2012年10月17日星期三

Off this planet: climate models work for Mars too


Computer models have accurately forecast conditions on Mars and are valid predictors of climate change on Earth, US and French astronomers said on Tuesday.

These computer programs predicted Martian glaciers and other features on Earth's planetary neighbor, scientists found.
"Some public figures imply that modelling of global climate change on Earth is 'junk science,' but if climate models can explain features observed on other planets, then the models must have at least some validity," lead researcher William Hartmann of the Planetary Science Institute said in a statement.
The team's findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society's planetary sciences division in Reno, Nevada.

Some climate change skeptics, notably US Senator James Inhofe, an Oklahoma Republican, dismiss human-spurred global warming as a hoax. Others accept that Earth's climate is changing, but discount a human cause. Still others, including Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, accept the idea of climate change, but maintain the science is inconclusive.
The science of climate change prediction is dependent in part on complex computer models that take into account multiple factors that influence Earth's climate, including the level of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
Many such models have forecast the globally averaged temperature will rise by 3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C) this century if greenhouse emissions continue at current levels.
Recent global temperature increases support these predictions. On Monday, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported that September 2012 was tied for the warmest month on Earth in the modern record, and was the 331st consecutive month above the 20th century average.
Modelling martian snows
Hartmann, a senior scientist at the nonprofit Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona, said he and his team confirmed the earthly computer models' effectiveness by using them to forecast conditions on Mars.
New satellite observations of glaciers, ice flows and other features on the red planet showed that the models' predictions corresponded with what was on the Martian surface, Hartmann said in a telephone interview.
One key difference between Earth and Mars is their tilt, he said. Earth's axis is fixed, with very small variations, at 23.5 degrees, held steady by the gravitational pull of our moon. This tilt is responsible for changing seasons as Earth moves through the year, alternately tipping its northern and southern hemispheres toward the sun.
Mars lacks a big moon to stabilize its tilt, and its rotational axis can vary as much as 70 degrees toward the sun. When that happens, polar ice evaporates and puts moisture into the Martian atmosphere, which dumps snow, ice and ultimately glaciers in Mars' mid-latitudes. The last time this happened, astronomers say, was between 5 million and 20 million years ago.
Factoring in the planet's varying tilt, topography, atmosphere and other information, the climate models forecast specific regions for massive snowfalls, and the remnants of those snowfalls are right there, Hartmann said. So are ice flows and other features, viewed by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
"We do have a lot of public figures, in our country particularly, saying that the global climate modelling studies have very little value," Hartmann said. "If the global climate modelling people can run these models on Mars and we actually see things that come out of the model on another planet, then the climate modelling people must be doing something right."


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Next Skyrim DLC called Dragonborn?

New Spider-Man: No More Mr. Nice Guy

Game Life

2012年10月15日星期一

Bachelor Racial Discrimination Suit: Case Dismissed


Well, back to the ole mating game.

A federal judge has granted ABC's motion to dismiss a racial discrimination lawsuitfiled against The Bachelor and The Bachelorette in Tennessee by two men who said that they both tried out to be the titular rose bearer in 2011 and were passed over because they're black.
But score one for the reality-TV masterminds, because the court ruled that casting choices remain the sole discretion of those working on the show.
ABC defends The Bachelor,Bachelorette: "Casting is protected by First Amendment"
"As the defendants persuasively argue, casting decisions are a necessary component of any entertainment show's creative content," wrote U.S. District Judge Aleta Trauger in her decision.
View the documents
"The producers of a television program, a movie, or a play could not effectuate their creative vision, as embodied in the end product marketed to the public, without signing cast members. The plaintiffs seek to drive an artificial wedge between casting decisions and the end product, which itself is indisputably protected as speech by the First Amendment. Thus, regulating the casting process necessarily regulates the end product. In this respect, casting and the resulting work of entertainment are inseparable and must both be protected to ensure that the producers' freedom of speech is not abridged."
The suit was dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can't be refiled at a later date.
"We felt from the onset this case was completely without merit and we are pleased the Court has found in our favor," ABC and Warner Bros. said in a statement to E! News. 
The plaintiffs' attorney hasn't yet responded to a request for comment.

