Author: admin

  • Fewer homes to be insulated to pay for bungle:Swan

     

    “Certainly it would mean that less houses would be insulated in the long term,” the treasurer told ABC Television on Sunday.

    The government has announced foil insulation is to be removed, or an extra safety switch installed, in 50,000 homes.

    It will also pay for inspections of about 200,000 homes and fix any problems.

    About 1.1 million homes have been insulated so far at a cost of approximately $1.5 billion.

    Mr Swan said it was not possible to put an immediate cost on fixing the mess.

    “But the cost will come from the existing funding envelope,” he said.

    “That is what normally happens in these circumstances.”

    However on Friday, the treasurer had suggested otherwise.

    “It may well be the case that we will have to make adjustments elsewhere in the budget because of these (insulation) adjustments,” he had said.

    On Sunday, he clumsily tried to explain the change of tact.

    He said he was simply pointing out on Friday that “we have a normal budget process going on at the moment where we look at out priorities”.

    Federal Labor won’t scrap the insulation scheme altogether because that would hurt workers.

    “There is an industry out there that has invested … and done the right thing and we think it’s important to do the right thing by them,” Mr Swan said.

    AAP

  • Solar Flare

     

    X-rays and UV radiation emitted by solar flares can affect Earth’s ionosphere and disrupt long-range radio communications. Direct radio emission at decimetric wavelengths may disturb operation of radars and other devices operating at these frequencies.

    Solar flares were first observed on the Sun by Richard Christopher Carrington and independently by Richard Hodgson in 1859 as localized visible brightenings of small areas within a sunspot group. Stellar flares have also been observed on a variety of other stars.

    The frequency of occurrence of solar flares varies, from several per day when the Sun is particularly “active” to less than one each week when the Sun is “quiet”. Large flares are less frequent than smaller ones. Solar activity varies with an 11-year cycle (the solar cycle). At the peak of the cycle there are typically more sunspots on the Sun, and hence more solar flares.

    Solar flares are classified as A, B, C, M or X according to the peak flux (in watts per square meter, W/m2) of 100 to 800 picometer X-rays near Earth, as measured on the GOES spacecraft. Each class has a peak flux ten times greater than the preceding one, with X class flares having a peak flux of order 10−4 W/m2. Within a class there is a linear scale from 1 to 9, so an X2 flare is twice as powerful as an X1 flare, and is four times more powerful than an M5 flare. The more powerful M and X class flares are often associated with a variety of effects on the near-Earth space environment. Although the GOES classification is commonly used to indicate the size of a flare, it is only one measure. This extended logarithmic classification is necessary because the total energies of flares range over many orders of magnitude, following a uniform distribution with flare frequency roughly proportional to the inverse of the total energy. Stellar flares and earthquakes show similar power-law distributions.[2]

    [edit] Hazards

    Solar flares strongly influence the local space weather of the Earth. They produce streams of highly energetic particles in the solar wind and the Earth’s magnetosphere that can present radiation hazards to spacecraft and astronauts. The soft X-ray flux of X class flares increases the ionisation of the upper atmosphere, which can interfere with short-wave radio communication and can increase the drag on low orbiting satellites, leading to orbital decay. Energetic particles in the magnetosphere contribute to the aurora borealis and aurora australis.

    Solar flares release a cascade of high energy particles known as a proton storm. Protons can pass through the human body, doing biochemical damage.[3] The proton storms are produced in the solar wind, and hence present a hazard to astronauts during interplanetary travel. Most proton storms take two or more hours from the time of visual detection to reach Earth’s orbit. A solar flare on January 20, 2005 released the highest concentration of protons ever directly measured,[4] taking only 15 minutes after observation to reach Earth, indicating a velocity of approximately one-half light speed.

    The radiation risks posted by prominences and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are among the major concerns in discussions of manned missions to Mars, the moon, or any other planets. Some kind of physical or magnetic shielding would be required to protect the astronauts. Originally it was thought that astronauts would have two hours time to get into shelter, but based on the January 20, 2005 event, they may have as little as 15 minutes to do so. Energy in the form of hard x-rays are considered dangerous to spacecraft and are generally the result of large plasma ejection in the upper chromosphere.

