Friday, April 16, 2010

Obama's asteroid goal: tougher, riskier than moon


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Landing a Add Imageman on the moon was a towering achievement. Now the president has given NASA an even harder job, one with a certain Hollywood quality: sending astronauts to an asteroid, a giant speeding rock, just 15 years from now.

Space experts say such a voyage could take several months longer than a journey to the moon and entail far greater dangers.

"It is really the hardest thing we can do," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said.

Going to an asteroid could provide vital training for an eventual mission to Mars. It might help unlock the secrets of how our solar system formed. And it could give mankind the know-how to do something that has been accomplished only in the movies by a few square-jawed, squinty-eyed heroes: saving the Earth from a collision with a killer asteroid.

"You could be saving humankind. That's worthy, isn't it?" said Bill Nye, TV's Science Guy and vice president of the Planetary Society.

President Barack Obama outlined NASA's new path during a visit to the Kennedy Space Center on Thursday.

"By 2025, we expect new spacecraft designed for long journeys to allow us to begin the first-ever crewed missions beyond the moon into deep space," he said. "We'll start by sending astronauts to an asteroid for the first time in history."

On the day the president announced the goal, a NASA task force of scientists, engineers and ex-astronauts was meeting in Boston to work on a plan to protect Earth from a cataclysmic collision with an asteroid or a comet.

NASA has tracked nearly 7,000 near-Earth objects that are bigger than several feet across. Of those, 1,111 are "potentially hazardous asteroids." Objects bigger than two-thirds of a mile are major killers and hit Earth every several hundred thousand years. Scientists believe it was a 6-mile-wide asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.

Landing on an asteroid and giving it a well-timed nudge "would demonstrate once and for all that we're smarter than the dinosaurs and can avoid what they didn't," said White House science adviser John Holdren.

Experts don't have a particular asteroid in mind for the deep-space voyage, but there are a few dozen top candidates, most of which pass within about 5 million miles of Earth. That is 20 times more distant than the moon, which is about 239,000 miles from Earth on average.

Most of the top asteroid candidates are less than a quarter-mile across. The moon is about 2,160 miles in diameter.

Going to an asteroid could provide clues about the solar system's formation, because asteroids are essentially fossils from 4.6 billion years ago, when planets first formed, said Don Yeomans, manager of NASA's Near Earth Object program at the Jet Propulsion Lab.

And an asteroid mission would be a Mars training ground, given the distance and alien locale.

"If humans can't make it to near-Earth objects, they can't make it to Mars," said MIT astronautics professor Ed Crawley.

Also, asteroids contain such substances as hydrogen, carbon, iron and platinum, which could be used by astronauts to make fuel and equipment — skills that would also be necessary on a visit to Mars.

While Apollo 11 took eight days to go to the moon and back in 1969, a typical round-trip mission to a near-Earth asteroid would last about 200 days, Crawley said. That would demand new propulsion and life-support technology. And it would be riskier. Aborting a mission in an emergency would still leave people stuck in space for several weeks.

The space agency may need to develop special living quarters, radiation shields or other new technology to allow astronauts to live in deep space so long, said NASA chief technology officer Bobby Braun.

Even though an asteroid would be farther than the moon, the voyage would use less fuel and be cheaper because an asteroid has no gravity. The rocket that carries the astronauts home would not have to expend fuel to escape the asteroid's pull.

On the other hand, because of the lack of gravity, a spaceship could not safely land on an asteroid; it would bounce off the surface. Instead, it would have to hover next to the asteroid, and the astronauts would have to spacewalk down to the ground, Yeomans said.

Once there, they would need some combination of jet packs, spikes or nets to enable them to walk without skittering off the asteroid and floating away, he said.

"You would need some way to hold yourself down," Yeomans said. "You'd launch yourself into space every time you took a step."

Just being there could be extremely disorienting, said planetary scientist Tom Jones, co-chairman of the NASA task force on protecting Earth from dangerous objects. The rock would be so small that the sun would spin across the sky and the horizon would only be a few yards long. At 5 million miles away, the Earth would look like a mere BB in the sky.

"It's going to be a strange alien environment being on an asteroid," Jones said.

But Jones, a former astronaut, said that wouldn't stop astronauts from angling to be a part of such a mission: "You'll have plenty of people excited about exploring an ancient and alien world."

Karachi stocks slump 18 points on bomb blast in Quetta

KARACHI: The Karachi stock market closed the week on Friday in the negative zone, as investors were concerned over limited foreign interest in blue chips and deadly suicide bomb blast in Quetta, which claimed scores of precious lives.

The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) 100-share index shed 18.26 points or 0.17 percent to close at 10,659.21 points as compared to the previous session’s 10,677.47 points. The KSE 30-share index closed at 10,876.61 points with a gain of 10.77 points. The KMI 30 closed at 16,079.33 points with a surge of 10.17 points.

Analysts said that the market opened on a positive note but rising circular debt in the energy sector and limited expectations of early approval of leverage product were the reasons for the negative activity.

