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Κυριακή 12 Ιουνίου 2016

''ΜΠΑΧΑΛΟ'' ΤΗΝ ΕΚΑΝΑΝ ΟΙ ΧΟΥΛΙΓΚΑΝΣ ΤΗΝ ΜΑRΣΕΙΓ VIDEO




Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 11 Ιουν 2016
A l'approche du match à hauts risques au Vélodrome de Marseille entre l'Angleterre et la Russie (ce soir 21h), les violences se succèdent dans la ville entre supporteurs et forces de l'ordre. Un nouveau seuil a été franchi dans la violence cet après-midi, avec une série de heurts entre supporters des deux camps et contre les forces de l'ordre. Vers 19h30, les marins-pompiers avaient dénombré 13 blessés dans le centre-ville. Un supporteur anglais se trouve entre la vie et la mort. Un reportage pour le JT de France 2.



An England fan caught up in clashes at the end of the Three Lions' game against Russia has told Sky News he thinks there is "definitely going to be a repeat" of the violence.
England supporters were forced to flee from the Stade Velodrome in Marseille shortly after the end of the Euro 2016 match as Balaclava-clad thugs broke through a line of stewards.
Mark Leader, who was inside the French stadium on Saturday night, told Sky News Russian supporters started "smacking everyone they could".
He said: "We had to run, jump down seats, (we) jumped over a fence, people (were) jumping 10ft just landing on their heads and their backs just trying to get away. People just had to run.
"It was pretty frightening. If you didn't get away, you got hit, it was pretty simple. So people just ran."
Mr Leader said he was certain the violence was planned, and added he thinks there will be further clashes next week.
England play Wales in Lens on Thursday - the day after Russia play Slovakia in nearby Lille, which is around 25 miles away.
"There's definitely going to be a repeat," Mr Leader told Sky's Siobhan Robbins.
"The police don't really do anything until it all goes off anyway.
"If Russia are there, if England are there …The French fans are just as bad as well, it's definitely going to go off."
The ugly scenes inside the stadium were the climax to three days of disorder in the Mediterranean port city that has left at least one Briton seriously injured and as many as another 20 fans hurt.
Fist fights and bottle throwing between rival supporters caused scenes of mayhem in the run-up to England's opening match of the tournament, with the FA calling on French police to deal with perpetrators swiftly.
The Football Association has condemned the "terrible" conduct of drunken English fans who were involved.
Speaking at a post-match conference, FA spokesman Mark Whittle said the day's events were regrettable.
"The FA is very disappointed about the terrible scenes of disorder and of course condemns such behaviour," he said.
"It is now in the hands of the relevant authorities to identify those involved in trouble and deal with them appropriately and quickly.
"At this time the FA urges England supporters to act in a respectful manner and support England in the right way."
00:05/01:58
Meanwhile, there have also been reports of violence in Nice, where riot police were called to disperse local fans who began to attack Northern Irish supporters ahead of their game against Poland later.
Gary McAllister, chairman of the Northern Ireland supporters' clubs, wrote on Twitter: "Local ultras attacked Polish and NI fans who were mixing well.
"French riot police dispersed locals."
After Wales beat Slovakia 2-1 in their opening match in Bordeaux, the atmosphere was reported to be good-natured.

Παρασκευή 10 Ιουνίου 2016

Shock and Awe: Eels Leap to Deliver Electrifying Attacks

By Mindy Weisberger, Senior Writer | June 8, 2016 07:48am ET





In a "shocking" turn of events, a researcher has discovered that electric eels can intensify their electrical attacks by leaping from the water to make physical contact with animals that threaten them, according to a new study.

By elevating their bodies and connecting "chin-first" with an attacker, the eels deliver a more powerful electrical discharge directly into the animal, rather than dissipating it into the surrounding water.

The finding provides support for a famous but previously contested observation of a dramatic interaction between electric eels and horses dating back to 1800.

