Science
News This Week:
1) Ancient
Egyptian blue glass beads reached Scandinavia:
Chemical
analysis of Danish discoveries extends range of Bronze Age trade. Bronze Age
bigwigs in what’s now Denmark wore brightly colored glass beads made in the
workshops of Egyptian pharaohs and Mesopotamian rulers, a new investigation
finds.
Trade
routes connected Egypt and Mesopotamia with Denmark by 3,400 years ago and
remained active until at least 3,100 years ago, say archaeologist Jeanette Varberg
of Moesgaard Museum in HĂžjbjerg, Denmark, and her colleagues. Chemical analyses
of blue beads previously found in Danish Bronze Age graves from that period
show that the ornaments originated in glass workshops of Egypt’s pharaohs and
Fertile Crescent rulers, the researchers report December 13 in the Journal of
Archaeological Science.
“This is
the first evidence of ancient Egyptian glass outside the Mediterranean region,”
Varberg says. Mesopotamian glass was previously known to have reached as far
north as France, she adds.
2) Quantum
physics just got less complicated: Wave-particle duality and quantum
uncertainty are same thing:
Here's a
nice surprise: quantum physics is less complicated than we thought. An
international team of researchers has proved that two peculiar features of the
quantum world previously considered distinct are different manifestations of
the same thing. The result is published 19 December in Nature Communications.
Patrick
Coles, Jedrzej Kaniewski, and Stephanie Wehner made the breakthrough while at
the Centre for Quantum Technologies at the National University of Singapore.
They found that 'wave-particle duality' is simply the quantum 'uncertainty
principle' in disguise, reducing two mysteries to one."The connection between
uncertainty and wave-particle duality comes out very naturally when you
consider them as questions about what information you can gain about a system.
Our result highlights the power of thinking about physics from the perspective
of information," says Wehner, who is now an Associate Professor at QuTech
at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.The discovery deepens
our understanding of quantum physics and could prompt ideas for new
applications of wave-particle duality.
Wave-particle
duality is the idea that a quantum object can behave like a wave, but that the
wave behaviour disappears if you try to locate the object. It's most simply
seen in a double slit experiment, where single particles, electrons, say, are
fired one by one at a screen containing two narrow slits. The particles pile up
behind the slits not in two heaps as classical objects would, but in a stripy
pattern like you'd expect for waves interfering. At least this is what happens
until you sneak a look at which slit a particle goes through -- do that and the
interference pattern vanishes.The quantum uncertainty principle is the idea
that it's impossible to know certain pairs of things about a quantum particle
at once. For example, the more precisely you know the position of an atom, the
less precisely you can know the speed with which it's moving. It's a limit on
the fundamental knowability of nature, not a statement on measurement skill.
The new work shows that how much you can learn about the wave versus the
particle behaviour of a system is constrained in exactly the same
way.Wave-particle duality and uncertainty have been fundamental concepts in
quantum physics since the early 1900s. "We were guided by a gut feeling,
and only a gut feeling, that there should be a connection," says Coles,
who is now a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for Quantum Computing in
Waterloo, Canada.It's possible to write equations that capture how much can be
learned about pairs of properties that are affected by the uncertainty
principle. Coles, Kaniewski and Wehner are experts in a form of such equations
known as 'entropic uncertainty relations', and they discovered that all the
maths previously used to describe wave-particle duality could be reformulated
in terms of these relations."It was like we had discovered the 'Rosetta
Stone' that connected two different languages," says Coles. "The
literature on wave-particle duality was like hieroglyphics that we could now
translate into our native tongue. We had several eureka moments when we finally
understood what people had done," he says.Because the entropic uncertainty
relations used in their translation have also been used in proving the security
of quantum cryptography -- schemes for secure communication using quantum
particles -- the researchers suggest the work could help inspire new
cryptography protocols.In earlier papers, Wehner and collaborators found
connections between the uncertainty principle and other physics, namely quantum
'non-locality' and the second law of thermodynamics. The tantalising next goal
for the researchers is to think about how these pieces fit together and what
bigger picture that paints of how nature is constructed.
3) Rosetta
may have spotted comet’s primordial ingredients:
New
images reveal 67P’s craggy terrain. The dynamic, rugged terrain of comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko may be exposing the meter-wide building blocks that
make up the comet, scientists reported December 17 at the American Geophysical
Union’s fall meeting. If confirmed, the finding could give scientists an
unprecedented look at pristine samples of the original material that bonded to
form comets, asteroids and planets nearly 4.6 billion years ago.
The
enticing evidence was delivered by the Rosetta spacecraft’s OSIRIS instrument,
which snaps photos of the comet’s surface with a resolution as high as a few
centimeters per pixel. The images quickly revealed that 67P violates the
conventional wisdom of comets resembling smooth dirty snowballs, said Holger
Sierks, a member of the Rosetta team. The photos, which are not yet available
to the public, reveal cliffs tens or hundreds of meters tall, as well as
mysterious pits, some about as long as two football fields and just as deep,
that are venting gas into space.
But it
was the components of the cliffs and pits that caught Sierks’ eye. Embedded
along the edges of those features are strange spheres, most between 1 and 3
meters in diameter. He hypothesizes that the spheres are examples of the
fundamental units of ice and dust that were sintered together in the infant
solar system to form asteroids, planets and comets like 67P.
