Tuesday 20 March 2012

Giant planet pileups in far-flung star systems

Giant planet pileups in far-flung star systems


Top brainboxes armed with a British supercomputer say that they've cracked the riddle of just why it is that massive planets - spied across the vasty interstellar gulfs in recent times - tend to prefer certain orbits around their faraway parent stars.
"Our models offer a plausible explanation for the pile-ups of giant planets observed recently detected in exoplanet surveys," says Richard Alexander of Leicester uni.
It seems that known exoplanets, most of which are enormous gas giants on the lines of Jupiter or Saturn here in our solar system, are found mainly at distances around 1 Astronomical Unit (AU) from their own suns. This is the same distance as Earth is from our Sun.
We here on the Reg farflung-planets-glimpsed-across-the-vasty-gulfs-of-interstellar-space desk had sort of formed an unscientific impression that this might be because the techniques used to spot exoplanets struggle to see anything which is not a) vast and b) quite close to its parent star. But according to Alexander and his colleague Ilaria Pascucci of Arizona uni, this isn't true: as star systems form, they naturally tend to accumulate gas-giants at this sort of distance - our system is atypical in having them much further out.
"Our results show that the final distribution of planets does not vary smoothly with distance from the star, but instead has clear ‘deserts' – deficits of planets – and ‘pile-ups' of planets at particular locations," says Pascucci.
The two boffins' theory shows that as a young star system collapses onto its central sun, the interplay between the hot solar wind blasting material outward and gravity sucking it inward changes sharply according to distance bands, which results in a clear band from say 1 to 2 AU out. Gas-giant worlds naturally get moved inwards through this clear band and then achieve orbit once they hit the next band of dust and proto-stuff.
According to a Leicester uni statement announcing the new research:
Giant planets migrate inward before they finally settle on a stable orbit around their star. This happens because as the star draws in material from the protoplanetary disk, the planets are dragged along, like a celebrity caught in a crowd of fans.
However, the researchers discovered that once a giant planet encounters a gap cleared by photo-evaporation, it stays put.
"The planets either stop right before or behind the gap, creating a pile-up," explains Pascucci

Wednesday 14 March 2012

Announcing the 2012 Google News elections section

Announcing the 2012 Google News elections section


Who just endorsed whom? What do the latest polls say? How much money did they raise this quarter? Keeping up with the 2012 elections in the U.S. and staying abreast of breaking developments can be quite a task in today’s fast-paced news cycle.

So today, we’re excited to continue our tradition of supporting you during elections season. Google News is launching an Elections section on its homepage which will organize and present elections coverage as it grows through the general election --

The Elections section will be visible by default for all US users and will be located beneath the Health section. It will bring readers the latest and most relevant news stories, using all of the ranking intelligence that users have come to expect of Google. You should also check out Google’s official elections page, YouTube’s collection of candidate videos, and the elections Trends Dashboard to find out more about how people are interacting with the elections online.


Death Star SUCKS PLASMA FROM SUN in NASA riddle vid

Death Star SUCKS PLASMA FROM SUN in NASA riddle vid


Vid Keen-eyed skywatchers have spotted a mysterious object emerging from the Sun that, according to the tinfoil-hatted YouTube majority, can only be a UFO, a small black hole, a world-destroying weapon or maybe a new planet.
Images show a shadowy spherical object apparently tethered to home world's star by a dark string. After much debate on YouTube, folks had come to the natural conclusion that it was some sort of alien ship fuelling up on solar plasma or possibly a new planet being born, particularly because you can see a Star Wars Death Star-like sphere blast away from the Sun.
One particular avid sun-worshipper going by the name of Sunsflare posted the video, a composite of telescope imagery taken by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, on his Facebook page as well as on YouTube, and asked for boffins' opinions on the phenomenon.
C. Alex Young, a solar astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Centre, who also runs a website called The Sun Today, kindly obliged in a posted video answer to Sunsflare that, unfortunately for ET-lovers everywhere, explained that the tethered sphere was actually quite a common occurrence.
"Filaments, when you see them on the solar disc at certain wavelengths, they appear to be dark because they're cooler material in relation to what's in the background. When you see them on the edge of the sun we call them prominences but they're the same objects," Young said.
"They sit in this kind of tunnel called the filament channel so when you look at it from the edge of the sun, what you see is this spherical object and you're actually looking down the tunnel."
You can hear and see his full explanation here.
Joseph Gurman, project scientist in the Solar Physics Laboratory at the Goddard centre, told Life's Little Mysteries that when a prominence extends out of the Sun, it's usually a sign that it's about to erupt - just as this one did.
"It's generally accepted, though still not conclusively proven, that prominence eruptions occur when the overlying magnetic field that contains the prominence material is disrupted," he said. ®

India to launch RISAT-1 next month

India to launch RISAT-1 next month

India is expected to launch next month an indigenously designed and developed satellite that has the unique capability of imaging during day and night and in all weather conditions.
“The Radar Imaging Satellite (RISAT-1) is likely to be launched in the second half of April from Sriharikota space port,” an Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) official said.
The spacecraft, country’s first microwave remote sensing satellite, was originally scheduled to be launched this month but the ISRO row, the fallout of the punitive action against four former space scientists for their role in the Antrix-Devas deal, delayed the preparations.
Nearly two years ago, India launched a Radar Imaging Satellite (RISAT-2) with all weather capability and ability to penetrate through clouds, but it was realised in association with Israel Aerospace Industries.
Bangalore-headquartered Isro said RISAT-2 has enhanced the country’s capability in the management of disasters.
RISAT-1, weighing around 1850 kg, is slated for launch by Isro’s workhorse Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C19 (XL)) into a 536 km orbit.
Besides use in the agriculture sector, RISAT-1 could also be used to keep round-the-clock vigil on the countrys borders and help in anti-terrorist and anti-infiltration operations.
The satellite carries a C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) payload, operating in a multi-polarisation and multi-resolution mode to provide images with coarse, fine and high spatial resolutions, respectively.