A historic illustration depicts Alexander von Humboldt's story of the battle between the horses and electric eels.Credit: PD-US

When 19th-century naturalist Alexander von Humboldt set out to collect electric eels in South America, local fishermen introduced him to the concept of "fishing with horses" — herding 30 hapless horses into the eels' pool to sap their electrical charges so the eels could be gathered safely. According to Kenneth Catania, author of the current study and a professor of biological sciences at Vanderbilt University, Humboldt described the eels leaping into the air and pressing themselves against the horses' bodies to repeatedly deliver powerful shocks. Humboldt wrote that two of the horses drowned, while the others collapsed after emerging from the water.

The account made Humboldt famous, though several of his colleagues scoffed at his discovery, referring to it as "poetically transfigured" and, even more harshly, "tommyrot" (i.e., utter nonsense), according to the authors of the new study. It hasn't helped Humboldt's case that, in the 200 years since his work was published, no similar behavior in eels had been observed.

That is, until now.
Shock treatment

This sequence shows an electric eel attacking a model of an alligator head fitted with LEDs that the eel's electric impulses light up. The sequence runs from the top left to the bottom right.Credit: Kenneth Catania, Vanderbilt University

Catania reported in the study that the eels' leaps were "serendipitously discovered" during an investigation of their predatory behavior while he was using a net with a metal handle and rim to move them between tanks. As the net approached the eels, they leaped forward and upward, connecting their chins with the net's handle and delivering shocks.

The eels performed this attack "from the outset," Catania said in the study. He suggested that their response differed from other behaviors he had observed because they saw the net as a predator rather than as prey. [Photos: Catch a Glimpse of the Reclusive Glowing Green Eel]

Catania rigged the tanks with equipment to measure the voltage and amperage of the eels as they leaped to attack. He found that when they pressed their chins directly to the threatening target, the eels delivered a more powerful shock than if they had discharged electricity into the water. And by leaping higher, the charge was even more effective; since it had farther to travel before exiting into the water, it affected more of the target's body.

That method made sense as a defensive strategy, Catania concluded. A terrestrial predator could hunt eels while only partly submerged, so it might not be deterred if the eel electrified the water around it. But a direct shock would make a much stronger impression, he wrote.

And during the dry season in the Amazon basin where the eels live, much of the water evaporates, leaving the eels with fewer opportunities to retreat, Catania reported. Leaping out of the water comes with risks, but the shocking offense it lets the eels deliver appears to be their best possible defense.


Πέμπτη 9 Ιουνίου 2016

Prosthetic arms inspired by 'Deus Ex' are coming next year

Remember that prosthetic arm, inspired by Metal Gear Solid, that Konami developed for a British amputee? Well, it seems the company has started a trend. Square Enix and Eidos-Montréal have now teamed up with Open Bionics, a specialist in low-cost prosthetics, to develop some designs based on the world of Deus Ex. The franchise delves deep into a possible future where human augmentation is commonplace, changing society and warfare in equal measure. Two arms -- one based on Adam Jensen, the hero of Mankind Divided, another on the wider Deus Ex universe -- will be released next year as royalty-free designs that anyone can use.
Open Bionics has already made prosthetic arms inspired by Iron Man,Frozen and Star Wars. The new designs look more impressive, however; the Adam Jensen arm (below) is full of detail, from its flexing fingers to the rotating wrist. The Titan arm (above), meanwhile, is more stylized with sharp, geometric shapes and angles. Both are colored in gunmetal grey and gold, reflecting the series and its augmented superhero.
Eidos-Montreal and Open Bionics will be showing the arms at multiple game shows including E3 and Gamescom, with a little help from Razer. The company, most known for its gaming keyboards and mice, will be using itsStargazer webcam to track people's movements and show them what it would be like to control an artificial limb. They might not be as lethal as those used by Adam Jensen, but they look the part -- if they perform half as well, they could be attractive to amputees with a passion for the franchise.

