Archive for November, 2008

Trail Watching Basics

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

There are some new technologies available to make your wildlife photography even better. There are a number of people who really like to capture some neat photos and view the beauty of nature. Taking pictures of wildlife presents problems though, since a human presence can cause an alarm. If you are really interested, then you should get a trail camera.

You don’t want to just get any trail camera though. You want a good one. A trail camera is basically just a camera built to use a fancy time-delay mechanism. You set it up and turn it on to cover an trail area. It will then take pictures when it detects motion. This should give you some really cool pictures. Make sure that your camera has a digital rangefinder though. This will make your pictures stay in focus even when they are at quite a distance. It is a little more expensive, but you will be happy you bought a good camera to start with.

Finally, you might want to get something to play predator calls. These are a mix of sounds that should draw in a specified animal to the area where you have the camera setup. If you are having trouble drawing an elusive creature to your setup, then this will be a good investment.

Computer based training with Videos

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

CBT or Computer based training is the buzzword at the moment with our ever changing lifestyle and fast paced world. Due to our lifestyle we have ended up lack of time. Only for these kind of people who find it hard to allocate time for specialized IT training, we have the option called Computer Based Training system. With this option of e-learning through videos you can learn from the comfort of your own home and at anytime you wish or can learn them.

Thus you will save immense time on travel and commuting. Also you will learn them a lot quicker than regular training classes. There are several other companies which offer CBT and one among them is the K Alliance. They are one of the pioneers in this field. They have well qualified faculties who will teach you all the nuances you would need to learn any IT courses online.

With the K Alliance training videos you will get the virtual classroom and you can get all your doubts cleared through the online option available specifically for them then and there. Since these are very highly qualified faculties at K Alliance, you will be able finish off your IT courses a lot quicker than regular courses.

Be Certified!

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

When you are going to enter a certain field of expertise, there is no point in going through it if you will only be a mediocre with it and will not undergo the necessary programs that it can offer. When we talk about IT certification boot camps, you will boil down to a realization that you will always need to go through an IT certification so you will be certified at that and you will also be able to gain the trust and confidence of other people to do some of the favors to you. It will always be a good choice for you to do such because it will really be a great way to spend almost every drop of your sweat if you will do so. Also, when you will have the IT certification, it will not e hard for you to garner as, any clients as you can and for that, you will also be hired by several companies of your choice that you might want to enter. Through all these, you just have to be sure that you got the certification in a good way and you did not have it under a fraud because it might go back to you. That’s one of advantages of attending an IT boot camps

Simple steps to improve quality of facial images taken at border entry points

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) say that officials at border entry points, such as airports and seaports, can acquire better quality facial images of travellers with the aid of the existing technology itself if they adopt certain simple steps.

Lead researcher Mary Theofanos has revealed that to find out how to obtain better facial images without having to deploy new technology, her team first visited and observed a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) border entry point at Dulles Airport in the Washington, D.C. area, where all travellers have their pictures taken and their fingerprints collected digitally as part of the US-VISIT program.

Having closely observed the facial-image capturing process, the researchers identified and shared with US-VISIT a number of steps to take for acquiring better images.

They recommended that operators should adjust camera settings to ensure the subject comes into sharp focus, and that a traditional-looking camera be used in facial-recognition systems so that individuals could clearly recognize the camera and look into it.

After the Dulles site visit, a study was also conducted to see whether the recommendations of the research team were actually workable.

The researchers took facial images of 300 participants while mimicking the real-world conditions of a border entry point, and, interestingly, all of the pictures clicked fully captured the participant’s face.

All of the participants faced the camera, and the researchers found additional improvements by using a graphical overlay to the camera display in order to better position the camera.

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that such steps can improve the performance of facial recognition systems in real-world settings using the existing technology.

A follow-up study is underway in which the researchers are incorporating the graphical overlay into the workflow of camera operators.

NASA’s new mission to study Jupiter

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

NASA is preparing to launch a mission to the planet Jupiter, which will conduct an unprecedented, in-depth study of the planet, understanding its formation, evolution and structure.

Called Juno, the mission will be the first in which a spacecraft is placed in a highly elliptical polar orbit around the giant planet.

Underneath its dense cloud cover, Jupiter safeguards secrets to the fundamental processes and conditions that governed our early solar system.

Understanding the formation of Jupiter is essential to understanding the processes that led to the development of the rest of our solar system and what the conditions were that led to Earth and humankind.

