-third gravity, no easy way to test a parachute in one percent atmosphere, and only so much is known about the Martian topography as far as landing hazards. EDL technology goes through its full profile once, and it has to work.

Lucky for NASA, it found an EDL system that worked in its early years of Martian exploration.

How NASA lands on Mars

The Viking lander. Credit: NASA/courtesy of nasaimages.org.

NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) began working on the Mars problem in 1968 when President Johnson called for a landing on the red planet to mark the United States? bicentennial. At the time, NASA was enjoying its Apollo-inflated budget and was able to devote significant funds to developing and testing a Martian EDL system. What emerged was the Viking program ? twin orbiters and landers would go to Mars to increase the odds of a successful landing.

The Viking 1 lander spent its interplanetary journey stored inside a protective casing. Inside, the lander was sandwiched between a back shell that housed a parachute on top and an ablative heat shield on the bottom. The spacecraft arrived at Mars and entered orbit on July 19, 1976 before firing its thrusters to enter the Martian atmosphere on July 20.

The heat shield burned away with the heat produced by friction with the Martian atmosphere, slowing the lander?s descent. Four miles above the surface, the back shell released and a 52-foot wide parachute deployed. It unfurled and inflated, stabilizing and further slowing Viking 1?s descent as the heat shield, now spent, was jettisoned. A landing radar on the lander?s underside sprung to life, determining the rest of the EDL sequence. A little under a mile above the surface, the lander fell away from the back shell and parachute, triggering ignition of retrorockets on its underside. Under its own power, the landing slowed to a descent rate of just 7 feet per second. Sensors in the legs triggered shut down of the retros on contact with the surface. Viking 1 settled happily onto Mars. Viking 2 followed suit on September 3, 1976. This formula successfully delivered the Mars Phoenix Lander to the surface in 2008.

Spirit, packed and ready to go. Credit: NASA/courtesy of nasaimages.org.

The same entry and descent sequence delivered the rovers Sojourner, Spirit and Opportunity to the surface in 1997 and 2004 respectively. But the landing was a little different. All rovers have arrived at Mars housed in airbags. Developed for the Sojourner rover, payload of the Mars Pathfinder Mission, the design was a way to hit a wider target area at faster speeds while spending less money.

Airbags would allow the lander to free-fall through its final descent ? doing away with heavy and finicky retrorockets ? and bounce along the surface before coming to its final resting point ? eliminating the need for expensive and precise landing instruments.

Sojourner was stored in a pyramid-shaped case. After the heat shield burned away in the upper atmosphere and fell away, between four and six miles from the surface, the pyramid fell from the back shell on a 65-foot long tether. The airbags inflated explosively from its sides at the same time that retrorockets on the back shell ignited. The retros slowed the payload further before cutting the bridle and letting it fall the rest of the way to the surface.

The airbags used to deliver the MER rovers. Shown inflated in JPL's test bed where engineers studied how they would deflate. Credit: NASA/courtesy of nasaimages.org.

The airbags bounced and rolled along the surface before coming to a stop. When onboard sensors registered no movement, the airbags deflated and the pyramid?s panels unfolded like a flower?s petals. One opened first to right the rover in case in landed on one of its sides. The panels opened to reveal a healthy Sojourner, ready to drive down one of the ramps created by the panels and explore its new home.

The same EDL delivered the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity to the surface in 2004, but the rovers pushed the system to its limits. Sojourner is about the size of a microwave and weighs a little over 23 pounds. Spirit and Opportunity dwarf their predecessor weighing in at about 408 pounds each. The MER rovers? size was dictated by what could fit inside the pyramid casing, and the weight the airbags could safely carry across a potentially ragged landing area.

The airbag landing system isn?t an option for Curiosity. Weighing in at an impressive 1,654 pounds (that?s three-quarters of a ton), it is the size of an SUV. Airbags large enough to cushion its landing would be too heavy for the Atlas launch vehicle and likely fail under the weight of the air required to inflate them.

Similarly, a larger parachute to slow Curiosity?s initial descent ? or to attempt a full parachute-controlled landing ? was out of the question. A parachute large enough would be too heavy for the launch vehicle and unlikely to fully inflate before its payload reached the Martian surface. A Viking-style landing for the rover was also a poor option. Not only do retrorockets add substantial weight for the rover to then carry around the surface, but rockets protruding on its underside also create a potential sticking hazard.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory was also keen to move away from the inevitability of driving a rover off a landing platform as it had with the previous rovers. It was a delicate maneuver with the constant possibility that the ramps would be stuck against a rock. Getting to Mars and not being able to drive a healthy rover off a lander would be a poor end to a mission.

It was clear that for NASA to deliver the larger and heavier payload with less room for failures, it would need a new landing system. Enter the Sky Crane.

How the Sky Crane Will Deliver Curiosity to the Surface

Size comparison of the MER rover (Spirit and Opportunity) and MSL rover Curiosity. Credit: NASA/courtesy of nasaimages.org.

Curiosity will begin its entry and descent like its predecessors: wheeled legs folded and stored between a back shell and parachute on top and ablative heat shield on the bottom.

Four miles above the surface, the Martian atmosphere will have provided enough resistance against the rounded heat shield to slow Curiosity to 1,000 miles per hour, about Mach 2 in that atmosphere. Burned away, the heat shield will jettison and the parachute will deploy. At 65 feet in diameter, it is the largest ever sent to Mars. In a little over three vertical miles, the parachute will slow Curiosity from 1,000 to a relatively calm 187 miles per hour before it is jettisoned with the back shell.

The parachute?s release will also trigger the jettison of the heat shield, exposing Curiosity?s underside and uncovering a ground sensing radar that will determine the rest of the landing sequence.

A little more than half a mile above the surface, the descent vehicle?s retro rockets will ignite and explosive bolts will separate it from the back shell. These retrorockets will take control of Curiosity?s descent. When the radar senses that it is about 115 feet above the surface, the descent vehicle will release Curiosity on a 65 foot tether. It will slow its descent to less than one mile per hour as it lowers the dangling rover to the surface.

Once Curiosity?s wheels touch down, explosive bolts will fire to sever the tether from the rover. The descent vehicle?s retros will carry it away to crash a safe distance from the rover. Curiosity will be free to begin its exploration of Mars.

What Happens if it Fails?

The Sky Crane lowers Curiosity.Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

There are a lot of moving parts on this system and a lot of things that have to happen at precisely the right time. It?s unlikely but still possible that a flaw in the parachute or heat shield could end the mission early with a crash landing. More problematic is the landing radar.

