Saturday, December 6, 2014

SCIENCE OF THE MONTH: DECEMBER 2014

1 December 2014: Today marked the 50th death anniversary of J.B.S. Haldane, who was among the greatest scientists of the 20 century. Along with Ronald Fisher and Sewall Wright, he laid the groundwork for modern evolutionary synthesis, the concept more popularly known as "neo-Darwinism" (popularised by Richard Dawkins' 1976 work titled The Selfish Gene). His article on 'The origin of life' in 1929, introduced a new hypothesis 'Primordial Soup Theory', independently developed by Russian biochemist Alexander Oparin, known as 'Oparin-Haldane hypothesis', the formation of life from inorganic molecules on primordial Earth. Haldane was also the first to construct gene maps for haemophilia and colour blindness. Though Scottish by birth, when he died on December 1, 1964, he was an Indian citizen. Link: http://www.iisc.ernet.in

2 December 2014: Today marks the 30th anniversary of  Bhopal gas tragedy thhat occurred on the night of 2 December 1984 at the factory of Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL) in the capital city of Madhya Pradesh, where cyanide gas accidently leaked into the air, killing thousands of residents. More than one lakh people are still suffering the aftermath of the mishap and children are still born with twisted limbs and brain disorders. Other diseases like cancer, neurological disorders and blindness among other such illnesses are also part of the city landscape. Various activists have filed a petition in the US courts against Union Carbide to endure the cost of the cleanup, but as per the company, Indian government had taken control of the land in 1998. However, tones of waste remain still underground in the tragedy site. Link: http://www.bhopal.com

3 December 2014: Union Minister for Science and Technology Harsh Vardhan signed a multilateral agreement admitting India‘s participation in the development of the Thirty Metre Telescope (TMT) in Hawaii, today. This project was rapidly cleared by the Union Cabinet and India has agreed to spend Rs. 1299.8 crores over the next decade for this project. India will gain the technology to manufacture fine aspherical mirrors from the California Institute of Technology. TMT will contain a collecting area of 650 square metres making it thrice as sensitive as the Hubble Space Telescope. India’s role will be to create the control systems and software that keep the mirrors aligned to collect data. These will be manufactured by General Optics (Asia) in Puducherry, Avasarala Technolgies and Godrej in Bengaluru. Link: http://tmt.iiap.res.in

4 December 2014: The world's most complete Stegosaurus skeleton was unveiled today for the first time at the Natural History Museum. The skeleton is 560 centimetres long and 290 centimetres tall. It was uncovered 11 years ago in Wyoming, USA, and is made up of more than 300 bones, including 19 back plates and four tail spikes. Only the left arm and base of the tail are missing.The Stegosaurus lived around 150 million years ago, in the late Jurassic period. Stegosaurs have been found in North America, Africa, China and Europe. They preferred to live alone or in small groups, and their skeletons are rarely discovered. Determining the sex of dinosaurs is notoriously difficult, and the sex of the Stegosaurus specimens is still unknown. Although it is known about for more than 130 years, not much is known about its biology. Link: http://www.abc.net.au


5 December 2014: Today was declared as World Soil Day, by United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and 2015 will be the International Year of Soils. The celebration of the World Soil Day is to highlight the significance of soil in the lives of every living organism in our planet. Soil is the basis for food, feed, fuel and fibre production and for services to ecosystems and human well-being. It is the reservoir for at least a quarter of global biodiversity, and therefore requires the same attention as above-ground biodiversity. Soils play a key role in the supply of clean water and resilience to floods and droughts. Soil is the largest store of terrestrial carbon and so that its preservation contributes to climate change adaptation. The maintenance of soil is essential to humanity’s need for food, water, and energy. Link: http://www.fao.org

6 December 2014: NASA's Pluto-bound probe New Horizons spacecraft has come out of hibernation for the last time next month in preparation for a six-month encounter, including a first-ever close flyby of the mysterious dwarf planet on July 14, 2015. The wake-up call was preprogrammed into New Horizons' on-board computer in August, commanding it come out of hibernation today. Since its launch in January 2006, New Horizons has spent 1,873 days in hibernation, spread over 18 separate hibernation periods from mid-2007 to late 2014. Distant observations of the Pluto system begin January 15 and will continue until late July 2015; closest approach to Pluto is July 14. The mission should help lift the veil on Pluto, which has remained a mysterious entity since its 1930 discovery. Link: http://pluto.jhuapl.edu

7 December 2014: Ralph Baer, the Father of Video Gaming, the man known for creating the first-ever video-game console, which continues to serve as a blueprint for the Xboxes and PlayStations of today, has reportedly passed away. He was 92. Baer, a German immigrant, built a device he called the Brown Box in the late 1960s, which hit the market in 1972 as the Magnavox Odyssey. It consisted of a main electronic unit that connected to a television screen, two player control units that enabled user interaction, and insertable electronic cards that held different games. Over the course of his career, Baer accumulated over 150 patents and won several awards honors and recognitions, including the 2006 National Medal of Technology from President George W. Bush, and an induction into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2010.Link: http://www.ralphbaer.com

8 December 2014: A team of scientists has found a new technique of analyzing DNA that is found in ancient parchments that can help tracing agricultural development across the centuries. The study conducted at Trinity College Dublin and the University of York used state-of-the-art scientific techniques to extract ancient DNA and protein from tiny samples of parchment from documents from the late 17th and late 18th centuries. The researchers believe that the two specimens derive from an unimproved northern hill-sheep typical in Yorkshire in the 17th century, and from a sheep derived from the 'improved' flocks, such as those bred in the Midlands, which were spreading through England in the 18th century. The study is published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Link: http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org

9 December 2014: A promising new anti-malarial compound tricks the immune system to rapidly destroy red blood cells infected with the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum without damaging healthy cells, a new study has found. Researchers from the St Jude Children's Research Hospital in the United States determined that the compound (+)-SJ733 uses a novel mechanism to kill the Malaria parasite by recruiting the immune system to eliminate malaria-infected red blood cells. Laboratory evidence suggests that the compound's speed and mode of action work together to slow and suppress development of drug-resistant parasites. Whole genome sequencing of the Plasmodium falciparum, the deadliest of the malaria parasites, showed that (+)-SJ733 disrupted activity of the Malaria parasites. Link: http://www.stjude.org