Nobel scientist who warned of thinning ozone dies


Nobel scientist who warned of thinning ozone dies  
F. Sherwood Rowland. File photo
AP F. Sherwood Rowland. File photo
F. Sherwood Rowland, the Nobel prize-winning chemist who sounded the alarm on the thinning of the Earth’s ozone layer, has died. He was 84.
Rowland died Saturday at his home of complications from Parkinson’s disease, the dean of the University of California, Irvine’s physical sciences department said Sunday.
“We have lost our finest friend and mentor,” Kenneth C. Janda said in a statement. “He saved the world from a major catastrophe - never wavering in his commitment to science, truth and humanity and did so with integrity and grace.”
Rowland was among three scientists awarded the 1995 Nobel Prize for chemistry for explaining how the ozone layer is formed and decomposed through chemical processes in the atmosphere.
The prize was awarded more than two decades after Rowland and post-doctoral student Mario Molina calculated that if human use of chlorofluorocarbons, a by-product of aerosol sprays, deodorants and other household products, were to continue at an unchanged rate, the ozone layer would be depleted after several decades. Their work built upon findings by atmospheric scientist Paul Crutzen.
Their prediction caught enormous attention and was strongly challenged partly because the non-toxic properties of CFCs were thought to be environmentally safe. Their work gained widespread recognition more than a decade later with the discovery of the ozone hole over the Earth’s polar regions.
“It was to turn out that they had even underestimated the risk,” a Nobel committee said in its award citation for Rowland, Molina and Crutzen.
Mr. Molina said his former mentor never shied from defending his work or advocating a ban on CFCs.
“He showed me that if we believe in the science ... we should speak out when we feel it’s important for society to change,” Mr. Molina told The Associated Press.
“Isn’t it a responsibility of scientists, if you believe that you have found something that can affect the environment, isn’t it your responsibility to do something about it, enough so that action actually takes place?” Rowland said at a White House climate change roundtable in 1997.
“If not us, who? If not now, when?” he asked.
Rowland was survived by his wife of nearly 60 years, Joan, a son and a daughter.

Tuesday 13 March 2012

New Volkswagen Vento Diesel Comfortline launched

New Volkswagen Vento Diesel Comfortline launched
 
 
 
 
Extending its range of mid-level Vento sedan models, German car manufacturer Volkswagen has launched the Vento diesel Comfortline at prices of Rs 8.74 lakh and Rs 8.56 lakh (ex-showroom, Maharashtra).
The newest variant has the same specifications and features as those of the current Vento diesel line-up in addition to body-coloured exterior door handles and mirrors, rear centre arm rest, fog light front and rear and electrically adjustable outside rear mirror.
Neeraj Garg, Member of Board & Director, Volkswagen Passenger Cars, said, “Since the introduction of the Vento, we have received requests for the mid-level trimline and it is our pleasure to be able to provide the customers with their desired car.”

 

Magic mirror to take stress out of shopping


Magic mirror to take stress out of shopping

Store managers are hoping a magic mirror that tries your clothes on for you will help take the stress out of shopping - and lure consumers back from the internet.

The virtual changing room allows shoppers to sample outfits without putting them on - with the help of a 58-inch plasma screen and a depth-sensing camera.
The new device, which goes on display at Manchester's Trafford Centre tomorrow, allows shoppers to sample clothes from a number of retailers all in one place.
Using 3D technology, the mirror can superimpose dresses, skirts and tops over a live picture of a shopper's body as they move in front of a camera placed on top of the screen, the Daily Mail reported.
Movement sensors and technology similar to that used on an XBox games console are used to judge the consumer's size and distance from the camera.
Shoppers can change the size or the outfit - from retailers such as Karen Millen and Coast - at the wave of a hand until they find the best match, before heading straight to the store to pick it up.
Marketing manager Kelly Da Silva Fernandes, 26, who tried out the magic mirror, said: "It's a great way to save time and allows you to scan through a large number of outfits very quickly. It's great fun to be with a group of girls too."
Adam Vahed, managing director of Apache Solutions, who developed the technology, said: "I took a 58-inch plasma screen TV and mounted a depth-sensing camera on top.
"It has worked really well, so far, with women's clothing, so we are now developing the software for menswear and children."
Caroline Aikman, marketing manager for the Trafford Centre, said: "This is our secret weapon against the rise of internet shopping, you just can't get this type of theatre and experience online. We want to put the excitement back into shopping."

India's spy satellite to be launched in April

India's spy satellite to be launched in April
Indo-Asian News Service
A wholly Indian-built spy/surveillance satellite - Radar Imaging Satellite (Risat-1) - that can see through clouds and fog and has very high- resolution imaging is slated for launch in April, a senior official of the Indian space agency has said.

An official of the Indian Space
Research Organisation (ISRO) said thorough tests were being done on the Risat-1. "The Risat-1 is put to thermal vacuum test (a test to check the satellite's functioning in space environment). It is a complex microwave satellite being built for the first time in India. The satellite is expected to be launched in April," the senior official told IANS, not wishing to be named because of the organisational rules. In earlier satellites, one major component, the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) was imported, but in Risat-1 that has also been developed in India.
He said Risat-1 is the first such satellite being built by India and is a bit complex compared to other remote sensing/earth observation satellites built and sent up earlier.
According to ISRO officials, Risat-1 at 1,850 kg is the heaviest microwave satellite to be built by India.
The satellite would be used for disaster prediction and agriculture forestry, and the high resolution pictures and microwave imaging could also be used for defence purposes.
Risat-1 will have all weather, day and night imaging capability.
The satellite's synthetic aperture radar can acquire data at C-band.
ISRO Chairman K. Radhakrishnan had said last October that the space agency would launch two more satellites - Risat-1 and SARAL - before 2011-end. But that did not happen. He also said two more satellites - AstroSat and Aditya - will be launched in 2012-13.
Remote sensing satellites send back pictures and other data for use. India has the largest constellation of remote sensing satellites in the world providing imagery in a variety of spatial resolutions, from more than a metre ranging up to 500 metres, and is a major player in vending such data in the global market.
In 2009, ISRO had launched 300 kg Risat-2 with an Israeli built SAR enabling earth observation on all weather, day and night conditions. The satellite can look through clouds and fog.
With 11 remote sensing/earth observation satellites orbiting in the space, India is a world leader in the remote sensing data market. The 11 satellites are TES, Resourcesat 1, Cartosat 1, 2, 2A and 2B, IMS 1, Risat-2, Oceansat 2, Resourcesat-2, Megha-Tropiques.
According to ISRO officials, the rocket that would sling Risat-1 will be the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle's (PSLV) upgraded variant called PSLV-XL.
The rocket would weigh around 320 tonnes at lift-off and will be the third such expendable rocket to be sent up by ISRO, and first time to launch a remote sensing satellite.
ISRO had used the PSLV-XL variant (rocket with extended strap-on motors than what the base model has) for its moon mission (Chandrayaan-1) in 2008 and for launching its communication satellite GSAT-12 in 2011.
The PSLV is a four-stage (engine) rocket powered by solid and liquid propellants alternatively. The first and third stages are fired by solid propellant and the second and fourth stages are fired by liquid propellant.
ISRO has developed three PSLV variants. The first is the standard variant weighing around 290 tonnes with six strap-on motors measuring 11.3 metres with a fuel capacity of nine tonnes.
The other two rocket variants are the PSLV Core Alone without the six strap-on motors and PSLV-XL with longer strap-on motors measuring 13.5 metres having a fuel capacity of 12 tonnes of solid fuel.

