Sunday, 30 June 2013

Hawaii Bans Scuba Spearfishing and Set Limit for Aquarium Collecting


By Julie S | Jun 30, 2013 06:53 PM EDT


Hawaii Bans Scuba Spearfishing and Set Limit for Aquarium Collecting
Members of the Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources have cast their votes which have resulted to prohibiting people to go spearfishing by diving while armed with a scuba gear off the coast of West Hawaii. (Photo : Facebook)
No more scuba spearfishing on the West Coast of Hawaii and better be careful when collecting fish for the aquarium as the board approved the ban and restrictions.
Members of the Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources have cast their votes which have resulted to prohibiting people to go spearfishing by diving while armed with a scuba gear off the coast of West Hawaii. They also decided to impose a limit to 40 different species of fish for aquarium collecting in the area and have reinstated the boundaries of a managed fishing area in Puako after gathering updated data on the reef.

On the other hand, supporters of the ban defended their stand by claiming that scuba divers go for larger fish. They have explained that larger female fish produce offspring that have better survival and growth rate than those that are produced by younger and smaller fish. Furthermore, they added that scuba fishermen would hunt in the deeper part of the ocean where most fish would take refuge.The ban was approved after a 4-2 vote and six hours of testimonials by fishermen who appealed not to continue the ban. Board Chairman William Aila and member David Goode were against the ban. Favoring the ban was a member from Big Island, Robert Pacheco, joined by three other members of the board.
According to the fishermen, there was not enough reason to implement the ban based on the rules of science. They were also concerned that the ban of spearfishing in the coast of West Hawaii would become a banning precedent that could lead to future bans of spearfishing all over the state.
Scuba fishermen certainly know which type of fish lays the most eggs and would target them. Mel Malinosky from South Kohala has expressed that these eggs should be left untouched in West Hawaii.
"This is not about restricting Hawaiian gathering practices. If we have regular spearfishing —the reef could handle that. There are advanced technologies that are taking too much," Malinosky said in an interview with The Daily Journal.
Fernandez, a resident of Kona, has argued that there were other important factors to consider aside from overfishing when evaluating the damages done to the reefs. These factors include development, cesspools, and use of fertilizer.
The scuba ban was able to gather a 90 percent support from 565 residents of West Hawaii. The proposed rules of the ban were developed after a decade of discussion and hearings have been scheduled at the West Hawaii Fisheries Council.

Climate change threatens giant sequoias, ecosystem in California's Sierra Nevada


By The Associated Press 

on June 29, 2013 at 9:21 PM, updated June 29, 2013 at 9:29 PM
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630sierra.JPGThe view from Beetle Rock in Sequoia National Park, Calif., is seen May 11, 2012. In parts of CaliforniaĆ¢€™s Sierra Nevada, the incursion of trees is sucking marshy meadows dry. Glaciers are melting into mere ice fields. Wildflowers are blooming earlier. And the optimal temperature zone for giant sequoias is predicted to rise several thousand feet higher, leaving existing trees at risk of dying over the next 100 years. As the climate warms, scientists studying one of the largest swaths of wilderness in the Continental U.S. are noting changes across national parks, national forests and 3.7 million acres of federally protected wilderness areas that are a living laboratory. 
By TRACIE CONE
SEQUOIA NATIONAL FOREST, Calif. — In parts of California's Sierra Nevada, marshy meadows are going dry, wildflowers are blooming earlier and glaciers are melting into ice fields.

Scientists also are predicting the optimal temperature zone for giant sequoias will rise hundreds and hundreds of feet, leaving trees at risk of dying over the next 100 years.

As indicators point toward a warming climate, scientists across 4 million acres of federally protected land are noting changes affecting everything from the massive trees that can grow to more than two-dozen feet across to the tiny, hamsterlike pika. But what the changes mean and whether humans should do anything to intervene are sources of disagreement among land managers.

"That's the tricky part of the debate: If humans are causing warming, does that obligate us under the laws of the National Park Service to try to counteract those effects?" said Nate Stephenson, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey.
"How do you adapt to a changing climate if you're a national park?" added Stephenson, who is 30 years into a study of trees in the largest wilderness in the continental U.S., Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park.

Since 1895, the average temperature across California has increased by 1.7 degrees, and experts say the most visible effects of that warming occur within the Sierra Nevada, where low temperatures are rising and precipitation increasingly falls as rain rather than snow. Some models show noncoastal California warming by 2.7 degrees between 2000 and 2050, one of many reasons President Obama pledged last week to use executive powers to cut carbon pollution.