Wildfire on the Kamchatka Peninsula

On June 7, 2016, the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the Suomi-NPP satellite captured this natural-color image of a large wildfire burning in Russia near the west coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula. Red outlines indicate hot spots where VIIRS detected warm surface temperatures associated with fires. Smoke from the wildfire was drawn into the circulation of a weak area of low pressure over the Sea of Okhotsk, the University of Wisconsin CIMSS satellite blog noted.Beneath the smoke, a deck of low-level stratus cloud is also visible.


































Volcanoes of Kamchatka
acquired September 12, 2014
In 1996, when the United Nations was considering whether to add the volcanoes of the Kamchatka Peninsula to its list of World Heritage sites, the committee was asked to consider what made those volcanoes more worthy of preservation than the many others around the world. At the time, several volcanoes were already on the list, and three others were under consideration.
The answer was reminiscent of something that explorer Stepan Krasheninnikov pointed out in 1755. “Perhaps there is no other region in the world where so many volcanoes and hot springs are to be found in so small a space as here on Kamchatka,” he wrote in Description of Kamchatka Land. Indeed, the peninsula’s location on the Ring of Fire puts it in one of the most geologically active zones on the planet. There are more than 300 volcanoes on the Kamchatka peninsula, including 29 that are active.
But Kamchatka’s volcanoes are remarkable for more than their numbers. “Geologists classify volcanoes by form and by eruptive habits,” the nominators wrote, “and once again Kamchatka stands out as having the greatest variety of types, more so than any other area and than in any other existing World Heritage site.”
Thanks to clear weather on September 12, 2014, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured a series of images that showcases the geologic diversity of Kamchatka’s volcanoes. This mosaic includes six scenes stitched together from the September 12 flyover. Use the gigapan browser below to explore the image in more detail.

From geographic north to south, the erupting volcanoes are Shiveluch, Bezymianny, Kizimen, Karymsky, and Zhupanovsky.Several volcanoes were erupting simultaneously, sending faint plumes of ash and gas drifting southeast. Smoke from a wildfire burning north of Shiveluch is also visible.
The tallest of the group is Shiveluch, a steep-sloped stratovolcano, that reaches 3,283 meters (10,771 feet) above sea level. The most active is Karymsky, a 1,536-meter (5,039-foot) peak that has erupted regularly since 1996. The Shiveluch and Bezymianny eruptions are both characterized by growing lava domes—thick, pasty lava that forms a mound as it is extruded. Kizimen’s lava is not as viscous as that at Shiveluch and Bezymianny. The intermediate lava forms thick, blocky flowsbordered by tall levees. Rocks and ash frequently fall from Kizimen’s summit and the fresh lava flow on its eastern flank, creating dark, fan-shaped debris deposits.
Kamchatka’s volcanoes are also defined by their inaccessibility. Fewer than 350,000 people live on the peninsula, with most of them in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. Broad swaths of the peninsula lack roads, and helicopters are the only way to get around in some areas.
The logistical challenges associated with installing and maintaining ground-based sensors make satellites a necessity for monitoring Kamchatka’s volcanoes. “There are several volcanic phenomena that lend themselves to remote detection and monitoring: eruption plumes laden with ash, sulfur dioxide, and water; low-temperature anomalies such as crater lakes and fumaroles; high-temperature anomalies, such as lava flows, pyroclastic flows, and lava domes; and deformation of the volcanic edifice,” explained Michael Abrams, a NASA scientist and the leader of the ASTER science team, in a chapter of theEncyclopedia of Remote Sensing.

