Scientists decode why universe is dominated by matter

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PTI : Washington, Thu Dec 27 2012, 13:28 hrs
Scientists have solved the puzzle of the universe being dominated by matter rather than its close relative anti-matter.
Physicists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison made a precise measurement of elusive, nearly massless particles, and obtained a crucial hint as to why the universe is dominated by matter.
The particles, called anti-neutrinos, were detected at the underground Daya Bay experiment, located near a nuclear reactor in China.
Anti-particles are almost identical twins of sub-atomic particles (electrons, protons and neutrons) that make up our world. When an electron encounters an anti-electron, for example, both are annihilated in a burst of energy.
Failure to see these bursts in the universe tells physicists that anti-matter is vanishingly rare, and that matter rules the roost in today's universe.
"At the beginning of time, in the Big Bang, a soup of particles and anti-particles was created, but somehow an imbalance came about," says Karsten Heeger, a professor of physics at UW-Madison.
"All the studies that have been done have not found enough difference between particles and anti-particles to explain the dominance of matter over anti-matter.
"But the neutrino, an extremely abundant but almost massless particle, may have the right properties, and may even be its own anti-particle, Heeger said in a statement.
"And that's why physicists have put their last hope on the neutrino to explain the absence of anti-matter in the universe," he said.
Reactors, Heeger says, are a fertile source of anti-neutrinos, and measuring how they change during their short flights from the reactor to the detector, gives a basis for calculating a quantity called the "mixing angle", the probability of transformation from one flavour into another.
The measurement of the Daya Bay experiment even before the last set of detectors was installed, showed a surprisingly large angle, Heeger said.
"People thought the angle might be really tiny, so we built an experiment that was 10 times as sensitive as we ended up needing.

Shivalik Express: World’s second solar train


CHANDIGARH: The world's second solar train, Shivalik Express was officially launched on Friday. Just like the Himalayan Queen, this train is also equipped with solar panels.

Shivalik Express had been running between Kalka and Shimla for the past some years. The Northern Railways thought of converting it into a solar-powered train recently.

A lot of effort has gone into its making. R K Gupta, senior divisional electrical engineer at Ambala division of Northern Railways who claims it to his brainchild, said that he has been working on it for the past two months.

All lights in the new train have been replaced by LEDs and the illumination level has also been increased from 20 to 42 lux in all the seven coaches of the train.

Solar-powered sockets have been installed so that passengers can recharge their mobiles and cameras with ease, said Gupta, a passout of IIT Delhi.

Gupta, who recently got the president's medal for energy conservation, said converting the train into solar power required Rs 2.25 lakh but the benefit far outweighs the cost incurred.

He said that by turning the train solar, he has been able to reduce 435kg of weight from each of the seven coaches. By reducing the weight, the train will save diesel worth around Rs 1.50 lakh per annum, he pointed out.

The total savings would come to Rs 12.35 lakh per year as it includes the savings of wear and tear, maintenance, spare parts and manpower, Gupta averred.

The train departs daily from Kalka station in the morning at 5.30.

Comet ISON

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Introducing Comet ISON
Image Credit & Copyright: Ligustri Rolando
Explanation: Could this dim spot brighten into one of the brightest comets ever? It's possible. Alternatively, the comet could break up when it gets closer to the Sun, or brighten much more modestly. Sky enthusiasts the world over are all abuzz, though, from the more optimistic speculations -- that the newly discovered C/2012 S1 (ISON) could develop a spectacular tail or briefly approach the brightness of the full Moon toward the end of 2013. Comet ISON currently is very faint but is just visible at magnitude 18 in the above image. The comet, discovered just over a week ago from Russia by Vitali Nevski (Belarus) and Artyom Novichonok (Russia), is currently falling toward the Sun from between the orbits of Jupiter and Saturn. In early 2013 October it will pass very near Mars and possibly be visible to rovers and orbiting spacecraft. Comet ISON appears on course to achieve sungrazer status as it passes within a solar diameter of Sun's surface in late 2013 November. Whatever survives will then pass nearest the Earth in late 2013 December. Astronomers around the world will be tracking this large dirty snowball closely to better understand its nature and how it might evolve during the next 15 months.