domenica 19 maggio 2013

news LV

news LV


ANSA: Impregilo: Salini scende sotto 90%

Posted: 17 May 2013 12:44 PM PDT

Costruttore nomina advisor per fusione Vitale, Imi e Natixis

ANSA: Moody's, conti Italia meglio di Spagna

Posted: 17 May 2013 09:17 PM PDT

Belpaese ha piu' tempo per affrontare impedimenti strutturali

ANSA: Cgia,Pa ultima in Ue per tempi pagamenti

Posted: 18 May 2013 02:40 AM PDT

Fatture saldate a 170 giorni contro una media continentale di 61

ANSA: Fiom: in migliaia a Roma, partito corteo

Posted: 18 May 2013 02:40 AM PDT

Manifestazione partita da Piazza della Repubblica

Aljazeera: Iran executes two suspected spies

Posted: 19 May 2013 02:01 AM PDT

Official media announces hanging of two men accused of gathering information for Israeli and US intelligence agencies.

Financial Times: BCC calls for more support for UK exports

Posted: 19 May 2013 02:29 AM PDT

Survey by British Chambers of Commerce shows EU still most popular market for UK exporters, with Central and South America at the bottom of the list

Financial Times: Pakistani politician shot dead by gunmen

Posted: 19 May 2013 03:27 AM PDT

Zehra Shahid Hussain, a member of Imran Khan's reformist party, is shot dead by gunmen ahead of the reopening of 43 polling stations in Karachi

Huffington Post: IceCube Neutrino Observatory Detects Mysterious High-Energy Particles

Posted: 19 May 2013 04:36 AM PDT

By John Matson

Hot on the heels of detecting the two highest-energy neutrinos ever observed, scientists working with a mammoth particle detector buried in ice near the South Pole unveiled preliminary data showing that they also registered the signal of 26 additional high-energy neutrinos. The newfound neutrinos are somewhat less energetic than the two record-setters but nonetheless appear to carry more energy than would be expected if created by cosmic rays hitting the atmosphere—a prodigious source of neutrinos raining down on Earth. The particles thus may point to unknown energetic astrophysical processes deeper in the cosmos.

"The result right now is very preliminary," cautions Nathan Whitehorn of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, who described the new data May 15 during a symposium in Madison on particle astrophysics. "We're not totally certain right now that it's from an astrophysical source." But it is difficult to explain the number and energy of the detected particles by invoking known processes within the solar system. "If this does in fact hold up with more data, and this does turn out to be an astrophysical source, then we'll be able to address some questions in ways that were totally inaccessible before," Whitehorn adds.

IceCube physicists are working to understand the origins of high-energy cosmic rays—charged particles from space that strike Earth—which may bear on the origins of the neutrinos as well. "Basically everything you could think of that would make cosmic rays would make neutrinos at the same time," Whitehorn says. In contrast to neutrinos produced locally when cosmic rays strike the atmosphere, astrophysical neutrinos would originate at the same source as the cosmic rays themselves.

The IceCube Neutrino Observatory makes up for the renowned slipperiness of neutrinos, the lightweight fundamental particles that rarely interact with atoms of matter, by casting a wide net. IceCube consists of more than 5,000 light sensors, buried at depths of up to two kilometers, embedded in enough Antarctic ice to fill several hundred thousand Olympic swimming pools. In such a large volume, one neutrino of the many streaming constantly through space, our bodies and even solid rock occasionally bumps against an atom in the ice, which produces a tiny flash of light.

The properties of the light emitted by a neutrino strike in the IceCube detector, such as the light pattern registered by the sensor array (Is it bloblike or streaky?) as well as the travel direction of the particle (Was it downward from the sky, or upward through Earth?) can reveal which of three known flavors of neutrino was involved and where it came from. Therein lies a key advantage of neutrino astronomy—unlike charged cosmic rays, whose trajectories bend and twist through the cosmos under the influence of magnetic fields, neutral particles such as neutrinos trace straight back to their sources.