Venus and Jupiter approach one another in night sky


Venus and Jupiter approach one another in night sky

Venus and Jupiter will appear side by side after sunset tonight as their paths appear to cross in the night sky.

Venus and Jupiter approach one another in night sky
The astronomical event comes a week after Mars made its closest pass of Earth in more than two years 
Amateur astronomers have been following the planets as they appear just a couple of degrees apart in the sky.
They reached their closest point last night and will be clearly visible again tonight just a couple of degrees apart in the sky to the west-southwest, before drifting apart as the week goes on.
Although it is not unusual for two planets to appear to pass by one another, there is excitement surrounding the spectacle because Venus and Jupiter are two of the brightest planets in the solar system.
Tonight they will be so close that the gap between them will appear from Earth to be about the width of two fingers held at arms length.
Their brightness is such that they will be visible to the naked eye from across the country immediately after sunset, and will be clearly distinguishable even to people with no experience of astronomy.
Robert Massey, of the Royal Astronomical Society, said: "The two being so close together will be beautiful. Last night they looked like two beacons.
"They will be unmistakable because both are really bright, and they will be visible before you can see any stars which is the real giveaway.
"Look outside to the west at about seven o'clock and unless you are standing beside a skyscraper you won't be able to miss them. It would not surprise me for one second if we got people reporting U.F.O. sightings because they are so bright."
The paths of the planets appear to cross because their orbits are briefly aligned, even though they are vast distances apart in reality.
The planets will be fairly high in the sky about 40 degrees above the horizon with Venus, the brighter of the two, positioned slightly above and to the right.
After tonight the planets will drift further apart, though Jupiter will remain visible for at least two more weeks.
The astronomical event comes a week after Mars made its closest pass of Earth in more than two years, and three months before the transit of Venus, the most eagerly anticipated stargazing event of 2012 when the planet will appear from some places to pass in front of the Sun.
A graphic for astronomers mapping the conjunction of Venus and Jupiter is available from Astronomy Now.

Monday 12 March 2012

NASA Crushes 2012 Mayan Apocalypse Claims

NASA Crushes 2012 Mayan Apocalypse Claims

The agency's Near-Earth Objects Program head points out many fallacies, including the claim that an imaginary planet will collide with Earth in December. Thousands of astronomers have not seen this


NASA astronaut launches Angry Birds in space

NASA astronaut launches Angry Birds in space

Astronaut Don Pettit teaches some basic physics principles using Angry Birds as Nasa help to promote the launch of a new space-based version of the popular game.


Using characters from the hit game as props, Nasa astronaut Don Pettit, gave a simple lesson in trajectory within zero-gravity on-board the International Space Station.
The physics lesson was a marketing ploy on behalf of Rovio, the Finnish company which produces the smartphone application, as they promoted a new version - Angry Birds Space - which is scheduled for release later this month.
The latest Apple App Store figures showed that Angry Birds, which a flock of irate wingless birds fired at pigs using a slingshot, was the most popular paid-for app during 2011 and two of its spin-offs - Angry Birds Seasons and Angry Birds Rio - also featured in the top 10.
As well as astronaut Mr Petitt, the app can also count Prime Minister David Cameron among its many millions of fans worldwide and it is estimated hugely popular mobile phone game, is played by 30 million people every day for a total of 300 million minutes.

Jupiter and Venus to appear side by side for two nights

Jupiter and Venus to appear side by side for two nights

Two of the brightest planets will appear side by side.

The last time Venus and Jupiter were close tobether in the nights sky was in December 2008
Image 1 of 2
The last time Venus and Jupiter were close tobether in the nights sky was in December 2008  Photo: AP Photo/Bullit Marquez
Although the planets are far apart in space, they will appear to be separated by only a few degrees.
Amateur astronomers will be excited by the prospect of two of the brightest planets in the solar system appearing so closely together, according to Robert Massey of the Royal Astronomical Society.
He said: ''Although conjunctions are not that rare, the interest in this one is a result of how spectacular it is.
''Both planets are very bright in the night sky. If you know where to look, you can even see Venus in the day. The two being so close together will be beautiful. Last night they looked like two beacons.
''It is also interesting for people because it just happens to be something which you can see for yourself. In the northern hemisphere we should look for them in the south west this evening. The pair will appear to move to the west over the course of the night.
''While the pair will drift apart after a couple of days, Jupiter will be visible for at least another two weeks.''
Last Monday, Mars made its closest pass of earth in more than two years, and in June Venus will appear to cross in front of the sun from some positions on Earth.

China 'to send its first woman into space'

China 'to send its first woman into space'

China may send its first woman into space this year after including female astronauts in the team training for its first manned space docking, state media said on Monday.

China 'to send its first woman into space'
The Long March rocket carrying the unmanned spacecraft Shenzhou 8 blasts off from the launch pad at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre Photo: REUTERS
Three astronauts will blast off on board Shenzhou ("Divine Vessel") IX between June and August to conduct a manual docking with the Tiangong-1 module currently orbiting the Earth, Xinhua news agency said, quoting an official with China's manned space programme.
A team of astronauts, including an unspecified number of women, are training for the docking mission and the three-person crew will be selected at the last minute, said Niu Hongguang, deputy commander-in-chief.
After the space rendezvous, the astronauts will move temporarily into Tiangong-1 ("Heavenly Palace"), where they will perform scientific experiments.
The mission is the latest step in a programme aimed at giving China a permanent space station by 2020.
In November, the unmanned Shenzhou VIII spacecraft returned to Earth after completing two space dockings with Tiangong-1 in the nation's first ever hard-to-master "space kiss", bringing together two vessels in high speed orbit.
Mastering space docking technology is a delicate manoeuvre that the Russians and Americans successfully completed in the 1960s.
Tiangong-1, China's first space station module, was launched in September.
China sees its space programme as a symbol of its global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party's success in turning around the fortunes of the once poverty-stricken nation.
The current programme aims to provide China with a space station in which a crew can live independently for several months, as at the old Russian Mir facility or the International Space Station.
China sent its first person into space in 2003 and has since conducted several manned missions, but has never included a woman.

