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Space race to rescue stranded Mars probe

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Mars moon lander strays off course

Russia launches the Phobos-Grunt unmanned spacecraft mission to explore the surface of Mars moon, but the probe fails to lock on to its proper course. Nick Rowlands reports.

Russian space engineers work to prepare the unmanned Phobos-Grunt probe on the Baikonur Cosmodrome, in Kazakhstan. Picture: AP, Supplied Source: AP

  • Russian space probe gets stuck in Earth's orbit
  • Failed to reach designated flying trajectory after glitch
  • Space agency has three days to fix the problem

RUSSIA'S Phobos-Grunt space probe has failed to take its planned trajectory towards Mars and is stuck in an Earth orbit, the country's space agency said, adding it now had three days to try to fix the problem, AFP reported.

"We have three days while the batteries are still working," said Roscosmos chief Vladimir Popovkin. "I would not say it's a failure. It's a non-standard situation, but it is a working situation."

The launch vehicle carrying the Phobos-Grunt probe lifted off successfully from a space center in Kazakhstan at 12.16am Moscow time, but failed to use its own booster to reach the designated flying trajectory, Mr Popovkin told RIA Novosti.

"It is a complex trajectory and the on-board computers could have simply failed to send a 'switch on' command to the engine," he said.

"We will attempt to reboot the program. The spacecraft is currently on a support orbit, the fuel tanks have not been jettisoned, and the fuel has not been spent."

The space probe, worth $163 million, is designed to land on the surface of Phobos -- one of Mars' two moons -- and transmit data from near Mars. It is also carrying a Chinese small-sized research satellite, the Yinghuo-1, which China's space program hopes will eventually orbit Mars, the Xinhua news agency reported.

Good call: Mobiles can save you from a hail storm

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A new text message warning system gives motorists up to 10 minutes' notice of a potentially damaging hail storm for their area. Picture: PerthNow Source: PerthNow

  • Text message warning system warns drivers of storm
  • System can measure size of hail stones, where it will hit
  • Message gives people minimum five minutes to move car

YOUR mobile phone could save your car from expensive hail damage this summer.

A text message warning system has been developed that gives motorists up to 10 minutes' notice of a potentially damaging hail storm for their area.

The Hail Automated Notification System (HANS) was developed in South East Queensland, but is available across Australia, and received its first test last night in Melbourne delivering up to 70,000 messages minutes before a hail storm lashed the city.

Paul Malt, director of IT for A&G Insurance, says HANS goes further and is more specific than the Bureau of Meteorology warnings.

"BOM issues a warning for a larger area, such as the whole of South East Queensland,'' he said.

"Where we differ is we take the targeting information to another level to track the cell of the storm that contains the ice, to measure the size of the ice and to then work on probabilities of where that storm will specifically track.


"We will be much more targeted to specific locations within a region.''

HANS is available free to Budget Direct customers at their home address. The messages to customers read: "From Budget Direct: There is a high probability of hail for (name of the suburb/district). Please take appropriate precautions and stay safe.''

"At this point it uses the home address of the customer, but where we see it going is to potentially offer the customer the ability to nominate other addresses such as where they work,'' he says.

"As people get more used to location-aware systems, our ultimate goal - if people are comfortable - is to link it to their mobile phone location.''

Mr Malt says they have been working on HANS for several years and been trailing it over the past week with storms in South East Queensland and NSW. The first high-volume test was yesterday's Melbourne hail storm.

"We've continued to work hard at getting the right warning time,'' he said.

"We're trying to give people a minimum of five minutes.

"From a safety perspective we don't want people moving their car during a hail storm. So unless we can give a minimum of five minutes warning we won't send out alerts.

"However, we can't be sure how quickly the text message gets through the carrier's network to the handset.

"It's always hard to get a definitive answer on whether our warning was exact, but some of the feedback from our Melbourne customers was that they had the information in time and had been able to act on it and then received hail.''

Like this? 'Man I got soooo wasted last night!'

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Uni students are turning to Facebook to document their boozy exploits. Picture: David Caird Source: Herald Sun

  • Uni students document boozy exploits on Facebook
  • Social network contributes to their "alcohol identity"
  • Men more likely to fall for online scams

BOOZY Facebook profiles could be lifting binge drinking rates among uni students.

Scientists said alcohol consumption - and the problems it caused - could be mapped on student Facebook accounts. A desire to portray themselves as party animals could worsen real-life habits.

The world-first study tracked the Facebook accounts and drinking habits of 157 Australian university students, aged 18-24.

Study author Brad Ridout said the online "alcohol identity" of students and attempts to "portray oneself as a drinker" online had broader ramifications - it encouraged others to binge drink.

"It is those who consider alcohol to be a major part of their online identity that are most at risk of alcohol-related problems such as blackouts, getting into fights or regrettable sexual encounters," said Mr Ridout, from the University of Sydney.

"So the more drinking is depicted as socially desirable on Facebook, the more it perpetuates an online culture that normalises binge drinking."

More than 96 per cent of the university students surveyed drank alcohol, with more than half reporting "potentially problematic alcohol use" according to the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.

Mr Ridout's study, published in the Drug and Alcohol Review journal, also found: "Increases in alcohol consumption by adolescents have coincided with a substantial rise in the use of mobile phones and the Internet".

Vatican host non-embryonic stem cell conference

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The conference on adult stem cells is being seen as an attempt to dispel the widespread notion that the Catholic church is at "loggerheads with science". Picture: Getty Images Source: Supplied

  • Vatican hold three-day conference on adult stem cell research
  • Signed a deal with US biopharmaceutical company NeoStem
  • Pope set to meet with assembled industry experts on Saturday

THE Vatican has advanced its opposition to embryonic stem cell therapy, which requires the destruction of a human embryo, by hosting experts in adult stem cells, a less-regarded field where the embryo is preserved.