Τετάρτη 8 Ιουνίου 2016

Technology partnership to provide vital new information to coastal engineers

Technology partnership to provide vital new information to coastal engineers

June 08, 2016
The National Oceanography Centre (NOC) has entered into a two year Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) with Marlan Maritime Technologies Ltd to develop innovative remote sensing services for the survey of intertidal zones.
The partnership builds on the existing collaborative R&D between Marlan, the NOC and the University of Liverpool which included a successful ERDF-funded collaboration as part of the University’s Centre for Global Eco-Innovation (CGE) and resulted in a technique (previously prototyped by the NOC’s Paul Bell being validated and refined by the Marlan sponsored CGE researcher Cai Bird during his PhD) being patented. The new project will see NOC’s Dr Paul Bell and KTP Associate Dr Cai Bird work with Marlan over the next two years to develop and then test new techniques that will ultimately provide improvements to the quality and efficiency of delivering data services to the coastal engineering industry. These services will enable more cost effective monitoring, design and construction of coastal and maritime infrastructure.


The data is collected by Marlan using its remote sensing platform which includes a standard ship’s radar to visualise the location of the ‘waterline’ between wet and dry regions. The rise and fall of the tide and consequent movement of the waterline is used to build up a three-dimensional map of the coastline covered by the tidal ebb and flow – the intertidal areas. This is an old idea dating as far back as World War One using aerial photos, brought right up to date using radars and newly developed robust software algorithms. This allows new maps of the intertidal beach areas to be produced automatically every couple of weeks, and those maps show how the coastline evolves over time. Beach surveys are difficult and expensive to produce, so are rarely performed routinely, and never at the rate this system can achieve. These evolving maps show how and when beaches change; providing the information needed for the management of key stretches of coastline or erosion hotspots.


The services are expected to appeal to the UK’s 50 coastal councils, as well as, for example, operators of ports, coastal power stations, desalination plants, transport infrastructure, sewage treatment works, coastal engineering consultancies, research groups and military sites. The patent also covers Europe, Australia and the USA, and so an additional 1.1 million km of coastline can be considered for potential sites.


Alex Sinclair, Managing Director of Marlan Maritime Technologies Ltd commented “Currently, we can offer this service to just a handful of customers a year, but by the end of the project we expect to be able to meet the needs of potentially hundreds and then thousands of users worldwide. Everyone we talked with is excited at the prospect of having data like this which will provide deeper understanding of the processes acting in complex coastal domains. We are delighted to be providing this information, which is such a valuable tool for protecting people, places and profits in maritime environments."


Kevin Forshaw, Associate Director, Innovation and Enterprise at the NOC commented “The NOC is confident that this partnership will see the benefits of coastal knowledge transferred from the science community to UK industry, and probably beyond, for the good of all coastal communities.”
Dr Paul Bell added “The ability to conduct intertidal beach surveys every couple of weeks using a robust and automated remote sensing system will provide an unprecedented window on the way key areas of coastline respond to storms, recover in calmer weather, and evolve following any coastal engineering works. This Knowledge Transfer Partnership with Marlan will massively accelerate and facilitate the shift of this cutting edge development from the realms of a research project to a fully-fledged commercial service.”


Prof. Andy Plater, support academic on the KTP from the University of Liverpool, emphasized, “Our success is down to the close research collaboration between the University of Liverpool, NOC and Marlan that emerged from our Centre for Global Eco-Innovation. The KTP will enable us to further develop the outputs of Cai’s PhD research, and is a great example of the commercial and societal impact that can be achieved by connecting world-leading research expertise with the innovative thinking and inspiration of SMEs like Marlan.”


NOC KTP Associate Dr Cai Bird added, "This knowledge transfer partnership represents an excellent and unique opportunity to see the direct implementation of our academic research into commercial systems. I am passionate about the potential for this technology to fill a crucial gap in the nearshore survey industry and look forward to developing and deploying radar survey systems over the duration of this project and beyond." 


The teamThe team
The project is being funded through Innovate UK following a successful joint bid application from the NOC and Marlan.
 

India’s capital city scrambles to tackle its epic pollution problems.

Can Delhi save itself from its toxic air?

India’s capital city scrambles to tackle its epic pollution problems.