4) A
clear, molecular view of how human color vision evolved:
ny
genetic mutations in visual pigments, spread over millions of years, were
required for humans to evolve from a primitive mammal with a dim, shadowy view
of the world into a greater ape able to see all the colors in a rainbow.Now,
after more than two decades of painstaking research, scientists have finished a
detailed and complete picture of the evolution of human color vision. PLOS
Genetics published the final pieces of this picture: The process for how humans
switched from ultraviolet (UV) vision to violet vision, or the ability to see
blue light."We have now traced all of the evolutionary pathways, going back
90 million years, that led to human color vision," says lead author Shozo
Yokoyama, a biologist at Emory University. "We've clarified these
molecular pathways at the chemical level, the genetic level and the functional
level."
Co-authors
of the PLOS Genetics paper include Emory biologists Jinyi Xing, Yang Liu and
Davide Faggionato; Syracuse University biologist William Starmer; and Ahmet
Altun, a chemist and former post-doc at Emory who is now at Fatih University in
Istanbul, Turkey.
Yokoyama
and various collaborators over the years have teased out secrets of the
adaptive evolution of vision in humans and other vertebrates by studying
ancestral molecules. The lengthy process involves first estimating and
synthesizing ancestral proteins and pigments of a species, then conducting
experiments on them. The technique combines microbiology with theoretical
computation, biophysics, quantum chemistry and genetic engineering.Five classes
of opsin genes encode visual pigments for dim-light and color vision. Bits and
pieces of the opsin genes change and vision adapts as the environment of a
species changes.Around 90 million years ago, our primitive mammalian ancestors
were nocturnal and had UV-sensitive and red-sensitive color, giving them a
bi-chromatic view of the world. By around 30 million years ago, our ancestors
had evolved four classes of opsin genes, giving them the ability to see the
full-color spectrum of visible light, except for UV."Gorillas and
chimpanzees have human color vision," Yokoyama says. "Or perhaps we
should say that humans have gorilla and chimpanzee vision."For the PLOS
Genetics paper, the researchers focused on the seven genetic mutations involved
in losing UV vision and achieving the current function of a blue-sensitive
pigment. They traced this progression from 90-to-30 million years ago.
The
researchers identified 5,040 possible pathways for the amino acid changes
required to bring about the genetic changes. "We did experiments for every
one of these 5,040 possibilities," Yokoyama says. "We found that of
the seven genetic changes required, each of them individually has no effect. It
is only when several of the changes combine in a particular order that the
evolutionary pathway can be completed."
In other
words, just as an animal's external environment drives natural selection, so do
changes in the animal's molecular environment.In previous research, Yokoyama
showed how the scabbardfish, which today spends much of its life at depths of
25 to 100 meters, needed just one genetic mutation to switch from UV to
blue-light vision. Human ancestors, however, needed seven changes and these
changes were spread over millions of years. "The evolution for our
ancestors' vision was very slow, compared to this fish, probably because their
environment changed much more slowly," Yokoyama says.About 80 percent of
the 5,040 pathways the researchers traced stopped in the middle, because a
protein became non-functional. Chemist Ahmet Altun solved the mystery of why
the protein got knocked out. It needs water to function, and if one mutation
occurs before the other, it blocks the two water channels extending through the
vision pigment's membrane."The remaining 20 percent of the pathways
remained possible pathways, but our ancestors used only one," Yokoyama
says. "We identified that path."In 1990, Yokoyama identified the
three specific amino acid changes that led to human ancestors developing a
green-sensitive pigment. In 2008, he led an effort to construct the most
extensive evolutionary tree for dim-light vision, including animals from eels
to humans. At key branches of the tree, Yokoyama's lab engineered ancestral
gene functions, in order to connect changes in the living environment to the
molecular changes.The PLOS Genetics paper completes the project for the
evolution of human color vision. "We have no more ambiguities, down to the
level of the expression of amino acids, for the mechanisms involved in this
evolutionary pathway," Yokoyama says.
5) Doctor who survived Ebola received
experimental drug treatment:
28
September, 2014, the 38-year old doctor, who was in charge of an Ebola virus
treatment unit in Lakka, Sierra Leone, developed a fever and diarrhea. He
tested positive for the virus on the same day. The doctor was airlifted to
Frankfurt University Hospital on the 5th day of his illness and admitted to a
specialized isolation unit.
Within 72
hours of admission he developed signs of vascular leakage and severe
multi-organ failure, including the lungs, kidneys, and gastrointestinal tract.
He was placed on a ventilator and on kidney dialysis, and was given antibiotics
together with a 3-day course of an experimental drug called FX06 -- a
fibrin-derived peptide that has been shown to reduce vascular leakage and its
complications in mice with Dengue hemorrhagic shock.A marked improvement in
vascular and respiratory function was seen under the combined measures of
intensive care and drug treatment. After a 30-day observation period, no Ebola
virus genetic material was detected in the patient's blood plasma. The patient
was released from hospital and is now with his family."Even though the
patient was critically ill, we were able to support him long enough for his
body to start antibody production and for the virus to be cleared by his body's
defenses," explains Dr Wolf."In terms of improving treatment for
Ebola patients, we have shown how intensive care medicine can successfully be
applied under strict isolation conditions," adds senior author Professor
Zacharowski, head of the Department of Anaesthetics and Intensive Care Medicine
at Frankfurt University Hospital."