The state's two largest rivers — the Sacramento and San Joaquin — originate in the Sierra. The range also is home to Lake Tahoe, the largest alpine lake in North America; Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the Lower 48; and the nation's only groves of giant sequoias, the largest living things on earth.

There are mounting concerns about the beloved sequoias, whose sprawling, 10-foot-deep root systems make them especially vulnerable to drought and heat.

Because the trees exist only in such a small region, scientists are debating whether to irrigate the 65 groves in the southern Sierra to help them endure warmer temperatures. Otherwise they fear the trees could die. During the last warm, dry period 4,000 to 10,000 years ago, their numbers were greatly diminished, according to pollen evidence collected by researchers at Northern Arizona University.

"Whether we would water them certainly comes up on our climate change scenario planning," said Koren Nydick, science coordinator at Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park. "They are a very unusual species because they're also looked on as a social artifact."

Stephenson says his decades of studying conifers in Sequoia National Forest have shown they are dying at twice their historic rate, partly because the climate is warmer and dryer. The giant sequoias grow much more slowly than conifers over many hundreds of years so changes have been tougher to recognize, though researchers suspect seedlings already may be having a harder time taking root.

"That's always the million-dollar question," said Stephenson, director of USGS's Sierra Nevada Global Change Research Program. "We just don't have a big enough sample size to know what's going on with the giant sequoias, whereas we monitor thousands of pines and firs and have much more confidence."

So far, the dozens of changes researchers have noted, in everything from earlier songbird fledging dates to greater wildfire intensity, may point to a warming climate. But it's far from understood whether that would mean doom or adaptation for California's ecological heart.

"I don't want to say that because we're seeing one thing, that's how it will play out," said Rob Klinger who is studying alpine mammals for the USGS's Western Ecological Research Center. "The endgame of our study is determining whether there will be uniform change or will it be patchwork. If you look at evolutionary time scales, species have gone through these changes before, and they handle it."

As part of a Ph.D. project at the University of California, Merced, Kaitlin Lubetkin for five summers has hiked the backcountry taking inventory of 350 subalpine meadows formed when glaciers retreated eons ago. The marshy ground acts as a reservoir that eases flooding after snow melts, and the stored water feeds streams during dry months and sustains wildlife such as the endangered willow flycatcher songbird and the Yosemite toad, which is being considered for threatened species status.

Over the past decade of warmer, drier conditions, however, pine trees have begun to take root, acting like straws to pull the moisture out of the meadows, Klinger and Lubetkin have observed.

"Pretty much right up to the tree line you're getting encroachment in every meadow," said Lubetkin.

In September, Hassan Basagic of the Glaciers of the American West Project will be hiking to 12,000 feet elevation to measure the Lyell Glacier in Yosemite National Park and monitor the changes he first began observing in the early 2000s. Scientists from Yosemite National Park and the University of Colorado recently noted that the glacier is no longer moving — and is melting — by using measurements they've made over the past four years, as well as some of Basagic's earlier work.

Basagic's used photos from the 1930s to show that in the early 2000s the rate at which the Sierra's glaciers were receding picked up.

"A lot of people call glaciers the 'canary in the coal mine.' They're an indicator that the alpine climate is changing," said Basagic, who monitors glacial changes for Portland State University research projects. "With that change, other things will change, like the plants and animals that depend on certain climatic conditions."

Already the American pika, a cold-loving rodent, is moving to higher elevations, and a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service report says, "Climate change is a potential threat to the long-term survival."

The USGS's Klinger, however, said pikas might be more resilient than the wildlife service predicts.

"It doesn't hibernate and it has dealt with expanding and contracting snow packs and changing temperatures — and yet it persists," Klinger said.

If the trends continue, some species are expected to adapt by finding more hospitable environments, scientists say. One potential place is Devil's Postpile National Monument in the eastern Sierra, where 40 data collection devices are showing that temperature inversions caused by atmospheric pressure are filling the region of steep canyons with colder air.

Scientists are studying whether other areas with similar features might serve as refuges for some species. They're looking at establishing seed banks in the 800-acre park where several climatic regions overlap and more than 400 plants, 100 birds and 35 animals coexist.

