Play reveals three faces of I, Animal

Daniel MacIvor writes great plays.

It doesn’t seem to matter what the subject is, from last year’s Bingo!, a hilarious look at a group of Cape Bretoners three decades after they graduated from high school, to this winter’s Communion, a searing study of three troubled women, the Cape Breton-born Governor General’s Award-winner for drama creates fascinating theatre.

His latest, I, Animal, had its world premiere Wednesday at Eastern Front Theatre’s SuperNova Theatre Festival.

Like Communion, it featured three memorable characters: Man in Scrubs, played by Antonio Cayonne in his Halifax debut; Boy in Hoodie, portrayed by Stewart Legere, known for his work with Zuppa Circus; and Woman in Prada, brought to life by Kathryn MacLellan, artistic director of KAZAN Co-op, which produced Communion and I, Animal.

The design team that created a spare yet interesting set to perfectly complement Communion’s thought-provoking story was back for I, Animal: Ingrid Risk doing lighting design, Janet MacLellan on costumes, Victoria Marsten on sets and Aaron Collier on sound design and composition. All elements worked together Wednesday to effectively enhance three radically different stories.

There’s no link among the three characters in I, Animal; each performs a direct-address monologue. And each, under director Richie Wilcox’s expert touch, evolves from somewhat annoying and unlikeable to a multi-layered sympathetic individual.

First up is Cayonne, whose story proves the most interesting and whose performance is the most riveting. He’s a black nurse out walking his dog Larry, a mutt who’s been fixed but is still horny, much to the dismay of purebred dog-owners trying to protect the bloodlines of their precious pets.

A reluctant guest at a gathering of all-male hospital workers interested in forming a gay organization, he hilariously protests he’s not gay, he’s queer, with detailed descriptions of the difference.

But in between the laughs and the incisive one-liners, we see a sensitive man who struggles as an outsider because he’s black and gay. He’s also a man grieving for his dead partner, not suffering with huge outpourings of emotions but quietly trying to deal with a loss that’s tearing apart his soul.

Legere’s teenager is also an outsider. Finding himself in the driveway of pretty, popular Betty Fitzgerald, who, he notes with a tone of wonder, is a cheerleader and goes to church, he ponders popularity, cliques, smoking pot and musical styles, his eyes shining as he utters a phrase then wonders how that would work as a name of a band.

The boy in the hoodie is reviled as a social outcast, which heightens the emotional impact of his unexpected encounter with the teen dream.

An expert at monologues, Legere effectively creates a tormented teen, and like most teens, there’s more going on under the surface than first appears.

MacLellan’s wealthy married woman of a certain age on vacation with her boy toy is also tormented. She’s battling aging, and though she puts up a good front to match her polished appearance, her confidence is fading as her bones ache and faculties begin to dim. Her life hasn’t been as rewarding as she hoped; though she got what she thought she wanted, she’s wondering if it was really what she wanted and what she wants now.

Her segment seems shorter than the other two but feels complete. The nurse’s story feels like it has just begun and we ache to know more, while the teen’s tale goes on a bit too long.

MacIvor’s genius at creating memorable characters and authentic dialogue continually impresses, and the packed house at Neptune’s Studio Theatre brought the accomplished actors back for several curtain calls.

Article source: http://thechronicleherald.ca/artslife/97613-play-reveals-three-faces-of-i-animal

Yankees notes: Nova feels super

Nova feels super

Ivan Nova is ready to take his regular turn Saturday, after testing his sore right ankle in a bullpen session. “I don’t think it’s going to be any problem,” said Nova, though he feels “a little bit” of discomfort – though it might have been due to the bulky medical tape. Nova suffered a contusion and a sprain on two comebackers during Monday’s start at Baltimore.

In addition to his bullpen, Nova simulated covering first base. “Our plans have been for him to start. … I think he will,” Joe Girardi said. Still, the manager won’t know for certain until Nova gets through Saturday’s pregame warm-ups. David Phelps might be on standby, but Girardi wouldn’t hesitate to use Phelps beforehand if necessary. “You have to try to win today.”

Second time around

Tonight, Andy Pettitte makes his second start since ending his one-year retirement and Girardi believes the emotions related to his comeback won’t be a factor this time. “We got through that. And now, I feel, it’ll be easier for him.”

The Reds visit Yankee Stadium to begin interleague play, and Pettitte flew home ahead of the club to prepare for his start. “Routines aren’t something guys forget quickly,” Girardi said. “He slid right back … and physically he feels fine.”

