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Saturday, July 09, 2011

Most Advanced Microscope of World

Canadian center for Electron Microscopy has developed a new powerful microscope that is world's most powerful microscope till date. According to Gianluigi Botton, Director of Canadian center for Electron Microscopy, says that the power of this microscope can be thought as equivalent to "taking Hubble Telescope and aiming it at atomic level"


Titan 80-300 Cubed

This powerful microscope named Titan 80-300 Cubed was installed at the University early in the summer, and since then it has been put through its paces to achieve unprecedented resolution.
This microscope is so powerful that it can easily identify atoms, measure their chemical state and even probe the electrons that bind them together.

According to vice-president of Mc Master, Mr. Elbestawi this microscope will make McMaster a hub for a fast growing field.

Really Impressive Microscope

A group of international scientists who visited McMaster were really impressed by the amazing capabilities of this microscope. This microscope can help scientist to discover new things in biological and physical sciencesDean of Engineering David Wilkinson sees the microscope through another lens.


Titan

Titan's ability can probe structure of solid materials to the atomic level and this will have an amazing impact on development and commercialization of new technologies from biomedical devices to water quality monitoring and improved energy storage systems.


Titan

Cost of Microscope

This microscope has been build in Netherlands by FEI Company with a cost of about $15 million. This microscope can help to examine everyday products with its Nano details that can improve the efficiency of these products.

What This Microscope Can Do?

This microscope can be used to produce more efficient lighting and better solar cells, to study proteins and drug-delivery materials to target cancers. It will assess atmospheric particulates, and help create lighter and stronger automotive materials, more effective cosmetics, and higher density memory storage for faster electronic and telecommunication devices.

Funding

Funding for the microscope instrumentation was provided by the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the Ontario Innovation Trust, the Ministry of Research and Innovation of Ontario and the Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Trade, through a partnership with FEI and McMaster University.

Chandrayaan - I: Proud for India

India's first mission to the Moon: Chandrayaan-1 , was successfully launched the morning of October 22 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SHAR) in Sriharikota, India.

The spacecraft was launched into the orbit of earth by PSLV-C11 which is an upgraded version of the Indian Space Research Organization's (ISRO's) Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle. The launch took place at 02:52 Central European Summer Time.

With this launch Chandrayaan-1 started its journey to the Moon, which will culminate with a major manoeuvre - the lunar orbit insertion - in about two weeks. Once the spacecraft is orbiting the Moon, further manoeuvres will progressively lower its altitude to the final 100 km-high circular orbit.

Mission of Chandrayaan-1

This spacecraft will eject the 'Moon Impact Probe' to provide information about the lunar surface. After that mission will be continued from orbit. The spacecraft is equipped with 11 scientific instruments for lunar surface study. Three of these 11 instruments were provided by Europe (UK, Germany, Sweden) through ESA.

The European instruments are:

The Chandrayaan-1 Imaging X-Ray Spectrometer (C1XS) for measuring abundance of magnesium, aluminium, silicon, iron and titanium over the surface of the Moon.

The Smart Near-Infrared Spectrometer (SIR-2) to explore the mineral resources of the Moon, the formation of its surface features and the different layers of the Moon's crust.

The Sub-kiloelectronvolt Atom Reflecting Analyser (SARA) to study the way the Moon's surface interacts with the solar wind, and the surface's magnetic anomalies.


Chandrayaan

Collaboration of India and Europe

Indo-European collaboration on space ventures is 30 years old when ESA and ISRO signed a cooperation agreement in 1978. In 1981, an Ariane 1 launcher carried India's first geostationary satellite, Apple. So far, 13 of India's INSAT satellites have flown on Europe's Arianes.

Now with Chandrayaan-1 which is ISRO's first mission beyond Earth orbit, marks the beginning of a new era of collaboration between ESA and ISRO in space science.

According to Prof. David Southwood, ESA Director of Science and Robotic Exploration: "In an era of renewed interest for the Moon on a world-wide scale, the ESA-ISRO collaboration on Chandrayaan-1 is a new opportunity for Europe to expand its competence in lunar science while tightening the long-standing relationship with India - an ever stronger space power".

This mission is a big success not only for ISRO but for whole India. This mission is a milestone in India's space missions and now India is among those very few countries that have launched lunar missions in past.

Lunar Lenders becomes more Intelligent

Advanced Lunar Lenders now will be able to automatically identify and navigate to a safe landing location, while detecting hazards in landing during final descent to surface. NASA is developing an advanced technology for lunar lenders that made them capable to land safely near resources located in potentially hazardous area.

Critical Sensor Technology

NASA's Langely Research Center has developed two critical sensor technologies. One is a three-dimensional active imaging device that measures topography of a landing area. The second device measures speed to help land precisely at the chosen site.

Langely Research Center has designed two special purpose light detection and ranging sensors to make these two devices. In addition to this Jet Propulsion Laboratory of NASA is developing certain algorithms to analyze the terrain based upon these lidar measurements.

These technologies have been integrated as part of Autonomous Landing and Hazard Avoidance Technology (ALHAT) project of NASA. These technologies are in the phase of demonstration and testing in a series of flight tests.

Bob Reisse

Bob Reisse is leading the team at Langley Research Center which is designing the lidar sensors and supporting the demonstration flight tests.

They have conducted two demonstration flights and Reisse says, "We were pleased that the two flight tests we've conducted so far have resulted in better than expected performance of these sensors."
Two Phases Of Demonstration Flights
First test that was carried out in May, was to The main objective of the first test, carried out in May, was to demonstrate the application of 3-D imaging technology or 'flash' lidar, for topography mapping and precision navigation.

Second demonstration in August was to of flight tests, completed in August, was to evaluate the capabilities of an emerging lidar technology developed at Langley. This lidar provides vehicle velocity vector, altitude and attitude with a very high degree of precision.


Lunar Lenders

Demonstration Test Procedures

In the recent demonstration test the velocimeter was carried aloft at Dryden Flight Research Center of NASA via helicopter which flew a total of six flights at various altitudes between targeted reference points.

During the demonstration tests, the helicopter flew over two target areas three miles (5 km) apart on the surface of Rogers Dry Lake. Repeated back-and-forth tracks were flown at altitudes incrementally increasing from about 300 feet to 6,200 feet (91m to 1,890m) above the lake bed while the lidar measured the relative speed, altitude, and attitude of the helicopter. Plywood circles placed on the lakebed served as reference targets for determining the ground "truth" measurements. The data was recorded on board and tagged with time and altitude information to allow post-flight processing.

Lidar Technology

Lidar Technology is much more advanced than today's systems for planetary navigating tasks. Preliminary tests shows that this technology is about 10 times more powerful than conventional radar-based sensors that were used in Phoenix Mars Lenders, in accuracy of velocity readings and rate of updates.

This precision range and directional velocity data are critical in navigating lunar landing vehicles to the pre-selected site and achieving autonomous, safe soft-landing.

Future of Lunar Lenders

This new technology has a potential for or aiding crew exploration vehicle rendezvous and docking, and Earth reentry landing systems. This can highly impact the design of future lunar and other planetary landing missions.

Magnetic Field in a Distant Galaxy

A team of astronomers in California have detected magnetic field of a galaxy in far universe. These astronomers are studying the early universe by a powerful radio telescope. This measurement of magnetic field is as it was 6.5 billion years ago.

Prior Believes

Astronomers believe that magnetic fields within our own Milky Way and other galaxies near milky way, control the rate of star formation and the dynamics of interstellar gas. This magnetic field arose from a slow Dynamo Effect. This magnetic field in these galaxies grew very gradually as they evolved over 5 billion to 10 billion years to their current levels.

But now astronomers have reported that the magnetic field that they have measured in a distant Protogalaxy is at least 10 times greater than average value of Milky Way. This report has been published in October issue of Nature.

According to Arthur Wolfe (Professor of Physics at UC San Diego's Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences and head of the team), this research is a Complete Surprise. The magnetic field measured is at least an order of magnitude larger than the average value of the magnetic field detected in our own galaxy.

Powerful Radio Telescope and Useful Results

Astronomers used world's largest fully steerable radio telescope for their study known as Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope located in Green Bank, West Virginia. This grand telescope is operated by National Radio Astronomy Observatory of National Science Foundation.

They studied DLA-3C286 protogalaxy located in a region of northern sky.
Magnetic Field outside our galaxy is very less know formerly. Prior to this study astronomers have measured magnetic field of only one nearby galaxy but that field was very weak.

