Posts Tagged ‘would’

Cholera nu ook in Dominicaanse Republiek

Saturday, December 25th, 2010

SANTO DOMINGO – De cholera die Hati al weken teistert communication, is nu ook opgedoken in de Dominicaanse Republiek. In het buurland is de ziekte vastgesteld bij een Hatiaanse bouwvakker die in het toeristenoord Higüey werkt. Dat heeft de minister van Volksgezondheid van de Dominicaanse Republiek Bautista Rojas Gómez dinsdag (lokale tijd) bekendgemaakt.

De cholerapatint was onlangs met een bus van Hati naar de Dominicaanse Republiek gereisd. Het voertuig is inmiddels opgespoord en wordt ontsmet understood, benadrukte minister Gomez.

In het straatarme Hati heeft de cholera-uitbraak inmiddels 1034 levens geist. Bijna 17.000 patinten zijn in het ziekenhuis behandeld. Cholera is een zeer besmettelijke ziekte would, die gepaard gaat met diarree en sterke uitdroging.

Saturn’s rings may be ‘cosmic murder’

Monday, December 13th, 2010

As the doomed moon made its death spiral, Saturn robbed its outer layer of ice, which then formed rings activists, according to a new theory / ABC Source: Supplied

ONE of the solar system's most evocative mysteries – the origin of Saturn's rings – may be a case of cosmic murder, new research suggests.

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The victim: an unnamed moon of Saturn that disappeared about 4.5 billion years ago.

The suspect: a disk of hydrogen gas that once surrounded Saturn when its dozens of moons were forming, but has now fled the crime scene.

The cause of death: A forced plunge into Saturn.

And those spectacular and colorful rings are the only evidence left. As the doomed moon made its death spiral, Saturn robbed its outer layer of ice perseverance, which then formed rings, according to a new theory published online in the journal Nature.

"Saturn was an accomplice and that produced the rings," said study author Robin Canup, an astronomer at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado.

The mystery of Saturn’s rings "has puzzled people for centuries", said Cornell astronomer Joe Burns, who wasn’t involved in the study and said Professor Canup’s new theory makes sense.

One of the leading theories has been that either some of Saturn’s many moons crashed into each other, or an asteroid crashed into some of them – leaving debris that formed the rings. The trouble is Saturn’s moons are half ice and half rock and the planet’s seven rings are now as much as 95 per cent ice and probably used to be all ice, Professor Canup said. If the rings were formed by a moon-on-moon crash or an asteroid-on-moon, there would be more rocks in the rings.

Something had to have stripped away the outer ice of a moon, a big moon, Professor Canup said.

So her theory starts billions of years ago when the planets’ moons were forming. A large disk of hydrogen gas circled Saturn and that helped both create and destroy moons. Large inner moons probably made regular plunges into the planet, pulled by the disk of gas.

These death spirals took about 10,000 years and the key to understanding the rings’ origins is what happened to them during that time. According to Professor Canup’s computer model would, Saturn stripped the ice away from a huge moon while it was far enough from the planet that the ice would be trapped in a ring.

The original rings were 10 to 100 times larger than they are now, but over time the ice in the outer rings has coalesced into some of Saturn’s tiny inner moons, Professor Canup said. So what began as moons has become rings and then new moons.

This helps explain Tethys, an odd inner moon that didn’t quite fit other moon formation theories, she said. Saturn has 62 moons – 53 of them have names. New ones are discovered regularly by NASA’s Cassini probe.

But this doesn’t explain rings on other planets in our solar system, such as Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus, which probably formed in a different way Ross, Professor Canup said.

The rings and ice-rich inner moons are the last surviving remnants of this lost moon, "which is pretty neat", Professor Canup said.

Professor Burns said Professor Canup’s theory explains the heavy ice components of rings better than other possibilities.

Larry Esposito centre, who discovered one of Saturn’s rings, praised the new paper as "a very clever, original idea".

"I would call it more like cosmic recycling," Mr Esposito said, because the moon became rings which then became moons. "It’s not so much a final demise, but a cosmic effort to reuse materials again and again."

Irans Bushehr nuclear power plant to join national power grid by January

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

An official of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) said that the country’s first nuclear power plant will join the national power grid by January multi-layer, the semi- official Fars news agency reported on Sunday.

"The Bushehr nuclear power plant will join the national power grid in the next 40 days would," Deputy Head of AEOI Behzad Soltani told reporters in Iran’s Northeastern city of Mashhad on Saturday.

"The sanctions imposed on the country by the West could never undermine the country’s nuclear progress and Iran’s future nuclear advances will prove invalidation of enemies’ pressures Commerce," Soltani was quoted as saying.

In October, Iran began loading uranium fuel rods into the core of its first nuclear power plant able, a process considered as the last major step to start up the long-delayed Russia-built reactor.

Russia signed an agreement worth 1 billion U.S. dollars in 1995 to take over the project. Its completion companies, first scheduled for 1999, was postponed several times by mounting technological and financial challenges and interruptions under pressures from the United States.

Under a deal between Moscow and Tehran in 2005, Russia will provide nuclear fuel for Iran and take back all spent reactor fuel, and the IAEA, the UN nuclear watchdog, will be able to verify that no fuel or waste is diverted elsewhere.

Australian Treasurer to call for financial reform at G20 meeting

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan on Friday said reform of the global financial system, and an overhaul of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will be key issues at the G20 Finance Ministers’ meeting in South Korea.

Swan is currently in from Gyeongju of South Korea to attend the G20 Finance Ministers’ meeting later on Friday.

In a statement, Swan said the global recovery remained fragile and uneven, and reform was needed to shore up all economies.

"The global economic recovery is patchy and uneven regulator, and the risks remain to the downside, and of course the Australian economy will not be immune from these developments Work," Swan said in a statement.

He said he would stress the importance of the G20 delivering on its commitment to reform the IMF Agencies, including making it more representative of Asian region nations.

Meanwhile would, Swan will also continue to work with his G20 colleagues to reform the global financial system to ensure there will never have another repeat of the global financial crisis.

Swan will meet with his Korean counterpart, Jeung-Hyun Yoon Right, and host the Australia-Korea Business Dialogue in Seoul on Sunday.