10 December 2014: The Curiosity rover has discovered evidence that billions of years ago a lake once filled the 154 km wide Gale crater in the Red Planet where the rover is presently exploring. Data sent back by the Rover showing rocks containing water-deposited sediment has now made it more plausible that Mars at one time was suitable for microbial life. This interpretation of the findings suggests ancient Mars maintained a climate that could have produced long-lasting lakes at many locations. Rivers carried sand and silt to the lake, depositing the sediments at the mouth of the river to form deltas similar to those found at river mouths on Earth. Curiosity currently is investigating the sedimentary layers of Mount Sharp, a section of rock 500 feet high, called the 'Murray formation'. Link: http://www.nasa.gov

11 December 2014: More than five trillion pieces of plastic, collectively weighing nearly 270,000 tonnes, are floating in the world's oceans, including the Indian Ocean, a new study has found. Microplastic pollution is found in varying concentrations throughout the oceans, including both micro and macroplastics. The data comes from across all five sub-tropical gyres, coastal Australia, Bay of Bengal, and the Mediterranean Sea. There is a minimum of 5.25 trillion plastic particles weighing nearly 269,000 tonnes in the world's oceans. Large plastics appear to be abundant near coastlines, degrading into microplastics in the 5 subtropical gyres, and that the smallest microplastics were present in more remote regions, such as the sub-polar gyres. The study is published in the Royal Society Open Science journal. Link: http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org


12 December 2014: Recreating isotopes that result when a star explodes can help physicists understand where life-supporting elements may be found in space.The researchers observed for the first time the isotopes of certain elementals formed when a star explodes. The isotopes of these elements (Samarium and Gadolinium) are sensitive tracers of the way that stars explode. The isotopes therefore can help us understand the origins of the heavy elements that are needed to support life in the universe. The team analysed the fragments left behind using a gamma-ray microscope and discovered that this reaction resulted in the creation of exotic isotopes. This helps map the creation of elements that are essential to support life. The study was published in the journal Physical Review Letters. Link: http://journals.aps.org


13 December 2014: China has developed a long range and non-lethal 'pain beam' weapon that can be used to break up riots or protests from a distance. The Poly WB-1, which was unveiled at an air show in China, uses a millimetre-wave beam that can travel distances of up to one kilometre. When the beam reaches a person, it heats water molecules just below the skin, causing intense pain. While a short burst with the pain beam will cause a human to recoil in pain, longer bursts at certain frequencies will cause the flesh to burn and blister. The system is very similar to the Active Denial System created by Raytheon, which was sent to Afghanistan but not used in combat due to fears it would fuel enemy propaganda and because it used so much power and took too much time to boot up. Link: http://www.popsci.com


14 December 2014: Scientists have for the first time created a new super-low density form of ice. The advance will help remove pipe-blocking clathrates from natural gas and thereby improve the energy efficiency of extraction. Water molecules can sometimes form crystal structures called a clathrate hydrate by surrounding impurities, such as methane or carbon dioxide, with frozen 'cages'. Scientists realised that if they could extract these molecules they could create a new type of ice. This was, however, difficult to achieve because the ice structure is fragile without these extra molecules. Researchers at the University of Gottingen have now done a trick to mix it with neon atoms, which are relatively small and easily coaxed out of the solid ice.The study was published in the journal Nature. Link: http://www.nature.com

15 December 2014: A younger portrayal of Mona Lisa, believed to be painted by the great Italian renaissance artist Leonardo Da Vinci,  depicting his muse in the early twenties, made its world premiere in Singapore today. Experts believe that Da Vinci started working on in this in the early 16th century, 10 years ahead of the Louvre version. The painting was discovered in 1913 in the Somerset home of a British aristocrat and was dubbed 'the Isleworth Mona Lisa' owing to its close resemblance to the famous 'Louvre Mona Lisa'. The portrait was initially rejected by the art experts as a later copy of the world famous painting. But in 2013, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich carried out a carbon-dating test and finally confirmed that it originally came from Da Vinci. Link: http://monalisa.org

16 December 2014: Reaction Engines, a British aerospace firm is developing an aircraft that would take passengers anywhere in the world in just four hours while flying at five times the speed of sound. It is working on an engine system that will pave the way for a plane that would transport 300 passengers anywhere in the world in four hours. A cooling technology allows air entering the new 'Sabre' engine system to be cooled by more than 1,000 degrees Celsius in .01 seconds. This would allow a jet engine to run at higher power than others. In normal circumstances, this would cause moisture in the air to freeze, coating the engine with frost, but there is also a method which prevents this from happening. The aircraft called Skylon can take off and land like a plane.Link: http://www.reactionengines.co.uk

17 December 2014: India's manned space flight programme moved a step forward with the much-awaited launch of the advanced Geo-Synchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-MIII) from Sriharikota, today. The mission has evoked global interest because its only payload is the unmanned Crew Module Atmospheric Re-entry Experiment. The primary aim of the first flight was to test the new rocket which has the capability to carry four-tonne class Insat-series communication satellites that are currently being flown by Arianespace. 325 seconds after the lift off, the crew module, made of aluminium alloy and with a lift-off mass of 3,735kg, separated from the rocket at an altitude of 126km. About 1,280 seconds after the launch the module was parachuted down in to the Bay of Bengal. Link: http://www.isro.org

18 December 2014
: Pakistan today beat India in the race to become an associate member of CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research), the world's largest particle physics laboratory that recently found some evidence of 'God particle'. CERN director general Rolf Heuer and the chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission Ansar Parvez signed in Islamabad in presence of prime minister Nawaz Sharif, a document admitting Pakistan to CERN Associate Membership, subject to ratification by the government of Pakistan. Being an associate member will allow Pakistan to participate in the governance of Cern, through attending the meetings of the CERN council. Moreover, it will allow Pakistani scientists to become members of the CERN, and to be into CERN's programmes. Link: http://home.web.cern.ch