"We have an incredible living laboratory to understand what's happening with this cold air pool," said monument Superintendent Deanna Dulen. "We're really trying to get a good baseline of knowledge so we can look at the changes over time. We have the potential to be a refuge, but also to be a place of increased vulnerability. There's so much to learn."


From: http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2013/06/climate_change_threatens_giant.html

KIROBO WILL BE JAPAN'S FIRST ROBOT ASTRONAUT


 | 30 June 2013 5:52 pm 

The robot will accompany Kouichi Wakata, the first Japanese commander of the International Space Station.



When Chris Hadfield retired from his post as commander of the International Space Station, we all knew his successor would have some pretty big boots to fill. That successor is Kouichi Wakata, who arrives at the station in November. He will be the first Japanese astronaut to act as commander of the ISS, and he's bringing his robot, Kirobo, with him. Kirobo will be sent to the station ahead of Wakata in August, in an unmanned rocket, and he's set to be the station's smallest, and cutest new member.

Kirobo was birthed from a collaborative effort between Dentsu, the University of Tokyo's Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, Robo Garage, Toyota, and JAXA, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (similar to NASA). I'm sure you can guess just how astronomically expensive it is to send stuff up to the station, so how did Kirobo score a ride? Well, Kirobo can do many things.

He can communicate naturally with humans (which i'm sure will be a source of sanity in those lonesome space station modules), he can navigate zero-gravity environments, and he will assist Commander Wakata in various experiments. His main goal is to see how well robots and human can interact, hopefully leading the way to robots taking more active roles in assisting astronauts on missions. He also only weighs a kilogram, so he won't need that much propulsion to send him where no robot has gone before.

You can watch the contagiously upbeat "commercial" for the project above. "Kibo" means "hope" in Japanese, which is where Kirobo gets his name from. The Japanese module of the ISS is also named "Kibo." It seems the Japanese sure have invested a lot of hope into the station.

Source: Rocket News 24


Read more at http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/125525-Kirobo-Will-be-Japans-First-Robot-Astronaut#68zIVKhC1qTYWz9Y.99 

Robot football players compete in RoboCup tournament

Teams from 40 countries take part in event in Eindhoven which aims is to develop robots that can eventually beat human players

Associated Press
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 30 June 2013 10.48 BST



Link to video: RoboCup: the robot football world championship




With the score tied at 1-1, it has gone to a penalty shootout in a tense football match between Israel and Australia. As the Australian goalkeeper braces for the shot, the Israeli striker pauses. Then he breaks into a dance instead of kicking the ball.


Perhaps he can be forgiven: he is a robot, after all. Welcome to the RoboCup, where more than 1,000 football-playing robots from 40 countries have descended on the Dutch technology mecca of Eindhoven this week with one goal in mind: to beat the humans. Eventually.


The tournament's mission is to defeat the human World Cup winners by 2050, creating technology along the way that will have applications far beyond the realm of sport.


To achieve the goal, organisers have created multiple competition classes – including small robots, large robots, humanoid robots and even virtual robots – with plans to merge their techniques into a single squad of all-star androids capable of one day winning a man v machine matchup.


Teams make last minute tweaks to their robots. Photograph: Toby Sterling/AP


For now Lionel Messi has no need to look over his shoulder. Humanoid robots have difficulty keeping their balance, and the largest – at human height – move more like, well, robots than world-class athletes.


"To be honest I think a three-year-old could win against any of the humanoid teams," says Marcell Missura, of the University of Bonn, whose NimbRO team won the teen humanoid class in Mexico City last year.


NimbRO's 3ft striker sports a shock of white hair and a flashy pink bandanna as it towers above a Japanese opponent in one match. That's because the Japanese player has no head, just a prong with a camera mounted on top.


The NimbRO striker shuffles over to the ball where it lies near one sideline, centres itself carefully and raises its head to gauge the placement of the goal. It then shifts its weight to one foot, draws back the other foot and kicks.


The shot is not powerful, but it's spot on, and it leaves the opposing keeper flat-footed. "It's starting to look like soccer," Missura says hopefully.


He adds that his robot's outfit, which also includes a pair of shorts that hang clumsily from its robotic hips, actually hinders its performance, leading to overheating. But making the bots look human is part of his task. "If they're ugly they will not be accepted by people," he said. "Plus it is a little fun."

 

A robot from the Universityof Bonn dribbles around a Japanese competitor. Photograph: Toby Sterling/AP


While the humanoid robots have a long way to go, it's a different story when robots are allowed to be robots – that is, with wheels, joints that can pivot 360 degrees and a wide array of sensors.