Any false information could end with Curiosity falling from an unrecoverable height, breaking its wheels and remaining in one place for its operable lifetime. Likewise if the tether snaps when Curiosity is released. If the explosive bolts connecting Curiosity to the descent module fail once Curiosity is safely on the surface, the descent vehicle could unwittingly pull the rover back off its wheels and drag it to a crash landing.

These scenarios are possible but improbable. Like every system JPL and NASA builds, the Sky Crane is designed to work perfectly on Mars. But if the Sky Crane fails, MSL and Curiosity won?t be the only casualties. In cooperation with the European Space Agency (ESA), NASA has an ambitious ten year plan for exploring Mars, much of which depends on the Sky Crane.

Curiosity?s landing on Mars in the summer of 2012 is only the first step. In 2014, an orbiter will arrive at Mars to measure the escape rate of the Martian atmosphere. This will give scientists the data needed to reverse-engineer Mars? atmosphere, determine its early composition, and figure out when in Mars? history the planet was likely to harbor life.

NASA and the ESA will join together for the 2016 and 2018 ExoMars missions. In 2016, NASA will launch the ESA?s orbiter and an Entry, Descent, and Landing Module (EDM). The orbiter will use onboard instruments to detect and study trace gases in the atmosphere while the EDM will use sensors to evaluate a landed payload?s EDL performance and study the landing site. In 2018, NASA will send two rovers to Mars ? one American and one European. Both will land together at the same site carrying different payloads. The ESA rover will carry a drill and a suite of instruments for exobiology and geochemistry research.

The NASA rover, delivered by the Sky Crane, will be the first step in NASA?s sample return mission. It will travel to known interesting areas and collect samples, each roughly the volume of a ballpoint pen, and store them. A second lander carrying a ?fetch? rover will follow the sample collection rover and will also arrive on Mars by the Sky Crane. It will collect the samples and transfer them to an ascent vehicle that will launch into Martian orbit. A third mission will launch to collect the orbiting sample and return them to Earth.

The potential payoff of a sample return mission is exciting. Having Martian samples on Earth, particularly ones that didn?t fall unprotected through our atmosphere, would give scientists access to Mars in a whole new way. Samples would be on hand as new tests develop and technologies emerge. Subsequent missions to Mars could be much more specifically targeted, revealing a wealth of knowledge not only about the red planet, but about the history of our solar system.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=02dcbc20dc2a4f5f73359782d96de44b

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রবিবার, ২৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

6 inmates nabbed after Hollywood-style escape

Six inmates from the last island penal colony in the Americas were recaptured at sea Thursday after they used buoyant containers and wood planks to try to swim to freedom in an escape reminiscent of the 1973 movie "Papillon."

The Mexican Navy said the inmates used empty plastic gas or water tanks to help stay afloat as they swam about 60 miles south of the Islas Marias, a Mexican penal colony where inmates live in small houses and are normally not locked up. Prisoners can tend small gardens and raise food.

The six men were only about 58 miles from the Pacific coast resort of Puerto Vallarta when they were spotted by a passing boat early Thursday.

Sunburned
The boat called in a tip to a local naval base, and patrol boats were quickly dispatched to take the men into custody. Photos provided by the Navy showed them men sunburned but alert ? and unhappy ? on the deck of the patrol vessel.

The men, who ranged in age from 28 to 39 years, were taken back to Puerto Vallarta for a medical check and to be turned back over to prison authorities.

Later, the Interior Department, which is in charge of Mexico's prisons, said the men had been found to be in acceptable health and would be returned to the penal colony "within hours."

The department said prison oversight agency had only been notified the men were missing from the prison on Thursday, the same day they were found at sea, suggesting that their absence had not been noticed when they set off on the escape bid.

Currents
The Islas Marias penal colony lies about 70 miles from the mainland, but the prisoners did not swim to the closest shore, which is due east. Instead they apparently swam about 60 miles south, either because prevailing currents carried them that way, they didn't know where they were going or because they were aiming for Vallarta.

The Pacific Ocean forms the main security barrier at the island; while dozens of prisoners are believed to have tried to escape since the penal colony was founded in 1905, local media reports indicate few if any are believed to have made it to the mainland.

The escape bid drew comparisons to the movie "Papillon," in which the main character, played by Dustin Hoffman, uses a buoyancy device to swim away from a penal colony in French Guyana.

Islas Marias is the last island penal colony in the region.

Panama closed Coiba Island, the only other remaining island penal colony in the Americas, in 2004. That same year, Mexico announced it would spend $2 million to revive the crumbling prison at Islas Marias and increase the inmate population. Normally, about 1,000 to 1,200 inmates are held at the facility.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45433765/ns/world_news-americas/

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93% Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey

As a young child, my best friend was my stuffed Elmo toy. I took him everywhere and told him everything. My friends loved him, my family did, we all just loved Elmo. But until now, I never thought about why. Why did I love Elmo so much? Why is he so instantly lovable, and how was he created? What brilliant performer created the best friend of billions of children? Well my friends, be ready to be answered and moved by this lovely documentary.Being Elmo follows the career of Kevin Clash: a kid from Baltimore who loved puppets. When he got older, Kevin started to build his own muppets and was featured on local TV. As Kevin got better and better, he felt limited by his position. Then he met muppet builder Kermit Love (creator of Big bird, Snuffy, and Ms. Piggy), who taught Kevin everything he knew. After meeting Jim Henson, Kevin was well on his way to becoming the legend he is. And of course, the rest is history.Ok, I know that it looks like I gave the whole movie away, but I only outlined it. Kevin's journey through the world of puppeteering is so deep and interesting that there's no way I could cover it in a paragraph. Anyway, part of what makes the story so great is that Kevin is one of the best examples of someone who followed their dreams. He had real talent in a weird field and he made it through 100% pure hard work. He's never arrogant, never outspoken, and always thankful. Kevin is such a good person, you can see Elmo in him.Now, I don't consider myself a super macho dude, but I have my pride. And I am discarding that right now because I'm admitting that this movie made me cry. It wasn't sad, and I didn't cry a lot, but I cried. I remembered how much Sesame Street meant to me, and how amazing it is that Kevin Clash makes millions of kids believe they are loved by Elmo. Then there's the scene where all the muppets, including Elmo and friends, sing "Saying Goodbye" at Jim Henson's funeral. I dare you not to choke up.Being Elmo is special. It is a rare documentary that doesn't uncover political corruption or be pro environmentalism that isn't about a historical figure. Like Anvil last year, Being Elmo tells a story about someone who never, ever gave up. It's effective, informative, interesting, touching, and of course inspiring. Why does it work so well? To paraphrase one of the interviewed puppeteers: Elmo is love, and he loves you unconditionally. And you know what, I love him right back. Always.

