The
EdgeWalk at Toronto's CN Tower is an adrenaline filled excursion around an
open-mesh metal walkway almost a quarter of a mile above the ground. There's no
guard rail and no hand holds, just an uninterrupted view of the Toronto skyline
and a through-the-mesh view of the ground, 1,168 feet beneath your feet. (Reuters)
Evans’ victory caps a classic Tour de France
It was a Tour de France many hailed as a classic. There were crashes,
dropouts, surprises and, above all, a new champion.
With Cadel Evans becoming the first Australian to win cycling’s most
prestigious race, the Tour de France had a completely new look this year.
Lance Armstrong’s seven-year
stranglehold over the Tour was a remarkable demonstration of strength and
resolve, but the competition itself was not that engrossing. Alberto Contador
then stepped up and won three titles in four years, with his third still in
limbo after a positive drug test last year.
Harry Potter Stars Then and Now
Check out Harry Potter Stars Then and Now:
It's been nearly a decade since Harry Potter first waved his wand on the big screen. Ahead of the release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, we chart the growing pains of the Potter stars
It's been nearly a decade since Harry Potter first waved his wand on the big screen. Ahead of the release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, we chart the growing pains of the Potter stars
Emma Watson
The gas platform that will be the world's biggest 'ship'
Shell has
unveiled plans to build the world's first floating liquefied natural gas (FLNG)
platform. The 600,000-tonne behemoth - the world's biggest "ship" -
will be sited off the coast of Australia. But how will it work?
Deep
beneath the world's oceans are huge reservoirs of natural gas. Some are
hundreds or thousands of miles from land, or from the nearest pipeline.
Tapping
into these "stranded gas" resources has been impossible - until now.
At
Samsung Heavy Industries' shipyard on Geoje Island in South Korea, work is
about to start on a "ship" that, when finished and fully loaded, will
weigh 600,000 tonnes.
That is
six times as much as the biggest US aircraft carrier.
How One Man Flies Like a Bird - Watch Video
What does it feel like to fly like a bird by using a jet-propelled wing? Only one man on Earth knows, and he shared his story with the crowd at TED Global in Edinburgh, Scotland, on Tuesday.
Yves Rossy’s invention allows him to fly by attaching to his back a four-engine jet suit with wings, which he starts up after jumping out of a helicopter or plane.
Check out the Video of the man Who files like a bird Below:
The History of the Space Shuttle in Pictures
From its first launch 30 years ago to its final launch on July 8th 2011, NASA's Space Shuttle program has seen moments of dizzying inspiration and of crushing disappointment. The program has sent up 135 missions, ferrying more than 350 humans and thousands of tons of material and equipment into low Earth orbit. Fourteen astronauts have lost their lives along the way -- the missions have always been risky, the engineering complex, the hazards extreme. We'd like to look back at the past few decades of shuttle development and missions as we await the next steps toward human space flight. |
7.3 Magnitude Earthquake Rocks Northeastern Japan
An earthquake with a magnitude of 7.3 hit the north-eastern coast of Japan today, briefly triggering a tsunami warning for the area still recovering from the devastating quake and killer wave four months ago.
The tremor, which hit at 9:57 a.m. local time, caused more concern than problems. No major injuries or damages have been reported. The residents of coastal areas were evacuated for about two hours after the earthquake, but the tsunami warning has since been lifted.
The earthquake's epicenter was off the coast of Japan's main island, Honshu, in the Pacific Ocean.
There is no tsunami danger for the United States' West Coast or Hawaii, according to officials, and the Japanese nuclear power plant in the region was not affected.
On March 11, the northeastern coast of Japan was hit by a 9.0 earthquake -- the strongest in Japanese history -- and a tsunami that devastated the region, triggered a nuclear crisis at the Fukushima power plant and left nearly 23,000 people dead or missing.
Since then, dozens of strong aftershocks have rattled the region, including a 5.6 quake in the Pacific off Honshu on Thursday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
The area still has a long way to go toward recovery. Because seawalls were destroyed in the March 11 disaster and many of the buildings are still structurally weak, even smaller-scale earthquakes can do damage, but for now, the Japanese are in the clear.
Source: ABC News
Source: ABC News
Solar surprise for climate issue
The Sun's influence on modern-day global warming may have been overestimated, a study suggests.
