Beluga….Super Transporter Plane from AIR BUS !!!!….A Jumbo Giant in Sky!!!!

Business is booming at Airbus: The European planemaker just closed a huge deal to sell $24 billion worth of A320 jets to Indonesia’s Lion Air, and it’s busy building the A350 XWB, the plane it created to compete with Boeing‘s 787 Dreamliner.

 

Airbus is based in Toulouse, France, but produces planes in the United Kingdom, Spain, Germany, and China.

To transport the wings and fuselages of half-built planes from one factory to another, it needed a plane bigger than any standard cargo jet.

So it built the Beluga.

Developed in the 1990s and based on the A300 (the wings, engines, landing gear, and lower portion of the fuselage are the same), the Beluga has one of the biggest cargo holds in the world.

It’s the best way to get the body of a jumbo jet, a fleet of helicopters, or even a priceless painting across the planet.

It’s also one of the strangest looking planes in the skies.. Airbus Created This Bizarre Plane To Fly Jumbo Jet Parts Around The World

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/meet-the-bizarre-but-useful-airbus-beluga-2013-3?op=1#ixzz2OB7bm82f

airbus beluga transport plane

With its main compartment open, the Beluga looks like a whale swallowing its prey…thus the name .It is built to fit entire aircraft fuselages..On a typical flight, Beluga carries more than 100,000 pounds of cargo.  It is 56 Feet tall !..And the diameter of the fuselage is  24 Feet…

The Beluga is available for charter. In 1999, it was used to fly Eugene Delacroix’s huge painting, ‘Liberty Leading the People,’ from Paris to Tokyo for an exhibition.
Seeing it on the ground, it’s hard to believe the huge plane can get airborne. But it’s actually made with a maximum takeoff weight of 341,713 pounds.

At the 2012 ILA Berlin Airshow in September, one was used to attract potential employees.   It’s official name is the A300-600ST Super Transporter.

The Beluga is available for charter. In 1999, it was used to fly Eugene Delacroix's huge painting, 'Liberty Leading the People,' from Paris to Tokyo for an exhibition.

From the ground, it seems almost like a normal jumbo jet — but not quite. Its wingspan measures more than 147 feet.

source::::businessinsider.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

தமிழ் இலக்கியம் விளக்கும் ஓசோன் …Ozone!!!

பிரமிப்பூட்டும் தமிழர்களின் விஞ்ஞானம் – வான்வெளி

இரண்டாயிரம் வருடங்களுக்கு முன்னர் வந்த தமிழ் இலக்கியங்களில் ஓசோன் !.

தற்கால அறிவியல் அறிஞர்களால் புவிக்கு மேலே இருக்கும் வான்வெளி ஆறு பகுதிகளாகப் பகுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

புவியில் இருந்து ஒன்றன் மேல் ஒன்றாக

ட்ரோபோஸ்பியர் (troposphere)
ஸ்ட்ரோட்ஸ்பியர்/ஓசோன் (stratosphere/ozone)
மீஸோஸ்பியர் (mesosphere)
தெர்மாஸ்பியர் (thermosphere)
எக்ஸோஸ்பியர் (exosphere)
நத்திங்னஸ் (nothingness) – நீத்தம்

என அவை அமைந்துள்ளன.

இவற்றுள் புவிக்கு மேலே முதலில் அமைந்திருப்பது ட்ரோபோஸ்பியர். இது வான்வெளியின் மொத்த கன அளவில் பதினேழில் ஒரு பங்குதான் (1/17). ஆனால், வான்வெளியில் உள்ள மொத்தக் காற்றின் அளவில் ஐந்தில் நான்கு பகுதி (4/5) இங்கு தான் இருக்கிறது.

இன்றைக்கு ஏறத்தாழ 2,000 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன் வாழ்ந்த தமிழர்கள் வான்வெளியை ஐந்து கூறுகளாகப் பிரித்துக் கூறி இருப்பதை அறியும்போது வியப்பும் மகிழ்வும், பெருமிதமும் ஒருங்கே உண்டாகின்றன.

“இருமுந்நீர்க் குட்டமும்
வியன் ஞாலத்து அகலமும்
வளிவழங்கு திசையும்
வறிதுநிலைஇய ஆகாயமும்.” (புறநா – 20)
என்னும் வரிகளில் புவிக்கு மேல் உள்ள மூன்று பகுதிகள் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளன.

