Showing posts with label INFORMATION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label INFORMATION. Show all posts

Himalaya glacier deadline 'wrong

Sunday, December 6, 2009


The UN panel on climate change warning that Himalayan glaciers could melt to a fifth of current levels by 2035 is wildly inaccurate, an academic says.
J Graham Cogley, a professor at Ontario Trent University, says he believes the UN authors got the date from an earlier report wrong by more than 300 years.
He is astonished they "misread 2350 as 2035". The authors deny the claims.
Leading glaciologists say the report has caused confusion and "a catalogue of errors in Himalayan glaciology".
The Himalayas hold the planet's largest body of ice outside the polar caps - an estimated 12,000 cubic kilometres of water.
They feed many of the world's great rivers - the Ganges, the Indus, the Brahmaputra - on which hundreds of millions of people depend.
'Catastrophic rate'
In its 2007 report, the Nobel Prize-winning Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said: "Glaciers in the Himalayas are receding faster than in any other part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of them disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the Earth keeps warming at the current rate.

“ It is not plausible that Himalayan glaciers are disappearing completely within the next few decades 
Michael Zemp, World Glacier Monitoring Service
"Its total area will likely shrink from the present 500,000 to 100,000 square kilometres by the year 2035," the report said.
It suggested three quarters of a billion people who depend on glacier melt for water supplies in Asia could be affected.
But Professor Cogley has found a 1996 document by a leading hydrologist, VM Kotlyakov, that mentions 2350 as the year by which there will be massive and precipitate melting of glaciers.
"The extrapolar glaciation of the Earth will be decaying at rapid, catastrophic rates - its total area will shrink from 500,000 to 100,000 square kilometres by the year 2350," Mr Kotlyakov's report said.
Mr Cogley says it is astonishing that none of the 10 authors of the 2007 IPCC report could spot the error and "misread 2350 as 2035".
"I do suggest that the glaciological community might consider advising the IPCC about ways to avoid such egregious errors as the 2035 versus 2350 confusion in the future," says Mr Cogley.
He said the error might also have its origins in a 1999 news report on retreating glaciers in the New Scientist magazine.
The article quoted Syed I Hasnain, the then chairman of the International Commission for Snow and Ice's (ICSI) Working group on Himalayan glaciology, as saying that most glaciers in the Himalayan region "will vanish within 40 years as a result of global warming".

When asked how this "error" could have happened, RK Pachauri, the Indian scientist who heads the IPCC, said: "I don't have anything to add on glaciers."
The IPCC relied on three documents to arrive at 2035 as the "outer year" for shrinkage of glaciers.
They are: a 2005 World Wide Fund for Nature report on glaciers; a 1996 Unesco document on hydrology; and a 1999 news report in New Scientist.
Incidentally, none of these documents have been reviewed by peer professionals, which is what the IPCC is mandated to be doing.
Murari Lal, a climate expert who was one of the leading authors of the 2007 IPCC report, denied it had its facts wrong about melting Himalayan glaciers.
But he admitted the report relied on non-peer reviewed - or 'unpublished' - documents when assessing the status of the glaciers.
'Alarmist'
Recently India's Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh released a study on Himalayan glaciers that suggested that they may be not melting as much due to global warming as it is widely feared.
He accused the IPCC of being "alarmist".

Mr Pachauri dismissed the study as "voodoo science" and said the IPCC was a "sober body" whose work was verified by governments.
But in a joint statement some the world's leading glaciologists who are also participants to the IPCC have said: "This catalogue of errors in Himalayan glaciology... has caused much confusion that could have been avoided had the norms of scientific publication, including peer review and concentration upon peer-reviewed work, been respected."
Michael Zemp from the World Glacier Monitoring Service in Zurich also said the IPCC statement on Himalayan glaciers had caused "some major confusion in the media".
"Under strict consideration of the IPCC rules, it should actually not have been published as it is not based on a sound scientific reference.
"From a present state of knowledge it is not plausible that Himalayan glaciers are disappearing completely within the next few decades. I do not know of any scientific study that does support a complete vanishing of glaciers in the Himalayas within this century."
Pallava Bagla is science editor for New Delhi Television (NDTV) and author of Destination Moon - India's quest for Moon, Mars and Beyond.
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Rising sea levels: A tale of two cities

Wednesday, November 25, 2009


When people talk about the impact of rising sea levels, they often think of small island states that risk being submerged if global warming continues unchecked.
But it's not only those on low-lying islands who are in danger. Millions of people live by the sea - and are dependent on it for their livelihoods - and many of the world's largest cities are on the coast.
By 2050 the number of people living in delta cities is set to increase by as much as 70%, experts suggest, vastly increasing the number of those at risk.
To shed light the impact of rising sea levels, we are taking a close look at two very different cities,
and
, and their varying responses to the problem.

