PHYSICS: New Research On Physics From A.A. Saharian And Co-Authors S

PHYSICS: NEW RESEARCH ON PHYSICS FROM A.A. SAHARIAN AND CO-AUTHORS SUMMARIZED

Science Letter
April 28, 2009

"In this paper, we investigate the radiation emitted by a charged
particle moving along a helical orbit around a dielectric cylinder
immersed in a homogeneous medium. Formulae are derived for the
electromagnetic potentials, electric and magnetic fields, and for
the spectral-angular distribution of the radiation in the exterior
medium," investigators in Yerevan, Armenia report (see also Physics).

"It is shown that under the Cherenkov condition for dielectric
permittivity of the cylinder and the velocity of the particle image
on the cylinder surface, strong narrow peaks appear in the angular
distribution for the number of quanta radiated on a given harmonic. At
these peaks the radiated energy exceeds the corresponding quantity
for a homogeneous medium by several dozen times. Simple analytic
estimates are given for the heights and widths of these peaks,"
wrote A.A. Saharian and colleagues.

The researchers concluded: "The results of numerical calculations for
the angular distribution of the radiated quanta are presented and they
are compared with the corresponding quantities for the radiation from a
charge moving along a helical trajectory inside a dielectric cylinder."

Saharian and colleagues published their study in the Journal of Physics
a – Mathematical and Theoretical (Synchrotron radiation from a charge
moving along a helix around a dielectric cylinder. Journal of Physics
a – Mathematical and Theoretical, 2009;42(13):35402).

For additional information, contact A.A. Saharian, Institute Applied
Problems Physics, Yerevan 0014, Armenia.

The publisher of the Journal of Physics a – Mathematical and
Theoretical can be contacted at: IOP Publishing Ltd., Dirac House,
Temple Back, Bristol BS1 6BE, England.

Keywords: Electromagnet, Electromagnetic, Electronics, Magnetic Field,
Physics, Synchrotrons.

This article was prepared by Science Letter editors from staff and
other reports. Copyright 2009, Science Letter via NewsRx.com.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Foreign Minister To Visit U.S. On May 4-5

AZERBAIJANI FOREIGN MINISTER TO VISIT U.S. ON MAY 4-5

Trend News Agency
May 1 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov was invited to the
United States. Mammadyarov will meet with U.S. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton, officials of Pentagon and Security Council and group
of experts. At the meeting, the sides will discuss the challenges in
the region and Azerbaijani-American relations.

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbadyan will also visit Washington
in early May, Armenian press released.

VTB Bank (Armenia) Considers Possible Cooperation With MasterCard

VTB BANK (ARMENIA) CONSIDERS POSSIBLE COOPERATION WITH MASTERCARD

ArmInfo
2009-04-29 19:41:00

The VTB Bank (Armenia) considers possible cooperation with MasterCard
international system, Director General, Chairman of Directorate of
VTB Bank (Armenia) Valery Ovsyannikov said, Wednesday.

At present VTB Bank (Armenia) issues only Visa international system
cards. It has already issued 53 thsd such cards. "In connection
with the crisis, we revised the term of implementation of the credit
card project, this year we’ll only get technologically prepared for
this",- Ovsyannikov said. He added that at the moment the bank has
31 bancomats in Yerevan and 24 in the regions. The bank has a total
of 170 POS-terminals, 78 of them in its branches, 92 – in trade and
service outlets.

Bam’s Genocide Dodge

BAM’S GENOCIDE DODGE

The New York Post
April 25, 2009

It was presidential candidate Barack Obama who last fall loudly
declared that quot;America deserves a president who speaks truthfully
about the Armenian genocidequot; – promising, quot;I will be that
president.quot;

He even wrote then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice blasting
the recall of an ambassador to Turkey who’d used the term
quot;genocidequot; to describe the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians
under the Ottoman Empire.

The Turks, not surprisingly, blame the deaths on fighting during
World War I.

But, as candidate Obama wrote: quot;The occurrence of the Armenian
genocide in 1915 is not an ‘allegation,’ a ‘personal opinion’ or a
‘point of view.’ Supported by overwhelming evidence, it is a widely
documented fact.quot;

Well, that was then.

Yesterday, President Obama released the annual White House statement
for Armenian Remembrance Day, which commemorates the atrocity. And
nowhere in that statement does the word quot;genocidequot; appear.