Movie
Release This Week:
From
Academy Award®-winning filmmaker Peter Jackson comes “The Hobbit: The Battle of
the Five Armies,” the third in a trilogy of films adapting the enduringly
popular masterpiece The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien.
“The
Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies” brings to an epic conclusion the
adventures of Bilbo Baggins, Thorin Oakenshield and the Company of Dwarves.
Having reclaimed their homeland from the Dragon Smaug, the Company has
unwittingly unleashed a deadly force into the world. Enraged, Smaug rains his
fiery wrath down upon the defenseless men, women and children of Lake-town.
Obsessed
above all else with his reclaimed treasure, Thorin sacrifices friendship and
honor to hoard it as Bilbo’s frantic attempts to make him see reason drive the
Hobbit towards a desperate and dangerous choice. But there are even greater
dangers ahead. Unseen by any but the Wizard Gandalf, the great enemy Sauron has
sent forth legions of Orcs in a stealth attack upon the Lonely Mountain.
As
darkness converges on their escalating conflict, the races of Dwarves, Elves
and Men must decide – unite or be destroyed. Bilbo finds himself fighting for
his life and the lives of his friends in the epic Battle of the Five Armies, as
the future of Middle-earth hangs in the balance.
Academy
Award® nominee QuvenzhanĂ© Wallis (Beasts of the Southern Wild) stars as Annie,
a young, happy foster kid who's also tough enough to make her way on the
streets of New York in 2014. Originally left by her parents as a baby with the
promise that they'd be back for her someday, it's been a hard knock life ever
since with her mean foster mom Miss Hannigan (Cameron Diaz). But everything's
about to change when the hard-nosed tycoon and New York mayoral candidate Will
Stacks (Jamie Foxx) - advised by his brilliant VP, Grace (Rose Byrne) and his
shrewd and scheming campaign advisor, Guy (Bobby Cannavale) - makes a
thinly-veiled campaign move and takes her in. Stacks believes he's her guardian
angel, but Annie's self-assured nature and bright, sun-will-come-out-tomorrow
outlook on life just might mean it's the other way around.
Get ready
for the wildest and most adventure-filled Night At the Museum ever as Larry
(Ben Stiller) spans the globe, uniting favorite and new characters while
embarking on an epic quest to save the magic before it is gone forever.
In this
twisted thriller, a young detective is caught in a sadistic game of
cat-and-mouse when he is kidnapped and tormented by a masked serial killer. In
order to survive, the rookie must use the wisdom imparted to him by senior
detectives on their regular poker night.
PK is a
2014 Indian comedy-drama film directed by Rajkumar Hirani, produced by Hirani,
Vidhu Vinod Chopra and Siddharth Roy Kapur, and written by Hirani and Abhijat
Joshi. The film stars Aamir Khan in the title role, with Anushka Sharma, Sushant
Singh Rajput, Boman Irani, Saurabh Shukla, and Sanjay Dutt in supporting roles.
Hirani has stated that the film will be a satire on "God and godmen".
PK released on 19th December 2014
PK (Aamir
Khan) is an alien who gets stranded on earth and is befriended by Bhairon Singh
(Sanjay Dutt) who helps PK try to adjust to Earth customs. PK goes to Delhi
where he and reporter Jagat Janani (Anushka Sharma) end up confronting a
huckster, the godman Tapasvi Maharaj (Saurabh Shukla).
Political
News This Week:
1) J&K
assembly poll final phase ends with a record turnout of 76 per cent:
The fifth
and last phase of the state assembly polls in Jammu and Kashmir ended on
Saturday with a turnout of 76 per cent.“The highest turnout was recorded as
83.20 per cent in Bani and lowest as 60 per cent in Gandhinagar,” the Chief
Electoral Officer Umang Narula said at a news conference in winter capital.With
Saturday’s polls for 20 assembly seats spread in the three districts of Jammu,
Rajouri and Kathua, the five phase poll process in the state has been
completed.Counting of votes will be taken up on Tuesday at various counting
centres across the state and the results are expected by afternoon.
Pollsters
predict a hung house in the state with no major political parties including the
Peoples Democratic Party, the Bharatiya Janta Party, the National Conference
and the Congress able to get a simple majority in the 87 member state assembly.
The polling,
which began at 8 am, saw brisk voting in all the 20 constituencies for which as
many as 2,391 polling stations were set up, which included 278 hypersensitive
ones and comprised 18,28,904 electors including 9,59,011 male and 8,69,891
female voters.Since early this morning voters began to queue up outside the
polling booths to cast their votes.A large number of women and first time
voters also lined up to exercise their franchise in the three
districts.Saturday’s polling, held under tight security would decide the fate
213 candidates including state Deputy Chief Minister Tara Chand, ministers Sham
Lal and Raman Balla.
The state
director general of police K Rajendra had directed the officers to ensure high
alertness, especially in the border areas to check any infiltration attempt.
Rajendra,
who reviewed the security arrangements with top police officers, said, “In view
of the recent developments on the other side of border, we have to remain
vigilant as the subversive elements could try to disrupt the peaceful
atmosphere in the state.”He had asked to conduct naka checking to identify
suspicious movement in these areas.
