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    July 30

    Save Money On Gas Today!!!

    Save Money On Gas Today: Here's How
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    July 16

    Tens of thousands of supporters of the Iranian opposition have attended a rally in France organised by the National Council of Resistance of Iran.

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    Iran exiles back People's Mojahedin (PMOI /MEK) PDF Print E-mail
    Written by Editor   
    Monday, 30 June 2008

     Tens of thousands of supporters of the Iranian opposition have attended a rally in France organised by the National Council of Resistance of Iran.

    BBC News, June 28 - It is calling for the lifting of international bans on their movement's armed wing, the People's Mujahideen [PMOI / MEK].

     

    The US and the EU list the wing as a terror organisation, although Britain lifted its own ban in the past week.

    The Iranian opposition leader said banning the People's Mujahideen [PMOI / MEK] played into the hands of Iran's government.

    Organisers said 70,000 people from across Europe attended the rally at an exhibition centre in the northern Paris suburbs, though there was no independent confirmation of the number.

    Among those present were delegations from several European parliaments.

    No legal justification

    They heard an address from the Iranian opposition leader, Maryam Rajavi, calling on the European Union to remove the designation of "terrorist group" that it applies to the People's Mujahideen [PMOI / MEK].

    The EU and the United States both say that the People's Mujahideen - which took up arms against the Islamic republic in the 1980s and had sanctuary in Iraq under Saddam Hussein - falls under the definition of foreign terrorist organisation.

    However the group's supporters say it has long since abandoned attacks that can be called terrorist, and argue that the ban in Brussels and Washington is intended to curry favour with Tehran.

    This week the People's Mujahideen achieved a major breakthrough, when it was dropped from a list of terrorist organisations in Britain, and supporters now say there is no legal justification for maintaining the European ban.

    France, which takes over as president of the European Union on 1 July, will have to decide whether to respond to the appeal.



    New Nano-Device To See Invisible Light

    New Nano-Device To See Invisible Light

    Physics Prof. Michael Gershenson with laboratory equipment used to fabricate ultra-sensitive, nano-sized infrared light detector. Credit: Carl Blesch
    by Staff Writers
    New Brunswick NJ (SPX) Jul 16, 2008
    A newly developed nano-sized electronic device is an important step toward helping astronomers see invisible light dating from the creation of the universe. This invisible light makes up 98% of the light emitted since the "big bang," and may provide insights into the earliest stages of star and galaxy formation almost 14 billion years ago.

    The tiny, new circuit, developed by physicsts at Rutgers University, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and the State University of New York at Buffalo, is 100 times smaller than the thickness of a human hair. It is sensitive to faint traces of light in the far-infrared spectrum (longest of the infrared wavelengths), well beyond the colors humans see.

    "In the expanding universe, the earliest stars move away from us at a speed approaching the speed of light," said Michael Gershenson, professor of physics at Rutgers and one of the lead investigators. "As a result, their light is strongly red-shifted when it reaches us, appearing infrared."

    ALL STORY, CLICK HERE.

    July 08

    هواداران مجاهدین با حضور بر مزار عزت ابراهیمنژاد یاد قیام قهرمانانه 18 تیر را گرامى داشتند

    هواداران مجاهدین با حضور بر مزار عزت ابراهیمنژاد یاد قیام قهرمانانه 18 تیر را گرامى داشتند
    11:54:13 AM 1387/4/17
    قيام قهرمانانه 18 تير
    قيام قهرمانانه 18 تير

    سالگرد قیام مردم و دانشجویان در 18تیر 1378 - هواداران مجاهدین با فعالیتهای مختلف ازجمله با حضور بر مزار عزت ابراهیم نژاد كه در جریان سركوب خونین كوی دانشگاه جان باخت، یاد این قیام قهرمانانه را گرامی داشتند.
    به فیلمى كه از این فعالیت به دستمان رسیده است توجه كنید:                                                                         

     

     

