Friday, December 16, 2011

Huge cloud heading for black hole

Researchers have spotted a giant gas cloud spiralling into the supermassive black hole at our galaxy's centre.

Though it is known that black holes draw in nearby material, it will be the first chance to see one consume such a cloud.

As it is torn apart, the turbulent area around the black hole will become unusually bright, giving astronomers a chance to learn more about it.

An article in Nature suggests the spectacle should be visible in 2013.

Researchers using the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope estimate that despite its size, the cloud has a total mass of only about three times that of Earth.

They have plotted the cloud's squashed, oval-shaped path and estimate it has doubled its speed in the last seven years - to 2,350km per second.

It should spiral in to within about 40 billion kilometres of the black hole in the middle of 2013.

Our local supermassive black hole, dubbed Sagittarius A*, lies about 27,000 light-years away, and has a mass about four million times that of our Sun.

As the name implies, beyond a certain threshold point - the event horizon - nothing can escape its pull, not even light itself.

But outside that regime is a swirling mass of material, not unlike water circling a drain. In astronomical terms, it is a relatively quiet zone about which little is known.

That looks set to change, though, as the gas cloud approaches.

Spaghetti tester

It does not comprise enough matter to hold itself together under its own gravity, as a star might, so the cloud will begin to elongate as it meets its doom.

"The idea of an astronaut close to a black hole being stretched out to resemble spaghetti is familiar from science fiction," said lead author of the study Stefan Gillessen, from Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany.

"But we can now see this happening for real to the newly discovered cloud. It is not going to survive the experience."

It is likely that about half of the cloud will be swallowed up, with the remainder flung back out into space.

But this violent process will literally shed light on the closest example we have of an enigmatic celestial object.

The acceleration of the cloud's constituent material will create a shower of X-rays that will help astronomers learn more about our local black hole.

And as astronomer Mark Morris of the University of California Los Angeles put it in an accompanying article in Nature, "many telescopes are likely to be watching".

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-16178112

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Troops, police patrol Moscow after protests (AP)

MOSCOW ? Thousands of police and Interior Ministry troops patrolled central Moscow on Tuesday, an apparent attempt to deter any further protests day after a rally against vote fraud and corruption caught Russian authorities by surprise.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, meanwhile, called his party's reduced number of seats in Sunday's parliamentary election an "inevitable" result of voters always being dissatisfied with the party in power. Putin also dismissed allegations of corruption among his United Russia party members, calling it a "cliche" that the party had to fight.

In neighboring Lithuania, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton again criticized the Russian election and urged that widespread reports of voting fraud be investigated.

United Russia party won slightly less than 50 percent of Sunday's vote, according to nearly complete preliminary results. Although that gives the party an absolute majority in the State Duma, the lower house of parliament, it is a significant drop from the 2007 election when the party got a two-thirds majority, enough to change the constitution unchallenged.

Even that smaller majority is seen as questionable in the wake of numerous reports of voting fraud to inflate United Russia's total. Russian officials, however, have denied any significant vote violations.

Still, the election results reflected public fatigue with Putin's authoritarian streak and with official corruption in Russia, signaling that his return to the presidency in next March's election may not be as trouble-free as he expected.

Russia's beleaguered opposition has been energized by the vote. Late Monday, thousands marched in Moscow chanting "Russia without Putin!"

On Tuesday evening, hundreds of police cordoned off Triumphal Square, adjacent to the capital's main boulevard, after reports that anti-Putin demonstrators would try to gather there. Hundreds of young men, some wearing emblems of the Young Guards, United Russia's youth wing, also were seen at the square.

Police also cordoned off a monument to the 1905 Revolution, which also has been the site of demonstrations.

Police detained about 300 protesters in Moscow on Monday and 120 participants in a similar rally in St. Petersburg. One of the leaders, Ilya Yashin, who was among those arrested, was sentenced to 15 days in jail Tuesday for disobeying police.

Security forces already had been beefed up in the capital ahead of the election. Moscow police said 51,500 Interior Ministry personnel were involved and it was all part of increased security for the election period.