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Should Nike Be Sticking by Lance Armstrong?





In August, Lance Armstrong put up his hands and said he would no longer contest the doping charges that the United States Anti-Doping Agency have brought against him, basically arguing that it was a waste of his time. No matter that he’d be stripped of his Tour de France titles. “I know who won those seven Tours, my teammates know who won those seven Tours, and everyone I competed against knows who won those seven Tours,” Armstrong said. Nike, his long-time sponsor, and maker of the 84 million-plus Livestrong bracelets that have been sold throughout the globe, said they were sticking by him:
“We are saddened that Lance Armstrong may no longer be able to participate in certain competitions and his titles appear to be impacted,” Nike spokeswoman Mary Remuzzi said in an emailed statement. ”Lance has stated his innocence and has been unwavering on this position. Nike plans to continue to support Lance and the Lance Armstrong Foundation, a foundation that Lance created to serve cancer survivors.”
On Wednesday, as we now know, things got much worse for Armstrong. A USADA report on Armstrong’s doping habits included eyewitness testimony from eleven former teammates, and gory details about refrigerated blood, secret roadside meetings and canceled races to avoid drug testing. And yet Nike’s position did not change. The company just re-relesesed that statement.
This stance inspired plenty of social media outrage. “Hey @nike your support of Ance just cost you a customer, and many, many more.,” wrote one user. @thebikeshow tweeted: “Wow. @nike is standing by the athlete guilty of the biggest fraud in the history of the sport. Cheat to win. Just Do It!” Owen Gibson, the Olympics editor for the Guardian newspaper inGreat Britain, shared a tweet from Paralympian Robin Williams, a British footballer: “I won’t be buying anything @nike again if they stand by Lance Armstrong. #disgrace.”
Sure, a few angry tweets may not negatively impact Nike’s bottom line. And Nike is heavily invested in Armstrong. Still, the company’s decision to support Armstrong surprises some sports business experts. Nike is one of the most important sports brands in the world. As such, it’s supposed to represent honesty and fairness. Unless you believe Armstrong is a victim of a conspiracy to bring him down, it’s pretty clear, at this point, that Armstrong violated these principles. So what, exactly, does Nike stand for? “I thought they would have dropped him, to be frank,” says Robert Tuchman, a sports marketing consultant based in New York.
Nike is sending mixed messages, a problem for any brand. The company might make some of the best sportswear on the planet, and strive to do good around the world. But now, Nike is getting attention for this anti-doping ad, from 2001. “Everyone wants to know what I’m on,” says Armstrong.  ”What am I on? I’m on my bike, busting my ass six hours a day. What are you on?”


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2012年10月11日星期四

Ballooning magma creates stunning sombrero-shaped volcano


According to a report, geologists have found a giant magma bubble that appears to look like a sombrero. Magma bubbles are pockets of air that form in the magma of a volcano; they are usually small in size. This bubble is not only unique for its shape, but it also happens to be one of the largest magma bubbles ever found on earth and the potential to unearth many new geologic findings.

