Monday, 14 October 2013

Anticipating a glorious death of our Sun

The Ring Nebula as captured by the Hubble Space Telescope. The whole structure in the photograph is about one light year across. SOURCE: NASA, ESA, AND THE HUBBLE HERITAGE (STSCI/AURA)-ESA/HUBBLE COLLABORATION
All good things come to an end. Even the lives of stars. Located 2,300 light years away, the Ring Nebula (right) is a gorgeous announcement of the demise of a star that shone brightly for ten billion years.
Now all that is left is a small white nucleus surrounded by gases that once were part of the star itself. Some of these gases will one day be part of another star. This is cosmic recycling at its best.
While beautiful, this stage is temporary for the star. Most of the gases we see in the Ring Nebula were expelled only a few thousand years ago. The star at the time had bloated into ared giant and subsequently lost much of its outer material to space, leaving behind a central core about the size of the Earth. This core is called a white dwarf and is one of the densest objects in the universe. Here on Earth, a teaspoon of white dwarf material would weigh as much as a car.
Made up mostly of Carbon and Oxygen, the white dwarf is extremely hot — about twenty times hotter than the surface of our Sun. It is the light from this white dwarf that is making some of the gases glow in the Ring Nebula. However, it does not have any energy source within, and from now on it will slowly cool down for eternity, becoming dimmer and dimmer each passing year, eventually — no longer detectable in visible light. This is the final stage — the corpse of a star that shone for ten billion years.
This is the fate that awaits the Sun as well. Our star has been a stable source of energy for the past four-and-a-half-billion years. Algae, rodents, ferns, seagulls, ants, humans — they have all been dependent on this supply of energy. Quite amazingly, humans have figured out that our Sun will run out of its supply of fuel in another 5 billion years or so. No need to worry about it tomorrow morning. But if humans — or some form of their descendants — are to survive on scales of billions of years, then journeys to other stars will have to be undertaken. Whatever happens to us, our Sun’s last rites will also include a beautiful nebula followed by the forever cooling of its white dwarf.
What about life around the star that formed the Ring Nebula? We have not detected any planets there as yet and we certainly have no idea if there ever was any life, let alone intelligence, out there. However, if there were any worlds inhabited by complex, intelligent beings, then I hope they had stumbled upon science, figured out the impending death of their star, and made alternative plans. They may have implemented mass-evacuation to another planet around a nearby star system. They may have left a billion years before the death of their star. The beauty of Ring Nebula may now be bitter sweet as they watch the demise of their original home star. Or maybe this life form never developed the ability to leave its solar system. Then most likely all of this life is now gone — just one of many mass extinctions that must happen quite often in the universe.

HTC One Max is a super-sized, 'print-scanning smart phone

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HTC's long-rumoured One Max smart phone is finally official, and sports a 5.9-inch 1080p display, as well as a fingerprint scanner on the rear.

The phone has the same metallic style as the smaller HTC One, but will stretch your palms with its enormous dimensions.
It has the same 4-megapixel 'Ultrapixel' technology as its smaller sibling, while on the inside there's a 1.7GHz quad-core processor. Like the iPhone 5S, the One Max has a fingerprint scanner, but unlike Apple's mobile, this one is located around the back, by the phone's camera.
You can use that scanner to unlock the phone, or quickly open apps. The One Max also officially debuts HTC's Sense 5.5 interface, and -- at last -- lets you turn off the company's Flipboard-esque Blinkfeed app. You can also remove the back-plate to get at the battery, should it need replacing.
The One Max is powered by Google's Android operating system, and goes toe-to-toe with the new Samsung Galaxy Note 3.
We'll have a full review of the HTC One Max ready for you later today, so stay tuned, folks.
The brand-new gigantophone should be on sale in the UK within the next couple of weeks. In the US, Sprint and Verizon will be selling the HTC One Max, though you may have to wait until November.

