Thursday, June 2, 2016
how to hack and patch your andriod games and apps
Lucky Patcher is an app that gives you real control over the permissions you give to the app installed on your andriod device
and you can hack your andriod games and apps. Lucky patcher lets you take control of the apps installed
on your andriod and enjoy almost all feature in the rooted device
To hack your andriod games or apps follow this steps
step 1. Open your lucky patcher. to download this app click here.
step 2. select apps or games
step 3. then open menu of patches
step 4. then click support patch for In App and LVL emulation
step 5. select
support patch for LVL emulation and
support patch for IN APP emullation
step 6. Then applyit and waite for a minute to complete process
step 7. You will see percentage of luck and it is done and click on ok
step 8. Open Toogles Toolbar
step 9. enable google lisence verification emulation
step 10 And it is done and enjoy it..
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
TOP 5 PLACE TO VISIT BEFORE LEAVING THIS WORLD
Here are Top
5 places you must see before you die, because life is just too dang short not
to live.
5. Miami,
Florida
Florida is
nicknamed The Sunshine, so except beautiful weather, awesome beaches and some
of the most stunning parks you’ve ever seen.
One of the
most vibrant cities in the USA, Miami is the best known for its Latin culture
and sizzling nightlife located in Southeastern Florida off the coast of
Atlantic Ocean, Miami is also a major port city managing the world’s largest
number of passengers cruise ship. Attracting tourists from all over the planet,
Miami’s is a melting pot of ethnic cultures with a wide array of exciting
attraction and activities. One of the Miami’s main advantages is its sunny
beaches that range from family, friendly to party scenes. Across the bay from
Miami on a barrier island is Miami Beach, known for the Art Deco architecture
and glamorous South Beach.
4. Mount
Fuji, Japan
Mount Fuji
is the Japan’s highest peak and also one of its most scared locations. The
popular spot for artists and tourists. The perfectly symmetrical snow topped
volcano is perched before Lake Kawaguchi making up one of the world’s most
recognizable natural destinations. Embrace the culture and cuisine of the Japan
in the country’s most traveled region. Just a short trip away from the Tokyo,
Mount Fuji encompasses appeal for nature seekers and city travelers alike.
There may be no prettier time to visit Mount Fuji than in the spring time, when
cherry blossom trees are in full bloom around the Fuji five lakes.
Also make
sure to check out one of many surrounding shrines to experience amazing
architecture and a scared cultural experience.
3. Wengen,
Switzerland
Wengen is a
village in the Bernese oberland in the canton of Bern, located in central
Switzerland. A special cultural feature of Wengen is so called “Pfeifende
Lurch” (German for “whistling amphibian”). It is a legendary creature from
myths and tales that only exists in Wengen.
In this
village, Cars of any kind have been banned for more than 100 year. The town is
tucked away between alpine mountains and lush, grassy hills in every direction
while the air is crisp and clean, un-polluted by the diesel and muck of a city.
So, this is the popular tourist spot also has some of the world’s finest modern
ski racing and Alpine skiing spots.
2. Kauai,
Hawaii
If there is
heaven in the earth, you will hardly find a more beautiful location than Kauai,
Hawaii. Relaxing and Pristine Kauai (The Garden Island) Is the least
commercially developed of the Hawaiian islands. Nicknamed The Garden Island,
Kauai is literally covered in green, while each of Hawaii’s eight island is
stunning. Kauai houses geologic spectacles like the cliff along the Nepali and
the Waimea Canyon in the heart of the island.
If simply
relaxing in the tropical Hawaiian sun isn’t enough travel through the high
hills of the Kauai in style. In Kauai some beaches have pools and some are
perfect for all kinds of water spots. Also make sure to grab a snorkel and
explore the crystal clear water surrounding the island and teeming with
tropical fish.
Nepal is the country full of natural beauties. Not only
the huge mountains, we can also see
various lakes, rivers, caves which are the inhabitant for varieties of the
wildlife and birds.