19 December 2014: China deployed a deep manned submersible in the Indian Ocean to look for deposits of Copper, Zinc and other precious metals. The submersible which is named ‘Jiaolong’ took its first dive in the hydrothermal area of the South West Indian ocean during the early hours of today. China has earlier procured the contracts to explore Indian Ocean in search of Poly Metallic Sulphide Ore. The 15 year contract was secured by China from the International Seabed authority. The ‘Jiaolong’ submersible will conduct a mission which is four month long, in the South West Indian Ocean. In this February, the Chinese research vehicle discovered a Hydrothermal Sulfide which is a kind of sea bed containing various metals like Copper, Zinc and sometimes precious metals like Gold and Silver. Link: http://www.researchgate.net

20 December 2014: Researchers developed a map of water vapor distribution in Mars' atmosphere. This was the longest period of observation and provides the largest volume of data about water vapor on Mars. The new updated version of the instrument was built with the participation of the Space Research Institute as part of the agreement between RosCosmos and the French space agency CNES for the Mars Express orbiter which was launched on June 2, 2003 which entered a near-Mars orbit at the end of December 2003. The content of water vapour in the atmosphere reaches a maximum level of 60-70 microns of released water in the northern regions during the summer season. The summer maximum in the southern hemisphere is significantly lower, about 20 microns. Link: http://www.esa.int

21 December 2014: The Curiosity rover’s detection of methane, the simplest organic compound, in both the atmosphere and on the surface of Mars indicates microbial life could live beneath the planet’s surface. Methane can be a by-product of biological processes, but it can also be produced geologically. Scientists are now planning tests to determine whether the methane comes from biological or geological activity.One particular strain of bacteria survived 120 days in the simulated Martian underground. These bacteria are known as methanogens because they emit methane. Methanogens were some of the first life forms on Earth. Because oxygen is toxic to them, methanogens migrated below Earth’s surface 2.4 billion years ago, when oxygen became abundant in the atmosphere. Link: http://www.nasa.gov

22 December 2014: NASA captured two images, one using the highly-powerful, and highly-sensitive NuSTAR telescope of something that many would not have expected to be at the receiving the attention of this sought after telescope. The telescope captured the high energy X-rays that surround the clusters of activity on the sun. The image captured a series of waves coming from the sun. The waves are seen in the varying colors, specifically the bluish-green patches that are visible, and signify X-rays. The reddish colors are the lower energy waves that come from the sun. Over the last year, or two, the sun has become more active, as it does from time-to-time. It’s the natural lifecycle of the sun, and something that scientists have long-accounted for in their studies of the sun to this point. Link: http://www.nasa.gov

23 December 2014: NASA has collaborated with four US companies to develop intra-vehicular activity space suits and new launch vehicle capabilities among other advances in space exploration. The partnerships build on the success of NASA's commercial spaceflight initiatives to leverage NASA experience and expertise into new capabilities. The Collaborations for Commercial Space Capabilities (CCSC) initiative is designed to advance private sector development of integrated space capabilities through access to NASA's spaceflight resources and ensure emerging products or services are available to government and customers within the next five years. The Space Act Agreements (SAAs) have no exchange of funds, and each party bears the cost of its participation. Link: http://procurement.jsc.nasa.gov

24 December 2014: India's maiden mission to Mars, Mangalyaan (Mars Orbiter Mission, affectionately called MOM), completes three months in Mars orbit today and will continue in orbit beyond the six months that was initially planned. India created history on September 24, by becoming the first country to succeed on its first Mars mission when ISRO's Mangalyaan slipped into Martian orbit. The country joined the United States, European Space Agency and the former Soviet Union in the elite club of Martian explorers with the Mangalyaan Mission. In the last three months, Mangalyaan has captured nearly 300 pictures. On an average the spacecraft takes four pictures in three days. Besides capturing the images of dust storm activities, it has also taken images of comet Siding Spring. Link: http://www.isro.org

25 December 2014: The first ever hybrid aircraft to be able to recharge its batteries took off on today, potentially signalling the beginning of a new form of low-carbon, green flight. It was a team-work of Cambridge University researchers and the Boeing company. They hope that the plane will be able to provide new forms of cleaner, low-carbon air travel. The petrol engine works with the battery-powered one at take-off and climb, when the plane needs extra power, but the electric motor can then switch into generator mode and recharges the batteries, or help the motor in minimising fuel consumption. The same technology is used in hybrid cars. The test flights took place at Sywell Aerodrome near Northampton. Aviation is thought to be responsible for about 2 per cent of man-made carbon emissions.Link: http://www.boeing.com


26 December 2014: A global warming expert has made shocking revelations that the north and south poles are "not melting".The scientist revealed that the poles are "much more stable" than climate scientists once predicted. Ted Maksym, an oceanographer at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, conducted a study in which he sent an underwater robot into the depths of the Antarctic sea to measure the ice.The results are contradictory to the previous assumptions made by scientists and showed that the ice is actually much thicker than has been predicted over the last 20 years. Global sea ice at a record high is another key indicator that something is working in the opposite direction of what was predicted and there is a huge reality is now catching up with climate alarmists. Link: http://www.whoi.edu     

27 December 2014: An international team of researchers has designed the world's smallest hearing aid which is so tiny that it is almost "invisible".The hearing aid called 'Nanoplug' is meant to be less intrusive than other such devices, less noticeable and less expensive. The device is just 7.1mm x 5.7mm x 4.17mm, which the team says is half the size of any other hearing aid. Nanoplug was first conceived by Nevena Zivic and then brought to fruition by industrial designer, Jongha Lee, audio engineer Mladen Stavri and electromechanical engineer Zoran Marinovi. On its Indiegogo page, the team claims the hearing aid has no toxic chemicals inside, nor heavy metals, which may be hrmful to the environment and to the person wearing it. Nanoplug can be programmed, the results of which can be downloaded directly to the device. Link: https://www.indiegogo.com


28 December 2014: The highly polluted backwaters of Cochin estuary could be a rich source of biofuel, as a research team of Cochin University of Science and Technology (CUSAT) has managed to isolate a micro-algae capable of producing biodiesel. The algae, Prymnesium parvum, which has high content of phosphates and nitrates, is found in the backwaters, off Mattanchery harbour. The Prymnesium parvum is golden yellow in colour when in full bloom, flourish in waters where there is a high eutrophication content. The oil from Prymnesium parvum had properties within the ASTM D6751-02 standards for biodiesel. As of now, about 15-20% of a biofuel is the bio-content and the rest is petrol or diesel. The finding was made by researchers under Dr Valsamma Joseph, faculty of National Centre for Aquatic Health. Link: http://www.ncaah.org

