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Saturday, September 24, 2011

Simulation Suggests There May Have Been a Fifth Gas Giant in Our Solar System



Solar System Harman Smith and Laura Generosa (nee Berwin)
A “violent encounter with Jupiter” may have hurled a fifth gas giant out of our solar system billions of years ago. A simulation done by the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado suggests that our solar system may have included another gaseous giant, placed between Saturn and Uranus. The computer models may prove how the planets of our solar system settled in their current position, a long-standing source of mystery to astronomers.
The formation of Uranus and Neptune has puzzled astronomers for years. The assumed disc of gas and dust that formed the two gas giants would have been too thin at their current locations to form the icy planets. It’s more likely that the two, and Jupiter and Saturn, were closer together in the earlier days of our solar system, and spread out once the disc was depleted. The “five gravitational bullies of the solar system, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune” jockeyed for position after being formed. According to past simulations, which only included the current planets, either Uranus or Neptune at least should have been jettisoned into deep space. “People didn’t know how to resolve that,” says David Nesvorny of the Southwest Research Institute. He offers a new explanation: “A sacrificial ice giant between Saturn and Uranus.”

The existence of this new planet, who some of Nesvorny’s colleagues are calling Hades, is supported by the results of 6,000 computer simulations. Previous simulations only included Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune in the outer solar system. But these new simulations also included models with five planets, testing different starting position scenarios. In 90 percent of the four planet models, the simulations ended with only three planets left in the outer system. But in half of the five planet simulations, four planets in very similar positions to our current solar system resulted. The results with the most similar positions started with a fifth planet between Saturn and Uranus, and ended with this planet cast out after an encounter with Jupiter.
These results also suggest that Jupiter “jumped” to its current position from one that was closer to the sun. This occurred in the simulations that allowed the four inner planets, including Earth, to survive the clash of the gaseous titans. “This jumping Jupiter theory is very difficult to achieve for the four-planet system. But it’s a natural consequence of the five-planet system,” says Nesvorny.
The planetary battle could also explain the heavily cratered surface of the moon caused during the “late heavy bombardment.” The Kuiper Belt and Oord Cloud were not fully formed, and the disturbance could have flung debris from these regions of proto-planets beyond Neptune towards the inner system.

TOP TEN MOST CURRENT BUSINESS TACTICS




The things that keep business moving continue to change. Stay on top with these 10 best practices.
The 10 Most Important Trends in Business
BY: Haydn Shaughnessy, Contributor
What is the single most important trend in business today? If there was a beauty contest or an arm wrestle to decide, then the big surprise would be the sheer number of contestants. Limiting the list to the ten most important trends in business today, there is a strong case for singling out just one of those as the most important.  What would it be for you?
For me it is radical adjacency,  a strategy that I have written about before.  Also on the list are:
Ten Trends
The emergence of a new type of business ecosystem, new ways to scale businesses, the emergence of a different type of leader and leader values, the rise of the global middle class, the new global division of labor, the ‘universal connector‘ or mechanisms through which business can be conducted anonymously at huge scale, the business platform, cloud infrastructure, the externalising of talent and in particular the rise of the bottom of the pyramid as a source of innovation.
These ten trends or developments are allowing companies like Apple and Amazon to cast a wholly new form of business. But the development is not confined to Apple and Amazon.
Tencent in China, NHN in Korea, Thomson ReutersUSAA, BigPoint Games, Facebook of course,  Google up to a point, all could lay a claim to appropriating five or more of these key trends and turning them to great advantage as could some surprising traditional brands such as Unilever. Unilever is also exceptional in workings its adjacencies through in the Indian market.
The topic of what makes the new generation of high performance businesses special is one that I’ve been researching with my colleague Nick Vitalari. We’re incorporating the results and thinking into in a new book. We are uploading chapters to the web from today onwards.
The book is called The Elastic Enterprise, a term we hope captures the sense that a new way to scale business, at low cost, has now emerged.
We’d really appreciate if you would join the debate here on Forbes or at The Elastic Enterprise.
Our argument is there are five pillars to the Elastic Enterprise and companies that migrate to these five pillars fastest and with sufficient competence are the ones that are returning often amazingly good results in a troubled economy. They are more than bucking the bad times though, they are creating a new manifesto for business.
So of the ten most important business trends we see five of them being especially significant – and each of these allows companies to drive significant radical adjacency moves.
Radical adjacency
Why is radical adjacency so important?
A radical adjacency is an acquisition or market move that takes the buyer or executing company into areas where its management has no, or little, current experience.
Traditionally, any kind of adjacency has been fraught with danger. Chunka Mui reiterates the point here on Forbes. A Bain study of 1,850 companies concluded that most sustained profitable growth does come when a company pushes its core business into an adjacent space. But 75 percent of companies that tried moving into adjacent markets, failed.
The adjacency moves we are seeing now are not just simple adjacencies into near-by markets. Apple from computing into music and mobile phones, NHN from search into games and payments, Tencent moving between IM,  games and payments, USAA moving into auto-buying advice and home-buying services, Amazon and Cloud, Kindle and, soon, tablet devices.
Continue reading this article at Forbes.com

