Images for the Day…Amazing Moon and Planets !!!

 

Venus, moon and more over Qutab Minar on October 10, 2015 by Abhinav Singhai in India.

Venus, moon and more over Qutab Minar on the morning of October 10, 2015 by Abhinav Singhai in India.

Venus and moon, with Jupiter below, on the morning of October 9, by Asthadi Setyawan in Indonesia.

Venus and moon, with Jupiter below, on the morning of October 9, by Asthadi Setyawan in Indonesia.

As seen from Australia on the morning of October 9, the moon passed in front of Venus.  Colin Legg caught this shot at Bremer Bay and wrote:

As seen from Australia on the morning of October 9, the moon passed in front of Venus. Colin Legg wrote: “…a 5-hour drive east of Perth to Bremer Bay where Venus would emerge from behind the moon just as it cleared the horizon. Perched on a cliff face, looking east over the southern ocean, I watched the two brightest objects in the night sky slowly drift apart as they climbed into a starry early morning sky.” Read more at Colin’s Facebook page

Source…..www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

No one can figure out whether this little girl is underwater or jumping into the water…

Confusion … Is this little girl underwater or jumping into the water? Picture: Imgur

IF there’s one thing the internet loves, it’s a mind-bending photo just like this.

Imgur user ‘maskari’ posted the image of a girl playing with some water over the weekend, and social media users were quick to point out its weirdness.

“This girl looks like she’s underwater and jumping into water at the same time,” the caption said.

At first glance, the splashes (bubbles?) around the child’s face makes it look like she is swimming underwater.

Illusion? ... Millions have debated what this girl is actually doing in this photo. Picture: imgur/maskari

Illusion? … Millions have debated what this girl is actually doing in this photo. Picture: imgur/maskariSource:Supplied

But on closer inspection her hair is dry, meaning she hasn’t gone underwater yet?

“Her hair is dry. She is just jumping in a shallow pool and little droplets have flown around her looking like air bubbles,” one Imgur uses said.

“She’s neither underwater or jumping in… She’s obviously squatting down in a shallow pool and splashing the water up!!!” another said.

Since being uploaded the photo has been viewed close to 3.2 million times.

What can you see?

source….Michael MorrowNews Corp Australia Network….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

” 1 Cent off Poster ….” !!!

What the? … Shoppers spotted this hilarious sale item is a Woolworths store in Sydney. Picture: Heidi Tiltins

WE all love a good bargain, but this hilarious poster had shoppers scratching their heads yesterday after noticing the ridiculous saving.

The sale item, a ‘Little Live Pets Butterfly House’, was photographed and posted to social media, after being spotted by a number of shoppers at a Woolworths store in Dural in Sydney’s north west.

The deal was also posted on the Woolworths website online.

1 cent saving ... the product was also online today on the Woolworths website.

1 cent saving … the product was also online today on the Woolworths website.Source:Supplied

The ‘Cheap Cheap’ special offered customers a 1 cent discount, reducing the cost from $20 to $19.99.

If our calculations are right, given the 1 cent coin’s withdrawn from circulation in 1992, the cost of the product would be rounded back up to $20 on purchase.!!!

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

From America to Australia in Under 6 Hours…!!!

JustJ100 years ago, getting from America to Europe was a voyage that took several days by ocean liners. With the invention of airplanes, that travel time was significantly shortened to under 24 hours. At the apex of the era of transatlantic flight, the Concorde was able to fly 100 passengers at Mach 2.0 speeds from New York to London in just over 3.5 hours.
Sources: 1 | 2
Now, the European Space Agency (ESA) just greenlighted the next stage of modern transportation – the hypersonic flight. The ESA has approved a new round of funding to project LAPCAT (Long-Term Advanced Propulsion Concepts and Technologies).

Hypersonic Plane

Ignoring its funny name, the new plane will fly at Mach 5.0 speed (that’s five times the speed of sound!), using liquid hydrogen engines. The planes will be able to travel from England to Australia in four hours, carry 300 passengers and even fly to space in just 15 minutes.

