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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

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சித்தர் சிவவாக்கியர் சிந்தனை

சித்தர் சிவவாக்கியர் சிந்தனை -114

பாரடங்க உள்ளதும் பரந்த வானம் உள்ளதும்
ஓரிடமும் இன்றியே ஒன்றி நின்ற ஒண் சுடர்
ஆரிடமும் இன்றியே அகத்திலும் புறத்துளும்
சீரிடங்கள் கண்டவன் சிவன் தெளிந்த ஞானியே

பூமியில் அடங்கியுள்ள யாவிலும் ஆகாயமாக விரிந்துள்ள அனைத்திலும் அங்கிங்கெனாதபடி நீக்கமற நிரந்த பரம்பொருளே சோதியாகவுள்ளது. அச்சோதியே எல்லா உயிரிலும் வியாபித்து அவரவர் மனத்துள்ளும் புற உடம்பிலும்  மெய்ப்பொருளாக விளங்கி நிற்கின்றது. அதனை அறிந்து தன் சீவனிலேயே சிவனைக் கண்டு தியானிக்கும் யோகி தெளிந்த ஞானியே !!!!

http://sivavakiyar.blogspot.com/ நண்பரே லிங்கினை அழுத்தி சித்தர் சிவவாக்கியரின் சிந்தனை மற்றும் சிவனைப் பற்றிய 550 பாடல்களை இனிய சந்தத்தில் வேண்டும் பொழுது கேளுங்கள் மனதிருக்கு மகிழ்வாக இருக்கும். இந்நாள் இனிய பொன் நாளாக ...மலர வாழ்த்துக்கள்

புற்றுநோய் கட்டி வளர்ச்சியை தடுக்கும் வலி நிவாரண மருந்து

புற்றுநோய் கட்டி வளர்ச்சியை தடுக்கும் வலி நிவாரண மருந்து

இபு ப்ரோபென் போன்ற வலி நிவாரண மருந்துகளுக்கும், புற்றுநோய் புரதத்திற்கும் தொடர்பு இருப்பதை ஆய்வாளர்கள் கண்டறிந்து உள்ளனர்.
இத்தகைய வலி நிவாரண மருந்துகள் மூலம் புற்றுநோய் கட்டி வளர்ச்சியை தடுக்க முடியும் என தெரியவந்துள்ளது. இந்த புது கண்டுபிடிப்பு ப்ராஸ்டேட் மற்றும் இதரப் புற்றுநோய்களுக்கு தீர்வு காண உதவும் என ஆராய்ச்சியாளர்கள் நம்பிக்கை தெரிவித்து உள்ளனர்.
இபு ப்ரோபென் வலி நிவாரணி போதை மருந்து தூண்டுதல் வகை சாராத ப்ரோபென் மருந்து வகையைச் சார்ந்தது ஆகும். புற்றுநோய் கட்டி வளர்ச்சியைத் தடுக்கும் வலி நிவாரணி குறித்து கெமிக்கல் கொம்யூனிகேஷன்ஸ் இதழில் வெளியிடப்பட்டுள்ளது.
வலி நிவாரணத்திற்கு பயன்படும் ப்ரோபென் வகை மருந்துகள் உடலில் ஒரே வழியில் செயல்படுகின்றன. இவை AMACR என்ற புரதத்தை கட்டுப்படுத்துவதாக உள்ளது. இந்த புரதம் பல புற்றுநோய்களில் தீவிரமாக செயல்படுகின்றன.
இந்த புரதம் அபரிதமாவதை கட்டுப்படுத்துவதில் வலி நிவாரண ப்ரோபேன் வகை மருந்துகள் வெகுவாக உதவுகின்றன. வலி நிவாரணிகளான இந்த வகை மருந்துகள் புற்றுநோய் கட்டி வளர்ச்சியை தடுக்க உதவுவதை எங்களது சோதனைகள் உறுதிப்படுத்தி உள்ளன என பாத் பல்கலைகழக தலைமை ஆய்வாளர் டொக்டர் மாத்யூ லாயிட் தெரிவித்தார்.