Friday 9 March 2012

Swords out of place on Mars

Swords out of place on Mars

John Carter’s Western premise doesn’t make for very good science fiction
In this film image released by Disney, Taylor Kitsch is shown in a scene from 'John Carter.' (FRANK CONNOR / AP Photo / Disney)
In this film image released by Disney, Taylor Kitsch is shown in a scene from 'John Carter.' (FRANK CONNOR / AP Photo / Disney)
IDON’T SEE any way to begin a review of John Carter without referring to Through Time and Space With Ferdinand Feghoot.
That was a series of little stories that appeared in the magazine Fantasy and Science Fiction from 1956 to 1973, and was to have a great influence on my development as a critic. In one of the Feghoot adventures, the hero found himself on Mars and engaged in bloody swordplay. He was sliced in the leg. Then in the other leg. Then an arm was hacked off. "To hell with this," Feghoot exclaimed, unholstering his ray gun and vaporizing his enemies.
I may have one or two details wrong, but you understand the point: When superior technology is at hand, it seems absurd for heroes to limit themselves to swords. When airships the size of a city block can float above a battle, why handicap yourself with cavalry charges involving lumbering alien rhinos? When it is possible to teleport yourself from Earth to Mars, why are you considered extraordinary because you can jump really high?
Such questions are never asked in the world of John Carter, and as a result the movie is more Western than science fiction. Even if we completely suspend our disbelief and accept the entire story at face value, isn’t it underwhelming to spend so much time looking at hand-to-hand combat when there are so many neat toys and gadgets to play with? But I must not review a movie that wasn’t made. What we have here is a rousing boy’s adventure story, adapted from stories that Edgar Rice Burroughs cranked out for early pulp magazines. They lacked the visceral appeal of his Tarzan stories, which inspired an estimated 89 movies; amazingly, this is the first John Carter movie, but it is intended to foster a franchise, and will probably succeed.
Burroughs’ hero is a Civil War veteran who finds himself in Monument Valley, where he has an encounter that transports him to the red planet Mars. This is not the Mars that NASA’s rovers are poking into, but the Mars envisioned at the time Burroughs was writing, which the astronomer Percival Lowell claimed was crisscrossed by a system of canals. Luckily for Carter, it has an atmosphere he can breathe and surface temperatures allowing him to go without a shirt. In a delightful early scene, he finds that his Earth muscles allow him great leaps and bounds in the lower Martian gravity.
This attracts the attention of the inhabitants of Mars, represented by two apparently human cities at war with each other, and a native race called the Tharks, who look like a vague humanoid blend of weird green aliens from old covers of Thrilling Wonder Stories. They have four arms, and it was a great disappointment to me that we never saw a Thark putting on a shirt. John Carter feels an immediate affinity for the Tharks, and also gets recruited into the war of the cities — choosing the side with a fiery beauty named Dejah Thoris (Lynn Collins, who is the movie’s best character).
John Carter is played by Taylor Kitsch, who co-starred with Collins in X-Men Origins: Wolverine. Yes, I agree Kitsch is a curious name for a star in action movies. Still, it is his real name, and one can wonder how many fans of Wolverine, for example, are familiar with the word or its meaning. As an actor, he is perfectly serviceable as a sword-wielding, rhino-riding savior of planets.
The film was directed by Andrew Stanton, whose credits include A Bug’s Life, Finding Nemo and WALL-E. All have tight, well-structured plots, and that’s what John Carter could use more of. The action sequences are generally well-executed, but they’re too much of a muchness. CGI makes them seem too facile and not tactile enough. And although I liked the scene where Carter was getting his Mars legs with his first low-gravity steps, the sight of him springing into the air like a jumping jack could inspire bad laughs.
Does John Carter get the job done for the weekend action audience? Yes, I suppose it does. The massive city on legs that stomps across the landscape is well-done. The Tharks are ingenious, although I’m not sure why they need tusks. Lynn Collins makes a terrific heroine.
And I enjoyed the story-outside-the-story, about how Burroughs wrote a journal about what he saw, and appears briefly as a character.

Digital 'map' of the Titanic to be released for 100-year anniversary


Digital 'map' of the Titanic to be released for 100-year anniversary

Researchers have pieced together the first comprehensive map of the Titanic's debris field, saying they plan to release the new images next month to mark the 100-year anniversary of the ship's sinking.