    [edit] Observations

    The following missions have flares as their main observation target.

    • Yohkoh – The Yohkoh (originally Solar A) spacecraft observed the Sun with a variety of instruments from its launch in 1991 until its failure in 2001. The observations spanned a period from one solar maximum to the next. Two instruments of particular use for flare observations were the Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT), a glancing incidence low energy X-ray telescope for photon energies of order 1 keV, and the Hard X-ray Telescope (HXT), a collimation counting instrument which produced images in higher energy X-rays (15-92 keV) by image synthesis.
    • GOES – The GOES spacecraft are satellites in geostationary orbits around the Earth that have measured the soft X-ray flux from the Sun since the mid 1970s, following the use of similar instruments on the SOLRAD satellites. GOES X-ray observations are commonly used to classify flares, with A, B, C, M, and X representing different powers of ten — an X-class flare has a peak 2-8 Å flux above 0.0001 W/m2.
    • RHESSI – RHESSI is designed to image solar flares in energetic photons from soft X rays (~3 keV) to gamma rays (up to ~20 MeV) and to provide high resolution spectroscopy up to gamma-ray energies of ~20 MeV. Furthermore, it has the capability to perform spatially resolved spectroscopy with high spectral resolution.
    • Hinode – A new spacecraft, originally called Solar B, was launched by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency in September 2006 to observe solar flares in more precise detail. Its instrumentation, supplied by an international collaboration including Norway, the U.K., and the U.S., and Africa focuses on the powerful magnetic fields thought to be the source of solar flares. Such studies shed light on the causes of this activity, possibly helping to forecast future flares and thus minimize their dangerous effects on satellites and astronauts.[5].

    The most powerful flare of the last 500 years was the first flare to be observed, and occurred in September 1859: it was reported by British astronomer Richard Carrington and left a trace in Greenland ice in the form of nitrates and beryllium-10, which allow its strength to be measured today (New Scientist, 2005).

    [edit] Prediction

    Current methods of flare prediction are problematic, and there is no certain indication that an active region on the Sun will produce a flare. However, many properties of sunspots and active regions correlate with flaring. For example, magnetically complex regions (based on line-of-sight magnetic field) called delta spots produce most large flares. A simple scheme of sunspot classification due to McIntosh is commonly used as a starting point for flare prediction. Predictions are usually stated in terms of probabilities for occurrence of flares above M or X GOES class with 24 or 48 hours. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) issues forecasts of this kind.

  • SET POPULATION AT INFRASTRUCTURE ,ENVIRONMENTAL CAPACITY THROUGH NATIONAL INQURY

    14 March 2010

    SET POPULATION AT INFRASTRUCTURE, ENVIRONMENT CAPACITY THROUGH NATIONAL INQUIRY

    On Monday the Greens will move a motion calling on the Government to establish an independent National Inquiry into Australia’s Population to 2050.

    “Australia’s population should be determined by the capacity of our environment and our infrastructure,” said Australian Greens Leader Bob Brown.

    “Australia cannot support an increase in population to 35 million by 2050.

    “Immigration should not be stopped.

    “In fact Australia should increase its humanitarian immigration program, but we need to reduce our skilled migration program and balance that reduction by investing in skills training for Australians.

    “National population policy is the responsibility of government; it should be responsive to national and global factors.

    “Global population is expected to grow from 6.8 billion people now to 9.2 billion by 2050 and Australia should be taking a lead in finding global solutions.

    “That should include increasing Australia’s overseas aid budget to 0.7% GDP now with more funding for literacy and reproduction health programs for women and girls.”

    Media contact: Erin Farley 0438 376 082

    Erin Farley
    Media Adviser
    Senator Bob Brown | Leader of the Australian Greens
    Suite SG-112 Parliament House, Canberra ACT 
    P: 02 6277 3577 | M: 0438 376 082| F: 02 6277 3185

  • Options for Railway Locomotives

    Latest update {Draft XI:05) of “Post-Carbon Australian Options for Railway Locomotives”  has been released on the net for public comment from my website at http://www.auzgnosis.com/pgs/auzloco.htm  (while the draft will still have the same file-name I will keep updating the actual file there to the latest version as any future improvement are made).                       