November 17, 2011

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/being_elmo_a_puppeteers_journey/

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শনিবার, ২৬ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Brazil suspends Chevron's drilling rights (Reuters)

BRASILIA (Reuters) ? Brazil's government suspended Chevron Corp's drilling rights until Chevron clarifies the causes of an offshore oil spill, the latest twist in a political firestorm threatening the U.S. company's role in Brazil's oil bonanza.

The decision on Wednesday came as the head of Chevron's Brazilian unit testified before Brazil's Congress, where he apologized for the November 8 spill that leaked about 2,400 barrels of oil into the ocean off the coast of Rio de Janeiro.

Brazil's National Petroleum Agency said it decided to halt Chevron's drilling rights after determining there was evidence that the company had been "negligent" in its study of data needed to drill and in contingency planning for abandoning the well in the event of accident.

The agency, known as ANP, also rejected a request from Chevron made before the leak to drill wells in the deeper subsalt areas in the Frade field where the spill occurred. The field is located in the oil-rich Campos Basin and is the only block in Brazil where Chevron produces oil as the operator.

The Campos Basin is currently the source of more than 80 percent of Brazil's oil output.

While Chevron said late on Wednesday it had not received formal notice of the drilling halt, the company announced an indefinite voluntary suspension of all current and future drilling off Brazil, apart from plug and abandonment work.

"Chevron acknowledges, however, that ANP has posted a notice of suspension to its website," the company added.

The only rig working for Chevron off Brazil is Transocean Ltd's Sedco 706, which drilled the well that leaked.

The spill is an ominous reminder of the risks involved in offshore drilling, cooling the euphoria over vast subsalt oil reserves that Brazil found in 2007 up to 7 km (4.4 miles) below the seabed. The country is banking on those reserves of up to 100 billion barrels to speed its development.

Chevron has previously drilled for subsalt depth targets in the field, which is also owned by Brazil's state-controlled energy giant Petrobras and Frade Japao, a Japanese consortium. Chevron owns 52 percent of Frade, whereas Petrobras owns 30 percent and Frade Japao 18 percent.

Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil company, has been fined $28 million by Brazil's environmental agency for the spill, an amount that is sure to rise when ANP and Rio's state government slap fines on the company, as they have pledged to do.

Chevron had already halted all of its local drilling operations after the leak occurred, before ANP's announced suspension. ANP said the suspension will remain in place until Chevron fully restores safety conditions in the field.

Chevron's CEO in Brazil, George Buck, told Brazilian lawmakers that the company "acted as rapidly and safely as possible" and "used all resources" to contain and stop the flow of oil from the well.

"We controlled the source in four days. We worked with transparency and cooperation with the authorities of Brazil," Buck said.

INVESTIGATIONS, RECRIMINATIONS

Chevron initially attributed the "sheen" on the sea surface to naturally occurring seepage from the seabed. The company is being investigated by the Federal Police, which noted discrepancies between Chevron's account of the spill and the government's.

The Frade leak, while small, is likely to provide more ammunition for the growing worldwide opposition to offshore drilling in the wake of the estimated 4-million-barrel BP Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

The Frade oil flow has been staunched except for residual droplets still bubbling up from a fissure in the sea floor, but this is expected to cease in a few days. Chevron said the oil "stain" on the sea surface now equated to about a barrel.

Most oil has been mechanically dispersed, while 350 cubic meters of oily water has been recovered and will undergo processing.

Addressing a crowded congressional commission through an interpreter, Buck said Chevron still did not understand how the crude rose 567 feet up to the seabed after rock "parted" while drilling in the 8.5 inch-wide column.

"We have an ongoing investigation. We will share the lessons learned with the people of Brazil to ensure that this never happens here or anywhere else in the world," Buck said.

Lawmakers, some calling the spill a "crime," also turned their ire on ANP in the four-hour hearing and which they said had proven ill-equipped and ill-prepared, even as Brazil pursues its ambitions to rapidly increase oil output.

Production is unaffected at Frade, which produces 79,000 barrels per day of oil, or 4 percent of the country's output. Chevron, with a share of Frade production that amounts to just over 1 percent of its worldwide output, had originally targeted peak capacity of about 72,000 barrels per day from the field.

Petrobras has so far dodged the criticism Chevron has faced despite having approved the development plans for Frade field.

Chevron, based in San Ramon, California, is also a 30 percent partner in the nearby $5.2 billion Papa-Terra project, which is operated by Petrobras. Petrobras and Chevron expect to produce 140,000 bpd oil and equivalent gas from Papa-Terra in 2013.

(Additional reporting by Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro and Braden Reddall in San Francisco; Writing by Todd Benson and Reese Ewing; Editing by Bob Burgdorfer, Gary Hill and Matt Driskill)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/bs_nm/us_chevron_brazil_anp

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৪ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Coin find sheds light on sacred Jerusalem site

Newly found coins underneath Jerusalem's Western Wall could change the accepted belief about the construction of one of the world's most sacred sites two millennia ago, Israeli archaeologists said Wednesday.

The man usually credited with building the compound known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary is Herod, a Jewish ruler who died in 4 B.C. Herod's monumental compound replaced and expanded a much older Jewish temple complex on the same site.

But archaeologists with the Israel Antiquities Authority now say diggers have found coins underneath the massive foundation stones of the compound's Western Wall that were stamped by a Roman proconsul 20 years after Herod's death. That indicates that Herod did not build the wall ? part of which is venerated as Judaism's holiest prayer site ? and that construction was not close to being complete when he died.

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"The find changes the way we see the construction, and shows it lasted for longer than we originally thought," said the dig's co-director, Eli Shukron.

The four bronze coins were stamped around 17 A.D. by the Roman official Valerius Gratus. He preceded Pontius Pilate of the New Testament story as Rome's representative in Jerusalem, according to Ronny Reich of Haifa University, one of the two archaeologists in charge of the dig.

The coins were found inside a ritual bath that predated construction of the renovated Temple Mount complex and which was filled in to support the new walls, Reich said.

They show that construction of the Western Wall had not even begun at the time of Herod's death. Instead, it was likely completed only generations later by one of his descendants.