Conquistador Silver May Not Have Sunk Spain's Currency

Conquistador Silver May Not Have Sunk Spain's Currency

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Pieces of eight. Spanish coins may not have been minted from New World silver until the 18th century, researchers argue.
Credit: (Left) Photo courtesy of Daniel Frank Sedwick, LLC; (Right) Howard Pyle “An Attack on a Galleon” frontispiece/Wikimedia Commons
Between 1520 and 1650, Spain’s economy suffered crippling and unrelenting inflation in the so-called Price Revolution. Most historians have attributed that inflation, in part, to the importation, starting in 1550, of silver from the Americas, which supposedly put much more currency into circulation in Spain. But in a report out this week, a team of researchers argues that for more than a century the Spanish did not use this imported silver to make coins, suggesting that the amount of money circulating in Spain did not increase and could not have triggered the inflation.
Between the 16th and 18th centuries, the Spanish extracted as much as 300 tons of silver per year from mines in Peru and Mexico. If the heavy bars managed to survive the hazards of the Atlantic, both natural and piratical, they could either be coined into pieces of eight or be traded with other countries to offset Spain's many costs, which at this time included financing wars in the Netherlands and importing porcelain and silk from China.
But did the Spanish actually use the imported silver to make coins? To find out, archaeometrist Anne-Marie DeSaulty and colleagues at the University of Lyon in France used mass spectrometry to measure the ratios of several metal isotopes—atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei—in 91 old coins: 24 ancient coins from Greece and Rome, 23 medieval coins from around Europe, 25 coins minted in Spain from the 16th and 18th centuries under a succession of different kings, and 19 coins minted from Latin American silver.
The Latin American coins generally had a broader mix of different silver, lead, and copper isotopes than the European coins, likely because of the geologic complexity of the volcanic caves that hosted the New World’s most prolific silver mines, the researchers report online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The ratio of the silver-109 isotope to silver-107 turned out to be much higher in New World silver than in the European coins. More important to the debate over the Price Revolution, the researchers discovered that coins with dates and heads indicating that they were minted in Spain prior to the reign of Philip V (1700 to 1746) had an isotopic makeup similar to medieval European coins. In contrast, coins minted later were more similar to those from the Andes. That suggests that even though American silver arrived in Spain in 1550, the Spanish waited well over 100 years before using it for their own currency. Instead of making coins, DeSaulty argues that the Spanish probably traded the American silver quickly.
However, Akira Motomura, an economist at Stonehill College in Easton, Massachusetts, who studies the economics of silver flow during this time period, questions whether the sample of coins DeSaulty studied is large enough to support her conclusions. The researchers analyzed only two to five coins minted under each of the Spanish kings between the 16th and 18th centuries. DeSaulty contends that because the isotopic makeup of contemporaneous coins is very consistent, the sample is likely representative of the coins that were in circulation.
But even if one accepts that the Spanish did not use New World silver in their coins for decades, does that eliminate the importation of silver from the Americas as the cause of the runaway inflation? It certainly wasn’t the sole cause, DeSaulty argues, and Motomura says the situation was far more complicated. “In terms of the effect on prices, there’s a lot more going on,” Motomura says, than simply the amount of money in Spain. China switched to silver currency from paper money about this time, he says, which would drive up the value of silver even as the world’s supply went up.

Did Quiet Sun Cause Little Ice Age After All?

Did Quiet Sun Cause Little Ice Age After All?