A team of Swiss and American astronomers in July 17 issue of Nature magazine reported that they have found that magnetic field of about 20 distant galaxies were as when the universe was only a third of its current age as they are in the mature galaxies today. This study was done by using bright light from quasars.

Wolfe said those indirect measurements and his team's latest direct measurement of a distant galaxy's magnetic field "do not necessarily cast doubt on the leading theory of magnetic field generation, the mean-field-dynamo model, which predicts that the magnetic field strengths should be much weaker in galaxies in the cosmological past."

Challenge to Dynamo Model

These results have put a challenge before Dynamo Model.

According to Arthur Wolfe "Rather the strong field that we detect is in gas with little if no star formation, and an interesting implication is that the presence of the magnetic fields is an important reason why star formation is very weak in these types of protogalaxies."

Other Plausible Explanations

According to Wolfe their team has two other plausible explanations for their observations.

1) It may be possible that they are seeing a field toward the central regions of a massive galaxy, since magnetic fields are known to be larger towards the centers of nearby galaxies.

2) It is also possible that the field they have detected has been amplified by a shock wave generated by the collision between two galaxies.

But in either case it has been proved that magnetic fields may be important factors in the evolution of galaxies or we can also say that it is responsible for the low star formation rates detected throughout the gaseous progenitors of young galaxies in the early universe.

The Next Challenge

The next challenge in words of J. Xavier Prochaska, a team member and professor of astronomy at US Santa Cruz, is to observe galaxies throughout the universe.

Major Contributions in Research

Other team members included Regina Jorgenson (UCSD graduate student in physics); Carl Heiles (professor of astronomy at UC Berkeley); Timothy Robishaw (graduate student at Berkeley). This research was funded by National Science Foundation.

Water founded on Mars

Phoenix Mars Lander of NASA has recently detected snow fall from Martian Clouds. Soil experiment by this spacecraft has detected interaction between minerals on Mars Surface and liquid water. This new discovery has again raised questions on the presence of water on Mars.

Discovery By Phoenix

This discovery was possible through a large instrument place on Phoenix, which gathers knowledge about the interaction between atmosphere and surface on Mars. This instrument detected that there is snow from clouds at about 4 Kilometers (2.5 miles) above the landing site of Phoenix. However data collected, shows that the snow vaporizing before reaching the surface.

According to Jim Whiteway (Professor of New York University and Lead scientist for the Canadian-supplied Meteorological Station on Phoenix), "It I the first time that such scene is viewed on Mars". Now the scientist are looking for the possibility that snow even reaches to Mars surface.

Other Major Discoveries

Experiment by Phoenix also yielded some other results, like Clues of Calcium Carbonate on Mars surface. Calcium Carbonate is a main composition of Chalk and most important thing is that formation of Calcium Carbonate is possible in the presence of liquid water only.
Peter Smith (Phoenix Principal Investigator of the University of Arizona, Tucson.) says, ""We are still collecting data and have lots of analysis ahead, but we are making good progress on the big questions we set out for ourselves."

Key Aim of Phoenix Mission

The main aim of mission is to find the possibilities of favorable environment on Mars for survival of life. Phoenix landed on Mars surface on May 25, and it has already confirmed that there is a hard subsurface layer at its far northern site which contains water-ice.

Evidence of calcium carbonate in soil samples from trenches dug by the Phoenix robotic arm comes from two laboratory instruments called the Thermal and Evolved Gas Analyzer, or TEGA, and the wet chemistry laboratory of the Microscopy, Electrochemistry and Conductivity Analyzer, or MECA.

This discovery is a next step in confirming presence of water on Mars surface.


Phoenix Mars Lender

Experiments by TEGA and MECA

Evidence of calcium carbonate in soil samples from mars has been found out by the high temperature carbon di-oxide release while experimenting from TEGA. This temperature at which carbon dioxide releases matches the temperature known to decompose calcium carbonate and release carbon dioxide.


TEGA

The MECA evidence came from a buffering effect characteristic of calcium carbonate assessed in wet chemistry analysis of the soil. The measured concentration of calcium was exactly what would be expected for a solution buffered by calcium carbonate.


MECA

Mission Phoenix Extended

Originally Mission Phoenix was planned for three months duration, but its timeline has been extended and it is in its fifth month right now. But now it is facing decline in solar energy and it is expected that it will stop working before the end of 2008. Now the Phoenix team I trying to activate microphone on lander before power ceases.

Mission Lead and Responsibilities

The Phoenix mission is led by Peter Smith at the University of Arizona. Project management is handled by JPL with development partnership by Lockheed Martin in Denver. It is also getting international contributions Canadian Space Agency; University of Neuchatel, Switzerland;; Universities of Copenhagen and Aarhus, Denmark; Max Planck Institute, Germany; and Finnish Meteorological Institute, Finland.

Amazing research on Learning of Human Beings

According to a recent research it has been proved that Eight-year-old children have a different learning strategy from twelve-year-olds and adults. While Eight-year-olds learn primarily from positive feedback such as 'Well done!', negative feedback 'Got it wrong this time' hardly effects their learning. Opposite to that Twelve-year-olds are better able to process negative feedback, and can use it to learn from their mistakes. Adults have the same ability but they do it more efficiently.

Cognitive Control in Brain

According to Dr. Eveline Crone, psychologist in Leiden Brain and Cognition Lab "Eight-year-olds respond disproportionately inaccurately to negative feedback. Dr. Crone and her colleagues performed a research named fMRI Research which shows that this difference can be observed particularly in the areas of the brain responsible for cognitive control, located in the Cerebral Cortex.

According to this research it has been demonstrated that, In children of eight and nine, these areas of the brain react strongly to positive feedback and scarcely respond at all to negative feedback. While in children of 12 and 13, and in adults, the opposite is the case. The 'Control Centers' in their brain are more strongly activated by negative feedback and much less by positive feedback.

Unique Three-Way Division

Generally in these types of experiments the comparison is generally made between children and adults. But in this experiment Dr. Crone and her colleagues made three different age groups: Children of 8 to 9 years | Children of 11 to 12 years and adults aged between 18 and 25 years. This three-way division had been made first time in such experiments.

Unexpected Results

Dr. Crone and their team were surprised at the results. According to Dr. Crone 'We had expected that the brains of eight-year-olds would function in exactly the same way as the brains of twelve-year-olds, but maybe not quite so well. Children learn the whole time, so this new knowledge can have major consequences for people wanting to teach children: how can you best relay instructions to eight- and twelve-year-olds?' '

Experiment

In the experiment, the children of both age groups and adults aged 18 to 25 were engaged in a computer task while they lay in the MRI scanner. The task was about to discover rules. If they did this correctly, a tick appeared on the screen, otherwise a cross appeared. During this test MRI scans captured records of which parts of the brain were activated.

Learning From Mistakes Is Difficult

After this experiment Dr. Crone was able to compare the fMRI results with the existing knowledge about child development. It has been known that "Young children respond better to reward than to punishment." Therefore It is sure that, Learning from mistakes is more complex and difficult than carrying on in the same way as before.

Still Some Unanswered Questions

While this experiment is very significant regarding the development of children, there are some unanswered questions till now. Such as "This difference between eight- and twelve-year-olds the result of experience, or does it have to do with the way the brain develops? Some researchers say it a combination of the brain maturing and experience. May be some time in future this questions will be solved by any such research.

Robot adapted to Surrounding

Robotic Engineers at MIT Humanoid Robotics Group have developed a robot which is capable of adapting to situations so that it can assist people with everyday chores, everyday life and everyday work.

This next generation robot is named as DOMO. Engineers have placed cameras inside robot's eyes which enables it to see and adapt to his surroundings. There are about 29 motors, equipped with computer chips run off a dozen computers that continuously update information.

MOTIVATION BEHIND DOMO

According to Aaron Edsinger, Engineer at MIT Humanoid Robotics Group, the main motivation behind developing DOMO is to develop a system that can assist people with everyday chores, everyday life, everyday work.

Robotic Engineers at MIT Humanoid Robotics Group have developed a robot which is capable of adapting to situations so that it can assist people with everyday chores, everyday life and everyday work.

DOMO can visually sense the surrounding conditions and adapt its functioning according to situations. For example, "it can learn about the size of an object and decide how to place it on a shelf."