The view that the Sun may be driving modern-day climate change has clouded policy discussions |
Scientists found unexpected patterns in solar output in the years 2004-2007, which challenge existing models.
However, they caution that three years of data are not enough to draw firm conclusions about long-term trends.
Writing in the journal Nature, they say it may become necessary to revise the way that solar influences are dealt with in computer models of the climate.
But, they add, the research does not challenge the role of humanity's production of greenhouse gases as the dominant long-term driver of modern-day climate change.
"What we can't really do at this stage is to extrapolate from this three-year period to any longer period - we can't even say that [what we've seen] has happened on previous solar cycles," said principal researcher Joanna Haigh from Imperial College London.
"If you could extrapolate... the climate models have been over-estimating the Sun's effect on temperature [rise]."
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that humanity's emissions over the 20th Century were about 10 times more important as a driver of temperature rise than the slow upward trend in average solar output.
This new study does not change that basic picture, Professor Haigh said, despite the claims of some observers that solar factors have been underestimated as a cause of modern-day climate change.
"If the climate were affected in the long term, the Sun should have produced a notable cooling in the first half of the 20th Century, which we know it didn't," she said.
Violet variations
The Sun's output waxes and then wanes on an 11-year cycle.
This periodic 11-year fluctuation rides on top of a much longer-term trend - and for most of the 20th Century, that trend was upwards, leading to the net warming influence on the Earth's temperature that the IPCC documented.
One of the things that varies most during the solar cycle is the Sun's output of ultraviolet radiation.
It is hard to measure from the Earth's surface, as the atmosphere absorbs much of the UV energy - but satellites can do the job.
One of the more recent satellites studying the Sun is the Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment (Sorce), launched by Nasa in 2003, with data collected and collated at the University of Colorado in Boulder, US.
Instruments on board the satellite provide readings of how the Sun's total energy output is changing, and breaks that down into various components across the spectrum from infrared through visible light into the ultraviolet.
The first years of readings from Sorce, covering 2004-2007, co-incided with the waning phase of the last solar cycle.
Scientists expected to see a slight decline across the spectrum. Instead, they saw a distinct fall in UV output, but an increase in emissions at visible wavelengths.
The UV fall - about six times as big as anticipated - was consistent with changes in ozone concentrations observed with other satellites. Ultraviolet radiation produces ozone in the upper atmosphere.
While these ozone concentrations can affect weather and longer-term conditions at the Earth's surface, so can the unexpected increase in energy at visible wavelengths, which penetrates down through the atmosphere.
Putting these various factors together, Professor Haigh's team calculates that over this three-year period, solar influences produced a net warming - not the net cooling that previous observations and theory predicted.
Strange brew
The observations, and the analysis, appear to have raised more questions than they have answered.
Is something awry with the satellite readings? That is unlikely, given that the UV changes were seen with two of its instruments and that they are consistent with ozone measurements; but it cannot be ruled out.
The trade-off between UV and visible radiation has not been seen by previous satellites. Is that because Sorce is better, or because what it has turned up is specific to that one solar cycle?
It is possible, contended Mike Lockwood of Reading University, that there was something special about the last solar cycle - that it could mark the end of an extended phase of relatively high output, and the transition into a less active phase.
Data comes from the Sorce satellite, which monitors solar radiation across the spectrum |
"If you look back... 9-10,000 years, you find oscillations of the Sun between 'grand maxima' and 'grand minima'," he said.
"It's now emerging that the 'space age' has been a grand maximum; so my view is that the Sun is due to fall out of this and into a 'grand minimum', so I would not be surprised if in 50 years' time we find ourselves in conditions like the 'Maunder Minimum' [of the late 17th and early 18th Centuries] associated with the 'Little Ice Age'."
Professor Lockwood was not involved in the Nature paper; but his research has shown that even though short-term changes in solar output may not affect the global big picture, they can have a powerful impact on local weather patterns, particularly over Europe and Eurasia.
"So we might have the ultimate paradox that in a globally warming world we'd have cold winters in Europe. But it would be an awful lot warmer in Greenland," he said.
Professor John Shepherd, who studies climatic change at the National Oceanography Centre in Southampton, added:
"The observations do show that solar radiation does some peculiar and interesting things, which will hopefully be revealed through future research.
"As with all other known solar effects since measurements began, these effects are subtle and tiny - certainly nowhere near enough to explain any of the climate changes that we observe."
