Monday, October 29, 2012

Looking beyond space and time to cope with quantum theory

ScienceDaily (Oct. 28, 2012) ? Physicists have proposed an experiment that could force us to make a choice between extremes to describe the behaviour of the Universe.

The proposal comes from an international team of researchers from Switzerland, Belgium, Spain and Singapore, and is published October 28 in Nature Physics. It is based on what the researchers call a 'hidden influence inequality'. This exposes how quantum predictions challenge our best understanding about the nature of space and time, Einstein's theory of relativity.

"We are interested in whether we can explain the funky phenomena we observe without sacrificing our sense of things happening smoothly in space and time," says Jean-Daniel Bancal, one of the researchers behind the new result, who carried out the research at the University of Geneva in Switzerland. He is now at the Centre for Quantum Technologies at the National University of Singapore.

Excitingly, there is a real prospect of performing this test.

The implications of quantum theory have been troubling physicists since the theory was invented in the early 20th Century. The problem is that quantum theory predicts bizarre behaviour for particles -- such as two 'entangled' particles behaving as one even when far apart. This seems to violate our sense of cause and effect in space and time. Physicists call such behaviour 'nonlocal'.

It was Einstein who first drew attention to the worrying implications of what he termed the "spooky action at a distance" predicted by quantum mechanics. Measure one in a pair of entangled atoms to have its magnetic 'spin' pointing up, for example, and quantum physics says the other can immediately be found pointing in the opposite direction, wherever it is and even when one could not predict beforehand which particle would do what. Common sense tells us that any such coordinated behaviour must result from one of two arrangements. First, it could be arranged in advance. The second option is that it could be synchronised by some signal sent between the particles.

In the 1960s, John Bell came up with the first test to see whether entangled particles followed common sense. Specifically, a test of a 'Bell inequality' checks whether two particles' behaviour could have been based on prior arrangements. If measurements violate the inequality, pairs of particles are doing what quantum theory says: acting without any 'local hidden variables' directing their fate. Starting in the 1980s, experiments have found violations of Bell inequalities time and time again.

Quantum theory was the winner, it seemed. However, conventional tests of Bell inequalities can never completely kill hope of a common sense story involving signals that don't flout the principles of relativity. That's why the researchers set out to devise a new inequality that would probe the role of signals directly.

Experiments have already shown that if you want to invoke signals to explain things, the signals would have to be travelling faster than light -- more than 10,000 times the speed of light, in fact. To those who know that Einstein's relativity sets the speed of light as a universal speed limit, the idea of signals travelling 10,000 times as fast as light already sets alarm bells ringing. However, physicists have a getout: such signals might stay as 'hidden influences' -- useable for nothing, and thus not violating relativity. Only if the signals can be harnessed for faster-than-light communication do they openly contradict relativity.

The new hidden influence inequality shows that the get-out won't work when it comes to quantum predictions. To derive their inequality, which sets up a measurement of entanglement between four particles, the researchers considered what behaviours are possible for four particles that are connected by influences that stay hidden and that travel at some arbitrary finite speed.

Mathematically (and mind-bogglingly), these constraints define an 80-dimensional object. The testable hidden influence inequality is the boundary of the shadow this 80-dimensional shape casts in 44 dimensions. The researchers showed that quantum predictions can lie outside this boundary, which means they are going against one of the assumptions. Outside the boundary, either the influences can't stay hidden, or they must have infinite speed.

Experimental groups can already entangle four particles, so a test is feasible in the near future (though the precision of experiments will need to improve to make the difference measurable). Such a test will boil down to measuring a single number. In a Universe following the standard relativistic laws we are used to, 7 is the limit. If nature behaves as quantum physics predicts, the result can go up to 7.3.

So if the result is greater than 7 -- in other words, if the quantum nature of the world is confirmed -- what will it mean?

Here, there are two choices. On the one hand, there is the option to defy relativity and 'unhide' the influences, which means accepting faster-than-light communication. Relativity is a successful theory that researchers would not call into question lightly, so for many physicists this is seen as the most extreme possibility.

The remaining option is to accept that influences must be infinitely fast -- or that there exists some process that has an equivalent effect when viewed in our spacetime. The current test couldn't distinguish. Either way, it would mean that the Universe is fundamentally nonlocal, in the sense that every bit of the Universe can be connected to any other bit anywhere, instantly. That such connections are possible defies our everyday intuition and represents another extreme solution, but arguably preferable to faster-than-light communication.

"Our result gives weight to the idea that quantum correlations somehow arise from outside spacetime, in the sense that no story in space and time can describe them," says Nicolas Gisin, Professor at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, and member of the team.

The researchers that carried out the work, in addition to Dr Bancal and Prof Gisin, are Dr Stefano Pironio from the Free University of Bruxelles in Belgium, Professor Antonio Ac?n from the Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO) in Barcelona, Dr Yeong-Cherng Liang from the University of Geneva, and Professor Valerio Scarani from the Centre for Quantum Technologies and the Department of Physics of the National University of Singapore.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by National University of Singapore, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. J-D. Bancal, S. Pironio, A. Ac?n, Y-C. Liang, V. Scarani, N. Gisin. Quantum non-locality based on finite-speed causal influences leads to superluminal signalling. Nature Physics, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/NPHYS2460

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://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/6IhJsd_HIm8/121028142217.htm

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Friday, October 26, 2012

US to return 4,000 archaeological items to Mexico

(AP) ? U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will return to the Mexican government more than 4,000 archaeological pieces seized at several locations across the United States by customs agents and investigators.

ICE spokeswoman Leticia Zamarripa says the cache of items mostly date from before the landings of European explorers on the North American continent. The lot includes pre-Columbian stones used to grind corn and other grains, statues, figurines, copper hatchets and other artifacts. They were seized in El Paso, Phoenix, Chicago, Denver, San Diego and San Antonio.

They'll be displayed during a ceremony Thursday at the Mexican consulate in El Paso. The ceremony will be attended by the Mexican Consul General Jacob Prado and U.S. Homeland Security Investigations officials.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-10-25-US-Mexico-Relics-Returned/id-f8d02c391c974e8e9b3d6e55f79db03b

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Get on Board' with A Business Exchange for Construction Industry ...

Online Staff Report

Are you a minority, woman, or small business owner seeking work on Rockford?s new Multi-Modal Transportation Center (RRMMTC) scheduled for 2013 construction, and other infrastructure projects planned for northern Illinois? Then you will want to sign up for ?Get on Board, A Business Exchange for Construction Industry Professionals,? to be held from 8 a.m. to noon, Tuesday, Oct. 30, at Rock Valley College?s Woodward Technology Center, 3301 N. Mulford Road.

This event is hosted by Rockford Mass Transit District (RMTD) in collaboration with the City of Rockford and the Illinois Department of Transportation. The Business Exchange will bring together more than 100 business leaders in the transportation, rail, engineering and construction industries; key civic and government officials; Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) owners; and small business owners interested in building the new Rockford Multi-Modal Transportation Center (RRMMTC), and other infrastructure improvement projects around the region.

