Monday, July 8, 2013

Milky Way, Andromeda collided 10bn yrs ago?

New Theory Signals We May Be Wrong About Gravity


London: Our Milky Way smashed into its neighbouring Andromeda galaxy around 10 billion years ago, European astronomers suggest. 
    Previous studies have suggested that our galaxy is set to crash into Andromeda in 3-4 billion years, and that this will be the first time such a collision has taken place. 
    However, now a European team of astronomers led by Hongsheng Zhao of the University of St Andrews propose that the two star systems collided some 10 billion years ago and that our understanding of gravity is fundamentally wrong. 
    This would neatly explain the observed structure of the two galaxies and their satellites, something that has been difficult to account for until now, researchers said. The Milky Way, made up of about 200 billion stars, is part of a group of galaxies called the Local Group. Astrophysicists often theorize that most of the mass of the Local Group is invisible, made of socalled dark matter. 
    Zhao and his team argue that at present the only way to successfully predict the total gravitational pull of any galaxy or small galaxy group, before measuring the motion of stars and gas in it, is to make use of a model first proposed by Professor Mordehai Milgrom of the Weizmann Institute in Israel in 1983. This modified gravity theory (Modified Newtonian Dynamics or MOND) describes how gravity behaves differently on the largest scales, diverging from the predictions made by Newton and Einstein, researchers said. 
    Zhao and his colleagues have for the first time used this theory to calculate the motion of Local Group galaxies. Their work suggests that the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies had a close encounter about 10 billion years ago. 
    If gravity conforms to the conventional model on the largest scales then taking into account the supposed additional pull of dark matter, the two galaxies would have merged. 
    “Dark matter would work like honey: in a close encounter, the Milky Way and Andromeda would get stuck together, figuratively speaking,” said team member Pavel Kroupa from Bonn University. 
    “But if Milgrom’s theory is right, then there are no dark particles and the two large galaxies could have simply passed each other thereby drawing matter from each other into long thin tidal arms,” said Dr Benoit Famaey from Observatoire Astronomique de Strasbourg. "New little galaxies would then form in these arms, a process often observed in the present-day universe," added team member Fabian Lueghausen, also from Bonn. 
    “The only way to explain how the two galaxies could come close to each other without merging is if dark matter isn't there. Observational evidence for a past close encounter would then strongly support the Milgromian theory of gravity,” Zhao said. PTI

CLOSE ENCOUNTER: Andromeda galaxy

Friday, June 14, 2013

Two days on, hurt elephant collapses again in Mulund

Bijlee Had Been Working Non-Stop For 51 Years

Vijay Singh TNN 


Mumbai: An injured elephant, Bijlee, which had collapsed on Tuesday near Wockhardt hospital in Mulund, collapsed once again on Thursday. Animal rights activists have found out that Bijlee had been continuously working for her owner for the last 51 years without any break. She is 54 years old and ailing. 
    Since her collapse on Tuesday, when Bijlee had to be lifted with a crane, the elephant was undergoing treatment for a serious maggot injury and fatigue. 
    “Bijlee’s case is typical of what other elephants in the city face. They are forced to beg, work at weddings and other religious ceremonies by their masters. And when they become too old to carry on, they collapse like this,’’ said activist Ganesh Nayak of the NGO Animals Matter To Me (AMTM). 
    AMTM has now taken a written undertaking from Bijlee’s owner that for the next four months, the elephant will be under the NGO’s care so that she can regain her health. 
    The elephant had first collapsed on Tuesday due to the maggot injury in the hind leg. Even as she was being treated and fed fruits like bananas, she once again collapsed on Thursday. A crane had to be arranged to lift up Bijlee. “Despite being a Schedule 1 protected species under the Wild Life (Protection) Act, elephants are often ill-treated and made to beg in Mumbai, Thane and Navi Mumbai. The authorities must ensure that this does not happen,” said Nayak. He added that the official permit and related documents for Bijlee’s ownership had expired five years ago. 
    AMTM is spending around Rs 1,500 per day for the elephant’s medical care and food. “There is a Bombay high court order that restricts the entry of elephants into Mumbai, Thane and Navi Mumbai. But mahouts openly flout this order. We appeal to the state forest department to come up with a fool-proof plan to stop this cruel exploitation,” said AMTM veterinarian, Dr Ankita Pathak. 
    Atent has been put up in Mulund to house the elephant in order to carry out her medical treatment.

The 54-year-old elephant is being treated for maggot injuries on her leg and fatigue