“செஞ்ஞாயிற்றுச் செலவும்
அஞ்ஞாயிற்றுப் பரிப்பும்
சூழ்ந்த மண்டிலமும்
வளிதரு திசையும்
வறிதுநிலை காயமும்.” (புறநா – 30)
என்னும் வரிகளால் புவிக்கு மேல் ஐந்து பகுதிகள் குறிப்பிடப்பட்டுள்ளன.

“மயங்கிருங் கருவிய விசும்பு முகனாக
இயங்கிய இருசுடர் கண்ணெனப் பெயரிய
வளியிடை வழங்கா வழக்கறு நீத்தம்.” (புறநா – 365)
என்னும் வரிகளில் இரண்டு பகுதிகள் குறிப்பிடப்பட்டுள்ளன.

இவற்றுள் “திசை” என்னும் பகுதியில் காற்று இருக்கும். “ஆகாயம்”, “நீத்தம்” என்னும் பகுதிகளில் எதுவும் இருக்காது எனவும் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது. “நீத்தம்” என்பது இன்றைய அறிவியலார் கூறும் “வெறுமை” (நத்திங்னஸ்) என்னும் பகுதி.

புவிக்கு மேல் இருக்கின்ற இரண்டாவது பகுதியான “ஸ்ட்ரோட்ஸ்பியர்” என்னும் பகுதியில் தான் “ஓசோன்” எனப்படும் காற்றுப்படலம் அமைந்துள்ளது. இப்படலம் கதிரவனிடம் இருந்து வரும் கடும் வெப்பத்தை, தான் தாங்கிக்கொண்டு புவியில் உள்ள உயிர்கள் துன்பம் உறாமல் காத்துவருகிறது. 20ஆம் நூற்றாண்டின் பிற்பகுதியில் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்ட இந்த ஓசோன் படலத்தைப் பற்றி 2ஆம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்த தமிழ்ப் புலவர்கள் குறிப்பிட்டிருப்பது வியப்பை அளிக்கிறது அல்லவா?

“நிலமிசை வாழ்வர் அலமரல் தீர
தெறுகதிர் வெம்மை கனலி தாங்கி
காலுண வாக சுடரொடு கொட்கும்
அவிர்சடை முனிவரும் மருள.” (புறநா – 43)
என்னும் பாடல் வரிகளின் கருத்து, “புவியில் வாழும் மக்களின் துன்பம் தீர கதிரவனின் வெப்பம் மிக்க கனலைத் தாங்கிக்கொண்டு கதிரவனோடு சேர்ந்து சுழல்கின்ற முனிவர்கள்” என்பதாகும்.

மேலும், முருகக் கடவுளின் ஒரு கை,

“விண்செலல் மரபின் ஐயர்க்கு ஏந்தியது” என்று
திருமுருகாற்றுப்படை (107) யிலும்,

“சுடரொடு திரிதரும் முனிவரும், அமரரும் இடர்கெட அருளி நின் இணையடி தொழுதோம்” என சிலப்பதிகாரத்திலும் (வேட்டுவ வரி – 18) இக்கருத்து கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

முனிவர்கள் என்று கூறப்பட்டதாலேயே, மற்ற மதத்தினரும் பகுத்தறிவுவாதிகளும் இது அறிவியல் கருத்தன்று; கற்பகமரம், காமதேனு போன்ற கற்பனைகளுள் ஒன்று தான் என்று சொல்லக் கூடும்.

கதிரவனின் வெப்பத்தைத் தாங்கிக் கொள்ளும் ஒரு சக்தியைப் பற்றித் தமிழர்கள் (சங்கப் புலவர்கள்) சிந்தித்திருக்கிறார்கள் என்னும் செய்தி நாம் இரண்டாயிரம் வருடங்களுக்கு முன்னரே கூறிவிட்டோம் என்று நினைக்கும் போது, இந்த செந்தமிழ்நாட்டில் பிறந்ததை எண்ணி நாம் பெருமை கொள்ளவேண்டும் !.

source::::input from a friend of mine.

Natarajan

Pilot Fast Asleep While at Control…But Safe Flight !!!

Air New Zealand

Air New Zealand says even though one of the two pilots fell into a deep sleep at the controls of the international flight “safety was not compromised at any point”. Picture: Mark Coote/Bloomberg Source: Bloomberg

AIR New Zealand said that one of its pilots fell into a deep sleep while at the controls of an international flight but insisted that safety aboard the aircraft was never compromised.

He was one of two pilots flying a 332-seat Boeing 777-300ER from London to Los Angeles in November 2011, according to a report released after a freedom of information request.

The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) document said the pilot voluntarily submitted a “fatigue report” with the regulator, recounting how he slept on the job.

The pilot, who was not identified, blamed a poor night’s rest in London, when air-conditioning problems in his hotel meant he had to change rooms three times, for his exhausted state on the flight.

“I suddenly, and without any warning, fell into a deep sleep on the flight deck. The same event occurred twice,” he said.

Air New Zealand said safety was paramount for the airline and it encouraged staff to report instances of fatigue as part of a programme to manage shift rosters to address the issue.

It said the flight in question had three pilots aboard.

“During the cruise phase of the flight one of the two operating pilots nodded off twice for around a minute and woke spontaneously,” it said in a statement.

“The other operating pilot on the flight deck was aware of this and safety was not compromised at any point.”

Air New Zealand said the pilot would not face disciplinary action as it did not want to discourage staff from reporting such incidents.
source:::::news.com.au

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/air-new-zealand-pilot-was-asleep-while-at-the-controls-but-plane-was-safe-says-airline/story-e6frfq80-1226588606045#ixzz2MHxcQzeX

India Puts World”s First Smartphone in Space !!!

India has become the world’s first country to launch a smartphone into space – loaded with a number of experimental ‘Apps’, some serious and some just for fun.
The British-built Strand-1 spacecraft, developed by scientists in Surrey, was sent into orbit from Sriharikota in India to test the capabilities of many standard smartphone
components for a space environment.
Launched into a 785 km Sun-synchronous orbit on Indian Space Research Organisation ISRO’s PSLV launcher on Monday, the spacecraft is an innovative 3U CubeSat weighing 4.3 kg and is the world’s first “phonesat” to go into orbit, as well as the first UK CubeSat to be launched.
Developed by a team from the University of Surrey’s Surrey Space Centre (SSC) and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL), STRaND-1 is a training and demonstration mission, designed to test commercial off-the-shelf technologies in space.
“STRaND-1 from SSC and SSTL is an example of the real synergy of academic research linked to commercial development and exploitation that is the hallmark of Surrey,” Professor Sir Martin Sweeting, SSC Director and also Executive Chairman of SSTL, said.
“This launch is SSTL’s first with ISRO, and I am looking forward to exploring opportunities for further launches and a wider collaboration on space projects in the future,” Martin said in a statement.
During the first phase of the mission, STRaND-1 will be controlled by the satellite’s attitude control system and a new high-speed linux-based CubeSat computer.
During phase two the STRaND-1 team plan to switch many of the satellite’s in-orbit operations to the smartphone, a Google Nexus One which uses the Android operating system, thereby testing the capabilities of many standard smartphone components for a space environment.
The smartphone has also been loaded with a number of experimental “Apps”, some serious and some just for fun.
The Scream in Space app was developed by Cambridge University Space Flight and will make full use of the smartphone’s speakers.
Testing the theory ‘in space no-one can hear you scream, made popular in the 1979 film ‘Alien’, the app will play videos of the best screams while in orbit and screams will be recorded using the smartphone’s own microphone.

source:::: INDIAN EXPRESS
Natarajan

– See more at: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/india-puts-worlds-first-smartphone-in-space/1080537/0#sthash.RKA4yRio.dpuf

A Clear Day and a Polluted Day in Beijing !!!

Beijing Smog

Beijing’s smog problem has become an international issue this year, with reports of canned air being solda ban on BBQs and even talk of moving the capital from Beijing to escape the fumes.

What can be hard to get across is exactly how much the smog changes the day-to-day life in the city. This photo, taken by Reddit user BananasUnited, shows the difference between a “clear” day, with a AQI of less than 500, and a smoggy day, with an AQI of more than 500.

AQI stands for Air Quality Index, which technically only goes to 500. On January 29th, however, Beijing’s AQI reached 517.

source:::: business insider.com

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/incredible-beijing-smog-image-2013-2#ixzz2LvGFhvT9

When All the Four Engines Failed of a British Airways 747…

The Best Airline Captain Announcement Ever Came On A British Airways 747 After All Four Engines Failed……

 

Photo of British Airways 747

British Airways

A British Airways 747-400

In 1982, a British Airways 747 flew into a cloud of volcanic ash near Indonesia. 

One by one, all four of its engines failed.

After falling more than 25,000 feet and preparing to ditch in the Indian Ocean, the plane’s crew eventually got the engines restarted. So the story had a happy ending.

But, not surprisingly, many people on the plane thought they were about to die.

I am old enough to remember this incident, but I had forgotten something important about it: What the plane’s captain said to the passengers the moment after the engines failed. I clicked through to a post on Flatrock earlier and found the quote below.

Captain Eric Moody was later praised for a cabin announcement that was described as “a masterpiece of understatement.”

Moody’s announcement was actually more than that.

It was a masterpiece, period. If an exceptional speechwriter had spent a week composing the message, he or she couldn’t have done better.

In 37 short, direct, and simple words, Captain Moody conveyed the following:

  • What was happening
  • The urgency of the situation
  • The crew’s intense focus on the problem (without false assurances that they could fix it)
  • Concern for the well-being of the passengers (without being patronizing)
  • A dry sense of perspective that probably did more to relax the passengers than thousands of words of explanation ever could have.

 

Captain Eric Moody

BA

Captain Eric Moody

Here’s what Moody said: 

“Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them going again. I trust you are not in too much distress.”

And here’s Wikipedia’s description of the incident:

British Airways Flight 9, sometimes referred to by its callsign Speedbird 9 or Jakarta incident,[1] was a scheduled British Airways flight from London Heathrow to Auckland, with stops in BombayMadrasKuala LumpurPerth, and Melbourne.

On 24 June 1982, the route was flown by the City of Edinburgh, a 747-236B. The aircraft flew into a cloud of volcanic ash thrown up by the eruption of Mount Galunggung (approximately 180 kilometres (110 mi) south-east of JakartaIndonesia), resulting in the failure of all four engines. The reason for the failure was not immediately apparent to the crew or ground control. The aircraft was diverted to Jakarta in the hope that enough engines could be restarted to allow it to land there. The aircraft was able to glide far enough to exit the ash cloud, and all engines were restarted (although one failed again soon after), allowing the aircraft to land safely at the Halim Perdanakusuma Airport in Jakarta.

The crew members of the incident segment had boarded the aircraft in Kuala Lumpur, while many of the passengers had been aboard since the flight began in London.[2]

Incident

Shortly after 13:40 UTC (20:40 Jakarta time) above the Indian Ocean, south of Java, the flight crew (consisting of Senior First Officer Roger Greaves and Senior Engineer Officer Barry Townley-Freeman while Captain Eric Moody was in the lavatory) first noted an effect on the windscreen similar to St Elmo’s fire.[1] The phenomenon persisted after Moody returned from the lavatory. Despite the weather radar showing clear skies, the crew switched on engine anti-ice and the passenger seat belt signs as a precaution.

As the flight progressed, smoke began to accumulate in the passenger cabin of the aircraft; it was first assumed to be cigarette smoke. However, it soon began to grow thicker and had an ominous odour of sulphur. Passengers who had a view out the aircraft windows noted that the engines were unusually bright, with light shining forward through the fan blades and producing a stroboscopic effect.[3]

At approximately 13:42 UTC (20:42 Jakarta time), engine number four began surging and soon flamed out. The flight crew immediately performed the engine shutdown drill, quickly cutting off fuel supply and arming the fire extinguishers. Less than a minute later, at 13:43 UTC (20:43 Jakarta time), engine two surged and flamed out. Within seconds, and almost simultaneously, engines one and three flamed out, prompting the flight engineer to exclaim, “I don’t believe it—all four engines have failed!”[3]

Without engine thrust, a 747-200 has a glide ratio of approximately 15:1, meaning it can glide forward 15 kilometres for every kilometre it drops. The flight crew quickly determined that the aircraft was capable of gliding for 23 minutes and covering 91 nautical miles (169 km) from its flight level of 37,000 feet (11,000 m).[3] At 13:44 UTC (20:44 Jakarta time), Greaves declared an emergency to the local air traffic control authority, stating that all four engines had failed. However, Jakarta Area Control misunderstood the message, interpreting the call as meaning that only engine number four had shut down. It was only after a nearby Garuda Indonesia flight relayed the message to Air Traffic Control that it was correctly understood. Despite the crew “squawking” the emergency transponder setting of 7700, the aeroplane could not be located by Air Traffic Control on their radar screens.

