HIMALAYAN MIRROR GANGTOK, TUESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2015 NASA selects tiny research satellites for future missions Washington : NASA has selected more than dozen small research satellites that could fit in the palm of your hand to fly in space on future rocket launches. Called CubeSats, these cube-shaped nanosatellites are small but pack an outsized research punch. They will enable unique technology demonstrations, education research and science missions and will study topics ranging from how the solar system formed to the demonstration of a new radiation-tolerant computer system, the US space agency said in a statement. The 14 CubeSats selected are from 12 states and will fly as auxiliary payloads aboard rockets planned to launch in 2016, 2017 and 2018. They come from universities across the country, non-profit organisations and NASA field centres. As part of the White House Maker Initiative, NASA is seeking to leverage the growing community of spaceenthusiasts to create a nation that contributes to NASA’s space exploration goals. The aim is to launch 50 small satellites from all 50 states in the next five years. (IANS) App that delivers lost key via post New York : Remember the hardship you had to undergo the last time you lost your car's keys while several kilometres away from home? Now, you can prevent the re-run of that incident with the help of an app. New York-based KeyMe is trying to ease that annoying and costly mistake by changing how we duplicate our keys. Its iOS app lets users take a photo of their key and upload it to the cloud to print a new one on the fly, reported CNET. "We've made hundreds of thousands of keys," Michael Harbolt, KeyMe's vice president of marketing, was quoted as saying. KeyMe has almost two dozen automated locations in the greater New York City area, as well as a few scattered around in states like Florida, Arizona and Arkansas. All one has to do is take a photograph of their home, office or car key. The app then uploads that image to the company's system. A press of a button tells the app to deliver the key to the user in the mail. Even easier, one can travel to one of KeyMe's kiosks and have a new key printed in less than a minute. Part of KeyMe's security measures against quick scans of other people's keys involve asking users to photograph both sides of the key and to use a blank white sheet of paper in the background. Can thieves abuse this? No, says the company. KeyMe requires a fingerprint to use its kiosk, an email account to sign up and a credit card and address to print a new key. "We haven't had one instance of our keys being used in a crime," Harbolt reassured. (IANS) Tapeworms fight to control shared host London : If two tapeworms infect the same host and find themselves at cross-purposes, they may actively sabotage each other in a competition to seize control, new research suggests. For the study, Nina Hafer and Manfred Milinski from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Ploen, Germany, infected small crustaceans called copepods with tapeworms. These live in copepods and then move to fish for their next life-cycle stage. The team found that when two tapeworms in the same copepod were ready to move hosts, they combined to make the copepod even more active than a single parasite would. But when an older tapeworm was sharing a host with a younger one, the older animal always won out. The younger tapeworms failed to influence their hosts at all when in conflict with their older brethren, and did not lower the activity compared with hosts infected with only one parasite. "This suggests that the older parasite is "sabotaging" the younger one's activity," Hafer said. The older parasite even won out when it was in competition with two younger individuals. According to Frank Cezilly, who studies host-parasite interactions at the University of Bourgogne in Dijon, France, the work is interesting. However, "it could be sabotage but it could be just that the younger parasite can't overcome [pre-existing] manipulation by the older parasite," he concluded. The report was published in the journal Evolution. (IANS) Haryana to launch IT mass literacy scheme Chandigarh :To achieve the goal of 'Digital Haryana' and keep pace with rapidly evolving technologies, the Haryana government will launch an Information Technology (IT) mass literacy scheme (Digital Saksharta Abhiyaan), to make the people of the state digitally literate. A spokesman of the electronics and information technology department said Sunday that under the programme, training would be imparted to 1.10 lakh people in five selected blocks by picking up one person from every eligible household. The pro- gramme will begin in March. "One block each in Gurgaon, Faridabad, Karnal, Jind and Panchkula districts has been selected for the programme," he said. "Under level-1, training would be imparted to make a person IT-literate and enable him to operate a computer or digital access devices, send and receive e-mails, and surf the internet for information. Under level-2, those selected would be trained to effectively avail themselves of various government-to-citizen and business-to-citizen services besides basic level IT literacy," the spokesman said. The main objective is to declare the selected blocks 100 percent digitally literate. About 20,000 beneficiaries are to be trained under phaseI by October this year. About 90,000 more would be trained in level 1 and level 2 digital literacy courses over a period of four years, he said. The central and state government will bear part of the cost of training for general category candidates while the entire cost would be borne by the union government in case of candidates from reserved categories. (IANS) MOM will live on, beating anticipated life expectancy Bengaluru : India's first interplanetary mission has achieved another feat. The Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), which will complete its designated life around the Red Planet on March 24, will have an extended life, thanks to its minimal fuel consumption. The Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) is likely to make an announcement regarding extended life in the coming days. However, how much longer MOM will live will be known only after a solar eclipse in April-May. An Isro official told last week that MOM's fuel consumption has been minimal. Confirming this on Saturday, a senior scientist said: "As we speak, only about a kilogram of the 40 kg fuel it had after insertion into the Martian Orbit has been used up. So yes, MOM will live longer." On the launch day (November 5, 2013), MOM had 852 kg fuel, of which 338.9kg was used during the launch and about 190 kg during the crucial trans-Mars Injection manoeuvre on December 1, 2013. Following this, there were a few other operations and as on September 23, 2014, the day before it was put into the Martian Orbit, roughly 300 kg of fuel was left. After the