The coins confirm a contemporary account by Josephus Flavius, a Jewish general who became a Roman historian. Writing after a Jewish revolt against Rome and the destruction of the Temple by legionnaires in 70 A.D., he recounted that work on the Temple Mount had been completed only by King Agrippa II, Herod's great-grandson, two decades before the entire compound was destroyed.

Scholars have long been familiar with Josephus' account, but the find is nonetheless important because it offers the "first clear-cut archaeological evidence that part of the enclosure wall was not built by Herod," said archaeologist Aren Maeir of Bar-Ilan University, who was not involved in the dig.

Josephus also wrote that the end of construction left 18,000 workmen unemployed in Jerusalem. Some historians have linked this to discontent that eventually erupted in the Jewish revolt.

The compound, controlled since 1967 by Israel, now houses the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the golden-capped Muslim shrine known as the Dome of the Rock. The fact that the compound is holy both to Jews and Muslims makes it one of the world's most sensitive religious sites.

The dig in which the coins were discovered cleared a Roman-era drainage tunnel that begins at the biblical Pool of Siloam, one of the city's original water sources, and terminates with a climb up a ladder out onto a 2,000-year-old street inside Jerusalem's Old City. The tunnel runs by the foundation stones of the compound's western wall, where the coins were found.

The drainage tunnel was excavated as part of the dig at the City of David, which is perhaps Israel's richest archaeological excavation and its most contentious.

The dig is being carried out inside the Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan, and is funded by a group associated with the Israeli settlement movement that opposes any division of the city as part of a future peace deal.

The excavation of the tunnel has also yielded a Roman sword, oil lamps, pots and coins that scholars believe are likely debris from an attempt by Jewish rebels to hide in the underground passage as they fled from the Roman soldiers.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45419597/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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World stocks fall on growth warnings, Europe woes (AP)

BANGKOK ? World stock markets fell Monday as a change of government in debt-laden Spain and warnings from Asian officials of a sharp growth slowdown underlined the challenges facing the world economy.

Benchmark crude fell below $97 per barrel. The dollar strengthened against the euro but slipped against the yen.

European shares retreated in early trading. Britain's FTSE 100 slipped 1.2 percent to 5,300.67. Germany's DAX dropped 1.5 percent to 5,715.68 and France's CAC-40 slid 1.3 percent to 2,956.66.

The Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo fell 0.3 percent to end at 8,348.27, its lowest closing since March 2009.

Wall Street was set to lose ground, with Dow Jones industrial futures falling 0.9 percent at 11,659 and S&P 500 futures down 1.2 percent at 1,199.80.

Market jitters were in evidence a day after Spain voted in a new government ? the third time in as many weeks that Europe's debt crisis has toppled an administration. Governments in financially troubled Greece and Italy have also fallen.

Spain dumped its ruling Socialist government Sunday for the conservative leadership of Mariano Rajoy, who inherits an economy wracked by debt and an unemployment nightmare ? which at more than 21 percent is the highest among the 17 nations that use the euro.

Rajoy also must lower Spain's soaring borrowing costs with deficit-reducing measures while preventing an already moribund economy from heading into a double-dip recession.

Adding to pessimism, Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan, who oversees trade and finance, said this weekend that the global economic situation is "extremely serious" and predicted the malaise is likely to be long term, state media reported.

The effects of slowing global demand were also evident in Japan, where exports fell for the first time in three months in October. Singapore's government, meanwhile, said it expects the island's economy to grow as little as 1 percent next year, down from a 5 percent expansion this year as export demand from developed countries wanes.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 1.4 percent to 18,225.85 and South Korea's Kospi dropped 1 percent to 1,820.03. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.3 percent to 4,163. Mainland Chinese shares fell slightly, with the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index inching down less than 0.1 percent to 2,415.13, its lowest close in almost one month.

Stocks that are heavily dependent on exports to the West have come under pressure recently, said Linus Yip of Hong Kong-based First Shanghai Securities. "The market right now is still worried about future economic growth, the European debt problem," Yip said.

In Tokyo trade, Mazda Motor Corp. lost 5.1 percent and Panasonic Corp. lost 2 percent. South Korea's LG Chem Ltd., which makes batteries for cars, lost 4.3 percent.

Energy and resource shares were hit by the uncertain outlook for the global economy. Hong Kong-listed China National Offshore Oil Corp., known as CNOOC, fell 3 percent. Japanese energy explorer Inpex Corp. fell 2.6 percent.

Mainland Chinese shares in textiles and railway infrastructure companies were among that market's gainers while shares in coal miners and environmental protection companies weakened.

"Earlier forecasts on credit easing haven't actually come true and the situation in Europe is also affecting sentiment here," said Li Jianfeng, an analyst at Caida Securities, based in Shanghai.

Gains were muted on Wall Street on Friday. While the Conference Board's index of leading economic indicators rose more than Wall Street analysts were expecting ? a sign that the economy may pick up in the coming months ? many investors were cautious as a key Congressional committee remained deadlocked on ways to cut the U.S. budget deficit.

The Dow Jones industrial average gained 0.2 percent to close at 11,796.16. The Standard and Poor's 500 lost less than 0.1 percent to 1,215.65. The Nasdaq composite slid 0.6 percent to 2,572.50.

Benchmark crude for December delivery was down $1 at $96.65 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Monday. The contract fell $1.41 to finish at $97.41 per barrel on the Nymex on Friday.

In currency trading, the euro fell to $1.3462 from $1.3518 late Friday in New York. The dollar weakened to 76.79 yen from 76.97 yen.

___

Researcher Fu Ting in Shanghai contributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

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বুধবার, ২৩ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Russia is resigned to losing Mars moon probe (AP)

MOSCOW ? Russian officials on Tuesday acknowledged that the chances of fixing a space probe bound for a moon of Mars that got stuck in Earth's orbit are close to zero, Russian news agencies reported.

The unmanned $170 million Phobos-Ground was launched two weeks ago and reached preliminary Earth orbit, but its engines never fired to send it off to the Red Planet. Russian engineers have been trying to retrieve data from the probe as it passes over their territory but haven't established contact.

"We have to be realistic. Since we haven't been able to get in touch with it for such a long time, chances to accomplish the mission are very slim," Roscosmos deputy chief Vitaly Davydov said in remarks carried by the Interfax news agency.

Davydov said that Russian engineers can keep trying until the end of the month to fix the probe's engines to steer it to its path to Phobos, one of Mars' two moons.

Russian scientists could fix the problem if the probe failed because of a software flaw, but some experts think that the failure was rooted in hardware that's difficult to fix.