The smallest robots, each about the size and shape of a birthday cake, swarm across their field, weaving around like piranhas. These bots play with a golf ball they tick into the goal so powerfully it's difficult to see it happen.


As in all the divisions, once a game starts there's no human interference – except for substitutions, when humans are allowed to remove a bot that has broken down, and when referees eject a player for fouling an opponent.


The mid-size robot competition – which some fans refer to as "the R2-D2 league" – most resembles real football, played on a 60ft-long court.


Majid Gholipour, leader of teams from Qazvin Open University in Iran, says his mid-size bots, which are shaped like buoys, have a top speed of about 14mph. The bots use different kicks for passing and shooting, and they communicate their position to each other via wireless internet connections.


The University of Eindhoven's Tech United is favoured to repeat its mid-size win. But the Iranians were runners-up in 2012, and Gholipour says his robots' strategy is becoming more complex. "If they are losing, they go on the attack," he says. "If they are winning, everybody goes to defence. Like Italians."


Both the Dutch team and the Iranian team say they have a secret weapon this year: "path planning", where the ball is passed toward open space as a robot scoots to intercept it.


Arguably the most enjoyable matches to watch are in the "standard platform" division, where all contestants use the same small humanoid robot, manufactured by Aldebaran Robotics. These are built with a stylish white design that includes glowing eyes that can change colour to signal emotion. In this league, the challenge is purely in the software: the best computer code wins.

 

Students from the Universityof Pennsylvania's UPennalizer team show off their robots. Photograph: Toby Sterling/AP


Many teams play looking like they're drunk. When programmers push the limits on speed, the bots tend to fall down even more often than human professionals do. But watching the bots stand back up, rotating their knees forward and pushing up off of one hand, it's possible to envision them running and jumping someday.


Unlike with human players, there are no prima donnas among the robots. Each plays every position equally wall, and they shift roles seamlessly. Goalkeepers have been known to come out and act as strikers. And when a bot gets a shot on goal, it rarely misses.


"That's the advantage a robot has over a human," says Dickens He, on the University of Pennsylvania's UPennalizers team. "There are no mistakes: a robot does what it is programmed to do."


The tournament director Rene van de Molengraft says the humanoid bots range from as little as $5,000 (£3,300) for the standard platform bots, when bought in bulk, to $35,000 or more for handmade adult-size models. Still a bargain compared to the £49m Barcelona recently paid for the Brazil star Neymar.


Look for the Thunder Moon in the night sky of July


2013-07-01 / Coastal Life




For July, the Moon will be a waning crescent in the morning sky during the first week, and then new on July 8. The waxing crescent moon passes six degrees south of Venus on July 10; note the nice binocular view of the Beehive cluster, M-44, between Venus and the Moon this evening!
The first quarter moon passes just three degrees south of Saturn on July 16. The full moon is on July 22, and is called the Hay or Thunder Moon in Native American tradition. The last quarter moon is on July 29, rising about midnight.
While the naked eye, dark adapted by several minutes away from any bright lights, is a wonderful instrument to stare up into deep space, far beyond our own Milky Way, binoculars are better for spotting specific deep sky objects. For a detailed map of northern hemisphere skies, visit the www.skymaps.com website and download the map for July 2013; it will have a more extensive calendar and list of best objects for the naked eyes, binoculars, and scopes on the back of the map.

