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Reliance Jio’s Happy New Year offer: Free services until March 31, 2017

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Reliance Jio’s existing and new customers will have free service till March 31.
  • New users can avail of this free offer from December 4.
  • This new offer is being called the ‘Jio Happy New Year offer.’

Existing and new Reliance Jio users will be able to use data, voice, video and all of Jio’s applications for free until March 31, 2017.

All existing customers who already have free service until December 31, 2016, will see this deal extended to them from January 1 to March 31, 2017, and all new customers can avail of this deal from December 4, said Reliance Industrieschairman Mukesh Ambani in an announcement today.

Reliance is calling this the ‘Jio Happy New Year’ offer.

“In this period, customers will also be able to test-drive digital recharge, billing experience, using JioMoney wallet,” said Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani at an event today.

Ambani said Jio has also “fine-tuned” its fair usage policy to ensure all users get fair share of network capacity.

He added that since it Jio started operations, as many as 900 crore voice calls from Jio to the networks of its 3 largest competitors “were blocked.”

Despite that, “in the first three months of its operation, Reliance Jio has grown faster than global tech giants Facebook, WhatsApp or Skype, ” said Ambani, in an address today.

“In 83 days Jio has crossed 50 million customers…Jio is now the fastest growing tech firm,” Ambani said.

He added that the benefits of Jio’s superior technology have been denied to customers “due to anti-competitive behaviour of incumbent operators.”

Ambani also congratulated Prime Minister Narendra Modi for his “bold and historic decision” to ban high denomination currency.

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Inside tiny tubes, water turns solid when it should be boiling

​MIT researchers discover astonishing behavior of water confined in carbon nanotubes.

David L. Chandler | MIT News Office 

A team at MIT has found an unexpected discovery about water: Inside the tiniest of the spaces – in carbon nanotubes whose inner dimensions are not much bigger than a few water molecules – water can freeze solid even at high temperatures that would normally set it boiling. The finding might lead to new  applications such as ice-filled wires.

 

                       (Credits :MIT)
It’s a well-known fact that water, at sea level, starts to boil at a temperature of 212 degrees Fahrenheit, or 100 degrees Celsius. And scientists have long observed that when water is confined in very small spaces, its boiling and freezing points can change a bit, usually dropping by around 10 C or so.

But now, a team at MIT has found a completely unexpected set of changes: Inside the tiniest of spaces — in carbon nanotubes whose inner dimensions are not much bigger than a few water molecules — water can freeze solid even at high temperatures that would normally set it boiling.

The discovery illustrates how even very familiar materials can drastically change their behavior when trapped inside structures measured in nanometers, or billionths of a meter. And the finding might lead to new applications — such as, essentially, ice-filled wires — that take advantage of the unique electrical and thermal properties of ice while remaining stable at room temperature.

The results are being reported today in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, in a paper by Michael Strano, the Carbon P. Dubbs Professor in Chemical Engineering at MIT; postdoc Kumar Agrawal; and three others.

“If you confine a fluid to a nanocavity, you can actually distort its phase behavior,” Strano says, referring to how and when the substance changes between solid, liquid, and gas phases. Such effects were expected, but the enormous magnitude of the change, and its direction (raising rather than lowering the freezing point), were a complete surprise: In one of the team’s tests, the water solidified at a temperature of 105 C or more. (The exact temperature is hard to determine, but 105 C was considered the minimum value in this test; the actual temperature could have been as high as 151 C.)

“The effect is much greater than anyone had anticipated,” Strano says.

It turns out that the way water’s behavior changes inside the tiny carbon nanotubes — structures the shape of a soda straw, made entirely of carbon atoms but only a few nanometers in diameter — depends crucially on the exact diameter of the tubes. “These are really the smallest pipes you could think of,” Strano says. In the experiments, the nanotubes were left open at both ends, with reservoirs of water at each opening.

Even the difference between nanotubes 1.05 nanometers and 1.06 nanometers across made a difference of tens of degrees in the apparent freezing point, the researchers found. Such extreme differences were completely unexpected. “All bets are off when you get really small,” Strano says. “It’s really an unexplored space.”