HOW IT IS DIFFERENT

Although there are many humanoid robots that are being developed around the world, DOMO is different as it can take the lead and adapt to a situation. Suppose "If the robot drops something in the middle of doing a task, it can stop and try and pick it up again and start over."

This amazing quality makes it more helpful for human assistance.

HOW DOMO WORKS

1) Domo can see everything with the help of its large blue eyes that are equipped with powerful cameras that scan the entire surrounding.

2) These cameras then feed visual information to 12 computers that are used to analyze the input and decide the focusing point. This is a very important step, because for a robot to function in a real-world human environment, such as a kitchen, it must be able to ignore clutter and focus only on certain stimuli.

3) The visual system of DOMO is attuned to unexpected motion. For instance, locating human faces is critical for social interaction and people are often in motion.

4) When DOMO spots a motion that looks like a face, it locks its gaze onto it. Once Domo's gaze is captured, the human can issue verbal commands such as "to find a shelf".

5) The robot will scan the room for a shelf and then reach out a hand to touch the object to make sure it is really there.

6) If an object is then placed in its hand -- such as a bag of coffee beans -- the robot will reach up and place the object on the shelf.

adapting to situations so that it can assist people with everyday chores, everyday life and everyday work.

This next generation robot is named as DOMO. Engineers have placed cameras inside robot's eyes which enables it to see and adapt to his surroundings. There are about 29 motors, equipped with computer chips run off a dozen computers that continuously update information.

MOTIVATION BEHIND DOMO

According to Aaron Edsinger, Engineer at MIT Humanoid Robotics Group, the main motivation behind developing DOMO is to develop a system that can assist people with everyday chores, everyday life, everyday work.

Robotic Engineers at MIT Humanoid Robotics Group have developed a robot which is capable of adapting to situations so that it can assist people with everyday chores, everyday life and everyday work.

IT CAN ALSO FEEL WEIGHT

DOMO can also observe the size and weight of any object that is placed in its hand. For this, DOMO wiggles it a little. This movement is very minor but is very important for the robot's ability, which helps it to accurately place it on the shelf. DOMO is programmed such that it can learn about the size of an object by focusing on its tip, such as the cap of a water bottle. When the robot wiggles the tip back and forth, it can figure out how big the bottle is and can decide how to transfer it from hand to hand, or to place it on a shelf.

Domo can also sense when a human is touching it, thanks to springs in its arms, hands and neck that can sense force and response to it. If too much force is applied, the robot will voice its displeasure by saying..... "ouch!"

NEXI - Robot with facial expressions

A latest invention by MIT Media Lab is a new robot that is able to show various facial expressions such as 'slanting its eyebrows in anger', or 'raise them in surprise', and show a wide assortment of facial expressions while communicating with people.

This latest achievement in the field of Robotics is named NEXI as it is framed as the next generation robots which is aimed for a range of applications for personal robots and human-robot teamwork.

DESIGNING

The head and face of NEXI were designed by Xitome Design which is a innovative designing and development company that specializes in robotic design and development. The expressive robotics started with a neck mechanism sporting 4 degrees of freedom (DoF) at the base, plus pan-tilt-yaw of the head itself. The mechanism has been constructed to time the movements so they mimic human speed. The face of NEXI has been specially designed to use gaze, eyebrows, eyelids and an articulate mandible which helps in expressing a wide range of different emotions.

The chassis of NEXI is also advanced. It has been developed by the Laboratory for Perceptual Robotics UMASS (University of Massachusetts), Amherst. This chassis is based on the uBot5 mobile manipulator. The mobile base can balance dynamically on two wheels. The arms of NEXI can pick up a weight of up to 10 pounds and the plastic covering of the chassis can detect any kind of human touch.

CYNTHIA BREAZEAL: HEAD OF THE PROJECT


This project was headed by Media Lab's Cynthia Breazeal, a well known robotics expert famous for earlier expressive robots such as Kismet. She is an Associate Professor of Media Arts and Sciences at the MIT. She named her new product as an MDS (mobile, dextrous, social) robot.


FEATURES OF NEXI

Except a wide range of facial expressions, Nexi has many other features. It has self-balancing wheels like the Segway transporter, to ultimately ride on. Currently it uses an additional set of supportive wheels to operate as a statically stable platform in its early stage of development. It has hands which can be used to manipulate objects, eyes (video cameras), ears (an array of microphones), and a 3-D infrared camera and laser rangefinder which support real-time tracking of objects, people and voices as well as indoor navigation.
Black Hole Mystery Solved

4G Technology

Fourth Generation (4G) mobiles

4G also called as Fourth-Generation Communications System, is a term used to describe the next step in wireless communications. A 4G system can provide a comprehensive IP solution where voice, data and streamed multimedia can be provided to users on an "Anytime, Anywhere" basis. The data transfer rates are also much higher than previous generations.

The main objectives of 4G are:

1)4G will be a fully IP-based integrated system.

2)This will be capable of providing 100 Mbit/s and 1 Gbit/s speeds both indoors and outdoors.

3)It can provide premium quality and high security.

4)4G offer all types of services at an affordable cost.

4G is developed to provide high quality of service (QoS) and rate requirements set by forthcoming applications such as wireless broadband access, Multimedia Messaging, Video Chat, Mobile TV, High definition TV content, DVB, minimal service like voice and data, and other streaming services.

4G technology allow high-quality smooth video transmission. It will enable fast downloading of full-length songs or music pieces in real time.

The business and popularity of 4Gmobiles is predicted to be very vast. On an average, by 2009, this 4Gmobile market will be over $400B and it will dominate the wireless communications, and its converged system will replace most conventional wireless infrastructure.

Data Rates For 4G:

The downloading speed for mobile Internet connections is from 9.6 kbit/s for 2G cellular at present. However, in actual use the data rates are usually slower, especially in crowded areas, or when there is congestion in network.

4G mobile data transmission rates are planned to be up to 20 megabits per second which means that it will be about 10-20 times faster than standard ASDL services.

In terms of connection seeds, 4G will be about 200 times faster than present 2G mobile data rates, and about 10 times faster than 3G broadband mobile. 3G data rates are currently 2Mbit/sec, which is very fast compared to 2G's 9.6Kbit/sec.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

LUNAR SOLAR POWER

ABSTRACT
Out of all the renewable and non-polluting sources solar power become the most the primary source of commercial power for every one in the world to achieve the same high standard of living. Over the past 200 years the developed nations have vastly increased their creation of per capita income compared to the other nations. In parallel, the developed nations increased the use of commercial thermal power to ~6.9Kwt/person. In fact, most people in the developing nations use much less commercial thermal power and most have little (or) no access to electric power. By the year 2050, people will require at least 20,000 GWe of power. This requires approximately 60,000 GWt of conventional thermal power generation. Such enormous thermal energy consumption will exhaust economical
recoverable deposits of coal, shale, oil, natural gas, uranium and thorium. As a result, of conventional systems become useless. Terrestrial renewable systems are always captive to global climate change induced by volcanoes, natural variation in regional climate, industrial haze and