Pettitte, 39, yielded a pair of two-run homers in 6 1/3 innings Sunday in a 6-2 home loss against Seattle.

Briefs

The Yankees went 13-5 last year in interleague play and were 2-1 against the Reds at Cincinnati. The Reds won two of three games at the previous Yankee Stadium in 2008, Cincinnati’s only other regular-season visit to the Bronx.

Infielder Matt Antonelli was claimed off waivers from the Orioles and assigned to Class AAA Empire State. Antonelli, 27, has played all four infield positions and left field. He last played in the majors with the 2008 Padres.

— Pete Caldera

Article source: http://www.northjersey.com/sports/151995445_Yankees_notes__Nova_feels_super.html

The closest supernova candidate?

[NOTE: Whenever I write about actual cosmic events that might possibly affect us on Earth, I get scared emails from some folks. So let me be up front: there are no stars close enough to Earth to hurt us should they explode. Nothing I write in this post changes that; I'm talking about a star that can go supernova that's closer than I thought any was, but still much too far away to do much to us. So don't panic. But do please enjoy the over-the-topness of what happens when a star explodes. Because it's cool.]

Back in January I started writing what I call BAFacts; daily snippets of astronomy factoids. I post them on Twitter and Google+, and I keep an archive of them on the blog, too.

On May 13 I tweeted this one: BAFact: A supernova has to be less than about 75 light years away to hurt us. No star that close can explode, so we’re OK. The distance may actually be somewhere between 50 – 100 light years, and it depends on the kind of exploding star, but I have to keep these factoids to about 110 characters to tweet them. Nuance is at a premium.

I got so many replies about that one that I decided to do a theme week, and stick with supernovae. The next day I tweeted this: BAFact: The nearest star that can go supernova is Spica – it’s 260 light years away, so we’re safe, and I linked to a video I did a few years back this.

A few minutes later I got a tweet from Nyrath, saying that he thought the nearest star that could explode was IK Pegasi, 150 light years away.

I looked this up, and here’s the thing: he’s right! I had never heard of IK Peg, so I didn’t even know it existed. And it turns out it is the nearest star that can explode, though technically it probably isn’t.

And you know when I say something weirdly oxymoronic like that there must be a good story here, right? Mwuhahahaha. Yes. yes, there is. Stick with me; this is long, but also awesome.


The story

It’s been known for a while that IK Peg is a weird star (you can read quite a bit about it on the ESO website, though the formatting is a bit messed up). It looks like an A-type star — that is, more massive, hotter, and bigger than the Sun. It’s not nearly enough to explode — stars need to be at least 8 times the Sun’s mass to do that, and this star is only about 1.7 times heftier than the Sun.

It pulsates, getting brighter and dimmer on a pretty rapid timescale: each cycle only takes about an hour. A lot of stars do this, but typically when one does it means it’s nearing the end of its life. In a few dozen million years it’ll swell up into a red giant, blow out a strong wind that’ll strip its outer layers away (creating a gorgeous planetary nebula), and eventually retire as a white dwarf; small, dense, and hot, cooling slowly over billions of years.

Except… there’s a monkey in the wrench. The star isn’t alone.

It has a companion. And this is where things get interesting.


IK Peg B

Years ago, the Germans launched the ROSAT satellite designed to survey the entire sky looking at objects that emit extreme ultraviolet light (this is the one that burned up in late 2011 over the ocean). UV emitters tend to be hotter objects, like massive stars and gas. At the position of IK Peg they detected a strong UV source. A-type stars aren’t nearly this bright in the UV, so it was clear something was up.

In fact, it had been known for a long time that IK Peg had an invisible companion — there was a periodic Doppler shift in the spectrum, which means it was sometimes approaching us and sometimes receding, as you’d expect for something in orbit around something else.

So this companion is bright in UV, faint in visible, and massive enough to cause that Doppler shift in the A star. Its mass is too low to be a black hole or a dense neutron star, so it must be a white dwarf. These are very hot, so they blast out ultraviolet, but so small that they’re faint in visible light. Interestingly — very interestingly, as we’ll see in a moment — this companion star is pretty high-mass for a white dwarf, about 1.1 to 1.2 times the mass of the Sun. Usually, white dwarfs are around 0.6 times the Sun’s mass, and it’s rare to find one that heavy.