Similar to the sun, Jupiter is composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. A small percentage of the planet is composed of heavier elements.

“Jupiter is the archetype of giant planets in our solar system and formed very early, capturing most of the material left after the sun formed,” said Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.

“Unlike Earth, Jupiter’’s giant mass allowed it to hold onto its original composition, providing us with a way of tracing our solar system’’s history,” he added.

The spacecraft is scheduled to launch aboard an Atlas rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in August 2011, reaching Jupiter in 2016.

The spacecraft will orbit Jupiter 32 times, skimming about 3,000 miles over the planet’’s cloud tops for approximately one year.

The mission will be the first solar powered spacecraft designed to operate despite the great distance from the sun.

“Jupiter is more than 400 million miles from the sun or five times further than Earth,” Bolton said. “Juno is engineered to be extremely energy efficient,” he added.

The spacecraft will use a camera and nine science instruments to study the hidden world beneath Jupiter’’s colorful clouds.

The suite of science instruments will investigate the existence of an ice-rock core, Jupiter’’s intense magnetic field, water and ammonia clouds in the deep atmosphere, and explore the planet’’s aurora borealis.

According to Professor Toby Owen, co-investigator at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, Juno would looks through Jupiter’’s clouds to search for signs of water, the ultimate essence of life.

“Juno’’s extraordinarily accurate determination of the gravity and magnetic fields of Jupiter will enable us to understand what is going on deep down in the planet,” said Professor Dave Stevenson, co-investigator at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

“These and other measurements will inform us about how Jupiter’’s constituents are distributed, how Jupiter formed and how it evolved, which is a central part of our growing understanding of the nature of our solar system,” he added.

Another Extrasolar Planet Possibly Imaged

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Astronomers say they have directly imaged a giant exoplanet orbiting its parent star. The announcement comes on the heels of two other reports this month of direct images of planets beyond our solar system.

The new infrared image shows the object as a speck of light near the star Beta Pictoris, which is 70 light-years from Earth, toward the constellation Pictor.

“We cannot yet rule out definitively, however, that the candidate companion could be a foreground or background object,” said study team member Gael Chauvin of Grenoble Observatory in France. “To eliminate this very small possibility, we will need to make new observations that confirm the nature of the discovery.”

Chauvin and other French astronomers discovered the candidate planet using the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO) Very Large Telescope. The possible planet is estimated to weigh about eight times the mass of Jupiter with an orbit of eight astronomical units (AU) from its star, where one AU is the average Earth-sun distance.

Astrophysicist Sara Seager of MIT, who was not involved in the latest discovery, said while the possibility is exciting, another more convincing image of the object is in order. “We want to make sure it’s moving together with the star,” Seager said.

Another image would show whether the star is moving at a different speed relative to this object and other background objects or if the star and planet are moving together (which would help to confirm this is indeed a planet).

Astronomers had thought a planet could be responsible for irregularities seen in the debris disk, first imaged in 1994, surrounding Beta Pictoris. As a planet treks around its star, the planet jostles and tugs on pieces of dust and debris, shaping the disk.

“Beta Pic has been teasing astronomers for the past two decades with hints of an orbiting planet,” said University of California, Berkeley, astronomer Paul Kalas, who was not directly involved with the study. Kalas led a team of astronomers who reported this month the first visible-light snapshot of a single-planet system around the star Fomalhaut.

The researchers say the object does explain the warped disk. “The candidate companion has exactly the mass and distance from its host star needed to explain all the disk’s properties,” said team leader Anne-Marie Lagrange of the Grenoble Observatory.

The team tried to rule out other non-planet possibilities. For instance, they looked at images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope of the system, which would likely reveal background and foreground objects.

They also used three independent detection methods to rule out the possibility that the point source of light was just an artifact of the observing instrument.

“Overall, this is an exciting discovery that could be verified in just a few weeks time since Beta Pictoris is a bright star visible during the winter months,” Kalas told SPACE.com.

Actually, Lagrange said the planet might not be visible with their instruments currently, because of the inclination of the orbit and how it is aligned. So from our perspective on Earth, the planet could travel too close to its star to be visible.

The Skinny On Sugars And Sweeteners

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

When cutting calories from their diet, especially during the holiday season, conscientious eaters often start by eliminating sugar. But adding honey to tea or substituting “raw” sugar for white won’t make a difference. A teaspoon of table sugar has 14 calories, no matter its color, as does honey, molasses and other “natural” sweeteners.