The Sorce satellite, meanwhile, continues to assimilate readings, and these may in time shed light on whether these three years of observation have thrown up a facet of how the Sun behaves generally and so whether the models need to be re-written with a lower value for solar influences - or whether there was indeed something unusual about the solar cycle we have just witnessed.
Source: BBC Science & Environment
Global warming lull down to China's coal growth
Solar power is coming to China - but coal-burning grew amazingly quickly a few years back |
The lull in global warming from 1998 to 2008 was mainly caused by a sharp rise in China's coal use, a study suggests.
The absence of a temperature rise over that decade is often used by "climate sceptics" as grounds for denying the existence of man-made global warming.
But the new study, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, concludes that smog from the extra coal acted to mask greenhouse warming.
China's coal use doubled 2002-2007, according to US government figures.
Although burning the coal produced more warming carbon dioxide, it also put more tiny sulphate aerosol particles into the atmosphere which cool the planet by reflecting solar energy back into space.
The researchers conclude that declining solar activity over the period and an overall change from El Nino to La Nina conditions in the Pacific Ocean also contributed to the temperature plateau.
Lead researcher Robert Kaufmann from Boston University, whose research interests span climate change and world oil markets, said the study was inspired by "sceptical" questioning.
"Two years ago, I gave a talk to a general audience in New Jersey about climate change," he told BBC News.
"And an older gentleman asked me 'why should I believe in this climate change - I was watching Fox News and they said the Earth's temperature hasn't changed in 10 years and has actually gone down'.
"At that stage I wasn't paying much attention to climate change - I'd returned to working on oil markets - so I went back and checked the data and found that was just about right."
Mainstream answers
Mainstream climate scientists have traditionally answered the "no warming since 1998" claim in two ways.
One is by pointing out that 1998 saw the strongest El Nino conditions on record, which transfer heat from the oceans to the atmosphere, warming the planet.
So while you may not see a temperature rise if you start the series in 1998, you do see one if you begin with 1997 or 1999.
The second answer is to point out that temperatures will naturally vary from year to year, and to point to the consistent upward trend seen when long-term average temperatures are used rather than annual figures.
But the new study, which uses statistical models that are very different from the models traditionally used to simulate the Earth's climate, offers an alternative way of explaining the apparent halt.
According to figures from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), the rate at which coal use was increasing around the world showed a sharp acceleration around 2003, with China in the vanguard.
China's consumption had doubled over two decades from 1980. But from 2002, it doubled again in the five years to 2007.
As the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) emerged in 2007, it was not able to include this data.
Piers Forster from the UK's Leeds University, who led the IPCC chapter analysing factors affecting global temperatures, said the new study was "interesting and worthwhile".
"The masking of CO2-induced global warming by short term sulphur emissions is well known - it's believed that the flattening off of global mean temperatures in the 1950s was due to European and US coal burning, and just such a mechanism could be operating today from Chinese coal," he told BBC News.
"Other natural fluctuations in the Sun's output, volcanoes and water vapour have also been proposed for causing the non-warming 'noughties', and may have contributed to a degree.
"It needs to be emphasised that any masking is short-lived, and the increased CO2 from the same coal will remain in the atmosphere for many decades and dominate the long-term warming over the next decades."
Since the end of the study period, in 2007, China's coal consumption has risen again by about 30%.
Changes in the Sun's output were also a factor in the cooling, the modelling indicates |
Out of the shadow
The European and US coal boom after World War 2 caused such an environmental impact in terms of urban smog and acid rain that many governments introduced legislation curtailing the output of aerosols.
As the air cleared, global temperatures began to rise again; and Professor Kaufmann believes the same thing is likely to happen now, as China and other developing countries get to grips with their burgeoning environmental issues.
The last two years' data suggest temperatures are once more beginning to rise; but how fast this happens depends on a number of factors.
One is how quickly the rapidly industrialising countries mandate the fitting of equipment that removes sulphate particles.
Another is solar activity. Recently, it showed signs of picking up as the Sun enters a new cycle of activity, although recent researchraises the possibility of a new lull.
Other research groups, meanwhile, have produced evidence showing that natural cycles of ocean temperature, such as the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, may restrain temperatures for another decade or so.
Uncertainties over aspects of the Earth's immensely complex climate system, such as melting ice and the behaviour of clouds, could also skew the overall picture.
But Robert Kaufmann is in no doubt that temperatures will pick up if greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise.