For future reference, in binary systems, the brighter of the two stars is given the designation A, and the dimmer B. So the A-type star is IK Peg A, and the white dwarf is IK Peg B.


The history of a lover’s embrace

White dwarfs, as I mentioned above, are the leftover cores of stars like the Sun that lose their outer layers. The Sun will become one in about 6 -7 billion years, when it uses up its supply of hydrogen fuel in its core. This means the IK Peg system is old. And just knowing what these two stars are now, we can unravel what they were like long ago.

A long time ago, billion of years ago, there were two stars orbiting each other. One was much like the Sun, but the other more massive, probably 3 – 4 times the Sun’s mass. More massive stars live shorter lives, so this star blew through its fuel, and expanded into a red giant (the details of this are complex, but you can get a synopsis here).

When I say expanded, I mean it: it got huge, so big it enveloped the other star. This is called a common envelope system — and think about that: we had a whole star physically inside another star! During this period the lower-mass star actually gained mass, drawing material from its bigger companion.

As this was happening the red giant was blowing out a strong wind of matter, which, over time, leeched away the outer part of the star. What was left was a hot white dwarf — IK Peg B — and a normal companion star — IK Peg A — that was now somewhat more massive than it was before. Impressively, we can detect all kinds of elements in the atmosphere of IK Peg A that shouldn’t be there; these are what it sucked away from IK Peg B while it was still a red giant.

And there you have it. That’s the system we see today.


When a relationship blows up

OK, cool. But of course, not even the most stable relationship lasts forever.

IK Peg A is aging. It’s still fusing hydrogen into helium in its core like the Sun does. But remember, those pulsations are telling us it’s nearing the end of its life too. At some point in the future, probably in a few dozen or hundred million years, it too will swell into a red giant.

When it does, the reverse of what happened before will occur. Material from IK Peg A will flow onto the white dwarf. Separated by a mere 30 million kilometers or so (closer than Mercury is to the Sun), this transfer of mass will flow steadily. As the matter piles up on the surface of the white dwarf it gets fiercely compressed and hot. At some point the temperature gets high enough to flash fuse it into helium. There will be an explosion — big, but not big enough to destroy the star — called a nova. Some of the hydrogen will remain, as will the helium. When things calm down, the material from the red giant will start to pile up again.

Lather, rinse, repeat.

But every time it does this, not all the added material blows away. The mass of the dwarf increases. It’s also possible that the matter from the red giant will accumulate slowly enough that it will pile up without a nova explosion. Either way, the mass of the white dwarf increases. And remember, IK Peg B is already pretty massive. It can only gain so much more mass before something very bad happens…

One day, something very bad happens. When the dwarf reaches a mass of about 1.4 times the Sun, the physical forces inside the star can no longer support its own mass. The white dwarf starts to collapse, and the core temperature rockets skyward. A fusion chain reaction is ignited in the dwarf, and the conditions inside it cannot stop it. Within seconds, the chain reaction runs out of control, consuming the bulk of the star, and it explodes.

And oh, that explosion. Blasting out of the living hell that was once a normal star is so much energy it can outshine an entire galaxy. In seconds the newly-born supernova releases as much energy as our Sun will over its entire lifetime.

It’s a supernova.

And when it finally fades, weeks later, there may be a dense neutron star left over, or it’s possible the star will have blown itself to bits. But either way, the mind-numbing energy is on its way, spreading out into the galaxy.


A whelk’s chance

Supernovae are among the most violent events in the modern Universe. You don’t want to be near one!

Which is something of an issue. IK Peg is only 150 light years away.

Now, don’t panic! That’s probably far enough away that the damage to Earth would be minimal. The flood of ultraviolet and higher-energy light might affect our ozone layer, but from my reading on this — which is extensive, since I wrote a chapter in my book Death from the Skies! about this and went through dozens of journal articles — 150 light years is far enough to dim the effects substantially.

And we’re safer than that. Measurements of the system’s velocity shows it to be moving away from the Sun at about 20 km/sec. That’s about a light year per 16,000 years… and remember, IK Peg A won’t go red giant for probably millions of years! They’ll be 60 light years farther away for every million years in the future the system sticks around, and if IK Peg A can hold its breath a little longer, it could easily be a thousand light years away before it goes. At that distance a supernova is no danger for sure.


The closest supernova?