The Vatican has advanced its opposition to embryonic stem cell therapy, which requires the destruction of a human embryo, by hosting experts in adult stem cells, a less-regarded field where the embryo is preserved.

At a three-day conference, the Holy See has assembled 350 experts in the field that is attractive to embryonic stem cell (ESC) opponents because it cannot be tagged as a practice that destroys human life.

In May 2010, the Holy See signed a deal with US biopharmaceutical company NeoStem that specialises in adult stem cells and the Vatican has already invested $US1 million ($A964,000) in the company's work.

Pope Benedict XVI is set to meet with the assembled industry experts on Saturday.

"We believe that the Vatican's choice to partner with NeoStem will significantly contribute to accelerating stem cell-based regenerative medicine therapies", NeoStem CEO Robin L. Smith said on the company's website.

That human embryonic stem cells (ESC) can potentially become any type of cell in the body has long held out the tantalizing promise of diseased organs or tissue being repaired or replaced with healthy, lab-grown cells.

But the leap from theory to practice has proven difficult, and fraught with ethical and moral concerns, notably from religious camps, because any such procedure requires the destruction of a human embryo.

The discovery in 2007 that it is possible to coax certain adult cells back into their immature, pre-specialised state has fuelled renewed efforts to generate brand new muscle, heart or even brain cells, this time from raw material provided by the patient.

The Vatican's conference on adult stem cells dispels the widespread notion that the Catholic church is at "loggerheads with science", said Ignacio Carrasco de Paula, head of the Pontifical Academy for Life.

In the field of medical research, the Vatican understands that there is no "alternative" to experimentation on people, but, said Carrasco de Paula, what counts is that the person be the "subject" and not the "object".

"We have the capacity in our own body to rebuild and to repair what we have," said Tommy G Thompson, who served as the US secretary of health and human services under former president George W Bush, an opponent of ESC.

"And as we do this, not one single human embryo is destroyed," he added.

Sources estimate that the global stem cell product market will reach $US88 billion by 2014.

World has five years to avoid severe warming

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The IEA report outlines two scenarios for future energy consumption and emissions of greenhouse gases. Picture: Thinkstock Source: Supplied

  • World has five years to avoid severe climate change, says IEA
  • Average temperature risen by about 1.0 C over the last century
  • Future warming forecasts as high as additional 5.0 C by 2100

THE WORLD has just five years to avoid being trapped in a scenario of perilous climate change and extreme weather events, the International Energy Agency (IEA) warned on Wednesday.

On current trends, "rising fossil energy use will lead to irreversible and potentially catastrophic climate change," the IEA concluded in its annual World Energy Outlook report.

"The door to 2.0 C is closing," it said, referring to the 2.0 Celsius cap on global warming widely accepted by scientists and governments as the ceiling for averting unmanageable climate damage.

Without further action, by 2017 the total CO2 emissions compatible with the 2.0 C goal will be "locked in" by power plants, factories and other carbon-emitting sources either built or planned, the IEA said.

Global infrastructure already accounts for more than 75 percent of that limit.

To meet energy needs while still averting climate catastrophe, governments must engineer a shift away from carbon-intensive fossil fuels, the agency said bluntly.

"As each year passes without clear signals to drive investment in clean energy, the 'lock-in' of high-carbon infrastructure is making it harder and more expensive to meet our energy security and climate goals," said IEA chief economist Fatih Birol.

The report outlines two scenarios for future energy consumption and emissions of greenhouse gases.

A "new policies" scenario incorporates existing government promises into a projection up to 2035.

A "450 scenario" lays out a timetable for curbing carbon emissions so that atmospheric concentration of CO2 stays under 450 parts per million (ppm), roughly equivalent to the 2.0 C target.

The current level is about 390 ppm.

Even taking into account current commitments, CO2 emitted over the next 25 years will amount to three-quarters of the total emitted since 1900, leading to a 3.5 C average increase in temperature since that date.

Business-as-usual emissions would put the world "on an even more dangerous track toward an increase of 6.0 C," the report says.

Scientists who have modelled the impacts on biodiversity, agriculture and human settlement say a 6 C world would be close to unlivable due to violent extremes of drought, flooding, heatwaves and storms.

The planet's average temperature has risen by about 1.0 C over the last century, with forecasts for future warming ranging from an additional 1.0 C to 5.0 C by 2100.

The report forecasts a one-third jump in primary energy demand by 2035, with 90 percent of this growth in developing economies.

Half of that demand will likely be met by increased use of coal, the most carbon-intensive of all major fossil fuels.

China - already the world's top coal consumer - is on track to use nearly 70 percent more energy than the United States by that date, it says.

Even under the "new policies" scenario progress toward a low-carbon economy will be halting.

The share of fossil fuels in global primary energy consumption falls from around 81 percent today to 75 percent in 2035, while renewables increase from 13 percent of the mix today to 18 percent.

This scenario already assumes a huge boost in subsidies for renewables, from roughly $A62 billion today to $A246 billion in 2035.

"One wonders how many more worrying figures the world needs," commented Connie Hedegaard, the European Union's climate commissioner.

The report "shows that the world is heading for a fossil-fuel lock-in. This is another urgent call to move to a low-carbon economy," she said in a statement.

Setting a global price on carbon, slashing fossil fuel subsidies, boosting renewable energy and energy efficiency and revised tax codes are all tools for achieving that end, she added.