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Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty
A brown cloud of pollutants hangs over the outskirts of New Delhi.
On winter nights, New Delhi burns with innumerable fires. Flames flicker along pavements and street corners, where the destitute huddle to stay warm and cook their suppers, while night watchmen stand guard next to their own small blazes outside private homes. The rising plumes of smoke mingle with exhaust and dust stirred up by overloaded trucks that rumble down roads blanketed in fog. The mixture melds into a nearly opaque substance that leaves a metallic taste on the tongue. Overhead, there is not a single star to be seen.

The grime is the most obvious part of the pollution that plagues India's capital region and its 25 million people. Less discernible are the airborne particles smaller than 2.5 micrometres in diameter, known as PM
2.5 — the most harmful size range. Just a fraction of the diameter of a human hair and astoundingly aerodynamic, PM2.5 can penetrate deep into the body, reaching the recesses of the lungs. The particles are a nasty amalgam of pollutants both natural and increasingly anthropogenic, generated from sources within the city's boundaries and hundreds of kilometres away. The World Health Organization (WHO) declares that no amount of this pollutant is safe to breathe.With dawn comes a hint of warmth, but the sunlight remains hidden by haze. A hopelessly optimistic sign — “Make Delhi Pollution-Free” — is lashed to a metal cage that protects a young sapling, its withered leaves caked with dust.
Two years ago, Delhi had the highest PM2.5 levels of 1,600 cities surveyed by the WHO. Last month, in an updated and expanded inventory1, Delhi retained its status as the most polluted of the world's largest cities, with an annual PM2.5 average of 122 micrograms per cubic metre (μg m−3) — three times the permitted Indian standard and greatly exceeding the WHO standard of 10 μg m−3. The pollution, which comes mainly from combustion of wood, coal, gas, diesel and crop residue, is worst in the winter, when wood-burning peaks and cold-weather inversions trap pollutants close to the ground and cause spikes in the daily average of above 600 μg m−3. Late last year, the levels prompted the Delhi High Court to declare the city a “gas chamber”.
The observed PM2.5 amounts are estimated to cause as many as 16,000 premature deaths and 6 million asthma attacks2 in Delhi annually, shaving around 6 years off the life expectancy of city residents3. Although the WHO data have brought attention to Delhi, the problem is global: according to the agency, particulate pollution affects more people than any other pollutant on Earth.