Which leaves me in a funny spot. Right now, IK Peg is the closest potential supernova. But by the time it goes off, it won’t be! Spica is close right now, as I pointed out before, but in a few million years all these stars will move. What’s close now may not be by the time one of them goes supernova, so the idea of which potential supernova is closest doesn’t have a lot of meaning. The better question is “which one that goes off next is the closest?” and there’s no real way to answer that. Predicting just when a supernova will explode isn’t possible.

But I think that’s OK. What we’re really asking is, what stars near us can explode? And it turns out the answer is that there are a lot within a thousand light years, a handful within 500, and none within the hard 50 – 100 light year limit.

In other words: you can take supernovae off your things-to-be-scared-of list. They’re all too far away, at least for the next few million years.You can breathe easy.

Now, gamma-ray bursts are another story. And don’t even get me started on magnetars


My very sincere thanks to Nyrath for pointing this whole thing out to me!
Image credits: Tycho’s Supernova remnant: NASA/CXC/Rutgers/K.Eriksen et al. DSS;
IK Peg art: RJHall, Wikipedia;
Binary art: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss;
Supernova art: NASA/Casey Reed


Related Posts:

- Spinning white dwarf bombs may lurk the galaxy
- Dwarf merging makes for an explosive combo
- AstroAlert: Type Ia supernova in M101!
- Astronomers spot ticking supernova time bomb
- Anybody wanna peanut?
- WR104: A nearby gamma-ray burst?






Share






May 18th, 2012 7:00 AM Tags: , , , , ,

by in Astronomy, Cool stuff, DeathfromtheSkies!, Pretty pictures, Top Post | 16 comments | RSS feed | Trackback

Article source: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2012/05/18/the-closest-supernova-candidate/

Southern Cross stargazer

Saturday

In evening twilight, brilliant Venus glows in the northwest and sets by 11 p.m. Betelgeuse, left shoulder star of Orion, twinkles near the western horizon. Capella guides Auriga, Charioteer, toward the northwestern horizon. Procyon, Little Dog, lies in the west. Silver Saturn follows Spica into the south. Both are in Virgo, Springmaiden. Corvus, Crow flies ahead of them. Dim Omega Centauri, a globular cluster of millions of stars, shimmers below Corvus. The stars of Libra drift across the southeast. Bright Arcturus, Herdsman, sparkles in the east. Overhead ruddy Mars lies beside westbound Leo, Lion. The delicate Beehive Star Cluster follows the Gemini Twins into the northwest. The Big Dipper hangs in the north, its `bowl’ faces Polaris, North Star. The Little Dipper’s handle appears to be attached to Polaris. By 10:30 p.m., Vega brings the vast Summer Triangle higher in the northeast Huge Scorpius crawls above the southeastern horizon. Antares (red heart) beats in the Scorpion’s torso.

Sunday

New Moon occurs at 7:47 p.m.

Tuesday

After sunset, aim binoculars on the young crescent moon 5 degrees beside Venus in the northwest.

Thursday

In the predawn, Saturn glows above Spica in the west. Arcturus sparkles low in the west. The Big Dipper settles low in the northwest. Westbound Vega, in Lyra the Harp, leads the Summer Triangle overhead. Before dawn, Pegasus, Winged Horse, lifts higher in the east. Andromeda appears low in the northeast. Queen Cassiopeia arrives in the north-northeast. Capricornus, Sea Goat, wanders across the southeast. The Sagittarian Teapot follows Scorpius toward the southwest. The Summer Milky Way arches north to south.

Friday

Tonight the moon forms a triangle below the Beehive cluster and the Gemini Twins.

Compiled by Barb Yager, Southern Cross Astronomical Society, 305-661-1375, www.scas.org

Article source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/05/18/2805652/southern-cross-stargazer.html

Arctic Microbe Hunt Could Aid Search for Alien Life




Researchers drill into a Greenland glacier in a hunt for microbes

Researchers auger into a Greenland glacier to hunt for methane that may have been produced by Arctic microbes.
CREDIT: Seth Young


Microbes living at the edges of Arctic ice sheets could help researchers pinpoint evidence for similar microorganisms that may have evolved on Mars, Jupiter’s moon Europa or Saturn’s moon Enceladus, researchers say.

Scientists are investigating the receding edge of ice sheets on Earth to study the release of methane there.

Methane is a colorless, odorless, flammable gas. On Earth, some methane is produced abiotically — not by life — through reactions between water and rock, as well as through the breakdown of hydrocarbons by geological processes.