29 December 2014: A new NASA app provides information on International Space Station (ISS) experiments, facilities and research results through videos, photos, interactive media and in-depth descriptions. The Space Station Research Explorer app has an experiments section which contains six categories and their subcategories.The space station is just over 72 m long by 108 m wide and 20 m high; it is maintained at an orbital altitude of between 330 km and 435 km and travels at an average speed of 27,724 kilometres per hour. Users of the app can drill down to see specific experiments within the categories and subcategories or search for a specific experiment or subject using the search option. The facilities section provides an interior view of three of the station modules: Columbus, Kibo, and Destiny. Link: http://spotthestation.nasa.gov

30 December 2014: NASA researchers have designed a new ape-like robot for disaster response that can navigate dangerous situations and carry out complex tasks such as lifting debris off survivors.The RoboSimian has four identical limbs that act as arms and legs. They move the robot across rough terrain and rubble but can also pick up and manipulate objects. Simian was designed by Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and has wheels which the robot can coast on if the surface is smooth enough. The RoboSimian is JPL's entry into the DARPA Robotics Challenge, a 27-month-long competition among some of the world's top robotic talent to create an emergency response robot. Although, RoboSiman is slower than many of its competitors, the JPL team is working to increase the robot's walking speed. Link: http://www-robotics.jpl.nasa.gov

31 December 2014: 2014 was the 175th anniversary of photography. The traditional story claims that it was in 1839 the discovery of photography was announced to the public in France by Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre (1787 –1851). This was immediately followed by a counter-claim by William Henry Fox Talbot (1800-1877) in London that for years he had been working on a medium that would also allow the recording of pictures ‘drawn by light’. Both processes were in fact quite different: the Daguerreo-type produced unique copies on a silver plate while Talbot’s process, the calotype, was reproducible, and therefore became the most widely used technique. Talbot wanted to make his invention applicable to the sciences and so promoted it in his book, 'The Pencil of Nature'. Link: http://foxtalbot.dmu.ac.uk



 

MOVIE OF THE MONTH: DECEMBER 2014


Director     : James Marsh
Screenplay : Anthony McCarten

Music          : Jóhann Jóhannsson
Camera       : Benoît Delhomme
Distribution: Universal Pictures
Running      : 123 minutes

The Theory of Everything’ is an interesting, out-of-the-ordinary, magical and romantic British drama involving the early-to-middle years of the life of theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking. Based off of the memoir, ‘Travelling to Infinity: My Life with Stephen’, written by now ex-wife Jane Wilde, this exceptional film tells the story of how Stephen and Jane got together, illustrates his battle with motor neuron disease, and shows the accomplishments he had in the field of physics.

The film begins when Stephen Hawking and Jane Wilde first met at the University of Cambridge in England. Both aspiring for a degree in some form of philosophy or science, they quickly took to each other while in school. Shortly after meeting, Stephen is diagnosed with motor neuron disease, a neurological disorder that impacts the cells that control muscle activity, i.e. speaking, walking, and general use of the body.

Instead of running away, Jane tells Stephen she loves him and wants to spend as much time as they can together, knowing full well he might only have up to two years to live. To anyone that knows Hawking's history, he is still alive and well (for his condition) to this day at the age of 72, and has accomplished more in his physically-challenged life than most people can imagine. This film displays the the life and family they built together, and many of the great things Stephen has been able to do, despite his vast impairment.

Watching Stephen try to feed himself, speak to people, crawl up the stairs, etc., can be difficult and sad to witness. Regarding themes, this film presents an assortment of things to think about. Whether a demonstration of love conquers all, showing audiences that there can always be something to live for, or proving that just about anything can be attained despite all odds against, "The Theory of Everything" has a lot of love, heart, courage, strength, beauty, and themes about following your dreams no matter what.

The film doesn't have the most well-known cast, but features a variety of quality and up-and-coming actors. Actor Eddie Redmayne, as Stephen Hawking, plays a brilliant, very quiet and soft-spoken, almost odd type of person. Mirroring his presentation, young actress Felicity Jones plays Jane Wilde, and similarly puts on a great show. She has a great deal of patience, love, and bravery to stick with Stephen during most of his life. The supporting cast involves Charlie Cox, Emily Watson, Simon McBurney, David Thewlis, and more.


Movie Website: http://www.focusfeatures.com

Review Courtesy: http://www.wfaa.com

BOOK OF THE MONTH: DECEMBER 2014

                                                           
Title        : Bird Flu: A Virus of Our Own Hatching
Author    : Michael Greger
Publisher: Lantern Books,
Pages       : 465
Price        : $30

ISBN        : 10: 1590560981

Dr. Michael Greger’s Bird Flu: A Virus of Our Own Hatching is more terrifying than a horror novel or anything that ever could be imagined, since it prophesied a real-life doomsday scenario that seemed to him to occur very soon. As per him, the new H5N1 strain of influenza, known as “bird flu,” has mutated into a form that can be transmitted by human contact, though not yet on a massive scale, meaning a mass outbreak is more a question of when, not if.

Whereas humans generally contract the disease by ingesting contaminated birds or being in frequent contact with them, bird flu could blanket the globe when the virus learns to jump from human to human. Dr. Greger sets the stage for what could come by giving readers a grisly account of a previous avian influenza outbreak: the 1918 flu pandemic, in which 50 to 100 million humans perished. These were gruesome deaths, with blood oozing from eye sockets as the victim’s lungs liquefied.

Fatalities were so abundant that officials were unable to keep up with burying the corpses. It seems this was merely a sample of what’s in store for humanity. As devastating as the 1918 pandemic was, on average the mortality rate was less than five percent. The H5N1 strain of bird flu virus now spreading like a plague across the world currently kills about 50 percent of its known human victims, on par with some strains of Ebola, making it potentially ten times as deadly as the worst plague in human history.