2) Jammu
and Kashmir records highest turnout, Jharkhand breaks records:
Jammu and
Kashmir and Jharkhand broke records as they voted for the fifth and final leg
of assembly polls on Saturday. Standing at 65 per cent J&K saw the highest
voter turnout in over two decades, while Jharkhand saw a record 66 per cent
voting. Jharkhand, which also went to the polls along with J&K, broke all
previous polling records to witness over 66 per cent of turn-out in the five
phases, bettering the previous mark of 54.2 per cent in the 2004 assembly poll.
Vinod
Zutshi said the fifth and final phase of polling in the assembly elections on
Saturday saw 76 per cent of polling.Similarly, the last phase recorded over 71
per cent of polling in Jharkhand, he said.Chief Electoral Officer P K Jajoria
lauded the police personnel and election staff for successfully carrying out
the elections in all the five phases.
He said
free, fair and peaceful conduct of elections is a matter of pride for
Jharkhand.Jajoria also commended the voters for turning out in large numbers,
saying that they have become aware of the value of vote and its impact on
development.Dumka Deputy Commissioner Harsh Mangla said the polling in all the
constituencies under the district concluded peacefully.A total of 36,90,069
electorate, including 17,84,486 women, were eligible to choose from 208
candidates, including 16 women nominees, for the 16 seats spread over 6
districts of Dumka, Godda, Sahebganj, Jamtara, Deoghar and Pakud in Santhal
Pargana region.
The
polling began at 7 am and ended at 3 pm.Prominent among those in the fray for
fifth phase polls are Chief Minister Hemant Soren from Dumka and Barhait,
Assembly Speaker Shashank Sekhar Bhokta from Sarath and Rural Works Minister
Lobin Hembrom from Borio.
Prominent
Jharkhand politician and former Jharkhand Vikas Dal MP Suraj Mandal is
challenging the speaker at Sarath.The incumbent Jharkhan Mukti Morcha had won
nine of the 16 seats in the 2009 assembly polls.The EC said it had marked as
many as 833 polling stations as hyper-sensitive and 1,496 sensitive and 291
polling stations were made available with web casting facilities.A total of
22,240 polling personnel were deployed for the polling.
The
previous four phase polling were held on November 25 (63.26 per cent voter
turnout), December 2 (68.01 per cent), December 9 (63.96 per cent) and December
14 (64.63 per cent) with updated polling percentage, according to the EC.A
senior security official reportedly said that security deployment in Jharkhand
was three to four times more than it was in the Lok Sabha elections.
3) Cold
wave continues in north; 8 killed in Uttar Pradesh:
Intense
cold wave continued unabated in north India on Saturday as fog-related
incidents claimed eight lives in Uttar Pradesh and disrupting traffic movement
in several parts of the region.Chilly weather prevailed in the national capital
on Saturday with the minimum temperature touching 7.2 degrees Celsius, a notch
below the normal.
Moderate
foggy conditions were witnessed early in the morning in several parts of the
city causing drop in visibility but the situation improved as the day
progressed.The maximum temperature settled five notches below the season's
average at 17.5 degrees Celsius.Cold wave intensified its grip in different
parts of Uttar Pradesh with mercury dipping to sub-zero levels and claiming
eight lives while dense fog threw transport systems out of gear in most areas.While
six persons were killed and 34 others injured when a truck fell into a canal in
Kadura area amidst dense fog, two deaths were reported in an accident in
Kushinagar due to poor visibility.Though weather was dry over the state, fog
occurred at most places adversely hitting air, train and road traffic.Lowest
minimum temperature over the state was 3 degrees Celsius recorded at Nazibabad
(Bijnore) while Kanpur recorded a minimum of 8.3 degrees Celsius.Mercury dipped
further in Srinagar to record the season's lowest temperature on the eve of
'Chillai-Kalan'– the 40-day harshest winter period.
Srinagar
recorded a low of minus 4.4 degrees Celsius, down from the previous night's
minus 4.2 degrees Celsius, a MeT official said.Leh continued to be the coldest
place in the state with minimum temperature at minus 13.9 degrees Celsius, as
Kargil, also in Ladakh region, recorded a low of minus 13 degrees Celsius, he
said. Temperature elsewhere in Kashmir region stayed below the freezing
point.Biting cold conditions continued without any respite in Himachal even as
the region had a clear day while the state started limping back to normalcy
with partial restoration of water and power supply in Kullu and Manali after
seven days.While the National Highway from Manali to Rohtang Pass was closed
all major roads have been opened and efforts are on to open 150 link roads in
the interior areas of Kullu where 83 roads are still shut.The high altitude
tribal areas continued to reel under piercing cold wave with mercury staying
well below the freezing point.Cold wave conditions continued unabated in Punjab
and Haryana throwing normal life out of gear with all flight operations being
cancelled at Chandigarh airport due to dense fog which reduced visibility
levels.
Many
trains, including Chandigarh-Delhi Shatabdi, Tata Mori, Paschim Express ran
hours behind schedule.Dense fog engulfed almost all major cities of the region,
including Amritsar, Ludhiana, Patiala in Punjab and Hisar, Karnal and
Ambala.Narnaul in Haryana was the coldest place in the region as it recorded a
minimum temperature of 4 degrees Celsius.In Punjab, Amritsar recorded a low of
4.1 degrees Celsius, the joint capital Chandigarh's minimum settled at 7
degrees Celsius.