Researchers have pieced together the first comprehensive map of the Titanic's debris field, saying they plan to release the new images next month to mark the 100-year anniversary of the ship's sinking.
Image 1 of 3
An expedition team used sonar imaging and more than 100,000 photos taken from underwater robots to create the map, which shows where hundreds of objects and pieces of the presumed-unsinkable vessel landed after striking an iceberg, killing more than 1,500 people.
Explorers of the Titanic – which sank on its maiden voyage from Southampton, England, to New York City – have known for more than 25 years where the bow and stern landed after the vessel struck an iceberg. But previous maps of the floor around the wreckage were incomplete, said Parks Stephenson, a Titanic historian who consulted on the 2010 expedition. Studying the site with old maps was like trying to navigate a dark room with a weak flashlight.
"With the sonar map, it's like suddenly the entire room lit up and you can go from room to room with a magnifying glass and document it," he said. "Nothing like this has ever been done for the Titanic site."
The mapping took place in the summer of 2010 during an expedition to the Titanic led by RMS Titanic Inc., the legal custodian of the wreck, along with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Falmouth, Massachusetts and the Waitt Institute of La Jolla, California.
They were joined by the cable History channel and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the National Park Service is involved in the mapping. Details on the new findings at the bottom of the ocean are not being revealed yet, but the network will air them in a two-hour documentary on April 15, exactly 100 years after the Titanic sank.
The expedition team ran two independently self-controlled robots known as autonomous underwater vehicles along the ocean bottom day and night. The torpedo-shaped AUVs surveyed the site with side-scan sonar, moving at a little more than 3 miles per hour as they traversed back and forth in a grid along the bottom, said Paul-Henry Nargeolet, the expedition's co-leader with RMS Titanic Inc. Dave Gallo from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution was the other co-leader.
The bow of the Titanic on the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean (AP Photo/RMS Titanic Inc.)
The AUVs also took high-resolution photos – 130,000 of them in all – of a smaller 2 mile -by-3-mile area where most of the debris was concentrated. The photos were stitched together on a computer to provide a detailed photo mosaic of the debris.
The result is a map that looks something like the moon's surface showing debris scattered across the ocean floor well beyond the large bow and stern sections that rest about half a mile apart.
The map provides a forensic tool with which scientists can examine the wreck site much the way an aeroplane wreck would be investigated on land, Nargeolet said.
For instance, the evidence that the stern rotated is based on the marks on the ocean floor to its west and the fact that virtually all the debris is found to the east.
"When you look at the sonar map, you can see exactly what happened," said Nargeolet, who has been on six Titanic expeditions, the first in 1987.
The first mapping of the Titanic wreck site began after it was discovered in 1985, using photos taken with cameras aboard a remotely controlled vehicle that didn't venture far from the bow and stern.
The mapping over the years has improved as explorers have built upon previous efforts in piecemeal fashion, said Charlie Pellegrino, a Titanic explorer who was not involved in the 2010 expedition. But this is the first time a map of the entire debris field has looked at every square inch in an orderly approach, he said.
"This is quite a significant map," he said. "It's quite a significant advance in the technology and the way it's done."
At Lone Wolf Documentary Group in South Portland, producers are putting the final touches on the History documentary. Rushmore DeNooyer, the co-producer and writer of the show, points out the different items on the map, displayed on a screen.
They include a huge tangle of the remains of a deckhouse; a large chunk of the side of the ship measuring more than 60 feet long and weighing more than 40 tons; pieces of the ship's bottom; and a hatch cover that blew off of the bow section as it crashed to the bottom. Other items include five of the ship's huge boilers, a revolving door and even a lightning rod from a mast.
By examining the debris, investigators can now answer questions like how the ship broke apart, how it went down and whether there was a fatal flaw in the design, he said.
The stern of the Titanic on the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean (AP Photo/RMS Titanic Inc.)
The layout of the wreck site and where the pieces landed provide new clues on exactly what happened. Computer simulations will re-enact the sinking in reverse, bringing the wreckage debris back to the surface and reassembled.
Some of those questions will be answered on the show, said Dirk Hoogstra, a senior vice president at History. He declined to say ahead of the show what new theories are being put forth on the sinking.
"We've got this vision of the entire wreck that no one has ever seen before," he said. "Because we have, we're going to be able to reconstruct exactly how the wreck happened. It's groundbreaking, jaw-dropping stuff."

Moon’s magnetism could be result of huge asteroid impact

Moon’s magnetism could be result of huge asteroid impact

A massive asteroid collision with the moon that left behind an enormous crater on the lunar surface may have spawned the surprisingly strong magnetic anomalies seen on the moon, researchers suggest.
In the nearly five decades since the first lunar surveys were conducted as part of NASA’s Apollo program, scientists have advanced a number of increasingly complex theories to explain the vast swaths of highly magnetic material that had been found in the some parts of the Moon’s crust.
But now a team of researchers from Harvard, MIT and the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, have proposed a surprisingly simple explanation for the unusual findings" the magnetic anomalies are remnants of a massive asteroid collision.
The researchers believe an asteroid slammed into the moon approximately 4 billion years ago, leaving behind an enormous crater and iron-rich, highly magnetic rock.
While there is evidence that the Moon once generated its own magnetic field, there is little to suggest it was strong enough to account for the anomalies seen in earlier surveys, Sarah Stewart-Mukhopadhyay, the John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Natural Sciences, and one of three co-authors of the paper, said.
To explain the findings, then, researchers turned to a number of elaborate scenarios.
“The conundrum has always been that the magnetism we see on the Moon is not correlated with any surface geology,” she said.
“The theory that has been most commonly cited to explain it is an ‘impact-induced field,’ in which an impact concentrates and amplifies the Moon’s magnetic field. But it was difficult to test �" people have tried to model it, but it is right at the edge of what could work.
“We have a simpler idea. Because the fields in this area are stronger than those found in any normal lunar rocks, our hypothesis is that it isn’t lunar material. We know the magnetic properties of asteroidal material are much higher than that of the Moon. It is possible that metallic iron from an asteroid could have been magnetized by the impact, and deposited on the Moon,” she added.
Ironically, their first clue came from the surveys that had long confounded scientists.
When combined with more recent, hyper-accurate topographical surveys of the Moon’s surface, it quickly became clear that most of the magnetic anomalies are scattered around the rim of an enormous, 2,400 kilometer-diameter crater known as South Pole-Aitken.
The oldest definitive structure on the Moon, the crater is between 3.9 and 4.5 billion years old, and is slightly elongated, suggesting it was formed by an object that struck the moon at an oblique angle.
Testing that hypothesis, however, proved tricky.
“The question was whether the projectile material could survive and stay on the Moon, and where it would end up,” Stewart-Mukhopadhyay said.
“What I did was model the impact and formation of the basin using computer codes that are typically used to model explosives,” she explained.
To create those models, Stewart-Mukhopadhyay started with “equations of state,” mathematical formulas that describe the asteroid and the Moon's crust, mantle and core. The far trickier part of modeling the impact, however, is in describing the rheology �" the conditions under which each material deforms and flows.
“We modeled a number of scenarios using faster or slower impacts and more shallow or more vertical angles. Each time, the model produced similar results to what we see on the Moon,” she said.
Beyond its surprisingly simple explanation to a decades-old scientific puzzle, the paper suggests new ways to answer questions about what the early solar system was like, and how the magnetic fields of the planets were formed.
“We don't have much evidence of what was hitting the Earth before 3.9 billion years ago,” noted Stewart-Mukhopadhyay.
“And there are some big questions about where those projectiles were coming from. Presumably if you picked up even the soil from this part of the Moon, you would have some of the material that came along with this large impact event.
“It may also be true that extra-terrestrial materials play a larger role in the magnetic fields of other planets than anyone has appreciated,” she continued.
“Magnetism is one of the clues that let us construct a geologic history of the surface of a planet. If we now have to consider that it may have come from a collision like this one, that’s something we need to be aware of,” she added.
The study was described in a paper published in Science.

