Image of the Day…Sunrise !!!

Striped sunrises and the shadows they cast

Two photos by Peter Lowenstein. One shows a sunrise striped with cloud, and the other shows the shadow from a cloud-striped sunrise on a nearby mountain slope.

View larger. | Photo by Peter Lowenstein.

Peter Lowenstein of Mutare, Zimbabwe – who recently contributed an interesting photo of straight lightning to these pages – has submitted another set of unusual photos for us. One is above, and the other is at the bottom of this post. The photos were taken a year apart, but might have been taken on the same day if two photographers had been standing back to back, one shooting a cloud-striped sunrise and the other shooting the sun’s first light – showing banded cloud shadow – shining on a nearby mountain slope. Peter wrote:

The first picture was taken almost a year ago from a high vantage point in the Bvumba Mountains looking east over Chikamba in Mozambique and shows a glorious sun striped by rising through thin layers of early morning cloud and mist on the horizon. I captured it at 5:57 a.m. using a Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ10 compact camera in sunset mode and x16 zoom setting.

The second picture was taken at sunrise yesterday morning (March 29, 2015) from the verandah of my house and shows alternate stripes of bright orange sunlight and the dark shadows of a thin strip of cloud and the eastern horizon being projected by the sun onto Murawa Mountain a few kilometers to the west. This spectacle lasted less than a minute before being faded by larger clouds passing in front of the sun. It was captured at 6:10 a.m. using a Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ60 compact camera in sunset mode and x2 zoom setting.

View larger. | Photo by Peter Lowenstein.

Bottom line: Peter Lowenstein in Zimbabwe took these photos a year apart. One shows a sunrise striped with cloud, and the other shows cloud-striped sunrise’s cloud shadow.

Source:::::::: http://www.earthskynews.org

Natarajan

 

The Strange History of April Fool’s Day…!!!

Have you ever stopped to think WHY you’re Saran Wrapping a toilet seat on April Fools’ Day?

Do you think the first time a man pranked his neighbor everyone reveled in the delight of it so much they decided to make a holiday out of it? Is that where April Fools’ Day came from?

Well, it’s as good a guess as any because the origins of this high jinx-filled holiday aren’t entirely

solidified. There are, however, some strong theories of how it came about.

The most popular theory of the holiday actually has Catholic origins: In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII replaced the widely used Julian calendar with the now currently instated Gregorian calendar. This moved the start of the year from April 1st to January 1st.

Those who were late to catch on or refused to acknowledge the change and still celebrated the New Year in April were mocked and teased (humans are the best!). In France, a common prank was throwing paper fish at the springtime New Year’s celebrators and calling them poisson d’avril, or April Fish, a term for a gullible person.

Other cultures and societies have springtime celebrations centering around foolishness and joviality. Hilaria was an ancient Roman celebration on the vernal equinox for Cybele, the mother of the gods. People would dress up in costumes and masks, imitating those in higher positions of power.

Sizdah Be-dar, which falls thirteen days after Nowruz, the Persian New Year, is an occasion where families gather outside for picnics and celebrate the return to ordinary life after the New Year. It’s a day where laughter is used to overpower the bad omens and thoughts for the upcoming year.

In Hinduism, Holi is the spring festival of colors where crowds welcome the warming weather and longer days by throwing colored dyes on each other. Covered in layers of powdered dyes, people were indistinguishable by class, caste, or gender.

As with many other traditions/holidays, like Santa Claus, Thanksgiving, or Halloween, there doesn’t seem to be one exact origin of April Fools’ Day, which might be for the best. Why do we need one excuse to be silly?

Fool on, pranksters!

This article originally appeared at Modern Notion. Copyright 2015. Follow Modern Notion on Twitter.

Read more: http://modernnotion.com/history-april-fools-day/#ixzz3W05QCApf

Source:::::www.businessinsider.com

Natarajan

 

Great-Great -Grand Parents with their Great-Great Grandchildren….Simply Great !!!

A photo of a 101-year-old great-great-grandmother holding her great-great-grandson, posted on the parenting blog Life of Dad, has seen hundreds of people share similar pictures.

The original image, which received more than 23,000 comments, inspired countless new submissions — proving that having a relative whose bond crosses multiple generations is not as rare as many may have thought.

‘Seriously incredible. We need to arrange a meetup of Centennials and their great-grand kids,’ wrote Life of Dad.

A photo of a 101-year-old great-great-grandmother holding her great-great-grandson, posted on the parenting blog Life of Dad, has seen hundreds of people share similar pictures

A photo of a 101-year-old great-great-grandmother holding her great-great-grandson, posted on the parenting blog Life of Dad, has seen hundreds of people share similar pictures

One image shows Ohio mom Amanda Garber’s son, Samuel, with his great-great-grandmother, Helen Willaman.

‘My son and grandma are almost 101 years apart. I feel extremely blessed to have her in our lives,’ Ms Garber told Today.

‘I love to hear the stories of when she was a little girl, or when she had a baby and how different it was back then.’