"People can choose not to believe in [man-made] climate change - but the correct term here is 'belief' - believing is an act of faith, whereas science is a testing of hypotheses and seeing whether they hold up against real world data.
"Even before this paper there wasn't much scientific evidence for denying climate change, and now I don't see any credible scientific contradiction - if people don't believe it, it'll be because they choose not to believe it."
Source: BBC Science and Environment
Interesting Facts about Justin Bieber being on the Cover Page of Magazines
At the start of 2011,
magazine sales figures proved putting Lady Gaga on the cover of your magazine
is a sure-fire way to guarantee blockbuster sales, while featuring Taylor Swift
front and center is an almost certain bust. Now that numbers from the February
2011 issue of Vanity Fair starring Justin Bieber are in, we know how the
17-year-old heartthrob ranks amongst pop-star cover models and it is not good
-- in fact, for Vanity Fair, the numbers are nearly horrifying. Bieber's issue
is going to have the dubious distinction of being the Conde Nast monthly's
worst-selling in 12 years.
First Ever Synthetic Windpipe Transplant
Surgeons in Sweden have carried
out the world's first synthetic organ transplant.
Scientists in London created an
artificial windpipe which was then coated in stem cells from the patient.
Crucially, the technique does not
need a donor, and there is no risk of the organ being rejected. The surgeons
stress a windpipe can also be made within days.
The 36-year-old cancer patient is
doing well a month after the operation.
Professor Paolo Macchiarini from
Spain led the pioneering surgery, which took place at the Karolinska University
Hospital.
In an interview with the BBC, he
said he now hopes to use the technique to treat a nine-month-old child in Korea
who was born with a malformed windpipe or trachea.
Professor Macchiarini already has
10 other windpipe transplants under his belt - most notably the world's first
tissue-engineered tracheal transplant in 2008 on 30-year-old Spanish woman
Claudia Costillo - but all required a donor.
Interesting Facts about Celebrities Tattoos
Take a look at some of the Interesting Facts about Celebrities Tattoos:
Jennifer
Aniston was recently spotted in NYC showing off her very first tattoo: the name
"Norman" on the inside of her right foot. The fresh ink is a tribute
to the 42-year-old actress's dog Norman, a Welsh corgi-terrier mix that passed
away in May at 15 years old. "Memorial tattoos are a serious and often
necessary thing, but Jennifer chose one of the worst places of all time to get
it," says "NY Ink's " Ami James. "The foot
is consistently being exposed to the elements, naturally exfoliating itself and
being exposed to constant friction. Even a good tattoo will not withstand that
for much time at all," the expert tattoo artist explains. "Jennifer
will be lucky if that tattoo looks decent for even a few months."
Antarctica Tops the List of Coldest Places on Earth
Antarctica takes position number one among the coldest places on earth. Mostly uninhabited except for penguin and seal colonies found along the coast, Antarctica has practically no match on the temperature department. At the Plateau Station, temperatures can easily plummet to -119.23° Fahrenheit (-84° Celsius) and the annual average temperature barely reaches -32.8°F (-36°C). The record as the coldest place, however, goes to Vostok Station, Antarctica, where the temperature reached -129°F (-89.4°C) on 21 July 1983. Scientists are the only humans to live on Antarctica for months at a time, and even they do it only in summer.
Cars Used in Filming Transformers 3: Dark of the Moon
Here is the list of Cars that has been used to film the Movie Transformers 3: Dark of the Moon & Pictures below:
Skids – Chevy Sparks Green
Blue Mercedes-Benz W212
Bumblebee – Fifth Generation Chevrolet Camaro
Dale Earnhardt, Jr NASCAR
Interesting Facts about Tom and Jerry
Tom and Jerry is an American series of animated cartoons created by
William Hanna and Joseph Barbera for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, centering on a
never-ending rivalry between Tom the cat and Jerry the mouse. Hanna and
Barbera wrote and directed one hundred and fourteen Tom and Jerry shorts
between 1940 and 1957, before the animation department was closed.
The original Tom and Jerry series, now known as one
of the most famous and longest-lived rivalries in American TV history, is notable for having
won the Academy Award for Animated Short Film seven times, tying with Walt
Disney’s Silly
Symphonies. A longtime television favorite with kids, teenagers,
and adults alike, in 2000 it was named one of the greatest television shows of
all time by Time magazine.