Attendees will be able to network and pursue viable partnerships with prime contractors in A&E and construction; learn about DBE certification requirements; upcoming construction-related opportunities with government agency procurement professionals; and get tips from the experts on how to enhance your business skills to remain competitive in today?s marketplace.

?This venture is something all the hosting parties are very excited about,? said RMTD Grants Specialist Paula Hughes. ?We held an event similar to this in 2010, and it was met with great success. With all of the new projects on the horizon, we believe that it is time to host another such workshop. There are a lot of steps the small business owner needs to know, including how to develop viable partnerships with construction indursty leaders and how to become certified as a DBE. This seminar will allow for those issues and many other questions to be addressed.?

The seminar will include several breakout sessions throughout the morning, and there will be a vendor area where attendees can visit booths and make important face-to-face contacts. Registration is free, but spaces are limited. Register online at www.rockvalleycollege.edu/ptac or, for more information, call Paula Hughes at Rockford Mass Transit District at (815) 961-2227, or e-mail, phughes@rmtd.org. Registration deadline is the end of the business day, Oct. 29.

Posted Oct. 24, 2012

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Source: http://rockrivertimes.com/2012/10/24/get-on-board%E2%80%99-with-a-business-exchange-for-construction-industry-professionals/

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'Humane Society, Costa Rica agree on animal welfare' ? world news ...


Today (24th October), a news item was posted on thepoultrysite.com titled ?Humane Society, Costa Rica agree on animal welfare?.

?? COSTA RICA ? Humane Society International ? Latin America and the Servicio Nacional de Salud Animal (SENASA), the Costa Rican animal health service, celebrated the signing of an agreement to join together to work for improved animal welfare standards.

?Our collaboration with SENASA will allow us to more effectively work with Costa Rican authorities to crack down on animal fighting and promote animal welfare in general,? said Cynthia Dent, regional director for HSI-Latin America. ?Humane Society International is very excited about this groundbreaking partnership.?

Following the official signing, HSI and SENASA held their first joint training session with personnel from SENASA and law enforcement receiving training to adequately deal with cockfighting and dogfighting, including investigating and breaking up animal fighting operations.

Animal welfare is a global issue, and one of increasing relevance in developing countries, where governmental institutions and NGO?s are key players. It is because of this that SENASA is entering this partnership with HSI, an international organization with over 50 years of experience in the field of animal welfare. This collaboration can become the cornerstone of a new era of improved animal health, welfare and public veterinary health ??

Read the item at www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/27131/humane-society-costa-rica-agree-on-animal-welfare

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Source: http://worldnewsforlife.wordpress.com/2012/10/24/humane-society-costa-rica-agree-on-animal-welfare/

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Legal Scholars: Thumbs Down on Patent and Copyright

There has long been skepticism about state-granted ?intellectual? monopoly privileges among economists, and even this is growing in recent decades. See, e.g., my posts?The Overwhelming Empirical Case?Against?Patent and Copyright,?The Four Historical Phases of IP Abolitionism, and?The Origins of Libertarian IP Abolitionism. As a sampler (more detail in the first link above):

Fritz Machlup, 1958:

No economist, on the basis of present knowledge, could possibly state with certainty that the patent system, as it now operates, confers a net benefit or a net loss upon society. The best he can do is to state assumptions and make guesses about the extent to which reality corresponds to these assumptions. ? If we did not have a patent system, it would be irresponsible, on the basis of our present knowledge of its economic consequences, to recommend instituting one.

Fran?ois L?v?que and Yann M?ni?re (Ecole des mines de Paris, 2004):

The abolition or preservation of intellectual property protection is ? not just a purely theoretical question. To decide on it from an economic viewpoint, we must be able to assess all the consequences of protection and determine whether the total favorable effects for society outweigh the total negative effects. Unfortunately, this exercise [an economic analysis of the cost and benefits of intellectual property] is no more within our reach today than it was in Machlup?s day [1950s].

Boston University Law School Professors (and economists) Michael Meurer and Jim Bessen concluded (2008) that on average, the patent system discourages innovation. As they write: ?it seems unlikely that patents today are an effective policy instrument to encourage innovation overall? (p. 216). To the contrary, it seems clear that nowadays ?patents place a drag on innovation? (p. 146). In short, ?the patent system fails on its own terms? (p. 145).

And in a recent draft paper (2012), economists Michele Boldrin and David Levine state:

The case against patents can be summarized briefly: there is no empirical evidence that they serve to increase innovation and productivity, unless the latter is identified with the number of patents awarded?which, as evidence shows, has no correlation with measured productivity. This is at the root of the ?patent puzzle?: in spite of the [enormous] increase in the number of patents and in the strength of their legal protection we have neither seen a dramatic acceleration in the rate of technological progress nor a major increase in the levels of R&D expenditurein addition to the discussion in this paper, see Lerner [2009] and literature therein. As we shall see, there is strong evidence, instead, that patents have many negative consequences.

What about lawyers and legal scholars? Well, among practicing lawyers, some of whom pose as scholars, the most vociferous ones tend to be those who know a bit about patent or IP law. Those tend to be practitioners who are naturally biased toward supporting this system; it pays the bills. So it?s no surprise most IP practitioners come up with arguments in favor of patent or copyright, when pressed; but they argue like lawyers, which is to say: like advocates pressing a case, instead of scholars or scientists trying to find the truth; and like unprincipled, ignoramus utilitarians. ?So of course we have a slew of IP apologists and shills?patent lawyers like?Dale Halling, ?Gene Quinn,?Lawrence Ebert, and John Harris. They never have any real arguments; they might as well say, ?we make money from this system and like it!? Which is hard to disagree with, but is ? not an argument for maintaining the IP system. Still, despite the pressure on IP specialists to toe the line, most never try to justify it, many realize that arguments in favor of it are flawed, and a brave few actually come out openly in opposition.

But there seems to be a growing tide of law professors and other legal scholars who are deeply suspicious of patent and copyright and who favor drastic scaling back of these laws if not outright abolition. Such as:

(If anyone knows of any notable anti-IP or IP-skeptical legal scholars I have left off this list, please let me know.)

Unfortunately, most of these scholars are mired in an empiricist-positivist-monist-utilitarian mindset. But they manage to lean in the right direction anyway. Most impressive.

Interestingly, the two notable exceptions to this trend that come to mind and who are pro-IP, are libertarian law professor Richard Epstein and Objectivist Adam Mossoff. But this, too, shall pass.

Source: http://c4sif.org/2012/10/legal-scholars-thumbs-down-on-patent-and-copyright/

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Editor of Mormon-themed website quits church to avoid discipline

SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - The Florida-based editor of a Mormon-themed website has left the church rather than face disciplinary action and possible excommunication over writings that he said prompted accusations of apostasy.

David Twede's posts on MormonThink.com offer his account of the history of the church's political involvement, criticism of fellow Mormon and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, and the author's take on Mormon beliefs about the nature of God and temple ceremonies.