photo/Dewey Barker photo/Dewey BarkerVenus dominates the western evening sky in July, but Mercury and Jupiter are now lost in the sun’s glare. Through the telescope, Venus is a small gibbous disk, still on the far side of the sun. Its disk is bright but featureless, as we only see the top of its sulfuric acid cloud deck from earth visually. It passes 1.1 degrees north of bright Regulus in Leo on the evening on July 22.
Mars is moving rapidly eastward in the dawn sky, and overtakes Jupiter on July 22. It does not reach opposition for good telescopic observing until about a year from now.
Saturn is well placed for evening viewing in the southern sky after sunset. The rings are open up to 17 degrees, and a telescopic treat to be savored at our public gazes. Its large moon Titan is as big as the planet Mercury, and is visible in most any telescope. Three middle sized moons, Rhea, Tethys, and Dione, are all about half as big as our own moon, and visible in scopes six inches or larger in aperture.
Overhead, the Big Dipper rides high at sunset, but falls lower in the northwest each evening. Good scouts know to take its leading pointers north to Polaris, the famed Pole Star. For us, it sits 30 degrees (our latitude) high in the north, while the rotating earth beneath makes all the other celestial bodies spin around it from east to west.
If you drop south from the bowl of the Big Dipper, Leo the Lion is in the southwest. Note the Egyptian Sphinx is based on the shape of this Lion in the sky. Taking the arc in the Dipper’s handle, we “arc” southeast to bright orange Arcturus, the brightest star of spring. Cooler than our yellow Sun, and much poorer in heavy elements, some believe its strange motion reveals it to be an invading star from another smaller galaxy, now colliding with the Milky Way in Sagittarius in the summer sky.
Moving almost perpendicular to the plane of our Milky Way, Arcturus was the first star in the sky where its proper motion across the historic sky was noted by Edmund Halley.
Spike south to Spica, the hot blue star in Virgo, then curve to Corvus the Crow, a four sided grouping. Saturn lies in Virgo’s eastern feet this July. North of Corvus, in the arms of Virgo, is where our large scopes will show members of the Virgo Supercluster, a swarm of over a thousand galaxies about 50 million light years distant.
To the east, Hercules is well up, with the nice globular cluster M-13 marked on your sky map and visible in binocs. The brightest star of the northern hemisphere, Vega (from Carl Sagan’s novel and movie, “Contact”), rises in the northeast as twilight deepens. Twice as hot as our Sun, it appears blue-white, like most bright stars.
Northeast of Lyra is Cygnus, the Swan, flying down the Milky Way. Its bright star Deneb, at the top of the “northern cross” is one of the luminaries of the galaxy, about 50,000 times more luminous than our Sun and around 3,000 light years distant. Under dark skies, note the “Great Rift,” a dark nebula in front of our solar system as we revolve around the core of the Milky Way in the Galactic Year of 250 million of our own years.
To the east, Altair is the third bright star of the summer triangle. It lays in Aquila the Eagle, and is much closer than Deneb; like Vega, it lays within about 25 light years of our Sun. Use your binocs to pick up many clusters in this rich region of our own Cygnus spiral arm rising now in the east.
To the south, Antares is well up at sunset in Scorpius. It appears reddish (its Greek name means rival of Ares or Mars to the Latins) because it is half as hot as our yellow Sun; it is bright because it is a bloated red supergiant, big enough to swallow up our solar system all the way out to Saturn’s orbit! Scorpius is the brightest constellation in the sky, with 13 stars brighter than the pole star Polaris! Note the fine naked eye clusters M-6 and M-7, just to the left of the Scorpion’s tail. Dewey Barker’s fine shot shows the two clusters as they appear in binoculars.
Public Gazes by the
Escambia Amateur Astronomers Association start at sunset and run ‘til 10 p.m.
Saturday, July 13 V Big Lagoon State Park
For more information on the Escambia Amateur Astronomers, visit www.eaaa.net, or call Dr. Wayne Wooten at Pensacola State College at (850) 484-1152, or email him at wwooten@pensacolastate.edu


Local Woman Has Close Call With An Aggressive Alligator

Saturday, June 29 2013, 03:38 PM 


WPEC-TV CBS12 News :: News - Top Stories - Local woman has close call with an aggressive alligatorBOYNTON BEACH, Fla. -- A local woman kayaking in the Loxahatchee National Wildlife refuge had a close call with an aggressive alligator at about 12:16 p.m. today.

Witnesses say the woman was in an inflatable kayak when an alligator attacked the boat eventually causing it to sink.

Palm Beach County Fire Rescue units in an air-boat responded to the call at 12:16 p.m. and were able to quickly reach the boater even though she was in a very remote area.

According to officials the woman was uninjured but quite shaken up and was safely transported back to dry land.


Rare jaguar spotted roaming Arizona’s Santa Rita Mountains


A citizen spotted the jaguar first, capturing a photograph of its tail last September.


Rare jaguar spotted roaming Arizonaā€™s Santa Rita Mountains
Photo credit: Flickr
Science Recorder | Ellen Miller | Sunday, June 30, 2013



A rare jaguar has been spotted on camera over the last nine months in Arizona’s Santa Rita Mountains, according to images obtained the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The Arizona Daily Star reports that the pictures were taken by stationary cameras affixed to different points in the area. The cat has been seen in five different locations a total of seven times. Three of the times the male jaguar was photographed, it was very close to the proposed mine site at Rosemont, southeast of Tucson, Arizona.