Brrr ... Cold winters in 17th-century Europe, as shown in this painting by Hendrick Avercamp, may have been caused by a lack of solar activity.
Credit: Hendrick Avercamp/Wikimedia Commons
BOSTON—For decades, astronomers and climatologists have debated whether a prolonged 17th-century cold spell, best documented in Europe, could have been caused by the sun's erratic behaviour. Now, an American solar physicist says he has new evidence to suggest that the sun was indeed the culprit.
The sun isn’t as constant as it appears. Instead, its surface is regularly beset by storms of swirling magnetic fields. As a result, like a teenager plagued with acne, the face of the sun often sprouts relatively dark and short-lived “sunspots,” which appear when strong magnetic fields inhibit the upwelling of hotter gas from below. The number of those spots waxes and wanes regularly in an 11-year cycle. However, even that cycle isn’t immutable.
In 1893, English astronomer Edward Maunder, studying historical records, noted that the cycle stopped between 1645 and 1715. Instead, the sun was almost devoid of sunspots during this period. In 1976, American solar physicist John “Jack” Eddy suggested there might have been a causal link between this “Maunder Minimum” in the number of sunspots and the contemporaneous Little Ice Age, when average temperatures in Europe were a degree centigrade lower than normal.
One might expect the absence of dark spots to make the sun slightly brighter and hotter. But the absence of other signs of magnetic activity, such as bright patches of very hot gas known as faculae more than compensates for this effect. So in fact, the total energy output of the sun is lower during a solar minimum. If the minimum is prolonged, as it was in the second half of the 17th century, the dip in output might indeed affect Earth’s climate.
However, scientists have debated whether the effect could have been large enough. For instance, in a recent paper in Geophysical Research Letters, solar physicist Karel Schrijver of the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center in Palo Alto, California, and his colleagues argue that during the Maunder Minimum, the sun couldn’t have dimmed enough to explain the Little Ice Age. Even during a prolonged minimum, they claim, an extensive network of very small faculae on the sun’s hot surface remains to keep the energy output above a certain threshold level.
Not so, says Peter Foukal, an independent solar physicist with Heliophysics Inc. in Nahant, Massachusetts, who contends that Schrijver and his colleagues are “assuming an answer” in a circular argument. According to Foukal, who presented his work yesterday here at the summer meeting of the American Astronomical Society, there is no reason to believe that the network of small faculae would persist during long periods of solar quiescence. In fact, he says, observations between 2007 and 2009, when the sun was spotless for an unusually long time, reveal that all forms of magnetic activity diminished, including the small-faculae network.
What’s more, detailed observations from orbiting solar telescopes have shown that the small faculae pump out more energy per unit surface area than the larger ones already known to disappear along with the sunspots. So if the small faculae start to fade, too, that would have an even stronger effect on the total energy production of the sun. “There’s tantalizing evidence that [during the Maunder Minimum] the sun may have actually dimmed more than we have thought until now,” Foukal says.
Even so, Foukal concedes that other factors, such as enhanced volcanic activity around the globe, may also have played a role in causing Europe’s Little Ice Age. Meanwhile, the biggest worry to solar physicists—and to society—is that no one knows what caused the sun’s prolonged quiescence in the first place. As far as anybody knows, a repeat of the Maunder Minimum could start within a few years with the next dip in the number of sunspots.

Furor Over Proposed Brazilian Forest Law

Furor Over Proposed Brazilian Forest Law

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Credit: NASA
The passage on Tuesday by Brazil's Chamber of Deputies of anamended forest law favorable to ranchers and loggers has brought an outpouring of concern from environmentalists, with some calling it a green light for deforestation.
The bill, which passed by a wide margin but is subject to change by Brazil's Senate, offers amnesty from penalties for illegal cuts made prior to July 2008, and for small landholders in the Amazon (up to 400 hectares) it would suspend a rule requiring them to maintain a minimum of 80% forest cover, among other changes.
"It's a disaster. It heightens the risk of deforestation, water depletion, and erosion," Paulo Gustavo Prado, head of environmental policy at Conservation International-Brazil told The Globe and Mail .
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has threatened to veto parts of the bill, which also gives states more control over establishing conservation rules.
Rural lawmakers say the legislation is a much needed update to Brazil's forest code, which dates to 1965, and argue that it would actually slow deforestation by allowing landowners to obtain legal titles to their plots. Brazil already has strict laws on deforestation, but these are only intermittently enforced in the vast Amazon region, leaving many farmers in legal limbo.
Brazil's scientific community complained this week that researchers were largely shut out of deliberations. On Wednesday, the Brazilian Academy of Sciences called the legislation "precipitous" and said it had no "scientific and technical foundation" (statement, in Portuguese).
The society has called for another 2 years of scientific review.
Environmentalists appear set on rallying against the proposed changes. Marina Silva, Brazil's outspoken former environment minister, called the legislation "one of the biggest steps backwards I've ever seen in Brazil. ... We have returned to the worst possible world." Indeed, the bill's advance comes amid a recent surge in deforestation, which in March and April reached a pace almost five times that of 2010. Farmers may have cleared land in the hopes of winning amnesty, said experts, but rising commodity prices likely played a role as well by increasing demand for land. Brazil is a major exporter of food to the rest of the world, including soybeans to Asia and beef products to Eastern Europe.
Fueling outrage among activists, the bill passed in Brazil's congress only hours after the killing of environmentalist and antideforestation campaigner José Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva and his wife, Maria do Espírito Santo, in an ambush in the state of Para, which has among the highest rates of clear cutting. News reports said the ears were cut off of the couple, a sign of a contract killing.

