Science & Technology
Researchers involved in the P-REACT project, which is the work of a consortium of European companies and organisations and is partly funded by a grant from the European Commission, say the surveillance technology could help catch criminals in the act and relieve police of "digital evidence overload" by highlighting video clips most likely to be relevant to investigations.
"If a camera at a gas station picks up suspicious activity, the video footage will be sent to the cloud, people at the gas station will be alerted, and nearby cameras will be told to look out for the criminals too," says project coordinator Juan Arraiza at Vicomtech, a research foundation in San Sebastian, Spain.
P-REACT tracks people's movements to work out whether they're simply walking along a street, for instance, or doing something dodgy. Its algorithms have been trained on sample scenes of people fighting, chasing someone or snatching a bag. They had to be finely tuned to identify these activities: hugging can look a lot like fighting, for example, while running can be mistaken for giving chase.
Near Earth Objects (NEOs) are defined as asteroids or comets that come near our planet's orbit. A recently released White House document entitled 'National Near-Earth Object Preparedness Strategy' details how low-probability, high consequence impacts pose a "significant and complex challenge".
The report says that while a "civilization-ending"smash with space rocks over the next 200 years is unlikely, the risk of "smaller but still catastrophic NEO impacts is real."
The record payload will be carried by India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) from the Sriharikota spaceport, the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) said.
"We are making a century by launching over 100 satellites at one go," ISRO director S. Somnath told a science convention in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, according to the Press Trust of India.
In fact, changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) — the same deep-water ocean current featured in the movie "The Day After Tomorrow" — could occur quite abruptly, in geologic terms, the study says. The research appears in the Jan. 4 online edition of the journal Science Advances.
"We show that the possibility of a collapsed AMOC under global warming is hugely underestimated," said Wei Liu, a postdoctoral associate in the Department of Geology and Geophysics at Yale University and lead author of the study. Liu began the research when he was a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and continued it at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, prior to coming to Yale.

Very Large Array, one of the world's premier astronomical radio observatories near Socorro, New Mexico.
Fast Radio Bursts, or FRBs, have only been heard 18 times and have been a puzzle to scientists since they were detected in 2007. Nobody knows where they could be coming from or how they might be triggered, with speculation ranging from a huge star, jets of material shooting out of a black hole - or even aliens.
FRBs are powerful but very short radio waves, which last no more than a millisecond. The first was found by Australia's Parkes telescope in 2007. Since then, 17 have been heard, but only one of them has been heard repeatedly. That repeated burst was studied for six months, letting scientists find its exact position in the sky. It seems to be coming from a faint dwarf galaxy more than three billion light years away, scientists said.
FRB 121102, as it is referred to, was found using the Very Large Array. That is a multi-antenna radio telescope operated by the US National Science Foundation.
Named 'PGC 1000714' or 'Burcin's Galaxy', the object has a "well-defined elliptical-like core surrounded by two circular rings," according to astronomers.
It seems to belong to an extremely rare 'hoag-type' class of galaxy. Such galaxies are known for their round core surrounded by a ring, with nothing visibly connecting them. Much like galaxies in our own solar system, these are usually disc-shaped.

Orting schools, as well as the Pierce County town itself, are in the potential path of Mount Rainier mudflows.
"That event (Oso) moved about 8 million cubic meters of mass," said Scott Heinze, deputy director of Pierce County's emergency-management department. "The projection for a Mount Rainier lahar is between 250 to 500 million cubic meters of mass — exponentially greater."
Pierce County Executive Pat McCarthy pushed for the review, which examined the functionality of the current warning system and also compared it to others around the globe, he said. The sensors, which were installed in the 1990s, monitor fast-moving gushes of mud and debris, or lahars.
Volcanic mudflows — formed by large landslides or suddenly melting snow and ice during eruptions — are considered the mountain's greatest hazard.
Comment: Hopefully the new sensors will be ready before something happens:
- Shake, rattle and roll: 3 volcanic eruptions and 2 strong earthquakes in 48 hours
- Earthquake swarms reported at Mt. Hood, Mt. Rainier and Mt. St. Helens: Is a major eruption imminent?
Once introduced on Earth, the zombie virus would condemn the human population to extinction in less than six months, scientists at Leicester University (UK) have calculated.
Comment: This meme could be symbolic for both the state of the population and a premonition of possible things to come:
- Spreading the zombie meme: 'Zombie expert' speaks at Texas Tech
- US: "Zombie Apocalypse" campaign crashes website
- Seven signs you are becoming a modern, brain-dead zombie
- Canadian parliament 'debates' zombie invasion: Lawmaker warns of 'zombie invasion', pushes for 'international zombie strategy'
- Fear of the walking dead: We the people are the zombies, the enemy in the eyes of the government
- When Zombies Attack! Bristol City Council Ready for Undead Invasion
- A History of 'Real' Zombies
- Update: 20 people now infected by zombie anthrax outbreak in Siberia, 90 hospitalized
But to understand why this is relevant, let's take a step back. States of matter, as you probably learned in grade school, have to do with the way atoms and molecules arrange themselves depending on the amount of energy present, or lack thereof.
Put simply, the higher the temperature, the higher the energy and the more disorganized the atoms become. Less energy is present at cooler temperatures, which is why water molecules are more orderly in a solid ice stage than in vapor. You've probably seen some version of this explaining it visually (image left).
As detailed in this recent paper, researchers found a surprising glitch in water's physical properties once it reached 122 degrees Fahrenheit, a structural change that appeared to be an extra, less atomically organized liquid phase. Independent researchers will need to conduct follow-up experiments to prove this second liquid state, and should they succeed, the implications could be wide-ranging. Water plays a crucial role in the development of most organisms, which means understanding how it operates could help us better understand our own biological systems on a fundamental level. What this finding proves more than anything, though, is how quickly and easily basic concepts can change. Water's fourth state may not feel as groundbreaking as discovering the world revolves around the sun, but time will tell how much it may change our understanding of the world in big and small ways.

An image of a Hyperface pattern, specifically created to contain thousands of facial recognition hits. Photograph
Berlin-based artist and technologist Adam Harvey aims to overwhelm and confuse these systems by presenting them with thousands of false hits so they can't tell which faces are real.
The Hyperface project involves printing patterns on to clothing or textiles, which then appear to have eyes, mouths and other features that a computer can interpret as a face.
This is not the first time Harvey has tried to confuse facial recognition software. During a previous project, CV Dazzle, he attempted to create an aesthetic of makeup and hairstyling that would cause machines to be unable to detect a face.












Comment: For more information on Near Earth Objects and the impact they can have. Read: