Saturday, January 22, 2011

Manuela Testolini Engaged


Manuela Testolini Engaged
It seems that the group of possible pairs of stars in the world that is less deep than we thought, to marry each other exes begin the stars! Halle Berry, ex, Eric Benet, gave his commitment, Manuela Testolin, which is one of the ex-wife of Prince. E! Online Benet sings the song he wrote for her supper again, then put one knee and proposed with a diamond ring antique. The song "Never Want to Live Without You " is Benet's new album "Lost In Time" and you and you will see.
    Benet and Berry were divorced six years ago, and Testolin, and the marriage of Prince ended about five years. Testolin and Benet have since three years, according to man, and promised in November. The wedding is planned for this summer and are currently on holiday in Egypt.

    Halle Berry, meanwhile, has reportedly enjoyed a romance with Olivier Martinez.

East West Shrine Game


East West Shrine Game
The 2011 East-West Shrine Game will start in a few hours on the NFL Network. Like a mini-primer for this last game, here are the five perspectives of the 2011 NFL Draft participate in the container, depending MockingTheDraft.com s "Top 200 list of past perspectives.
32. Marvin Austin, DT, North Carolina. Once considered a candidate for one of the leading players on the board broke down this year shares of the Austin-project when he was arrested and began the football team at UNC to receive improper benefits. An overview of this talent as a rule do not appear in this game, but it is clear that Austin is a special case. Austin entered the week in good shape and has dominated at the point of the exercise, if unavoidable, it plays well in the game live for the first time in over a year, is back in the conversation as a range of options for the first round. | Marvin Austin Analysis Report
78. Dontay Moch, OLB, Nevada. Moch enthusiasm generated last season, when he reported that he conducted a 40-meter sprint 4.25 seconds. At the end of the defense universities, measured Moch at least 6'1 "and £ 229 in this week and received representatives of the 4-3 outside linebacker. He has trouble adapting to the new position, as expected, but some browsers such as some aspects what I saw - one of them said: "The light is on, to collect on his new role Moch more athletes, football players now ..


81. Pat Devlin, QB, Delaware. Was to Joe Flacco for a few years, or since he attended the same school. A great guy who has strong production, Devlin received mixed reviews this week. Some have the best quarterback in the game - and maybe even applies to those who have expressed their disappointment in his introductory weeks to term. It is much more in line with Devlin in the game.
101. Chris Carter, DE / OLB, Fresno State. Carter has always had talent, and finally came to an outstanding season in which high accumulated 11 sacks and 16.5 tackled for losses. (. He was productive as a junior and with 13 picks for loss and five sacks) at 6'2 ", 240 pounds Tweener" Carter is likely that many opportunities to fall in the coverage of this game - and it is where curious to see the Mariners to play Carter.
105. Michael Mohamed, ILB, California. A "6'2, 245-pound linebacker from one of the toughest conferences in the United States, Mohamed has extensive experience and comes from a very productive career. For four seasons, he collected addresses 339, 20 repeats for losses, six and seven sacks Interceptions. The love of his equipment, intangible assets, experience and production, but keep an eye on your overall athletic ability in the competition have.

Qwiki


Qwiki
Founded by the entrepreneur and co-founder Doug Imbruce Internet industry pioneer Dr. Louis Monier (AltaVista Founder), Qwik and is considered by many to be a "game changer". The platform is to "define the future of the information of consumers in the world," said Eduardo Saverin, which of course, when it adopted the company managed to convince the user.
All this sounds interesting - in his words, work Qwik for information in a format that offers essentially human - throughout history rather than research. But it seems so complicated and how it arises, is a little confusing.
Remember your favorite teacher of Leonardo Da Vinci, or rather his friend from Buenos Aires to ask the Qwik experience may be supplied on request anywhere in the world ... use on any device you.
Qwik not deliver the results list as a search engine, but the responses of rich media, a story - it works when you have time to listen to a story get to the point that would really be interested. Although it is a "game changer" Qwik may not sound like a "time-saver." Technology could be used more for entertainment. So far it seems too much, something the fans as a documentary.
We have all seen science fiction movies (or reading novels), in which computers are able to collect data on behalf of man and present the most important details. That is our goal Qwik - progressive information technology to the point that human behavior.
Others have tried (unsuccessfully) before. regulam exceptio Probat in casibus not Exceptis.
And could succeed, since we already have enough support to begin the journey. Qwik announced today that it closed $ 8 million in Series A financing. To date, the company has a total of EUR 9.5 million, including a number of angels.
Qwik financial support from some of the visionaries Site: Eduardo Saverin (co-founder of Facebook) Jawed Karim (YouTube co-founder) and Pradeep Sindhu (Co-Founder, Juniper Networks). Institutional investors include Lerer Media Ventures, Enterprise Partners and tug a review of the risks. The consortium of investors organized by investment Felix New York City resident.
Cycle Groupon closing just under $ 1000000000, 4750000000 $ value WebVisible raises $ 20,000,000 in financing Country reference to Bill Power Twitter - for a while