4) 'Made
in India' guided bomb can hit targets 100 km away:
India has
tested a 1,000 kg indigenously-developed glide bomb, which successfully hit a
target 100 km away, in the Bay of Bengal off the Odisha coast, making the
country self-reliant in guided precision bombs.
"The
nation today has capability to design, develop and launch heavy bombs for
delivery up to 100 km away with high precision," said DRDO Director
General Avinash Chander.
Designed
and developed by Defence Research and Development Organisation, the bomb was
dropped by an Indian Air Force aircraft in the ocean, according to an official
statement.
The bomb,
guided by an on-board navigation system, glided for nearly 100 km before
hitting the target with great precision.
The
flight of the glide bomb was monitored by radars and electro-optic systems
stationed at IntegratedTestRange at Chandipur in Odisha's Balasore district,
about 230 km from Bhubaneswar.The flight of the glide bomb was monitored by
radars and electro-optic systems stationed at the ITR.
5) Bitter
rivals Modi and Mamata all smiles at Pranab's dinner:
A banquet
hosted by President Pranab Mukherjee for a visiting foreign dignitary on Friday
night provided the platform for Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his bitter
political foe West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee to meet and exchange
pleasantries. As the Prime Minister arrived at the banquet at the Rashtrapati
Bhavan in honour of Bangladesh President Md Abdul Hamid, he shook hands with
the Indian delegation that had lined up for customary introduction to the
visiting head of state.
Modi
stopped for a while and exchanged greetings with the West Bengal chief
minister.
After
exchanging pleasantries with Banerjee, Modi walked ahead along the line and
stood with former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh while Banerjee talked to
External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj.
This was
the first time Mamata met Modi in the backdrop of weeks of a bitter war of
words between BJP and Trinamool Congress, including the party supremo, for
weeks on a range of issues including Saradha chit fund scam, Burdwan blast and
incidents of communal tension in parts of the country.
Mamata
has repeatedly targeted Modi using some strong words against him and BJP too
attacked her and Trinamool Congress accusing them of shielding those involved
in Saradha chit fund scam and Burdwan
blast. The President, who returned from a week-long hospitalisation where he
underwent a coronary angioplasty, did not stay for the banquet and retired to
bed on health grounds.
The
banquet, where the visiting President was served 'sorsey maach' (fish dipped in
mustard paste), 'doi maach' (fish prepared with curd), 'maach bhapa' (steamed
fish) with Bengali music playing in the background, was carried forward by Vice
President Hamid Ansari.
6) ISRO
does it again: India's heaviest rocket GSLV-Mark III launched successfully:
India on
Thursday successfully launched its heaviest rocket yet and tested an unmanned
crew module in a step towards its manned space mission in twin achievements
that gave a big push to its space prowess.As India got a giant new satellite
launch vehicle that opened more commercial opportunities, the crew module --
Crew Module Atmospheric Re-entry Experiment -- splashed down into the Bay of
Bengal after it separated from the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle.
The
successful test of the atmospheric re-entry of the 3.65 tonne unmanned capsule
came around 730 seconds after the three-tonne rocket on its experimental
mission lifted off at 9.30 am from the second launch pad of the Satish Dhawan
Space Centre.
While the
rocket cost Indian Space Research Organisation Rs 140 crore, the crew module
has taken another Rs 15 crore, officials said. Three levels of parachutes
specially designed by Agra-based DRDO lab Aerial Delivery Research and
Development Establishment helped the crew module descend safely into the sea,
about 180 km from Indira Point, the southern tip of the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands.“This was a very significant day in the history of Indian space programme,”
ISRO Chairman K S Radhakrishnan said from mission control, as fellow scientists
clapped and broke into a round of cheers.
President
Pranab Mukherjee and Prime Minister Narendra Modi were among other leaders who
congratulated the ISRO scientists for the feat that will help carry heavier
communication satellites.“Successful launch of GSLV Mark-III is yet another
triumph of brilliance and hardwork of our scientists. Congrats to them for the
efforts. @isro,” Modi tweeted. The Lok Sabha also hailed ISRO for the new
achievements. GSLV Mark III Project Director S Somanath said the country has
made it again and it has a new launch vehicle. “India, you have a new launch
vehicle with you. We have made it again,” he said.“We have made it again.
ISRO’s capability of launching heavier payloads has come to shape and this will
change our destiny and our capability has significantly enhanced.”The 2.7 metre
tall cupcake-shaped crew module with a diameter of 3.1 metre features aluminium
alloy internal structure with composite panels and ablative thermal protection
systems and can carry two to three astronauts.
The
module would be shipped to KamarajarPort in Ennore near Chennai, from where it
would be taken to Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre at Thiruvananthapuram in Kerala for
further study.Though it would take at least 10 years for India to send humans
into space, this experiment has helped the space agency to test the module for
safe return of humans from space, according to ISRO.As for the objective of
validation of the complex atmospheric flight regime of GSLV Mk III,
Radhakrishnan said the two active S200 and L110 propulsive stages “performed as
expected”.“We have got the signal from the beacon in the crew capsule. Indian
Coast Guard ships have received them and they are some 100 km away from the
site presently moving to recover it,” S Unnikrishnan Nair, Project Director of
ISRO’s Human Spaceflight Programme, said.