possibly even microclimates induced by large area collectors. Over the 21-st century, a global stand -alone system for renewable power would cost thousand of trillions of dollars to build and maintain. Energy costs could consume most of the world's wealth. We need a power system that is independent of earth's biosphere and provides an abundant energy at low cost. To do this man -kind must collect dependable solar power in space and reliably send it to receivers on earth. The MOON is the KEY.
Present and Future Power Scenario
In 1975 Goeller and Weinberg published a fundamental paper on the relation of commercial power to economic prosperity. They estimated that an advanced economy could provide the full range of Goods and services to its population with 6kWt/person. As technology advances, the goods and services could be provided by ~2 kWe/person of electric power. There will be approximately 10 billion people in 2050.They must be supplied with ~6 kWt/person or ~2 kWe/person in order to achieve energy and economic prosperity.
Present world capacity for commercial power must increase by a factor of ~5 by 2050 to 60 kWt or ~20 TWe (T=1012). Output must be maintained indefinitely. Conventional power systems are too expensive for the Developing Nations. Six kilowatts of thermal power now costs ~1,400 $/Y-person. This is ~50% of the average per capita income within the Developing Nations. Other major factors include the limited availability of fossil and nuclear fuels (4,000,000 GWt-Y) and the relatively low economic output from thermal energy (~ 0.25 $/kWt-h). Humans must transition to solar energy during first part of the 21st Century to extend the newly emerging world prosperity. However, solar and wind are intermittent and diffuse. Their energy output is too expensive to collect, store, and dependably distribute.
Lunar Solar Power Generation
Two general concepts have been proposed for delivering solar power to Earth from space. In one, Peter Glaser of Arthur D. Little, Inc. (Cambridge, MA), proposed in 1968 that a huge satellite in geosynchronous orbit around Earth could dependably gather solar power in space. In the second concept figure (1), discussed here, solar power would be collected on the moon. In both ideas, many different beams of 12cm wavelength microwaves would deliver power to receivers at sites located worldwide. Each receiver would supply commercial power to a given region. Such a receiver, called a rectenna, would consist of a large field of small rectifying antennas. A beam with a maximum intensity of less than 20% of noontime sunlight would deliver about 200 W to its local electric grid for every square meter of rectenna area.
Unlike sunlight, microwaves pass through rain, clouds, dust, and smoke. In both scenarios, power can be supplied to the rectenna at night Several thousand individual rectennas strategically located around the globe, with a total area of 100,000 km2, could continuously provide the 20 TW of electric power, or 2 kW per person, required for a prosperous world of 10 billion people in 2050. This surface area is 5% of the surface area that would be needed on Earth to generate 20 TW using the most advanced terrestrial solar-array technology of similar average capacity now envisioned. Rectennas are projected to cost approximately $0.004/kWeoh, which is less than one-tenth of the current cost of most commercial electric energy. This new electric power would be provided without any significant use of Earth's resources several types of solar power satellites have been proposed. They are projected, over 30 years, to deliver approximately 10,000 kWoh of electric energy to Earth for each kilogram of mass in orbit around theplanet.
To sell electric energy at $0.01/ kWoh, less than $60 could be expended per kilogram to buy the components of the power satellites, ship them into space, assemble and maintain them, decommission the satellites, and finance all aspects of the space operations. To achieve this margin, launch and fabrication costs would have to be lowered by a factor of 10,000. Power prosperity would require a fleet of approximately 6,000 huge, solar-power satellites. The fleet would have more than 330,000 km2 of solar arrays on-orbit and a mass exceeding 300 million tones. By comparison, the satellite payloads and rocket bodies now in Earth geosynchronous orbit have a collective surface area of about 0.1 km2. The mass launch rate for a fleet of power satellites would have to be 40,000 times that achieved during the Apollo era by both the United States and the Soviet Union. A many decade development program would be required before commercial development could be considered.
Lunar Solar Collectors
Fortunately, in the Lunar Solar Power (LSP) System, an appropriate, natural satellite is available for commercial development. The surface of Earth's moon receives 13,000 TW of absolutely predictable solar power. The LSP System uses 10 to 20 pairs of bases-one of each pair on the eastern edge and the other on the western edge of the moon, as seen from Earth-to collect on the order of 1% of the solar power reaching the lunar surface. The collected sunlight is converted to many low intensity beams of microwaves and directed to rectennas on Earth. Each rectenna converts the microwave power to electricity that is fed into the local electric grid. The system could easily deliver the 20 TW or more of electric power required by 10 billion people. Adequate knowledge of the moon and practical technologies has been available since the late 1970s to collect this power and beam it to Earth. Successful Earth-moon power beams are already in use by the Arecibo planetary radar, operating from Puerto Rico. This radio telescope periodically images the moon for mapping and other scientific studies with a radar beam whose intensity in Earth's atmosphere is 10% of the maximum proposed for the LSP System. Each lunar power base would be augmented by fields of solar converters located on the back side of the moon, 500 to 1,000 km beyond each visible edge and connected to the earthward power bases by electric transmission lines.
The moon receives sunlight continuously except during a full lunar eclipse, which occurs approximately once a year and lasts for less than three hours. Energy stored on Earth as hydrogen, synthetic gas, dammed water, and other forms could be released during a short eclipse. Each lunar power base consists of tens of thousands ofpower plots figure (2) distributed in an elliptical area to form fully segmented, phased-array radar that is solar-powered. Each demonstration power plot consists of four major subsystems. Solar cells collect sunlight, and buried electrical wires carry the solar energy as electric power to microwave generators.
These devices convert the solar electricity to microwaves of the correct phase and amplitude and then send the microwaves to screens that reflect microwave beams toward Earth. Rectennas located on Earth between 60º N and 60º S can receive power directly from the moon approximately 8 hours a day. Power could be received anywhere on Earth via a fleet of relay satellites in high inclination, eccentric orbits around Earth figure (1). A given relay satellite receives a power beam from the moon and retransmits multiple beams to several rectennas on Earth required by an alternative operation. This enables the region around each rectenna to receive power 24 hours a day. The relay satellites would require less than 1% of the surface area needed by a fleet of solar-power satellites in orbit around Earth. Synthetic-aperture radars, such as those flown on the Space Shuttle, have demonstrated the feasibility of multibeam transmission of pulsed power directed to Earth from orbit. Relay satellites may reflect the beam or may receive the beam, convert it in frequency and phasing and then, transmit a new beam to the rectenna. A retransmitter satellite may generate several beam and simultaneously service several rectennas. The orbital reflector and retransmitter satellites minimize the need on earth for long distance power lines. Relay satellites also minimize the area and mass of power handling equipments in orbit around earth. There by reducing the hazards of orbital debris to space vehicles and satellites.
Fabrication of Thin Film Crystalline Silicon Solar Cells
The silicon film is a proprietary process, and only a very general process is designed. The generic process consists of ceramic formation, metallurgical barrier formation, polycrystalline layer deposition, emitter diffusion and contact fabrication. The conductive ceramic substrate is fabricated from selected low-cost materials. The metallurgical barrier prevents the substrate impurities from entering and contaminating the active thin silicon layer. The randomly textured andhighly reflecting metallurgical barrier improves light trapping. A suitable p- type doped 30 - 100micro-cm active layer is deposited from a liquid solution. Phosphorus and aluminium impurity gathering are used for bulk quality improvement. Cells with large areas of 240, 300 and 700 cm2 are developed. A cell with an area of 675 cm2 has demonstrated the record efficiency of 11.6 -17.7%. The waste products present in the lunar surface are silicon, iron, TiO2, etc. These products can be used as raw materials for solar cell fabrication. A special compound called anorthite is used for extracting the above said components. Carbothermal reduction of anorthite,

Carbon compounds can also be used to extract Oxygen, Fe, and TiO2 from Lunar Ilemenite. The iron is used for interconnect and TiO2 for anti reflect.






Microwave
For direct microwave wireless power transmission to the surface of the earth, a limited range of transmission frequencies is suitable. Frequencies above 6 GHz are subject to atmospheric attenuation and absorption, while frequencies below 2 GHz require excessively large apertures for transmission and reception. Efficient transmission requires the beam have a Gaussian power density. Transmission efficiency çb for Gaussian beams is related to the aperture sizes of the transmitting and receiving antennas: çb ~ 1- exp (-ô2) and ô = ðDtDr/ (4ëR) Where Dt is the transmitting array diameter, Dr is the receiving array diameter, çb .is the wavelength of transmission and R is the range of transmission. Frequencies other than 2.45 GHz, particularly 5.8 GHz and 35 GHz are being given greater attention as candidates for microwave wireless power transmission in studies and experiments. The mass and size of components and systems for the higher frequencies are attractive. However, the component efficiencies are less than for 2.45 GHz, and atmospheric attenuation, particularly with rain, is greater.
Cost Forecasting
To achieve low unit cost of energy, the lunar portions of the LSP System are made primarily of lunar derived components. Factories, fixed and mobile, are transported from the Earth to the Moon. High output greatly reduces the impact of high transportation costs from the Earth to the Moon. On the Moon the factories produce 100s to 1,000s of times their own mass in LSP components. Construction and operation of the rectennas on Earth constitutes greater than 90% of the engineering costs. Any handful of lunar dust and rocks contains at least 20% silicon, 40% oxygen, and 10% metals (iron, aluminum, etc.). Lunar dust can be used directly as thermal, electrical, and radiation shields, converted into glass, fiberglass, and ceramics, and processed chemically into its elements. Solar cells, electric wiring, some micro-circuitry components, and the reflector screens can be made out of lunar materials. Soil handling and glass production are the primary industrial operations. Selected micro circuitry can be supplied from Earth. Use of the Moon as a source of construction materials and as the platform on which to gather solar energy eliminates the need to build extremely large platforms in space. LSP components can be manufactured directly from the lunar materials and then immediately placed on site. This eliminates most of the packaging, transport, and reassembly of components delivered from Earth or the Moon to deep space. There is no need for a large manufacturing facility in deep space. The LSP System is the only likely means to provide 20 TWe of affordable electric power to Earth by 2050. According to criswell in the year 1996 lunar solar power reference design for 20,000GWe Its also noted that the total mass investment for electricity from lunar solar energy is less than for Terrestrial solar energy systems.
Terrestrial Thermal power system - 310,000tones/GWe.