A citizen spotted the jaguar first, capturing a photograph of its tail last September. As a result, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service utilized the University of Arizona’s cameras to follow up on the claim. The jaguar was spotted near the area the photo was originally taken, and other photos showed that the jaguar moved around 15 miles from the mine site. All of the photographs were taken at night and were obtained by the Arizona Daily Star as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request.

The jaguar is an endangered species, affording it a higher level of protection, potentially affecting the proposed mine. It is the only jaguar currently known to live in the United States. The last known jaguar living in the United States, which also resided in Arizona, died in 2009. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is expected to make a decision by August 20 on whether the land the jaguar is roaming will be designated as a critical habitat. If it is designated as such, the mine would likely be unable to open as scheduled. However, environmentalists disagree as to whether the area the jaguar is living in should be protected.

While it is the best area within the U.S. for a jaguar since the terrain is favorable and plenty of prey exists, the jaguar is a sole male jaguar, so it will not be reproducing or contributing to a growing population of jaguars. Also, the main habitat for jaguars is further south in Mexico.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Forest Service are currently writing a report analyzing the potential effects of the proposed copper mine on the jaguar and nine other federally protected species. The report will purportedly include recommendations for how to ease the environmental impact of the mine, particularly in regard to protected and endangered species. The report is expected to be released sometime around July 1, after which county, state and federal agencies will have the opportunity to comment before a final report is released.


Read more: http://www.sciencerecorder.com/news/rare-jaguar-spotted-roaming-arizonas-santa-rita-mountains/

Saturday, 29 June 2013

New system uses low-power Wi-Fi signal to track moving humans — even behind walls

‘Wi-Vi’ is based on a concept similar to radar and sonar imaging.
Helen Knight, MIT News correspondent


New system uses low-power Wi-Fi signal to track moving humans ā€” even behind walls
ILLUSTRATION: CHRISTINE DANILOFF/MIT

The comic-book hero Superman uses his X-ray vision to spot bad guys lurking behind walls and other objects. Now we could all have X-ray vision, thanks to researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

Researchers have long attempted to build a device capable of seeing people through walls. However, previous efforts to develop such a system have involved the use of expensive and bulky radar technology that uses a part of the electromagnetic spectrum only available to the military.

Now a system being developed by Dina Katabi, a professor in MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and her graduate student Fadel Adib, could give all of us the ability to spot people in different rooms using low-cost Wi-Fi technology. “We wanted to create a device that is low-power, portable and simple enough for anyone to use, to give people the ability to see through walls and closed doors,” Katabi says.

The system, called “Wi-Vi,” is based on a concept similar to radar and sonar imaging.  But in contrast to radar and sonar, it transmits a low-power Wi-Fi signal and uses its reflections to track moving humans. It can do so even if the humans are in closed rooms or hiding behind a wall. 

As a Wi-Fi signal is transmitted at a wall, a portion of the signal penetrates through it, reflecting off any humans on the other side. However, only a tiny fraction of the signal makes it through to the other room, with the rest being reflected by the wall, or by other objects. “So we had to come up with a technology that could cancel out all these other reflections, and keep only those from the moving human body,” Katabi says.

Motion detector

To do this, the system uses two transmit antennas and a single receiver. The two antennas transmit almost identical signals, except that the signal from the second antenna is the inverse of the first. As a result, the two signals interfere with each other in such a way as to cancel each other out. Since any static objects that the signals hit — including the wall — create identical reflections, they too are cancelled out by this nulling effect.

In this way, only those reflections that change between the two signals, such as those from a moving object, arrive back at the receiver, Adib says. “So, if the person moves behind the wall, all reflections from static objects are cancelled out, and the only thing registered by the device is the moving human.”

Once the system has cancelled out all of the reflections from static objects, it can then concentrate on tracking the person as he or she moves around the room. Most previous attempts to track moving targets through walls have done so using an array of spaced antennas, which each capture the signal reflected off a person moving through the environment. But this would be too expensive and bulky for use in a handheld device.

So instead Wi-Vi uses just one receiver. As the person moves through the room, his or her distance from the receiver changes, meaning the time it takes for the reflected signal to make its way back to the receiver changes too. The system then uses this information to calculate where the person is at any one time.

Possible uses in disaster recovery, personal safety, gaming

Wi-Vi, being presented at the Sigcomm conference in Hong Kong in August, could be used to help search-and-rescue teams to find survivors trapped in rubble after an earthquake, say, or to allow police officers to identify the number and movement of criminals within a building to avoid walking into an ambush.

