El Nino drives Panama butterfly migrationsOctober 6th, 2009 WASHINGTON - A long-term study has shown that El Nino, a global climate pattern, drives Sulfur butterfly migrations across the Panama Canal. Climate change has been linked to changes in the migration of butterflies in North America and Europe but this is one of the first long-term studies of environmental factors driving long-distance migration of tropical butterflies.
Soon, clothes that can send and receive messages through 'textile antennas'September 29th, 2009 PARIS - Thanks to the efforts of a Finnish company supported by ESA (European Space Agency), clothes that can send and receive messages would soon turn out to be a reality, through the use of textile antennas. Through the ESA Advanced Research in Telecommunications Systems (ARTES) 5 project 'Textile Antennas', the Finnish Patria Aviation Oy company has demonstrated that an antenna can be built using textiles that can be worn and used for personal satellite communication.
Virtual reality gallery opens in Punjab's science citySeptember 22nd, 2009 KAPURTHALA - Playing with butterflies, sand, molecular bubbles, shadows and magical flowers will now be child's play, literally, with a virtual reality gallery being opened at the Pushpa Gujral science city near here Tuesday. The latest addition to the science city, located on the Jalandhar-Kapurthala highway, 170 km from Chandigarh, will also help children and other visitors learn how things like e-mails and automated teller machines (ATMs) work.
Winged beauties and the city: Butterfly park for ChandigarhSeptember 6th, 2009 CHANDIGARH - It promises to be an incredible sight - winged beauties of 100 species, collected from across the world, fluttering around on the outskirts of Chandigarh! For, this city is set to house India's second butterfly park. The park will be established in the coming months in the green belt area in Sector 26 of this union territory (UT) as per international standards.
A unique story of parallel evolution in moths unraveledSeptember 2nd, 2009 WASHINGTON - A new revision of the taxonomic relationships among one group of moths, the subfamily Dioptinae, sheds light on the diversity of tropical moth species and presents a unique story of parallel evolution. "These diurnal moths are a microcosm of butterfly evolution," said James Miller, author of the new Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History and a research associate in the Division of Invertebrate Zoology at the Museum.
The butterfly effect: Winged beauties of Chandigarh (Letter from Chandigarh)August 18th, 2009 CHANDIGARH - "I've watched you now a full half-hour/ self-poised upon that yellow flower/ and, little butterfly! indeed/ I know not if you sleep or feed...."
These words from a poem by William Wordsworth come to one's mind as one walk down the Madhya Marg and Panjab University (PU) campus in Chandigarh and behold hundreds of butterflies fluttering in the sky. Over 70 species of butterflies are found in Chandigarh.
Chandrayaan spacecraft's faulty sensor set rightJuly 17th, 2009 BANGALORE - A malfunctioning star sensor of India's first lunar mission spacecraft Chandrayaan-I was set right by space scientists to ensure correct orientation, an official said here friday. "One of the star sensors, which gives the orientation of the spacecraft, was malfunctioning but our scientists have overcome this problem with innovative techniques of using antenna pointing mechanism and gyroscope on board the spacecraft to get the orientation information," Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) direcvtor S.
EU report says species, habitats at risk in Europe; calls for more land for conservationJuly 13th, 2009 EU: Grasslands, wetlands, butterflies at riskBRUSSELS — A European Union report says grasslands, wetlands and butterflies are threatened in Europe. The report says the increasing use of land for farming — along with climate change, tourism and poor land management — are to blame for the loss of biodiversity across the 27-nation bloc.
Cyclists transform into mobile pollution sensorsJune 30th, 2009 LONDON - Pedestrians and cyclists in urban areas of the UK are being transformed into mobile pollution sensors, as part of a Government-backed scheme to monitor air quality. According to a report by Sky News, researchers, led by a team at Imperial College London, will trial three new types of sensors on people, vehicles and traffic islands to measure traffic emissions and noise pollution.
New method opens door for highly sensitive biosensors and fast photodetectorsApril 20th, 2009 WASHINGTON - An international team of scientists has reported an innovative method for controlling light on the nanoscale by adopting tuning concepts from radio-frequency technology, which opens the door for antenna-based applications, including highly sensitive biosensors and extremely fast photodetectors. These applications could play an important role in future biomedical diagnostics and information processing.
Butterflies use wings to send both 'sexy' and 'repulsive' signalsApril 2nd, 2009 WASHINGTON - The eyespots of some butterflies serve to both attract mates and ward off predators, according to new research by Yale University biologists. The researchers say that butterflies seem able to both attract mates and ward off predators by using different sides of their wings.
Butterfly wings can attract mates - or repel predatorsApril 2nd, 2009 WASHINGTON - Butterflies can entice potential mates or repel predators by using different sides of their wings, according to new research. Reconciling these two contradictory functions has been one of nature's ancient dilemmas, said Jeffrey Oliver, post-doctoral associate in Yale University department of ecology and evolutionary biology and co-author of the study.
Nanotubes spun into threads open new possibilities in communicationsMarch 16th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Taking already proven technology to grow carbon nanotubes of record lengths, researchers have now found new applications in communications for these fibres by spinning them into strong threads. David Mast, an associate professor of physics at the University of Cincinnati's (UC) McMicken College of Arts and Sciences, took a 25-micron carbon nanotube thread and created a dipole antenna using double-sided transparent tape and silver paste.
Fruit flies use evolved antennae to detect wind directionMarch 13th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Scientists at Caltech University, US, have discovered that fruit flies have evolved a specialized population of neurons in their antennae that let them know not only when the wind is blowing, but also the direction from which it is coming. The behavior of fruit flies in the face of a stiff breeze is remarkable in and of itself, according to David J.
Hind wings help butterflies evade predatorsJanuary 8th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Hind wings help butterflies and moths evade predators by taking swift turns. 'To escape a predator, you don't have to be fast, you just have to be more erratic,' said Tom Eisner, who co-authored a new study on the subject.