Taliban
Peshawar school massacre:
As many
as 141 people, nearly all of them school children, were massacred on Tuesday
when heavily armed Taliban suicide bombers stormed a Pakistan army-run school
in Peshawar, firing indiscriminately, leaving another 130 injured.Dressed in
para-military Frontier Corps uniforms, the seven Arabic-speaking terrorists
entered the Army Public School on Warsak Road around 10 am (local time) from
the rear side and went from classroom to classroom shooting innocent children
indiscriminately in one of the most gruesome terror attacks anywhere.
Chief
Military Spokesman Maj Gen Asim Bajwa told a news conference tonight that 132
of the dead were children and another nine were staff members. A total of 130
people -- 118 students, three staffers, seven SSG soldiers and two officers --
were injured, he said. He also said that 960 students and staffers were
rescued. Bajwa said all the seven militants were killed in the operations
involving Special Services Group or commandos.
Some of
them reportedly blew themselves up."The operation is over. The school has
been handed over to its administration. SSG troops are withdrawn" he
added.Bajwa said about 1,100 students and staffers were in the school at the
time of the attack.Earlier, reports had put the death toll at 160 but later it
was scaled down.During the over eight-hour standoff, the terrorists also took
several hostages, including teachers and the principal of the school, and used
them as human shield during the assault.
The
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility for the attack, the bloodiest
in recent years since the 2008 suicide bombing in Karachi in which 150 people
were killed.The Taliban spokesman claimed that 6 suicide bombers were involved
in the attack and that it was a revenge for the military's operation against
militants in the North Waziristan tribal area close to Peshawar
Taliban
Peshawar School Massacre incident is the most horrific faliure of Pakistan
Army intelligence, which will be
remember as Most Devilish act of the Human to other human. Complete Faliure of Pakistani government can only be compensated
by the Complete annihilation of
Terrorism throughout Pakistan. Without
That Pakistan Government cannot be faced in front of Civilized world. ISI and
Taliban Terrorists rule parallal government throughout the Pakistan where terrorism
nurtured with heavy care. This hellish act must be stopped by the intervention
foreign contries like India. The
root-cause of Indian Terrorism are these Talibans which must be annihilated for
the betterment of our country. Pakistani Exsisting government alone cannot
stopped these Talibani People because many International powerful muslim groups (Like Muslim Brotherhood) all over the
world are promoting them to create internal disputes.
Sports News
This Week:
1)
Atletico de Kolkata beat Kerala Blasters 1-0 to lift inaugural ISL trophy:
Substitute
Mohammad Rafique headed in an injury time header as Atletico De Kolkata
clinched the inaugural Indian Super League crown with a 1-0 win over Kerala
Blasters here on Saturday.
Rafique,
who replaced Mohammad Rafi in the 74th minute of the mega clash at the packed
DY Patil stadium, followed up a corner from Czech defender Jakub Podany to fire
the header in the 94th minute, a minute before the second half injury time was slated
to end to send ATK fans into raptures here as also in Kolkata and other parts
of the world.
Rafique -
later adjudged hero of the match - ran into the box, outjumped rival defender
Nirmal Chetri and put the ball into the net past Blasters' veteran custodian-
cum-coach David James to decide the fate of the game which seemed poised to
roll into extra time.
It was a
revenge of sorts for the Sourav Ganguly co-owned ATK, which had lost 1-2 to the
Blasters in Kochi in the return leg of the round robin stage. The two sides had
finished 1-1 in the first leg.
2) India
win men, women kabaddi title:
India
defeated Pakistan (45-42) in a controversy-marred final of the fifth World Cup
Kabaddi tournament at the Guru Gobind Singh Multipurpose Stadium here on Saturday.
In the women's final, the Indian eves defeated New Zealand (36-27).
In the
men's final where Pakistan alleged foul play, both the teams were neck and neck
for the first 10 minutes. Gradually, Pakistan gained lead, and it was only
towards the end that India came back in the game.Pakistan captain Shafiq Chisti
alleged that the Indian players resorted to unfair means to win the title.
"Indian raiders applied mustard oil on themselves to avoid being caught.
They openly drank water in between the game, which is against the rules. They
also hurled abuses to intimidate us."
Coach
Malik Safdar said: "If this is the standard of the tournament, I am very
sure our team will not come next year." The team, however, accepted the
trophy and award under protest but some of the team members did not go onstage
to receive the award. Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal appreciated the
"keenly contested match". "From next year, the prize money for
the winners in the girls' category will be Rs 2 crore, same as for men,"
said the chief minister.In women's section, Ram Bateri and Priyanka were
adjudged the best raiders. Anu Rani was declared the best stopper for the
second year in running. In men's section, Sandeep Surakhpur (India) and Shafiq
Ahmed Chisti of Pakistan were adjudged best raiders while Yadwinder Singh Yada
was declared the best stopper.
3)
Yearender: Prizes shared but Djokovic and Serena still rule:
Grand
slam titles were shared around like slices of pizza in 2014 but for all the
welcome variety Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams ended the year still setting
the standard.