It could also be used as a personal safety device, Katabi says: “If you are walking at night and you have the feeling that someone is following you, then you could use it to check if there is someone behind the fence or behind a corner.”

The device can also detect gestures or movements by a person standing behind a wall, such as a wave of the arm, Katabi says. This would allow it to be used as a gesture-based interface for controlling lighting or appliances within the home, such as turning off the lights in another room with a wave of the arm.

Venkat Padmanabhan, a principal researcher at Microsoft Research, says the possibility of using Wi-Vi as a gesture-based interface that does not require a line of sight between the user and the device itself is perhaps its most interesting application of all. “Such an interface could alter the face of gaming,” he says.

Unlike today’s interactive gaming devices, where users must stay in front of the console and its camera at all times, users could still interact with the system while in another room, for example. This could open up the possibility of more complex and interesting games, Katabi says

From: http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2013/new-system-uses-low-power-wi-fi-signal-to-track-moving-humans-0628.html
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Russian meteor shock wave traveled the globe twice


The resulting shock wave had a significant impact on the city of Chelyabinsk.

By Max Sonnenberg, The Space Reporter
Saturday, June 29, 2013

Russian meteor shock wave traveled the globe twice




Do you remember the meteor that blazed a trailacross the Russian sky on February 15, 2013? The resulting shock wave had a major impact on the city of Chelyabinsk, leading to property damage and causing more than 1,500 injuries to the city’s residents. Now, scientists, supervised by Alexis Le Pichon of the French Atomic Energy Commission, believe that the shock wave was so strong that it traveled the globe twice.

“For the first time since the establishment of the IMS infrasound network, multiple arrivals involving waves that traveled twice round the globe have been clearly identified,” the scientists write in a paper recently published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

The Global Seismic Network and EarthScope Transportable Array also measured the shock wave as it traveled across the United States.

“These recordings of seismic waves through the Earth, and sound waves through the atmosphere, are good examples of how these facilities can help global organizations better monitor earthquakes, clandestine nuclear tests and other threats,” said Greg Anderson, program director in NSF’s Division of Earth Sciences, in a news release.

Le Pichon and his team obtained data from 20 International Monitoring System stations worldwide to get an accurate idea of how much explosive energy was released when the meteor slammed into Chelyabinsk.
“A preliminary estimate of the explosive energy using empirical period-yield scaling relations gives a value of 460 kilotons of TNT equivalent,” the scientists add. Discovery News notes that this is the equivalent of 30 Hiroshima-sized atomic bombs.

According to measurements obtained by Peter Brown at the University of Western Ontario, the meteor is believed to have been approximately 17 meters across with a mass of 7,000-10,000 tons when it entered the atmosphere.

This energy estimate makes the Chelyabinsk event by far the largest space explosion since the 1908 Tunguska event, which destroyed millions of trees over an area of 830 square miles.

According to the BBC, the Tunguska event is believed to have had an energy equivalent to three to five megatons of TNT.

After the Chelyabinsk event, there was concern that this sort of undetected meteor event could happen again, and in a more populated region of the world. Four days after the event the European Space Agency pointed out that events of this significance are estimated to take place once every ten to 100 years.
Government are taking the threat of near-Earth objects extremely seriously. In fact, NASA has its own near-Earth object detection and tracking effort called the Near Earth Object Program.

In collaboration with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Near Earth Object program recently announced the discovery of its 10,000 near-Earth object in space.

When and where will the next meteor impact take place? Share your thoughts in the comments section.


From: http://thespacereporter.com/2013/06/russian-meteor-shock-wave-traveled-the-globe-twice/

Tips for memorable summer stargazing


Sunday, June 30, 2013


Gerry Descoteaux

Sure signs that the best time for stargazing is here: The days are getting shorter and the nights are getting longer.

Summer is finally here, and what could be better than sharing a lingering look into the universe with dear friends and family under a really dark, star-filled sky.

If you plan it correctly, you’ll create memories that will last a lifetime. Here are some things to consider in order to create a spectacular night out under the stars.

The weather is always a major concern. Clouds and rain are the mortal enemies of the Lawnchair. While skies may remain clear all day, an approaching front can only ruin your plans. It’s best to keep an eye on weather sites and track what’s in store for your area.