Just as he very pointedly refused to use the word earlier this month
during a press conference with Turkish President Abdullah Gul.

quot;I want to focus not on my views right now, but on the views of
the Turkish and Armenian peoplequot; as the two nations hold talks,
he said then.

In yesterday’s statement, Obama issued a bland call to re-examine
the past, quot;so that it can better be understood.quot;

So much for America deserving quot;a president who speaks truthfully
about the Armenian genocide.quot;

Obviously, the president does not want to do anything that would
alienate Turkey, whose good will and active cooperation Washington
sees as critical to US interests in the Middle East.

So is Obama a hypocrite? Maybe so.

But it’s a telling lesson that actually being president is a lot more
complicated than running for the job.

Tsarukyan: Dashnaktsutyun Party’s Withdrawal From Ruling Coalition T

TSARUKYAN: DASHNAKTSUTYUN PARTY’S WITHDRAWAL FROM RULING COALITION TO WEAKEN ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES

ARKA
April 27, 2009
Yerevan

Gagik Tsarukyan, leader of Prosperous Armenia, one of governing
parties, Dashnaktsutyun party’s withdrawal from the ruling coalition
will weaken Armenian authorities.

On Monday, Armenian Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutyun announced
its withdrawal from Armenian ruling coalition.

The party quitted all ministerial seats and the vice-speaker post
in the National Assembly as well as chairmanship in parliamentary
standing committees because of discord over foreign policy.

Tsarukyan said that unlike Dashnaktsutyun, his party doesn’t think
the establishment of a dialogue between Armenia and Turkey without
preconditions can hobble international recognition of the fact of
Armenian Genocide and settlement of Karabakh conflict.

He also stressed that, if any precondition is put forward for
establishing Armenian-Turkish relations, Prosperous Armenia will quit
the ruling coalition as well.

"If approaches contradict our principles, we will withdraw from the
coalition. However, President Serzh Sargsyan takes steps favorable
for the nation and the country and will never make something harmful
for state interests", Tsarukyan said.

He remembered that the head of state has repeatedly said that
Armenian-Turkish relations were improving without preconditions.

T sarukyan also didn’t rule out that Dashnaktsutyun has taken that
step as part of its election campaign in the coming election to
Yerevan municipal committee.

He said that the party has its traditions electorate 10 to 15%.

"Participation in the coalition doesn’t mean joint approaches to all
issues. Both governing and opposition parties should decide together
what to do in favor of the nation", Tsarukyan said.

The ruling coalition was formed on March 21, 2008.

Dashnaktsutyun’s fellow coalition members were Republican Party of
Armenia, Prosperous Armenia and Orinats Yerkir.

On Wednesday, Armenian Turkish and Swiss foreign ministries issued
a joint statement saying the sides had reached an accord on a
wide range of issues related to improvement of Armenian-Turkish
relations.

Turkey recalls ambassador to Canada after Armenian commemoration

Prince George Citizen, Canada
April 26 2009

Turkey recalls ambassador to Canada after Armenian commemoration

Written by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Saturday, 25 April 2009

ANKARA, Turkey – Turkey recalled its ambassador to Canada, the Foreign
Ministry said Wednesday, after Canadian government ministers
reportedly took part in an event that labelled the Ottoman-era
killings of Armenians as genocide.

Ambassador Rafet Akgunay was called back for "thorough evaluations and
consultations," Foreign Ministry spokesman Burak Ozugergin said,
without saying why Akgunay was recalled or for how long.

Another government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in
line with government rules, said the ambassador was being withdrawn
temporarily to protest an event earlier this week in Canada
commemorating the deaths of Armenians at the end of the First World
War as genocide.

The official said Prime Minister Stephen Harper sent a message to the
ceremony, which angered Turkey. Turkish news reports said Canadian
officials took part in the event.

It is the second time that Turkey has recalled its ambassador to
Canada over the genocide dispute. In 2006, Turkey criticized Harper
for remarks he made in support of recognizing the mass killings as
genocide and briefly withdrew its ambassador. It also pulled out of a
military exercise in Canada in protest.

Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
Ottoman Turks – an event widely viewed by genocide scholars as the
first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies that the deaths
constituted genocide, contending the toll has been inflated and the
casualties were victims of civil war and unrest.