George W. Bush’s decision in April of 2006 to lift the ban on poultry products from China, a country well known for its recent outbreaks of avian influenza, possibly in return for China’s agreement to drop its mad cow disease-related ban on U.S. beef imports. Other troubling highlights include the world’s inadequate hospital capacity and the inability to create a vaccine, or enough of it, to combat a virus that kills half its victims. In other words, we are as ill-prepared for avian flu today as we were in 1918.

Bird Flu is exceptionally well documented, with more than 3,000 references and input from the most respected names in the fields of communicable diseases and virus research. With so many insights from health experts, food industry representatives and medical journals, this is an excellent resource for animal advocates looking to cite the latest data. Moreover, in an effort to make this book as accessible as possible, Lantern Books has even posted the entire manuscript online at www.birdflubook.org


Review Courtesy: http://www.satyamag.com

EVENT OF THE MONTH: DECEMBER 2014


UN CLIMATE SUMMIT BEGINS IN PERU
 Venue: Lima, Peru
Date: 1-12 December, 2014

Officials from over 190 nations, including India, today converged here at the UN climate summit to negotiate on a new ambitious and binding deal to cut global carbon emissions. Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar leads India’s 17- member delegation.

During the 12-day summit in the Peruvian capital, countries will put forward what they plan to contribute to the 2015 pact in the form of Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) by the first quarter of 2015, well in advance of the Paris conference.

The overarching goal of the Peru summit, which may stretch beyond 12 days if issues remain unresolved, is to have domestic plans in place to reduce emissions, which they would be held to once the Paris 2015 agreement is signed.

In previous years, agreements like the 1997 Kyoto Protocol did not require countries like India and China to commit to any cuts, but that has changed in light of emissions rates and economic growth.


News Courtesy: http://www.tribuneindia.com
   

SPECIES OF THE MONTH: DECEMBER 2014

               HEIGHT OF THE SHORTNESS!
                                                           
Manikyam, the Vechur cow, a breed of dwarf cattle found in Kerala the cow, has become an instant celebrity as she is all set to enter the Guinness Book of World Records as the shortest cow in the world. A five-member team of its officials from London arrived in her village in Kerala to verify claims of her keepers, November last week.

The shortest cow to enter the Guinness so far is nine-year-old miniature Zebu cow Blaze, who measures 69.07cm from the hoof to the withers, as verified in US-based Sanford on July 7, 2013. Owned by farmer and conservationist N V Balakrishnan, Manikyam measures only 61.5 cm. The maximum height of a Vechur cow is 91cm and it weighs on an average of 107kg.

This means that overall, Manikyam is the shortest cow in the world.The photograph of Manikyam will replace Blaze in the next edition of the book of world records. Manikyam’s owner, Balakrishnan has 40 indigenous cows of 12 different endangered species in his 10-acre farm in the northern Kerala village of Atholi.

Vechur cows give him an average of 2l of milk during the prime time of feeding calves. However, it fetches almost four-times the price of ordinary milk available in the market for its nutritious values. The milk is much in demand for preparation of medicines in the Indian traditional system of Ayurveda. It has low feed requirements and is highly disease resistant and adapted to Kerala’s humid climate.


News Courtesy: http://www.gulf-times.com

Thursday, November 6, 2014

SCIENCE OF THE MONTH: NOVEMBER 2014

1 November 2014: A suborbital passenger spaceship being developed by Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic company crashed during a test flight today near the Mojave Air and Space Port in California. The crash of the vehicle, undergoing its first powered test flight since January over the Mojave Desert, came days after another private space company, Orbital Sciences Corp, lost a rocket in an explosion moments after liftoff in Virginia. The back-to-back accidents dealt a considerable blow to the fledgling commercial space launch industry, which has been taking on more work traditionally done by NASA. One spaceship pilot was killed while the second survived with serious injuries. Both were test pilots for Scaled Composites, the Northrop Gruman Corporation subsidiary that designed and built the spacecraft for Virgin and lost three employees in July 2007. Link: http://www.virgingalactic.com

2 November 2014: Scientists sequenced the genome of the Jujube tree (Ziziphus jujuba), the most economically important member of the Rhamnaceae family, popularly kown as the ‘Thorns of Jesus’. The sequencing was carried out by researchers at BGI Tech and Hebei Agricultural University. By using a combination of BAC-to-BAC sequencing and PCR-free whole genome sequencing, the researchers were able to successfully complete the high quality de novo sequencing of 98.6 percent of the estimated jujube genome, identifying 32,808 genes. Jujube has a much higher vitamin C content than other well-known vitamin C-rich fruits such as orange and it is highly resistant to salinity and drought, and grows well in sandy, alkaline and arid areas. Therefore, decoding the genome of the jujube tree can help exploiting these traits. The study is published in Nature Communications. Link: http://www.nature.com

3 November 2014: Kadaba Shamanna Seshadri, an Indian researcher at the National University of Singapore, discovered a new reproductive strategy in frogs, breeding and developing eggs in live bamboos. The males of the White-spotted Bush Frog, Raorchestes chalazodes enters the narrow openings at the base of the internodes of the flute bamboo Ochlandra travancorica where they vocalize to attract mates. Female frogs lays about five to eight eggs inside the bamboo. The adult males stays in the bamboo to take care of the eggs, defending territories too. The critically endangered Raorchestes chalazodes, recently rediscovered in the forests of the Kalakad Mundanthurai, in the Western Ghats, is currently one of only two species known to adopt this novel reproductive strategy. The study is published in the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. Link: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com

4 November 2014: Researchers in Nepal have developed a rapid diagnostic ‘dip-stick’- test similar to a pregnancy test which can be used to identify the snake by taking swabs from bite marks and analyzing the snake species by DNA analysis. There are up to 94,000 deaths occur and 300,000 cases of permanent disability worldwide from snakebite each year. There are 300 snake species in India out of which four species groups of snakes are primarily responsible for what is likely to be the highest death rate from snakebite in any country in the world. These are the 'Big Four': Cobra (four species), Krait (eight species), Saw-scaled Viper (two subspecies) and Russell's viper. Data from the clinical trials of this test was presented today at the annual meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH) at New Orleans, United States. Link: http://www.eurekalert.org