THREE DO’S AND DONT’S FOR WEALTH BUILDING




Looking to grow your nest egg? Did you know that there are some finite rules which must be followed to build wealth successfully? Get these important do’s and dont’s here!
Fortune Watch suggests…
Dont’s
Don’t fall behind : Finance charges, interest payments, getting discouraged about your finances… all problems that can occur if you let yourself fall behind. Whether it’s bills, credit cards, or student loan payments, falling behind can be a very difficult problem to come back from. The more you have to pay out in charges, the less you will have to invest in your future.
Don’t do what the crowd is doing : When everyone is starting to get into an investment, that is generally when the smart investors are getting out. If everybody knows a stock is hot, or that their real estate market is booming, it generally indicates a bubble and that it’s time to cash out. Investors make money buying low and selling high. If an investment is hot and lots of money is flowing into it, you can’t buy low.
Don’t try get rich quick schemes : Don’t get greedy. This is easier said then done, but don’t try to gain too much too fast. Building wealth takes time and hard work… there is no easy way to get rich.
Do’s
Invest in what you know : Whether you are looking to invest in real estate, stocks, or anything else, make sure you know how the investment works. The great Warren Buffett was often criticized for not investing in technology during the dot-com boom. His answer was simple. If you don’t know the business model, what the company does on a day to day basis, or how it generates revenue now, and in the future, then stay away from it. This principle can be applied to all types of investing.
Invest early : The greatest thing you can do to build wealth is start early. Even if you can’t invest much, start with what you can and let your money grow over time. As Albert Einstein said, “compound interest is the greatest mathematical discovery of all time.”
Save more : This is another one that sounds pretty basic, but can be difficult to achieve. Often times people want the instant gratification and go out and treat themselves. If you have some money burning a hole in your pocket at the end of the month, save it. Think about how nice it will be when that money is working for you rather than heading out shopping.
Get more tips from Fortune Watch!

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SHRI SHIRDI SAI BABA

Friday, September 23, 2011

Nanoscale Nonlinear Light Source Optical Device Can Be Controlled Electronically


This schematic demonstrates how the EFISH device's dual electric and optical functions could be used to communicate data in a chip-based environment. (Credit: Mark Brongersma)
Science Daily  — Not long after the development of the first laser in 1960 scientists discovered that shining a beam through certain crystals produced light of a different color; more specifically, it produced light of exactly twice the frequency of the original. The phenomenon was dubbed second harmonic generation.














