Showing posts with label Unsolved. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unsolved. Show all posts

Monday

Third Series of Paranormal Activity Hits UK Box Office

It is debuting that at number one with takings of £55m. This horror story is based on Unexplained supernatural theme like "Forth Kind", which purports to present discovered footage of things going bump in the night, is also at the top of the US film charts.

By pre-empting the Hallowe'en weekend, it sneaks ahead of on several other horror releases. Due out this week are Demons Never Die, The Silence & a re-release of 1984 comedy classic Ghostbusters. But they face strong competition from Stephen Spielberg's blockbuster retelling of Tintin, US civil rights drama The Help early release.

Paranormal Activity 3 is strong debut knocked spy spoof Johnny English: Reborn down to second place in this week's chart.

It made £2 million over the weekend, putting it comfortably above the star-studded disaster movie Contagion, which was a new entry at number three. But on a screen-by-screen basis, little separated the two films.

Rowan Atkinson's secret agent took an average of £3,718 on each of the 552 screens it was showing on, while Contagion's receipts were £3,711 on 398 screens.

The only other new entry in this week's chart was literary adaptation We Need To Talk About Kevin, which took £492,297 to land in seventh place.

Meanwhile, The Smurfs is the longest-running hit on the chart, hanging on to 14th place in its 16th week of release, with total box office takings of £16.7 million.

Thursday

The future of smallsats: The smallest satellites of the world going to ready for the very next generation

The big news is the small satellite front of the world going to ready for the very next generation. From super secret agencies & the U.S. military to academia & private firms, as well as world space agencies & NASA, ultra small satellites are the big thing.

Cornell University has begun to delve into a postage stamp size satellite on a chip design, called Sprite, envisioning a swarm of these tiny probes exploring planetary atmospheres for organic compounds.

Call them a powerful force in the universe. Smallsats have already shown their ability to monitor disasters, study Earth's environment & support agriculture, cartography & earth science missions.

The future of smallsats, there will be growth, new missions, & new ways of working together, said Bille,expressing his own views & not speaking for Booz Allen Hamilton policy. CubeSats are like the personal computer of this industry.

Hunsaker's personal crystal ball predicts networked satellites with individual IP addresses controlled through the Internet & providing individualized positioning, communications, social & multimedia capability.Perhaps just like personal computing & cell phones that have common utility among individual consumers today, smallsats will also follow that trend, said colleague Tom Hunsaker, also an associate at Booz Allen Hamilton.

Bille concluded: The age of microspacecraft is on solid ground now. There's a definite trend toward putting small things together to do big accomplishments.

Wednesday

One hundrade years old man completes marathon

Fauja Singh successfully completed the Toronto Waterfront Marathon in just over 8 hours.

Singh took up running 11 years ago at the age of 89 after his wife & son had died & is said to train every day by running 10 miles. He attributes his extraordinary fitness to drinking tea, eating ginger curry & being happy.

Tuesday

Miracle of creator: Man surfs on backside of a big white shark !

Doug Niblack was surfing when he hit something hard & found himself footing on the back of a shark.

[It was stunning frightening just seeing the shape appear out of nothing & just being under me, he said. Looking down at his feet Doug could see the shark's dorsal fin in front of him & a full 10ft of the shark's back. & the fin coming out of the water. It was just like the movie.]

Thursday

New innovation is coming up: The Particular Brain Fold That Helps People Distinguish between Imagination and Reality

Did you actually open the refrigerator a few minutes ago, or were you just thinking about it & imagined that you did? If you can remember correctly, you might have an extra fold in your brain.

A fold in the front brain called the paracingulate sulcus, or PCS, can apparently help people more accurately remember whether something was imagined or really happened, or which person actually said something. It's one of the final structural folds to develop before birth, & its size varies greatly in the general population, according to researchers at the University of Cambridge. People with the fold were significantly better at memory tasks than people without the fold, the researchers say.

The study, which was published in the Journal of Neuroscience, involved 53 healthy adult volunteers with no reported history of cognitive difficulties, according to a Cambridge news release. & everyone thought they had a good memory before the tests.

Participants were chosen based on MRI scans that showed a clear presence or absence of the PCS fold. Then they were presented with word pairs & half-pairs — like “Laurel & Hardy” or “Laurel & ?” In the second test, they were asked to imagine the other word, & then either they or the study leader actually said the word aloud.