On the other hand, some methane comes directly or indirectly from methanogenic microbes, as a byproduct of fermentation of acetate — a derivative of vinegar — into methane and carbon dioxide.



“It is increasingly clear that on Earth, there are cold-adapted methanogenic microbes in Arctic, Antarctic and sea-bottom settings,” said Jeffrey White, an environmental biogeochemist at Indiana University. “Acetate fermentation is the principal pathway accounting for as much as 95 percent of methane production in these cold environments.” [Extremophiles: World's Weirdest Life]

Similar ice sheets exist elsewhere in the solar system, such as the buried water ice glaciers in the Hellas Basin region on Mars. The plan is to see what methods can best determine whether the sources of any such methane are biological or not.

NASA's Cassini spacecraft has been studying Saturn and its moons since it entered orbit in 2004. This image, taken on Oct. 5, 2008, is a stunning mosaic of the geologically active Enceladus after a Cassini flyby.

Studying Arctic microbes

Methanogenic microbes rely on a community of microorganisms that provide the acetate and other simple molecules they consume. If such communities evolved in the cold corners of Earth, “it seems reasonable to search for evidence of similar biological processes on other icy bodies in our solar system,” White said.

Such objects include Enceladus and Europa — moons of Saturn and Jupiter, respectively — both of which are thought to harbor oceans of liquid water beneath their icy shells.

A satellite view of Greenland showing where researchers are hunting for microbes

To analyze these microbes and their methane emissions, White and his colleagues recently went to Greenland as part of a $2.6 million NASA ASTEP (Astrobiology Science and Technology for Exploring Planets) grant.

The researchers investigated the western edge of the Greenland ice sheet, “one of the most readily accessible margins of a large ice sheet on Earth,” White said. “The relatively manageable logistics and climate in Greenland compared to Antarctica made this area an excellent choice.”

Careful analysis of the isotopes making up methane can shed light on its origins. Isotopes are variants of elements. All isotopes of an element have the same number of protons in their atomic nuclei, but each has a different number of neutrons. For instance, atoms of carbon-12 each have six neutrons while atoms of carbon-13 have seven.

The available data suggest that methane from microbial reactions is substantially richer in lighter isotopes at 20 to 40 parts per thousand than abiotic methane, explained researcher Lisa Pratt, an astrobiologist and geomicrobiologist at Indiana University.

Small dissolved molecules or ions containing a lighter isotope move more rapidly at a given temperature than ones containing a heavy isotope. Consequently, those containing a light isotope interact more often with a bacterium’s enzymes, and so get incorporated more often into what it makes metabolically, such as methane.

In 2011, the researchers used an infrared laser to look for methane at multiple sites across a valley that extends for tens of miles near the margin of the Greenland ice sheet. Measurements were taken about 6 feet (2 meters) above the soil surface for 1 to 4.5 hours each time.

Methane was spotted at several lakes and wetland areas. However, the methane levels seen were very close to what would be detected from normal atmospheric levels at ice margins in Greenland. Their next measurements will be taken at heights just above the soil surface to better distinguish local sources of emission.

Surprising finds

So far, the researchers have been surprised by how much biology and biogeochemistry can vary across several small lakes arrayed along a single valley near the ice margin.

“If life was widespread during an early period on Mars when small lakes were common, we need to approach sampling with the expectation that pronounced variation in biological markers could occur even over distances as small as 100 meters (330 feet),” Pratt said.

In the coming summer, the researchers intend to look for potential subsurface gaseous signs of life with an innovative drill they have developed. The device allows rapid transfer of unaltered gas samples from drilled boreholes directly into analytical instruments.

A similar instrument could one day find use in planetary exploration, Pratt said.

This story was provided by Astrobiology Magazine, a web-based publication sponsored by the NASA astrobiology program.

Article source: http://www.space.com/15744-arctic-microbes-alien-life-methane.html

Space History Photo: Huge Saturn V Rocket Stage Test Fired




space history, Saturn V S-1C

The huge S-1C belches smoke and flames during a static test.
CREDIT: NASA.


<![CDATA[
<!--{cke_protected}{C}<!--{cke_protected}{C}<!--{cke_protected}{C}-->-->-->]]>

Off goes a moon rocket! Well, actually, not quite. In this historical photo from the U.S. space agency, smoke and flames belch from the huge S-1C test stand as the first stage booster of the Apollo/Saturn V space vehicle is static fired on Jan. 1, 1967, at the NASA Mississippi Test Facility (MTF), later named the Stennis Space Center. There was no liftoff in this test.