It was later discovered that applying an electrical field to some crystals produced a similar, though weaker, beam of light. This second discovery, known as EFISH -- for electric-field-induced second harmonic light generation -- has amounted mostly to an interesting bit of scientific knowledge and little more. EFISH devices are big, demanding high-powered lasers, large crystals and thousands of volts of electricity to produce the effect. As a result, they are impractical for all but a few applications.
The green laser pointers in use today to illustrate presentations are based on this science, but producing such a beautiful emerald beam is no easy feat. The green light begins as an infrared ray that must be first processed through a crystal, various lenses and other optical elements before it can illuminate that PowerPoint on the screen before you.
In a paper published September 22 in Science, engineers from Stanford have demonstrated a new device that shrinks EFISH devices by orders of magnitude to the nanoscale. The result is an ultra-compact light source with both optical and electrical functions. Research implications for the device range from a better understanding of fundamental science to improved data communications.
Spring-loaded electrons
The device is based on the physical forces that bind electrons in orbit around a nucleus.
"It's like a spring," said Mark Brongersma, an associate professor of materials science and engineering at Stanford.
In most cases, when you shine a light on an atom, the added energy will pull the electron away from the positively charged nucleus very predictably, in a linear fashion, so that when the light is turned off and the electron springs back to its original orbit, the energy released is the same as the light that displaced it.
The key phrase here being: "in most cases." When the light source is a high-intensity laser shining on a solid, researchers discovered that the farther the electrons are pulled away from the nuclei the less linearly the light interacts with the atoms.
"In other words, the light-matter interaction becomes nonlinear," said Alok Vasudev, a graduate student and co-author of the paper. "The light you get out is different from the light you put in. Shine a strong near-infrared laser on the crystal and green light exactly twice the frequency emerges."
Engineering possibilities
"Now, Alok and I have taken this knowledge and reduced it to the nanoscale," said the paper's first author, Wenshan Cai, a post-doctoral researcher in Brongersma's lab. "For the first time we have a nonlinear optical device at the nanoscale that has both optical and electrical functionality. And this offers some interesting engineering possibilities."
For many photonic applications, including signal and information processing, it is desirable to electrically manipulate nonlinear light generation. The new device resembles a nanoscale bowtie with two halves of symmetrical gold leaf approaching, but not quite touching, in the center. This thin slit between the two halves is filled with a nonlinear material. The narrowness is critical. It is just 100 nanometers across.
"EFISH requires a huge electrical field. From basic physics we know that the strength of an electric field scales linearly with the applied voltage and inversely with the distance between the electrodes -- smaller distance, stronger field and vice versa," said Brongersma. "So, if you have two electrodes placed extremely close together, as we do in our experiment, it doesn't take many volts to produce a giant electrical field. In fact, it takes just a single volt."
"It is this fundamental science that allows us to shrink the device by orders of magnitude from the human scale to the nanoscale," said Cai.
Enter plasmonics
Brongersma's area of expertise, plasmonics, then enters the scene. Plasmonics is the study of a curious physical phenomenon that occurs when light and metal interact. As photons strike metal they produce waves of energy coursing outward over the surface of the metal, like the ripples when a pebble is dropped in a pond.
Engineers have learned to control the direction of the ripples by patterning the surface of the metal in such a way that almost all of the energy waves are funneled inward toward the slit between the two metallic electrodes.
The light pours into the crevice as if over the edge of a waterfall and there it intensifies, producing light some 80 times stronger than the already intense laser levels from which it came. The researchers next apply a modest voltage to the metal resulting in the tremendous electrical field necessary to produce an EFISH beam.
Practical applications
"This type of device may one day find application in the communications industry," says Brongersma. "Most of the masses of information and social media interaction we send through our data centers, and the future data we will someday create, are saved and transmitted as electrical energy -- ones and zeros."
"Those ones and zeroes are just a switch; one is on, zero is off," said Cai. "As more energy-efficient optical information transport is rapidly gaining in importance, it is not a great leap to see why devices that can convert electrical to optical signals and back are of great value."
For the time being, however, the researchers caution that practical applications remain down the road, but they have created something new.
"It's a great piece of basic science," said Brongersma. "It is work that combines several disciplines -- nonlinear optics, electronics, plasmonics, and nanoscale engineering -- into a really interesting device that could keep us busy for awhile."

Bad diet: poor mental health



DEAKIN UNIVERSITY   


"It might be possible to use diet to prevent mental health problems developing in the first place."
Image:loooby/iStockphoto
Deakin University health researchers have found that poor diet may be a risk factor for mental health problems during adolescence.

In a study of 3000 Australian adolescents, published in the journal PLoS One, the Deakin researchers revealed that diet quality predicted mental health in adolescents over time, suggesting that it might be possible to use diet to prevent mental health problems developing in the first place.

“We found that diet quality and mental health were linked, with healthier diets associated with better mental health in 2005 and also predicting better mental health in 2007. This relationship even persisted when mental health at the starting point was taken into account,” said Dr Felice Jacka from Deakin University’s Barwon Psychiatric Research Unit based at Barwon Health, who led the study.

“Three quarters of psychiatric illnesses begin before the age of 25 and the average age that depressive illnesses start is only 13 years old. Once an individual experiences depression, they are more likely to experience it again. We believe that diet may be an important environmental factor influencing the development of mental health problems during adolescence, when rapid growth makes good nutrition particularly important.

“This new evidence suggests that it might be possible to prevent some cases of depression developing in the first place by ensuring that the diets of adolescents are sufficiently nutritious.”

For the study, the researchers analysed data collected from over 3000 Australian adolescents in 2005 and again in 2007.

Participants filled in detailed questionnaires about their normal diets and their psychological symptoms. Other factors which may be associated with both diet quality and mental health, such as the socioeconomic status of the family, age, gender, physical activity levels, dieting behaviours and weight, were also taken into account.

“Importantly, we found that changes in diet quality over time were linked to changes in mental health,” Dr Jacka said.

“On average, adolescents whose diets improved over the two year period also experienced an improvement in mental health over that time, while those adolescents whose dietary quality deteriorated over a two year period experienced an associated deterioration in mental health. This wasn’t explained by changes in physical activity levels or weight.”

The researchers also noted that the relationship didn’t seem to work the other way.

