Kerosene lamp which cooks food without polluting



Kerosene lamp which cooks food without polluting
The device, aptly named Lanstove (lantern combined with cook stove), has been developed by researchers from Nimbkar Agricultural Research Institute (NARI) in Maharashtra's Phaltan.
KOLKATA: A lamp which produces high quality light and doubles up as a device to cook food without causing pollution has been invented by a team of engineers in Maharashtra.


Suitable particularly for rural households which lack clean cooking fuel and electricity, the device, aptly named Lanstove (lantern combined with cook stove), has been developed by researchers from Nimbkar Agricultural Research Institute (NARI) in Maharashtra's Phaltan.

IIT graduate Anil Rajvanshi, who led the team. says the clean-combustion kerosene lanstove provides excellent light equivalent to that from a 200-300 W electric bulb and cooks a complete meal for a family of five just like an LPG stove.

"To our knowledge this is the first such device where both lighting and cooking are combined together resulting in tremendous energy efficiency and saving of fuel," he says in a research report published by the institute.

The Lanstove consists of a nine litre pressurised kerosene cylinder, a high light output mantle lantern and a very efficient steam cooker which is based on heat pipe principle.

The device has been designed so that kerosene is pressurised and stored in a small separate cylinder from where it flows into the combustor and burns very cleanly just like in the LPG cookstove.

"We developed this technology with our own funds and the trials were funded by Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi," Rajvanshi told PTI.

Millions of people in rural India cook and heat their homes using open fires and leaky stoves burning biomass (wood, animal dung and crop waste) and coal.

Nearly 2 million people die prematurely from illness like those caused by chronic obstructive respiratory disease attributable to indoor air pollution from household solid fuel use, World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates.

Research by NARI shows that carbon monoxide levels from these new lanstoves are less than 3 parts per million (ppm), whereas those from regular 'chulhas' are between 250-400 ppm or 80 to 130 times more than from the lanstove.

"Thus lanstove is an extremely clean device and equivalent to LPG stove," say NARI engineers.

Lanstove has been tested for the last eight months in 25 rural huts in western Maharashtra which do not have electricity.

After the successful trials, the technology is now available for commercialisation and the institute is now looking for suitable entrepreneurs who can market it in the rural areas.

"It has shown excellent results with users commenting that it does not produce smoke like their existing biomass powered chulha and gives excellent light compared to the presently used hurricane lanterns and tin wick lamps," Rajvanshi says.

However, engineers regret that Lanstoves cannot be made available on a large-scale in rural areas because of government regulations on the supply of kerosene.

"Today below poverty line (BPL) families get only five litres of kerosene per household every month while Lanstove users need at least 15-20 litres of kerosene per month," he points out demanding that kerosene should be allowed to be sold in open market freely.

Sun's magnetic field about to flip, says Nasa


Sun's magnetic field about to flip, says Nasa
"It looks like we're no more than 3 to 4 months away from a complete field reversal," says solar physicist Todd Hoeksema of Stanford University.
The Sun's magnetic field - in which the Earth and all the planets are bathed - will do a 180 degree flip, Nasa scientists announced on Tuesday.
"It looks like we're no more than 3 to 4 months away from a complete field reversal," says solar physicist Todd Hoeksema of Stanford University. "This change will have ripple effects throughout the solar system."
The sun's magnetic field changes polarity approximately every 11 years. It happens at the peak of each solar cycle as the sun's inner magnetic dynamo re-organizes itself. The coming reversal will mark the midpoint of solar cycle 24.
Hoeksema is the director of Stanford's Wilcox Solar Observatory, one of the few observatories in the world that monitor the sun's polar magnetic fields. Magnetograms at Wilcox have been tracking the sun's polar magnetism since 1976, and they have recorded three grand reversals-with a fourth in the offing.
Solar physicist Phil Scherrer, also at Stanford, describes what happens: "The sun's polar magnetic fields weaken, go to zero, and then emerge again with the opposite polarity. This is a regular part of the solar cycle."
A reversal of the sun's magnetic field is, literally, a big event. The domain of the sun's magnetic influence (also known as the "heliosphere") extends billions of kilometers beyond Pluto. Changes to the field's polarity ripple all the way out to the Voyager probes, on the doorstep of interstellar space.
When solar physicists talk about solar field reversals, their conversation often centers on the "current sheet." The current sheet is a sprawling surface jutting outward from the sun's equator where the sun's slowly-rotating magnetic field induces an electrical current. The current itself is small, only one ten-billionth of an amp per square meter (0.0000000001 amps/m2), but there's a lot of it: the amperage flows through a region 10,000 km thick and billions of kilometers wide. Electrically speaking, the entire heliosphere is organized around this enormous sheet.
During field reversals, the current sheet becomes very wavy. Scherrer likens the undulations to the seams on a baseball. As Earth orbits the sun, we dip in and out of the current sheet. Transitions from one side to another can stir up stormy space weather around our planet.
Cosmic rays are also affected. These are high-energy particles accelerated to nearly light speed by supernova explosions and other violent events in the galaxy. Cosmic rays are a danger to astronauts and space probes, and some researchers say they might affect the cloudiness and climate of Earth. The current sheet acts as a barrier to cosmic rays, deflecting them as they attempt to penetrate the inner solar system. A wavy, crinkly sheet acts as a better shield against these energetic particles from deep space.
As the field reversal approaches, data from Wilcox show that the sun's two hemispheres are out of synch.
"The sun's north pole has already changed sign, while the south pole is racing to catch up," says Scherrer. "Soon, however, both poles will be reversed, and the second half of Solar Max will be underway."


