Friday, October 21, 2011

New AMU Centre in Maharashtra

Maharashtra Minorities Affairs Minister Mohammed Arif Naseem Khan today said efforts are on to finalise a 260-acre plot for setting up a centre of Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) at Khultabad taluka near Aurangabad.
Khan said the centre has decided to set up five centres of the university all over the country, including Maharashtra.
"A Rs 25-crore fund has been sanctioned and a suitable plot for setting up the centre is being searched. The suitable plot is situated at Sulibhanjan, 25 km away from Aurangabad," he added.
An AMU delegation will come to the state to review and finalise the plot. "After their approval, the proposal will be sent to the Revenue department for clearance," he added.
The minister said there were a lot of vacancies for teachers in primary and secondary urdu medium schools in the state because of which students are facing hurdles.
"Rural development and education department should take details of the number of vacancies from the district collectors and take steps to fill the vacancies. The teachers should also get promotions on time," he added.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

AMU team to visit Aurangabad for proposed AMU Centre

A six-member team, headed by the Vice Chancellor of Aligarh Muslim University, Prof. P. K. Abdul Azis, will visit Aurangabad (Maharashtra) on October 25-27, 2011 to inspect the sites identified by the District Magistrate, Aurangabad for the establishment of AMU Centre.

The team is visiting the district on the request of Prof. Fauzia Khan, Minister of State for Education, Government of Maharashtra, said Dr. Rahat Abrar, Public Relations Officer, AMU.

The other members of the team include Prof. Anwar Jahan Zuberi, Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences and former Vice Chancellor, University of Calicut, Prof. Jawaid Akhtar, Dean, Faculty of Management Studies and Research, Prof. Ekram Husain, Principal, Zakir Husain College of Engineering and Technology, Prof. N. A. K. Durrani, Media Advisor, Prof. M. Saud Alam Qasmi, Former Dean, Faculty of Theology.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

India Says Is Now Third Highest Carbon Emitter

India's environment minister said on Monday the country could not have high economic growth and a rapid rise in carbon emissions now that the nation was the number three emitter after China and the United States.
Jairam Ramesh's comments come as negotiators from nearly 200 governments meet in the northern Chinese port city of Tianjin. The U.N. talks aim to reach agreement on what should follow the current phase of the Kyoto Protocol, the key treaty on climate change, which expires in 2012.
Indian per-capita emissions are still low but demand for energy is rising as the middle-class buys more cars, TVs and better housing. Much of that energy comes from coal oil and gas, the main sources for planet-warming carbon dioxide.
But Ramesh said India's rush for wealth could not come at the expense of the environment.
Officials said his comments are the first time a government minister has said India has overtaken Russia as the third-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions.
"We will unilaterally, voluntarily, move on a low-carbon growth path. We can't have 8-9 percent GDP growth and high-carbon growth," Ramesh told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in the Nepalese capital.
"It has to be low-carbon 8 percent, 9 percent growth and that is the objective that we have set for ourselves," he said.
Poorer nations are now the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions and many big developing countries have taken steps to curb the growth of their emissions but say they won't agree on absolute cuts, fearing this will hurt their economies.
India weathered the global financial crisis better than most, and is setting its sights on economic growth of almost 10 percent over the coming years. Its economy currently grows at around 8.5 per cent.
"We are the third largest emitter of the greenhouse gases in the world ... China is number one at 23 percent, the United States is second at about 22 percent and India is number three at about five percent."

GREENER PATH
In India, any talk of a low-carbon economy was once seen as politically very risky, given the economic costs involved. But Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in January asked a panel to begin charting a path to a greener economy. The report is expected by the year-end
Although India has announced a new climate plan which identifies renewable energy, such as solar power, as a key element, coal remains the backbone of energy supply in a country where almost half the 1.1 billion population has no access to electricity.

"The gap between the second and the third (highest emitters) is very very high, but nevertheless we need to be conscious of our contribution," Ramesh said.
The fraught U.N. talks have been hobbled by lack of trust between rich and poor nations over climate funds, demand for more transparency over emissions cut pledges and anger over the size of cuts offered by rich nations.
The risk of the talks stalling is so great that the United Nations has stopped urging nations to commit to tougher pledges to curb carbon emissions, fearing further debate could derail already fraught talks on a more ambitious climate pact.

