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11/03/2014

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23/10/2013

Announcement of India's Mars Orbiter Spacecraft Launch Date
Press Release, October 23, 2013

The launch of India's first interplanetary probe, Mars Orbiter Spacecraft onboard PSLV C25 (in its XL version), is scheduled on November 05, 2013 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre SHAR, Sriharikota. The liftoff time is at 14:36 hrs IST.

17/10/2013

A solar flare occurs when magnetic energy that has built up in the solar atmosphere is suddenly released. Radiation is emitted across virtually the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from radio waves at the long wavelength end, through optical emission to x-rays and gamma rays at the short wavelength end. The amount of energy released is the equivalent of millions of 100-megaton hydrogen bombs exploding at the same time! The first solar flare recorded in astronomical literature was on September 1, 1859. Two scientists, Richard C. Carrington and Richard Hodgson, were independently observing sunspots at the time, when they viewed a large flare in white light.

As the magnetic energy is being released, particles, including electrons, protons, and heavy nuclei, are heated and accelerated in the solar atmosphere. The energy released during a flare is typically on the order of 1027 ergs per second. Large flares can emit up to 1032 ergs of energy. This energy is ten million times greater than the energy released from a volcanic explosion. On the other hand, it is less than one-tenth of the total energy emitted by the Sun every second.

There are typically three stages to a solar flare. First is the precursor stage, where the release of magnetic energy is triggered. Soft x-ray emission is detected in this stage. In the second or impulsive stage, protons and electrons are accelerated to energies exceeding 1 MeV. During the impulsive stage, radio waves, hard x-rays, and gamma rays are emitted. The gradual build up and decay of soft x-rays can be detected in the third, decay stage. The duration of these stages can be as short as a few seconds or as long as an hour.

Solar flares extend out to the layer of the Sun called the corona. The corona is the outermost atmosphere of the Sun, consisting of highly rarefied gas. This gas normally has a temperature of a few million degrees Kelvin. Inside a flare, the temperature typically reaches 10 or 20 million degrees Kelvin, and can be as high as 100 million degrees Kelvin. The corona is visible in soft x-rays, as in the above image. Notice that the corona is not uniformly bright, but is concentrated around the solar equator in loop-shaped features. These bright loops are located within and connect areas of strong magnetic field called active regions. Sunspots are located within these active regions. Solar flares occur in active regions.

The frequency of flares coincides with the Sun's eleven year cycle. When the solar cycle is at a minimum, active regions are small and rare and few solar flares are detected. These increase in number as the Sun approaches the maximum part of its cycle. The Sun will reach its next maximum in the year 2011, give or take one year.

Flares are in fact difficult to see against the bright emission from the photosphere. Instead, specialized scientific instruments are used to detect the radiation signatures emitted during a flare. The radio and optical emissions from flares can be observed with telescopes on the Earth. Energetic emissions such as x-rays and gamma rays require telescopes located in space, since these emissions do not pe*****te the Earth's atmosphere.

17/10/2013

Fantastical knot-like structures of light could soon be created in the lab thanks to calculations made by physicists in the US, Poland and Spain. They have discovered a new family of solutions to Maxwell's equations that are knots of light that do not disperse or lose their specific topological properties as they propagate. The researchers say such knots, if made for real, could be used to trap atoms or create similar knots in plasmas or quantum fluids.

Identified by Hridesh Kedia at the University of Chicago, along with colleagues at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw and the Spanish National Research Council in Madrid, the new family of solutions to Maxwell's equations have field lines describing all "torus knots" and "links". Torus knots are those knots that can lie on the surface of a torus, whereas a link is a collection of such knots.

One solution involves magnetic-field lines that trace out a familiar "trefoil" knot around a torus that is aligned in the plane perpendicular to the direction of propagation of the light (see figure). As the light propagates, the knot is distorted but retains the topological property of being a trefoil knot. The electric-field lines have the same structure as the magnetic-field lines but are rotated about the propagation axis by an angle that depends upon the knot. Other solutions include cinquefoil knots and linked rings.
Knotty problem

Kedia and colleagues believe that these knots could be made in the lab using tightly focused Laguerre–Gaussian beams. These beams have been created and studied extensively because – unlike most other beams of light – they carry orbital angular momentum.

If these optical knots can be made in the lab, they could have a number of scientific applications. Physicists are already exploring how focussed Laguerre–Gaussian beams can be used to trap ultracold atoms and this latest theoretical development could lead to new ways of trapping them. Firing such knots into a plasma or quantum fluid could also result in knot-like entities propagating through those materials, thereby offering new ways of studying these states of matter.

Once the preserve of mathematicians, knot theory is playing an increasingly important role in how physicists describe the behaviour of physical systems, ranging from liquid crystals to superconductors. Most of these descriptions arise from numerical simulations of complex systems, rather than the exact solution of the equations describing the system of interest.

The research is described in Physical Review Letters.

14/10/2013
refractive telescope
14/10/2013

refractive telescope

reflecting telescope
14/10/2013

reflecting telescope

huble space telescope
14/10/2013

huble space telescope

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