5 November 2014: Researchers at the Micreos biotech company have developed the first effective alternative to antibiotics that may aid the fight against drug-resistant infections. In a small patient trial, the drug was shown to be effective at eradicating the superbug Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The approach is inspired by naturally occurring viruses that attack bacteria using enzymes called endolysins. Scientists have now engineered a designer endolysin to tear the surface of bacteria cells. Conventional antibiotics need to reach the inside of the cell to work, and part of the reason they are becoming less effective is that certain strains of bacteria have evolved impenetrable membranes. By contrast, endolysins target basic building blocks of the outside of bacterial cells that are unlikely to change as infections genetically mutate over time. Link: http://www.micreos.com

6 November 2014: Wildlife Institute of India has suggested that the rookery of Olive Ridley Sea Turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) near Rushikulya river mouth be declared an eco-sensitive zone under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986. A large number of Olive Ridleys lay eggs on a stretch near the river mouth. It is considered the second largest rookery in the world for Olive Ridleys after Gahirmatha.Wildlife Institute of India scientists discovered the nesting site off the Odisha coast in 1995. The wildlife wing of the forest department had proposed that the area be turned into a wildlife sanctuary in 1998. The Odisha government had submitted 16 proposals to the Union government for notification of several areas as eco-sensitive zones. It includes 16 of 19 wildlife sanctuaries and national parks in the state. The final notification is yet to be made. Link: http://www.sciencedirect.com

7 November 2014: The International Organization for Medical Physics is celebrating today as the International Day of Medical Physics. It was on this day in 1867, Marie Sklodowska-Curie, known for her pioneering research on radioactivity, was born in Poland. In 1897, the world’s first Radiological Society, the Rontgen Society, was formed in London, admitting medical practitioners and physicists as members on an equal footing; this society is now the British Institute of Radiology. X-rays were rapidly brought into therapeutic use. Many physics-based medical innovations such as CT and MRI scans resulted from focused research with clinical applications in mind from the outset. But translation into clinical practice was not rapid, always.The theme for this year is ‘looking into the Body: Advancement in Imaging through Medical Physics’. Link: http://www.aapm.org  

8 November 2014: Wildlife Institute of India has suggested that Rushikulya river mouth in Orissa, the rookery of Olive Ridley sea turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea), be declared an eco-sensitive zone under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986. A large number of Olive Ridleys lay eggs on a five-km stretch near the river mouth. It is considered the second largest rookery in the world for Olive Ridleys after Gahirmatha, also in Orissa. Wildlife Institute of India scientists discovered the nesting site off the Odisha coast in 1995. They had proposed that the area be turned into a wildlife sanctuary in 1998. It is still pending. The Odisha state government had submitted 16 proposals to the Union government for notification of several areas as eco-sensitive zones. It includes 16 of 19 wildlife sanctuaries and national parks in the state. The final notification on these proposals is yet to be made.Link:http://world-turtle-trust.org

9 November 2014: The world's first ever supersonic car, presently in the making, has breached the 500mph (804km/h), 50 per cent of the speed the Bloodhound Supersonic car will ultimately travel. The Bloodhound Project started the 12-month countdown last week to its first land speed record attempt at Hakskeen Pan, South Africa. It was called Jaguar F-TYPE R Coupe driven by project director Richard Noble and a Jaguar XF saloon, at closing speeds of up to 500mph. The world land speed record of 763mph is held by Thrust SSC, a UK team led by Bloodhound's project director Richard Noble and driven by Andy Green. At full speed Bloodhound Supersonic car will cover a mile (1.6km) in 3.6 seconds which is being assembled at the Technical Centre in Bristol, UK. It is on schedule for roll out summer 2015 where it will undergo UK runway testing. Link: http://www.jaguarusa.com


10 November 2014: Today marks the 10th anniversary of Firefox 1.0 and to celebrate Mozilla is rolling out new features, as well as a developer-centric version of its web browser. The Firefox project began as an experimental branch of the Mozilla project by Dave Hyatt, Joe Hewitt and Blake Ross. The Firefox project has undergone several name changes. It was originally titled Phoenix, but was renamed due to trademark issues with Phoenix Technologies. The replacement name, Firebird, provoked an intense response from the Firebird database software project. In response, the Mozilla Foundation stated on February 9, 2004 that Mozilla Firebird becomes Mozilla Firefox.The name Firefox was said to be derived from a nickname of the red panda,which became the mascot for the newly named project. The Firefox version 1.0 was released on November 9, 2004.Link: https://www.mozilla.org
 
11 November 2014: The elusive Higgs Boson may not have been discovered despite claims of it being detected last year, according to a new study. Many calculations indicate that the particle discovered last year in the CERN particle accelerator in Switzerland was indeed the famous Higgs particle. Physicists agree the CERN experiments did find a new particle that had never been seen before, but according to an international research team, there is no conclusive evidence that the particle was indeed the Higgs particle. Although the techni-higgs particle and Higgs particle can easily be confused in experiments, they are two very different particles belonging to two very different theories of how the universe was created. The Higgs particle is the missing piece in the theory called the Standard Model. The study is published in the journal Physical Review D. Link: http://journals.aps.org


12 November 2014: An event in Space history was made today when the first man-made object landed on a comet.The European Space Agency's Rosetta deployed its lander, Philae, to the surface of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, after a decade-long journey through space. Rosetta has already become the first spacecraft to rendezvous with a comet and has been orbiting 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko since August 2014. Since the rendezvous, Rosetta has been mapping the comet's surface; making important measurements of its gravity, mass and shape; assessing its gaseous, dust-laden atmosphere; and probing its plasma environment. Rosetta will continue to follow the comet around the Sun as it moves back towards the orbit of Jupiter. Comets are considered to be primitive building blocks of the solar system and may have helped to 'seed' Earth with the ingredients for life. Link: http://sci.esa.int

13 November 2014: Ashtamudi short-neck clam fishery in Kerala, received WWF-India initiated the MSC Certification today, being the first in India. The clam fishery in Ashtamudi dates back to 1981. MSC certification will mean the implementation of measures to ensure that this valuable resource is not overfished and its ecosystem is protected. It also opens up the scope for other fisheries in India to work towards MSC certification that will enhance conservation and sustainability of the resource while providing greater economic returns. The MSC certification was a joint effort by WWF, the Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI) and the Kerala State Fisheries Department and the local fishing community. Ashtamudi Lake is a Ramsar site and has extensive mangrove habitats harboring nearly 90 species of fish and 10 species of clams. Link: http://www.wwfindia.org
 