Haiti cholera outbreak blamed on UN force
Evidence "strongly suggests" that a UN peacekeeping mission brought acholera strain to Haiti that has killed thousands of people, according to a study by a team of epidemiologists and physicians.
The study is the strongest argument yet that newly arrived Nepalese peacekeepers at a base near the town of Mirebalais brought with them the cholera, which spread through the waterways of the Artibonite region and elsewhere in the Caribbean country.
The disease has killed more than 5,500 people and affected more than 363,000 others since it was discovered in October, according to the Haitian government.
"Our findings strongly suggest that contamination of the Artibonite [river] and one of its tributaries downstream from a military camp triggered the epidemic," said the report in the July issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases, a journal of the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The article says there is "an exact correlation" in time and place between the arrival of a battalion from an area of Nepal that was experiencing a cholera outbreak and the appearance of the first cases in the Meille river a few days later.
The remoteness of the Meille river in central Haiti and the absence of other factors make it unlikely that the cholera strain could have come to Haiti in any other way, the report says.
Sylvie van den Wildenberg, a spokeswoman for the UN mission in Haiti, would not comment on the findings of the article , referring only to a study released in May by a UN-appointed panel.
That panel's report found that the cholera outbreak was caused by a South Asian strain imported by human activity that contaminated the Meille river where the UN base of the Nepalese peacekeepers is located. The study also found that bad sanitation at the camp would have made contamination of the water system possible.
But the UN report refrained from blaming any single group for the outbreak. While no other potential source of the bacteria itself was named, the report attributed the outbreak to a "confluence of circumstances", including a lack of water infrastructure in Haiti and Haitians' dependence on the river system.
The panel's report was ordered by the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, as anti-UN protests spread in Haiti and mounting circumstantial evidence pointed to the troops.
Before that, for nearly two months after the outbreak last October, the UN, CDC and World Health Organisation refused to investigate the origin of the cholera, saying that it was more important to treat patients than to try to figure out the source.
The article comes as health workers in Haiti wrestle with a spike in the number of cholera cases brought on by several weeks of rainfall. The aid group Oxfam said earlier this month that its workers were treating more than 300 new cases a day, more than three times what they saw when the disease peaked.
Cholera is caused by a bacteria that produces severe diarrhoea and is contracted by eating or drinking contaminated food or water.
The disease has spread to the neighbouring Dominican Republic, where more than 36 deaths have been reported since November.
Epidemiologist Renaud Piarroux, the lead author of the CDC journal article, was initially sent by the French government in late 2010 to investigate the origins of Haiti's outbreak. He wrote a report for UN and Haitian officials that said the Nepalese peacekeepers were likely to have caused the outbreak.
The latest study was more complete and its methodology was reviewed by a group of scientists.
The new study argues it is important for scientists to determine the origin of cholera outbreaks and how they spread in order to eliminate "accidentally imported disease".
Moreover, the study says, figuring out the source of a cholera epidemic would help health workers better treat and prevent cholera by minimising the "distrust associated with the widespread suspicions of a cover-up of a deliberate importation of cholera".
It also argues that demonstrating an imported origin would compel "international organisations to reappraise their procedures".
After cholera surfaced last fall, many Haitians believed the Nepalese peacekeepers were to blame, straining relations between the population and UN personnel and sparking angry protests. On the streets, cholera has become slang for something that must be banished from Haiti.
The new study is acknowledged in a commentary by a pair of public health experts affiliated with the CDC.
"However it occurred, there is little doubt that the organism was introduced to Haiti by a traveller from abroad, and this fact raises important public health considerations," wrote Scott Dowell, director of the CDC's division of global disease detection and emergency response, and Christopher Braden, a medical epidemiologist with the CDC.
100 great things about America 2011
FORTUNE -- Though our affection for America is a
year-round phenomenon, summer seems to make the heart and mind grow even
fonder. Holidays contribute to this: Memorial Day ushers in the season,
followed soon after by our Uncle Sam's favorite, July Fourth. Getting out into
the great outdoors also kindles nation-love, as only a visit to national parks
like Yellowstone or the Great Smoky Mountains can do. So, too, does the food of
summer: grilled hot dogs and hamburgers, corn on the cob, and blueberry pie on
a brimming picnic table. So we think it only fitting to present to you our
second annual list of 100 Great Things About America right as we head into the
summer solstice.
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