The sombrero-shaped magma bubble was found in the Altiplano-Puna plateau in the Andes Mountains. It comes as no surprise that the Altiplano-Puna plateau is considered one of the most geologically active places on earth. On the plateau, the sombrero-shaped magma bubble is located at the center of a geologic uplift. A valley surround the uplift, which is being pushed upwards by the magma bubble.
“It’s a subtle motion, pushing up little by little every day, but it’s this persistence that makes this uplift unusual,” said Yuri Fialko, a professor of geophysics in the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at Scripps. “Most other magmatic systems that we know about show episodes of inflation and deflation.”
Another unique aspect of the magma bubble is its constant growth. At an enormous 62 miles across, the magma bubble has not stopped growing yet. Every year, the valley surrounding the magma seems to sink lower and lower. This causes the magma bubble to continue to rise and get larger year after year. This has puzzled the scientists involved in the finding as the end to the grow spurt of the magma bubble does not seem to be in the foreseeable future. This contradicts the growth pattern of most previously discovered magma bubbles.
Fialtko  was surprised by the unusual growth pattern of this magma bubble. “It’s a subtle motion, pushing up little by little every day, but it’s this persistence that makes this uplift unusual,” he said. “Most other magmatic systems that we know about show episodes of inflation and deflation.”
“Satellite data and computer models allowed us to make the important link between what’s observed at the surface and what’s happening with the magma body at depth,” Fialko added.
Some may think the magma bubble’s size may mean disaster in the near future. To date, the magma bubble has shown some violent activity that resulted in shaking in the area around the site. This coupled with its size suggests the magma could be dangerous. The geologists involved, however, do not believe the bubble will burst anytime soon, making it safe for the time being and allowing them to continue their studies.
As unique as this magma bubble is, it is no surprise that scientists may be able to use it other important geological data. Not only that, but the magma may also be studied to contribute to historical studies. For example, researchers believe that studying the constantly growing magma bubble could help explain how super-volcanoes take shape. Whatever its future use, it clear that the sombrero-shaped magma bubble will contribute to the field of geology in a unique way.




Strange star spiral offers clues to sun's fate


An intriguing spiral structure surrounding a pulsing red giant star may be offering a preview of how the sun will behave at the end of its life.

Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) in northern Chile, an international team of astronomers found the spiral structure, one never seen before, in the envelope of gas and dust around a red giant about 1,000 light-years from Earth and took a detailed three-dimensional reading of its composition.
The spiral is thought to be created from the gases being expelled by the dying red giant called R Sculptoris. The structure provides information about the velocity of the wind blowing off of R Sculptoris, revealing that the star has expelled three times as much mass as previously estimated.
"We can 'walk along' the spiral and use it as a clock to see what happened when," said Matthias Maercker, of Germany's University of Bonn. [Weird Spiral Around Red Giant Star (Video)]
Thermal pulsing
Low- to intermediate-mass stars like the sun expand into red giants during the last stages of their evolution. (When the sun reaches this stage in about 5 billion years, its outer layer will spread as far as Earth's orbit.)
Every 10,000 to 50,000 years, these gaseous behemoths burn helium for a few hundred years in a runaway process known as a thermal pulse, causing the layers of the star to mix.
"Thermal elements are an essential part of late stellar evolution," Maercker told SPACE.com in an email. "They are responsible for the formation of new elements, which eventually will get incorporated into new stars and planets."
These new elements take time to reach the outer layers of the star. By studying the corkscrewed expulsion from R Sculptoris, the astronomers calculated that the star was shedding more mass during thermal pulses than had been estimated.
"This means that much more mass is lost during a time where new elements cannot yet be incorporated into the wind," Maercker said. "Hence it will take longer for these elements to be blown into space ? most likely, only during the next pulse."
The spiral shape was caused by a companion star pushing through the layers expelled by T Sculptoris. The formation is allowing the scientists to study the history of the thermal pulses: Elements blown off at higher speeds create more widely separated spirals, while phases of slower mass loss are more tightly packed. The intensity of the spiral reveals how much mass was lost in each phase.
"Now that the companion star causes the spiral structure in the stellar wind from R Sculptoris, we can see it and, in a very detailed way, measure how it has evolved since the last thermal pulse," Maercker said.
The research was published in today's (Oct. 10) online version of the journal Nature.
ALMA and the star
Located in the constellation Sculptor in the Southern Hemisphere, R Sculptoris is a typical red giant, so its evolution could provide a hint of what to expect from the sun down the road.
ALMA is a new network of 66 radio dishes linked together to observe cooperatively. The facility won't be fully operational before next year; fewer than half of the telescopes in the array were functional when R Sculptoris was examined.
Maercker and his team hope to use ALMA's full array to get an even closer look at R Sculptoris in the future. "We hope to see exactly where the spiral begins," he said.
That information should reveal the mass and orbits of R Sculptoris and its companion star, providing more exact information about what happens to red giants during and after their thermal pulses.
"This will allow us to understand late stellar evolution better, and where and how the material for new stars is created," Maercker said.