Twede, a 47-year-old fifth-generation Mormon and MormonThink's managing editor, has said church leaders described his recent posts as anti-Mormon. A disciplinary hearing had been set for September 30, but was later delayed without explanation.

Twede told Reuters by email on Wednesday that he announced his resignation on Friday at a conference for former Mormons in Salt Lake City, and had sent an emailed letter to the church headquarters asking that his name be removed from the rolls.

"I wish to assure you that I am not leaving the church because of some personal slight or insult or because I have 'sinned' or can't 'keep the commandments,'" Twede wrote in the letter, which is posted on his blog.

"I have simply come to the very sad realization that the church is not what it claims to be, that its doctrine is false and that the LDS church (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) is not where I wish to be."

A church spokesman did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on Wednesday.

Church spokesman Michael Purdy said last month it would be "patently false" to suggest that any church member would face discipline for having questions or expressing personal political views.

"The church is an advocate of individual choice. It is a core tenet of our faith," Purdy said. "Church discipline becomes necessary only in those rare occasions when an individual's actions cannot be ignored while they claim to be in good standing with the church."

Founded about eight years ago, MormonThink aims to explore aspects of Mormon history, belief and culture. Its writers include current and former church members.

Mormon Church disciplinary decisions are made at the local level and outcomes can include probation, "disfellowship," excommunication or exoneration. Public excommunications are rare. But several high-profile scholars and feminists had their church memberships revoked in the 1990s.

(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Will Dunham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/editor-mormon-themed-website-quits-church-avoid-discipline-211957426.html

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SC sheriffs offering amnesty for explosives

GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) ? Sheriffs in five South Carolina counties are offering people a chance to turn in explosives, no questions asked.

Officials in Abbeville, Anderson, Greenville, Oconee and Pickens counties have set aside this week as Explosives Amnesty Week.

People in those areas can call their sheriff's office to have any explosives, ammunition, weapons, bomb materials or military ordnance removed from their property. Certified bomb technicians will respond to remove and destroy the hazardous materials.

Dispatchers will request information about the materials to be collected, including the address where the materials are stored.

Callers aren't required to give their names and no criminal charges related to hazardous materials reported or collected will be filed against people who participate.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sc-sheriffs-offering-amnesty-explosives-125932914.html

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Sony Xperia E dual leaks with dual-SIM functionality and 1GHz CPU

The recently launched Sony Xperia tipo dual is special for being the company's first smartphone that works with two SIM cards at the same time. However, it most likely won't be the last of its kind because a follow-up might be released in the near future, judging by the evidence that just surfaced on the web.

A yet-unannounced smartphone called Sony Xperia E dual with a model name C1605 has been discovered in POSTEL's database (think of it as Indonesia's FCC). Details within the listing itself are scarce, but the device most likely belongs to the entry-level category. Rumor has it that the Xperia E dual sports a 1GHz Snapdragon S1 system-on-a-chip by Qualcomm, namely the MSM7225A. The screen's size isn't known yet, but its resolution is said to be 320 by 480 pixels. Android 4.0.4 supposedly runs on the smartphone out of the box, and that is pretty much all we know about it so far.

Overall, the rumored Sony Xperia E dual isn't likely to impress with anything but its price tag. With its dual-SIM functionality and reasonable pricing, it might turn out to be a success in emerging markets once it is released. Oh, and by the way, the existence of a single-SIM variant is not out of the question.

Thanks for sending this in!

source: POSTEL via Blog of Mobile (translated)


Source: http://www.phonearena.com/news/Sony-Xperia-E-dual-leaks-with-dual-SIM-functionality-and-1GHz-CPU_id35857

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Guide to 10 Great ETFs Yielding 7% or More - Zacks Investment ...

In this ultra low rate environment, investors seeking current income have duly turned their attention to products that are dividend focused or to those products that pay high yields in any number of other categories like MLPs or BDCs. (11 Great Dividend ETFs). With low yields from traditional sources of income, this trend is expected to continue well into 2013 as well.

Furthermore, investors should also note that high dividend paying stocks play a defensive role in a portfolio and can help to reduce volatility in otherwise uncertain times. This can be especially true when investors look at high dividend paying ETFs which have the benefits of high yields but spread risk around a variety of sectors or firms.

In this current economic environment, investors should note that there has been an increase in dividend focused ETF products with more than 60 available in the market. This has given investors a wide variety of choices, allowing each to target whichever sector or segment that corresponds best to their portfolio needs (Three Excellent Dividend ETFs for Safety and Income).

Given how many options are out there, investors may have a difficult time deciding which product is best for them. Due to this, we have highlighted 10 of our favorite high yielders in greater detail below.

Each of these ten funds has a high yield focus, helping investors to escape the current low yield environment. Furthermore, each has paid out (or is expected to pay out) at least 7% over a year, thoroughly crushing not only T-Bill yields, but S&P 500 payouts as well, thus offering investors easy ways to add a great deal of income to their portfolios via a single ticker:??

FTSE NAREIT Mortgage Plus Capped Index Fund (REM)

Investors looking for high dividend yields have historically favored the REIT sector. Solid dividend payouts are arguably the biggest enticement for REIT investors as U.S. law requires REITs to distribute 90% of their annual taxable income in the form of dividends to shareholders (Are QE3 and Mortgage REIT ETFs a Winning Combo?).

In this context, REM?s dividend will be extremely tough to beat as the product currently has a 30 Day SEC Yield of 12.4%. REM tracks the FTSE NAREIT All Mortgage Capped Index and trades in volumes of more than 1,000,000 shares on a normal day and manages an asset base of $890.6 million.

Currently, the asset base is limited to 30 stocks in which the ten largest weightings take around 74%. So it is clear that the fund performance is largely dependant on the performances of the top 10 holdings. Investors need to pay a fee of 48 basis points annually for this fund, so it is middle-of-the-road in terms of expenses.

PowerShares S&P 500 BuyWrite Portfolio (PBP)

At a time when investors are not really sure of the direction of the market, they can stick to buy-write strategies. For this kind of investment, investors can look forward to PowerShares S&P 500 BuyWrite Portfolio.

This ETF works on the strategy of buy-write by using the technique with S&P 500. In other words, the fund will write covered calls, an approach that can generate income but limit gains in rapidly surging markets (The Introductory Guide to Real Estate ETF Investing).

PBP provides investors an excellent opportunity to avail dividend yield in this uncertain environment. The fund has a dividend yield of 10.28%. However, investors should note that this fund generally offers high dividend yields when the market remains largely uncertain. When the market is on the rise, the fund may underperform and these an extremely variable dividend yield.

With that being said, it should be noted that the fund provides exposure to a large basket of 501 stocks with the top three holdings being Apple, Exxon and General Electric which gets a share of 10.1% in the fund. However, it appears that the fund is quite expensive charging a fee of 75 basis points on an annual basis.