For the
first time since 1998 the eight grand slam singles trophies on offer were
lifted by eight players.While the four women's champions were existing members
of the elite club, Switzerland's Stanislas Wawrinka and Croatia's Marin Cilic
marked the biggest shake-up of men's tennis for a decade with breakthrough
victories.
After
years spent in the shadow of 17-times grand slam champion and compatriot Roger
Federer, Wawrinka came good in Melbourne, beating Djokovic in the
quarter-finals of the Australian Open and showing no mercy to injured Spaniard
Rafa Nadal in the final.
Nadal
rebounded to claim a ninth French Open title, but the year was too prove a
worrying one for the injury-prone Mallorcan who suffered a shock defeat by
Australian teenager Nick Krygios at Wimbledon before a wrist problem and a
grumbling appendix restricted him to only seven more matches.Federer, 33,
claimed five titles but was unable to add to his record collection of grand
slams.He came close though. The Swiss maestro went toe to toe with Djokovic for
five sets in an epic Wimbledon final, while a few weeks later in New York he
looked favourite for the title before being ambushed by the powerful Cilic in
the semi.
The door
had been opened invitingly by events earlier on that sweltering New York day
when Asian trailblazer Kei Nishikori became the first Asian man to reach a
grand slam singles final with a stunning defeat of Djokovic.It meant that, for
the first time since 2005 a men's grand slam final took place without a member
of the Fab Four, be it Federer, Nadal, Djokovic or Briton Andy Murray.
DOPING
BAN
Cilic
seized his chance in ruthless fashion by destroying Nishikori, completing a
stunning comeback from the depths of the previous year when he served a doping
ban.
Djokovic,
who got married and became a father this year, claimed a chart-leading seven
titles and won his last three events, culminating at the ATP World Tour Finals.
"I
physically feel very fit," Djokovic said ominously. "I'm very
motivated to keep on playing on a very high level. I'm going to try to use
these years in front of me to fight for number one in the world and the biggest
titles in the sport."Like Djokovic, Williams, 33, will start 2015 as the
measuring stick for the rest as usual.
The
American, now the oldest world number one, overpowered Caroline Wozniacki to
win her 18th grand slam title at the U.S. Open, moving level on the all-time
list with Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert and only four behind record
holder Steffi Graf.While not as dominant as the year before, she still bagged
seven titles and the way she scythed through the draw at Flushing Meadows was
awe-inspiring, winning 14 consecutive sets and dropping only 32 games in bagging
a sixth U.S. Open crown.
Romania's
Simona Halep, the most improved player on the circuit, and Canadian Eugenie
Bouchard both contested their first grand slam finals but the establishment
showed they are unwilling to cede the top trophies to the new generation.Chinese
veteran Li Na, who retired in September, won the Australian Open, Maria
Sharapova fought off Halep to win the French Open title while Czech Petra
Kvitova thrashed Bouchard to win her second Wimbledon title.Tennis entered the
brave new world of the International Premier League in December but a more
fitting climax to a memorable year was Federer leading Switzerland to the Davis
Cup title to fill one of the final gaps on his CV.
4) Messi
double, Suarez hits first La Liga goal in Barca rout:
Lionel
Messi scored twice and Luis Suarez struck his first La Liga goal as Barcelona
crushed struggling Cordoba 5-0 on Saturday to finish the year a point behind
Real Madrid at the top of the table.In-form Pedro put Barca ahead after just 71
seconds, the second quickest in La Liga this season, with a clinical finish
from a ball over the top of the defence by Ivan Rakitic.
The signs
were ominous for Cordoba as they found themselves encamped in their own half,
although Barca did not add to their lead until the start of the second half
through Suarez.The Uruguayan returned from a four-month ban for biting at the
end of October and claimed his first goal in La Liga when he slotted the ball
home from a Pedro pass.“I am more relaxed now having got the goal. Perhaps we
had something to prove going into the match as the draw (last weekend) against
Getafe was a blow,” Suarez told reporters.“We are candidates for La Liga and we
want to turn things around at the top. For me personally to get a goal in the
league is important but I knew with all the support I was getting that it would
come soon.”With the Cordoba players’ heads going down, Gerard Pique nodded in
Barca’s third and then Messi fired in a late double.Xavi came on as a
second-half substitute in his 741st match for Barca, equalling the record of
Real's Raul for the number of games for a single club in Spanish football.
Barca
have moved on to the shoulders of Real who are playing the Club World Cup final
on Saturday against San Lorenzo and have played a game less then their
arch-rivals.Suarez went close to adding to Pedro’s opener as his strike from a
Jordi Alba pull-back narrowly went the wrong side of the post.
Barca
have looked susceptible at the back this season and there were warning signs
when Nabil Ghilas was able to run unopposed down the right wing but he fired
into the side netting from a tight angle.Luis Enrique’s side were still clearly
in control with Rakitic and Pedro having further chances before Suarez struck
after 52 minutes.From there the game opened up as Cordoba began to lose
concentration.Pique headed in a cross from Xavi and Messi came to life having
had a quiet game with two well-struck drives from inside the area to complete
the rout.
5) U.S.
swimmer Phelps sentenced to 18 months probation for drunken driving:
American
swimmer Michael Phelps, the most decorated Olympian of all time, pleaded guilty
on Friday to driving under the influence of alcohol and received 18 months of
supervised probation and a one-year suspended jail sentence.The 18-time Olympic
gold medalist was arrested for drunken driving early on Sept. 30 after speeding
and then crossing the double yellow lines inside a Baltimore tunnel, police
said.