The failure of the probe could see Russia change its priorities in space research. The Russian space agency will more likely focus on Moon research instead of studying Mars, Davydov said.

The failed spacecraft is 13.2 metric tons (14.6 tons), and most of that weight, about 11 metric tons (12 tons), is highly toxic fuel.

Davydov said Tuesday that Phobos-Ground could crash to Earth some time between late December and late February. The site of the crash cannot be established more than a day in advance, he said.

Davydov insisted that "if you calculate the probability of it hitting somebody on the head, it is close to zero."

A satellite tracking website showed the Mars probe passing over North America on Tuesday morning Moscow time.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_on_sc/eu_russia_mars_moon_mission

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মঙ্গলবার, ২২ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Blocked holes can enhance rather than stop light going through

Blocked holes can enhance rather than stop light going through [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Steven Schultz
sschultz@princeton.edu
609-258-3617
Princeton University, Engineering School

Conventional wisdom would say that blocking a hole would prevent light from going through it, but Princeton University engineers have discovered the opposite to be true. A research team has found that placing a metal cap over a small hole in a metal film does not stop the light at all, but rather enhances its transmission.

In an example of the extraordinary twists of physics that can occur at very small scales, electrical engineer Stephen Chou and colleagues made an array of tiny holes in a thin metal film, then blocked each hole with an opaque metal cap. When they shined light into the holes, they found that as much as 70 percent more light came through when the holes were blocked than when they were open.

"The common wisdom in optics is that if you have a metal film with very small holes and you plug the holes with metal, the light transmission is blocked completely," said Chou, the Joseph Elgin Professor of Engineering. "We were very surprised."

Chou said the result could have significant implications and uses. For one, he said, it might require scientists and engineers to rethink techniques they have been using when they want to block all light transmission. In very sensitive optical instruments, such as microscopes, telescopes, spectrometers and other optical detectors, for example, it is common to coat a metal film onto glass with the intention of blocking light. Dust particles, which are unavoidable in metal film deposition, inevitably create tiny holes in the metal film, but these holes have been assumed to be harmless because the dust particles become capped and surrounded by metal, which is thought to block the light completely.

"This assumption is wrong -- the plug may not stop the leakage but rather greatly enhance it," Chou said.

He explained that in his own field of nanotechnology, light is often used in a technique called photolithography to carve ultrasmall patterns in silicon or other materials. Thin metal film patterns on a glass plate serve as a mask, directing light through certain locations of the plate and blocking other locations. Given the new finding, engineers ought to examine whether the mask blocks the light as expected, Chou said.

Conversely, Chou said, the newly discovered "blocking" technique might be used in situations when a boost in light transmission is desired. In near-field microscopy, for example, scientists view extremely fine details by passing light through a hole as tiny as billionths of a meter in diameter. With the new technique, the amount of light passing through the hole -- and thus the amount of information about the object being viewed -- can be increased by blocking the hole.

Chou and colleagues stumbled on the phenomenon of enhanced light transmission through a blocked hole in their research on developing ultrasensitive detectors that sense minute amounts of chemicals, with uses ranging from medical diagnostics to the detection of explosives. These detectors use a thin metal film with an array of holes and metal disks to boost faint signals produced when laser light encounters a molecule, allowing much greater sensitivity in identifying substances.

In one of their experimental detectors, the researchers studied transmission of light through an array of tiny holes that were 60 nanometers (billionths of a meter) in diameter and 200 nanometers apart in a gold film that was 40 nanometers thick. Each tiny hole was capped with a gold disk that was 40 percent larger than the hole. The disks sat on top of the holes with a slight gap between the metal surface and the disks.

The researchers pointed a laser at the underside of the film and tested to see if any of the laser light went through the holes, past the caps, and could be detected on the other side. To their surprise, they found that the total light transmission was 70 percent higher with the holes blocked by the metal disks than without blockers. The researchers repeated the same experiment shining the light in the opposite direction -- pointing at the side with the caps and looking for transmitted light under the film -- and found the same results.

"We did not expect more light to get through," Chou said. "We expected the metal to block the light completely."

Chou said the metal disk acts as a sort of "antenna" that picks up and radiates electromagnetic waves. In this case, the metal disks pick up light from one side of the hole and radiate it to the opposite side. The waves travel along the surface of the metal and leap from the hole to the cap, or vice versa depending on which way the light is traveling. Chou's research group is continuing to investigate the effect and how it could be applied to enhance the performance of ultrasensitive detectors.

###

The researchers published their findings Oct. 7 in the journal Optics Express, and it quickly became one of the most downloaded papers. In addition to Chou, the team included graduate student Wen-Di Li and postdoctoral researcher Jonathan Hu in the Department of Electrical Engineering. The work is sponsored in part by the Defense Advanced Research Agency and the National Science Foundation.



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Blocked holes can enhance rather than stop light going through [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Steven Schultz
sschultz@princeton.edu
609-258-3617
Princeton University, Engineering School

Conventional wisdom would say that blocking a hole would prevent light from going through it, but Princeton University engineers have discovered the opposite to be true. A research team has found that placing a metal cap over a small hole in a metal film does not stop the light at all, but rather enhances its transmission.

In an example of the extraordinary twists of physics that can occur at very small scales, electrical engineer Stephen Chou and colleagues made an array of tiny holes in a thin metal film, then blocked each hole with an opaque metal cap. When they shined light into the holes, they found that as much as 70 percent more light came through when the holes were blocked than when they were open.

"The common wisdom in optics is that if you have a metal film with very small holes and you plug the holes with metal, the light transmission is blocked completely," said Chou, the Joseph Elgin Professor of Engineering. "We were very surprised."

Chou said the result could have significant implications and uses. For one, he said, it might require scientists and engineers to rethink techniques they have been using when they want to block all light transmission. In very sensitive optical instruments, such as microscopes, telescopes, spectrometers and other optical detectors, for example, it is common to coat a metal film onto glass with the intention of blocking light. Dust particles, which are unavoidable in metal film deposition, inevitably create tiny holes in the metal film, but these holes have been assumed to be harmless because the dust particles become capped and surrounded by metal, which is thought to block the light completely.

"This assumption is wrong -- the plug may not stop the leakage but rather greatly enhance it," Chou said.

He explained that in his own field of nanotechnology, light is often used in a technique called photolithography to carve ultrasmall patterns in silicon or other materials. Thin metal film patterns on a glass plate serve as a mask, directing light through certain locations of the plate and blocking other locations. Given the new finding, engineers ought to examine whether the mask blocks the light as expected, Chou said.