Summer also tends to see an increase in humidity. Early evening skies can often be a bit hazy. Fortunately, as the night wears on, this moisture dissipates, and typically by late evening and early morning, skies are primed for inspection.

The next consideration is location. If you live in the city, your backyard perhaps isn’t the best place to consider a night out under nature’s tapestry. Ideally, if you can get away from the city – perhaps as little as 20 miles or so – you should be able to find a nice, dark place to set up your Lawnchairs.

What constitutes a nice place depends on what you want to see. If you’re looking to capture some deep-sky targets via a telescope, then the darker the locale, the better.
You want to stay away from places where there are street lights, billboards and the worst light-pollution offenders, auto dealerships, shopping centers and malls. Even in rural communities these days, light pollution is becoming an issue and limiting the ability for amateurs and professionals alike to enjoy dark, clear skies.

Once you find your way to a dark sky, you want to be able to see as large a piece of sky as possible. A large, open field is ideal, especially if it’s on a hill providing panoramic access to each horizon.

However, there is also the concern that the horizon in the direction of nearby cities will be awash in a glow of light. So you have a choice of either setting up in a valley field, limiting your access to some of the low-horizon targets, or a hill where you may be inundated with extraneous light from far-off cities and towns.

Next on the list is the question of when is best to try such a feat. Well, as it is with city lighting, the moon can lessen the success of a wonderful night out.

There are good and bad times to observe. For instance, when the moon is rising full in the east, it will persist all evening and make finding and observing any deep-sky objects almost impossible. However, when you see that sliver moon in the early evening heading toward the western horizon, rest assured that the remainder of the night will provide crisp, dark skies to peruse at will.

This is also the stage in the moon’s cycle when it can be observed best. When the moon is full, it’s simply too bright to do any meaningful observing.

Throughout the first- and last-quarter stages of the lunar cycle, the light levels, though still bright, are easily managed, and viewing the moon is much easier and typically more rewarding. Viewing along the terminator, or the line of day/night separation on the moon, can provide some interesting sights through a pair of binoculars or a small telescope. Look for sun rays peeking through the mountaintops illuminating portions of the moon.

The moon is often a great starting point for an evening of observing. However, in July, the best times to avoid lunar glare that would spoil any deep-sky stargazing will be before the 15th.

Then there are the planets.

In mid-July, Saturn is the star of the show, floating in the south-southwest as the sky turns dark at just after 9:30 or so.

Then, by late July, Mars and Jupiter emerge from their stay with the sun and, on the early morning of the 23rd, they emerge in close conjunction above the eastern horizon just before sunrise. It’s a great opportunity to see and/or photograph these wonderful wanderers.

While there’s plenty to see in the skies this July, in August, an opportunity to view meteors in large numbers will begin with the Perseid meteor shower.

So, as you prepare the old Lawnchair for a busy summer, look for that ideal location that will ensure your stargazing adventure will be memorable and hassle-free. I’ll have more on the Perseids and summer’s best deep-sky targets next month. Until then, here’s wishing you all a great summer. Clear skies!

Gerry Descoteaux is the author of “The Lawnchair Astronomer,” a Dell trade paperback. He has been writing about astronomy for more than 25 years. He also played an integral role in the development of AOL’s pioneering distance education program known originally as the Online Campus, in addition to presenting astronomy courses. His online course, An Introduction to Astronomy, is available as a self-study program atwww.thelawnchairastronomer.com.



Big Brother Galaxy to the Milky Way, Seen by GALEX



NGC 6744 is bigger than the Milky Way, with a disk stretching 175,000 light-years across

















NGC 6744 is bigger than the Milky Way, with a disk stretching 175,000 light-years across. A small, distorted companion galaxy is located nearby, which is similar to our galaxy's Large Magellanic Cloud.

This image, made by and commemorating NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer that was shut down this week after 10 years of faithful and gainful service, shows NGC 6744, one of the galaxies most similar to our Milky Way in the local universe. This ultraviolet view highlights the vast extent of the fluffy spiral arms, and demonstrates that star formation can occur in the outer regions of galaxies. The galaxy is situated in the constellation of Pavo at a distance of about 30 million light-years.
NGC 6744 is bigger than the Milky Way, with a disk stretching 175,000 light-years across. A small, distorted companion galaxy is located nearby, which is similar to our galaxy's Large Magellanic Cloud. This companion, called NGC 6744A, can be seen as a blob in the main galaxy's outer arm, at upper right. -- NASA