Nepal nature
tour is one of the best tour to explore the natural beauty of Nepaland in the
world. Nepal is
known as the naturally beautiful country, and it is the best
choice for Nature lovers, and best place in the world to observe the natural
beauty and feel peace in
Monday, February 15, 2016
Researchers create 'mini-brains' in lab
to study neurological diseases
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health say they have developed tiny
"mini-brains" made up of many of the neurons and cells of the human
brain -- and even some of its functionality -- and which can be replicated on a
large scale.
The
researchers say that the creation of these "mini-brains," which will
be discussed at the American Association for the Advancement of Science
conference in Washington, DC on Feb. 12 at a press briefing and in a session on
Feb. 13, could dramatically change how new drugs are tested for effectiveness
and safety, taking the place of the hundreds of thousands of animals used for
neurological scientific research in the United States. Performing research
using these three-dimensional "mini-brains" -- balls of brain cells
that grow and form brain-like structures on their own over the course of eight
weeks -- should be superior to studying mice and rats because they are derived
from human cells instead of rodents, they say.
"Ninety-five
percent of drugs that look promising when tested in animal models fail once
they are tested in humans at great expense of time and money," says study
leader Thomas Hartung, MD, PhD, the Doerenkamp-Zbinden Professor and Chair for
Evidence-based Toxicology at the Bloomberg School. "While rodent models
have been useful, we are not 150-pound rats. And even though we are not balls
of cells either, you can often get much better information from these balls of
cells than from rodents.
"We
believe that the future of brain research will include less reliance on
animals, more reliance on human, cell-based models."
Hartung
and his colleagues created the brains using what are known as induced
pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These are adult cells that have been
genetically reprogrammed to an embryonic stem cell-like state and then are
stimulated to grow into brain cells. Cells from the skin of several healthy
adults were used to create the mini-brains, but Hartung says that cells from
people with certain genetic traits or certain diseases can be used to create
brains to study various types of pharmaceuticals. He says the brains can be
used to study Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis and
even autism. Projects to study viral infections, trauma and stroke have been
started.
Hartung's
mini-brains are very small -- at 350 micrometers in diameter, or about the size
of the eye of a housefly, they are just visible to the human eye -- and
hundreds to thousands of exact copies can be produced in each batch. One
hundred of them can grow easily in the same petri dish in the lab. After
cultivating the mini-brains for about two months, the brains developed four
types of neurons and two types of support cells: astrocytes and
oligodendrocytes, the latter of which go on to create myelin, which insulates
the neuron's axons and allows them to communicate faster.
The
researchers could watch the myelin developing and could see it begin to sheath
the axons. The brains even showed spontaneous electrophysiological activity,
which could be recorded with electrodes, similar to an electroencephalogram,
also known as EEG. To test them, the researchers placed a mini-brain on an
array of electrodes and listened to the spontaneous electrical communication of
the neurons as test drugs were added.
"We
don't have the first brain model nor are we claiming to have the best
one," says Hartung, who also directs the School's Center for Alternatives
to Animal Testing.
"But
this is the most standardized one. And when testing drugs, it is imperative
that the cells being studied are as similar as possible to ensure the most
comparable and accurate results."
Hartung
is applying for a patent for the mini-brains and is also developing a
commercial entity called ORGANOME to produce them. He hopes production can
begin in 2016. He says they are easily reproducible and hopes to see them used
by scientists in as many labs as possible. "Only when we can have brain
models like this in any lab at any time will we be able to replace animal
testing on a large scale," he says.
The
work was supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for
Advancing Translational Sciences (U18TR000547), the Alternatives Research &
Development Foundation and the Bart McLean Fund for Neuroimmunology
Research/Project Restore.
Other
researchers involved in the project include David Pamies; Paula Barreras,
Katharina Block; Georgia Makri; Anupama Kumar; Daphne Wiersma; Lena Smirnova;
Che Zang; Joseph Bressler; Kimberly M. Christian; Georgina Harris; Guo-li Ming;
Cindy J. Berlincke; Kelly Kyro; Hongjun Song; Carlos Pardo; Thomas Hartung and
Helena T. Hogberg.
Friday, February 12, 2016
GRAVITATIONAL WAVE FINALLY DETECTED
For the first time, scientists have
observed ripples in the fabric of spacetime called gravitational waves,
arriving at Earth from a cataclysmic event in the distant universe. This
confirms a major prediction of Albert Einstein's 1915 general theory of relativity
and opens an unprecedented new window onto the cosmos.