More Water on Moon!!!


There is a lot more water on the moon than previously believed, according to an analysis of NASA data being published Friday, a finding that may bolster the case for a manned base on the lunar surface.

The discovery grew out of an audacious experiment last year, when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration slammed a spent-fuel rocket into a lunar crater at 5,600 miles an hour, and then used a pair of orbiting satellites to analyze the debris thrown off by the impact. They discovered that the crater contained water in the form of ice, plus a host of other resources, including hydrogen, ammonia, methane, mercury, sodium and silver.
The discovery of significant amounts of water on the m there.

NASA announced its groundbreaking discovery of lunar water last November. Now, a more detailed analysis of the data—the subject of six research papers being published in the journal Science—concludes that there is a lot more water on the moon than anyone expected, about twice the concentrations seen in the Sahara Desert.

"It's really wet," said Anthony Colaprete, co-author of one of the Science papers and a space scientist at NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif. He and his colleagues estimate that 5.6% of the total mass of the targeted lunar crater's soil consists of water ice. In other words, 2,200 pounds of moon dirt would yield a dozen gallons of water.

The presence of water doesn't make it more likely that there ever was life on the moon, as the location studied is among the coldest in the solar system. But the large quantity boosts the case for a manned lunar base from which to launch other interplanetary adventures. Water is crucial because its components, hydrogen and oxygen, are key ingredients for rocket fuel. Oxygen can also be extracted from water to make breathable air.

Finding a water source on the moon has long been a dream, because it could save on the expense of transporting it from earth. A bottle of water on the moon would run about $50,000, according to NASA, because that is what it costs, per pound, to launch anything to earth's nearest neighbor.
Scientists have discovered significant amounts of water on the moon, a finding that may bolster the case for establishing a manned base on the lunar surface. Lee Hotz has details. Plus, who owns the moon? And why stocks were so volatile today.

The U.S. likely won't be involved in manned voyages to the moon anytime soon. President Barack Obama recently canceled a NASA program to return astronauts to the lunar surface a decade from now. The agency, however, is working on the grander, longer-term prize of a manned trip to Mars.
Jack Pfaller/NASA
NASA's Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite and its Centaur booster rocket crashes into the moon in this artist's illustration.

But other countries are gearing up. China has pledged to land astronauts on the moon by 2025, and India has plans to do the same by 2020. Japan wants to establish an unmanned moon base in a decade, potentially setting the stage for a manned mission later. So far, only the U.S. has sent astronauts to the moon.

NASA chose its impact site carefully. Because of the tilt of the moon's axis, the floors of large craters at either pole haven't received direct sunlight for billions of years. NASA's target was a crater, Cabeus, near the southern pole.

Cabeus is a cosmic trap. Any material that lands there sticks. "There's almost no energy to warm up the molecules, so that they can't bounce off again," said G. Randall Gladstone, co-author of one of the Science papers and a planetary scientist at the nonprofit Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.

Dr. Gladstone and others believe that Cabeus contains cosmic material that has accumulated over a billion years or more. Scientists know that most of the moon is almost entirely dry. But some remote observations had suggested that water might be present at cold-trap regions of the moon.

The quantity of water discovered was 50% greater than NASA's initial estimates. Other measurements suggest there's even a "lunar permafrost" covering about 30% of the southern polar region of the moon, with ice lying just below the surface.

In its search for lunar water, NASA launched an Atlas V rocket stacked with an upper-stage rocket known as Centaur. Above it sat the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, or LCROSS, roughly the size of a Volkswagen Beetle. Atop that sat another satellite, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO.

The LRO went into moon orbit. Centaur eventually flew toward the Cabeus crater, followed by a hurtling LCROSS. Drained of fuel, Centaur was now the equivalent of an empty soda can 36 feet tall.

It slammed into the crater's "fluffy, snow-covered dirt," scientists said, spewing at least 8,800 pounds of debris, dust and vapor. LCROSS's instruments took measurements on the quantity of water vapor and ice in the plume, then smashed into the moon as well.

The LRO satellite, meanwhile, orbited 30 miles above the moon. Its main task—which it continues to do today—was to create a three-dimensional map of the moon's surface, but it collected data on the impact plume as well.