The huge Saturn V rocket — a Heavy Lift Vehicle — had five engines that develop 7.5 million pounds of thrust. The full 363-foot-long Saturn V (standing as tall as a 36-story building) could launch up to a height of 40 miles at a speed of 6,000 mph. (The “V” is for the Roman numeral 5.) The Saturn V was the most powerful rocket ever flown, and it was used to get Apollo moon missions off the ground.

The first stage was built for NASA by the Boeing Company at NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, Louisiana, under the management of Marshall Space Flight Center.

Each weekday, SPACE.com looks back at the history of spaceflight through photos (archive).



Article source: http://www.space.com/15607-saturn-rocket-test-firing.html

Meteorology and astronomy combine in weekend skies – Enterprise

Click photo to enlargeExpect bright sunshine over the weekend, except at about 6:30 p.m. Sunday, when the sky will be darkened and only a ring of fire will be visible where the sun should be.

The first half of the forecast is meteorological. The second part has more to do with astrophysics.

The National Weather Service is predicting warm clear days with high temperatures in the middle 80s, with light winds and overnight lows in the upper 50s.

On Sunday the beautiful weather will be trumped by an exceptional astronomic event, an eclipse of the sun.

The eclipse will reach totality just before 6:30 p.m. The Kiwanis Chico Community Observatory in Bidwell Park will sponsor a program about the eclipse that is supposed to get underway at about 5:30 p.m. Sunday.

Article source: http://www.chicoer.com/news/ci_20654379/meteorology-and-astronomy-combine-weekend-skies

Fifteen-Year-Old Creates Non-Invasive Pancreatic Cancer Detection Tool


PITTSBURGH, May 18, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) –
–NEWS HIGHLIGHTS

–The world’s largest high school science research competition, the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, a program of Society for Science the Public, announced its top winners in Pittsburgh, Pa.

–Jack Andraka of Crownsville, Md. received the Gordon E. Moore Award, a $75,000 prize named in honor of the Intel co-founder, retired chairman and CEO.

–Two Intel Foundation Young Scientist Awards winners — Nicholas Schiefer of Pickering, Ontario, Canada and Ari Dyckovsky of Leesburg, Va. — each received prizes of $50,000 from the Intel Foundation.

Jack Andraka, 15, of Crownsville, Md. was awarded first place for his
new method to detect pancreatic cancer at this year’s Intel
International Science and Engineering Fair, a program of Society for
Science the Public. Based on diabetic test paper, Jack created a
simple dip-stick sensor to test blood or urine to determine whether or
not a patient has early-stage pancreatic cancer. His study resulted in
over 90 percent accuracy and showed his patent-pending sensor to be 28
times faster, 28 times less expensive and over 100 times more sensitive
than current tests. Jack received the Gordon E. Moore Award, named in
honor of Intel co-founder and retired chairman and CEO of $75,000.

Two students, Nicholas Schiefer, 17, of Pickering, Ontario, Canada and
Ari Dyckovsky, 18, of Leesburg, Va., each received the Intel Foundation
Young Scientist Award of $50,000.

Nicholas studied what he calls “microsearch,” or the ability to search
the fastest-growing information medium: small amounts of content, such
as tweets and Facebook status updates. Through his research, Nicholas
hopes to improve search engines’ capabilities, which will in turn
improve access to information.

Ari investigated the science of quantum teleportation. He found that
once atoms are linked through a process called “entanglement,”
information from one atom will just appear in another atom when the
quantum state of the first atom is destroyed. Using this method,
organizations requiring high levels of data security, such as the
National Security Administration, could send an encrypted message
without running the risk of interception because the information would
not travel to its new location; it would simply appear there.

“We support the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair because
we know that math and science are imperative to future global growth,”
said Wendy Hawkins, executive director of the Intel Foundation. “This
competition encourages millions of students to engage their skills for
innovation and develop promising solutions for global challenges.”

This year, more than 1,500 young scientists were chosen to compete in
the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. They were selected
from 446 affiliate fairs in approximately 70 countries, regions and
territories. In addition to the winners mentioned above, more than 400
finalists received awards and prizes for their groundbreaking work.
Awards included 17 “Best of Category” winners who each received a $5,000
prize. The Intel Foundation also awarded a $1,000 grant to each winner’s
school and to the affiliated fair they represent.