insertion into the Mars orbit, MOM was left with 40 kg of fuel and now it has about 39 kg. Scientists had predicted that will all uncertainties accounted for MOM would need 20 kg of fuel for six months, but it had more than that. Solar Eclipse Scientists can't estimate how much longer MOM will live. For, it all depends on how much fuel MOM uses during a solar eclipse expected to occur in the Martian Orbit in AprilMay 2015. "As of now, MOM is being maintained by ground stations. We have control over how much fuel to expend, whether a manoeuvre is required or not and other specifics. But during the eclipse, MOM will get into an autonomous mode and we will have no control over it," a senior official said. Explaining that solar panels on MOM currently power a lot of sub-systems and fuel is only being used for small autocorrections, he said: "During the eclipse, MOM may expend fuel to turn the panels to position it towards the Sun, or even use some for repositioning itself in the orbit and so on; we really cannot guess how much fuel it may use." Therefore, he said, an accurate guess of how much longer MOM can stay can only be made after the eclipse. (TOI) HAPPY RETURNS OF THE DAY BIRTHDAY GREETINGS Name : .............................................. Cost f o Free PHOTO Age:.................................................... Date of birth : ................................. Address :............................................. Dilip Paul All you have to do is fill up this Coupon, attach the desired photograph in the space provided. Completed coupon should reach our office Seven (7) days before the birthday. Office address : HIMALAYAN MIRROR, Gairi Gaon, Tadong, Gangtok, PIN: 737102, Email :[email protected] SCIENCE / TECHNOLOGY 5 Smart robots to become future firefighters at sea Washington : A group of the US engineering students has created a firefighting robot that may help sailors fight fires at sea. The SAFFiR (Shipboard Autonomous Firefighting Robot) humanoid robot has been developed by Terrestrial Robotics Engineering and Controls Lab and Extreme Environments, Robotics & Materials Laboratory at Virginia Institute of Technology. "It is not going to replace navy firefighters; it is going to assist navy firefighters," Viktor Orekhov, a former Virginia Tech doctoral student who helped design and build the robot, was quoted as saying. SAFFiR is about the size of an adult man, measuring five feet 10 inches tall and weighing about 64 kg and it stands on two "legs". In the future, every navy ship that leaves port could have one of these firefighting robots on board, the researchers said. SAFFiR was tested several times. The bot, which was controlled from a distance by a team from Virginia Tech, successfully put out the blaze, LiveScience reported. "We have demonstrated a real-world application for humanoid robots that no one has done before," said John Seminatore, a student in mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech who helped create SAFFiR. The Virginia Tech team hopes to get the bot to act autonomously but for now, it will continue to be tested as a useroperated machine. A prototype of the bot was unveiled recently at the Naval Future Force Science and Technology Expo in Washington, DC. (IANS) Submarine volcanoes may alter long-term climate: Study Washington : Volcanoes hidden under the oceans may have a greater influence on our planet's long-term climate than previously thought, a US study said. The study found that submarine volcanoes flare up on strikingly regular cycles, ranging from two weeks to 100,000 years and that they erupt almost exclusively during the first six months of each year, Xinhua reported. Previously, scientists presumed underwater volcanoes are Earth's gentle giants, oozing lava at slow, steady rates, but the new study said they produce maybe eight times more lava annually than land volcanoes. Due to the chemistry of their magmas, the carbon dioxide they emit is currently at about 88 million tonnes a year, the same as, or perhaps a little less than, from land volcanoes, said study author Maya Tolstoy of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in the US. If underwater volcanoes were a little bit more active, their carbon dioxide output would shoot up, Tolstoy said. The findings suggested that models of earth's natural climate dynamics and human-influenced climate change may have to be adjusted. "People have ignored seafloor volcanoes on the idea that their influence is small - but that's because they are assumed to be in a steady state, which they're not," said Tolstoy. "They respond to both very large forces, and to very small ones, and that tells us that we need to look at them much more closely." In the study, Tolstoy and colleagues closely monitored 10 submarine eruption sites using sensitive new seismic instruments. They also created new high-resolution maps showing outlines of past lava flows and analyzed some 25 years of seismic data from ridges in the Pacific, Atlantic and Arctic oceans. Sea levels drop as water gets locked into ice, relieving pressure on submarine volcanoes and causing them to erupt more. Seismic data also suggested that undersea volcanoes pulse to life every two weeks. That is the schedule upon which combined gravity from the moon and sun cause ocean tides to reach their lowest points, thus, subtly relieving pressure on volcanoes below. "This study... may have a long-term feedback into our whole climate system. If we are going to protect Earth we have to understand how the planet functions as a whole," Tolstoy added.The study was published in the US journal Geophysical Research Letters Friday. (IANS) Hubble captures rare triplemoon conjunction Washingto : NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has captured the rare occurrence of three of Jupiter's largest moons Europa, Callisto and Io racing across the banded face of the gas-giant planet. These so-called Galilean moons, named after the 17th century scientist Galileo Galilei who discovered them with a telescope, complete orbits around Jupiter with durations ranging from two days to 17 days. They can commonly be seen transiting the face of Jupiter and casting shadows onto its cloud tops. However, seeing three moons transiting the face of Jupiter at the same time is rare, occurring only once or twice a decade, the US space agency said in a statement. The images were taken with Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 in visible light. The moons in these photos have distinctive colours. The ancient cratered surface of Callisto is brownish; the smooth icy surface of Europa is yellow-white; and the vol- canic, sulfur-dioxide surface of Io is orange. The apparent "fuzziness" of some of the shadows depends on the moons' distances from Jupiter. The farther away a moon is from the planet, the softer the shadow because the shadow is more spread out across the disk. (IANS)
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