From known processes in the atmosphere, researchers expected to register about 10.6 particles over two years with energies measured in the tens or hundreds of tera–electron volts (trillions of electron volts). The 28 detected particles—including the two extremely high-energy particles announced in April—thus indicate an additional neutrino source that has not been accounted for.

So IceCube physicist Naoko Kurahashi Neilson, also of U.W.–Madison, traced the arrival directions of the newfound energetic particles to look for clues to their origins. "What I tried to do is figure out if they point back to anything that might correspond with cosmic-ray production," she says. But perhaps because there were relatively few particles to work with, no strong patterns emerged. "Because we have a lot of events compared to before, but still not many, it's hard to say," she adds. "My conclusion was that there are no identifiable sources at this time."

The researchers used screening techniques to ferret out impostor particles and limit the background noise from atmospheric neutrinos, such as treating the edge of the detector as a red-flag region. A charged particle such as a muon from the atmosphere would light up sensors at the periphery of the IceCube detector as it enters, whereas a neutrino would penetrate cleanly and trigger sensors deep inside the ice. "You don't want things that have come into the detector, you want things that start in the detector," says IceCube physicist Claudio Kopper of U.W.–Madison. Nevertheless, proving that the neutrinos indeed originated in high-energy cosmic processes will take time. "The search is always for the source, and we haven't found that yet," Kopper says. "That would be the smoking gun."



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Huffington Post: Woman Fatally Run Over By Bus At Fort Lauderdale Airport (VIDEO)

Posted: 19 May 2013 04:39 AM PDT

A woman's airport visit to greet an arriving traveler turned deadly when she tripped in a roadway and a charter bus ran over her.

It forced the normally hectic four-lane arrivals section of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport to be shut down for about four hours Saturday. Cars arriving at the airport were redirected to the departures area.

Some fliers said the traffic delays annoyed them, but then they were shaken to hear a woman died.


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Huffington Post: Kim Kardashian Shows A Lot Of Skin, Kate Middleton Art & More Instagrams Of The Week

Posted: 19 May 2013 04:48 AM PDT

This week the celebs were out and about snapping pictures of their busy happenings. Victoria Beckham took an intimate photo with her hubby, David Beckham, while Miranda Kerr shared a racy shot of her latest Vogue shoot. We love how Instagram gives us a look inside the daily lives of our favorite stars, though we were most envious of Beyoncé this week, with an amazing shot of her chocolate Louboutins.

In this post, we've gathered our favorite Instagrams from the past few days. Click through the slideshow below to see Kim Kardashian baring a lot of skin and a regal portrait of Kate Middleton.


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Huffington Post: Jeffrey Loria Actually Takes His Seat At Marlins "Taxpayer" Park

Posted: 19 May 2013 04:50 AM PDT

MIAMI -- The Marlins obviously haven't padded attendance enough through sweet deals like allowing fans over 55 into Thursday games free or giving away select tickets for a $1.25 service charge at select bars.

So on Saturday night, they really ran a risky promotion to beef up their major league-worst crowds.

Jeffrey Loria walked in the house.


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Financial Times: Bailed-out Jamaica in last-chance saloon

Posted: 19 May 2013 05:07 AM PDT

Last month's bailout led by the International Monetary Fund could be the country's final chance to avert an economic catastrophe

Aljazeera: Chinese premier visits India

Posted: 19 May 2013 06:28 AM PDT

Li Keqiang's first foreign trip as prime minister aims to help settle border dispute and boost economic ties with India.

Aljazeera: Jordan eyes role in Israeli-Palestinian talks

Posted: 19 May 2013 09:09 AM PDT

Prime minister says involvement in final settlement discussions will aim at guaranteeing rights of Palestinian refugees.

Financial Times: Polish defence spending set to soar

Posted: 19 May 2013 09:14 AM PDT

Poland is gearing up for its biggest-ever increase in military equipment spending, splashing out $43bn on contracts over the next decade

Aljazeera: Nadal and Serena triumph in Rome

Posted: 19 May 2013 09:51 AM PDT

Rafael Nadal brushes away Roger Federer to secure seventh Italian Open title as Serena breezes past Victoria Azarenka.

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