This image shows Ohio mom Amanda Garber's son, Samuel, with his great-great-grandmother, Helen Willaman - a 101-year difference

This image shows Ohio mom Amanda Garber’s son, Samuel, with his great-great-grandmother, Helen Willaman – a 101-year difference

Australian mom Leanne Young posted this image of a 102-year difference between a great-great-grandfather and his great-great-grandson

Australian mom Leanne Young posted this image of a 102-year difference between a great-great-grandfather and his great-great-grandson

Jennifer Browder Goodman from South Carolina submitted this image of her grandmother holding her daughter for the first time 'She will be 95 in August!' she wrote

Jennifer Browder Goodman from South Carolina submitted this image of her grandmother holding her daughter for the first time ‘She will be 95 in August!’ she wrote

Meanwhile Washington-based mom Breean Ferreira shared an image of her 113-year-old great grandmother and her one-year-old son.

Grandmother Laura Kayizzi also shared in the fun, posting a photo of her own grandmother, who was born in who was born in 1915 and passed away this winter.

Ms Kayizzi’s image shows her daughter’s son being held by his great-great-grandmother, revealing that ‘her advice to my daughter about being a mom was, “Love them as much as you can. They grow up fast.”‘

Candice Joynt, from Colorado, posted this image with the caption: '101 years, 4 months and 12 days apart'

 

Candice Joynt, from Colorado, posted this image with the caption: ‘101 years, 4 months and 12 days apart’

According to this submission from Pennsilvania, the age differnce here is 93 years

According to this submission from Pennsilvania, the age differnce here is 93 years

Jody Robinson, from Birmingham, wrote: 'This is a special family photo. My dad, aged 93, holding his great granddaughter, then ten days old, for the first time. He was desperate to hold her. He died 2 weeks later'

Jody Robinson, from Birmingham, wrote: ‘This is a special family photo. My dad, aged 93, holding his great granddaughter, then ten days old, for the first time. He was desperate to hold her. He died 2 weeks later’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3018386/Great-great-grandmothers-seen-cuddling-newborn-family-members-touching-

Natarajan

Amazing Street Art ….Classic Chalk Drawings !!!

A gaping volcano, a sheer cliff, dragons and goblins and gates to heavenly kingdoms – all opening before you as you walk down these sidewalks, those lucky sidewalks that got to bear these wonderful chalk drawings that come to life before you eyes!

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

chalk drawings

Source:::: ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

” Art of Seeking Approval …” !!!

Jack and Max were walking near a church for the Sunday prayer..
Jack wonders whether it would be all right to smoke while praying.
Max replies, “Why don’t you ask the Priest?”
So Jack goes up to the Priest and asks, “Father, may I smoke while I pray?”
The Priest replies, “No, my son, you may not! That’s utter disrespect to our religion.”
Jack goes back to his friend and tells him what the good Priest told him.
Max says, “I’m not surprised. You asked the wrong question. Let me try.”
And so Max goes up to the Priest and asks, “Father, may I pray while I smoke?”
To which the Priest eagerly replies, “By all means, my son. By all means.
You can always pray whenever you want to.”
Moral of the story: The approval you want depends on the way you ask for it!!
Source:::::::: input from a friend of mine
Natarajan

An Unexpected Passenger Tries to Board a Flight…. !!!

Airport workers were startled to find a green snake making its way up the stairs.

Airport workers were startled to find a green snake making its way up the stairs. Source: Twitter 

AN UNEXPECTED passenger tried to board this flight to Sydney this morning …..

Passengers boarding a Virgin plane at Gold Coast Airport were diverted to the rear of the plane when airline workers discovered a snake had scaled its way up the stairs to the front door.

Luckily they didn’t have a hiss-y fit over the surprise visitor.

It just so happened that Assistant Minister for Defence, Stuart Robert, was one of the passengers boarding the plane and he took to Twitter to announce the breach of security, not the first time a snake has tried to slip its way onto a flight.

“A snake had just slithered up the front steps, so we actually boarded, then, through the back steps,” he told ABC.

“But within five minutes they had come along and a couple of airport guys had brought a bag and a couple of snake catching rods and quickly gathered up the little sucker and put him in the bag, and I guess deposited him out where he belongs.”

View image on Twitter

“It was probably enjoying the nice warm steel as part of the front stairs and wasn’t quite aware what all the fuss was about really,” he said.

“Now it may have just climbed up there I guess when people were happily boarding the aircraft, but you have to admire how good the airline staff are in terms of rapidly diverting plans, sorting out the snake, replotting the aircraft in terms of when it is going to take off.

“But I dare say the poor little snake didn’t make it to Sydney.”

It’s not the first time a snake has tried to hitch a free ride, with a python boarding a

It’s not the first time a snake has tried to hitch a free ride, with a python boarding a Qantas flight from Cairns to PNG in 2013. Source: Supplied 

Source:::::: http://www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Speed of Electricity… Slower than a Turtle !!!