    870417_havadaranmazare18tir.wmv


    نسخه آماده چاپ

    شما ميتوانيد اخبار مورد نظرتان را براي دوستان و آشنايان ارسال نمائيد
    آدرس ايميل ارسال كننده
    آدرس ايميل دريافت كننده 
    موضوع ايميل

     

    متن ايميل

    هواداران مجاهدین با حضور بر مزار عزت ابراهیمنژاد یاد قیام قهرمانانه 18 تیر را گرامى داشتند
      

    Einstein Theory Passes Strict Test In Unique Stellar Laboratory

    Einstein Theory Passes Strict Test In Unique Stellar Laboratory

    This double pulsar PSR J0737-3039A/B is the only known pulsar-pulsar system, that is, two neutron stars orbiting each other and both visible as radio pulsars. Credit: NRAO
    by Staff Writers
    Washington DC (SPX) Jul 07, 2008
    Taking advantage of a unique cosmic configuration, astronomers have measured an effect predicted by Albert Einstein's theory of General Relativity in the extremely strong gravity of a pair of superdense neutron stars. Essentially, the famed physicist's 93-year-old theory passed yet another test.

    Scientists at McGill University used the National Science Foundation's Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) to do a four-year study of a double-star system unlike any other known in the Universe. The system is a pair of neutron stars, both of which are seen as pulsars that emit lighthouse-like beams of radio waves.

    "Of about 1700 known pulsars, this is the only case in which two pulsars orbit around each other," said Rene Breton, a graduate student at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. In addition, the stars' orbital plane is aligned nearly perfectly with their line of sight to the Earth. This causes the signal of one to be blocked, or eclipsed, as it circles the other.

    "Those eclipses are the key to making a measurement that could never be done before," Breton said.

    Einstein's 1915 theory predicted that in a close system of two very massive objects, such as neutron stars, one object's gravitational tug, along with an effect of its spinning around its axis, should cause the spin axis of the other to wobble, or precess.

    Studies of other pulsars in binary systems had indicated that such wobbling occurred, but could not produce precise measurements of the amount of wobbling.

    "Measuring the amount of wobbling is what tests the details of Einstein's theory and gives a benchmark that any alternative gravitational theories must meet," said Scott Ransom of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory.

    The eclipses allowed the astronomers to pin down the geometry of the double-pulsar system and track changes in the orientation of the spin axis of one of them. As one pulsar's spin axis slowly moved, the pattern of signal blockages as the other passed behind it also changed. The signal from the pulsar in back is absorbed by the ionized gas in the other's magnetosphere.

    Pulsars, first discovered in 1967, are the "corpses" of massive stars that have exploded as supernovae. What is left after the explosion is a superdense neutron star that packs more than the mass of our Sun into the size of an average city. Beams of radio waves stream outward from the poles of the star's intense magnetic field and sweep around as the star rotates, as often as hundreds of times a second.

    The pair of pulsars studied with the GBT is about 1,700 light-years from Earth. The average distance between the two is only about twice the distance from the Earth to the Moon. The two orbit each other in just under two and a half hours.

    "A system like this, with two very massive objects very close to each other, is precisely the kind of extreme "cosmic laboratory" needed to test Einstein's prediction," said Victoria Kaspi, leader of McGill University's Pulsar Group.

    Theories of gravity don't differ significantly in "ordinary" regions of space such as our own Solar System. In regions of extremely strong gravity fields, such as near a pair of close, massive objects, however, differences are expected to show up.

    In the binary-pulsar study, General Relativity "passed the test" provided by such an extreme environment, the scientists said.

    "It's not quite right to say that we have now 'proven' General Relativity," Breton said. "However, so far, Einstein's theory has passed all the tests that have been conducted, including ours."

    Breton, Kaspi and Ransom worked with Michael Kramer of the Jodrell Bank Observatory at the University of Manchester in Great Britain; Maura McLaughlin of West Virginia University and the NRAO; Maxim Lyutikov of Purdue University and other colleagues in Canada, the U.S., France and Italy. The researchers presented their work in an article in the July 4 issue of Science Magazine.

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