    I’d be real happy for readers to circulate this email to anybody they think may find this interesting. Any & all feedback most appreciated.  I am very aware that the whole envisaged project is a monsterThe aim of writing the paper was to get the broad community to muse about the long-term futures of land-transport across Australia’s vast dry landmass.

    Appreciate any pointers for getting some university facilities playing around with, testing these broad ideas.

     

    Would be interested in any feedback, Many Thanks
      W.Shawn Gray

  • Antarctica once had a tropilal climate, scientists say

    Antarctica once had tropical climate, scientists say

    ABC March 12, 2010, 3:06 pm
    Mud and ice samples show a geological history dating back 54 million years.

    ABC News © Enlarge photo

     

    An international team of scientists who have arrived back in Hobart from Antarctica say they have evidence the icy continent once had a tropical climate.

    The team studied ice and mud cores from the Antarctic sea floor.

    The crew of the integrated ocean drilling program drilled more than 3,000 cores showing a geological history going back 54 million years.

    Co-leader of the expedition Dr Carlota Escutia says the team’s findings will allow scientists to understand more about the dramatic changes in the earth’s climate and improve future predictions.

    “We have this particular bonus that we went so deep and so old that we actually reached into this, let’s say sub-tropical Antarctica,” he said.

    “We thought it was there but to actually have it in your hand, it’s spectacular. It’s really mindblowing.”

    “All these kind of things will be looked at and they will be put together to create this history of how the ice sheet behaved, how the sea ice behaved when we had such temperatures, such CO2s, back in time.”

     

  • Extreme physics at the ends of the Earth

    NASA balloon.jpg

    Image: NASA balloon over Antarctica, NASA

    Anil Ananthaswamy, a science journalist and consultant for New Scientist, has been to more of these lonely locations than just about anyone, and in The Edge of Physics he weaves a remarkable narrative that combines fundamental physics with high adventure. The story takes him from the giant telescopes atop the Chilean Andes to a dark-matter detector deep in a defunct Minnesota iron mine, to the neutrino observatory known as IceCube, whose optical sensors have been placed up to 2.5 kilometres below the surface of the perpetually frozen South Pole.

    Check out Anil Ananthaswamy’s video of his travels to physics’ most extreme sites

    Ananthaswamy carefully explains the science relevant to each of these sites, dipping into history where needed to flesh out the background. Ultimately, though, it is the remote, unforgiving locations that anchor the story. “These magnificent telescopes and detectors can work only in the most extreme settings,” he writes. “Their surreal environments are the unsung characters in this unfolding story – venues rarely appreciated and often overlooked.”

    The two sites that bookend the story are, perhaps, the most familiar. We begin at the mount Wilson observatory in California, where Edwin Hubble first deduced that the universe is expanding. At the time, mount Wilson was a pristine, dark-sky site from where astronomers could probe the heavens. Today it lies at the edge of Los Angeles’s urban sprawl. The penultimate chapter finds Ananthaswamy at the Large Hadron Collider, built in a tunnel that straddles the France-Switzerland border. The LHC has received enough press in the past few years for it to have become practically a household name; even so, as the author reminds us, it is the largest single science experiment ever devised by our species, and if we are lucky it may tell us if the universe is made of tiny strings or contains hidden dimensions.

    Very_Large_Telescope.jpg

    Image: Very Large Telescope in Chile, ESO/G.Hüdepohl

    Readers might be less familiar with the Baikal Deep Underwater Neutrino Telescope, which rests in the frigid waters of Lake Baikal in Siberia, looking for meagre flashes of light that tell of collisions between neutrinos and molecules of water. The observatory is run on a shoestring, with only one luxury: the traditional Russian banya, or sauna, where “naked men sit in an outbuilding, chuck water on hot stones to raise steam, and beat each other with leafy twigs and branches of birch”.

    The Edge of Physics is really two stories in one: a travelogue that takes the reader to some of the most desolate places on our planet, and a survey of the most urgent problems in physics and cosmology, from dark energy and string theory to multiple universes. Ananthaswamy is a worthy guide for both journeys.