A surprising amount of the Cabeus dirt, about one-fifth, is a mix of different elements and volatile compounds, including water. The rest is made from the typical components of moon rock, including feldspar and basalt.

How NASA Found Water on the Moon


The scientists also found molecular hydrogen in the soil. "That's interesting because if you want to make rocket fuel you could heat up the soil and hydrogen would come pouring out," said Dr. Gladstone.

The Coaching Menance in India

Nearly 40,000 students arrive in Kota every year from across India, to prepare for the entrance tests to the exclusive Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT).

More than 450,000 students take the IIT exam but only three percent succeed. 

17-year-old Vijay Singh dreams of getting an engineering degree. To fulfill his ambition, he studies morning, noon and night.

"Money can be earned by many other ways, it is not necessary to do IIT for that. IIT is done for respect," he said.

Another student, Suvraj Kumar from Bihar, spends his days in a dingy, fluorescent-lit room in a boys' hostel, sharing it with four others. It's a place to study ten hours a day and sleep a few hours a night. Most importantly, it's just Rs. 2000 a month. Kumar's father went to loan sharks to pay his fees.

"The loan puts pressure that you have to do this. That is why I am moving in that direction," said Suvraj.

Passing the IIT exam has become the ultimate sign of success, and about one-third of those who pass are believed to have studied in Kota.

There are more than 100 institutes in Kota, from fly-by-night, one-teacher operations, to marble-floored six-story institutions that have enviable infrastructure.

One of the first institutes here was started by V.K. Bansal. Struck down by muscular dystrophy, he tutored students for the IIT in his spare time. In 1991, his classes became a full-time operation. Others followed.

At these institutes in Kota, no one is talking about Nobel Prizes or making contributions to science, their dream is more prosaic: a steady job, respectability and, above all, money.


National panel will seek to check diversion of tribal lands


 The National Council for Land Reforms will meet on October 28 to give a thrust to moves to check the diversion of land in tribal areas to private companies, and launch schemes to ensure that every landless person has at least the land to build a house.
The council, chaired by the prime minister, will take a close look at consolidating the laws governing land records and benami transactions to plug violation of ceiling laws.
A key agenda drawn by rural development minister Jairam Ramesh will be to nudge the states to abide by the Supreme Court's Samata judgment of July 1997 banning transfer of land and mining leases to non-tribals in Schedule V areas: an issue which has huge implications for industries in tribal pockets. Sources said the Centre was likely to insist on implementation of the judgment in "letter and spirit".
The council was formed in October 2008 in the wake of a "jal, jungle, zameen" march to the Capital by tribals and others protesting against the usurpation of their land and other resources by outsiders. That the body which comprises 10 chief ministers has finally been activated has to do with the recognition of land as the source of problems plaguing the hinterland and alienation of tribal land due to usurpation by powerful individuals and industrialists, all contributing to the growing menace of naxalism.
The sudden interest in land may be academic, it being a state subject and an intractable political and social issue. However, the council may help renew the focus on land management, especially among tribals. The coming meeting may look to bring about convergence between Centre and states to ensure that policy guidelines do not fall prey to jurisdictional issues.
The Centre will also launch central schemes for homestead rights for homeless rural poor, survey of bhoodan lands, reconciliation of forest and revenue land records, establishment of land tribunals for fast disposal of appeals, survey of common property resources in villages and survey and settlement operations in tribal sub-plan areas.
It will also seek recognition of gram sabhas as competent authority for transfer of tribal land by sale or lease, and for restoration of alienated tribunal lands and for maintenance of land records. Another demand for withdrawal of encroachment cases and minor forest offences may be raised.
Along with the council, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, eager to buy peace with protestors in the run-up to Lok Sabha polls, had also formed a committee to go into the issues of "state agrarian relations and unfinished task in land reforms".
Coming on the back of the urgency across political spectrum to amend the 1894 Land Acquisition Act, the initiative of the rural development ministry is interesting. While the new bill, now with Parliament's standing committee, seeks to ensure better price for farm land, it has drawn criticism from activists who see it as facilitating the sale of land when it should have discouraged it. The focus on land management and tribal land through the brainstorming in the national council will seek to right the perspective.