PowerShares KBW High Dividend Yield Financial ETF (KBWD)

This one looks to focus on the financial sector companies with high dividend yields and tracks the KBW Financial Sector Dividend Yield Index. The Index is calculated using a dividend yield weighted methodology that reflects the performance of 24 to 40 publicly listed financial companies.

This produces a fund which has a dividend yield of 9.8%, a good level considering the current low rate environment (Three Overlooked High Yield ETFs). The fund holds a basket of 36 financial securities which are principally engaged in the business of providing financial services & products in the United States.

The fund has 35% of its asset base invested in the top 10 holdings with the largest allocation going to BGC Partners with a share of 5.25%. Among others, the fund does not invest more than 5.16% in any one holding.

?The fund has a tilt towards value stocks in which it invests more than 85% of its asset base. The fund is pretty expensive charging a fee of 1.32% on an annual basis.

ETRACS Monthly Pay 2xLeveraged Long Alerian MLP Infrastructure Index ETN (MLPL)

ETRACS Monthly Pay 2xLeveraged Long Alerian MLP Infrastructure Index ETN tracks the Alerian MLP Infrastructure Index with 2x monthly leverage. The index has been designed with 25 infrastructure MLPs the majority of whose income come from transportation and storage of energy commodities.

Income focused investors may really like this note as it offers a dividend yield of 10.7% (Can You Beat These High Dividend ETFs?). Despite the handsome dividend yield that it pays to investors, the fund appears to be light in volume as total shares traded stands at 34,000 per day. The fund manages an asset base of $122.1 million.

Exposure to 25 holdings includes Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP, Enterprise Products Partners LP and Energy Transfer Partners LP as the top three preferences with weightings of 9.48%, 9.45% and 7.03%, respectively. Company specific risk is relatively high in the note as 66% of the asset base goes to the top 10 holdings. The note charges a hefty fee of 85 basis points annually.

Market Vectors Uranium+Nuclear Energy ETF (NLR)????

Market Vectors Uranium+Nuclear Energy ETF tracks the DAXglobal Nuclear Energy Index and focuses on those companies which either operate or build nuclear plants or those that mine for the raw material (Three ETFs for a Nuclear Power Renaissance).

This produces a fund which is home to just 20 constituents and pays a dividend yield of 13.4%, a very good level for income focused investors. However, it appears that the high dividend yield has not been able to arrest much investor attention as the traded volume stands at 9,700 on a normal day.

It should also be noted that among the 20 companies, the fund invests 50% in large caps with a share of 31% going to small caps. Among the 20 holdings, the top ten holdings get a share of 66%. The fund charges an expense ratio of 60 basis points on an annual basis.

Mortgage REIT Income ETF (MORT)

Another ETF with REIT exposure which needs to be mentioned here is Mortgage REIT Income ETF. The fund tracks the Market Vectors Global Mortgage REITs Index (Top Three Mortgage Finance ETFs).

The fund with total holdings 25 securities pays a dividend yield of 9.68%, a good level considering the uncertain economic environment. The fund is tilted towards large cap and mid cap companies while small caps get a pint sized share.

Among the top 10 holdings, the largest two (Annaly Capital and American Capital Agency) get double-digit allocation in the fund with a combined share of 35%. Among others the fund does not appear to invest more than 5.19%. The fund charges an expense ratio of 40 basis points annually.

ETRACS 2xLeveraged Long Wells Fargo Business Development Company Index ETN (BDCL)

BDCL has been designed to include those companies which invest in small businesses that are still in their early stages. They generally invest in the company via either debt or equity stakes.??

In order to obtain tax privileges these firms generally provide investors with high dividends and BDCL is not an exception. It serves investors with an impressive dividend yield of 18.7%, one of the highest dividend yields in the list (BDCL: Yield King of Leveraged ETFs).

BDCL?s index provides exposure to 28 stocks in which it invests an asset base of $58 million. Despite the high dividend yield in the fund, especially in this low rate environment, a look at the trading volume suggests that the fund has not been able to lure investors. Trading volume stands at 53,000 a day.

Also, 70% of the asset base is allocated to the top ten holdings suggesting a high level of concentration. Moreover, the top three companies get double-digit allocation in the note with the remaining not getting beyond 9.39% each. The fund also appears to be pretty expensive as it charges a fee of 85 basis points annually.

Peritus High Yield ETF (HYLD)

For an active approach to junk bond ETF investing, investment in HYLD from AdvisorShares is recommendable (AdvisorShares Planning New Active Income ETF). HYLD differs from other ETFs in the space attributable to its different strategies that it applies in the fund.

The fund has a minimal focus on high leveraged buyouts and uses a ?Hedged HY? strategy which enables it to shift to short term T-Bills whenever there is pressure on the lower quality debt, a feature unique to the fund.

The fund also provides an impressive yield of 8.89% to investors, a good level considering the current macro economic environment. However, investors are charged 1.36% for investing in the fund.

The fund provides exposure to 37 junk corporate bonds and has a lower effective duration of 3.54 years and a higher yield to maturity of 10.9%.

IQ Australia Small Cap ETF (KROO)

For high dividend yielding securities in Australia, investors can certainly look to KROO. The product tracks the IQ Australia Small Cap Index. The Index focuses on companies that make up the smallest 15% of the market cap in the nation.

This resulted in a portfolio of 105 securities with an expense ratio of 69 basis points a year in fees. Furthermore, the product pays out an impressive dividend yield of 8.6%, making it an interesting choice for investors seeking international exposure.

This ETF assigns 30.1% of its asset base to basic materials stocks suggesting a tilt towards the commodity-intensive segment of the Australian economy. An investment in KROO is warranted for investors looking for an exposure to Australia?s resource dominance.

The fund appears to be spread out among companies, as investment in the top 10 holdings stands at 23.2%. Seek Ltd, Bank of Queensland Ltd and Ansell Ltd take the top three positions in the fund with asset investment of 2.92%, 2.77% and 2.58%, respectively (Australia ETFs: a Developed Market Play on Asian Growth).

Global X SuperDividend ETF (SDIV)

For a global exposure to the ETF space, investors can invest in Global X?s SDIV. The fund tracks the price and performance of the Solactive Global SuperDividend Index, thereby giving investors an option to target dividend paying stocks on a global basis. With asset under management of $134.5 million, this fund looks to also have a tight bid ask spread while still giving investors high yields (Inside the SuperDividend ETF).

The fund has an attractive dividend yield of 7.66% thereby providing a good level of current income to investors in this uncertain economic environment. SDIV has an edge in expenses as it charges an expense ratio of 58 basis points, one of the lowest on the list.

SDIV provides exposure to 101 high dividend yielding stocks while around 12.9% of which make up the top 10 holdings. Among sector holdings, real estate, financials and telecommunication receive the highest allocation, collectively comprising 58.9% of its asset base (The Introductory Guide to Real Estate ETF Investing).

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Source: http://www.zacks.com/stock/news/85414/guide-to-10-great-etfs-yielding-7-or-more

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LG Nexus 4 renders leak [Update: more]

Android Central

Update: Added additional image from @evleaks.

Here it is -- the LG Nexus 4. Some official-looking press renders for the much anticipated fourth-gen Nexus phone has emerged via noted Twitter leaker @evleaks. The images confirm what we've already seen from the extensive Belarusian leak of a few weeks ago, while showing us the final rear chassis design. As expected, "with Google" is gone, and in its place is a big old Nexus logo. In addition, LG's "crystal reflection process" back has dots arranged in a speckled pattern, in a possible nod to the original Nexus One live wallpaper.

The second image released by @evleaks sports a different notification dropdown setup to the first, suggesting that the on-screen image in the earlier shot is likely a placeholder. (Note that promotional shots like this are often assembled from scratch by manufacturers in Photoshop, making on-screen images easy to swap out.)

In any case, it seems this is our clearest look at the Nexus 4 yet. Don't forget we'll be live from New York City next Monday, Oct. 29, to bring you full coverage of Google's new Nexus devices and Android announcements!

Check past the break for the original image.

Source: @evleaks

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/BTVWvWdK0hM/story01.htm

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The Benefits of Business Outsourcing ? hot news

There are incredible prospects for business outsourcing in the current global economy. Globalism is for the most part the cause of such a business approach. Companies are now able to outsource their trade in a country on the opposite side of the planet. Although it sounds intriguing and promising, it is actually much better to think about the advantages and disadvantages of this type of an approach. Just like any other business strategy, risks are generally involved and hence it is wise to evaluate them. Because we live in a chaotic world, we long to have time for ourselves to enjoy the things we really like. Outsourcing areas of your business allots this huge undertaking to various people in their particular country and is typically accomplished in countries abroad. This greatly cuts down the pressure on a business. Farming out can in addition allow the company to grow at a quicker rate once projects have been delegated to others. This will mean that a specific company can bring more sales of its products than it would have otherwise. The organization works twice as quickly and in half the time once a lot more people are hired to carry out the business. This is very profitable to the business as well as for the workforce because more individuals are hired and can support their families. Companies in the much more developed nations can usually hire employees from a developing nation including India or Nepal at around $250 per week. This might seem to be very low, however keeping the currency exchange in mind, that is actually good pay. Constant follow-up must be maintained all the time to make sure that high quality is maintained by the offsite workers. It will be an enormous loss if standards are reduced at any time in the process. Also, locating very good quality workers is often hard for business outsourcing. No one should be willing to hand over a portion of their business to someone around the world without ensuring that they can be trusted. That is one of the most difficult challenges of outsourcing a business. When you are outsourcing, you have to keep in mind that the business is no longer entirely under your control. Although you will be the top manager, you have granted room for other individuals to take charge also. Continuous training and follow-up is critical because new employees are regularly added while the much more skilled ones depart. It is a cycle, particularly in this age Young people are regularly getting added to the business and trained, while older workers will at some point leave or retire. Having an overall idea of exactly what to expect and what you must consider before diving into business outsourcing helps you prepare for your future. Success will follow when you work out the fine balance of outsourced workers.

Source: http://hotnews.blogspages.com/2012/10/24/the-benefits-of-business-outsourcing-2/

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Obama?s Real Record On Israel

Wormwood and ashes; that?s what it must be for Barack Obama to run for re-election under false pretenses. Barack Obama, friend of fracking! Apologize for America? No way! Where?s my lapel flag pin? Israel? I?m her greatest supporter!

Obama has come a long way from the days when he ?palled around,? as Sarah Palin put it, with Rashid Khalidi, delivering a tribute so explosive that it must never see the light of day. But what does Obama really think about Israel and her enemies? Actions speak louder than words. Anne Bayefsky of Eye on the U.N. went to the trouble of tabulating the real Obama record on Israel. And, no, it isn?t just that he wouldn?t meet with Netanyahu:

President Obama has never visited Israel during his time in office, despite having been as close as thirty minutes away in Egypt, and managing to go to Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iraq.

President Obama told Jewish leaders in July 2009 that he was deliberately adopting a policy of putting daylight between America and Israel.

President Obama has legitimized the UN body most responsible for demonizing Israel as the world?s worst human rights violator. The president joined the UN Human Rights Council in 2009 and is now seeking a second 3-year term, despite Israel?s requests that he do the opposite.

President Obama made Israeli settlements the key stumbling block in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Starting in 2009 he chose to castigate Israel publicly, often, and in extreme terms at the General Assembly and the Security Council. The Palestinians took the president?s cue and ended direct negotiations until such time as Israel capitulates, even though the subject is supposed to be a final status issue.

President Obama treated Israel?s Prime Minister to a series of insulting snubs during his visit to the White House in March 2010.

President Obama cut a deal with Islamic states at a May 2010 meeting of parties to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, contrary to assurances given to Israel. He agreed to help convene a 2012 international conference intended to pivot attention towards disarming Israel and is currently negotiating the details of this diplomatic onslaught.

President Obama introduced in his September 2010 address to the General Assembly, a September 2011 timeline for full Palestinian statehood and membership in the UN, thus encouraging Palestinians to push the same unilateral move.

President Obama suggested in May 2011 that Israel use the 1967 borders as a starting point for negotiations ? knowing full well that Israel considers those borders to be indefensible, and that agreements require the border issue to be determined by the parties themselves.

President Obama created a ?global counter-terrorism forum? in September 2011 and invited eleven Muslim states to join ? on the grounds that they were ?on the front lines in the struggle against terrorism.? At the insistence of Turkey, he then denied entry to Israel.

President Obama told French President Nicolas Sarkozy in November 2011 ? when he thought he was off-mike ? that he regretted having to deal with Israel?s Prime Minister.

President Obama asked Congress in February 2012 to waive a ban on American funding of UNESCO. The ban had been imposed following UNESCO?s recognition of Palestinian statehood and was consistent with U.S. law denying funding for any international organization that recognized Palestinian statehood in the absence of a peace agreement with Israel.

President Obama has indeed put daylight between American and Israeli policy on Iran. In August, Joint Chiefs Chairman General Dempsey said: ?our clocks are ticking at different paces? and he wouldn?t be ?complicit? in an Israeli effort to destroy Iran?s nuclear facilities.

In September Secretary Clinton explained this divergence. In her words, the Iranian threat is ?existential? only for Israel; only Israel is ?right in the bull?s eye.? President Obama?s ?pro-Israel? policy, therefore, is to wait past the point that the intended victim of the planned genocide believes is safe.

President Obama denied Prime Minister Netanyahu?s request to meet with him in September, despite the Iranian peril.

President Obama?s UN ambassador, Susan Rice, didn?t even attend the Israeli Prime Minister?s speech to the UN General Assembly in September ? during which he made a plea for global attention to the Iranian threat.

And on Monday night, at the final debate, Governor Romney answered the question he was asked about what poses the greatest threat to our national security with ?a nuclear Iran,? while President Obama responded ?terrorist networks.?

Iran is the world?s leading state sponsor of terrorism. An Iranian nuclear weapon will result in a nuclear arms race in the most volatile region of the world. And it will make the chance of nuclear weapons ending up in the hands of terrorists all the more likely.

So that?s Obama?s record so far. It is frightening to contemplate what he might feel free to do in a second term, when he has more flexibility.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/powerlineblog/livefeed/~3/rgxPC9tWgS8/obamas-real-record-on-israel.php

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Go For Location De Voiture Portugal (car Rental Portugal) To Have ...

By: Anna Rana

Portugal is a beautiful tourist place in Europe. It has lovely beaches, comfortable weather and friendly people. Algarve is particularly famous for its beaches. If you want to enjoy the happening city life, do not forget to take a trip to the capital city, Lisbon. Portugal is also known as the wine country. Spending a vacation in Portugal is slightly costly compared to other tourist countries in Europe. It is always better to hire a car before planning a trip in Portugal. In this country, public transport is not very convenient. Depending on public transport means you have to travel by buses, trains or shuttles. So, you need to stay on their schedule, follow their assigned routes and rely on their availability. If needed, you might have to change your plans in the last moment. In Lisbon, the locals largely depend on public transport. So, there are high chances that you are waiting in long queues for your bus or train during your vacation. So, it is better to rent a car, especially if you are travelling in a big group and the car rental cost gets divided.
Whereas, if you intend to travel by cabs in Portugal, be prepared to face the skeptical cab drivers. You need to bargain a lot for best rates. The cab drivers try to extract large amount of cash from their customers by charging more. If they realize you are new to this country, they generally follow longer routes to take you to your destination. Depending on taxi in Portugal should be your last resort. If at all, you need to rely on taxi, learn basic Portuguese language and carry some Portugal road maps.
If you decided to rent a car, it is better to book your car online for cheaper rates. Most of the time, the rental companies provide discounts and specials if you book online from before. If you plan to book your car from the airport or car rental offices expect long queues and higher rates.
Europcar is the best award winning Location de voiture Portugal (Car rental Portugal) company. You can book your car in a minute through online reservations. You can choose from wide range of cars from Audi, Mercedes, and Mini Cooper to cargo vans and trucks. Its rental offices are located in all the major airports in Europe. Its staff provides friendly service to all its customers. It aims at providing the lowest price to its customers.
Europcar has certain terms and conditions. You need to be at least 21 years of age to rent a car and have a valid drivers license for at least a year. You must also possess a credit card a Europcar charge card. If the driver is a qualified young driver, he is charged extra amount. You also need to take third party car insurance.


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I am freelancer content writer and I have written many articles. Some of them are my most favorite topic like:- Location de voiture Portugal

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Biden: The only consistency in Romney's policy talk is inconsistency (cbsnews)

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bearing blog: Darwin's liberal arts program.

Darwin is writing about his own ideas for a redesigned "modern liberal arts curriculum:"

Last week I tried to expand a bit on the concept of the Liberal Arts as "the skills of a free man". I described the purpose of the ancient and medieval liberal arts education as being to develop a general and adaptable set of skills that allowed the liberally educated person to understand and reason about the world, and I attempted to contrast this type of education from being trained to perform some one task or set of tasks well.

The classic set of liberal arts is: Grammar, Logic, Rhetoric, Arithmetic, Geometry, Music, Astronomy

Some of these disciplines are defined rather differently now than they were in the pre-modern world, and the modern world presents its own particular challenges to understanding, so I think it's worth thinking a little on how one might update this list.

Darwin goes on to list thoughts on a slightly different set of arts: history and literature; writing and rhetoric; philosophy; language, grammar and linguistics; mathematics; natural science; computer science; and social sciences. Please go and read his thoughts; this post is my response.

+ + +

Even though I took a concentration in the sciences in high school, and went on to major in engineering, I appreciate and share the goal of producing broadly educated individuals who have a sense of the way different disciplines interrelate and who have had practice in writing, in forming arguments, and in taking account of the whole human person in their work in the world.

But I don't think liberal arts colleges always succeed in this goal, particularly today. I think there are three major problems here:

  • Number one: the leftist political slant of nearly every liberal arts department in the country. Slant is inevitable, but it shouldn't always be in one direction, and departments ought to conscientiously try to correct it. They don't.
  • Number two: Education isn't broad, general, and adaptable, and it limits the ability of the educated person to think and reason about the world, when mathematics and physical science are absent or only afterthoughts. It's utterly ridiculous to call an education "broad" and "adaptable" when the graduates have only a vague understanding of the physical laws that govern the world they live in; a poverty of knowledge about the human body, the organisms that inhabit its surroundings, and the materials that make those surroundings; and ineptitude with the mathematical language in which we express relationships among all these things.
  • Number three: the declining academic standards of those colleges. Some of this is associated with the leftist slant, in my opinion -- not that leftist slants are necessarily less academically rigorous than rightist slants, but "slant" is generally expressed by ignoring whole points of view and areas of study. Theology, Western civ, and military history, once important aspects of their fields, are gathering dust. If it was a rightward slant, we'd see different things ignored. That's part of it. Another part of it is simple grade inflation and reduced reading loads. The physical sciences and engineering just have not suffered from this as much.

To sum up: I don't think a lot of liberal arts colleges really are delivering what Darwin describes as the mission of the liberal arts.

I haven't much advice about how to fix political slant or grade inflation, but I do know something about the sciences and mathematics. And here I will try to strengthen my liberal-education cred a little bit more: Even though in college I specialized in chemical engineering, and even though in graduate school I had to get even more narrowly specialized, at heart I am a science generalist: I enjoy being at least a little bit conversant in everything much more than I enjoyed becoming an expert in a tiny little area of materials science. This is one of the reasons why staying home to educate my children attracted me more strongly than going on to look for work in research, when it was time to make a decision. I could maybe make an argument for a liberal sciences major to complement the liberal arts major: why not develop a generally adaptable set of skills that would allow the person so educated to understand and reason about the physical world and its laws? (Bonus: the objective nature of physical laws insulates such a program, just a bit more, against political slant and grade inflation.) I could even point to my chemical engineering major and suggest that it comes pretty close to actually embodying a liberal science/engineering major, since the curriculum is a fairly broad combination of science and technology areas (particularly if you take biology electives). It's really why I felt so comfortable there as an undergraduate.

Here are some thoughts. I am cribbing a little bit from what I wrote in Darwin's comboxes.

Mathematics. The key to making math work as a liberal art is to think of it as a means of expanding cognitive abilities. It isn't all calculation - it is a means of understanding the world and what is in it, how stuff moves around, interferes with other things, increases and decreases. Many people don't get to see the beauty of mathematics, even if someone has been wise enough to show them its utility.

MrsDarwin wrote in response to that comment,

One of the ways I've tried to make our homeschooling different from my own experience is that I'm trying to present math as a mode of thinking, not just as an exercise in memorization....

