
Kerala oil spill: Marine, coastal ecosystems likely to be hit, warn experts
The sinking of the MSC ELSA 3 container ship off Kochi poses a significant threat to marine and coastal ecosystems, particularly fisheries
KOCHI: The sinking of MSC ELSA 3 container ship in the Arabian Sea off Kochi's coast on Saturday will have serious ecological impact on marine and coastal ecosystems, principally fishing, experts said on Sunday.
While a lot depends on the scale of leakage carrying hazardous cargo of calcium carbide, diesel and furnace oil smothering can impact sensitive marine ecosystems, said Grinson George, director of Kochi-based Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI).
'Oil smothering could threaten sensitive marine species and disrupt fishing activities, particularly affecting artisanal fishers in coastal regions.
If the spill spreads, it may harm marine productivity, especially during the monsoon — a critical period for pelagic fish breeding and growth. This could have lasting consequences for fisheries,' George said.
Monsoon typically supports high marine productivity, George said, adding that much will depend on how the ship's leakage can be contained.
A study on long-term impact of the very low sulfur fuel oil spill (VLSFO) from the site of Wakashio, a ship which sank off Mauritius in July 2020, shows contaminated sediments and mangroves.
The study was published in Elsevier's Marine Pollution Bulletin recently, three years after the sinking.
This was the world's first major spill of VLSFO since a global sulfur cap took effect from Jan 2020.
Chemical analysis in March 2023 of sediment samples collected from mangroves close to the site of Wakashio's sinking confirmed biodegradation.
The researchers have concluded that the mangroves differed in their sensitivity to oil, resulting in the more tolerant species obtaining a competitive advantage to recolonise other systems.
In such cases, it is crucial to know locations of the spilled oil and monitor such sites with health checks on mangroves and associated plants and animals.
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NDTV
2 hours ago
- NDTV
What Veteran Astronaut Said About Subhanshu Shukla Ahead Of Axiom Mission
Quick Read Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed. India's Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla will launch into space aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon, marking India's entry into commercial human spaceflight. Axiom Space's mission includes significant research and showcases India's growing role in space exploration. New Delhi: As India prepares to send Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla into space aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon, a new chapter in the country's space journey is being written, not by ISRO alone, but in collaboration with Axiom Space, a Houston-based private space company. This mission, part of Axiom's fourth private astronaut flight to the International Space Station (ISS), marks India's first foray into commercial human spaceflight. At the heart of this mission is not only a young Indian pilot but also a seasoned astronaut guiding him named Michael Lopez-Alegria. Lopez-Alegria, a veteran of four spaceflights and over 250 days in space, now serves as the chief astronaut at Axiom Space. In an exclusive conversation with NDTV, he shared insights into his own journey, the rigorous training of the Indian crew, and what this mission means for India and the future of space exploration. "I was a NASA astronaut for 20 years," Lopez-Alegria began, recounting his storied career. "I flew on three Space Shuttle missions -Columbia, Discovery, and Endeavour - and then spent seven months on the ISS during Expedition 14, which I commanded." Since transitioning to Axiom, he has led two private missions to the ISS, including the historic AX-1 in 2022, the first all-private astronaut mission. Despite the risks inherent in space travel, Lopez-Alegria emphasised the meticulous preparation that goes into every mission. "Sure, it's risky," he acknowledged. "But we study the risks hard. We know what to expect. We're very well trained. So I don't consider it an undue risk." That training has now extended to Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla and his backup, Group Captain Prashant Balakrishnan Nair. Known affectionately through their call signs as "Shux" and "Papa," the two Indian Air Force test pilots have undergone nearly a year of intensive preparation. "Training usually takes about 10 months," Lopez-Alegria explained. "About 40 perc ent of that is with NASA, learning how to live and work on the ISS. Another 40 per cent is with SpaceX, focused on the Crew Dragon. The rest includes payload training, centrifuge, and zero-gravity simulations." He praised the Indian crew's performance, noting their professionalism and camaraderie. "They're both very gifted-not just technically, but interpersonally. That's crucial in space. You have to get along with people in close quarters for extended periods." Lopez-Alegria also highlighted the unique background the Indian astronauts bring to the mission. "Their experience at the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre in Russia was a big plus. Not many private astronauts come to us with that kind of foundation." As the mission pilot, Mr Shukla will play a critical role during launch, docking, undocking, and re-entry. "The commander and pilot act as a two-person cockpit team," Lopez-Alegria said. "Everything is done with concurrence. It's like a modern airliner-automated, yes, but the crew must be ready to take over if needed." The Crew Dragon, he added, is a far cry from the spacecraft of the past. "It's like a Tesla - very clean, very modern, with a touchscreen interface. Compared to the space shuttle, which had a thousand switches, it's a joy to train and fly in." But the mission is not just about flying. It's also about science. AX-4 will carry more than 60 research activities representing 31 countries, making it Axiom's most ambitious mission yet. "Not all of them are conducted in space - some are pre- and post-mission-but it's a ton of research for a two-week flight," Lopez-Alegria said. Among those experiments are several from Indian institutions, covering areas like agriculture, food science, and human biology. "It's a wonderful opportunity," he said. "You don't want to waste it. But I also tell the crew-try to enjoy the experience." That balance between work and wonder is something Lopez-Alegroa knows well. "We wake up at 6 am Universal Time, start work at 7:30, and go until about the same time at