The market tuAdd Imagernover went down by 49.07 percent and traded 206.49 million shares as compared with the previous session’s 405.45 million shares. The overall market capitalisation was down by 0.13 percent and traded Rs 3.017 trillion as against Rs 3.021 trillion of the previous session. Out of total 385 companies, 166 closed in the positive zone, 194 in negative and 25 remained unchanged.

“Bearish trend in regional markets also resulted in some profit-taking in later hours,” said Topline Sec analyst Farhan Seth. “Second-tier stocks like World Call, NIB Bank, TRG Pakistan etc, despite leading the volumes, closed in the red zone.”

“Despite expectations of early release of the next International Monetary Fund’s tranche and unanimous approval of the 18th Amendment by the Senate, the market witnessed selling activity,” said Shahzad Chamdia Sec senior analyst Ahsan Mehanti.

“Turnover in the second-tier stocks stayed thin as compared to previous sessions, keeping the overall turnover to 50 percent to that recorded a day earlier along with decline in value of traded shares,” said Aziz Fida Husein and Co analyst Husnein Asghar Ali. The KSE 100-share index opened in the green zone with a gain of 25.04 points and at the end of the day closed at 10,659.21 with a loss of 18.26 points.

WorldCall Telecom was the volume leader with 27.59 million shares as it closed at Rs 5.11 after opening at Rs 5.18, losing seven paisas. NIB Bank traded 11.34 million shares as it closed at Rs 4.83 from its opening at Rs 5.10, shedding 27 paisas. TRG Pakistan traded 10.93 million shares as it closed at Rs 5.47 as compared to its opening at Rs 5.69, decreasing 22 paisas. Nimir Ind Chemical traded 9.31 million shares as it closed at Rs 2.55 as against its opening at Rs 2.52, gaining three paisas. staff report

Kate Gosselin talks About Dating, Jon, and Future Children


According to her most recent Access Hollywood interview to promote her latest book “I Just Want You to Know: Letters To My Kids on Love, Faith and Family,” Kate Gosselin also spoke about future dating prospects, Jon Gosselin, and future children.

* Of taking partial responsibility for her failed marriage, Kate said she did take partial ownership.

* Of getting back with Jon, Kate said unfortunate she could not foresee that ever happening again.

*

On dating prospects with anyone in the future, Kate said she just too busy with children and her career and believed she had too much baggage for ANYONE to deal with.

*

Of possibly more children in the future, Kate said she would not even consider dating a man who wanted ANY additional children since she was DONE in that department.

Good for Kate Gosselin for doing what she believes is right for her and her children. It is unfortunate, in my opinion, that fame ripped her family apart but I believe she has grown to accept what's happened and is now trying her best to be a good mother to her children, all eight of them, and is also trying to teach them to have a strong work ethic. I do hope she finds love one day, we all deserve love.

Salman Khan’s Bodybuilding Tips


Salman Khan has taken to the Internet like fish to water. After blogging for his latest film, Veer, the Bollywood hunk has now joined the micro-blogging website, Twitter, and has amassed as many as 25,000 followers in just a couple of days. And he’s enjoying the conversation – dishing out bodybuilding tips, warning people against drunken driving and even answering questions about Katrina Kaif.

The actor, who is known to guard his private life zealously, said on April 14, “Katrina Kaif not on Twitter yet,” indicating the possibility that she might join in soon. The actor also advised his fans against the ills of drunken driving, saying, “No daaru. If daaru then no driving, riding, fighting.”

The actor also gave a few body-building tips to his followers. “Eat very little carbs, work out hard with somebody in the gym who’s body you like, follow him or her,” tweeted the actor.

A Bollywood Battle, Waged


The microblogging service popular in India and the rest of the world, is emerging as a place where Bollywood stars can hold a neverending popularity contest.

Indian media this week has been following the follower counts of Shah Rukh Khan and Salman Khan, two actors known for being rivals. Shah Rukh Khan, star of the recent film “My Name Is Khan,” joined Twitter at the beginning of the year and has given the service a workout since then, posting updates about shoots, mourning a loss by his Kolkata Knight Riders cricket team, sharing a shaving photo and tweeting good night to fans nearly every evening. He even admitted, via Twitter, to voting for himself in the latest Time 100 Poll (”cant think of a more cheesy thing i have done lately,” he wrote).

Salman Khan, a Bollywood bad boy who’s crossed the law for his driving and even poaching, joined Twitter on Tuesday. He quickly mastered the art of condensing his thoughts into 140 characters (example: “Twitter is good, y? Bcoz u guys r amazing. Out of 25k followers, just 2 ppl hv a prob with my being. Mustv hrt thm smwhr”) and already has more than 35,000 followers. While he has much ground to cover — Shah Rukh Khan has more than 270,000 followers — his instant popularity drew attention.