Friday, January 21, 2011

Sarah Shahi


Sarah Shahi
Sarah Shahi 31st former Dallas Cowboys cheerleader has TV star has admitted a tabloid newspaper online resource, the crush was once the small talk, the actor Danny DeVito.

  "I'm in love with Danny DeVito was since I saw him in" Taxi ", I know this is the rarest thing in the world to say, "she said.

  Well, who knows?

  The beauty of Iran and Spanish is currently in the role of Kate Reed turned to a lawyer legal mediator, juggling a tough race with a boss who is also his step-mother, is having a complicated relationship with her husband soon his ex, a His lawyer. The story is set in San Francisco.

  The actress, who is married in real life and a mother, a child of 18 months, described the program as "a law against the law. " Think Law & Order meets Sex and the City, said.

  In addition to boasting a large selection of cabinet series (Alexander Wang, Phillip Lim and Dries Van Noten is one of the best fashion designers whose inspiration seems on television comedy and drama), "It really is a highly dynamic in the program, " she said .

  You can use this very law debut Thursday night 20th to 21 January hours on USA Network.

Fairly Legal


Fairly Legal
The brilliant engineers in the U.S. show networks of laboratories have developed a formula to extract the narrow television. First, take a talented player with a history of TV images - Matthew Bomer, Jeffrey Donovan, and Mark Feuerstein, all in their fair share, no on-the TV set was playing white collar, and Burn Notice Royal Pain. Second, give the actors a job vintage TV - police, lawyer, doctor, spy - but ready to sprinkle in some eccentricity cable. Finally, she sends it to a bright spot almost exclusively of attractive people and friends of the spirit, and voila populated: Brain Candy! At first glance, the new legal dramedy perfectly legal enough pre-view of the United States, but the first season had some interesting possibilities ... although I'm not sure the whole package is still there.
First the good stuff. Series star Sarah Shahi is a wonderful actress. She was good in the first seasons of The L Word. She had a great guest star appearances soprano (plays a stripper Redeemer Vegas.) More recently he was an elegant presentation, on the NBC police is the name of life not been cut negotiable. Legal protagonist Kate Reed, Shahi somehow makes you think it is both a casualty of anxiety and a brilliant promoter.
In fact, the profession of Kate is another highlight of the show: Based on a series of mediation, at least a touch of freshness of the statutory formula. At the end of the episode, when Kate was the ashes of her late father, who describes actually speaks a very complex plot: while his lawyer father believes the letter of the law, believes that "the law" of human interaction back and forth. Quite legally clearperspective to mediation: There is only a facade.
Unfortunately, other elements of the first season was a kind of stunted. On one side can not decide the show, a dark drama or a legal quirkfest be zippy. Kate scenes careers within and outside the courtroom and in fact in contempt of court by a judge who seemed to despise from a sitcom set. But the result was other elements - a teenager in error by the Yale is tied in the ghetto, charged with a long meditation on the relationship of Kate with her dead father - who seemed in a much larger, are more directly "The lawyers really care. "
The show was enough evidence eccentric (like the constant references to the Wizard of Oz) that I want to make again. But as Bay Area native, I must stress that the representation of the number of San Francisco is very stupid - with the exception of the constant (greenscreened) plans Transamerica Pyramid and leaving nowhere plot twist a parody of the show can also be in every city, U.S. is. (Or rather, from Vancouver.) It's kind of embarrassing, especially as their U.S. counterparts to see Burn Notice and In Plain Sight collect miles as its own (Miami and Albuquerque, respectively).