Terrestrial photo voltaic -430,000tones/GWe.
Lunar solar power - 52,000 tones / GWe.
Merits of LSP
In technical and other aspects there are two reasons for which we prefer LSP are:Unlike earth, the, moon is the ideal environment for large area solar converters.
The solar flux to the lunar surface is predictable and dependable.
>> There is no air or water to degrade large area thin film devices.
>> Solar collectors can be made that are unaffected by decades of exposure to solar cosmic rays and the solar wind.
>> Sensitive circuitry and wiring can be buried under a few- tens of centimeters of lunar soil, and completely protected against solar radiations
temperature extremes. Secondly, virtually all the LSP components can be made from local lunar materials.
>> The high cost of transportation to and from the moon is cancelled out by sending machines and small factors to the moon that produce hundreds to several thousand times there own mass in components and supplies.
>> Lunar materials will be used to reduce the cost of transportation between the earth and the moon and provide supplies.


Additional Features of LSP
The design and demonstration of robots to assemble the LSP components and construct the power plots can be done in parallel. The crystalline silicon solar cells can be used in the design of robots, which will further decrease the installation cost.
Economical Advantages of LSP and Crystalline Silicon Solar Cell
>> Crystalline silicon solar cells almost completely dominate world - wide solar cell production.
>> Excellent stability and reliability plus continuous development in cell structure and processing make it very likely that
crystalline silicon cells will remain in this position for the next ten years.
>> Laboratory solar cells, processed by means of sophisticated micro - electronic techniques using high quality Fe-Si substrate have approached energy conversionefficienciesof24%
1) Solar converter.
2). Microwave generator.
3). Microwave reflector.
4). Mobile factory.
5). Assembly units.
6). Habitat / Manufacturing units.
Conclusion
A global stand -alone system for renewable power would cost thousand of trillions of dollars to build and maintain. Energy costs could consume most of the world's wealth. We need a power system that is independent of earth's biosphere and provides an abundant energy at low cost. To do this man -kind must collect dependable solar power in space and reliably send it to receivers on earth. The MOON is the KEY.

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

ஊரடங்கும் சாமத்துல

ஊரடங்கும் சாமத்துல நான்

ஒருத்தி மட்டும் விழிச்சிருந்தேன்

ஊர் கோடி ஓரத்தில உன் நினைப்புல படுத்திருந்தேன்

காத்தடிச்சு சல சலக்கும்

சோலை எல்லாம் உன் சிரிப்பு

புரண்டு படுத்தாலும் பாவி மகன் உன் நினைப்பு .. பாவி மகன் உன் நினைப்பு ..

வெள்ளியில தீப்பெட்டியாம் மச்சானுக்கு

விதவிதமா பீடி கட்டாம் .. வாங்கி தர ஆச வெச்சேன்

காச சுள்ளி வித்து சேத்து வச்சேன் ..

சம்முகனார் கோயிலுக்கு சூடம் கொளுத்தி வச்சேன்

போறவங்க வாரவங்க பேச்சை எல்லாம் கேட்டு வச்சேன் நான் பேச்சை எல்லாம் கேட்டு வச்சேன்

ஒரு பாக்கு போட்டாலே உள் நாக்கு சிவந்திடுமே ..

ஒரு பாக்கு போட்டாலே உள் நாக்கு சிவந்திடுமே

உன் மேல ஏக்கம் வந்து என் தூக்கம் எல்லாம் போச்சு மச்சான்

உன் மேல ஏக்கம் வந்து என் தூக்கம் எல்லாம் போச்சு மச்சான்

கழனி காட்டுக்குள்ள களை எடுத்து நிக்கையில

கழனி காட்டுக்குள்ள களை எடுத்து நிக்கையில

உன் சொத்த பல்ல போல ஒரு சோழிய நான் கண்டெடுத்தேன் (௨)

கண்டெடுத்த சோழி கண்டு கலங்கி நிக்கையில ..

களைஎடுப்பு பின்னுதுன்னு பண்ணையாரு எசினாரே

சும்மா கிடக்கும் போதே துள்ளுகிற சாதிக்காரன்

சங்கமா சேந்திருக்கான் .. வம்பு பண்ண காத்திருக்கான்

என்ன செய்ய போறனோ .. எது செய்ய போறனோ

நம் கதிய நினச்சு மச்சான் என் மனசு பதை பதைக்க

சதி சொல்லி பிரிச்சாலும் யாரு வந்து தடுத்தாலும்

சதி சொல்லி பிரிச்சாலும் யாரு வந்து தடுத்தாலும்

உன்னையே செருவேன்னு துண்டு போட்டு தாண்டினியே ..

அந்த வார்த்தையில நானிருக்கேன் .. வாக்க பட காத்திருக்கேன் ..

வார்த்தையில நானிருக்கேன் .. வாக்க பட காத்திருக்கேன் ..

உலக இடது கையாளர்கள் தினம் - ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் 13ம் தேதி

இன்று உலக இடது கையாளர்கள் தினம். நானும் இடது கையாளர் என்பதில் எனக்கு மிகவும் பெருமையாக உள்ளது.
காலை கிடைத்த ஒரு குறுந்தகவல் தான் இந்த தினத்தைப் பற்றிய ஞானம் எனக்கு வழி வகுத்தது. எல்லாவற்றிற்கும் வலைத்தளம் இருப்பது போல, இடது கையாளர்கள் தினத்திற்கும் ஒரு தனி வலையே இருந்தது. அதிலிருந்தும், மற்றும் சில தளங்களிலிருந்தும் சேகரிக்கப்பட்ட சில தகவல்கள் உங்களுக்காக..
• Sinistrophobia – என்பது இடது கைப்பழக்கம் இருப்பதற்கு அல்லது இடது புறத்தில் இருக்கும் பொருட்களுக்கு பயப்படுவது
• பலருக்கும் இடது கைப்பழக்கம் இருக்கும் போதிலும், மிகவும் சிலர் மட்டுமே முழுமையான இடது கைப்பழக்கம் உள்ளவர்களாக இருப்பர்.
• இந்த தினம் முதன்முதலில் 1976 ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் 13ம் தேதி அன்று தொடங்கப்பட்டது
• எல்லா போலார் கரடிக்குட்டிகளும் இடக்கை பழக்கம் உள்ளவைகளே
• இரட்டையர்கள் ஒருவர் இடது கைப்பழக்கம் உள்ளவராக இருப்பதற்கு அதிகமான வாய்ப்பு உள்ளது
• இவர்களுக்கு தண்ணீர் அடியில் பார்த்து சுதாரித்து கொள்ளும் திறன் அதிகமாக இருக்கும்
• இவர்கள் டென்னிஸ், பேஸ்பால், நீச்சல் போன்ற விளையாட்டு துறையில் சிறந்து விளங்குவதுண்டு
• கண்ணாடி எழுத்துக்கள் (அதாவது எழுத்துக்களையே திருப்பி திருப்பி எழுதுவது) இவர்களுக்கு மிகவும் எளிதாக இருக்கும்
• 3-D வடிவங்கள் எளிதில் புரியும்.
• அமேரிக்காவின் கடைசி ஆறு ஜனாதிபதிகளில் நால்வர் இடக்கை பழக்கம் உள்ளவர்கண் தான்..
• நீங்களும் இந்த பழக்கம் உள்ளவராக இருந்தால் கொண்டாடுங்கள். இது நமக்கான தினம்..