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2012年10月7日星期日

Mix and match at FreeFest


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Throw a free concert and everyone will show up. Girls with glowing Hula-Hoops. Stroller-pushing parents. Grizzled men in faded ZZ Top T-shirts. That guy in the skintight tie-dye bodysuit.
A crowd of 50,000 squeezed through the gates of Merriweather Post Pavilion on Saturday for Virgin Mobile FreeFest, a gathering of wildly disparate tribes. They came to hear 22 acts, including Southern rock newcomers Alabama Shakes, rap great Nas, pop alchemistSantigold, the eternally hirsute ZZ Top, and dueling headlining sets from former White Stripes frontman Jack White and dubstep prince Skrillex.
The sounds were spread across three stages — the venue’s usual Pavilion stage, a second stage built in a neighboring field to the west and a third, smaller stage for DJs dubbed “the Dance Forest.”
And for the fourth year running, organizers gave tickets away online for free.
Fans swarmed the place to let it all hang out. Or maybe just keep it tucked in. There were furry boots and flip-flops. Gold laméthongs and cargo shorts. Fishnet stockings and mesh lacrosse jerseys. Orioles caps outnumbered Nationals caps, outnumbered dragon-green caps with purple fins, of which there was at least one. For 11 colorful hours, this year’s FreeFest was a place to see and be seen — and hopefully find some music that matched your outfit.
12:01 p.m.
“Good morning,” says Will Eastman, greeting the early birds assembled on a dance floor of dry oak leaves and dirt. Eastman’s band, Washington-based Volta Bureau, is the first act of the festival, and its thumping DJ set in the Dance Forest foreshadows a day of unrelenting rhythm. Wearing a zebra-print blouse and a constellation of stars tattooed up the back of her neck, Liz Carr, 27, laughs when a falling acorn beans her in the head. She doesn’t stop dancing, though, insisting that she’s pacing herself. “Our goal,” she says, “is to not be blacked out by the time Skrillex comes on.”
2:32 p.m.
Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson has just returned backstage after a quick mosey across the grounds, darting through already thickening crowds. “Just saying hello to some of the punters,” Branson says, smiling. “They’re very grateful, as if I’ve done all the hard work by myself.” He touts FreeFest’s charity work with homeless youth and says that he’s excited to get back out and see the bands.
Fans are already stomping circles on the lawn to the neo-bluegrass of Trampled By Turtles. Down in the Pavilion seats, fans bat at a beige, malformed balloon, trying to keep it afloat. The guy who figures out it’s an inflated condom lets it fall to the ground.
3:38 p.m.
For some, FreeFest is a place to test-drive your Halloween costume. For the Dismemberment Plan, it’s a place to test-drive new tunes — all while trying to win fans as they hover hundreds of feet over the proceedings.
Travis Morrison, frontman of the recently reunited Washington post-punk troupe, persuades the crowd in front of the stage to salute those riding the neighboring Ferris wheel by shouting, “HI, FERRIS WHEEL!”
A girl in the lime-green carriage waves back toward the stage, then leans over the rail to talk to her pals in the purple carriage below. Morrison shouts in mock-terror: “Don’t lean over. . . . I’m afraid of heights!”





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Chinese tourists in Sri Lanka killed by lightning!


A LIGHTNING strike in central Sri Lanka killed two Chinese tourists and injured three others while they were outside during a thunderstorm, police said.
A bolt of lightning hit the mountainous area where Chinese tourists were on a sightseeing tour in Haputale, Sri Lanka.  Source: AP

A bolt of lightning hit the mountainous area where the tourists were on a sightseeing tour in Haputale, a picturesque tea-growing region, police said.
"A Chinese man and a woman were killed and three other tourists were injured and we have rushed them to hospital," a police official in the area said by telephone. Authorities did not name the victims.
Sri Lanka is seeing an increase in the number of Chinese tourists visiting the island after it ended nearly four decades of ethnic strife in May 2009.