Many passengers, fearing for their lives, wrote notes to relatives. One such passenger was Charles Capewell, who scrawled “Ma. In trouble. Plane going down. Will do best for boys. We love you. Sorry. Pa XXX” on the cover of his ticket wallet.[2]

Owing to the high Indonesian mountains on the south coast of the island of Java, an altitude of at least 11,500 feet (3,500 m) was required to cross the coast safely. The crew decided that if the aircraft was unable to maintain altitude by the time they reached 12,000 feet (3,700 m) they would turn back out to sea and attempt to ditch into the Indian Ocean. The crew began engine restart drills, despite being well above the recommended maximum engine in-flight start envelope altitude of 28,000 feet (8,500 m). The restart attempts failed.

Despite the lack of time, Moody made an announcement to the passengers that has been described as “a masterpiece of understatement“:[3]

Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. We have a small problem. All four engines have stopped. We are doing our damnedest to get them going again. I trust you are not in too much distress.[3][4][5]

As pressure within the cabin fell, oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling — an automatic emergency measure to make up for the lack of air. On the flight deck, however, Greaves’s mask was broken; the delivery tube had detached from the rest of the mask. Moody swiftly decided to descend at 1,800 m per minute to an altitude where there was enough pressure in the outside atmosphere to breathe almost normally.

At 13,500 feet (4,100 m), the crew was approaching the altitude at which they would have to turn over the ocean and attempt a risky ditching. Although there were guidelines for the water landing procedure, no one had ever tried it in a Boeing 747, nor has anyone since. As they performed the engine restart procedure, engine number four finally started, and at 13:56 UTC (20:56 Jakarta time), Moody used its power to reduce the rate of descent. Shortly thereafter, engine three restarted, allowing him to climb slowly. Shortly after that, engines one and two successfully restarted as well.[6] The crew subsequently requested and expedited an increase in altitude in order to clear the high mountains of Indonesia.[7]

As the aircraft approached its target altitude, the St Elmo’s fire effect on the windscreen returned. Moody throttled back; however, engine number two surged again and was shut down. The crew immediately descended and held 12,000 feet (3,700 m).

As Flight 9 approached Jakarta, the crew found it difficult to see anything through the windscreen, and made the approach almost entirely on instruments, despite reports of good visibility. The crew decided to fly the ILS (Instrument Landing System); however, the glide slope (vertical guidance) system was inoperative, so they were forced to fly with only the localizer (lateral guidance) as the first officer monitored the airport’s DME (Distance Measuring Equipment). He then called out how high they should be at each DME step along the final approach to the runway, creating a virtual glide slope for them to follow. It was, in Moody’s words, “a bit like negotiating one’s way up a badger‘s arse.”[1] Although the runway lights could be made out through a small strip of the windscreen, the landing lights on the aircraft seemed to be inoperable. After landing, the flight crew found it impossible to taxi, due to glare from apron floodlights which made the already sandblasted windscreen opaque.

Aftermath

Damaged engine parts from BA 9 on display at Auckland Museum

Post-flight investigation revealed that City of Edinburgh’s problems had been caused by flying through a cloud of volcanic ash from the eruption of Mount Galunggung. Because the ash cloud was dry, it did not appear on the weather radar, which was designed to detect the moisture in clouds. The cloud sandblasted the windscreen and landing light covers and clogged the engines. As the ash entered the engines, it melted in the combustion chambers and adhered to the inside of the power-plant. As the engine cooled from inactivity, and as the aircraft descended out of the ash cloud, the molten ash solidified and enough broke off for air to again flow smoothly through the engine, allowing a successful restart. The engines had enough electrical power to restart because one generator and the onboard batteries were still operating; electrical power was required for ignition of the engines.

Engines one, two and three were replaced at Jakarta, as well as the windscreen, and the fuel tanks were cleared of the ash that had entered them through the pressurisation ducts, contaminating the fuel and requiring that it be disposed of. After being ferried back to London, engine number four was replaced and major work was undertaken to return the aircraft to service.