night. It's an 11-hour workday. But in the early mornings and evenings, there's time to look out the window. And nobody goes to bed on time-there's just too much beauty to see." He recalled his own view of India from space. "It's beautiful. Sometimes hard to see because of cloud cover or haze, but when you do, it's stunning - especially the Himalayas." Lopez-Alegria also addressed the cost of such missions. India's seat on AX-4 reportedly cost between $60 and $70 million. "The lion's share of that is the launch cost," he explained. "We'd love to make it cheaper, and I think over time, prices will come down. But for now, it's expensive." Still, he believes the investment is worth it. "Having an astronaut represent the nation is a great asset. It inspires youth, encourages technical education, and builds the workforce. It's a win for India." Looking ahead, Lopez-Alegria sees great potential for collaboration between Axiom and ISRO. "I'd love to see Gaganyaan dock with the Axiom space station someday. There's no reason it couldn't. India is an emerging space power, and we'd be foolish to ignore that." Axiom's own space station is already in development. The first module is set to launch in 2027 and will initially dock with the ISS before becoming an independent platform. "We'll have a full autonomous capability to house a crew and conduct experiments," he said. "Certainly before the end of the decade." He also expressed admiration for India's broader space roadmap. "I've been hearing a lot about it, and I'm very impressed. It's well thought out and has strong government support. First Gaganyaan, then a space station, then the Moon - why not?" As for Mr Shukla, Lopez-Alegria had nothing but praise. "He's done extremely well in training. I have zero doubt he'll excel in orbit. Indians can be very, very proud." With the countdown underway, the excitement is palpable. For India, this mission is more than a milestone - it's a message. A message that the country is ready to take its place among the stars, not just as a participant, but as a leader in the new era of space exploration. And for Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, it's the beginning of a journey that will inspire generations to come.

Mint
3 hours ago
- Mint
Want even tinier chips? Use a particle accelerator
Semiconductor chips are among the smallest and most detailed objects humans can manufacture. Shrinking the scale and upping the complexity is a fight against the limits of physics, and optical lithography—etching nanometre-scale patterns onto silicon with short-wavelength light—is its most extreme frontier. ASML , a Dutch firm that builds such lithography tools, takes an almost sci-fi approach by blasting molten tin droplets with lasers in a vacuum to produce extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light with a wavelength of just 13.5nm. Now, some researchers hope to generate more powerful EUV beams with a particle accelerator that propels electrons to nearly the speed of light. The need for this radical proposal stems from a fundamental limitation of current EUV sources: they struggle to generate enough power to reliably etch circuits onto silicon. In a lithography tool such as ASML's, the EUV beam bounces off nearly a dozen mirrors before it hits the silicon. EUV light is so easily absorbed, though, that even in a vacuum-sealed chamber with ultra-specialised mirrors, each reflection saps 30% of the light's energy. By the time the photons reach the wafer, less than 2% of the original EUV energy remains. Without enough power, reliability and precision plummet. One way to boost energy is to bombard the wafer with multiple doses of EUV light, a trick that slows down the chip-manufacturing process. The other approach is to increase the power of the photons. ASML's latest rig uses a light source that operates at 500 watts, nearly twice the power of its previous machines. To speed up production or to shrink feature sizes even further, the light source must get stronger. ASML currently has a road map to develop a one kilowatt light source. A more radical solution is to use a free-electron laser (FEL), where electrons travelling near the speed of light are manipulated to emit EUV radiation. The FEL process begins with a powerful electron gun that injects a beam of the particles into a miniature racetrack. The electrons then pass through a linear accelerator, which propels them to nearly the speed of light. Once accelerated, they enter a roughly 200-metre-long structure called an undulator, where a series of magnets generate a field whose polarity flips periodically. This wiggles the electrons, causing them to emit a beam of EUV photons with a specific wavelength. Nicholas Kelez, the boss of xLight, a Silicon Valley startup developing FEL-based lithography, described the technology as a more powerful and tuneable 'new light bulb" that he believes can be swapped into existing optical lithography machines. xLight expects to deliver the first commercial system within four years. Another research group, at the High Energy Accelerator Research Organisation (KEK) in Japan, has already demonstrated the ability to generate light at 20 micrometres (millionths of a metre)—far longer than the 13.5nm wavelengths ASML is capable of but a step towards refining the process. Chinese researchers are also exploring FEL technology in their quest to develop an independent EUV machine. Generating light using a FEL has some advantages over using lasers. The first is power: a lithography machine based on a FEL-based light source can be around six times more energy-efficient than a laser-plasma tool. Dispensing with molten-tin droplets also reduces the risk of contamination. Tuning such a machine for smaller wavelengths is also, at least theoretically, much easier: all that needs doing is tweaking the settings on the electron gun and the undulator. It would also be cheaper. A single FEL system can be repurposed to provide light for multiple lithography machines, allowing its operator to distribute the fixed costs across multiple chip-etching tools. Nakamura Norio from KEK estimates that the construction cost is around half that of a laser-based EUV tool and the running costs are around a fifteenth. For now, all this is theoretical. Whereas ASML's EUV machines are proving themselves in high-volume manufacturing, FEL-based lithography is still in the experimental phase. But in the high-stakes world of chipmaking, any edge is worth chasing. Curious about the world? To enjoy our mind-expanding science coverage, sign up to Simply Science, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter.