  •  Glaciers: If the world's mountain glaciers and icecaps melt, sea levels will rise by an estimated 0.5m

  •  Thermal expansion: The expansion of warming oceans was the main factor contributing to sea level rise, in the 20th Century, and currently accounts for more than half of the observed rise in sea levels

  •  Ice sheets: These vast reserves contain billions of tonnes of frozen water - if the largest of them (the East Antarctic Ice Sheet) melts, the global sea level will rise by an estimated 64m

  • Much of Rotterdam - Europe's busiest port city - lies several metres below sea level, and this vulnerable position has led it to develop some of the best flood protection in the world.
    As the capital of Mozambique - one of the world's poorest countries, and one that is already feeling the effects of climate change - Maputo is struggling to provide cost-effective measures to mitigate the effects of the rising waters.
    Authorities in both cities know urgent action is needed to protect their populations, and both are trying to rise to the challenge.
    Weaker Gulf Stream

    A rise in temperatures around the world due to carbon emissions since the industrial revolution means many icecaps and glaciers are steadily melting.
    Rising temperatures have also caused ocean waters to expand - the main cause of sea level rise in the 20th Century.
    The 2007
    projected a likely sea level rise of 28-43cm this century, but it acknowledged that this was probably an underestimate, as not enough was known about how ice behaves."The fact that sea levels are rising is a major reason for concern and it's a combination of the global average rise together with the natural variability leading to larger regional rises," said Dr John Church, from Australia's government-funded science and research body, the CSIRO.
    The weakening of the Gulf Stream coupled with the gravitational effects of being closer to the North Pole mean waters in the northern hemisphere are experiencing the biggest rise.

    Off the Netherlands, for example, sea levels rose by some 20cm in the last 100 years. But the country's national Delta Commission predicts they will increase by up to 1.3m by 2100 and by as much as 4m by 2200.
    "There is a problem and we have to find an answer," said Rotterdam's Vice-Mayor Lucas Bolsius.
    "We need to invest. If we don't put money into this issue we'll have a problem surviving."
    Cyclones
    The Dutch drew this conclusion from a massive storm surge in 1953, which caused widespread flooding and killed nearly 2,000 people.
    They set about defending populated areas with a massive network of dykes and dams, and experts now estimate the country is protected from all but a one-in-10,000-year event.
    The story is very different in Mozambique.
    Already buffeted by regular floods and cyclones, the problem of rising sea levels is one the authorities in Maputo could do without.
    But Mozambique has been identified as one of the countries likely to be affected most by climate change, and the issue will not go away.

    While scientists cannot give an exact figure of how much the sea has already risen in Mozambique, the effects are already obvious.
    "I went to the beach a lot as a child, and I've noticed things are changing," said 34-year-old Jose, who lives in Maputo.
    "The water is eating the land - little by little it's eating the land."
    Mozambique has compiled an action plan, and has been offered help from the World Bank, UN agencies and a plethora of other aid agencies.
    But so far little has been done, and much of what the country would like to do is beyond its budget.
    "I think people are still at the stage of 'Oh my God - what are we going to do?'" as environmentalist Antonia Reina puts it.
    Mozambique will be going to the Copenhagen summit as part of a united African delegation, to ask for help from richer countries - like the Netherlands.
    Africa argues that climate change - including rising sea levels - is a global problem, and demands a global response.
    While most would agree with that sentiment, the reality is that every country has its own battles to face - and in this series of articles we examine how our two cities are coping, both at an individual and a municipal level, as the waters rise.
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    Facebook acts on follower trade

    Saturday, November 21, 2009

    Facebook has threatened legal action against a service that sells friends on the social networking site.

    It said it would take the action against marketing firm USocial unless it stopped violating Facebook's rights.

    It also wanted USocial to stop helping members break the site's terms and conditions, specifically letting people profit from their profile.

    In response, USocial agreed to a change in its practices but would not shut down its service.

    Facebook sent Cease and Desist letters to USocial claiming that the way the marketing firm operates violates its rights by sending spam, using web tools to harvest pages, getting login names and by accessing accounts that did not belong to the marketing firm.

    Customers of USocial use it to boost follower and friend numbers on social network sites such as Facebook and Twitter.

    On micro-blogging site Twitter, followers can be bought in blocks starting at £53 for 1,000. The biggest block USocial is selling is 100,000 people.

    USocial defended itself against Facebook's claims, saying that it did not spam users or use web tools to gather information about profiles.