Air patrol

Delhi, like Beijing, Mexico City, London and Los Angeles, is struggling to reduce pollution, even as its population swells. Researchers and the government are trying to construct a detailed breakdown of the different pollution sources, and authorities are experimenting with ways to mitigate the damage, from restricting when people can drive to shutting down power plants. But India faces unique challenges. Its population is concentrated in the north, an area geographically prone to pollution, and its people have aspirations for development. There is a growing middle class hungry to own cars, and one-fifth of the population merely wants access to basic electricity. Those facts threaten to compromise Delhi's efforts to improve environmental quality.
“The reality is that the pollution in Delhi is very complex. There are a lot of sources. It varies from season. It varies by time of day. It varies by neighbourhood,” says Namit Arora, a member of the pollution task force of the Delhi Dialogue Commission, a government initiative in the city. But he insists that the city can make progress. “We can act, and we need to act, on multiple fronts simultaneously.”
Delhi is trying to do just that. Long before it was saddled with the mantle of having some of the world's worst air, the city and the Supreme Court of India took several steps to alleviate pollution. Vehicle emissions came down in the early 2000s, thanks to decisions to remove lead from petrol, improve vehicle-emission standards and pull old commercial vehicles off the roads. Around the same time, the city implemented a monumental conversion of the public-transportation fleet, including buses and the city's zippy three-wheel auto-rickshaws, away from gasoline and diesel engines to ones fuelled by cleaner compressed natural gas. In 2002, the Delhi Metro subway system opened its first line, improving public-transportation options. All but two of the coal-based thermal power plants in the city were converted to natural gas, and many industries, including brick kilns, were moved beyond Delhi's bounds.
These efforts reaped big gains, yet they have been offset by the incessant growth of the megacity. Since 2000, Delhi's population has nearly doubled. And the number of vehicles has almost tripled, from 3 million to more than 9 million, according to the government.
Determining what creates hazardous PM2.5 is a crucial step in reducing it, yet past studies have varied markedly because they have used different methods and relied on limited data. Filling some of the gaps is a report released in January by the Indian government and the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur4, which took a more comprehensive approach to investigating the causes of Delhi's poor air quality. Some sources contribute throughout the year, such as pollution from vehicles, diesel generators, construction dust, biomass and coal combustion and industries. Others are seasonal: dry summer dust blowing in from nearby deserts, autumn crop burning and Diwali holiday fireworks, and the warming fires that make the city glow come winter (see 'Poison stew').
Source: Fig. 6 in Ref. 4
Vehicle emissions are constant, and with all those belching tailpipes in sight every day, they often capture the attention of pollution-fighting officials. In January, Delhi implemented an odd–even programme that allowed car owners to drive only every other day, as dictated by their vehicle's number plate. When the 15-day experiment came to a close, a few hundred Delhiites took to the streets to praise the initiative and rally for continued efforts. Families, musicians, passionate teenagers, costumed 20-somethings and activists all gathered near Jantar Mantar, a cluster of monuments built in the 1700s to study skies that were then crowded with visible stars. But over the temporary stage set up for the event, an air monitor showed that PM2.5 levels were hovering around 184 μg m−3, a level that warrants staying indoors to reduce exposure.
Although levels remained well above acceptable during the odd–even experiment, several researchers declared it a success in both lowering emissions and, perhaps more importantly, raising public awareness. “People are willing to display the civic sense we thought didn't exist here,” says Arora, who was at the demonstration wearing a shirt emblazoned with the words “Help Delhi Breathe” and an image that was half flower bloom, half gas mask.
Still, government officials and researchers admit that this approach has limited long-term potential because of how difficult it is to enforce the ban. During January's trial, people were already talking about buying a second car as a workaround. After the odd–even effort was repeated in April, the government estimated that there were half a million more vehicles on the roads than during January's trial, according to local media, which suggests that people were skirting the rules.
The odd–even policy gets a lot of attention, “but that is not the solution”, says Ashwani Kumar, who was secretary of the environment of the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) at the time. “A typical democratic society cannot depend on a 'don'ts' approach,” he says. Making it more expensive and inconvenient to drive a car, for example, would naturally spur people to use public transportation. “It has to be based on incentive and disincentive; otherwise, it's easy to find loopholes and descend into a quagmire of corruption.”