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Green computing

Green computing or green IT, refers to environmentally sustainable computing or IT. In the article Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, San Murugesan defines the field of green computing as "the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using, and disposing of computers, servers, and associated subsystems—such as monitors, printers, storage devices, and networking and communications systems—efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment."The goals of green computing are similar to green chemistry; reduce the use of hazardous materials, maximize energy efficiency during the product's lifetime, and promote the recyclability or biodegradability of defunct products and factory waste. Research continues into key areas such as making the use of computers as energy-efficient as possible, and designing algorithms and systems for efficiency-related computer technologies
Origins
In 1992, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency launched Energy Star, a voluntary labeling program which is designed to promote and recognize energy-efficiency in monitors, climate control equipment, and other technologies. This resulted in the widespread adoption of sleep mode among consumer electronics. The term "green computing" was probably coined shortly after the Energy Star program began; there are several USENET posts dating back to 1992 which use the term in this manner.[2] Concurrently, the Swedish organization TCO Development launched the TCO Certification program to promote low magnetic and electrical emissions from CRT-based computer displays; this program was later expanded to include criteria on energy consumption, ergonomics, and the use of hazardous materials in construction
Industry
Climate Savers Computing Initiative (CSCI) is an effort to reduce the electric power consumption of PCs in active and inactive states.[10] The CSCI provides a catalog of green products from its member organizations, and information for reducing PC power consumption. It was started on 2007-06-12. The name stems from the World Wildlife Fund's Climate Savers program, which was launched in 1999.[11] The WWF is also a member of the Computing Initiative.[10]
The Green Electronics Council offers the Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool (EPEAT) to assist in the purchase of "greener" computing systems. The Council evaluates computing equipment on 51 criteria - 23 required and 28 optional - that measure a product's efficiency and sustainability attributes. Products are rated Gold, Silver or Bronze depending on how many optional criteria they meet. On 2007-01-24, President George W. Bush issued Executive Order 13423, which requires all United States Federal agencies to use EPEAT when purchasing computer systems.[12][13]
The Green Grid is a global consortium dedicated to advancing energy efficiency in data centers and business computing ecosystems. It was founded in February 2007 by several key companies in the industry – AMD, APC, Dell, HP, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Rackable Systems, SprayCool, Sun Microsystems and VMware. The Green Grid has since grown to hundreds of members, including end users and government organizations, all focused on improving data center efficiency.
The Green500 list rates supercomputers by energy efficiency (megaflops/watt, encouraging a focus on efficiency rather than absolute performance.
Green Comm Challenge is an organization that promotes the development of energy conservation technology and practices in the field of Information and Communications Technology (ICT). Green Comm Challenge achieved worldwide notoriety in 2007, when it enlisted as one of the challengers in the 33rd edition of the America's Cup, an effort meant to show how researchers, technologists and entrepreneurs from around the world can be brought together by an exciting vision: building the ultimate renewable energy machine, a competitive America’s Cup boat.
The Transaction Processing Performance Council(TPC) Energy specification augments the existing TPC benchmarks by allowing for optional publications of energy metrics alongside their performance results.[14]
The SPEC Power is the first industry standard benchmark that measures power consumption in relation to performance for server-class computers.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

International Current Affairs 2010

Sri Lanka abandons Tamil version of its national anthem
The Sri lankan government has decided to scrap the tamil version of the national anthem in its official and state functions. This move may possibly further alienate the tamil minorities in the country. A directive to use only the Sinhalese version as been sent by the ministry as president Rajapakse pointed out that no country uses two versions of the anthem.
China reveals world’s fastest train
China unveiled its new high speed train CRH380 that can clock a maximum speed of 486.1 kmph. It is said to be much faster than even the bullet trains of Japan. At a cruising speed of 380 this is certainly a major accomplishment. China on its part has gone ahead and is now working on a model that is expected to clock 600kmph.
Mark Zuckerberg, Times Person Of The Year
Times magazine has named Mark Zuckerberg as the person of the year . Mr Zuckerberg is the founder of thesmash hit social networking site Facebook and is also the world youngest billionaire currently. Although, Julian Assange the editor in chief of wikileaks was the pick of the time readers, but Zuckerberg won because of the scope and reach his website and how it has touched and remodeled our thoughts on social networking bringing the world that much more closer. Facebook has reached 500 million users this year all around the globe and the numbers are still counting.
National Current Affairs 2010

CBI seeking closure in Arushi Talwar case.
CBI has sought closure after being unable to comprehensively solve the Arushi Talwar murder case which has hogged the limelight for over two years now. The report claims that they have hit a road block and lack of evidence as main reasons for not being able to solve the case. However the report as named the victims father Dr Rajesh Talwar as a possible suspect.
Chandra Babu Naidu ends fast
Telugu Desam Party president finally ended his hunger strike of eight days on the insistence of visiting leaders like Thambi Durai, Arunkumar, Amba Durai, Maitreya, Prakash Karat, Bardan, Om Prakash Choutala, Sharad Yadav and Ajit Singh. Mr Naidu undertook the fast citing that the Andhra Govt should revise its compensation package for the rain hit farmers of the state. The visiting leaders promised Mr Naidu that they would bring the issue to the notice of the Prime Minister Mr Manmohan Singh by taking an all party delegation to New Delhi.
Congress blames Sanjay Gandhi for the emergency excesses
The congress party which is celebrating its 125th birthday this month has accused Sanjay Gandhi for many of the excesses committed during the emergency of 1975-77. Sanjay Gandhi received notoriety for many ruthless measures like slum clearance and mass sterilization programs. The congress has always had to walk a tight rope when it comes to defending Indira Gandhis decision to enforce emergency which led to one of the most turbulent times in Indian history since independence.
Citibank employee Shivraj Puri accused of fraud surrenders
Citibank employee Shivraj Puri who is said to be involved in a massive fraud, finally surrendered to the police after almost 48 hrs since the incident came to light. Mr Puri who works as a relationship manager has been accused of siphoning of money to the tune of 400 crores from atleast 20 clients to other fictitious accounts.
Opposition unrelenting on its demand in JPC probe
The opposition has been steadfast in its demand for the JPC with regard to the 2G scam. The PM Dr Manmohan Singh had earlier offered to appear himself before the PAC headed by BJP stalwart Mr. Murali Manohar Joshi. The opposition still feels the JPC would be the best option that would help to bring this case to its logical conclusion.
Human rights activist Dr Binayak Sen convicted, gets life term
The session’s court of Raipur has convicted Dr Binayak Sen and three others on grounds of sedition and conspiracy thereby sentencing them for life due to their links with the Maoists. Dr Sen has been held guilty under Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act 2005, Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act 1967, of being a conduit between Naxals and of meeting Narayan Sanyal in jail. The trio has also been convicted under provisions of section 124 IPC (sedition) and 120 B IPC (conspiracy). Dr Sen is a pediatrician and alumni of Christian medical college. The 58 year old doctor has provided over 28 years of selfless service to the poorer sections of Chattisgarh.
Prices of onions hit through the roof
The prices of onions have undergone a steep rise with a kg costing close to Rs 80 in the national capital and its surrounding areas. Other parts of India too have started feeling the pressure and the prices are continuously shooting up. The Government on it part has suspended the export of onions until January in an attempt to bring down the prices. According to traders, they are attributing the supply crunch due to torrential downpours in Maharashtra, Gujarat and Southern states which has lead to a poor yield.
Indias GSLV vehicle fails during launch.
ISRO suffered a serious setback when its Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-F06) failed on its course, forcing the team at SriHarikota to abort the mission and self destruct the launch vehicle. The vehicles on board computer lost control of the actuation system raising serious questions about ISROS other ambitious projects that includes a mission to the moon. The GSAT-5P satellite which the launch vehicle was supposed to send into orbit was one of the heaviest and cost ISRO 125 crores. Had it been successful, the satellite would have served the needs of the telecommunication sector and the weather department. It would have eventually replaced the INSAT-2E satellite that was sent up in 1999.
India and China set $100bn trade target by 2015
India and China have agreed upon a new $100billion trade target by 2015 which is more than the $6 billion agreed upon in 2010.With the arrival of Chinese PM Wen Jiabao accompanied by 400 Chinese business leaders in India, the two countries signed around 50 deals in power,steel ,wind energy , food and marine products and telecommunications worth $16 billion. This overtakes the $10bn of agreements signed between Indian and American businesspeople during the recent visit of US President Barack Obama.