Todd Palin Affair


Todd Palin Affair
Todd Palin sex scandal: Does the family hold any politician to be in the news. Bill Clinton and John Edwards are perfect examples. The rumors are a bit above, but there is nothing that is not Sarah be able, if they are not real.

  It is (you guessed it) the National Enquirer was "read " the news today, the same magazine that broke the scandal, John Edwards, Cheating, and everyone knows how it happened is past. The magazine claims to be "covered official documentation to confirm the arrest of the woman and learned police seized physical evidence that could link an alleged extramarital affair, Todd."

  The magazine also claims that the woman was identified as Shailey Tripp was "free massage" for someone who works in the campaign of Sarah Palin. Really? Because it narrows. It is really unfortunate, because this kind of rumor can ruin the lives of the people. If no further evidence (such as Tiger Woods and Jesse James), do not talk about such things. On the other hand, as a tabloid for a little money?

  Sarah and Todd Palin has faced rumors of infidelity in the past, so shall it be released now. Unless, of course, that's a rumor.

Roger Ebert Face


Roger Ebert Face
And its new face - saw it has been a while since we've Roger Ebert the big screen debate in the small screen, but after winning the Pulitzer Prize for film criticism is again on TV this week was the launch of its new show! For more information about the new concert of Roger Ebert and his chin new to read after the jump!
For anyone who follows movie reviews, is an operation that Roger Ebert is not distorted face left again. It has been almost five years since he lost part of his jaw to cancer, but now the critical acclaim is back and ready for a new perspective on the sport.

    
Roger Ebert shared his views on television films for decades, and although she was stopped while he is against thyroid cancer is fighting back and ready! Friday premiere of his new show on PBS titled "Roger Ebert noted in the film, but look a little different than in recent years.
For over 35 years, Ebert began reviewing movies with his friend and critic Gene Siskel on his show "Sneak Peek". It was part of the film critic of the most famous and influential in the country and gave up his show, until Siskel's death in 1999. He continued the show with his co-anchor until 2006 when he underwent surgery to remove his cancer of the jaw, and left him unable to speak.
The rounded, Ebert was recognized with a thin deformed face, but that does not stop him made out of business. He has published many programs and is preparing again to Co-Host Chris Lemire and Vishnevetsky Ignatiy.
Besides a new show and new co-sponsors, the sport is also Ebert prosthetic chin news to view more familiar than ever before. It is to focus on current disfigured his chin, and if she needs the help of a computer to talk, feel fans can connect and current and past films, as always.
"Roger Ebert noted in the film" opens this Friday at the local radio channel. Check to see your local ads, if you find the new show!
What do you think of Roger Ebert think back with a chin implant? Give to you hear what he and his co-presenter of thinking in the new movie?

National Hug Day


National Hug Day
Is National Hug Day, then reach out and hug someone. For those who have too much time online, we are spending too ... Illustrated Guide to kiss. You are welcome.

    The Illustrated Guide to kiss back online, was apparently with courage against the assaults of the armed huggerati. National Hug Day is 25th in his Year.

    Embrace the label: the person initiating the hug is over. If you kiss a stranger on the street, was somewhat short, it embraces, it will not stop.

    Below is the Illustrated Guide to kiss her. It is 68 pages long, but I hope you gasoline sooner rather than later.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Yellowstone Has Bulged as Magma Pocket Swells


Yellowstone National Park's supervolcano just took a deep "breath," causing miles of ground to rise dramatically, scientists report.

The simmering volcano has produced major eruptions—each a thousand times more powerful than Mount St. Helens's 1980 eruption—three times in the past 2.1 million years. Yellowstone's caldera, which covers a 25- by 37-mile (40- by 60-kilometer) swath of Wyoming, is an ancient crater formed after the last big blast, some 640,000 years ago.

Since then, about 30 smaller eruptions—including one as recent as 70,000 years ago—have filled the caldera with lava and ash, producing the relatively flat landscape we see today.

But beginning in 2004, scientists saw the ground above the caldera rise upward at rates as high as 2.8 inches (7 centimeters) a year.
The rate slowed between 2007 and 2010 to a centimeter a year or less. Still, since the start of the swelling, ground levels over the volcano have been raised by as much as 10 inches (25 centimeters) in places.