Distant young galaxy cluster 'discovered'

Distant young galaxy cluster 'discovered'

Distant young galaxy cluster `discovered` Washington: Planetary scientists claim to have discovered a distant young galaxy cluster located 10.5 billion light years away from Milky Way.

Galaxy clusters are the "urban centres" of the universe and may contain thousands of galaxies.

An international team says that it identified the new galaxy cluster, which is made up of a dense concentration of 30 galaxies that is the seed for a much bigger "city", using the Magellan 6.5-metre telescope in Chile. The galaxy cluster is located in a region near the star constellation Leo.

"Our galaxy cluster is observed when the universe was only three billion years old. This means it is still young and should continue to grow into an extremely dense structure containing many more galaxies," said Lee Spitler at Swinburne University of Technology, who led the team.

The discovery of this system at such an early stage of the universe will help astronomers understand how galaxies are influenced by their environment, the planetary scientists said in a university release.

Team member Prof Kim-Vy Tran of Texas A&M University said: "This finding is much like discovering an ancient city that existed earlier than any other known city.

"In the same way that it's important for humans to search for the oldest known cities to understand civilisations today, it's important to search for the cosmological equivalent of the most ancient cities to understand why galaxies like our Milky Way look the way they do," Tran added.

The findings are to be published in an upcoming edition of the 'Astrophysical Journal Letters'.

Thursday 8 March 2012

மகளிர்தின ஸ்பெஷல்

மகளிர்தின ஸ்பெஷல் 


மகளிர்தின ஸ்பெஷல்
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அம்மா விட்டு சென்ற பிறகு அல்ல, அம்மா எனக்கு திருமணம் செய்ய தீர்மானித்து பல இடங்களில் விசாரித்த போதும், அம்மா முதன்முதலில் பெண் பார்க்க என போனது என் மனைவியின் வீட்டிற்குத்தான்.
அந்த முதல் நாள் என் அம்மாவை வெகுவாக கவர்ந்துவிட்டாள் என் மனைவி, என் மனைவியின் இயற்கையான பல நல்ல குணங்களில் ஒன்று. யாராக இருந்தாலும் உடல்நலத்தில் அக்கறை காட்டுவாள் (நர்ஸிங் கோர்ஸ் படித்தவர்), அதுபோலவே அம்மாவின் உடல்நலத்தை பற்றி விசாரித்து பல விசயங்களை பகிர்ந்து கொண்ட்து முதல் சந்திப்பில் அம்மாவை வெகுவாக கவர இவள் தான் என் மருமகள் என முடிவே செய்துவிட்டார்.
அப்போது இருந்தே என் வாழ்வின் மிக முக்கிய பங்கு வகிக்க துவங்கி விட்டாள் என் மனைவி.
திருமணம் முடிந்த்துமே பறந்து விடும் வெளிநாட்டில் வேலை செய்பவர்கள் போல்ல்லாமல் திருமணம் முடிந்து ஒரு வருடம் ஊரிலே நின்று விட்டேன், எனவே எனக்கு வருமானம் இல்லாத நிலை, புது மனைவி என ரொம்பவே திண்டாடிவிட்டேன், வருமானம் இல்லாத காரணத்தால் குடும்ப பிரட்சனைகள் வரத்துவங்கின, ஏறக்குறைய மதிப்பில்லாத நிலைக்கு தள்ளட்டப்பட்ட என்னை மீண்டும் தூக்கி நிறுத்தியவள் அவள்.
இன்று எனது சொந்த உழைப்பில் நிலம் வீடு கார் என வளர்ந்துவிட்டாலும் எல்லாவற்றிற்கும் துவக்கம் என் மனைவிதான்.
அவளாலே நான் ஆளானேன் என்று சொல்ல எனக்கு தடையேதும் இல்லை.
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இயல்பாகவே நான் வீட்டை விட்டு எங்கும் அதிகம் செல்லாதவன் ( அம்மா பொத்தி பொத்தி வளர்த்தார்கள்) திருமணத்திற்கு பிறகுதான் பொறுப்பானவனாக மாறினேன் மாற்றியவள் மனைவி.
எங்களுக்கு இதுவரை சுகங்களை காட்டிலும் சோதனைகளே அதிகம் அச்சோதனை காலங்களில் துணையாக தூணாக நின்று நான் சாய்ந்து விடாமல் தாங்கி கொண்டவள் அவள் . .
பெண்மைக்கே உரிய எல்லா குணங்களும் பெற்றவள், கோபம் என்ற குணம் மட்டும் கொஞ்சம் அதிகமாக அதே சமயத்தில் கோபத்தை உடனே மறந்துவிடுபவளாகவும் இருக்கிறாள். மனதளவில் கோபம் என்பது அவளுக்கு இருப்பதே இல்லை.
தன்னைப்போன்று அனைவரும் இருக்க வேண்டுமென்ற குணம் அவளை பலரிட்த்திலிருந்தும் விலக்கி இருக்கிறது. ஐந்து விரலும் ஒரே போல் இல்லை என்பதை இப்போது உணரத்துவங்கி இருக்கிறாள்.
எனக்கான சந்தோசம் அவளுடைய சந்தோசம் என்பதை உணர்ந்தவளாக என் வெற்றியில் எப்போதும் பங்கு கொள்பவளாக இருக்கும் அவளுக்கு என் நன்றி
பிஸியான ஒரு அலுவலகத்தில் வேலை இருந்த போதிலும் என்னவளின் மிஸ்டுகால்களே அதிகம் என்கின்றது என் கைபேசி . .
எட்டு வருடங்களுக்கு பிறகு இப்போதுதானே இரு வேறு இடங்களில் . ம் ம் இதுவும் புது அனுபவம்தான் . .
எனினும் உள்ளத்தில் இருந்து ஊக்குவிக்கும் உன்னை வாழ்த்துகிறேன் . .
இத்தினம் நீ பெருமை கொள்ள அல்ல உன்னால் நான் பெருமை கொள்ள . . 
பெண்ணே
பெண்மையே
உன்னை நேசிக்கிறேன்
உன்னை சுவாசிக்கிறேன்
உன்னை யாசிக்கிறேன்
நீ நானாக இருப்பதால் என்னையே நான்
வாசிக்கிறேன் . . . .
நான் உன்னை காதலிக்கிறேன் . .