Gravitational
waves carry information about their dramatic origins and about the nature of
gravity that cannot otherwise be obtained. Physicists have concluded that the
detected gravitational waves were produced during the final fraction of a
second of the merger of two black holes to produce a single, more massive
spinning black hole. This collision of two black holes had been predicted but
never observed.
The
gravitational waves were detected on September 14, 2015 at 5:51 a.m. Eastern
Daylight Time (09:51 UTC) by both of the twin Laser Interferometer
Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors, located in Livingston,
Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington, USA. The LIGO Observatories are funded by
the National Science Foundation (NSF), and were conceived, built, and are
operated by Caltech and MIT. The discovery, accepted for publication in the
journal Physical Review Letters, was made by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration
(which includes the GEO Collaboration and the Australian Consortium for
Interferometric Gravitational Astronomy) and the Virgo Collaboration using data
from the two LIGO detectors.
Based
on the observed signals, LIGO scientists estimate that the black holes for this
event were about 29 and 36 times the mass of the sun, and the event took place
1.3 billion years ago. About 3 times the mass of the sun was converted into
gravitational waves in a fraction of a second -- with a peak power output about
50 times that of the whole visible universe. By looking at the time of arrival
of the signals -- the detector in Livingston recorded the event 7 milliseconds
before the detector in Hanford -- scientists can say that the source was
located in the Southern Hemisphere.
According
to general relativity, a pair of black holes orbiting around each other lose
energy through the emission of gravitational waves, causing them to gradually
approach each other over billions of years, and then much more quickly in the
final minutes. During the final fraction of a second, the two black holes
collide into each other at nearly one-half the speed of light and form a single
more massive black hole, converting a portion of the combined black holes' mass
to energy, according to Einstein's formula E=mc2. This energy is emitted as a final strong burst of
gravitational waves. It is these gravitational waves that LIGO has observed.
The
existence of gravitational waves was first demonstrated in the 1970s and 80s by
Joseph Taylor, Jr., and colleagues. Taylor and Russell Hulse discovered in 1974
a binary system composed of a pulsar in orbit around a neutron star. Taylor and
Joel M. Weisberg in 1982 found that the orbit of the pulsar was slowly
shrinking over time because of the release of energy in the form of gravitational
waves. For discovering the pulsar and showing that it would make possible this
particular gravitational wave measurement, Hulse and Taylor were awarded the
Nobel Prize in Physics in 1993.
The
new LIGO discovery is the first observation of gravitational waves themselves,
made by measuring the tiny disturbances the waves make to space and time as
they pass through Earth.
"Our
observation of gravitational waves accomplishes an ambitious goal set out over
5 decades ago to directly detect this elusive phenomenon and better understand
the universe, and, fittingly, fulfills Einstein's legacy on the 100th
anniversary of his general theory of relativity," says Caltech's David H.
Reitze, executive director of the LIGO Laboratory.
The
discovery was made possible by the enhanced capabilities of Advanced LIGO, a
major upgrade that increases the sensitivity of the instruments compared to the
first generation LIGO detectors, enabling a large increase in the volume of the
universe probed -- and the discovery of gravitational waves during its first
observation run. The US National Science Foundation leads in financial support
for Advanced LIGO. Funding organizations in Germany (Max Planck Society), the
U.K. (Science and Technology Facilities Council, STFC) and Australia (Australian
Research Council) also have made significant commitments to the project.
Several of the key technologies that made Advanced LIGO so much more sensitive
have been developed and tested by the German UK GEO collaboration. Significant
computer resources have been contributed by the AEI Hannover Atlas Cluster, the
LIGO Laboratory, Syracuse University, and the University of Wisconsin-
Milwaukee. Several universities designed, built, and tested key components for
Advanced LIGO: The Australian National University, the University of Adelaide,
the University of Florida, Stanford University, Columbia University of the City
of New York, and Louisiana State University.
"In
1992, when LIGO's initial funding was approved, it represented the biggest
investment the NSF had ever made," says France Córdova, NSF director.