Mint
3 hours ago
- Mint
‘Agroterrorism weapon': How China-linked outbreaks disrupted life worldwide
Two Chinese nationals were reportedly accused of smuggling a "dangerous biological pathogen" into the United States for research at a University of Michigan Laboratory. The pathogen was said to have the potential to be used as an agricultural terrorism weapon. The US Department of Justice on Tuesday identified the pathogen as Fusarium graminearum. The US department said Fusarium graminearum is a fungus that was classified in scientific literature as a potential "agroterrorism weapon". In a statement, it said that the fungus causes "head blight" in some crops and is responsible for billions of dollars in economic losses globally each year. 'Head blight' is a disease of wheat, barley, maize, and rice. "Fusarium graminearum's toxins cause vomiting, liver damage, and reproductive defects in humans and livestock," the US Department of Justice said. The two accused Chinese nationals were identified as Yunqing Jian, 33, and Zunyong Liu, 34. According to an FBI criminal complaint, Zunyong Liu, 34, a researcher currently in China, brought the fungus into the US while visiting his girlfriend, Yunqing Jian, 33, in July 2024. They were charged in a criminal complaint "with conspiracy, smuggling goods into the United States, false statements, and visa fraud," said US Attorney Jerome F. Gorgon, Jr. Notably, a complaint is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. China has been under the scanner for allegedly being responsible for the outbreak of several diseases and pandemics. The coronavirus pandemic is the latest example. Here are times when China was held responsible for a virus outbreak, epidemics and pandemics: The origin of bubonic plague has led to a heated debate among historians. According to Germany-based Max Planck Society, the plague first entered the Mediterranean in 1347 via trade ships transporting goods from the territories of the Golden Horde in the Black Sea. The rats on the ship brought with them the Black Death, the bubonic plague. The Black Death is considered one of the deadliest epidemics in human history. It sprea across Western Asia, Northern Africa, Middle East and Europe in 1346-53. Accoridng to the report, this first wave extended into a 500-year-long pandemic, the so-called Second Plague Pandemic, which lasted until the early 19th century. Even as the origins of the Second Plague Pandemic have long been debated, one of the most popular theories has supported its source in East Asia, specifically in China, the report added. Meanwhile, according to a New York Times report published in 2022, researchers found that the Black Death arrived in 1338 or 1339 near Issyk-Kul, a lake in a mountainous area just west of China in what is now Kyrgyzstan. "The plague first infected people in a small, nearby settlement of traders eight years before it devastated Eurasia, killing 60 percent of the population," the report added. It's alleged that the pandemic of 1957-1959, dubbed the Asian flu, emerged in East Asia. The Lancet Journal said the virus emerged in China in the winter of 1957 and spread rapidly worldwide via ships, aeroplanes, and trains. However, there are differing accounts of where the 1957 'Asian flu' pandemic, which was caused by the new influenza A (H2N2) virus, originated. According to Reuters, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) states that the virus was first reported in Singapore in February 1957, before spreading to Hong Kong in April and the US in the summer. The pandemic killed 2 million people worldwide in a two-year period. The SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV) was first identified in November 2002 in the Guangdong province of southern China, Reuters reported. The epidemic affected 26 countries and resulted in more than 8,000 cases in 2003. The World Health Organization (WHO) says that SARS cases were detected as early as November 2002 as part of an outbreak that emerged in China. It added that the pathogen causing the disease was identified as a coronavirus at the end of February 2003. The COVID-19 pandemic was also caused by SARS-CoV virus. However, the site of origin of the outbreak is still debated. On December 31, 2019, the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission in China had reported a cluster of cases of pneumonia in Wuhan, Hubei Province. A novel coronavirus was eventually identified. Since then, several theories have been tabled to understand the origin of COVID-19 pandemic. The current argument revolves around two theories: one is the scenario of laboratory leak where the pathogen escaped from a laboratory, the other is human contact with zoonotic diseases. China has been disputing the claims that the virus leaked from a Wuhan lab or that it originated in China. The country recently suggested that the COVID-19 virus may have originated in the US. "Substantial evidence suggested the COVID-19 might have emerged in the United States earlier than its officially-claimed timeline, and earlier than the outbreak in China," stated the white paper released by the official Xinhua news agency earlier this year.