Avoid divisions, chaos and sectarianism, urges Grand Mufti

Saudi's Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh. PHOTO: AFP
Saudi's Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Sheikh. PHOTO: AFPA Muslim pilgrim prays atop Mount Mercy on the plains of Arafat during the peak of the annual haj pilgrimage, near the holy city of Mecca early morning October 14, 2013. PHOTO: REUTERS
MOUNT ARAFAT: Some 1.5 million Muslim pilgrims thronged Mount Arafat in Saudi Arabia Monday for the high point of the annual hajj, praying for an end to disputes and bloodshed.
Helicopters hovered overhead and thousands of troops stood guard to organise roads flooded with men, women and children.
Chanting “Labaik Allahum Labaik” (I am responding to your call, God), many of them camped in small colourful tents and took shelter under trees to escape temperatures of around 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit). Special sprinklers were set up to help cool the pilgrims.
In his annual sermon, top Saudi cleric Sheikh Abdulaziz al-Sheikh urged Muslims to avoid divisions, chaos and sectarianism, without explicitly speaking of the turmoil unleashed by the Arab Spring.
“Your nation is a trust with you. You must safeguard its security, stability and resources,” the cleric, who heads Saudi Arabia’s highest religious body, said in an address to the Muslim world.
“You should know that you are targeted by your enemy… who wants to spread chaos among you … It’s time to confront this.”
He did not speak specifically of Syria, where Sunni-led rebels backed by Saudi Arabia are at war with a regime led by Alawites — an offshoot of Shia Islam — and closely allied with Shia-dominated Iran and Hezbollah.
But the cleric recalled the Islamic prohibition of killing and aggression, while insisting there is “no salvation or happiness for the Muslim nation without adhering to the teachings of the religion.”
Attendance is sharply down from last year, due to fears linked to the MERS virus and to multi-billion-dollar expansion work at the Grand Mosque to almost double its capacity to around 2.2 million worshippers.
Governor of Makkah province and head of the central hajj committee Prince Khaled al-Faisal said 1.38 million pilgrims had arrived from outside of the kingdom while ony 117,000 hajj permits were issued for domestic pilgrims.
This puts the total number of pilgrims this year at almost 1.5 million, less than half of last year’s 3.2 million, after Riyadh slashed hajj quotas.
Prince Khaled told the official SPA news agency late Sunday that authorities had turned back 70,000 nationals and expatriates for not carrying legal permits and had arrested 38,000 others for performing the hajj without a permit.
Authorities have also seized as many as 138,000 vehicles for violating the hajj rules, and owners will be penalised, the prince said.
Saudi health authorities have stressed that no cases of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) virus have been detected so far this pilgrimage. The disease has killed 60 people worldwide, 51 of them in Saudi Arabia.
The pilgrims arrived at Arafat from nearby Mina where most of them spent the night following the traditions of the Prophet Mohammed, who performed the rituals 14 centuries ago.
They had moved to Mina on Sunday from the holy city of Makkah, home to the Grand Mosque, Islam’s holiest place of worship, which houses the cube-shaped Kaaba towards which all Muslims pray five times daily.
On reaching Arafat, they crowded onto the hill and the vast plain surrounding it to pray until sunset, when they are due to set off for Muzdalifah for a ritual on Monday symbolising the stoning of the devil.
“I will pray the whole day for God to improve the situation for Muslims worldwide and an end to disputes and bloodshed in Arab countries,” 61-year-old Algerian pensioner Saeed Dherari said.
“I hope that God will grace all Muslims with security and stability,” said 75-year-old Ahmad Khader, who hails from the southern Syrian province of Daraa.
“The regime is tyrannical and I pray for God to help the oppressed people,” he said, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s embattled government.
Egyptian Ahmad Ali, who is performing hajj for the first time, prayed for peace after hundreds were killed in recent months in fighting between security forces and Islamist supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi.
“I pray for Egypt to enjoy security and stability and for the people to reach understanding and reconciliation,” Ali told AFP.
The hajj, which officially ends on Friday, is one of the five pillars of Islam that every capable Muslim must perform at least once