"It's an extraordinary uplift, because it covers such a large area and the rates are so high," said the University of Utah's Bob Smith, a longtime expert in Yellowstone's volcanism.

Scientists think a swelling magma reservoir four to six miles (seven to ten kilometers) below the surface is driving the uplift. Fortunately, the surge doesn't seem to herald an imminent catastrophe, Smith said. (Related: "Under Yellowstone, Magma Pocket 20 Percent Larger Than Thought.")

"At the beginning we were concerned it could be leading up to an eruption," said Smith, who co-authored a paper on the surge published in the December 3, 2010, edition of Geophysical Research Letters.

"But once we saw [the magma] was at a depth of ten kilometers, we weren't so concerned. If it had been at depths of two or three kilometers [one or two miles], we'd have been a lot more concerned."

Studies of the surge, he added, may offer valuable clues about what's going on in the volcano's subterranean plumbing, which may eventually help scientists predict when Yellowstone's next volcanic "burp" will break out.

Yellowstone Takes Regular Breaths

Smith and colleagues at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Yellowstone Volcano Observatory have been mapping the caldera's rise and fall using tools such as global positioning systems (GPS) and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR), which gives ground-deformation measurements.

Ground deformation can suggest that magma is moving toward the surface before an eruption: The flanks of Mount St. Helens, for example, swelled dramatically in the months before its 1980 explosion. (See pictures of Mount St. Helens before and after the blast.)

But there are also many examples, including the Yellowstone supervolcano, where it appears the ground has risen and fallen for thousands of years without an eruption.

According to current theory, Yellowstone's magma reservoir is fed by a plume of hot rock surging upward from Earth's mantle. (Related: "New Magma Layer Found Deep in Earth's Mantle?")

When the amount of magma flowing into the chamber increases, the reservoir swells like a lung and the surface above expands upward. Models suggest that during the recent uplift, the reservoir was filling with 0.02 cubic miles (0.1 cubic kilometer) of magma a year.

When the rate of increase slows, the theory goes, the magma likely moves off horizontally to solidify and cool, allowing the surface to settle back down.

Based on geologic evidence, Yellowstone has probably seen a continuous cycle of inflation and deflation over the past 15,000 years, and the cycle will likely continue, Smith said.

Surveys show, for example, that the caldera rose some 7 inches (18 centimeters) between 1976 and 1984 before dropping back about 5.5 inches (14 centimeters) over the next decade.

"These calderas tend to go up and down, up and down," he said. "But every once in a while they burp, creating hydrothermal explosions, earthquakes, or—ultimately—they can produce volcanic eruptions."

Yellowstone Surge Also Linked to Geysers, Quakes?

Predicting when an eruption might occur is extremely difficult, in part because the fine details of what's going on under Yellowstone are still undetermined. What's more, continuous records of Yellowstone's activity have been made only since the 1970s—a tiny slice of geologic time—making it hard to draw conclusions.

"Clearly some deep source of magma feeds Yellowstone, and since Yellowstone has erupted in the recent geological past, we know that there is magma at shallower depths too," said Dan Dzurisin, a Yellowstone expert with the USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory in Washington State.

"There has to be magma in the crust, or we wouldn't have all the hydrothermal activity that we have," Dzurisin added. "There is so much heat coming out of Yellowstone right now that if it wasn't being reheated by magma, the whole system would have gone stone cold since the time of the last eruption 70,000 years ago."

The large hydrothermal system just below Yellowstone's surface, which produces many of the park's top tourist attractions, may also play a role in ground swelling, Dzurisin said, though no one is sure to what extent.

"Could it be that some uplift is caused not by new magma coming in but by the hydrothermal system sealing itself up and pressurizing?" he asked. "And then it subsides when it springs a leak and depressurizes? These details are difficult."

And it's not a matter of simply watching the ground rise and fall. Different areas may move in different directions and be interconnected in unknown ways, reflecting the as yet unmapped network of volcanic and hydrothermal plumbing.

The roughly 3,000 earthquakes in Yellowstone each year may offer even more clues about the relationship between ground uplift and the magma chamber.

For example, between December 26, 2008, and January 8, 2009, some 900 earthquakes occurred in the area around Yellowstone Lake.

This earthquake "swarm" may have helped to release pressure on the magma reservoir by allowing fluids to escape, and this may have slowed the rate of uplift, the University of Utah's Smith said.