Conversely, Chou said, the newly discovered "blocking" technique might be used in situations when a boost in light transmission is desired. In near-field microscopy, for example, scientists view extremely fine details by passing light through a hole as tiny as billionths of a meter in diameter. With the new technique, the amount of light passing through the hole -- and thus the amount of information about the object being viewed -- can be increased by blocking the hole.

Chou and colleagues stumbled on the phenomenon of enhanced light transmission through a blocked hole in their research on developing ultrasensitive detectors that sense minute amounts of chemicals, with uses ranging from medical diagnostics to the detection of explosives. These detectors use a thin metal film with an array of holes and metal disks to boost faint signals produced when laser light encounters a molecule, allowing much greater sensitivity in identifying substances.

In one of their experimental detectors, the researchers studied transmission of light through an array of tiny holes that were 60 nanometers (billionths of a meter) in diameter and 200 nanometers apart in a gold film that was 40 nanometers thick. Each tiny hole was capped with a gold disk that was 40 percent larger than the hole. The disks sat on top of the holes with a slight gap between the metal surface and the disks.

The researchers pointed a laser at the underside of the film and tested to see if any of the laser light went through the holes, past the caps, and could be detected on the other side. To their surprise, they found that the total light transmission was 70 percent higher with the holes blocked by the metal disks than without blockers. The researchers repeated the same experiment shining the light in the opposite direction -- pointing at the side with the caps and looking for transmitted light under the film -- and found the same results.

"We did not expect more light to get through," Chou said. "We expected the metal to block the light completely."

Chou said the metal disk acts as a sort of "antenna" that picks up and radiates electromagnetic waves. In this case, the metal disks pick up light from one side of the hole and radiate it to the opposite side. The waves travel along the surface of the metal and leap from the hole to the cap, or vice versa depending on which way the light is traveling. Chou's research group is continuing to investigate the effect and how it could be applied to enhance the performance of ultrasensitive detectors.

###

The researchers published their findings Oct. 7 in the journal Optics Express, and it quickly became one of the most downloaded papers. In addition to Chou, the team included graduate student Wen-Di Li and postdoctoral researcher Jonathan Hu in the Department of Electrical Engineering. The work is sponsored in part by the Defense Advanced Research Agency and the National Science Foundation.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/pues-bhc112211.php

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New Museum Exhibit Invites Visitors to Smell the Moon, Nuke an Asteroid or Colonize Mars

Curiosity. Credit: ? AMNH/R. Mickens

NEW YORK CITY??Beyond Planet Earth,? the slick new exhibit on space exploration at the American Museum of Natural History, is thoroughly modern. It has an augmented-reality iPhone app that produces hovering, three-dimensional animations. It has an interactive station where museumgoers can terraform a virtual Mars on a giant touch-screen to make the Red Planet habitable. It even has an interactive display that challenges visitors to divert a giant asteroid bearing down on Earth.

But the thing that struck me most during a recent media preview of the exhibit, which opens November 19, was also one of the least hands-on. It was a scale model of NASA?s new Mars rover, Curiosity, which is scheduled to launch as soon as next week. Curiosity is huge?it weighs almost a metric ton, and its anthropomorphized head towers over most all humans not currently out of work due to the NBA lockout.

Expandable moon habitat. Credit: ? AMNH/D. Finnin

I had seen a scale model of Curiosity before, but its placement in the new exhibit?perched above the viewer on a simulated Martian slope, its many-pronged arm outstretched, its cyclopean eye staring down at the puny Earthling below?was awe-inspiring. Unlike the cute little solar-powered explorers of Mars missions past, the car-size, nuclear-powered Curiosity is intimidating, almost militaristic-looking. As I stood there staring up at the model rover, I thought to myself: That is one bad-ass robot.

The rover is just a small part of the new exhibit; other notables include a device that releases the scent of moon rocks (an interesting but not especially pleasant burnt odor), a life-size re-creation of a space-suited astronaut working on the Hubble Space Telescope and fascinating artifacts such as a compacted disk of trash from the International Space Station. (Before return to Earth, the mundane contents of the trash pellet?a protein-bar wrapper, a Russian trail mix package?were sucked clean to recapture any available water, heated to kill germs and then compressed.)

Terraforming Mars. Credit: ? AMNH/D. Finnin

But Curiosity stuck with me because it inspired the awe and wonder that so often accompany space exploration, but that are easily lost amid the sobering realities on the ground?the Congressional frivolities, the hand-wringing over NASA?s future, the fact that many missions simply fail.

?Beyond Planet Earth? is a good antidote for a space geek?s doom and gloom, offering a well-balanced portfolio of NASA?s greatest hits, as well as those of its international counterparts and of commercial strivers such as Virgin Galactic.

Ellen Futter, the museum?s president, cited the transformative power of space exploration in her remarks to reporters. She noted that this year marks the 50th anniversary of humankind?s first foray into space, the 1961 orbital flight of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin. ?That event utterly changed us all,? Futter said. ?No longer could we merely gaze into space?now we could go there, too.?

The exhibit also suggests an ambitious vision of the future, where Mars becomes a temperate, livable world in five not-so-easy steps, where inflatable habitation modules are deployed on the moon and where humanity extends its presence beyond the fragile planet we inhabit.

Hubble servicing mission display ? AMNH/R. Mickens

?If money weren?t a factor ? I think many of the things in this exhibition could actually be done within the lifetime of everyone in this room,? Michael Shara, an astrophysicist at the museum who curated the exhibit, said in a speech to reporters. ?There?s nothing in physics that prevents us from not only going back to the moon and [then on] to Mars and even to Europa and down underneath the ice to look for life, but there?s lots and lots of possibilities of getting even to the outer solar system.?

In a later interview, Shara said that the unifying theme for the exhibition is life?the search for extraterrestrial life as well as the desire to extend the reach of human life to other places. ?When we think of space, we think of the vacuum,? he said. ?We think of the moon as being dead and dry. We think of Mars as being a sandy, dusty, desolate world. To me, all of these places signify opportunities for life.? Earlier he had spoken to reporters of the necessity of breaking free of humanity?s reliance on Earth as our sole habitat. ?You back up your hard drive?or you should, anyway,? Shara said. ?We should back up life.?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=5e2abb93114c1a35d2b9989afa357f62

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সোমবার, ২১ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Americans win 4th straight Presidents Cup

U.S. team's Phil Mickelson, left, is congratulated by his teammate Jim Furyk after sinking a winning putt on the 17th green during the Presidents Cup golf tournament at Royal Melbourne Golf Course in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/David Callow)

U.S. team's Phil Mickelson, left, is congratulated by his teammate Jim Furyk after sinking a winning putt on the 17th green during the Presidents Cup golf tournament at Royal Melbourne Golf Course in Melbourne, Australia, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/David Callow)

(AP) ? The American returned Down Under and wound up on top in the Presidents Cup.