Legislators in the United States have also introduced a resolution
that would call the death genocide. If passed, the resolution could
undermine efforts by President Barack Obama’s administration to win
NATO ally Turkey’s help on key foreign policy goals.

U.S. legislators almost passed a similar resolution two years ago, but
congressional leaders did not bring it up for a vote after intense
pressure from the Bush administration.

Obama avoided the term "genocide" when he addressed Turkish
legislators during his visit a month ago. But he said, in response to
a question, that he had not changed his views. As a presidential
candidate, Obama said the killings amounted to genocide.

0425187770/wire/national-news/turkey-recalls-ambas sador-to-canada-after-armenian-commemoration.html

http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/2009

Gul says Obama ‘better informed’ on Armenian massacres

Agence France Presse — English
April 24, 2009 Friday 12:51 PM GMT

Gul says Obama ‘better informed’ on Armenian massacres

ANKARA, April 24 2009

Turkish President Abdullah Gul hinted Friday that he did not expect
his US counterpart Barack Obama to brand the mass killings of
Armenians under the Ottoman Empire a genocide.

He told reporters that they had discussed the question "very broadly"
during Obama’s visit to Turkey earlier this month, adding that the US
president "is now better informed."

During his 2008 White House run, Obama pledged to recognise the World
War I massacres as genocide, and had an opportunity to do so in the
annual April 24 statement from the White House commemorating the
events.

But analysts said it was unlikely after Wednesday’s announcement by
Armenia and Turkey that they had agreed "a comprehensive framework"
for normalising bilateral ties.

Gul predicted that Obama’s message "will encourage … all our
well-intentioned work," referring to the negotiations between Ankara
and Yerevan.

He said that Washington had "intensified very productive efforts to
produce a climate favouring a resolution of regional problems."

Armenians say 1.5 million of their people were victims of genocide in
eastern Turkey from 1915 and many countries, including France and
Canada, have officially recognised the killings as such.

Turkey rejects the genocide label and says 300,000-500,000 Armenians
and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took up
arms in eastern Anatolia and sided with invading Russian troops.

Gul also said that Wednesday’s accord would help Azerbaijan, a close
ally with Turkey at odds with Armenia over Nagorny Karabakh, an ethnic
Armenian enclave of Azerbaijan that fought to break free of Baku’s
control.

"I have spoken often with (Azerbaijan’s President) Ilham Aliyev in
recent days," he said. "We are in agreement that everything that is
being done is of advantage to both our countries, Azerbaijan and
Turkey."

Azerbaijan on Thursday urged Turkey to link reconciliation efforts
with Armenia to the withdrawal of Armenian forces from Nagorny
Karabakh.

Earlier this month, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan ruled
out a deal with Armenia unless Yerevan resolved its conflict with
Baku.

Baku has long insisted that any agreement should depend on Armenian
concessions in the dispute over Nagorny Karabakh.

Azerbaijan Defence Minister Safar Abiev was in Ankara Friday for talks
with Turkish armed forces chief General Yasar Buyukanit which were
expected to cover the accord with Armenia.

Will Turkey Recognize The Armenian Genocide?

WILL TURKEY RECOGNIZE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE?

A1+
06:43 pm | April 23, 2009 | society

This year marks 94 years since the Turkish authorities perpetrated
a genocide that led to the killing of 1.5 million Armenians.

"Turkey will never recognize the Armenian Genocide. If it hasn’t
recognized it until now, it will never do it," told the majority
people to "A1+".

"A1+" conducted a series of small surveys from citizens to find
out their opinions on the possible developments of Turkish-Armenian
relations.

"There is no need to talk about opening of the border as long as the
genocide remains unrecognized. Turkey is be the only one to benefit
from the border opening," says Ruben Hakobyan.

As for Zohrab Hovhannisyan, he says that those responsible for the
crimes perpetrated against Armenians in the early 20th century must be
brought to justice and hopes that there will never be genocide again.

"There will never be a Turkish-Armenian border opening. Those are just
rumors. The most important thing for Armenians today is international
recognition of genocide," says doctor Svetlana Aghayan.

Some citizens, however, say that there will come a day when Turkey
will recognize the genocide.