மகளிர்தின ஸ்பெஷல்

மகளிர்தின ஸ்பெஷல் 


மகளிர்தின ஸ்பெஷல் -
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அம்மா என்ற பெண் எல்லார் வாழ்க்கையிலும் செய்து கூட்டும் தொண்டு அனைவரும் அறிந்த்தே. அம்மாவை தவிரவும் நம் வாழ்க்கையில் பல பெண்கள் தொடர்புடையவர்களாக இருக்கிறார்கள் . . அவர்களை பற்றி இங்கே
என் இரு தங்கைகள்
அண்ணன் தம்பி எனக்கில்லை என்ற போதிலும் தங்கைகள் இரண்டு பேர். பாசமும் நேசமும் எங்கள் மூவருக்கும் அதிகம், அண்ணனை பற்றி பேசியே தன் கணவரிடம் இன்றளவும் சண்டை பிடிக்கும் முதல் தங்கை பாசத்தில் என்னை விட மூத்தவள். இன்றளவும் அவருக்கு என்னை பிடிக்காமல் போனதற்கும் அவளின் பாசமே காரணம். நானும் சளைத்தவனல்ல . .
மூக்குத்தி போட்டுக்கொள்வது அதீத விருப்பமாக இருந்த காலத்தில் என் முதல் வருமானத்தில் என் தங்கைக்கு என தங்கத்தில் மூக்குத்தி வாங்கி போடச்சொன்னா, மூக்கு குத்தும் போது இரத்தம் வர எனக்கும் மூக்கு குத்த வந்தவருக்கு நடந்த சண்டை இன்னும் நினைவில் வருகிறது (இரத்தம் வருதுன்னா அந்த மூக்குத்தியே போட வேண்டாம்னு அத தூக்கி எறிந்த்து தனிக்கதை)
ஏறக்குறைய அவளது திருமணத்திற்கு பிறகு பல ஆண்டுகள் கடந்துவிட்ட நிலையில் இப்போதுதான் மனம் விட்டு இருவரும் பேசிக்கொள்கிறோம்.
அடுத்தவள், என் மேல் உனக்கு பாசமே இல்லை உனக்கு உன் தங்கையிடம்தான் பாசம் என்று மூத்த தங்கை குற்றம் சுமத்தும் அளவிற்கு இவளோடு எனக்கு பாசம் உண்டு, அவளுக்கும் அது போல்தான், எப்போதும் நாங்கள் இருவரும் சேர்ந்து கொண்டு முதல் தங்கையை கலாய்ச்சிகிட்டே இருப்போம். ம் ம் இப்பவும் அப்படித்தான்.
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என் தந்தையுடனே சண்டை போட்டிருக்கிறேன் அவளை கடிந்து கொண்டமைக்காக. ஓவர் செல்லம். அவள் கேட்ட்து அவளுக்கு கிடைத்துவிடும், அது என்னவோ தெரியல அவள் மீது மட்டும் அப்படி ஒரு பாசம், இப்போது திருமணம் முடிந்து நன்றாக இருக்கிறாள் எனினும் இன்னும் அவள் நன்றாக இருக்க வேண்டுமென நினைத்து கொண்டிருக்கிறேன்.
எதுவாக இருந்தாலும் மிக தைரியமாக என்னிடம் வாதம் செய்ய அவளால் முடியும் .
நான் பஹ்ரைனில் இருப்பதால் எல்லா ஞாயிற்றுகிழமைகளில் காண்ப்ரன்ஸ் முறையில் மூவரும் பேசிக்கொள்கிறோம் .
தங்கைகளின் பாசமும் அன்பும் மற்ற பெண்களை மதிக்கவும் நேசிக்கவும் கற்று கொடுத்த்து,
இப்படி இரு தங்கைகளை தந்த ஆண்டவனுக்கு நன்றி.
தங்கைகளுக்கு வாழ்த்தும் பாராட்டும் .

Like humans, chimpanzees have cops too

Eco News

Like humans, chimpanzees have cops too

Like humans, chimpanzees have cops too Washington: Seems like chimpanzees also understand that sound conflict management is crucial to ensure peace and order in their group.

This form of conflict management is called “policing” – the impartial intervention of a third party in a conflict.

Until now, this morally motivated behaviour in chimpanzees was only ever documented anecdotally.

However, primatologists from the University of Zurich can now confirm that chimpanzees intervene impartially in a conflict to guarantee the stability of their group.

They therefore exhibit prosocial behaviour based on an interest in community concern.

The willingness of the arbitrators to intervene impartially is greatest if several quarrelers are involved in a dispute as such conflicts particularly jeopardize group peace.

The researchers observed and compared the behaviour of four different captive chimpanzee groups.

At Walter Zoo in Gossau, they encountered special circumstances: “We were lucky enough to be able to observe a group of chimpanzees into which new females had recently been introduced and in which the ranking of the males was also being redefined. The stability of the group began to waver. This also occurs in the wild,” explained Claudia Rudolf von Rohr, the lead author of the study.

Not every chimpanzee makes a suitable arbitrator. It is primarily high-ranking males or females or animals that are highly respected in the group that intervene in a conflict.

Otherwise, the arbitrators are unable to end the conflict successfully. As with humans, there are also authorities among chimpanzees.

“The interest in community concern that is highly developed in us humans and forms the basis for our moral behaviour is deeply rooted. It can also be observed in our closest relatives,” concluded Rudolf von Rohr.

Fears of disruption as big solar storm strikes the Earth.

Fears of disruption as big solar storm strikes the Earth

Prof Cally from Monash University in Australia explains what will happen when the solar storm hits

Related Stories

The Earth is currently being battered by a storm of charged particles from the Sun, which could disrupt power grids, satellite navigation and plane routes.
The storm - the largest in five years - will bombard the Earth's magnetic field throughout Thursday.
It was triggered by a pair of solar flares - the largest of their kind - earlier this week.
As a result, the Northern Lights may be visible at lower latitudes.
The effects will be most intense in polar regions, and aircraft may be advised to change their routings to avoid these areas.
In the UK, the best chance to see them will be on Thursday night, the British Geological Survey says.