Slower Than a Turtle

You may be surprised to learn that electrons flow through a typical copper wire much slowerthan a turtle walks.

Each wire that conducts a flow of electrons, producing usable electric current, is composed of billions of atoms. To move along it, the electrons have to traverse these atoms, randomly zig-zagging their way as they do, resulting in the net flow rate, called “drift velocity,” in a given direction being quite slow.

How slow exactly? To calculate it, we use this formula: I = n*A*v*Q or v = I/(n*A*Q)

I is the current, n is the number of electrons per cubic meter, A is the cross-section of the wire, Q is the charge of an electron and v is the drift velocity of the electrons.

Since the number of electrons in a copper wire (n) is 8.5 * 1028 per m3, and the charge of an electron (Q) is 1.6 * 10-19C, if we also know the cross sectional area and the current, we can calculate the electrons’ drift velocity.

For example, suppose you have a current of 14 amps and a copper wire with a cross section of 3 * 10-6 m2. Plug in all the numbers and you get that the electrons are moving at a speed of 3.4 * 10-4 m/s – or about one-third of a millimeter per second.

To put it in values that are easier to conceptualize, this works out to about 1.2 meters (4.1 feet) per hour- a rate far slower than the average box turtle, which can cover about 800 feet in that same amount of time.

So how is it that something that is essentially slower than a turtle can more or less instantaneously turn on a light across a room?

Chain reaction.
The atoms in the wire are crammed together cheek to jowl, which, while it makes the going slow, also has the electrons more or less abutting one another. When the switch is turned on, thanks to the electrical potential difference created by the generator, a force is created to move the electrons, with each pushing its neighbor, which in turn pushes its neighbor and so on all the way through the wire.

So, while no electrons zoom through the wire to turn on the light as you might have previously thought, it ends up seeming like that is what’s happening. This is not unlike how when you turn on your faucet, water instantly comes out despite the fact that your water source might be many miles away.

Bonus Fact:

  • The land speed record for a tortoise in competition was set by a leopard tortoise named Bertie who flew up an 18-foot uphill track in just under 20 seconds (about 0.61 mph) in 2014.

Source:::::www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

Image of the Day…Spacecraft Launch on March 27 2015…

One-year crew lift-off success

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko will spend a year aboard the International Space Station.

Soyuz TMA-16M spacecraft launch on March 27, 2015

Media photograph the Soyuz TMA-16M spacecraft as it launches to the International Space Station with Expedition 43 NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, Russian cosmonauts Mikhail Kornienko and Gennady Padalka of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) onboard.

Liftoff was at 3:42 p.m. EDT Friday, March 27, 2015 (March 28 Kazakh time) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

As the one-year crew, Kelly and Kornienko will return to Earth on Soyuz TMA-18M in March 2016.

The goal of the mission is to help scientists better understand how the human body reacts and adapts to the harsh environment of space.

Source:::: http://www.earthskynews.org

Natarajan

 

Message For the Day…”Your Journey will be Smooth , if Your Axle is Truth and Your Goal is Peace…”

The vehicle of human life is drawn by the senses, driven by the intellect, with discrimination and detachment as the reins on the two wheels of Time and Action. The spokes of the wheel are the rules of righteousness, bound by the rim of Love. Your journey will be smooth, if your axle is Truth and your goal is Peace. Be careful to not exaggerate the importance of things that have material utility. They fade, even while you grasp them. Search for truth (Sath) – that which suffers no change, and Awareness (Chith) – the state of consciousness which is pure, unaffected by gusts of passion and is free from egoism or the desire to possess. Then you will experience Light, and illumine the Path for others. Experience the joy that emanates from Love with no blemish of attachment.

Sathya Sai Baba

One of the History’s Best Hoaxes …World”s Longest Running Hoax!!!

Cottingley Fairies

This story deserves some kind of award for being the world’s longest-running hoax. This one started way back in 1917, perpetrated by two young girls, Elsie and Frances, aged 16 and 9. They took five photographs of themselves in the woods, but something weird happened when these images were developed: the girls were surrounded by fairies.

Best Hoaxes Fairies

Right off the bat, the girls received support from a peculiar source – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The Sherlock Holmes creator was a keen spiritualist and complete believer in fairies, so he immediately accepted the pictures as genuine despite skeptics pointing out that they were faked.
Best Hoaxes Cottingley

Interest in the pictures lasted for a few years, but eventually died down. By then, the two cousins grew up and went on with their lives. Every now an then, a newspaper would track one of the girls down and do a story on the once-famous Cottingley Fairies. The girls would again claim that the pictures are genuine and interest in the story is briefly rekindled.

 

By the 1970s new technology allowed careful analysis of the photographs, which had been completely dismissed as fakes. A closer look reveals a series of strings holding the fairies up. However, it wasn’t until 1983 that the girls confessed to the hoax, admitting that the fairies were nothing but cardboard cutouts from a children’s book.

Source:::: http://www.all-that-is-interesting.com

Natarajan