"I hope that 200 or 300 years later Turkey will be forced to recognize
the Armenian Genocide because that is proven by facts. We, our children
and grandchildren will not see it, but it will eventually happen,"
says Andranik Margaryan.

State Senate Commemorates 94th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide

The Office of Senator Dave Cogdill
MaryAlice Kaloostian, District Director
4974 East Clinton Way, Suite 100
Fresno, CA 93727
* Tel: 559.253.7122
* Fax: 559.253.7127
* Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
Thursday, April 23, 2009

State Senate Commemorates 94th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide

The California State Senate today solemnly recognized the 94th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, when more than one and a half
million Armenian men, women and children were victims of a brutal
genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turkish Empire. Senator Dave Cogdill
is a principal coauthor of Assembly Joint Resolution 14
< ?bill_number=3Dajr_14&sess=3DCUR&house=3DB &author=3Dkrekorian> , which commemorates the Armenian
Genocide.

"Armenians have held their cause alive and never allowed the world to
forget the crimes inflicted in cold blood on their families. But there
is far more to the story of the Armenians than a closed chapter in the
history books. There is also the story of survivors carving out new
identities in new lands," said Senator Cogdill. "Armenian Americans
have enriched our state through leadership in the fields of academia,
medicine, business, agriculture, government and the arts. With great
admiration, I salute the Armenian people for their great courage and

Last year Senator Cogdill authored Senate Concurrent Resolution 93
< ?bill_number=3Dscr_93&sess=3DPREV&house=3D B&author=3Dcogdill> , which designated 2008 as the Year of
William
Saroyan, an Armenian American author from Fresno, and recognized the
cultural contributions of Armenian Americans to California. More members
of the Armenian community live in California than any other state in the
nation.

Tomorrow in Fresno, Senator Cogdill will speak at an event commemorating
the 94th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

Senator Cogdill proudly represents part or all of the counties of
Fresno, Madera, Mariposa, San Joaquin, Stanislaus and Tuolumne.

###

http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/postquery
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/postquery

The dilemma of the Lebanese Armenians

The dilemma of the Lebanese Armenians

Azad-Hye Special

Since the formation of modern Lebanon, the Armenians in Lebanon were
not part of any direct political alliance or coalition. For this
reason, they were frequently considered as neutral or without
political alignment. This has not always been as risk-free as it may
seem, especially during times of crisis (such as the Civil War), when
not having a backup support meant in reality to be targeted by two or
more adversaries at the same time.

The upcoming parliamentarian elections in Lebanon (07 June 2009) have
created an awkward situation, a kind of dilemma for the Lebanese
Armenians. The highly polarized and antagonistic political situation
in the country (between the March 8 and March 14 alliances) is
dragging also the Armenians into its web.

At the last legislative elections in May and June 2005, the March 14
alliance (Led by Saad Hariri, president of the Future Movement, Samir
Geagea president of the Lebanese Forces, Amine Jemayel, president of
the Lebanese Phalanges and Walid Jumblatt, leader of the Progressive
Socialist Party) turned to be the dominant group in the Parliament,
with 72 Members out of 128. Two MPs affiliated to the March 14
alliance belong to the Armenian Ramgavar and Hunchak parties, in
addition to 2 other "independent" Armenian MPs.

The opposing March 8 alliance is a coalition of various political
parties in Lebanon including Hezbollah, Amal Movement, Marada
Movement, Lebanese Communist Party and the Syrian Social Nationalist
Party. In 2006, the Free Patriotic Movement (Led by Michel Aoun)
joined this alliance after signing a Memorandum of Understanding with
Hezbollah. Two MPs in this alliance belong to the ARF
(Tashnagtsoutyoun) party. In March 2008 Michel Murr (who has always
been an ally to the Armenians) and his bloc quit the alliance, causing
some tension within the Armenian voting ranks. The ARF has now allied
itself with Hezbollah and the Free Patriotic Movement of General
Michel Aoun, at the same time maintaining links with Michel Murr (as a
person and not as bloc).

During the first week of April 2009, Hagop Pakradounian of the ARF
became the first Lebanese MP to win a parliamentary seat in 2009,
after winning the Matn district seat uncontested, following the
withdrawal of rival candidate Nazaret Sabounjian.