Putin's comments Tuesday appeared aimed at saving face and discouraging the opposition from seeing United Russia as vulnerable.

"Yes, there were losses, but they were inevitable," Putin said. "They are inevitable for any political force, particularly for the one which has been carrying the burden of responsibility for the situation in the country."

Putin also addressed the popular characterization of United Russia as "the party of crooks and thieves," saying corruption was a widespread problem not limited to a single party.

"They say that the ruling party is associated with theft, with corruption, but it's a cliche related not to a certain political force, it's a cliche related to power," he said during a meeting with provincial officials.

"What's important, however, is how the ruling government is fighting these negative things," he said.

Clinton criticized the Russian vote for a second straight day, saying Tuesday that "Russian voters deserve a full investigation of electoral fraud and manipulation."

Konstantin Kosachev, a senior United Russia member, described Clinton's statement as "one of the darkest pages in the Russian-U.S. relations" and warned Washington against supporting the opposition.

Russia's only independent election monitoring group, Golos, which is funded by U.S. and European grants, came under heavy official pressure ahead of Sunday's vote after Putin likened Russian recipients of foreign support to Judas. Golos' website was incapacitated by hackers on election day, and its director Lilya Shibanova and her deputy had their cell phone numbers, email and social media accounts hacked.

The Russian election even drew criticism from one of Putin's predecessors.

"There is no real democracy here and there won't be any, if the government is afraid of the people," former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev said on Ekho Moskvy radio.

____

Vladimir Isachenkov contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111206/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_election

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Record-breaking black holes discovered

Monday, December 5, 2011

An international team of astronomers has discovered two gigantic black holes with masses about 10 billion times the mass of our sun. These black holes have a mass more than 50 per cent greater than any other previously measured.

"They may be the dormant remains of quasars that were extremely luminous billions of years ago," says Professor James Graham, director of the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Toronto and founding member of the team behind the discovery.

A black hole is a region of space that has so much mass concentrated in it that there is no way for a nearby object to escape its gravitational pull. The masses of black holes are measured by figuring out how strong their gravity is. More mass means more gravity and a stronger effect on stars that orbit in the galaxies that they inhabit.

Using several telescopes ? the Gemini Observatory, the MacDonald Observatory and the Keck Observatory ? the scientists measured the speed of stars orbiting in these galaxies, thereby measuring the strength of the gravitational field of the black hole.

"Black holes inhabit the centres of nearly all galaxies ? the centre of our very own Milky Way galaxy harbours a black hole four million times the mass of the sun ? relatively speaking, a baby! But only a few dozens of these black holes have been 'weighed' carefully," says Graham.

"We believe that 10-billion solar mass black holes like these are the ultimate power sources for the distant quasars observed in the early universe, one to three billion years after the Big Bang," he says. Quasars are among the brightest phenomena in the universe, emitted by material whirling around and falling into the black hole at the centre of a galaxy. The more massive the black hole, the more powerful the quasar can be.

More recently, quasars have toned it down: the ones closer to home are not nearly as luminous as those of 10 billion years ago. The light coming from the two galaxies the team observed shows them as they were less than half a billion years ago. No quasar there, but black holes massive enough to have powered extremely bright quasars several billions of years earlier.

"Our measurements of black holes with 10-billion solar masses in nearby galaxies show that these types of galaxies originally hosted very luminous quasars," says Graham. "For the last 10 billion years, these enormous black holes have been dormant."

To look for such massive black holes, the team turned their telescopes toward giant galaxies since there appears to be a tight correlation between properties of the host galaxy and the mass of its black hole. This key piece of evidence helps scientists piece together how galaxies and their central black holes form and grow. The correlation suggests there is a sort of feedback between the growth of the central black hole and the formation of the stars that eventually comprise the central region of the galaxy.

"But these newly measured black hole masses are a surprise," says Graham. "They are significantly more massive than predicted using the previously known correlations. Something that we had not anticipated for the most massive black holes must be at play here."