The new kind of engine is being developed by the British company Reaction Engines, who are said to invest over 60 million GBP in the development, and are going to start builing a full-scale prototype engine.

Hypersonic Plane
Current jet engines require that airplanes carry liquid oxygen as a coolant because in speeds beyond Mach 3.0 the engines cannot use external oxygen for cooling. The new type of engine can use external oxygen freely, allowing it to cool down its engines from over 1,000°c (1,832°f) to -150°c (-328°f) in a fraction of a second.

Hypersonic Plane

Experts are hailing this development as the biggest advancement in aviation since the invention of the jet engine. The cost of a single plane is estimated to be a whopping $1.1 Billion and will have no windows.

All LATAP images: Source
This interesting video explains the LAPCAT’s abilities:

 

So would you be willing to fly in a windowless super-fast rocket?

Source…www.ba-bamail.com and http://www.youtube.com

Natarajan

 

A Rare Picture of Snubfin Dolphin in Australia…

A rare Australian snubfin dolphin taking a leisurely backstroke off Hinchinbrook Island National Park. PICTURE: QUEENSLAND NATIONAL PARKS

RANGERS have spotted a snubfin dolphin frolicking off north Queensland’s Hinchinbrook Island in a small pod, in an extremely rare sighting of the vulnerable species.

Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service Ranger Emma Schmidt has been working in the waters off the island for 12 years, but has only encountered the sociable mammals twice.

“They are very rare, so this photo was just pure luck,” Ms Schmidt said.

“We were heading to Sunken Reef Bay and I noticed a pod of about 10 Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins and among them was this cute little snubby.

“It was playing and mucking around jumping out of the water and in the photo it looks like it’s smiling.”

Ms Schmidt said while the animals were difficult to find, the Hinchinbrook Channel was a regular snubfin pod hotspot.

“They like the sheltered inshore waters rather than out of the reef.

“They are very shy, but there is one charter operator who regularly sees a pod,” she said.

Snubfin dolphins are Australia's only endemic dolphin and are at risk of being put on the endangered list. This one was spotted off the coast of Northern Western Australia by the World Wildlife Fund. Pic Deb Thiele/WWF.

Snubfin dolphins are Australia’s only endemic dolphin and are at risk of being put on the endangered list. This one was spotted off the coast of Northern Western Australia by the World Wildlife Fund. Pic Deb Thiele/WWF.Source:News Limited

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

World’s first-ever unmanned airport control tower….

Bye guys. A plane takes off beyond a remotely controlled control tower.

HAVE you ever imagined landing at an airport with no humans watching from the control tower?

Introducing the world’s loneliest airport.

In an era where pilot error is the leading cause of commercial airline accidents, a Swedish airport is testing an unmanned control tower.

And Australia may soon follow suit.

The commercial planes landing at the remote Ornskoldsvik Airport are instead watched by cameras, guided in by controllers viewing the video at another airport nearly 150 kilometres away.

Ornskoldsvik is the first airport in the world to use such technology.

Others in Europe are testing the idea, as is one airport in the United States.

While the majority of the world’s airports will, for some time, still have controllers on site, experts say unmanned towers are coming.

They’ll likely first go into use at small and medium airports, but eventually even the world’s largest airports could see an array of cameras mounted on a pole replacing their concrete control towers.

The companies building these remote systems say their technology is cheaper and better than traditional towers.

There is a lot of good camera technology that can do things that the human eye can’t,” says Pat Urbanek, of Searidge Technologies, “We understand that video is not real life, out the window. It’s a different way of surveying.”

Cameras spread out around an airport eliminate blind spots and give controllers more-detailed views. Infra-red can supplement images in rain, fog or snow and other cameras can include thermal sensors to see if animals stray onto the runway at the last second.

None of those features are — yet — in the Swedish airport because of regulatory hurdles.