The following lists the 17 Best of Category winners, from which the
top three were chosen:


                         Category                       First          Last               City            State/Country
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Animal Sciences                             Lucy          Hritzo          Holland                Pa.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Behavioral and Social Sciences              Benjamin      Kornick         Roslyn Heights         N.Y.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Biochemistry                                Rebecca       Alford          Commack                N.Y.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Cellular and Molecular Biology              Raghav        Tripathi        Portland               Ore.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Chemistry                                   Raghavendra   Ramachanderan   Bengaluru              India
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Computer Science                            Nicholas      Schiefer        Pickering, Ontario     Canada
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Earth and Planetary Sciences                Mofeed        Sawan           London, Ontario        Canada
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Engineering: Electrical and Mechanical      Assiya        Kussainova      Karaganda, Karagandy   Kazakhstan
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Engineering: Materials and Bioengineering   Ryota         Ishizuka        Cos Cob                Conn.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Energy and Transportation                   Shyamal       Buch            Folsom                 Calif.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Environmental Management                    Adam          Noble           Lakefield, Ontario     Canada
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Environmental Sciences                      Naomi         Shah            Portland               Ore.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Mathematical Sciences                       Aishwarya     Vardhana        Beaverton              Ore.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Medicine and Health                         Jack          Andraka         Crownsville            Md.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Microbiology                                Felix         Angelov         Skokie                 Ill.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Physics and Astronomy                       Ari           Dyckovsky       Leesburg               Va.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------
        Plant Sciences                              Huihui        Fan             Staten Island          N.Y.
        -----------------------------------------   -----------   -------------   --------------------   -------------

Society for Science the Public, a nonprofit membership organization
dedicated to public engagement in scientific research and education,
owns and has administered the International Science and Engineering Fair
since its inception in 1950, as the National Science Fair.

“We congratulate Jack, Nicholas, and Ari on their success here at the
Intel International Science and Engineering Fair,” said Elizabeth
Marincola, president of Society for Science the Public. “They and all
the other finalists here this week further demonstrate how a background
of STEM [science, technology, engineering, and math] education creates
the breeding ground for creativity and ingenuity that will help solve
the pressing issues of the future.”

The Intel International Science and Engineering Fair includes some of
the most promising rising student entrepreneurs, innovators and
scientists from around the world. Finalists are selected annually from
hundreds of affiliated fairs. Their projects are then evaluated onsite
by more than 1,200 judges from nearly every scientific discipline, each
with a Ph.D. or the equivalent of 6 years of related professional
experience in one of the scientific disciplines.

A full listing of finalists is available in the event
program (beginning on page 57). The Intel International Science and
Engineering Fair 2012 is funded jointly by Intel and the Intel
Foundation with additional awards and support from dozens of other
corporate, academic, governmental and science-focused organizations.

To learn more about SSP, and its programs and publications, visit
www.societyforscience.org ,
follow on Twitter,
or visit the Facebook
page.

To get the latest Intel education news, visit
www.intel.com/newsroom/education ,
and join the conversation on Facebook
and Twitter.

About Intel

Intel


/quotes/zigman/20392/quotes/nls/intc INTC
+0.46%



is a world leader in computing innovation. The
company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the
foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information
about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com
and blogs.intel.com.

Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the
United States and other countries.

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

Note to Editors: Multimedia is available at:
www.intel.com/newsroom/education .

SOURCE: Intel Corporation


        North of Nine, for Intel
        Allison Kubota, 646-525-6718
        allison.kubota@nof9.com
        or
        Society for Science  the Public
        Sarah Wood, 202-872-5110
        swood@societyforscience.org

Copyright Business Wire 2012

/quotes/zigman/20392/quotes/nls/intc




add Add to portfolio

INTC

loading...

Article source: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/fifteen-year-old-creates-non-invasive-pancreatic-cancer-detection-tool-2012-05-18

See a partial solar eclipse Sunday evening

The moon will invade the sun’s space in Southern California skies Sunday evening, intruding in front of the solar disk enough to look as if it’s biting off a chunk of it in a rare partial eclipse.

The partial, or “annular,” eclipse begins about 5:30 p.m., and peaks about 6:30 p.m., well before sunset.


Article Tab: image1-See a partial solar eclipse Sunday evening


“At peak obscuration, it will be like a crescent,” said Caltech astronomy professor George Djorgovski.

In the old days, astronomers used eclipses to learn secrets of the solar system. But not so much today.