    However, in response to the legal letters, USocial said it would delete the login information it had collected and broadly stop offering to sell Facebook friends. It also put a notice on its site saying it was not affiliated with Facebook.

    However, it said, there was "possibility" that it would resell the service in the future. If it was to re-start the service it said it would let Facebook know beforehand.

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/technology/8370302.stm

    Published: 2009/11/20 13:46:11 GMT

    © BBC MMIX
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    Large Hadron Collider works again

    Friday, November 20, 2009


    The Large Hadron Collider experiment has re-started after a 14-month hiatus while the machine was being repaired.
    Engineers have made two stable proton beams circulate in opposite directions around the machine, which is in a tunnel beneath the French-Swiss border.
    The team may try to increase the £6bn ($10bn) collider's energy to record-breaking levels this weekend.
    The LHC is being used to smash together beams of protons in a bid to shed light on the nature of the Universe.
    It is the world's largest machine and is housed in a 27km-long circular tunnel.
    During the experiment, scientists will search for signs of the Higgs boson, a sub-atomic particle that is crucial to our current understanding of physics. Although it is predicted to exist, scientists have never found it.
    “ It happened faster than anyone could have dreamed of, everything went very smoothly 
    James Gillies Cern
    Dozens of giant superconducting magnets that accelerate the particles at the speed of light have had to be replaced after faults developed just days after the collider was inaugurated last year.
    Operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (Cern), the LHC will create similar conditions to those which were present moments after the Big Bang.
    The BBC's Pallab Ghosh in Geneva says the restart of the collider was the moment the scientists had been waiting for.
    It means they can once again go in search of the new discoveries they believe will roll back the frontiers of understanding our universe, says our correspondent.
    "It's great to see beams circulating in the LHC again," said Cern's director-general Rolf Heuer.

    "We've still got some way to go before physics can begin, but with this milestone we're well on the way."
    Engineers sent their first beam all the way round the LHC's circumference 100m underground after 1930 GMT on Friday.
    Record attempt
    The beams themselves are made up of "packets" - each about a metre long - containing billions of protons. But they would disperse if left to their own devices.
    Electrical forces had to be used to "capture" the protons. This keeps them tightly huddled in packets, for a stable, circulating beam.

    Engineers had not been expected to try for a circulating beam before 0600 GMT on Saturday.

    James Gillies, Cern's director of communications, told BBC News: "It happened faster than anyone could have dreamed of."
    "Everything went very smoothly."
    Dr Gillies said that if everything continued to go well, Cern might try to reach a record-breaking beam energy of 1.2 trillion electron volts this weekend.
    Only the Tevatron particle accelerator in Chicago, US, has approached this energy, operating at just under one trillion electron volts.
    But other team members want to keep the beam circulating at low energy and try for the machine's first proton beam collisions.
    "The LHC is a far better understood machine than it was a year ago," said Steve Myers, Cern's director for accelerators.
    "We've learned from our experience, and engineered the technology that allows us to move on. That's how progress is made."




  •  1 - 14 quadrupole magnets replaced







  •  2 - 39 dipole magnets replaced







  •  3 - More than 200 electrical connections repaired







  •  4 - Over 4km of beam pipe cleaned







  •  5 - New restraining system installed for some magnets







  •  6 - Hundreds of new helium ports being installed around machine







  •  7 - Thousands of detectors added to early warning system





  • There are some 1,200 superconducting magnets which form the LHC's main "ring".
    These magnets bend proton beams in opposite directions around the tunnel at close to the speed of light.
    At allotted points around the tunnel, the proton beams cross paths, smashing into one another with enormous energy. Large "detector" machines located at the crossing points will scour the wreckage of these collisions for discoveries that should extend our knowledge of physics.
    Engineers first circulated a beam all the way around the LHC on 10 September 2008.
    But just nine days later, an electrical fault in one of the connections between superconducting magnets caused a tonne of liquid helium to leak into the tunnel.
    Liquid helium is used to cool the LHC to its operating temperature of 1.9 kelvin (-271C; -456F).
    The machine has been shut down ever since the accident, to allow repairs to take place.
    Professor Norman McCubbin, from the UK's Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Didcot, added: "I'm sure every particle physicist has been feeling just a little bit impatient as the 're-start' of the LHC has drawn nearer. It's great to see beams circulating again."
    The damage caused to the collider meant 53 superconducting magnets had to be replaced and about 200 electrical connections repaired.
    Engineers have also been installing a new early warning system which could prevent incidents of the kind which shut down the experiment.
    Cern has spent some 40m Swiss Francs (£24m) on repairs to the collider.
    Paul.Rincon-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
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    Peru arrests 'human fat killers'

    Thursday, November 19, 2009



    Four people have been arrested in Peru on suspicion of killing dozens of people in order to sell their fat and tissue for cosmetic uses in Europe.
    The gang allegedly targeted people on remote roads, luring them with fake job offers before extracting their fat to sell it for $15,000 (£9,000) a litre.
    Other suspected gang members, including two Italian nationals, remain at large.
    Police said the gang could be behind the disappearances of up to 60 people in the region.