Ornskoldsvik Airport is a vital lifeline for residents who want to get to Stockholm and the rest of the world. But with just 80,000 annual passengers, it can’t justify the cost of a fulltime control staff — about $175,000 a year in salary, benefits and taxes for each of six controllers.

In April, after a year and a half of testing a system designed by Saab, all the controllers left Ornskoldsvik.

Now, a 24-metre tall mast housing 14 high-definition cameras sends the signal back to the controllers, stationed at Sunvsal Airport. No jobs have been eliminated but ultimately such systems will allow tiny airports to pool controllers.

Old habits are hard to break. Despite the ability to zoom in, controllers instinctively grab their binoculars to get a closer look at images on the 55-inch TV screens. And two microphones were added to the airfield at Ornskoldsvik to pipe in the sounds of planes.

This is the first airport in the world to use such technology.

This is the first airport in the world to use such technology.Source:AP

“Without the sound, the air traffic controllers felt very lost,” says Anders Carp, head of traffic management for Saab.

The cameras are housed in a glass bubble. High pressure air flows over the windows, keeping them clear of insects, rain and snow. The system has been tested for severe temperatures: 22 degrees below zero and, at the other extreme, a sizzling 122 degrees.

Niclas Gustavsson, head of commercial development for LFV Group, the air navigation operator at 26 Swedish airports, says digital cameras offer numerous possibilities for improving safety.

Computers can compare every picture to the one a second before. If something changes — such as birds or deer crossing the runway — alerts are issued.

“Maybe, eventually there will be no towers built at all,” says Gustavsson.

Saab is currently testing — and seeking regulatory approval — for remote systems in Norway and Australia and has contracts to develop the technology for another Swedish airport and two in Ireland.

Competitor Searidge is working on a remote tower for the main airport in Budapest, Hungary. That airport serves 8.5 million passengers annually and, within two years, controllers could be stationed a few miles from the airport.

Now, Saab is bringing some aspects of this technology to the United States.

Leesburg Executive Airport in Virginia is a relatively busy airport with 300 daily takeoffs and landings.

Just a few kilometres from Dulles International Airport, Leesburg does not have its own control tower. A regional air traffic control centre clears private jets into the airspace and then pilots use an established radio frequency to negotiate the landing and takeoff order. That often leads to delays.

Saab has built a system for Leesburg and has just started a three-month test with the Federal Aviation Administration.

FAA controllers will, at first, familiarise themselves with the technology and just observe the planes operating as they already do today.

If the FAA approves, the next phase would be to start clearing planes onto taxiways and to take off and land.

The National Air Traffic Controllers Association says it is participating in the testing.

Towers for large commercial airports are expensive. They need elevators, air conditioning and heating, fire suppression systems plus room for all the controllers.

A new tower in Oakland, California that opened in 2013 cost $51 million. Towers at smaller airports are cheaper.

Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport opened a new one in February at a cost of $15.4 million. Saab won’t detail the cost of its system except to say it is “significantly less.” There is no need for a tower and elevator.

The companies see a giant market: The vast majority of US commercial airports — 315 of 506 — have control towers. However, only 198 of the 2,825 general aviation airports have manned towers.

source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Cute& Eco-Friendly Pillayar for Ganesh Pooja at Brisbane Australia….Made out of Clay….

 

Credit ….Photo as well as the Clay Model ….By my Son Senthil Natarajan  Brisbane Australia

Senthil Natarajan deserves a pat on his back for his artistic creation of the clay model pillayar as well as an  eye catching photographic image of the art he created thro his photoshoot this day.. REf his facebook page .

This Pillayar is going to be kept in the Ganesh Pooja Tomorrow.@ our Home in Australia

Natarajan

 

 

Can You Pronounce This 58-Letter Name? This Man Can, Like a Boss !!!