“It’s been a long time since eclipses were a big science thing,” he said. “Now it’s really just a wonderful phenomenon of nature, for people to wonder about the universe.”

While the annular eclipse will be visible in Orange County — that is, if the National Weather Service forecast of mostly clear skies holds up — we won’t get to see the “ring of fire” that will be visible farther north.

There, the moon will appear to move into the center of the sun, leaving a fiery ring around the moon’s edges. Unlike an annular eclipse, a total eclipse occurs when the moon is closer to Earth, and appears to blot out the sun completely.

Astronomers caution against looking at the sun directly; without special filters, it will burn out digital camera sensors, too.

Instead, you can purchase special “eclipse glasses.”

Another trick, said Craig Bobchin of the Orange County Astronomers, is to punch a small hole in a piece of cardboard, and let the sun shine through it onto a white screen, or a wall.

The Orange County Astronomers won’t be hosting any local events for the partial eclipse, he said.

But the UC Irvine Observatory will host a “Visitor Night” from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Find directions and parking information on the UCI Observatory website.

The Slooh Space Camera, headquartered in New York City, also will provide real-time webcasting of the eclipse from Japan, California, Arizona and New Mexico.

Article source: http://www.ocregister.com/news/eclipse-354767-partial-astronomers.html

A Supernova Cocoon Breakthrough

Observations with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory have provided the first X-ray evidence of a supernova shock wave breaking through a cocoon of gas surrounding the star that exploded. This discovery may help astronomers understand why some supernovas are much more powerful than others.

On November 3, 2010, a supernova was discovered in the galaxy UGC 5189A, located about 160 million light years away. Using data from the All Sky Automated Survey telescope in Hawaii taken earlier, astronomers determined this supernova exploded in early October 2010 (in Earth’s time-frame).

A Supernova Cocoon Breakthrough

This composite image of UGC 5189A shows X-ray data from Chandra in purple and optical data from Hubble Space Telescope in red, green and blue. SN 2010jl is the very bright X-ray source near the top of the galaxy (mouse-over for a labeled version).

A team of researchers used Chandra to observe this supernova in December 2010 and again in October 2011. The supernova was one of the most luminous that has ever been detected in X-rays.

In optical light, SN 2010jl was about ten times more luminous than a typical supernova resulting from the collapse of a massive star, adding to the class of very luminous supernovas that have been discovered recently with optical surveys. Different explanations have been proposed to explain these energetic supernovas including (1) the interaction of the supernova’s blast wave with a dense shell of matter around the pre-supernova star, (2) radioactivity resulting from a pair-instability supernova (triggered by the conversion of gamma rays into particle and anti-particle pairs), and (3) emission powered by a neutron star with an unusually powerful magnetic field.

In the first Chandra observation of SN 2010jl, the X-rays from the explosion’s blast wave were strongly absorbed by a cocoon of dense gas around the supernova. This cocoon was formed by gas blown away from the massive star before it exploded.

In the second observation taken almost a year later, there is much less absorption of X-ray emission, indicating that the blast wave from the explosion has broken out of the surrounding cocoon. The Chandra data show that the gas emitting the X-rays has a very high temperature — greater than 100 million degrees Kelvin – strong evidence that it has been heated by the supernova blast wave.

The energy distribution, or spectrum, of SN 2010jl in optical light reveals features that the researchers think are explained by the following scenario: matter around the supernova has been heated and ionized (electrons stripped from atoms) by X-rays generated when the blast wave plows through this material. While this type of interaction has been proposed before, the new observations directly show, for the first time, that this is happening.

This discovery therefore supports the idea that some of the unusually luminous supernovas are caused by the blast wave from their explosion ramming into the material around it.

In a rare example of a cosmic coincidence, analysis of the X-rays from the supernova shows that there is a second unrelated source at almost the same location as the supernova. These two sources strongly overlap one another as seen on the sky. This second source is likely to be an ultraluminous X-ray source, possibly containing an unusually heavy stellar-mass black hole, or an intermediate mass black hole.

These results were published in a paper appearing in the May 1st, 2012 issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters. The authors were Poonam Chandra (Royal Military College of Canada, Kingston, Canada), Roger Chevalier and Christopher Irwin (University of Virginia, Charlottsville, VA), Nikolai Chugai (Institute of Astronomy of Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia), Claes Fransson (Stockholm University, Sweden), and Alicia Soderberg (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA).

Article source: http://scienceblog.com/54390/a-supernova-cocoon-breakthrough/