    At a news conference in the capital, police showed reporters two bottles containing human body fat and images of one of the alleged victims.
    One of the alleged killings is reported to have taken place in mid-September, with the person's body tissue removed for sale.
    Cmdr Angel Toledo told Reuters some of the suspects had "declared and stated how they murdered people with the aim being to extract their fat in rudimentary labs and sell it".
    Police said they suspect the fat was sold to cosmetics and pharmaceutical companies in Europe, but have not confirmed any such connection.
    'Detailed confession'
    Gen Felix Burga, head of Peru's police criminal division, said there were indications that "an international network trafficking human fat" was operating from Peru.
    The first person was arrested earlier this month in a bus station in Lima, carrying a shipment of the fat.
    The Associated Press news agency quoted Col Jorge Mejia as saying one of the suspects had described to police in detail how the victims were killed and their fat removed.
    The suspect said the fat was then sold to intermediaries in Lima and that the gang's leader, Hilario Cudena, had been carrying out such murders for decades, AP reported.
    The alleged buyers of the fat are also being hunted by police.
    The gang has been referred to as the Pishtacos, after an ancient Peruvian legend of killers who attack people on lonely roads and murder them for their fat.
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    Tiny chip could diagnose disease

    Wednesday, November 18, 2009


    Researchers have demonstrated a tiny chip based on silicon that could be used to diagnose dozens of diseases.
    A tiny drop of blood is drawn through the chip, where disease markers are caught and show up under light.
    The device uses the tendency of a fluid to travel through small channels under its own force, instead of using pumps.
    The design is simpler, requires less blood be taken, and works more quickly than existing "lab on a chip" designs, the team report in Lab on a Chip.
    It has a flexible design so that it could be used for a wide range of diagnostics.
    Much research in recent years has focused on the chemical and medical possibilities of so-called microfluidic devices at the heart of lab-on-a-chip designs.
    These microfluidics contain between dozens and thousands of tiny channels through which fluids can flow, and as micro-manufacturing methods have advanced, so has the potential complexity of microfluidics.
    Now, scientists at IBM's research labs in Zurich have developed a cheap lab-on-a-chip that has the potential to diagnose dozens of diseases.
    Bind and shine
    The device relies on an array of antibody molecules that are designed to latch on to the protein-based molecular markers of disease in blood.
    The antibodies are chemically connected to molecules that emit light of a specific colour when illuminated - but only when they have bound to the disease markers.
    "There are devices that have been developed in microfluidics to do analysis of proteins, but most of them use active pumping and electrical components," said Luc Gervais, a co-author on the study.
    "They're very complex systems; this makes them less easy to use by non-trained personnel - and it makes them a lot more expensive to manufacture," Dr Gervais told BBC News.
    Instead, the new device exploits capillary action, the tendency of fluids to climb through narrow channels - the same phenomenon that drives water into a sponge placed on a wet surface.
    The speed with which blood is drawn through the chip can be controlled by the design of the micro-channels on the device. Those channels can be designed with incredible precision on a silicon chip - something with which IBM has significant experience.
    The microchannel-patterned chip is then sealed with a special polymer called polydimethylsiloxane, to which the "detector" antibodies easily bond.
    Different antibodies can be placed in a number of distinct channels, making it possible to diagnose a range of different diseases simultaneously.
    Such wide-ranging studies can be done in large analysers, found in the central laboratories of hospitals.
    "Typically you'll take a couple of millilitres of blood send it to the central lab and it can take up to an hour or even more to get the results," Dr Gervais said.
    "In our case you can get a quantitative analysis of the patient's blood within just a few minutes at the bedside of the patient."
    What is more, it can be done with just a few microlitres of blood - a thousand times less - an amount that could be collected with a prick of a finger instead of a syringe.
    While the approach will make diagnosis cheaper, co-author Emmanuel Delamarche said the key aspect of the approach is its speed.
    "We are giving back precious minutes to doctors so they can make informed and accurate decisions right at the time they need them most to save lives."

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    http://www.economist.com/sciencetechnology/displayStory.cfm?story_id=14889162

    Monday, November 16, 2009

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