Although the airspace around Mount Galunggung was closed temporarily after the incident, it was reopened days later. It was only after a Singapore Airlines 747 was forced to shut down three of its engines while flying through the same area nineteen days later (13 July) that Indonesian authorities closed the airspace permanently and rerouted airways to avoid the area; a watch was set up to monitor clouds of ash.[3] Flight 9 was not the first encounter with this eruption — a Garuda DC-9 had encountered ash on 5 April 1982.[8]

The crew received various awards, including the Queen’s Commendation for Valuable Service in the Air and medals from the British Air Line Pilots Association. Following the incident, the crew and passengers formed the Galunggung Gliding Club as a means to keep in contact.[9] G-BDXH’s engineless flight entered the Guinness Book of Records as the longest glide in a non-purpose-built aircraft.

One of the passengers, Betty Tootell, wrote a book about the incident, All Four Engines Have Failed. She managed to trace some 200 of the 247 passengers on the flight, and went on to marry a fellow survivor, James Ferguson, who had been seated in the row in front of her. She notes: “The 28th December 2006 marks the start of our 14th year of honeymoon, and on the 24th June 2007 many passengers and crew will no doubt gather to celebrate the 25th anniversary of our mid-air adventure.”[10]

British Airways continued to operate the Flight 9 route from London Heathrow to Sydney; in March 2012 the route was curtailed to BangkokCity of Edinburgh, later renamed City of Elgin, continued to fly for British Airways after the incident, before being sold to European Aviation Air Charter. The aircraft was taken out of service in February 2004; in 2009, the then 30-year-old aircraft was scrapped. In September 2009 the environmental group 10:10 bought the fuselage of City Of Edinburgh to be made into tags. The tags, bearing the campaign’s logo, were worn as necklaces or bracelets and used to raise awareness of 10:10’s work: the organisation aimed to persuade individuals, organizations and businesses to reduce their carbon emissions by 10% in 2010.[11]

The incident featured in an episode of the Mayday documentary TV series Air Crash Investigation titled “Falling From the Sky”. This episode was repeated a number of times when the Eyjafjallajökull volcano caused a large-scale shutdown of European airspace.

Captain Eric Moody gave an interview to the July 2010 edition of Flaps Podcast, where he recounted his experience.

Similar incident

A nearly identical incident occurred on 15 December 1989 when KLM Flight 867, a Boeing 747-400 from Amsterdam to Anchorage, Alaska, flew into the plume of the erupting Mount Redoubt, causing all four engines to fail due to compressor stall. Once the flight cleared the ash cloud, the crew was able to restart each engine and then make a safe landing at Anchorage.[12]

source:::::business insider.com

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/captain-announcement-after-all-four-engines-failed-2013-2#ixzz2LvBynqiv

Astronomer Copernicus in Google Doodle….

 

Nicolaus Copernicus celebrated in Google doodle

Astronomer whose heliocentric theory of the universe triggered a revolution in scientific thinking was born on 19 February 1473

Nicolaus Copernicus Google doodle

Nicolaus Copernicus, the Polish astronomer, is the subject of the latest Google doodle.

Google’s latest doodle celebrates the birthday of Nicolaus Copernicus, the astronomer who transformed our understanding of the solar system and is best known for his theory that the sun and not the Earth is at the centre of the universe.

Born on 19 February 1473 as the son of a merchant in the city of Toruń, Poland, he studied at Krakow Academy, now the Jagiellonian University, before travelling to Italy to study law in 1496.

While studying at the University of Bologna, his passions for geography and astronomy were encouraged by a mathematics professor, Domenico Maria de Novara.

He returned to Poland and worked there for several years as a secretary to his uncle, a bishop, before taking on an administrative post in the city of Frauenberg, where he continued to study astronomy.

By 1514, at the behest of the Catholic church, he was involved in working to improve the calendar and in 1530 produced a major piece of research, De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres).

His observations were the first to place the sun, not the Earth, at the centre of what is now known as the solar system.

His heliocentric revolution was condemned by Martin Luther.

He died in May 1543. Legend has it that the first printed copy of De Revolutionibus was placed in his hands on the day of his death.

His long-lost skeleton was located in 2005 under floor tiles near one of the side altars in the 14th-century Roman Catholic cathedral in Frombork.

 

source:::: the guardian UK

Natarajan