###

University of Toronto: http://www.utoronto.ca

Thanks to University of Toronto for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115722/Record_breaking_black_holes_discovered

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Obama Team Gangs Up on Romney, 'Political Gymnast' Who 'Doesn't Have a Core' (ABC News)

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Many Russians dismayed with ruling party (AP)

KALININGRAD, Russia ? In the glitzy central square of what once was regarded as one of Europe's ugliest cities, Marina Timofeyeva was underwhelmed by the changes brought by a decade under Vladimir Putin. "It's all nice if you have money to buy something, but what if you don't?," asked the 29-year-old manager of a boutique.

She hadn't decided who to vote for in Sunday's national elections ? except that it won't be for Putin's United Russia party.

Widespread dismay with United Russia threatens to undermine the party's control of Russia and authorities are clearly nervous, including applying strong pressure on the country's only independent election-monitoring group.

The group, Golos, has complied some 5,300 complaints of election-law violations ahead of the vote. Most are linked to United Russia, the party headed by Putin, who has dominated Russian politics for a dozen years as president and prime minister.

Roughly a third of the complainants ? mostly government employees and students ? say employers and professors are pressuring them to vote for the party.

Golos' leader, Lilya Shibanova, was held at a Moscow airport for 12 hours upon her Friday return from Poland after refusing to give her laptop computer to security officers, said Golos' deputy director Grigory Melkonyants. On Friday, the group was fined the equivalent of $1,000 by a Moscow court for violating a law that prohibits publication of election opinion research for five days before a vote.

The group has come under growing pressure since last Sunday, when Putin accused Western governments of trying to influence the election. Golos is funded by grants from the United States and Europe.

United Russia has received overwhelmingly favorable coverage during the campaign, mostly from Kremlin-controlled national television. But the party is increasingly disliked, seen as representing a corrupt bureaucracy and often called "the party of crooks and thieves."

Independent pollster Levada Center said last week that United Russia will receive 53 percent of the vote, down from the 64 percent it got in the 2007 vote. This would deprive it of the two-thirds majority that has allowed it to amend the constitution.

Putin, who is expected to win a third term as president next year, and the party, had won much of their popularity on the back of Russia's economic revival, driven largely by high prices for oil and natural gas. Kaliningrad was one of the most striking beneficiaries.

The city and the region of the same name, disconnected from the rest of Russia and bordered by Lithuania, Poland and the Baltic Sea, had been a particularly dismal post-Soviet landscape of clumsy concrete buildings and shabby infrastructure. But the city's main square now features two sleek malls and dozens of boutiques whose lights cast a glow on streams of shoppers.

In a country infamous for lousy roads, a new highway connecting the city with the seacoast is a standout marvel. A nuclear plant, a casino center and a stadium for the 2018 World Cup are all under way. Putin promises even more: a new heart disease clinic, support for the local soccer team, kindergarten repairs, a major bridge through the city, and a new convalescent center for children.

Both Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev, apparently aware of discontent in Kaliningrad, have made pre-election trips to the region. But many local residents are unimpressed.

"I'm going to vote for the Communist Party," says Tatyana Zhuravlyova, 29, a boutique manager. United Russia "have done some things, but they did the minimum they could have. As much as they've done, they've stolen in equal numbers."

Anatoly Polyakov, a retired naval officer, said he too would vote for the Communists because of the yawning gap between society's haves and have-nots.

"United Russia is for the super-rich, but Russia has lots of poor people and its middle class is just developing. We need more social justice for the poor," he said.

Only seven parties have been allowed to field candidates for parliament this year ? down from 11 in 2007 ? while the most vocal opposition groups have been denied registration and barred from campaigning.

The Kremlin is determined to see United Russia maintain its majority in parliament. Medvedev and Putin both made final appeals for the party on Friday, warning that a parliament made up of diverse political camps would be incapable of making decisions.

Putin needs the party to do well in the parliamentary election to pave the way for his return to the presidency in a vote now three months away.

It remains unclear whether the pressure on Golos may impede its monitors from working on Sunday. The Organization for Security and Cooperation Europe has sent a monitoring mission. A preliminary report from the mission noted pointedly that "Most parties have expressed a lack of trust in the fairness of the electoral process."