"Big quakes [can have] a relationship to uplift and deformations caused by the intrusion of magma," he said. "How those intrusions stress the adjacent faults, or how the faults might transmit stress to the magma system, is a really important new area of study."

Overall, USGS's Dzurisin added, "the story of Yellowstone deformation has gotten more complex as we've had better and better technologies to study it."

Star Clock BC


Move over, Bill Gates. It appears that the world's first PC was invented during biblical times. It was a device so sophisticated that with a turn of a hand crank, mathematical gears mapped the positions of planets and stars. Now, more than 100 years since the discovery, experts are still vying to understand how such an advanced technology could have existed 2,000 years ago.

Multiple Asteroid Strikes May Have Killed Mars’s Magnetic Field


Once upon a time, Mars had a magnetic field, just like Earth. Four billion years ago, it vanished, taking with it the planet’s chances of evolving life as we know it. Now scientists have proposed a new explanation for its disappearance.

A model of asteroids striking the red planet suggests that, while no single impact would have short-circuited the dynamo that powered its magnetism, a quick succession of 20 asteroid strikes could have done the job.

“Each one crippled a little bit,” said geophysicist Jafar Arkani-Hamed of the University of Toronto, author of the new study. “We believe those were enough to cripple, cripple, cripple, cripple until it killed all of the dynamo forever.”

Rocky planets like Earth, Mars, Mercury and even the moon get their magnetic fields from the movement of molten iron inside their cores, a process called convection. Packets of molten iron rise, cool and sink within the core, and generate an electric current. The planet’s spinning turns that current into a magnetic field in a system known as a dynamo.

Magnetic fields can shield a planet from the constant rain of high-energy particles carried in the solar wind by deflecting charged particles away from the surface. Some studies have suggested that Earth’s magnetic field could have protected early life forms from the sun’s most harmful radiation, allowing more complex life to develop. But traces of magnetism in the Martian surface reveal that the red planet lost its magnetic field some four billion years ago, leaving its atmosphere to be dessicated by the harsh solar wind.

Previous studies suggested that a massive impact could have shut down Mars’s dynamo by warming the mantle layer, disrupting the heat flow from the core to the mantle and shutting down convection. The fact that the crust of Mars’s younger impact craters is not magnetized supports this idea. Earlier computer models by geophysicist James Roberts of Johns Hopkins University showed that the largest known impacts on Mars could turn the mantle to a warm blanket, bringing the dynamo to a standstill.

But Arkani-Hamed’s new study in the Journal of Geophysical Research suggests that just one impact wouldn’t suffice. The dynamo would recover in less than one hundred million years. “The magnetic field should come back again,” he said.

To make his case, Arkani-Hamed modeled the heat that could have been produced when — according to some geophysicists — an asteroid the size of Texas hit Mars about 4.5 billion years ago, producing the biggest impact in our solar system’s history. Called the Borealis impact, it may have flattened Mars’s entire northern hemisphere.

This mega-impact would have flattened out the heat cycle inside the planet, too, snuffing out the dynamo within about 20,000 years. Without the cold compress of the mantle to siphon heat away from the core, convection wouldn’t have a chance.

But left alone, convection would have recovered in the outer parts of the core, and eventually penetrated deep and started the whole core churning again. The Borealis impact would have crippled the dynamo, but not killed it outright.

“If there were a dynamo at 4.5 billion years, it could cease, go away and regenerate after about 100 million years,” he said.

But perhaps several impacts in a row could do the job. The planet’s crater record shows that Mars suffered 20 impacts in quick succession between 4.2 and 3.9 billion years ago. In work to be presented at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in The Woodlands, Texas this March, Arkani-Hamed teamed up with Roberts to show that just the five largest of these impacts could have shut down the magnetic field. The impacts came so rapidly that the dynamo had no time to recover before the next crippling blow arrived.

“This research is important because it shows that this scenario is plausible. It could have physically happened,” said Wesley Watters of Cornell University, who was not involved in the new research. “But to test this model versus another is enormously difficult to do.”

To really figure out when and how Mars lost its magnetic field, we’d need to know the ages of lots of Martian rocks with the same kind of precision with which we know them on Earth.

“We just don’t have that for Mars,” he said.