Apple Unveils Its New Spaceship Style Headquarters

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Apple is always up to something unique and creative. While rumours of how iPhone 6 will look like are in the air, this time it is not a phone. It is Apple’s all new, state-of-the-art Apple campus 2, which late founder Steve Jobs, described as “something like a spaceship”. The tech company has been working on the model for over two years now. Apple revealed the model for internet audience, to San Jose Mercury News on Friday. It will be presented before the Cupertino City Council on Tuesday.
The impressive design covers an area of about 2.7 million square feet. It is a four-story building which will house 12,000 employees. The spaceship is an architectural wonder. Apple definitely knows who to work with huge architectural glass sheets. The curved glass windows provide compelling illusion of a Mothership structure. Some other complimentary features, as seen in the model, include an auditorium, fitness center, jogging track and lots of trees.
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Apple’s chief financial officer Peter Oppenheimer described the spaceship model as “the home for most creative and collaborative teams in the tech industry to innovate for decades ahead”. The building is not only eye-candy for architectural and civil engineers; it is also a role model for energy efficient buildings. The dark roof is covered with solar panels. Although, the interior of the top-secret Apple project has not been revealed in full detail, everyone believes it will be a wonder in itself. Have a sneak peak inside the top-secret building.
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The ‘spaceship’ building is the only main building in the complex at the moment however, the company plans to make additions to house more employees later on. The design is said to be in its final stages of planning. Apple’s representatives are treating the model the same way they would treat any new tech venture. Once the design is approved after the final vote on November 19, Apple will go ahead with the implementation plan. If the model gets approval by Cupertino Planning Commission, we may see the completed structure by 2016. Apple has definitely not been dormant about getting the final vote of approval. The company has already started contacting Cupertino residents to support the Apple soon-to-be corporate office and attend the approval vote on October 15.
If Apple is successful in constructing the spaceship-design corporate headquarters, it will be a huge achievement for the tech leader company. Let the wait begin!

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CJP’s daughter gets engaged to EDEN builders CE

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ISLAMABAD - The daughter of Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry has been engaged to the chief executive of renowned EDEN builders’ group, Murtaza Amjad, son of Dr Amjad.

The ceremony, hosted by the Chief Justice House on Thursday, was attended by close relatives only, and none of the Supreme Court judges was invited.

Compared to the much lavish walima ceremony of CJP’s son Dr Arsalan Chaudhry held two years ago in Lahore, this reception was quite a low-profile affair.

The EDEN group is reported to be involved in the Employees Old Age Benefit Institution (EOBI) scandal, having a massive outstanding bills of Rs 900 million, the hearing of which has already been carried out by the chief justice.

The FIA had been directed on August 29 to refrain from harassing the EDEN group in order to acquire the outstanding amount worth Rs 900 million from them.
- See more at: http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2013/10/04/news/national/cjps-daughter-gets-engaged-to-eden-builders-ce/#sthash.uDXcny7O.dpuf

what is Karachi Like

Karachi symbolises love and compassion mixed with endurance and peace. PHOTO: REUTERS
Karachi is to Pakistan what Pakistan is to the rest of the world – a place of contradictions! It is a really difficult task when one has to explain this city to a person who has only been exposed to it via the media.
However, deep down, I enjoy this task.
So on one Friday morning when there was not much work to do, I received a question from an anonymous blogger asking:
What is Karachi like?
Instead of sending a brief textual reply, I did this:
Well…
Karachi is lame,
Photo: ONLYINPAKISTAN.TUMBLR.COM
Yet it makes sense.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is serious,
Yet it knows how to smile.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is cheap,
Yet it is fancy.
Karachi is conservative,
Yet it is open minded.
Karachi is orthodox,
Yet it is contemporary.
Karachi is dirty,
Yet it is beautiful.
Karachi is crowded,
Yet it is peaceful.
Karachi is backward,
Yet it is modern.
Karachi is dangerous,
Yet it is safe.
Karachi is old,
Yet it is new.
Karachi is all sorts of things!
Karachi is love.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is compassion.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is endurance.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is bizarre.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is patriotism.
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is chai (tea).
Photo: Humans of Karachi/Citizens Archive Pakistan
Karachi is paan.
Karachi is so many things that I can go on forever!
The city of lights has a roller coaster journey for anyone who wants to explore this metropolisand all its contrasting beauty.