The Helsinki Commission, a federal board that advises on U.S. policy about security, human rights and other issues involving Europe, criticized the court ruling to fine Golos in a statement released late Friday.

"The campaign against Golos provides additional reason for doubt about the legitimacy of the parliamentary election that will take place in Russia on Sunday and the broader state of democracy there," it said.

_____

Associated Press writers Mansur Mirovalev and Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111203/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_election

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Good Riddance to Bad Rubbish (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | Herman Cain addressed the public today about the future of his candidacy. I watched the live broadcast online from ABC. He withdrew from the campaign, saying he was "suspending" it. His speech was laden with buzzwords and cliches about believing in America, God, country and "we the people" in particular.

He called running for president a "dirty, dirty game." As someone alleged to prefer harassing and having affairs with dirty, dirty girls Cain might be in position to know. Throughout his speech he kept to his usual strategy regarding the dirty, dirty allegations against him of sexual misconduct: deny, deny, deny. What else can we expect from a man of the same party as Richard "I am not a crook" Nixon?

Cain broke down America into three groups: The media, politicians and "we the people." During his closing he repeatedly asked people to "look inside to see what they can do." If he came any closer to saying, "Ask not what your country can do for you" he'd have to become a Democrat and change his name to Kennedy.

He says he is now embarking on Plan B, centered around policies on a website called thecainsolutions.com, which has a placeholder page at the time of this writing. He said foreign policy should revolve around strength and clarity. He says the U.S. needs energy independence. Cain claimed to be "disappointed that things have come to this point."

Cain asserted Washington needs to change and that while he wanted to be the man to change it from the inside that he will work to change it from the outside. His idea of change still appears to be centered around the 999 plan. If that strategy were any more slanted toward the rich Cain could ski down it with helpless working-class people strapped to his feet.

Cain failed to take the honorable path. He should have apologized for his moral shortcomings and for shaming his party, and then stepped down gracefully. Instead he remains a curse on his party because he announced on camera that he plans to endorse another candidate soon.

If I were running as a Republican I would beg him not to endorse me. Who needs a recommendation from a perceived harassing, lying, and adulterous plutocrat?

I wish we could say a final goodbye to Herman Cain but, like a bad rash, he'll be back.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111203/cm_ac/10590711_good_riddance_to_bad_rubbish

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Astronomers find 18 new planets: Discovery is the largest collection of confirmed planets around stars more massive than the sun

ScienceDaily (Dec. 2, 2011) ? Discoveries of new planets just keep coming and coming. Take, for instance, the 18 recently found by a team of astronomers led by scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).

"It's the largest single announcement of planets in orbit around stars more massive than the sun, aside from the discoveries made by the Kepler mission," says John Johnson, assistant professor of astronomy at Caltech and the first author on the team's paper, which was published in the December issue of The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. The Kepler mission is a space telescope that has so far identified more than 1,200 possible planets, though the majority of those have not yet been confirmed.

Using the Keck Observatory in Hawaii -- with follow-up observations using the McDonald and Fairborn Observatories in Texas and Arizona, respectively -- the researchers surveyed about 300 stars. They focused on those dubbed "retired" A-type stars that are more than one and a half times more massive than the sun. These stars are just past the main stage of their life -- hence, "retired" -- and are now puffing up into what's called a subgiant star.

To look for planets, the astronomers searched for stars of this type that wobble, which could be caused by the gravitational tug of an orbiting planet. By searching the wobbly stars' spectra for Doppler shifts -- the lengthening and contracting of wavelengths due to motion away from and toward the observer -- the team found 18 planets with masses similar to Jupiter's.

This new bounty marks a 50 percent increase in the number of known planets orbiting massive stars and, according to Johnson, provides an invaluable population of planetary systems for understanding how planets -- and our own solar system -- might form. The researchers say that the findings also lend further support to the theory that planets grow from seed particles that accumulate gas and dust in a disk surrounding a newborn star.