Going public

Although parts of Delhi's public-transportation system are impressive, others are lacking. The Delhi Metro is an efficient, extensive electric-rail system with more than 200 kilometres of lines, and it continues to expand. But the Indian media has reported that the government's plans to increase the number of buses in Delhi have been plagued by delays, and that a pilot programme for dedicated bus lanes was met with so much public resistance that the lanes are now being dismantled.
“If the public-transportation system is robust, and it's made safe and comfortable and reliable, people will automatically switch,” says Sarath Guttikunda, director of the independent research group UrbanEmissions.info, which is registered in Delhi.
Nudging people onto buses and subways will deal with only part of the transportation pollution problem. Although vehicles as a group contribute up to about one-quarter of PM2.5 in Delhi5, the fraction generated by heavy-duty freight trucks is twice that of cars. To ease the impact of the estimated tens of thousands of trucks that move through the city daily, the Supreme Court has implemented new taxes on them, and Delhi is adding bypass highways.
The other crucial ingredient is the type of fuel that goes into vehicles. Given that diesel engines produce much more particulate matter than ones that run on petrol, the rising percentage of luxury diesel cars is a troubling trend. To try to stem the sales, the government temporarily banned registration of diesel vehicles with larger engines earlier this year, according to Indian media.
Delhi's emissions standards for vehicles are more stringent than those in the rest of India, but they still lag far behind those in Europe. And the discrepancy between city and national standards means that many vehicles operating in Delhi spew emissions from lower standard vehicles and fuel obtained beyond city limits.
Yet all this attention on vehicles is somewhat misplaced because they are not the biggest source of particulate pollution. “If the goal is to reduce PM, we need to go beyond traffic,” says atmospheric scientist Pallavi Pant of the University of Massachusetts–Amherst, who studies Delhi's air quality.
Chris Stowers/Panos
Ever-present construction and smoke-belching vehicles are major contributors to air pollution.
Just a few steps away from the busy roads, on a broken stretch of pavement, a woman tends a cooking pot perched on three stones, a wood fire burning below. Across South Asia, more than one-quarter of the outdoor air pollution comes from these traditional stoves6. In urban Delhi, only about one in ten households still relies on smoky stoves that use wood, dung or kerosene, but they still contribute a substantial part of the city's PM2.5 burden. One study found7 that the emissions from fires used domestically for cooking and warmth rival those from the electricity sector, from brick kilns and from industry.
Delhi's government and the country's Supreme Court have tried to limit some of these sources, but there is one major factor that they cannot control: the city's location, far from the cleansing breezes of the ocean. From the west, smoke from agricultural crop burning and dust storms from the Thar Desert blow into the city. And from the north, cold fronts sweep down from the Himalayas, locking pollutants in with winter weather inversions. When it comes to air pollution, the city is “geographically disadvantaged”, says M. P. George, an environmental scientist with the DPCC.
Although Delhi can't fend off desert dust storms, it can control construction dust generated by its never-ending building spree. Officials are attempting to decrease air pollution from construction by improving and enforcing rules, such as requirements to cover building sites and trucks to stop dust from blowing away.
The problems that Delhi faces also afflict other cities in the region, creating a vast brown cloud that in satellite images seems to smother much of South Asia. About one-third of Delhi's particulate pollution comes from sources outside the city, according to the IIT-Kanpur study4.
“It's not just a Delhi problem; it's a regional problem,” says Milind Kandlikar, who researches development and environmental issues at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. India's northern cities have come to dominate the WHO's list of most-polluted cities, with half of the top 20 all located in the region. Delhi's efforts will falter unless the rest of the country also steps up, says Kandlikar. “Everybody else has to be involved. This is not going to go away easily.”
But political conflicts are threatening the chances for broad-scale pollution-control efforts. There is currently a fractious tension between the national government, run by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party, and Delhi's ruling Aam Aadmi Party — a situation that hinders efforts to develop a unified strategy to deal with air pollution. In lieu of any cooperation, the Supreme Court continues to have an integral role in improving air quality by directing the government to restrict emissions from sources such as vehicles and power plants. “My reading is that the politicians are often grateful to the courts for acting, because many of these measures are unpopular,” says Arora.
With so many sources of air pollution, city officials would ideally like to know which programmes will work best — so the Delhi Dialogue Commission task force recruited IBM Research–India to develop computer models to forecast pollution levels.
“The idea is to create a simulation framework which will allow them to evaluate different policies and see their impact before they actually implement them,” says Ashish Verma, a senior manager with IBM's Smarter Planet team in Delhi. Although the modelling is still in progress, early results reinforce how important the weather is. This suggests that air-pollution controls might be most effective if they take advantage of specific weather conditions, for example, by closing power plants or limiting traffic during the worst pollution-trapping weather inversions.