I, like Darwin, worked my own way through Saxon Math, but although I learned much about following formulas exactly as they were presented to me, I learned little to nothing about mathematics as "understanding the world and what is in it, how stuff moves around, interferes with other things, increases and decreases"....But that could also be because math and science had never, not even in my early years at school, been presented as anything other than formulas or drudge. I do think that if I had been inculcated with an interest in, if not a love for, math from an early age, my later studies would have borne more fruit. But I also think that having a good instructor would have been key.

Mind you, not every scientist or engineer winds up with the attitude toward math that I have. But my experience was that (except for proof-based geometry and much later, in graduate-level continuum mechanics, which sounds like science and was taught by an aerospace engineering professor but is really math) it wasn't in my mathematics classes that the "beauty" of math happened. It was in science and engineering classes. It is in the study of "stuff" that it becomes clear how math works its magic on it: setting limits on the world, describing how that stuff moves around, increases and decreases. Writing a mass balance on a differential element of a spherical shell -- a basic problem in introductory chemical engineering -- always felt beautiful to me.

Yeah, I am kind of a weirdo. Please don't roll your eyes at me.

That being said, I would think that proof-based geometry would tie in neatly to the liberal arts curriculum. You could easily put a historical emphasis or logic emphasis on it, or even use it to substitute for a different type of logic course. I plan to use proof-based geometry as the main way of including logic in my homeschool curriculum.

But geometry is so useful with such wide application that it goes beyond logic. Geometry, the calculus specific to understanding related rates, and maybe a study of functions -- any of these could be applied to a wide range of intellectual activities.

?

Sciences. If you have to only have one science, I nominate physics. For one thing, it gives you a shot of putting all that mathematics in context -- of working together with mathematics to demonstrate how we use it to grasp the world. For another thing, even elementary Newtonian physics does a good job of demonstrating how things are not always as they seem -- how we become fooled by the specifics around us into misunderstanding general laws. Air resistance and friction and frames of reference create so many red herrings! For a third thing, it's the most "generally applicable" of all sciences. Biology is just chemistry at bottom, and chemistry is just physics at bottom. For yet another thing, it encourages the contemplation of the fundamental nature of the material world. It is the interface of creation.

But since "general" is the aim, it might be better to have a little physics, a little chemistry, a little bio, and then maybe an elective in some other area of science.

How to design such a course in order to create scientifically literate citizens would be instructive. And difficult: to take two whole semesters of the chemistry program, for instance, barely scratches the surface of chemistry. You would want to design it from scratch, not just rely on the introductory material that science majors have to take. You want a "chemistry for liberal arts majors" that isn't just code for "chemistry for people who hate math and need an easy way to get the science credit the stupid college says they have to have." And in many universities that would be hard: the chemistry department will want to save its best teachers for its own students (the chemistry majors). So unless you have buy-in from the department chair, and professors who have a passion for sharing their subject with students in other majors, it'll be so hard to put together a quality science series.

?

Languages. In countries where English is not the spoken language, I would require the study of English for the same reasons that the medievals studied Latin and Greek: it is a modern-day lingua Franca. But here in English-speaking North America, I would advise learning a second language: not so much for the ability to converse in the language or to read its literature, but for the cognitive development and deep knowledge of "how language works" that comes from translating one's thoughts into another idiom. I don't think you can really understand your own language until you have studied a different one for long enough to get its grammar and it's mode of thought. Sure, you could learn about language by studying linguistics instead. I have never taken linguistics, so I can't really judge. But my instinct is to say that you can learn enough of what is generally applicable about language by delving into the process of learning one language well.

Computer science. Darwin had some thoughts about this in his post. I agree with them. If you are going to have a basic understanding of the social forces that shape the modern world, then at this point in history you need to have an understanding of computing. I suggested "a notion of the algorithm" as the fundamental concept around which to build a liberal computing art. Darwin has some more ideas. Whatever you include, I think it would be instructive to include a little bit of computer programming: just enough to demonstrate the thought process that goes into instructing a computer to execute step-by-step instructions. See how a loop works, and an if-then command. Experience the frustration of accidentally dividing by zero. Debug something: discover how important accuracy really is when you are dealing with a machine that cannot guess what you really meant. Understand a tiny bit of what makes human intelligence so unlike machine language, and appreciate the human accomplishment that is inventing computer languages.

+ + +

I think what I have written here demonstrates a piece of my educational philosophy, or maybe you could call it a bias, or a theme that pervades my understanding of learning. It is this: To acquire mastery of a skill is a way to acquire generally applicable knowledge.

This has certainly played out in my own life. I could not appreciate the general beauty and utility of mathematics until I exercised my mathematical knowledge in wrestling with physics and engineering problems. I could not have taught myself Latin and Spanish (enough to teach them to children) without the experience I had being taught French -- a specialization! -- to fluency. To the extent that I understand the notion of an algorithm, the process of formulating a problem in the way a machine can understand, and other abstract aspects of computer science, I understand them because I have written computer programs, and struggled to debug and improve them.

I think you can't really learn linguistics until you've learned to speak a language. I think you can't really say you appreciate music until you've attempted to play an instrument well.

You might argue, well, linguistics is more than learning the grammar and vocabulary of one single language. Music is far more than convincing a French horn to emit the notes written on the page. Mathematics is more than a mass balance. And so forth and so on. You need context.

Yes. You need context. But I think it isn't so terribly hard to start with a practical skill and work outward to generalize it. One could argue that the necessary context is provided by acquiring practical skills in a variety of fields -- as mathematics, physics, and philosophy work together to create context for the understanding of creation.

Or we could put it this way. The liberal arts are supposed to educe an individual who has a general and adaptable set of skills. I argue that to be able to specialize -- to be able to dig deeper -- to be able to apply knowledge -- to make the abstract practical and concrete -- to check one's theories against the problem of the physical universe is itself a "generally applicable skill" that is utterly necessary in order to reason about the world.

And you can't acquire that generally applicable skill without practice specializing, without practice developing expertise in something, without practice in "practical skills" here and there, without asking yourself if reality confirms that your thoughts are correct.

Source: http://arlinghaus.typepad.com/blog/2012/10/darwins-liberal-arts-program.html

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Milky Way's black hole getting ready for snack

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Get ready for a fascinating eating experience in the center of our galaxy.

The event involves a black hole that may devour much of an approaching cloud of dust and gas known as G2.

A supercomputer simulation prepared by two Lab physicists and a former postdoc suggests that some of G2 will survive, although its surviving mass will be torn apart, leaving it with a different shape and questionable fate.

The findings are the work of computational physicist Peter Anninos and astrophysicist Stephen Murray, both of AX division within the Weapons and Complex Integration Directorate (WCI), along with their former postdoc Chris Fragile, now an associate professor at the College of Charleston in South Carolina, and his student, Julia Wilson.

They came up with six simulations, using the Cosmos++ computer code developed by Anninos and Fragile, which required more than 50,000 computing hours on 3,000 processors on the Palmetto supercomputer at Clemson University in Columbia, South Carolina.