Can You Pronounce This 58-Letter Name? This Man Can, Like a Boss

Image Courtesy: Screengrab taken from video posted on Facebook by Channel 4 News

The only way to describe this Welsh weather presenter is ‘supercalifragilisticexpialidocious’. And if you think that’s a mouthful, you ain’t seen (or heard) nothing yet.

In a video that’s going viral with over 6.8 million views on Facebook, Channel 4 weatherman Liam Dutton talks about one of the warmest places in UK on September 9 in his forecast, and it just happens to be called, wait for it… Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.

No, that wasn’t a seizure-induced typing error – that’s actually the name of a large village in North West Wales.

The video shows Mr Dutton, calm as a breeze, pronouncing the giant name and then talking about the weather conditions in the area. He’s so collected, you’d think saying that name out loud is a cakewalk.

It really isn’t, even for those born Welsh, like actress Catherine Zeta-Jones who gave Mr Dutton 10 on 10. “Amazing job!! Some of those Welsh names are tricky!” she said on her Facebook page.

So watch Mr Dutton and then try saying ‘Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch’ yourself. And while you’re at it, also try saying

‘Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu.’     That’s the name of a hill in New Zealand.
https://video-lax3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hvideo-xfp1/v/t43.1792-2/11959269_10153205021301939_1582746876_n.mp4?efg=eyJybHIiOjE1MDAsInJsYSI6MTAyNH0%3D&rl=1500&vabr=699&oh=d199490caa96079cd2f2a6ac3e50bcc9&oe=55F3CDAF
Source…..www,ndtv.com and http://www.facebook.com
Natarajan

ஆஸ்திரேலியா ஸ்பெல்லிங் பீ போட்டி: கலக்கிவரும் தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இரட்டையர்கள்….

ஆஸ்திரேலியாவில் ஸ்பெல்லீங் பீ நிகழ்ச்சியில் தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இரட்டையர்கள் பட்டையை கிளப்பி வருகின்றனர்.

ஆஸ்திரேலியா தொலைக்காட்சி நிறுவனம் ஒன்று ஸ்பெல்லீங் பீ என்ற நீண்ட ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகளின் எழுத்துகளைச் சரியாக சொல்லும் போட்டியை நடத்திவருகிறது. இதில் நாடு முழுவதிலும் இருந்து 3000 குழந்தைகள் கலந்துகொண்டார்கள். மூன்று கட்ட தேர்வுகளுக்குப் பிறகு 50 குழந்தைகள் இறுதி போட்டிக்கு தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டனர். தற்போது இவர்களில் இருந்து 12 பேர் மட்டும் இறுதி போட்டிக்கு தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.

இந்த 12 பேரில் தமிழகத்தின் வேலுரை பூர்வீகமாகக் கொண்ட இரட்டையர்களான ஹார்பிதா மற்றும் ஹார்பித்தாவும் அடங்குவார்கள். இருவரும் 50 ஆயிரம் வார்த்தைகளுக்கு மேல் தெரிந்து வைத்துள்ளனர். இறுதி போட்டி இன்னும் 2 வாரங்களில் நடைபெறவுள்ளது.

இது பற்றி இரட்டையர்களான ஹார்பிதா மற்றும் ஹார்பித் ஆகிய இருவரும் கூறும் போது இதற்காக நாங்கள் எந்தவித சிறப்பு பயிற்சிக்கும் செல்லவில்லை. நான்கு வயது முதல் வீட்டில் அப்பாவின் ஐ.பேடில் ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகளை உச்சரிக்கும் விளையாட்டை விளையாடுவோம் எனத் தெரிவித்தனர்.

இவர்களின் சாதனை குறித்து தந்தை அண்ணாமலை தெரிவிக்கையில், குழந்தைகளுக்கு சுதந்திரம் தந்து அவர்களை சொந்தமாக கற்றுக்கொள்ள அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும் என்றார்.

Source….Parvathi Arunkumar, சிட்னி…www.dinamani.com and http://www.newindianews.com

Natarajan