“We also examined whether the relationships that we saw could be explained by ‘reverse causality’; that is, was diet quality in adolescents a response to mental health symptoms rather than the other way around? We tested this idea, but did not find any evidence that this was the case,” Dr Jacka said.

The results of the study can be found in the latest issue of the journal the journal PLoS One.
Editor's Note: Original news release can be found here.

Red dust swept toxic fumes



QUEENSLAND UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY   

play4smee_Flickr_-_red_dust_storm
The red dust storm in Brisbane Central, Queensland in 2009.
Image: play4smee, Flickr CC-licensed
Queensland University of Technology (QUT) researchers have identified a silver lining in the cloud of red dust that enveloped much of eastern Australia two years ago.

Research fellow Dr Rohan Jayaratne from QUT's International Laboratory for Air Quality and Health (ILAQH) said that data, from what is believed to be the first air quality test undertaken during an Australian dust storm, showed that large dust particles swept up the smaller, potentially fatal ultrafine particles caused by everyday vehicle emissions.

Air quality tests taken during the September 2009 dust storm showed that Brisbane's most harmful ultrafine particle pollution from vehicle emissions, which contain 250 well-known carcinogens, almost disappeared as the eerie orange haze settled over the city.

Dr Jayaratne's team, led by ILAQH director Professor Lidia Morawska, said the dramatic shift in air quality was the result of a process of polydisperse coagulation whereby smaller particles, such as diesel emissions, diffuse on to the surface of larger particles, such as dust.

"We have seen this happen in the laboratory but never in an environment like this, given the very specific conditions," he said.

"One of the reasons vehicle emissions are so scary is that the ultrafine particles are able to penetrate deeper into the lungs, in the alveoli, whereas larger particles such as dust tend to get trapped in the upper-respiratory system. Asthma is often caused by larger particles, but the finer particles are associated with long-term health issues such as cardiovascular mortality." 

The threshold for the process of polydisperse coagulation usually occurs when large dust particles reach concentrations of "a couple of hundred" micrograms per cubic metre.

On a typical day in an urban area, such as Brisbane, the dust concentration is about 50 micrograms.

However, at the peak of the dust storm in the Brisbane CBD at noon on September 23, 2009, the measured concentration shot up to 6000 micrograms per cubic metre, causing the vehicle emission particles to almost disappear.

The QUT findings were recently reported in the internationally reputed journal Atmospheric Environment.

Dr Jayaratne said he also investigated causes of severe Australian dust storms in order to predict future occurrences and believes we may see a similarly severe storm this year if dry conditions continue.

"We found dust storms in Australia usually occur after flood events, similar to what Brisbane experienced in January," he said.

"Sediment is carried along inland rivers and settles as fine alluvial dust on the desert floor.

"If these conditions are followed by a prolonged dry season, which we have had, and the heavy winds that are characteristic in September and October, then there is every chance we will see another dust storm similar to the one we experienced in 2009."
Editor's Note: Original news release can be found here.

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Slippery slope: Researchers take advice from a carnivorous plant