And artificial and plant-based sweeteners may pose additional health risks, as they’ve been linked to cancer and other serious health problems in previous animal studies. Packets of plant-derived Stevia, sold in health food stores as a dietary supplement, aren’t even approved by the Food and Drug Administration for sale as a food additive. High fructose corn syrup, an artificial sweetener used in products like soda and ice cream, has been increasingly blamed for rising levels of diabetes and obesity.

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All the caveats have left consumers confused about sugar, and it’s frequently difficult to find straightforward answers. That’s partly due to the controversy surrounding sugar consumption, and while scientific research is still inconclusive on many of these questions, there are some very basic guidelines that consumers can follow to stay healthy.

Souring On Sugar

In the past few years, sugars have been blamed for worsening rates of diabetes and obesity, and companies in the business of sweetening the American diet have countered.

The Corn Refiners Association, an industry group, recently launched an advertising campaign extolling the virtues of high fructose corn syrup. Some beverage and food companies have scrambled to swap high fructose corn syrup for cane sugar and other natural sweeteners. And this year, food manufacturers launched “all-natural” zero-calorie sweeteners extracted from the stevia plant.

These companies are trying to capture market share even as sugar consumption becomes a public health concern, and billions of dollars are at stake. In 2007, total retail sales of sugar and sweeteners reached $3.1 billion, according to an estimate by the market research company Packaged Facts.

Consumers, though they spend consistently, are often overwhelmed with conflicting information about sugar and sweetener consumption, including warnings about calories, cancer and weight gain.

Myths and Misperceptions One popular misperception is that unprocessed sugar is healthier than processed versions.

“When it comes to sugar and cane sugar and any other word they’re using, sugar is sugar,” says Amy Virus, a registered dietitian at Temple University’s Center for Obesity Research and Education. Virus is referring to the caloric content of not only table sugar, but also honey, molasses, cane sugar and even high fructose corn syrup, which is derived through a chemical process from corn starch. All of these sweeteners have the same number of calories in one teaspoon.

Persuasive marketers using phrases like “all natural” have helped make products with high sugar and fructose levels appealing, says Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit advocacy organization.

“Marketers know that people will pay a little extra for that all natural product,” he says. “It’s totally dishonest of companies to brag about not having high fructose corn syrup when they contain sugar.”

Both Jacobson and Virus say that what matters most is quantity. Americans now eat less table sugar than they did in 1970, but the advent of corn syrup as an additive in everything from ice cream to ketchup means we consume more sugars than ever before. In 2007, Americans consumed 44 pounds of refined cane and beet sugar and 40 pounds of high fructose corn syrup per capita.

The simultaneous increase of diabetes and obesity has not escaped the attention of public health experts and scientists, but scientific research has yet to provide conclusive evidence that sucrose and fructose, found in table sugar and corn syrup, respectively, are directly responsible for the trend.

Dr. Peter Havel, a professor in the departments of molecular biosciences and nutrition at University of California, Davis, has studied the impact of fructose intake and found that it increases some markers that are considered risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes in overweight and obese patients.

Alternatives to Sugar Dr. Elizabeth Parks, an associate professor at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and in the Center for Human Nutrition, has also studied the role of fructose and found that the body often turns excess quantities of fructose into fat.

But Parks is hesitant to draw any conclusions about fructose’s links to obesity.

“It appears to me that it’s too many calories of everything,” she says. Parks recommends satisfying sweet-tooth cravings with something healthier than a sugary drink or soda, which can have more than the day’s calorie allowance. She also warns against demonizing fructose, a natural sugar found in fruit and which is healthy in small doses.

For those who cannot give up sodas and sweets, there are several artificial and natural zero-calorie sweeteners available. The FDA has approved five artificial sweeteners for use in the U.S., including saccharin, aspartame and sucralose. However, they are not without medical caveats; some scientific studies using animals have raised questions about aspartame and saccharine and links to cancer.

Stevia, a South American plant whose extract is up to 300 times sweeter than sugar, has become a popular calorie-free alternative and is sold as a dietary supplement in health food stores. The FDA has yet to approve it, or newly launched versions of it, for sale in food products and previous animal studies have demonstrated a link between stevia and genetic mutations and diminished fertility. More recent studies sponsored by Coca Cola and food manufacturer Cargill have deemed it safe for human consumption. Cargill currently sells a zero-calorie, stevia-based tabletop sweetener named Truvia in grocery stores.