SOLAR STORMS

  • The sudden release of magnetic energy stored in the Sun's atmosphere can cause a bright flare
  • This can also release bursts of charged particles into space
  • These solar "eruptions" are known as coronal mass ejections, or CMEs
  • When headed in our direction, the charged gas collides with the magnetic "sheath" around Earth
  • The subsequent disturbances in the Earth's magnetic envelope are called solar storms
  • They can interfere with technology: satellites, electrical grids and communications systems
  • They can also cause aurorae - northern and southern lights - to be seen at lower latitudes
The Sun's activity rises and falls through an 11-year cycle, and has in recent months been seen to launch more of the solar flares that are causing the current storm.
The cycle is due to peak in 2013.
The flares have resulted in what is known as a coronal mass ejection, "the technical term for what is really just a big ball of gas travelling at 2,000 kilometres per second", according to Doug Biesiecker from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The incoming cloud of charged particles could affect satellites and will launch a geomagnetic storm in the Earth's protective magnetic field, Mr Beisiecker told the BBC.
"This magnetic field keeps harmful radiation out. Now, the geomagnetic storm isn't going to take that magnetic field away from the Earth, but... it's going to shake it.
"And if you shake a magnetic field you generate things like electric currents in the atmosphere and say, in the power grid that criss-crosses pretty much every country on the planet now."
1 - Solar flare and erruption. 2 - Billions of tonnes of superhot gas containig charged particles is released. 3 - Particles drawn to poles collide with atmosphere causing polar lights.
More benign storms have few effects, but the strongest have had signiifcant effects.
In 1972, a geomagnetic storm provoked by a solar flare knocked out long-distance telephone communication across the US state of Illinois.
And in 1989, another storm plunged six million people into darkness across the Canadian province of Quebec.
There are also concerns over the potential communication problems for aircraft and disruption to GPS signals caused by current solar activity.

Wednesday 7 March 2012

Google launches unified digital content store

Google launches unified digital content store

Published: Wednesday, Mar 7, 2012, 17:54 IST
Place: San Francisco | Agency: IANS

Google Tuesday introduced a new online store called Google Play, offering consumers a one-stop marketplace for music, movies, books, applications and other digital media content.
The Google Play store will create a unified digital entertainment destination that combines the company's Android Market app store, as well as other stores including Google Music and the Google eBookstore, reported Xinhua.
"Google Play is entirely cloud-based so all your music, movies, books and apps are stored online, always available to you, and you never have to worry about losing them or moving them again," Jamie Rosenberg, director of digital content at Google, wrote in a post on the company's official blog.
The new store is seen as Google's latest move to compete more directly with technology giants like Apple and Amazon in selling digital content.
With Google Play, a user can store up to 20,000 songs for free and buy millions of new tracks, said Rosenberg.
The marketplace will also offer over 450,000 Android apps and games, the world's largest selection of e-books and thousands of movies for users to download, browse or rent.
The launch of Google Play started on the web from Tuesday and the upgrading will be rolled out over the coming days on smartphones or tablets running Google's Android operating system.

New evidence that asteroid hit Earth 13,000 years ago

Israde et al. (2012)
Central Mexico’s Lake Cuitzeo contains melted rock formations and nanodiamonds that suggest a comet impacted Earth around 12,900 years ago, scientists say.
New evidence supports the idea that a huge space rock collided with our planet about 13,000 years ago and broke up in Earth's atmosphere, a new study suggests.
This impact would have been powerful enough to melt the ground, and could have killed off many large mammals and humans. It may even have set off a period of unusual cold called the Younger Dryas that began at that time, researchers say.
The idea that Earth experienced an asteroid or comet impact at the start of the Younger Dryas has been controversial, in part because there is no smoking-gun impact crater left behind as with other known events in our planet's past. But researchers say it's common for space rocks to disintegrate in the heat of a planet's atmosphere before they can reach the ground.
The scientists first reported their suspicions about the event in 2007. Now, they say, a new site in Central Mexico's Lake Cuitzeo displays telltale signs of an impact, including melted rock formations called spherules and microscopic diamonds that could only have formed under extreme temperatures.
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The researchers, led by Isabel Israde-Alcantara of Mexico's Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo, published their findings online March 5 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Buried evidence "If you don't have a crater, you're a little bit lost," said space scientist Ted Bunch of Northern Arizona University, a member of the research team. "Here what we have is something similar to an aerial bomb blast. With these aerial bursts, with time all the evidence is wiped away unless it's buried."
In addition to the Mexican site, the scientists have found signs of an impact in Canada, the United States, Russia, Syria and various sites in Europe. And all of these bits of evidence were found buried in a thin layer of rock that dates to precisely 12,900 years ago.
"If you have an event like this in a 1- or 2-inch layer that dates to exactly the same age over a very large area, and you have high-temperature materials and nanodiamonds in there, the evidence pretty well points to an event that (is) pretty disastrous," Bunch told Space.com.
This wouldn't have been the only aerial impact event ever to hit Earth. Scientists think a space rock exploded over Siberia in 1908, flattening 500,000 acres (2,000 square kilometers) of forest in what's known as the Tunguska event.
Israde et al. (2012)
This scanning electron microscope image shows a magnetic impact spherule likely to have been created by an asteroid or comet impact 12,900 years ago, researchers say.
Heat flash If a comet, which would have been traveling at about 30 miles per second, impacted Earth's atmosphere, it would have created a flash of extreme heat reaching about 3,000 to 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit (1,600 to 2,200 degrees Celsius).
In addition to melting the ground, such temperatures would have proven cataclysmic to many kinds of life.
At the same time that the impact may have taken place — 12,900 years ago — Earth was beginning an ice age. It is known that many large animals, such as the mammoth and the saber-toothed cat, did not survive this age. There's even evidence of a population decline in humans living in North America at the time, called the Clovis culture.
The researchers aren't claiming that the comet impact caused the climate changes at the time, but Bunch said such an event would have had a significant effect on Earth's climate.
"We're not going to come out and say it did do it, but it's more than a coincidence that the timing happened exactly the time that a lot of climatic conditions occurred and you had the loss of various species," Bunch said.
Still, the researchers predict some skeptics will remain unconvinced that Earth was hit by space rock during the Younger Dryas.
"There's always going to be theoretical and statistical people who would never believe it even if they were there," Bunch said. "I think what we're trying to do is open up a vista there for people to examine the data themselves and make their own conclusions.