The sharp divisions between the above-mentioned two alliances have
created a new reality for the Armenians and especially for the ARF,
who represents 70-75% of the community in Lebanon. It has forced them
out of their traditional neutrality.

The involvement has reached to the point that Lebanese Armenians in
Diaspora, from Kuwait to UAE, from Canada to France are called upon to
participate in the elections, with all the travel expenses from abroad
to Lebanon undertaken by the Armenian political parties, exactly in
the same way the Lebanese parties try to allure their supporters.

In the wake of the Lebanese elections, some politically motivated pens
are questioning the nature of the loyalty of the Lebanese Armenians
and the political motivations of the leading ARF party.

Hagop Pakradounian rejects any accusation of duality of allegiance
(Armenian versus Lebanese). In an interview with the Arabic daily
Asharq Alawsat (17 April 2009) he says: "We are one of the sects that
form the Lebanese pluralism. We are members of the Armenian Church, so
we are Lebanese Armenians. There is no contradiction in being Armenian
and Lebanese. We hold Lebanese citizenship and not Armenian. That is
the basic characteristic. We are all for abolishing political
sectarianism in Lebanon. We might then assume high-ranking positions."

Regarding the international affiliations of the party, ARF is clear
about it. The party is an international one headed by Hrant Markarian,
who holds Armenian citizenship, even though he was born in Iran. The
party has branches in many countries, while the central committee
(bureau) convenes in a general conference once every four years to
discuss common Armenian issues and not internal political issues
related to each branch. In conclusion, there is no intervention
whatsoever from the party’s central committee in the internal affairs
of Lebanon or any other country.

ARF has its own internal challenges, such as the Free Lebanese
Armenian Movement, founded two years ago by several displeased ex-ARF
members, headed by General Nareg Aprahamian. The Movement is said to
be supported by the Future Movement (Saad Hariri), with the aim of
weakening the voting power of the ARF. In May 2008, the radio station
of the Movement (Radio Sevan) was burned during a Hezbollah raid on
Beirut suburbs (Hezbollah is perceived as an ally to ARF). In January
2009, one of the founding members of the Movement (Hrag Akian) was
heavily wounded and paralyzed by a shot fired by ARF supporter in
Bourdj Hammoud’s Amanos neighborhood, during a heated encounter. On 06
April 2009 General Nareg Aprahamian announced his candidacy for the
Armenian seat in the city of Zahle, heralding a fierce confrontation
on that seat with ARF.

The situation inside the Ramgavar party is critical. A group of
members have formed a sort of inner opposition to the leader Hagop
Kassarjian and Avedis Dakessian, the deputy-chairman. Kassarjian, who
had managed to gain one of the Armenian seats in the 2000 and 2005
elections though his affiliation to the Future Movement (Hariri clan),
might eventually lose support for the same position. Ramgavar
opposition circles claim that Kassarjian and Dakessian have
orchestrated an illegal general meeting on 29 March 2009, with the
sole aim of consolidating their positions in the June elections.

Armenians have been always careful not to fall into alliances during
Lebanese crisis. They have always served as an element of balance and
stability. The community nowadays is witnessing political and cultural
diversity, manifested in the numerous parties and trends. This in a
way is bringing fresh air to the society. On the other hand, the
Armenian votes could easily be exploited, in a political culture, that
favors blind party comradeship and a traditionally introvert society
governed by semi-authoritarian normes.

It is obvious that, the political options of the Lebanese Armenian are
now divided between March 8 and 14 Alliances. Would they be able to
achieve a common "Armenian Bloc", despite their differences? Would
they succeed at least to enjoy a sort of harmony within the community
itself? Would they still be able (on pan-Lebanese level) to play a
certain balancing role? Or would they be strongly influenced by the
acute polarization in the Lebanese political scene?

Last year was the 50th anniversary of the inter-Armenian killings of
the 1958 in Beirut, when the political polarization in the Cold War
era Lebanon led to the death of at least a hundred Armenians in an
internal strife. The Lebanese Armenians preferred to keep the taboo
intact and did not even pray for the souls of those lost in tragic
circumstances. While it is highly unlikely that a physical lose could
inflict the Armenians in the same manner that happened in the past,
the prospect of being manipulated as proxies in hostile camps remains
real.

ws.asp?newsId=112lls92

http://www.azad-hye.net/news/viewne