14 November 2014: Horses and rhinos probably originated on the Indian subcontinent, some 54.5 million years ago according to a new study of fossils found in Gujarat. Modern horses, rhinos and tapirs belong to a biological group, or order, called Perissodactyla. Cambaytheres (Cambaytherium, Nakusia and Kalitherium) are recently discovered early Eocene placental mammals from the Indo-Pakistan region. The researchers report new dental, cranial and postcranial fossils of Cambaytherium, from the Cambay Shale Formation, Gujarat, India (approximately 54.5 Million years ago). The presence of the sister group of Perissodactyls in western India near or before the time of collision suggests that Perissodactyla may have originated on the Indian Plate during its final drift toward Asia. The research is published in Nature Communications. Link:http://www.nature.com

15 November 2014: The ruddy colour of Jupiter's mysterious Great Red Spot is due to the effects of sunlight rather than chemicals from beneath the planet's clouds. According to a new analysis from NASA's Cassini mission, the reddish-rosy crimson colour is likely a product of simple chemicals being broken apart by sunlight in the planet's upper atmosphere. The results contradict the other leading theory for the origin of the spot's striking colour that the reddish chemicals come from beneath Jupiter's clouds. In the lab, the researchers blasted ammonia and acetylene gases, the chemicals known to exist on Jupiter with ultraviolet light, to simulate the Sun's effects on these materials at the extreme heights of clouds in the Great Red Spot. This produced a reddish material, which was compared using Cassini's Visible and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS). Link:http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov


16 November 2014: From the weaving waterways of the Sundarbans to the iconic Great Barrier Reef in Australia, NASA has unveiled stunning satellite images of Earth's last untouched sanctuaries in a new book. ‘Sanctuary: Exploring the World's Protected Areas from Space’, published by the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (Arlington, Virginia) with support from NASA is an effort to conserve parks and protected areas around the world are being aided by Earth observations from space-based sensors operated by NASA and other space agencies as well as commercial providers. There are about 209,000 protected areas worldwide, covering 14 per cent of the planet's land and 11 per cent of coastal areas, as well as 3.6 per cent of the world's oceans. The book also encourages to protect some of the world's most changing, and threatened places. Link: http://www.nasa.gov

17 November 2014: A mysterious Russian object is being tracked by space agencies, giving new life to fears about the increase of space weapons. The satellite, dubbed Object 2014-28E, has grabbed the interest of official and amateur satellite-watchers because it is taking a confusing path and its purpose has not been identified. Some think that it could be collecting space junk, helping to clean up the useless satellites that are floating around space. Or it could be providing fuel or repairs to other satellites. But others fear that the satellite could be used to destroy enemy ones. Russia has launched three satellites to produce its own navigation system in May, on a rocket that carried three other packages, but the launch of the mysterious satellite was not declared. It was initially thought to be debris, but after it performed complex maneuvers the US re-classified it as a satellite. Link: http://orbitaldebris.jsc.nasa.gov

18 November 2014: A team of US researchers has identified new evidence supporting the growing belief that Neanderthals were a distinct species separate from modern humans and not a subspecies of them. The findings show that the Neanderthal nasal complex was not adaptively inferior to that of modern humans and that the Neanderthals' extinction was likely due to competition from modern humans and not an inability of the Neanderthal nose to process a colder and drier climate. However, the current study joins a growing body of evidence that the upper respiratory tracts of this extinct group functioned via a different set of rules as a result of a separate evolutionary history. Results indicate that Neanderthals and other later Pleistocene Homo possessed Nasal Complexes that align them with tropical modern humans.The study was published in the journal The Anatomical Record. Link: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com
 

19 November 2014: A project to fund a private lunar exploration mission got under way, offering the public the chance to take part. For as little as 10 pounds ($15), Lunar Mission One gives the public a chance to buy space on memory discs that will be buried in a hole drilled into the lunar surface. The public will be invited to leave music, photos and videos on the disc, helping creating a chronicle of the people of Earth. The mission plans to drill a hole 300 feet (90 meters) deep and extract material for science that is billions of years old. The study of the rock by the spacecraft's on board laboratory should give a unique insight into what happened during the early days of the formation of the Moon, and in particular what happened when it was torn away from the proto-Earth by a collision with another, now destroyed world called Theia when the planets had just formed. Link: http://www.lunarmissionone.com
 

20 November 2014: Today marked the 10th anniversary of NASA’s Swift observatory. Swift was sent into orbit to look for gamma-ray bursts, the most violent bangs in the Universe since the Big Bang. These explosions are the birth cries of black holes and occur somewhere in the Universe every day. Swift was designed and built to detect GRBs in gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet, and optical light, a huge chunk of the electromagnetic spectrum and rapidly slew over to point at them, sometimes in well under a minute. It was named after the acrobatic bird, which catches huge numbers of insects on the fly. As soon as it detects a burst, it sends the coordinates out via the Gamma-Ray Coordinates Network.
And Swift is still up there, orbiting the Earth, scanning the skies diligently, waiting for the next burst. Link: http://www.nasa.gov

21 November 2014: CERN scientists have announced the discovery of two new subatomic particles that could widen understanding of the universe. The particles were predicted to exist by the quark model but had never been seen before. A related particle was found by the CMS experiment at CERN in 2012. The collaboration for the LHCb experiment at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider discovered the two new particles belonging to the baryon family. A baryon is a composite subatomic particle made up of three quarks. The particles were predicted to exist by the quark model but had never been seen before. Like protons, the new particles are baryons made from three quarks bound together by the strong force. The types of quarks are different, though: the new particles both contain one beauty (b), one strange (s), and one down (d) quark. Link: http://home.web.cern.ch
 