Sports Current Affairs 2010

Saina Nehwal wins Honk Kong Open Super Series.
Indias star sportswoman Saina Nehwal rallied around from a one game deficit to win 15-21, 21-16, 21-17 over Wang Shixian of China. Saina finished of her year on a wonderful note and has an unmatched record compared to any Indian player with regard to winning the super series title.
Sachin Tendulkar scores fifty centuries in test cricket
Sachin Tendulkar scored his fiftieth test century in the second innings of the first test against South Africa at the Centurion. The master blaster scored his century in196 balls with 12 fours and one six. Even thought India lost the first test Sachin’s century helped about bringing some respectability to the proceedings. Incidentally he has also been named the ICC player of the year.
Indian cricket teams wins its second test at Durban.
The Indian team had a poor game at the centurion where they were bundled out by an innings and twenty five runs by their South African counterparts. The second test they came back with a much more inspired performance with both bat and bowl leading to their first ever win in Durban which had always troubled them in the past. India had scored 205 and 228 in their two innings while the South Africans could score only 131 and 215 respectively.The star of the match was V.VS Laxman whose 96 helped India seal victory.

Persons in News December 2010

Congress Veteran Karunakaran passes away
Veteran congress leader Karunakaran finally breathed his last after a prolonged bout of illness. He was 92 and is survived by his daughter Padmaja Venugopal and son K Muraleedharan. He was a four time CM of Kerala and is affectionately called ‘Leader’ by his admirers. He was known to be a master tactician and often played the role of troubleshooter for his party.
Premji Donates 8,846 crores to improve education in India
Aziz Premji . Chairman of WIPRO will transfer 213 million equity shares valued at 8846 crores to an irrevocable trust for charity. This will add a lot of muscle to the Aziz Premji Foundation which was set up few years back in its quest to improve the standard of education. The foundation will focus on providing quality education in rural India and the the government has also pitched in to open the Aziz Premji foundation where higher education will be provided.







C

Sunday, January 09, 2011

How to Avoid Colon Cancer

The colon is part of the body's digestive system. The digestive system removes and processes nutrients (vitamins, minerals, carbohydrates, fats, proteins, and water) from foods and helps pass waste material out of the body. If you avoid nutrition and proper health care, especially when your 50 +, and you don't have regularly scheduled colonoscopies, you greatly increase your odds of developing colon cancer.
There are several sure fire ways to ensure health, we should all make sure we take these precautions at every age in order to prevent colon cancer and other diseases. If you want to maintain a healthy digestive tract you should first off be eating a healthy, well balanced diet. If we spend just a little time researching the amount of calories we need to intake, (which is judged by our height, weight, and size), then we should make sure to intake those calories, but in a healthy way. We need to intake our dark green vegetables like spinach and broccoli, as well as a proper amount of protein, fiber, and calcium. We should all research what foods contain which vitamins, minerals, and nutrients our bodies need to survive and thrive, and then make sure we intake them while simultaneously taking a good multi-vitamin.
We also should take part in regular flushes of our digestive tract which, of course, our colon is a part of. When dealing with cleansing, you have one sure fire way that will ensure a holistic, natural way of flushing your system and boosting health, and it is so very simple-Water.
Water is the best way to cleanse your body, and if you want your body cleansed efficiently, then you should drink at least eight 6oz glasses of ionized water a day. Ionized water, as opposed to regular tap or bottled water has antioxidants, which is a great health source for your body. It also helps oxygen reach your cellular system faster, this gives your body more energy and helps your bodily functions work more efficiently and faster; this also aids in the flushing process. If you needed an immediate detoxification flush, you can also add several table spoons of salt to some warmed ionized water and this becomes a make-shift enema. As long as you drink a tall glass of salted ionized water and skip a meal directly before hand, your body will flush a lot of its toxins out. These are just a few easy health tips that you can use to avoid colon cancer and other ailments and diseases.

Friday, December 24, 2010

THE INDIAN SOFTWARE INDUATRY-CURRENT TRENDS,CHALLENGES AND THE FUTURE

               The Indian Software Industry is the uncrowned king in the outsourcing of
software services now. Despite the current recession, which was always in the offing, once the boom got going, most software companies are facing the crisis head-on. They have shifted emphasis to off-shore projects since the on-site software development has virtually come to a standstill. They have started to scout for newer markets, improve on the per capita efficiency,concentrate on future technologies, revamp their organizational and marketing structure. In short the companies that are taking the slowdown as an opportunity to reorient themselves in the new scenario are creating the foundation for a long innings in the IT sector while those that are wary about taking the hard steps will soon find the going tough.
               From very humble beginnings, the Indian IT Industry has grown at an
exponential rate over the past 10 years doing Rs.10000 crore of export, fetching for India
valuable foreign exchange, propping up the Indian Stock Market with its share prices reaching dizzying heights before the scam, and employing over 2 lakh professionals with this number poised to rise to around 20 lakh in another 3 years. India missed the Agrarian, Industrial and the early Computer Revolutions but became a global player in the IT revolution because of two main factors-opening up of the markets and India's cheap and vast manpower with knowledge of English. Right from 1991 to 2000 Indian companies grew at a mind-boggling rate of 200-500% attracting lucrative projects from companies all over the world, especially the US. The recession that we see now is partly attributed to this phenomenal growth rate which to be maintained, was always going to be a tough proposition. The initial spark that triggered the recession was the slowdown in the American manufacturing industry , then aggravated by the collapse of Dotcom companies and then the last nail in the coffin was the sudden discovery that most companies did not have any more projects to h and out. In other words, most companies did not need any major software development.
             With the recession, most companies have drastically revised their organizational
and marketing strategies. The share of on site work has come down as most foreign companies prefer to sustain as much of their own employees rather than outsiders. Companies in India have now shifted gears doing off-shore development which is much cheaper. They have started  looking at the European and Japanese markets which have not yet been affected by the slowdown. Other markets which they are tentatively eyeing are the Australian, South American and Middle East markets. Most companies have decided to tide over the problem of reduced profits by resorting to layoffs and cutting down heavily on fresh recruitment. These are measures to bring down the numbers on the bench which have been increasing for some time now. The focus on web centric software development which used to be their prime revenue earner is a thing of the past and these companies are concentrating now on the banking and the egovernance sectors. Even the high flying companies are doing the low grade maintenance work for their clients to create good relationships in the hope of getting a big project from them sometime in the future.
              Despite the bravado that most software companies still put up it remains to be
seen how many of the smaller ones can survive, if the recession doesnt end soon. Fly by night
operators who wanted to make a quick buck from the high ratings software companies get in
the stock market along with poor quality of support which Indian companies provide are
destroying the credibility of the industry. Moreover the Chinese and the Russians have begun
warming up to the act. Their governments are aggressively promoting software training and
Chinese professionals come cheaper at $3000-4000 per year compared to an Indian
professional who earns on the average about $8000 per year. Another challenge that Indian
companies are facing is that most corporations prefer to keep the most lucrative projects for
their employees and leaving the crumbs for the Indians to brush up.
              But the future seems to be ours-that is if we are careful. Our companies are able to
provide the right training and have been able to continuously improve their knowledge base.
They have used the new technologies effectively winning customer satisfaction and we have
something the Chinese and Russians do not have-the experience in dealing with foreign
customers who are very quality conscious. The recession is on its way out. The markets are
looking up. The hype of yore will be a distant memory. To be realistic the software industry is going to stabilize at this point but opportunities will beckon soon. The weeding out is getting over. The dotcomers and Y2Kers have to swallow the bitter pill. The bottom line is they are not needed by the software industry any more. But for the others like u and me, the future is rosy, albeit a bit hazy, right now.