AFP/Getty Images
Aamir Khan, left, and Salman Khan at the December premiere of ‘3 Idiots’ in Mumbai.

India Times weighed in Thursday, saying “the tortoise [Salman] is almost on the verge of catching up with the hare [Shah Rukh]…in coming days one can expect a cold war between the two in cyberspace.” It quoted a trade analyst, Taran Adarsh, who said Twitter can affect celebrities’ “brand value,” as well as fans who are already comparing the difference between the Khans’ tweets (”[Salman's] tweets are interesting and not monotonous like SRK,” S. Pankaj told the Times).

A third Khan celeb, Aamir Khan, has yet to join the race (or has he?), but the speculation has already started.

All three of them, however, have their work cut out for them if they want to overtake Hollywood’s biggest Twitterers. Ashton Kutcher, the most followed user, according to Twitterholic, has more than 4.7 million followers, while other celebs, such as Kim Kardashian, Ryan Seacrest, Jimmy Fallon and Justin Timberlake, have more than two million each.

Happy Birthday Lara Dutta


Actress Lara Dutta turns 32 today. Her latest flick Housefull is set for release. While she has her fingers crossed, here's mapping her journey so far.

Lara Dutta was born on April 16, 1978. After being crowned Miss Universe in 2000 she was appointed UNFPA Goodwill Ambassador in 2001. The crown brought fame and also opened doors to Bollywood.

She won the annual Gladsrags modeling competition. She was crowned Femina Miss India Universe and was even crowned Miss Universe in 2000.

Lara signed up for a Tamil film, Arasatchi in 2002, but due to financial problems, it could only release in mid-2004. She made her Bollywood debut in 2003 with the film Andaaz which was a box office success and won her a Filmfare Best Female Debut Award.

She then appeared in a number of films, some of which failed at the box office and some were mildly successful. Her box office hits include Masti (2004), Kaal (2005), No Entry (2005) and Partner (2007). She also starred in the comedy, Bhagam Bhag that also did well at the box office. She seems to have found her niche in the comedy genre.

In the year 2009 Lara had two back-to-back releases – Blue and Do Not Disturb. Both the films did not do well at the box office.

She will be seen next in Sajid Khan's Housefull. We wish her luck.

Sania, Shoaib: Ab finally shaadi pakki

Earlier in the day, there was a lot of action at the reception venue. The ballroom was done up with colourful flowers and golden lights. The decoration was by Balkrishna, a Hyderabad-based florist and decorater. There was tight security at the entrance to the hotel. The city’s police and traffic police was called in to keep a check on the guests entering the venue, besides the hotel’s security personnel.

In the afternoon, Pakistani cricketer Sohail Tanveer said, “I’m happy for Shoaib and Sania. I’m pleased to be here for this wonderful occasion, and we bring with us tons of wishes from Pakistan. I would say this is Shoaib bhai’s best innings so far, and Sania bhabhi’s best game set and match! May Allah bless them.”

He added, “It is slightly dull here, lag hi nahin raha hai ki koi shaadi ka mahaul hai. Let Shoaib and Sania bhabhi come to Pakistan, we will have a grand reception aur log dekhte rah jayenge.” Baig said, “I will sing a song for the newlywed couple, Aaja Meri Laila, Tujh Ko Main Dikha Doon, Pyaar Ki Jannat Mein Tujhe Leke Jaaon.”

Also present was Pakistan’s federal minister for population welfare, Firdous Ashiq Awan, along with other delegates like Zulfikquar Malik, a leading businessman from Sialkot, Imran Rafique Towne, president of Sialkot cricket association, and Syed Mohammad Fawad Sher, first secretary (political) from the Pakistani high commission in India. Awan presented a golden crown studded with semi precious stones to Sania. Talking about Sania and Shoaib’s wedding, she said, “Pakistan mein log bahut khush hain Sania aur Shoaib ki shaadi ki khabar sun kar. Humein khushi hai ki Sania aur Shoaib ki shaadi mein hum shaamil ho sake. The crown represents the taj gifted to our bahu... Humari dua hai ki woh dono khush rahein.” The Pakistani delegates are expected to fly back to Pakistan on April 21. The buzz is that both Shoaib and Sania are also expected to leave for Pakistan on the same day.

Amongst the other guests who made it to the reception were TDP chief and former Andhra CM Chandrababu Naidu, Subbirami Reddy, leading South actors like Nagarjuna, MS Manchu Vishnu, Laxmi Jagapathy Babu, Venkatesh, Bollywood actor Raza Murad, ghazal maestro Talat Aziz, actresses Neha Dhupia and Rakshanda Khan, fashion designers Shantanu and Nikhil Mehra with their wives Rima and Vidushi and kids Ayan, Rishan, Vivhan and Ninya. Those who were expected to attend the reception and gave it a miss finally included AP CM K Rosaiah, governor ESL Narsimhan, city police commissioner AK Khan, Mahesh Bhupathi, Salman Khan, Arbaaz and Malaika Khan and many more.