According to this theory, tiny particles start to clump together, eventually snowballing into a planet. If this is the true sequence of events, the characteristics of the resulting planetary system -- such as the number and size of the planets, or their orbital shapes -- will depend on the mass of the star. For instance, a more massive star would mean a bigger disk, which in turn would mean more material to produce a greater number of giant planets.

In another theory, planets form when large amounts of gas and dust in the disk spontaneously collapse into big, dense clumps that then become planets. But in this picture, it turns out that the mass of the star doesn't affect the kinds of planets that are produced.

So far, as the number of discovered planets has grown, astronomers are finding that stellar mass does seem to be important in determining the prevalence of giant planets. The newly discovered planets further support this pattern -- and are therefore consistent with the first theory, the one stating that planets are born from seed particles.

"It's nice to see all these converging lines of evidence pointing toward one class of formation mechanisms," Johnson says.

There's another interesting twist, he adds: "Not only do we find Jupiter-like planets more frequently around massive stars, but we find them in wider orbits." If you took a sample of 18 planets around sunlike stars, he explains, half of them would orbit close to their stars. But in the cases of the new planets, all are farther away, at least 0.7 astronomical units from their stars. (One astronomical unit, or AU, is the distance from Earth to the sun.)

In systems with sunlike stars, gas giants like Jupiter acquire close orbits when they migrate toward their stars. According to theories of planet formation, gas giants could only have formed far from their stars, where it's cold enough for their constituent gases and ices to exist. So for gas giants to orbit nearer to their stars, certain gravitational interactions have to take place to pull these planets in. Then, some other mechanism -- perhaps the star's magnetic field -- has to kick in to stop them from spiraling into a fiery death.

The question, Johnson says, is why this doesn't seem to happen with so-called hot Jupiters orbiting massive stars, and whether that dearth is due to nature or nurture. In the nature explanation, Jupiter-like planets that orbit massive stars just wouldn't ever migrate inward. In the nurture interpretation, the planets would move in, but there would be nothing to prevent them from plunging into their stars. Or perhaps the stars evolve and swell up, consuming their planets. Which is the case? According to Johnson, subgiants like the A stars they were looking at in this paper simply don't expand enough to gobble up hot Jupiters. So unless A stars have some unique characteristic that would prevent them from stopping migrating planets -- such as a lack of a magnetic field early in their lives -- it looks like the nature explanation is the more plausible one.

The new batch of planets have yet another interesting pattern: their orbits are mainly circular, while planets around sunlike stars span a wide range of circular to elliptical paths. Johnson says he's now trying to find an explanation.

For Johnson, these discoveries have been a long time coming. This latest find, for instance, comes from an astronomical survey that he started while a graduate student; because these planets have wide orbits, they can take a couple of years to make a single revolution, meaning that it can also take quite a few years before their stars' periodic wobbles become apparent to an observer. Now, the discoveries are finally coming in. "I liken it to a garden -- you plant the seeds and put a lot of work into it," he says. "Then, a decade in, your garden is big and flourishing. That's where I am right now. My garden is full of these big, bright, juicy tomatoes -- these Jupiter-sized planets."

The other authors on the The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series paper, "Retired A stars and their companions VII. Eighteen new Jovian planets," include former Caltech undergraduate Christian Clanton, who graduated in 2010; Caltech postdoctoral scholar Justin Crepp; and nine others from the Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii; the University of California, Berkeley; the Center of Excellence in Information Systems at Tennessee State University; the McDonald Observatory at the University of Texas, Austin; and the Pennsylvania State University. The research was supported by the National Science Foundation and NASA.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by California Institute of Technology. The original article was written by Marcus Woo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. John Asher Johnson, Christian Clanton, Andrew W. Howard, Brendan P. Bowler, Gregory W. Henry, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Justin R. Crepp, Michael Endl, William D. Cochran, Phillip J. MacQueen, Jason T. Wright, Howard Isaacson. Retired A Stars and Their Companions. VII. 18 New Jovian Planets. The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 2011; 197 (2): 26 DOI: 10.1088/0067-0049/197/2/26

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111202155801.htm

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