Citizen action

As it seeks cleaner air, Delhi has to confront the country's desperate desire for development, which includes providing electricity to the roughly 240 million people who still lack it. India pledged to expand its renewable energy capacity aggressively, as part of the national plan that it submitted during the United Nations climate-treaty negotiations last year. But the plan also defends India's right to use fossil fuels, stating that “in order to secure reliable, adequate and affordable supply of electricity, coal will continue to dominate power generation in future”.
Both the climate plan and government officials such as Kumar insist that India need not follow conventional modes of development that rely on fossil fuels. “There is no way we can adopt the technology trajectory of the developed countries who continue to be the biggest polluters in terms of per capita,” Kumar says. But it is not clear whether India will be able to leap-frog past the most polluting forms of energy.
“As it seeks cleaner air, Delhi has to confront the desperate desire for development.”
One encouraging sign in Delhi is that air quality is now part of an active city-wide conversation. Full-page newspaper ads solicit citizen input on odd–even schemes, and the Delhi government has teamed up with the University of Chicago's Delhi-based academic centre to launch a design competition called the Urban Labs Innovation Challenge: Delhi, which aims to crowdsource ideas for improving air and water quality. In March, it received hundreds of submissions, including ideas for promoting rooftop solar panels and creating viable alternatives to burning waste and crops. Prize money of up to US$300,000 will fund design pilots.
In Delhi and around the world, citizens, governments and researchers are all demanding more air-quality data, which indicates an interest in knowing the enemy. Information from government monitors is publicly available, but the interfaces are often clunky. This has given rise to new alternatives such as IndiaSpend, an independent media outlet that also conducts 'sensor journalism', in which readings from its own pollution monitors are made available in a user-friendly format. The sheer increase in global monitoring — the WHO's database doubled in two years because many more cities had begun to monitor their air — offers an opportunity for more-comprehensive studies going forward, including in regions that have previously been neglected.
Meanwhile, concerns about pollution are hard to escape. In upscale Delhi markets, vendors hawk air masks and purifiers, and parents can purchase nebulizers decorated with cute animals to appeal to children with asthma. Doctors have been known to advise patients with lung ailments to leave the city. “Picking up a life is not so easy,” pleads one mother. “What are we supposed to do?”
Many Delhiites tend to swing between despair and hope — just as the skies go through their own cycles. By late March, the weather starts to shift and the winds pick up. It's as if the city's windows are thrown open, allowing fresh breezes to blow through. July brings the monsoon rains and washes much of the danger out of the sky, down towards the Yamuna River, which carries some of the burden away. For a few months, citizens can step into the night, tilt their heads back and once again enjoy the stars overhead.
Nature
 
534,
 
166–169
 
()
 
doi:10.1038/534166a

Terror Attack in Turkey on June 07 2016 04:05 PM

At least 11 people have been killed in a car bomb attack targeting a police vehicle in central Istanbul, the latest in a series of terror attacks in Turkey. The explosion occurred at a busy intersection in the Vezneciler district during morning rush-hour, near Istanbul University and the Grand Bazaar, a popular tourist attraction in the historic Sultanahmet district. The Istanbul governor, Vasip Åžahin, said a parked car packed with explosives was detonated by remote control the moment a bus carrying riot police personnel passed by. Seven of those killed were police officers, he said, and three of the 36 injured remained in a critical condition. The explosion destroyed the police bus, damaged nearby cars and buildings, and blew out windows on shops and hotels more than 50 metres (164ft) from the blast site. "The explosion catapulted me out of bed," said a 22-year-old man who worked in a nearby restaurant. "It was massive. I also heard the sounds of gunshots right afterwards. When I went out to look it was an awful scene. People were sprawled on the ground, many had lost limbs, there was blood everywhere." Turkey has been on a high security alert after two deadly attacks in Istanbul this year blamed on Islamic State jihadis, and twin attacks in Ankara that killed dozens and were claimed by Kurdish militants. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Tuesday's blast, and Turkish authorities issued a broadcast ban on the attack. Hours after the explosion, police detained four people for questioning for their possible involvement, the state-run Anadolu Agency reported. The suspects were taken to Istanbul's main police headquarters, the report said, without providing further details.