 WHEN IS THE NEXT MAGNETIC FLIP OF EARTH?


  1. Geomagnetic reversal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geomagnetic_reversal
    A geomagnetic reversal is a change in the Earth's magnetic field such that the positions of magnetic north and magnetic south are interchanged. The Earth's field ...
  2. Earth's magnetic field - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth's_magnetic_field
    Earth's magnetic field (also known as the geomagnetic field) is the magnetic ..... that a brief complete reversal occurred only 41,000 years ago during the last ice ...
  3. Lost in migration: Earth's magnetic field overdue a flip - GMA Network

    www.gmanetwork.com › GMA News OnlineSciTechScience
    Aug 8, 2013 - The only thing stopping Earth having a lifeless environment like Mars is the magnetic field that shields us from deadly solar radiation and helps ...
  4. Don't Flip Out, but the Sun's Magnetic Field Is About to Flip - Popular ...

    www.popularmechanics.com › ScienceSpace
    Aug 14, 2013 - The magnetic flip comes about as a result of strong, local magnetic fields ... Within Earth's magnetic field, all but the highest-energy galactic ...
  5. Is it true that the Earth's magnetic field is about to flip? | physics.org

    www.physics.org/facts/frog-magnetic-field.asp
    physics.org Facts Posters - on the buses in the European Capital of Culture.




Australian doctors create history in IVF technology


Australian doctors create history in IVF technology
The doctors managed to help the women produce two healthy eggs after transplanting her own frozen ovarian tissue into her abdomen.


MELBOURNE: A team at Melbourne IVF and the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Australia have achieved a breakthrough by helping an infertile woman to conceive through an ovarian tissue transplanted into her abdomen.

The breakthrough, in a world first, has the potential to revolutionize the existing fertility treatment, reports the Sydney Morning Herald.

Twenty six-year-old Vali is 26 weeks pregnant with twins after previously being declared infertile because of a treatment for ovarian cancer.

The doctors managed to help the women produce two healthy eggs after transplanting her own frozen ovarian tissue into her abdomen.

Gab Kovas, medical director of Monash IVF, said the breakthrough was very exciting.

"It makes me quite convinced that the optimal way for preserving fertility will be taking ovarian tissue," the report quoted Kovas as saying.

"If I had a patient who was going to lose their fertility to cancer treatment, I would offer it from now on," he said.

Kate Stern, Vali's fertility specialist, said it had taken years of daily monitoring to achieve the pregnancy.

"When it happened, I think we all had a good cry together really," Stern said.

"Vali had remained strong throughout. Never once did she waver and tell us it was too hard and she wanted to give up," she added.

The sample of Vali's ovarian tissue was kept frozen for seven years and was taken from her cancer-free ovary.

The new breakthrough could be a blessing for women with conditions such as ovarian cancer where the treatment could make them infertile.