Jim Furyk became the fourth player to win all five of his matches, and the bottom half of the lineup was strong enough to give the Americans their fourth straight win in this lopsided series.

Tiger Woods won the clinching point for the second straight time. He played well all week without always getting rewarded with a point, but easily handled Aaron Baddeley, losing only one hole in a 4-and-3 victory.

By then, it already was clear which team would be hoisting the gold cup ? again.

The International team's only win came 13 years ago at Royal Melbourne. The Americans made sure there was no repeat, and lead the series 7-1-1.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-19-GLF-Presidents-Cup/id-d6f743ba594e4738b97759212fbdb46a

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রবিবার, ২০ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Sprint rides the Express to Budget Town, available now for $20

Do you choo-choo-choose the Sprint Express, or does it choose you? The Now Network's mixing things up this holiday season by adding its own branded device -- in reality, a reworked Huawei Boulder that Sprint slapped its name on -- to the low end of its smartphone lineup. Known simply as the Express, it's a portrait QWERTY Android 2.3 handset that will set you back $20 with a two-year contract (after a $50 mail-in rebate). What you'll get in return for that hard-earned Jackson is a 2.6-inch QVGA (320 x 240) display, 3.2MP camera, 256MB of RAM, 512MB of internal storage (with expandable microSD slot), a 1,500mAh battery and a 3G mobile hotspot that supports up to five devices. We doubt it'll be the first stop on anybody's Black Friday shopping list, but we think it may actually get penciled into the schedule somewhere.

Continue reading Sprint rides the Express to Budget Town, available now for $20

Sprint rides the Express to Budget Town, available now for $20 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Nov 2011 05:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/USl1FhVDtpw/

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Human Survival Depends On Space Exploration, Says Hawking

Nothing short of zero population growth is going to do anything but slow down the inevitable. Suppose we discover a means of building colony starships capable of moving ten billion people at the speed of light. Further, suppose there is an empty, habitable "class M" planet around every star.

Now, the human race has been expanding exponentially at the historic average of 2% per year. That means that, on average, the number of people doubles every 35 years. It's crowded here, and we've got a starship and an empty planet only 4 light years away. So we load half the population and take them to Alpha Centauri. It took (according to some estimates) 20,000 years for homo sapiens to get where we are today. Do you know how long it will take us to populate Alpha Centauri to today's levels? Only 35 years.

Okay, it's 39 years later (Four years transit time plus 35 years of growth), 2050, and now you have two crowded planets. No problem, Barnard's Star is only 6 years away from Earth, and Wolf 359 is 8 years from Alpha Centari. So we pack up half the population of Earth and send them to Barnard's Star, and we take half the population of Alpha Centauri and send them to Wolf 359. Again, it will only take 35 years to fill each of the planets. By 2093 we will need to find 8 more planets. We now have a colony on each of the stars within ten light years. 35 years after that, and we will need 16 planets, 70 years and we'll need 32, then 64. By 2200 we will have colonized all the stars within 20 light years.

By 2360ish we'll hit a snag. We will have populated all of the stars within 35 light years of Earth. Colony ships leaving Earth at this point will not arrive at their destination before it is time to send out another colony ship. Of course, all the other colonies will be sending out their colony ships as well. We'll need another 512 planets. At the end of another 35 year cycle, we'll need 1024, another cycle and we'll have used up all the stars within 50 light years.

Scientists estimate that there is about one star per 280 cubic light years. In 800 years or so, our empire will need 34 million new planets. However there are only some 19 million stars within 800 light years. In other words, we will have outgrown our ability to travel.

Today we have 7 billion people on the planet. By 2150, your target date, we will have 36 billion people. Your 50/50 by 2150 plan would result in each person having only half an acre of land on which to live and support themself. This [netdna-cdn.com] suggests 2 acres per person are needed. 50/50 by 2150 would result in 3/4 of the population starving to death.

It's basic mathematics. A fixed resource cannot supply an ever increasing population. Any plan that does not include zero population growth and 100% recycling will eventually fail.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/KFhnDgqKzHE/human-survival-depends-on-space-exploration-says-hawking

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শনিবার, ১৯ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

NASA creates first-ever high resolution moon map (Yahoo! News)

Lunar craters, volcanic features, and more are revealed in new images

Domino's Pizza may have plans for a franchise on the moon (if China doesn't claim the entire thing first), but where will they put it? Until now there has only been low resolution images of the moon's surface available. All that has changed thanks to NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. On board is a camera that could fit in the palm of your hand that takes pictures covering most of the moon's surface once a month.

Over 69,000 of those pictures have been stitched together by the science team at the Arizona State University in Tempe to show a single map of the moon. Each small pixel represents about 328 feet across and two football fields in height. The only exception to the coverage are the poles of the moon which don't receive enough light for the camera to capture images, but another image recorder on the orbiter is mapping those regions with the assistance of lasers.

With this new topographical map in hand, scientists can now "...better understand impact crater mechanics, investigate the nature of volcanic features, and better plan future robotic and human missions to the moon," according to Mark Robinson, Principal Investigator of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera. And, of course, people like Richard Branson whose world's first commercial spaceport is nearing completion can set their sights on the next celestial destination for intrepid travelers.

NASA via Gizmodo

This article was written by Dan O'Halloran and originally appeared on Tecca

More from Tecca:

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111117/tc_yblog_technews/nasa-creates-first-ever-high-resolution-moon-map

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How to Move with your Household pets Around by CEI 2007

When moving to another spot of residence you would surely not want your household pets to be left behind. In the end, they?ve been a part of the family for a long and have spent time and emotions together. In moving spots, household pets also will need to be thought to be secondly following all of your valuables. Phoenix moving company tells that moving is often a stressful matter for men and women and it is exactly the same together with your household pets. But a bit know the way of this matter, the trip may be pleasant for each you as well as your pet.