22 November 2014: European Space Agency is currently looking at Mercury for its next mission, which is called BepiColombo, in honor of Italian space pioneer Giuseppe "Bepi" Colombo. The tentative launch-date of BepiColombo will be 21 July 2016 and it will reach Mercury's orbit seven and a half years later, in 2024. Upon reaching Mercury, a module called Mercury Planet Orbiter (MPO) will separate from the rest of the spacecraft and perform a detailed study of the Mercury system and the module is designed by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, which jointly conducts the mission along with ESA. It will use gravity assists to reach its destination: it will first complete a fly-by of Earth, essentially returning to our planet two years after. It will perform two fly-bys of Venus, before heading to Mercury. Link: http://sci.esa.int
 

23 November 2014: Mangalyaan is among the 25 ‘Best Inventions of 2014’ listed by Time magazine that are ‘making the world better, smarter and, in some cases, a little more fun. Developed by the Indian Space Research Organisation, the Mars spacecraft cost India just $74 million, less than the budget for the Academy Award winning science fiction thriller film ‘Gravity.’ The list also includes inventions by two Indians for developing an exercise space for prisoners in solitary confinement and a tablet toy for kids. Nalini Nadkarni, forest ecologist and college professor helped develop the ‘Blue Room’ with Snake River Correctional Institution in Oregon for inmates in solitary confinement. Former Google engineer Pramod Sharma developed ‘Osmo’, a tablet toy that gets physical. The toyhelped to raise $14.5 million in capital and is now being sold in the Apple Store. Link: http://time.com
 

24 November 2014: Leonardo da Vinci, the Italian artist and scientist, may have been the first to identify hurricanes, scientists say. Ann Pizzorusso, a geologist and Renaissance art scholar said the painter's drawings show he had identified the swirling pattern of a hurricane 500 years before satellite technology first revealed the distinctive image of a hurricane. Pizzorusso studied the artist's deluge drawings in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle. The 16 drawings, composed in the latter years of da Vinci's life between 1514 and 1518 and apparently inspired by biblical stories of floods, show that 500 years before satellite technology first revealed the distinctive image of a hurricane. Leonardo was the first to depict hurricanes. What he depicted was discovered by meteorologists in 1970s and called 'vortex flow patterns', the rotating masses of air or water. Link: http://www.leonardosgeology.com
 

25 November 2014: NASA is planning to launch an ambitious Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission in March next year to deploy four identical spacecraft from a single rocket to study magnetic reconnection in the universe.A single rocket will carry all four MMS spacecraft, stacked on top of each other, to their destination from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The fresh insights offered by the MMS mission could aid in the creation of clean energy solutions such as fusion energy reactors. The spacecraft are designed to break free from the stack once the rocket reaches orbit. Each of the four spacecraft has a compliment of 25 sensors comprising 11 instruments. Magnetic reconnection is a process that converts magnetic energy to kinetic or thermal energy. It happens all over the universe and occurs during coronal mass ejections causing solar winds. Link: http://mms.gsfc.nasa.gov
 

26 November 2014: As one of the most diverse plant family, orchid now has its first genome sequenced. The team carried out whole genome sequencing on Phalaenopsis equestris, which is an important parental species for breeding of commercial Phalaenopsis strains. Phalaenopsis equestris is also the first plant with Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) for which the genome has been sequenced. The genome contains 29,431 predicted protein-coding genes. The average intron length is 2,922 base pairs, which is much longer than in any sequenced plant genomes. This is possibly an important clue to why orchid developed into one of the largest plant families on earth. This study which is an accomplishment of the Orchid Genome Project, an international collaboration led by National Orchid Conservation Center in China is published at Nature Genetics.Link:http://www.nature.com
 

27 November 2014: Government of India now plans to protect endangered plants and trees as it protects the wildlife by making changes in Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. The plants are not protected under Forest Conservation Act, but only under wildlife laws. The current laws states that anyone caught keeping endangered plants species illegally can be charged with illegally cutting a tree and can be sent to the jail for maximum of six months and can be fined 500 rupees. On the other hand, killing an endangered animal can result in seven years in jail with a minimum fine of Rs 25,000.The ministry plans to create a network to work against inter-state smuggling after Andhra Pradesh government reported about 1,000 cases of Red Sander trees being illegally cut down. The endangered tree is is used for the manufacturing of facial creams, medicines and furniture.Link:http://envfor.nic.in


28 November 2014: Today marks the 50th anniversary of  Mariner -4 mission which was launched on 28 November 1964 and it was NASA’s first successful journey to Mars. Mariner-4 made its closest approach to Mars on 15 July 1965 and sent back first images of another world beyond the Earth-Moon system. During its flight, the Marine-4 recorded information on surface temperatures of Mars and also measured the magnetic field and atmospheric pressure of the planet. Radio telescopes on Earth will beam 90,000 messages to Mars to commemorate this which will be traveling at the speed of light, and so, the messages will take 15 minutes to reach Mars. Copies of the messages will be delivered to Congress, to NASA headquarters in Washington, and the United Nations in New York. Since Mariner-4’s journey, more than 20 spacecraft have visited Mars. Link: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

29 November 2014: American geologists have named the earth’s most abundant mineral Bridgmanite. It had hitherto remained nameless as a large enough sample of the mineral, found in the earth’s lower mantle, had not been recovered. Under the rules of set down by the International Mineralogical Association, a mineral cannot be given a formal name until a specimen has been found and examined first hand. A group of American geologists were recently able to extract a sample large enough to analyse from a meteorite. The new name is in honour of Percy Bridgman, a pioneer in the use of high pressure experiments to better understand how many geological formations come about. Bridgmanite , made up of high-density magnesium iron silicate, makes up about 38 percent of the total volume of the earth. The research is published in the journal Science. Link: http://news.sciencemag.org
 

30 November 2014: The 70th anniversary of a V2 rocket attack on London was commemorated today in a service held by Reverend Neil Nicholls.The rocket landed on a New Cross shop killing 168 people and was the single biggest bombing attack in London during the Second World War.It was the middle of the day and no one inside those shops would have known anything about it. The V2 was so huge and travelled at thousands of miles per hour. The area was completely destroyed. Children from St James Hatcham CE Primary School in New Cross were part of a service held at St James Church by Bishop of Woolwich. During the service children aged between nine and 11 read out names of those who had lost their lives that day.Sir Steve Bullock, Mayor of Lewisham attended the service and planted a commemorative tree while the church bells chimed. Link: http://www.flyingbombsandrockets.com