"The
last three months of my life have been some of the hardest times I've ever gone
through, some of the biggest learning experiences I've ever had," Phelps,
wearing a dark suit, white shirt and blue tie, told reporters."I'm happy
to be moving forward. I'll continue to grow from this."Phelps, 29, was
clocked by radar at around 1:40 a.m. traveling 84 miles per hour (135 kph) in a
45-mph (72-kph) zone, police said, adding that he blew a .14 on a Breathalyzer,
nearly twice the legal limit of .08 in Maryland.
He faced
up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine."I hope we don't have this conversation
again and I'm optimistic that we won't have this conversation again,"
Judge Nathan Braverman told Phelps during his sentencing.
Among the
observers in the courtroom were Phelps' mother, Debbie, his two sisters, and
close friend Ray Lewis, the retired 13-time Pro Bowl linebacker for the
Baltimore Ravens.Police said an officer followed Phelps' 2014 Land Rover onto
northbound Interstate 95, through the Fort McHenry Tunnel, and pulled him over
just beyond the tunnel's toll plaza.The drunken-driving arrest was the second
for Phelps, who has spent most his life working feverishly in the pool but
admits he likes to have a good time when not competing.Following his arrest,
Phelps, who is eyeing a spot on the U.S. team for the 2016 Olympics, was
suspended for six months by USA Swimming and barred from representing the
United States at the 2015 FINA World Swimming Championships in Russia.Phelps
said he completed a 45-day rehab program at an Arizona treatment center
following his arrest, continues aftercare in Baltimore, and will participate in
Alcoholics Anonymous."What I did was wrong, and I made a bad
mistake," Phelps told Braverman. "I'm looking forward to having a
much brighter future than I had in the past."Phelps was charged in
Salisbury, Maryland, in 2004 for drunken driving. He pleaded guilty to a lesser
charge of driving while impaired in exchange for 18 months' probation.
Book Of
This Week:
Mr.
Mercedes :by Stephen King
In the
frigid pre-dawn hours, in a distressed Midwestern city, hundreds of desperate
unemployed folks are lined up for a spot at a job fair. Without warning, a lone
driver plows through the crowd in a stolen Mercedes, running over the innocent,
backing up, and charging again. Eight people are killed; fifteen are wounded.
The killer escapes.
In
another part of town, months later, a retired cop named Bill Hodges is still
haunted by the unsolved crime. When he gets a crazed letter from someone who
self-identifies as the "perk" and threatens an even more diabolical
attack, Hodges wakes up from his depressed and vacant retirement, hell-bent on
preventing another tragedy.Brady Hartfield lives with his alcoholic mother in
the house where he was born. He loved the feel of death under the wheels of the
Mercedes, and he wants that rush again.
Only Bill
Hodges, with a couple of highly unlikely allies, can apprehend the killer
before he strikes again. And they have no time to lose, because Brady’s next
mission, if it succeeds, will kill or maim thousands.Mr. Mercedes is a war
between good and evil, from the master of suspense whose insight into the mind
of this obsessed, insane killer is chilling and unforgettable.
Stephen
King:
Stephen
Edwin King was born the second son of Donald and Nellie Ruth Pillsbury King.
After his father left them when Stephen was two, he and his older brother,
David, were raised by his mother. Parts of his childhood were spent in Fort
Wayne, Indiana, where his father's family was at the time, and in Stratford,
Connecticut. When Stephen was eleven, his mother brought her children back to
Durham, Maine, for good. Her parents, Guy and Nellie Pillsbury, had become
incapacitated with old age, and Ruth King was persuaded by her sisters to take
over the physical care of them. Other family members provided a small house in
Durham and financial support. After Stephen's grandparents passed away, Mrs.
King found work in the kitchens of Pineland, a nearby residential facility for
the mentally challenged.
Stephen
attended the grammar school in Durham and Lisbon Falls High School, graduating
in 1966. From his sophomore year at the University of Maine at Orono, he wrote
a weekly column for the school newspaper, THE MAINE CAMPUS. He was also active
in student politics, serving as a member of the Student Senate. He came to
support the anti-war movement on the Orono campus, arriving at his stance from
a conservative view that the war in Vietnam was unconstitutional. He graduated
in 1970, with a B.A. in English and qualified to teach on the high school
level. A draft board examination immediately post-graduation found him 4-F on
grounds of high blood pressure, limited vision, flat feet, and punctured
eardrums.
He met
Tabitha Spruce in the stacks of the Fogler Library at the University, where
they both worked as students; they married in January of 1971. As Stephen was
unable to find placement as a teacher immediately, the Kings lived on his
earnings as a laborer at an industrial laundry, and her student loan and
savings, with an occasional boost from a short story sale to men's magazines.
Stephen
made his first professional short story sale ("The Glass Floor") to
Startling Mystery Stories in 1967. Throughout the early years of his marriage,
he continued to sell stories to men's magazines. Many were gathered into the
Night Shift collection or appeared in other anthologies.
In the
fall of 1971, Stephen began teaching English at Hampden Academy, the public
high school in Hampden, Maine. Writing in the evenings and on the weekends, he
continued to produce short stories and to work on novels.
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