Then they had a memory test, where they tried to remember whether they had actually seen the second word or just imagined it, & which person said the word out loud, Cambridge says. People with a PCS remembered correctly a lot more often.

This work has implications for some mental disorders like schizophrenia, in which the line between reality & imagination is unclear to the patient. In other studies, schizophrenic patients reportedly have had reduced PCS areas, according to Jon Simons of Cambridge’s Experimental Psychology department & Behavioural & Clinical Neuroscience Institute.

What to do about this isn’t clear — because the fold happens so shortly before birth, it’s not something that can be physically changed. But understanding the PCS’ role in memory & reality perception could have some impact on drug treatments for mental disorders.

Explaination: UFO cases that generate buzz

UFO investigators see references to rocket ships, aliens & astronauts that go back to the days when humans first put chisel & paintbrush to rock. More than 6,000 years later, objects that are unidentified — at least at first — continue to appear in the skies & generate buzz.

Take, for example, the blazing pinwheel that appeared in Norwegian skies in December 2009, shown here. The sight sparked speculation that aliens were sending earthlings a signal. Other researchers speculated — & the Russian military later confirmed — that a missile failed.

NBC space analyst James Oberg says the incident fits into a long tradition of UFO sightings over Russia that are caused by secret military & space activities. Even when there's a prosaic explanation for the sightings, they can provide useful information about covert activities.

According to an organization that tracks UFO reports, this summer has been an especially busy period for UFO sightings. The Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) noted that sightings increased over the past six weeks, with some states more than doubling their normal numbers.

UFO sightings on the increase

According to an organization that tracks UFO reports, this summer has been an especially busy period for UFO sightings. The Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) noted that sightings increased over the past six weeks, with some states more than doubling their normal numbers.

Are we on the cusp of an alien invasion? Or maybe people just have more time on their hands to spot —&report — strange things in the sky?

MUFON International Director Clifford Clift told Life's Little Mysteries that he's not sure what to make of the data at this point. It could be the start of something big, or it could merely be a computer glitch that accidentally counted some reports twice. Another possibility is that we're simply in the midst of a "UFO flap," one of many periodic increases in sightings over the years.

There are several reasons UFOs might appear in flaps, or clusters. One is that objects in the sky are usually seen by many people, especially when they appear over urban areas. UFOs typically don't hover close to Earth or in someone's back yard; instead, they are often sighted high in the sky — just far enough away so that we can't see details or get sharp photos.

Thus, whatever a particular UFO really is — a plane, a comet, an extraterrestrial spacecraft or something else — that one object or strange light in the sky could trigger hundreds, or even thousands, of reports.&even reports of the same object will probably differ depending on the reporter's perspective.

So if there were hundreds of UFO reports in a state during a given period, it's important to know how those reports were categorized because it might mean hundreds of different UFOs were sighted by single individuals, or that one UFO was sighted by hundreds of people.

There are also psychological&social explanations. Sightings are often fueled by the mass media; people read about mysterious things or see TV shows about them,&interest or concern about them spreads from person to person. It's not that anyone is hoaxing or making up sightings: Research has shown that if you tell people what to look for (a phenomenon called "priming"), people will often see what they are looking for — whether those things exist or not.

As Clift noted, "It's likely that the media&(alien-themed) movies that are coming out, like 'Apollo 18 '&'Paul,' are piquing people's interest in UFOs." People hear about UFOs,&for a while they tend to look at the sky more often, wondering if they might have their own sighting.&precisely because people are spending more time looking at the sky, they will for the first time notice (normal) lights&objects that have always been there.

So it may not be that UFOs are actually appearing more often, but instead we're noticing them more. An identical process can be found in the medical field, where an increase in reports of a disease may not represent an increase in the actual number of cases, but instead reflects more public awareness of the disease or better screening techniques. In other words, scientists know that just because more people report a phenomenon does not necessarily mean the phenomenon is occurring more often.

Why might UFOs be seen more often in the summer months? One possibility is that people spend more time outdoors; we spend warm nights outside at parties&barbecues, thus we have more opportunity to notice things in the sky than in the winter when we're inside watching television. That said, Clift pointed out that his organization doesn't normally see such dramatic seasonal increases in reports.

Whether the increase in sightings is rooted in reality, a computer glitch or psychological&social influences remains to be seen. One thing is certain: This is not the first time that UFO reports have increased,&it won't be the last.

 
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