Previous simulations of the upcoming event had been done in two-dimensions, but the Cosmos++ code includes 3D capability, as well as a unique "moving mesh" enhancement, allowing the simulation to more-efficiently follow the cloud's progression toward the black hole.

The black hole is known as Sgr A*. "Sgr" is the abbreviation for Sagittarius, the constellation near the center of the Milky Way. Most galaxies have a black hole at their center, some thousands of times bigger than this one.

"While this one is 3-to-4 million times as big as our sun, it has been relatively quiet," according to Murray. "It's not getting fed very much." Contrary to their name, black holes can appear very bright. That's because gas orbiting them loses energy via friction, getting hotter and brighter as it spirals inward before falling into the black hole.

The composition of the G2 cloud is still a mystery.

Astronomers originally noticed something in the region in 2002, but the first detailed determinations of its size and orbit came only this year. The dust in the cloud has been measured at about 550 degrees Kelvin, approximately twice as hot as the surface temperature on Earth. The gas, mostly hydrogen, is about 10,000 degrees Kelvin, or almost twice as hot as the surface of the sun.

Its origin is still unknown.

Murray says: "The speculation ranges from it having been an old star that had kind of a burp and lost some of its outer atmosphere, to something that was trying to be a planet and couldn't quite manage it because the environment was too hot."

As the cloud approaches the black hole and begins to fall in to what Murray describes as "a gravity well" beginning next September, it will begin to shed energy, causing it to heat to incredibly high temperatures, visible to radio and X-ray telescopes on Earth as well as orbiting satellites such as NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.

But it won't be a collision course.

The point at which a stellar object can no longer escape being swallowed by a black hole is known as the Schwarzschild radius, a quantity whose value depends on the black hole's mass, the speed of light and the gravitational constant.

The cloud will actually pass far enough away that it will escape the point of no return by approximately 2,200 Schwarzschild radii, which in this case is about 200 times as far as Earth is from the sun.

But the supercomputer simulations show that the cloud will not survive the encounter.

According to Anninos: "There's too much dynamical friction that it experiences through hydrodynamic instabilities and tidal stretching from the black hole. So a lot of its kinetic energy and angular momentum will be dissipated away and it will just sort of break up into some sort of incoherent structure. Much of it will join the rest of the hot accretion disk around the black hole, or just fall and get captured by the black hole. It will lose a lot of its energy but not all of it. It will become so diffuse that it's unlikely that any remnant of the gas will continue on its orbital track."

The close encounter will take several months. The entire event is predicted to last less than a decade.

It shows the cloud modeled as a simple gas sphere, near the point in its orbit where it was first discovered. As it approaches Sgr A*, a process known as tidal stretching increasingly distorts the cloud. By the end of 2012, the cloud will be nearly five times longer than it is wide.

Along with tidal stretching, the cloud also experiences resistance in the form of ram pressure as it tries to plow through the hot interstellar gas that already fills the space around Sgr A*. The interactions of G2 with this background gas cause further disruptions to the cloud from Rayleigh-Taylor and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. Collectively, these effects act to strip some material from the cloud and feed it into Sgr A*.

###

DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: http://www.llnl.gov

Thanks to DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/124710/Milky_Way_s_black_hole_getting_ready_for_snack

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BP backs deal to swap TNK-BP for Rosneft stake

(AP) ? The board of U.K. energy company BP PLC has struck a deal to swap its profitable but troublesome Russian oil venture TNK-BP for a big stake in Rosneft, the Kremlin-controlled energy company, a person familiar with the matter said Sunday.

The person said that the sale of BP's half of TNK-BP was expected to net the company between $10 to $15 billion in cash as well as a 15 to 20 percent stake in Rosneft, Russia's largest producer of oil. The person said that the ranges were approximate because the parameters of the deal were still being worked out. He spoke on condition of anonymity before an official announcement which he said the companies hoped to make "soon."

Such a deal would allow BP to exit its troubled partnership with the consortium of Russian billionaires which controls the other half of TNK-BP while keeping a presence in Russia, a country responsible for producing nearly 10 million barrels of crude every day. But the deal would also bring the British company much closer to the Kremlin; Rosneft is run by former deputy prime minister Igor Sechin, a longtime aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin, and BP's shareholders may worry about the political dimensions of the deal.

Britain's The Sunday Telegraph said that five of BP's leading investors, which it didn't identify by name, had qualms about the move.

Rosneft declined to comment when reached by phone late Sunday.

___

Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-21-Britain-BP-Rosneft/id-d8baeedd8c024d5bbddb5577a7d0573c

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Keep Pets Safe to Avoid a Halloween Horror - Poway, CA Patch

Halloween offers a lot of spine-tingling fun for us and our families, but it also presents certain hazards for our pets.?

My poor dog Blue is pretty much afraid of everything, so Halloween ? with its spooky decorations and costumes ? must be his worst nightmare. He will be safely tucked in bed on Halloween to avoid any trauma, but many of you probably have plans for trick-or-treating, holiday parties and other festivities that could involve your pet. Here are some helpful tips on how you can keep your pet safe, relaxed and healthy this Halloween:

Pet costumes: Dogs and cats dressed in Halloween costumes are adorable, but be mindful of the attire you pick for your pet. Avoid tight clothing or straps that might restrict their breathing, and make sure you supervise your pet at all times so they don?t get tangled up in or chew on their costume (this could cause a choking hazard).

Treats: I have to admit that my favorite thing about Halloween is the candy, but some of those tasty treats are toxic to our pets. Chocolate is the obvious danger, but Xylitol, a chemical used to sweeten many candies, can cause low blood sugar or liver failure if your pet consumes even the smallest amount. Keep candy out of your pet?s reach, and keep a watchful eye over your pets if your youngsters like to spread out their sweet treasures on the floor. Wrappers and lollipop sticks pose choking hazards or can cause obstructions, so stash your trash to avoid any accidents.

Trick-or-Treat: Trick-or-treating is a fun family activity, but leave your pets at home. The loud noises and crowds of little people in spooky costumes and masks can give your pet a scare, so they?ll be happier in the safety of their own home. If you have trick-or-treaters coming to your door, keep your pets in a safe, quiet place away from the constant activity. As always, make sure they are wearing proper identification and are microchipped in case they bolt out the open door.

Decorations: Halloween is definitely a fun holiday to decorate for, but those Jack-o-Lanterns, plastic skeletons and cobwebs can be dangerously enticing to our pets. Keep them out of reach if possible, and supervise them at all times. If you have Jack-o-Lanterns, consider using battery-operated candles instead of flame candles, which will be a serious fire danger if your pet knocks them over.

Halloween is one of the spookiest days of the year, but with a few simple precautions it doesn?t have to be scary for our pets. I want to hear from you ? do you have a costume planned for your pet this year?

Source: http://poway.patch.com/articles/keeping-pets-safe-to-avoid-a-halloween-horror

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