"It was a big risk. But the National Science Foundation is the agency that
takes these kinds of risks. We support fundamental science and engineering at a
point in the road to discovery where that path is anything but clear. We fund
trailblazers. It's why the U.S. continues to be a global leader in advancing
knowledge."
LIGO
research is carried out by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC), a group of
more than 1000 scientists from universities around the United States and in 14
other countries. More than 90 universities and research institutes in the LSC
develop detector technology and analyze data; approximately 250 students are
strong contributing members of the collaboration. The LSC detector network
includes the LIGO interferometers and the GEO600 detector. The GEO team
includes scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics
(Albert Einstein Institute, AEI), Leibniz Universität Hannover, along with
partners at the University of Glasgow, Cardiff University, the University of
Birmingham, other universities in the United Kingdom, and the University of the
Balearic Islands in Spain.
"This
detection is the beginning of a new era: The field of gravitational wave
astronomy is now a reality," says Gabriela González, LSC spokesperson and
professor of physics and astronomy at Louisiana State University.
LIGO
was originally proposed as a means of detecting these gravitational waves in
the 1980s by Rainer Weiss, professor of physics, emeritus, from MIT; Kip
Thorne, Caltech's Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics,
emeritus; and Ronald Drever, professor of physics, emeritus, also from Caltech.
"The
description of this observation is beautifully described in the Einstein theory
of general relativity formulated 100 years ago and comprises the first test of
the theory in strong gravitation. It would have been wonderful to watch
Einstein's face had we been able to tell him," says Weiss.
"With
this discovery, we humans are embarking on a marvelous new quest: the quest to
explore the warped side of the universe -- objects and phenomena that are made
from warped spacetime. Colliding black holes and gravitational waves are our
first beautiful examples," says Thorne.
Virgo
research is carried out by the Virgo Collaboration, consisting of more than 250
physicists and engineers belonging to 19 different European research groups: 6
from Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in France; 8 from the
Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN) in Italy; 2 in The Netherlands
with Nikhef; the Wigner RCP in Hungary; the POLGRAW group in Poland; and the
European Gravitational Observatory (EGO), the laboratory hosting the Virgo
detector near Pisa in Italy.
Fulvio
Ricci, Virgo Spokesperson, notes that, "This is a significant milestone
for physics, but more importantly merely the start of many new and exciting
astrophysical discoveries to come with LIGO and Virgo."
Bruce
Allen, managing director of the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics
(Albert Einstein Institute), adds, "Einstein thought gravitational waves
were too weak to detect, and didn't believe in black holes. But I don't think
he'd have minded being wrong!"
"The
Advanced LIGO detectors are a tour de force of science and technology, made
possible by a truly exceptional international team of technicians, engineers,
and scientists," says David Shoemaker of MIT, the project leader for
Advanced LIGO. "We are very proud that we finished this NSF-funded project
on time and on budget."
At
each observatory, the two-and-a-half-mile (4-km) long L-shaped LIGO
interferometer uses laser light split into two beams that travel back and forth
down the arms (four-foot diameter tubes kept under a near-perfect vacuum). The
beams are used to monitor the distance between mirrors precisely positioned at
the ends of the arms. According to Einstein's theory, the distance between the
mirrors will change by an infinitesimal amount when a gravitational wave passes
by the detector. A change in the lengths of the arms smaller than
one-ten-thousandth the diameter of a proton (10-19 meter)
can be detected.
"To
make this fantastic milestone possible took a global collaboration of
scientists -- laser and suspension technology developed for our GEO600 detector
was used to help make Advanced LIGO the most sophisticated gravitational wave
detector ever created," says Sheila Rowan, professor of physics and
astronomy at the University of Glasgow.
Independent
and widely separated observatories are necessary to determine the direction of
the event causing the gravitational waves, and also to verify that the signals
come from space and are not from some other local phenomenon.
Toward
this end, the LIGO Laboratory is working closely with scientists in India at
the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, the Raja Ramanna
Centre for Advanced Technology, and the Institute for Plasma to establish a
third Advanced LIGO detector on the Indian subcontinent. Awaiting approval by
the government of India, it could be operational early in the next decade. The
additional detector will greatly improve the ability of the global detector
network to localize gravitational-wave sources.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)