Elizabeth Parks sympathizes with consumers who struggle to stay abreast of the current research and make educated decisions about sugars and sweeteners and their health, but says shifting opinion is part of the scientific process.

“[Consumers] shouldn’t be surprised that they might get one advice this year and then that advice is refined,” she says. “We’re getting better at understanding how the intricacies of the diet may affect [people].”

Improvement is needed for environmental health

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Improvement is needed for environmental health, said in a report.

Environmental health in Lincoln, Marathon, Portage and Wood counties ranks in the bottom quarter of Wisconsin’s 72 counties.

The 2008 County Health Rankings, released Thursday by the University of Wisconsin’s Population Health Institute in Madison, suggest the findings.

The report looked at air quality data from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the state’s Department of Natural Resources, nitrate levels in water, percentage of housing built before 1950.

Though health behaviors, socioeconomic factors and physical environment were not included in rankings, researchers included them to show how counties compared.

Star Wars-style “light sabre” to fight cancer cells developed

Monday, November 24th, 2008

A Star Wars-style “light sabre” has been developed that can fight cancer cells, its creators have claimed.

According to the researchers, the revolutionary device - a couple of millimetres square - could be routinely used on patients within the next five years.

The machine fires a laser beam so accurately that it can puncture a hole in an individual cell, allowing drugs to enter and do their work much more effectively.

This could imply, for instance, that the cells surrounding the spot where a tumour has been removed by surgery would be holed by the device.

The procedure would allow chemotherapy drugs to enter and kill any remaining cancer cells. It would be particularly useful for hard-to-reach cancers such as that of the pancreas, reports Courier Mail.

The team from the University of St Andrews in Scotland has managed to mount the “light sabre” on an optical fibre.

The boffins said that the next step is to develop it for use on endoscopes, the tubes used by surgeons to pass miniature cameras through the body.

The masterminds behind the creation are Professor Kishan Dholakia from the university’s school of physics and Dr Frank Gunn-Moore from the school of biology.

Dr Gunn-Moore said: “You could think of these as tiny light sabres like they had in Star Wars inside your body.

“We can use lasers to punch tiny holes exactly where we want them. We can produce a rod of light - sometimes described as a sword - that can even go around objects. It really does sound like science fiction.”

Scientists produce first crude map of aurorae on Mars

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008

Scientists have used the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Mars Express to produce the first crude map of aurorae on Mars, which are a powerful tool with which scientists can investigate the composition and structure of the Red Planet’s atmosphere.

The aurorae on Mars were discovered in 2004 using the SPICAM ultraviolet and infrared atmospheric spectrometer on board Mars Express.

These displays of ultraviolet light appear to be located close to the residual magnetic fields generated by crustal rocks on Mars.

They highlight a number of mysteries about the way Mars interacts with electrically charged particles originating from the Sun.

Now, Francois Leblanc, from the Service d’Aeronomie, IPSL/CNRS, France and colleagues have announced the results of coordinated observation campaigns using SPICAM, the MARSIS sub-surface sounding radar altimeter’s radar, and the energetic neutral atoms analyser, ASPERA’s electron spectrometer on Mars Express.

They have observed nine new auroral emission events, which have allowed them to make the first crude map of auroral activity on Mars.

According to the researchers, the aurorae seem to be located near regions where the martian magnetic field is the strongest.

This suggests, although it does not prove, that the magnetic fields help to create the aurorae.

On Earth, aurorae are more commonly known as the northern and southern lights. They are confined to the polar regions and shine brightly at visible as well as ultraviolet wavelengths.

The existence of similar aurorae is well known on the giant planets of the Solar System. They occur wherever a planet’s magnetic field channels electrically charged particles into the atmosphere.

The aurorae are caused by charged particles, in this case most probably electrons, colliding with molecules in the atmosphere.

The electrons almost certainly come from the Sun, which constantly blows out electrically charged particles into space.

Known as the solar wind, this constant stream of particles provides the source of electrons to generate the aurorae, as suggested by MARSIS and ASPERA.

But how the electrons are accelerated to sufficiently high energies to spark aurorae on Mars remains a mystery.

“It may be that magnetic fields on Mars connect with the solar wind, providing a road for the electrons to travel along,” said Leblanc.

“There’s now a large domain of physics that we have to explore in order to understand the aurorae on Mars. Thanks to Mars Express we have a lot of very good measurements to work with,” he added.