In earlier efforts to understand how water and other fluids would behave when confined to such small spaces, “there were some simulations that showed really contradictory results,” he says. Part of the reason for that is many teams weren’t able to measure the exact sizes of their carbon nanotubes so precisely, not realizing that such small differences could produce such different outcomes.

In fact, it’s surprising that water even enters into these tiny tubes in the first place, Strano says: Carbon nanotubes are thought to be hydrophobic, or water-repelling, so water molecules should have a hard time getting inside. The fact that they do gain entry remains a bit of a mystery, he says.

Strano and his team used highly sensitive imaging systems, using a technique called vibrational spectroscopy, that could track the movement of water inside the nanotubes, thus making its behavior subject to detailed measurement for the first time.

The team can detect not only the presence of water in the tube, but also its phase, he says: “We can tell if it’s vapor or liquid, and we can tell if it’s in a stiff phase.” While the water definitely goes into a solid phase, the team avoids calling it “ice” because that term implies a certain kind of crystalline structure, which they haven’t yet been able to show conclusively exists in these confined spaces. “It’s not necessarily ice, but it’s an ice-like phase,” Strano says.

Because this solid water doesn’t melt until well above the normal boiling point of water, it should remain perfectly stable indefinitely under room-temperature conditions. That makes it potentially a useful material for a variety of possible applications, he says. For example, it should be possible to make “ice wires” that would be among the best carriers known for protons, because water conducts protons at least 10 times more readily than typical conductive materials. “This gives us very stable water wires, at room temperature,” he says.

The research team also included MIT graduate students Steven Shimizu and Lee Drahushuk, and undergraduate Daniel Kilcoyne. The work was supported by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the U.S. Army Research Office through the MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies, and Shell-MIT Energy Initiative Energy Research Fund.
 “Reprinted with permission of MIT News”

http://news.mit.edu/

http://news.mit.edu/2016/carbon-nanotubes-water-solid-boiling-1128

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Parallel Universes DO Exist And Are Already Reaching Out To Us, Scientists Confirm!

In order to put forth tangible proof that backs the multiverse or ‘Many Worlds’ theory, scientists have finally confirmed that parallel universes exist and that they have already started interacting with ours. 

Scientist Howard Wiseman of Griffith University, Australia, is spearheading a project that proposes a landmark theory suggesting that these parallel universes operate in the same time and space as our own. What’s even more interesting is that they are interacting with ours on a quantum level, as reported by IFL Science.

The multiverse theory debunks the 20th-century single verse theory that suggested only one universe existed. However, the 'Many Worlds' theory proposes to explain the inexplicable aspects of quantum mechanics - a field of physics that deals with the structure and behaviour of matter as well as our physical world at the small scale of fundamental mechanics. 

However, even the ‘Many Worlds’ theory doesn’t show the interaction between these universes. According to its traditional interpretation, several universes came to life after a celestial event occurred – like an asteroid hitting the Earth. 

The alternative and a more believable theory is that of the ‘Many Interacting Worlds’ theory that suggests that these worlds not only overlap but constantly connect with one another in the same space and time.

While some researchers think this is a ‘huge waste of time’, others have called it a ‘very nice analysis’. But if the ‘Many Interacting Worlds’ theory holds true, we are in for many worlds of surprise!

 

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Xiaomi Mi 5c specs reportedly leak, announcement to take place on December 6

 

The phone is set to start at CNY 999, which means about $144 or €136. That’s a decent price, especially considering that this device will be part of the Mi 5 line.

That said, don’t expect specs similar to those of the Mi 5s. The Mi 5c will be a lower-end alternative, and  an alleged spec sheet for it has been leaked in China.

It tells us that the Xiaomi Mi 5c will have a 5.5-inch touchscreen with narrow bezels, a 2.2 GHz octa-core processor, 3GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and NFC support. Its main camera will be a 12 MP unit, while an 8 MP shooter will take care of selfies. The phone will run MIUI 8, probably atop Android 6.0 Marshmallow. The CPU will probably have Cortex-A53 cores, and it’s said that this might even be an SoC made in-house by Xiaomi. Take that with a pinch of salt though.

Past leaks have shown a handset with a fingerprint sensor on the front, and 2.5D glass on top of its screen.