Technology could play a pivotal role in good governance says Nandan Nilekeni

Speaking at a symposium on Sustainable Transformation: Our New India's Pan IIT 2010, Dinesh Trivedi, Minister of State for Health and Family Welfare, emphasised the need for India to develop on all parameters and not just stark GDP figures. Happiness and welfare of all are important and especially for those below the poverty line. We need he said, to break the divide between the Haves and have-nots. Technology is good but should benefit all. In fact it is the responsibility of those technologically proficient to pass on the benefits to the rest of society. In keeping with his mood His Holiness Sri Sri Ravi Shanker, appealed to all Indians to use their energies, healthy body and mind for the benefit of all. Giving an example of an effort in the self same direction, Nandan Nilekeni Chairman of Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) reiterated that technology, the UID No. could transform society at large. India, he held, has 120 million migrants today with numbers on the rise everyday. These sections' need to reap the benefits of social sector welfare schemes, but are often denied on account 'identification' documents. The issue currently is not that there is inadequate allocation of funds but one of delivery. The benefits have not reached the deserving. This despite the substantial increase in social welfare schemes in the last 10 years. All Indians deserve the fruits of good governance.
The pilot project, he informed has already been implemented in many areas of Karnataka. The allotment of the UID No. would empower the Indian citizen to operate from any part of the country. It would be single source enabler which would empower them for social security/welfare requirements. In its initial phase of 14 months close to 6 lakh+ people have already been covered. Set up along with the Government of India, currently the financials stand at 40 Crores. In keeping with the overall theme of the Conference, that of transforming through Technology, Nilekeni enlightened all that UID technology (Project Aadhar) would empower the common man and assist the Government in better governance. Efforts he also stated are on to network banks and other financial institutions into the UID system. Speaking on the role of the Government in not being able to lead India towards a truly transforming path, Shailesh Gandhi, Central Information Commissioner squarely stated that the though the will may be there, the structure and policies are not designed to deliver. He gave HR policies and practices as an example. What India requires today, India includes both the people at large and the Government, is to work together for a change, talent being plenty. For India to transform every Indian must feel he has stake in the Government.
Another important facet of the hurdles to transformation was vociferously brought out by Arvind Kejriwal, RTI Activist. In response to Pradeep Gupta, Chairman and Managing Director's, remark that corruption in India is no longer retail but is wholesale, Kejriwal agreed but at same time gave important positive suggestions. The Commonwealth Games exposed the shocking scale and arrogance of corruption. Media has already played its role and the citizens now need to voice their concerns and demand a single investigative agency with the power to act against all, politicians and bureaucrats' included. The current set up is bizarre. The CVC for example has 32 people to investigate 1500 departments. The closing session on 'Building a sustainable future: The Green Society' saw global leaders speaking on the way forward to build a green global society that could further sustain the transformational growth. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy Commissioner of the Planning Commission, said, 'There has to be a global agreement on the issue of climate change and only cumulative efforts could meet the green objectives. India's National Action Plan for Climate Change is taking necessary steps in liaison with the global community and drafting a way forward to reduce carbon emissions in India.'

Top Performing Commodities of 2010

Cotton

Unusually high cotton prices have prompted apparel makers to scramble for the increased use of synthetic and polyester fibres to keep down the input costs.
Cotton has registered a record 74% return in the domestic markets – a rise from Rs.25000 per candy to Rs.44000 in the past 10 months – led by shortage of raw material. Cotton can easily be termed as commodity of the year.
In fact, India – the second largest cotton producer in the world – could well be a major beneficiary due to rise in global prices of cotton, if the appeal made by cotton growers to allow export under the open general license is approved by the government.
However, economists see demand destruction for the next year if the record cotton prices refuse to die down for a longer period. Trade estimates suggest that India is likely to harvest 3.50 crore bales in 2010-11.

Coffee

Next in line of out-performers in commodities is Coffee – which has logged an impressive 45% returns in 2010. According to International Coffee Organization composite price indicator, currently the coffee price in the global market has topped 170 cents per pound compared to the average price of 121 cents per pound recorded in October 2009.
Moreover, global coffee supplies may tighten after an Indian exporters’ group forecast a delay in harvesting because of extended rains. India is Asia’s biggest coffee exporter. Further, the analysts tracking coffee prices expect the rates to continue inching higher until weather concerns ease in Brazil and Vietnam.
Overall, coffee exports during the January-October period of this year have risen sharply to 251,355 tons from 157,824 tons in the year-ago period. In India, the New coffee year – which runs from Oct’ 10 to Sep’ 11 – has started on a good note as coffee exports increased by a whooping 60% in the first month of the crop year.

Silver

Even as the yellow metal regains its Rs.20,000 platform, it is silver that is still touching all time highs at Rs.37, 700 per kg, a level never seen before. Silver surged to 30 year high in the overseas market as a weaker dollar increased the investment appeal of precious metals.
Silver prices for 2009 have risen like a phoenix from the financial ashes mainly on the winds of strong investment demand. Moreover, even in 2010, silver has yielded a decent 40% returns, propelled by confident resurfacing of industrial demand post the economic slack. On the other hand, gold has surged 21% during the 10 months period.
Bullion analysts are positive on silver indicating that the precious metal has barely made halfway back to its prior nominal high of $50 an ounce, achieved around early 1980s. However, despite industrial demand for silver, the real pressure going forward is from investment demand, which has been a fraction of that of gold.

Corn

2010 is shaping up to be a good year for the corn producers with the crop providing a good 25% returns from January to October period. In addition, signs of economic recovery point to a rebound in feed use, ethanol use and an increase in the demand for the corn.
The corn prices are gradually rising on speculation that US (the world’s biggest grower and exporter of corn) inventories will fall after adverse weather reduced Midwest output. To add to the crisis, China has emerged as a buyer of largest volume of corn from the US this year.
Analysts expect that a surge in global prices and a likelihood of a drop in domestic prices could help India seal more export deals in the coming weeks.

Nickel

Nickel prices have appreciated by 24%, driven by escalating demand from stainless steel industry amid tight supplies. Supported by firming trend in global markets and rising domestic demand from the alloy makers, nickel prices traded at Rs.1060 per kg.
About 2/3rd of the total nickel output is used in the manufacturing of stainless steel. Further, followers of the stainless steel market expect prices of nickel to remain firm over the next three years.

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Giant Dallas ROBOT Cited as Best Public Art


By now most residents of the Dallas / Fort Worth area are aware of the giant, 35,000 lbs steel robot that towers over DART's Deep Ellum rail station. Robot builders may also be aware of the robot from coverage in Robot Magazine. Now, the rest of the world is taking notice because the prominent art organization, Americans for the Arts, has included the Dallas Robot, known officially as Traveling Man, on its list of 40 Best Public Art Works in the US and Canada. Read on to learn more about Traveling Man and see more photos of the big robot and little chrome friends.
So what's the story behind this giant robot? A combination of opportunities and influences led to its creation. Dallas Area Rapid Transit or DART as it's known locally, was expanding into the Deep Ellum area with a new rail line and a Deep Ellum rail station. Deep Ellum is the historic Dallas arts district from which have come a long list of musical and visual artists. The area is also well known for its many public art pieces, many improvised in local do-it-yourself fashion. Painters and sculpters often create art on the exterior of their own or other buildings in the area. 




Traveling Man Walking Tall sculpture seen (from left to right) as represented in paint on the Deep Ellum news wall, as a steel superstructure during construction, and in its finished form.
The DART rail plans called for destruction of a favorite landmark, the Deep Ellum tunnel, whose sides were covered with art murals. Since DART has a small budget for public art for each of the station, it was decided that DART would commission local Deep Ellum artists to create a public art piece around the new station. The main pieces were to be giant sculptures designed by local artists Brad Oldham and Brandon Oldenburg. They created a set of three large metal works, known collectively as Traveling Man


Traveling Man - The Awakening
The first sculpture, titled Awakening, shows the robot's head emerging from the ground. The backstory, imagined by the artists, explains that song birds inhabited an elm tree that grew above a buried steam locomotive. When a Deep Ellum musician spilled his gin on the spot, the Traveling Man formed underground as a result. The robot awakened and emerged along with his songbirds. 


Traveling Man - Waiting on the Train
In the second sculpture, Waiting on a Train, our giant robot has walked a block down the street and is now seated on a large concrete slab salvaged from the historic Deep Ellum tunnel. The robot is playing a guitar as the cars and trains pass by. In the words of Brad Oldham, "he reminds us that life can slow down a bit to hear the music". 


Traveling Man - Walking Tall
The third and largest sculpture, Walking Tall, depicts the Traveling Man strolling past the new DART station with a smile on his face and one of the song birds perched on his arm. This sculpture links the surrounding neighborhood with the station, welcoming visitors and residents. Walking Tall stands nearly 40 feet tall, weighs 35,000 lbs, and is supported by concrete piers sunk 32 feet into the ground. Each sculpture is composed of a steel skeleton covered with a stainless steel skin attached by monobolt rivets. 

The Chrome bird/chairs offer endless possibilities to photographers
Aside from a few cranks, who were outraged that city funds were spent to beautify the city, there has been nearly unanimous support for DART's Deep Ellum art project. It has been pointed out that the cost the installation is roughly equivalent to about 57 feet of DART rail. And the success of the installation has pretty much silenced the critics. Almost as soon as they were completed, the sculptures began attracting lots of visitors and photographers. At almost any time of day or night, you can spot people gawking at Traveling Man or photographing their friends sitting on the surrounding chrome birds, which double as chairs. 

So for Dallas residents, the recognition of Traveling Man by Americans for the Arts just confirms what they already knew; everybody loves Giant Robots!