Another Look Beneath Hawaii Knocks Islands Off Their Riser Pipe

Another Look Beneath Hawaii Knocks Islands Off Their Riser Pipe



Hawaii may be a vacation destination and a surfers’ paradise, but it is also an exemplar of a long-sought geological structure for some earth scientists. The Big Island of Hawaii sits atop a vast “plume,” or upwelling, of hot rock from Earth’s deep mantle—at least, so some scientists argue. However, new seismic imaging reported in tomorrow’s issue of Science reveals no plume under Hawaii. Instead, it draws attention to a new feature well west of Hawaii that may or may not be part of a new kind of plume system. The prize for bagging the first bona fide plume seems to remain out of reach for a while longer.
The most recent sighting of a standard Hawaiian plume came when seismologists imaged the mantle by monitoring how quickly seismic waves from distant earthquakes passed upward beneath and around the islands (Science, 4 December 2009, p. 1330). The waves slowed when passing through hotter-than-normal rock in a column extending at least 1500 kilometres beneath the islands. That could be the upper half of a hot, vertical plume of rock rising like smoke from a chimney. It might extend from near where the rocky mantle meets the core's molten iron 2900 kilometres down. Such a plume would deliver molten rock to fuel the Hawaiian volcanic hot spot at Earth's surface. Other mantle-spanning plumes might stoke a few dozen other hot spots around the world.
The latest look beneath Hawaii using seismic waves differently reveals a different mantle. Seismologists Qin Cao of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge and colleagues use seismic waves that rise through the mantle and reflect from the underside of mantle layers, where different minerals form thanks to changing pressure. The depth of a given mineral transformation reflects the temperature there. Using this reflected wave technique, Cao and colleagues found elevated temperatures a few hundred kilometres beneath Hawaii, as the earlier study found. However, deeper down, they saw no sign of a rising hot column. There is no deep plume beneath Hawaii in their observations.
More than 1000 kilometres to the west, however, they find scorching rock almost 700 kilometres down, where the upper and lower mantle meet at a prominent boundary. Although rock can rise or sink through the upper-lower mantle boundary, passing through it isn’t easy. Cao and colleagues speculate that the thousand-kilometre-wide flattened blob of hot rock they see may be trapped at the boundary, with only a bit at its eastern edge managing to leak upward and feed Hawaii. And if the hot blob is old enough to have created the 60-million-year-old chain of Hawaiian Islands, they say, it would likely be replenished by hot rock rising from below.
So, the new view beneath the Pacific could reveal an offset plume. “It’s tough to make a simple, undistorted plume that extends all the way to Hawaii,” says seismologist Rob van der Hilst of MIT, a co-author on the paper. The reflection method could be revealing the upper part of a rising mantle plume as if a smokestack’s plume rose to hit a glass ceiling—the 700-kilometre boundary—only to flow to an open window at the ceiling’s edge and rise again in another plume.
As is common in mantle imaging, the new view gets a mixed reception from others in the field. “It might be right; it’s hard to tell,” says Donald Forsyth of Brown University. He and others point to inconsistencies between the new view and other studies using the same seismic waves analysed using different techniques. “Meticulous studies using different techniques don’t agree,” says seismologist Edward Garnero of Arizona State University, Tempe. The possible offset plume “is a prediction about the Earth. Let’s see how it holds up.”