(Biomechanism) — “Bio-inspired coating resists liquids and could lead to a broad range of advances in fuel transport, anti-bacterial surfaces and more.”
After a rain, the cupped leaf of a pitcher plant becomes a virtually frictionless surface. Sweet-smelling and elegant, the carnivore attracts ants, spiders, and even little frogs. One by one, they slide to their doom.
Caption: This is an illustration showing a schematic of slippery surface and its characteristics of repelling many fluids present on the earth (as symbolized by the earth reflected on the liquid drop). Credit: Courtesy of James C. Weaver and Peter Allen.
Adopting the plant’s slick strategy, a group of applied scientists at Harvard have created a material that repels just about any type of liquid, including blood and oil, and does so even under harsh conditions like high pressure and freezing temperatures.
The bio-inspired liquid repellence technology, described in the September 22 issue of Nature, should find applications in biomedical fluid handling, fuel transport, and anti-fouling and anti-icing technologies. It could even lead to self-cleaning windows and improved optical devices.
“Inspired by the pitcher plant, we developed a new coating that outperforms its natural and synthetic counterparts and provides a simple and versatile solution for liquid and solid repellency,” says lead author Joanna Aizenberg, Amy Smith Berylson Professor of Materials Science at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), Director of the Kavli Institute for Bionano Science and Technology at Harvard, and a Core Faculty member at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard.
By contrast, current state-of-the-art liquid repellent surfaces have taken cues from a different member of the plant world. The leaves of the lotus resist water due to the tiny microtextures on the surface; droplets balance on the cushion of air on the tips of the surface and bead up.
The so-called lotus effect, however, does not work well for organic or complex liquids. Moreover, if the surface is damaged (e.g., scratched) or subject to extreme conditions, liquid drops tend to stick to or sink into the textures rather than roll away. Finally, it has proven costly and difficult to manufacture surfaces based on the lotus strategy.
The pitcher plant takes a fundamentally different approach. Instead of using burr-like, air-filled nanostructures to repel water, the plant locks in a water layer, creating a slick coating on the top. In short, the fluid itself becomes the repellent surface.
“The effect is similar to when a car hydroplanes, the tires literally gliding on the water rather than the road,” says lead author Tak-Sing Wong, a postdoctoral fellow in the Aizenberg lab. “In the case of the unlucky ants, the oil on the bottom of their feet will not stick to the slippery coating on the plant. It’s like oil floating on the surface of a puddle.”
Inspired by the pitcher plant’s elegant solution, the scientists designed a strategy for creating slippery surfaces by infusing a nano/microstructured porous material with a lubricating fluid. They are calling the resulting bio-inspired surfaces “SLIPS” (Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surfaces).
Caption: This is a schematic showing the manufacturing of the Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surface (SLIPS). Credit: Courtesy of Peter Allen and James C. Weaver.
“Like the pitcher plant, SLIPS are slippery for insects, but they are now designed to do much more: they repel a wide variety of liquids and solids,” says Aizenberg. SLIPS show virtually no retention, as very little tilt is needed to coax the liquid or solid into sliding down and off the surface.
“The repellent fluid surface offers additional benefits, as it is intrinsically smooth and free of defects,” says Wong. “Even after we damage a sample by scraping it with a knife or blade, the surface repairs itself almost instantaneously and the repellent qualities remain, making SLIPS self-healing.” Unlike the lotus, the SLIPS can be made optically transparent, and therefore ideal for optical applications and self-cleaning, clear surfaces.
In addition, the near frictionless effect persists under extreme conditions: high pressures (as much as 675 atmospheres, equivalent to seven kilometers under the sea) and humidity, and in colder temperatures. The team conducted studies outside after a snowstorm; SLIPS withstood the freezing temperatures and even repelled ice.
“Not only is our bio-inspired surface able to work in a variety of conditions, but it is also simple and cheap to manufacture,” says co-author Sung Hoon Kang, a Ph.D. candidate in the Aizenberg lab. “It is easily scalable because you can choose just about any porous material and a variety of liquids.”
To see if the surface was truly up to nature’s high standards, they even did a few experiments with ants. In tests, the insects slid off the artificial surface or retreated to safer ground after only a few timorous steps.
The researchers anticipate that the pitcher plant-inspired technology, for which they are seeking a patent, could one day be used for fuel- and water-transport pipes, and medical tubing (such as catheters and blood transfusion systems), which are sensitive to drag and pressure and are compromised by unwanted liquid-surface interactions. Other potential applications include self-cleaning windows and surfaces that resist bacteria and other types of fouling (such as the buildup that forms on ship hulls). The advance may also find applications in ice-resistant materials and may lead to anti-sticking surfaces that repel fingerprints or graffiti.
“The versatility of SLIPS, their robustness and unique ability to self-heal makes it possible to design these surfaces for use almost anywhere, even under extreme temperature and pressure conditions,” says Aizenberg. “It potentially opens up applications in harsh environments, such as polar or deep sea exploration, where no satisfactory solutions exist at present. Everything SLIPS!”

TEN MOST PROMISING TECH COMPANIES





The tech sector is growing quickly and amassing millions. These chosen companies are among the few which are showing growth at a faster pace than all their competitors. Get the companies here!
Forbes highlights…
2010 Forbes Fast Tech List
RankCompany NameBusinessClosing Price (2/2/2011)Est. Long-Term EPS Growth (%)LTM Sales ($Mil)5-Year Sales Growth (%)
1

First Solar

Semiconductors/ Related Devices$164.4024$2,595182
2

Neutral Tandem

Telephone Communications Not Radiotelephone15.5312181100
3

Riverbed Technology

Data Processing And Preparation35.652755280
4

Illumina

Analytical Instruments71.312782276
5

Cavium Networks

Semiconductors/ Related Devices42.292020756
6

ViroPharma

Pharmaceutical Preparations16.581040555
7

Rackspace Hosting

Internet Software/ Services35.682473551
8

Salesforce.com

Internet Software/ Services135.08271,55450
9

Celgene

Pharmaceutical Preparations53.17253,62046
10

SolarWinds

Prepackaged Software18.861814443
Get more of the fastest growing technology companies at Forbes!