Many moving company in Phoenix permits household pets within their vehicles. Just before travelling, it is much better to give household pets water in the morning and limit the volume of food you can let them have the night just before the travel. If travelling needs nighttime journey, limit also the food you can give them at night. Kennels of massive canines will need to be placed on the automobile first, then place every dog one by one after the kennel is in its appropriate spot. Don?t forget to pack water and food for household pets so they will not get starved until you reach house. Leashes of household pets will need to be placed on the kennel door so it is going to be ready once necessary. To get a mess free travel, constantly maintain a poop scooper ready. As travel perhaps as well substantially stressful for household pets, make sure to give them products to maintain them comfortable and calm like blanket or favorite toys. Household pets will need to also be kept secure in their kennels or cages by making positive that the doors are closed securely and effectively. Household pets may possibly move across the automobile and get into furnishings and boxes which could outcome to injuries.

In the course of stopovers or when at rest area, it is much better to stroll canines and cats to relieve them from pressure. If time permits which you stop inside a hotel, give your household pets little food. Make it possible for canines out of their kennels along with the cats outside of their cage. When the hotel includes a pet area, you may leave them there until eventually you?ve got sufficient rest and are set to carry on your journey.

Source: http://www.cei2007.org/movers/how-to-move-with-your-household-pets-around.html

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More in Afghanistan criticize country's direction. What it means for US troops.

A recent Afghanistan poll finds progress on several fronts but some worrisome signs, including a jump in the number who say the country is headed in the wrong direction. Security is still a major issue.

More Afghans than not say their country is moving in the right direction, but the number who say that a decade into a Western-led war Afghanistan is headed in the wrong direction is increasing ? now to more than one-third of the population.

Skip to next paragraph

Even as Afghan President Hamid Karzai lays out a plan that envisions US troops remaining in his country for years to come, a large majority of Afghans say that one of the things that frightens them most in their daily life is the prospect of crossing paths with foreign troops.

Those are among the finds of an annual survey of the Afghan people conducted by the Asia Foundation, a Washington-based organization focused on US-Asia relations.

More Afghans expressed optimism over improvements in the availability of services such as health care, education, and water. In recent testimony before Congress addressing the billions of dollars the US has invested in Afghanistan, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton focused on those improvements.

Today more than 2.4 million Afghan girls are enrolled in school, Secretary Clinton is fond of noting, compared with 5,000 just before the Taliban government?s fall.

But the Asia Foundation survey, in which 6,348 Afghans in all 34 provinces were interviewed between July 2 and Aug. 1, also contains worrisome signs. This year 35 percent of Afghans said conditions in their country are headed in the wrong direction ? an 8 percent jump over last year and the highest level for ?wrong direction? respondents since the group began taking the annual poll in 2004.

The main reason cited for the higher pessimism: lack of security.

One factor that may have contributed to this sense of deteriorating security was the rising level of violence in some regions as a greater number of US troops (as a result of the mini-surge of 2010) launched more anti-Taliban assaults.

But the survey also found dwindling sympathy for the country?s militants. Afghans expressing support for at least some aims of the armed antigovernment groups fell to below a third ? 29 percent compared with 40 percent last year, the lowest level of any of the annual surveys.

At the same time, a majority of Afghans support initiatives to engage in a dialogue with militant groups and ultimately to make peace with them.

The Asia Foundation survey was released this week, as President Karzai holds a loya jirga, or grand council, in Kabul to consider the terms of an eventual strategic partnership with the US. Karzai told the council Wednesday that he favors reaching an agreement with the US to allow for American military bases to remain in the country past NATO?s 2014 date for ending its military mission.

But Karzai said he has a set of conditions for reaching an agreement with the US. The Afghan leader said the US would have to agree to end a number of its practices ? carrying out night raids, invading Afghan homes, detaining Afghan citizens ? that he said he could not support as the head of a sovereign nation.

The military practices Karzai cited are also among the reasons average Afghans cite for feeling fearful around foreign troops. The survey found that 76 percent of Afghans are fearful of encountering US and other foreign troops in the country.

In contrast, 55 percent said they fear encountering the Afghan National Army.

In any case, concerns over deterioration in the country?s security don?t appear to be limited to average Afghans. Karzai himself seemed to second his people?s pessimism over security conditions when he opted to take a helicopter ? rather than risking a car ride on the capital?s streets ? to get to the loya jirga.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/TBXhfXpXAiI/More-in-Afghanistan-criticize-country-s-direction.-What-it-means-for-US-troops

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৭ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Germany to create far right extremists' register (AP)

BERLIN ? Germany will create a national database as a clearing-house for information on far-right extremists amid mounting criticism because its security agencies failed to detect a deadly neo-Nazi terror group for years.

Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said Wednesday the new database to be used by all federal and state-level intelligence and police agencies will be modeled on a similar registry for Islamic extremists created in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks.

"We want to also use this idea, that has been very successful over the past 10 years to foil Islamist terror attacks, against domestic terrorist structures," Friedrich told reporters.

The minister also announced that the government scheduled talks for Friday with the country's 16 state interior and justice ministers on how to "improve cooperation in the future."

Germany has a federal domestic intelligence agency, but all states also have their own police and domestic intelligence agency ? resulting in a lack of coordination that critics say helped the neo-Nazis to remain undetected between 1998 and last week.

The group is suspected of murdering eight Turks, a Greek and a policewoman over the past decade.

The investigation into the activities of the National Socialist Underground has spiraled into a nationwide search of previously unsolved crimes, including suspected terror attacks in Cologne and Duesseldorf from 2000 to 2004 that are now linked to the group. The attacks injured more than 30 people, most of them foreigners.

Two people have been arrested, a suspected co-founder of the group and an alleged supporter. Two other suspected founding members died last week in an apparent suicide, but authorities believe the group relied on a much larger network of "helpers" across the nation.

The crimes have caused an outcry and caused soul-searching across the country. Chancellor Angela Merkel called them "a shame for Germany" over the weekend.

President Christian Wulff announced Wednesday that he will invite the victims' relatives and government representatives to meet at his Berlin office in a private ceremony.

German police referred to the series of the nine murders of foreign businessmen ? including a flower wholesaler, a tailor and kebab stall owners ? as "kebab killings," suspecting organized crime behind it but not politically motivated violence.

The head of state therefore raised the question of what lessons German authorities must learn from that failure.

"Did we have to suspect a far right extremist background and are the protagonists of those far right circles under sufficient surveillance?" Wulff said.

"Did we possibly let prejudices guide ourselves?" he added in a speech addressing the Central Council of Jews in Germany.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/terrorism/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111116/ap_on_re_eu/eu_germany_far_right_terror

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