Dramatic Space Photos….

May 18, 2013. On this date astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) captured three beautiful views of Pavlof Volcano, part of the Aleutian Arc, with a handheld Nikon D3S digital camera. As the volcano poured out lava and shot ash 20,000 feet (6,000 meters) into the air, the astronauts managed to capture these seldom-seen oblique views of the volcano, which are very different from the top-down views of most unmanned satellites.

Pavlof Volcano May 18, 2013 via ISS

Pavlof Volcano May 18, 2013 via ISS. The space station was about 475 miles south-southeast of the volcano when astronauts aboard captured this beautiful, oblique view. Photo provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations experiment and Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. Image taken by the Expedition 36 crew.

Pavlof Volcano May 18, 2013 via ISS

Pavlof Volcano May 18, 2013 via ISS. This volcano is located about 625 miles (1,000 kilometers) southwest of Anchorage. In May 2013, its volcanic plume extended southeastward over the North Pacific Ocean. Photo provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations experiment and Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center. Image taken by the Expedition 36 crew.

Pavlof Volcano May 18, 2013 via ISS

Via NASA Earth Observatory

Source…..www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Image of the Day….Astronauts at work on International Space Station…

Astronauts working on the International Space Station.

This week, the six-member Expedition 43 crew worked a variety of onboard maintenance tasks, ensuring crew safety and the upkeep of the International Space Station’s hardware. In this image, NASA astronauts Scott Kelly (left) and Terry Virts (right) work on a Carbon Dioxide Removal Assembly (CDRA) inside the station’s Japanese Experiment Module. The CDRA system works to remove carbon dioxide from the cabin air, allowing for an environmentally safe crew cabin.

The crew also is packing the SpaceX Dragon space freighter readying the vehicle for its return home and splashdown May 21.

Tags:  Expedition 43, Image of the Day, International Space Station, One-Year Crew

Source……www.nasa.gov

natarajan

Image of the Day…Milky Way …

Milky Way against a bright moon

Even in bright moonlight, astrophotographer Justin Ng captures amazing shots of the Milky Way. Here’s one from May 6, during the peak of a meteor shower.

View larger. | Milky Way against a bright Moon at Mount Bromo during the peak of Eta Aquarid meteor shower, by Justin Ng of Singapore.

Justin Ng wrote to EarthSky, with this photo attached. He captured it on May 6, 2015 at 5:30 a.m. local time in East Java, Indonesia. He wrote:

Just led my first full moon astrophotography expedition to Mount Bromo, one of the active volcanoes in Indonesia. It would have been easier to unveil the Milky Way against the bright moon on our first night there, but the sky was cloudy and we could only do this on our last night, which was more challenging as the bright moon was located nearer to the Milky Way’s galactic center.

The moon and Saturn made a close approach on May 6, passing just within 2° of each other, at around 35° above horizon at 5.30am (GMT +7). It was a cold night, and alsowhen the Eta Aquarid meteor shower peaked. The large and bright waning gibbous moon, with its illumination at 97%, managed to obscure both the Eta Aquarid meteor shower and the spectacular Milky Way. Although I was able to see a few faint Eta Aquarid meteors on that night, I was unable to see the Milky Way with my unaided eye because the bright moon was so close!

Nonetheless, using the method that I have shared in this tutorial, I managed to unveil the Milky Way that’s obscured by the moon.

So it’s still possible to unveil the Milky Way against a large and bright moon! Give it a try.

Justin pointed out that the circular feature in the photo – on the lower left side – was not a real object in the sky over Mount Bromo. It’s an internal reflection from his camera, known as a lens flare, often seen (although usually not so beautifully!) in photos of bright objects like the sun and moon.

Thank you, Justin!

Bottom line: Milky Way in bright moonlight, by Justin Ng of Singapore.

Source…..www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Image of the Day…” Sunset on Mars…” !!!

You are there! Sunset on Mars

A beautiful new timelapse showing sunset on Mars in mid-April, 2015, from the Mars Curiosity rover.

View larger. | Mars sunset in Gale Crater, Sol 956, Wednesday, April 15, 2015.  Image via 34mm MastCam on Mars Curiosity rover.  Image via NASA / JPL / Malin Space Science Systems.

This new timelapse lets you experience a sunset on our neighboring planet, Mars. NASA’s Mars Curiosity Rover captured the images to make this animated gif from the Gale Crater on Mars during Sol 956 – the 956th day of the rover’s activity on the Martian surface. By earthly calendars, it was Wednesday, April 15, 2015.

At the time, the planet Mercury was transiting the sun as seen from Mars. These observations were an attempt to observe Mercury passing in front of the sun, as well as to obtain a Martian sunset with Curiosity’s Mast Cameras.

NASA wrote:

The four images shown in sequence here were taken over a span of 6 minutes, 51 seconds.

This was the first sunset observed in color by Curiosity. The images come from the left-eye camera of the rover’s Mast Camera (Mastcam). The color has been calibrated and white-balanced to remove camera artifacts. Mastcam sees color very similarly to what human eyes see, although it is actually a little less sensitive to blue than people are.

Bottom line: Animated gif of a Martian sunset, April 15, 2015, acquired by the Mars Curiosity rover’s Mast Camera.

Via NASA.

Source….www.earthskynews.org

Natarajan

This seaweed farm looks amazing from space…

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Seaweed farms in South Korea

In January 2014, the Operational Land Imager on NASA’s Landsat 8 satellite captured a series of photos from around South Korea’s Sisan Island. The shallow coastal waters were filled with arrays of evenly spaced patches, like plots in a garden. The verdict? It’s a seaweed farm.
Seaweed Farms in South Korea

The Goddard Space Flight Center’s Flickr page, where the photos are posted, explains that seaweed farming is pretty popular in South Korea. Seaweed patches are rigged up to ropes and buoys to help them stay put and grow better under the constant fluctuation of the tides. More than 90 percent of the seaweed consumed worldwide is farmed, and more than 90 percent of South Korea’s crop, which includes the sushi seaweed known as nori is found off the south coast, where these pictures were taken.

Read the original article on Modern Notion.

Source….

http://www.businessinsider.com

Natarajan

Doomed Russian Spacecraft about to fall….

Progress 59 re-supply craft, launched April 28, quickly lost control. Soon it will fall from space and may produce a fiery streak in our sky

Progress is a series of unmanned cargo craft used to resupply the International Space Station.

Progress is a series of unmanned cargo craft used to resupply the International Space Station.

A unpiloted Russian re-supply ship – carrying 6,000 pounds of food, fuel, and supplies for International Space Station – was declared lost when, shortly after its April 28 launch, it began spinning out of control. This craft will reenter Earth’s atmosphere between May 7 and May 9 and may produce a bright meteor – or fiery streak – across Earth’s sky. But where will it fall, and who will see it? No one knows. Look below for information on what observers might see when the spacecraft re-enters.

The reentry will not be controlled, which means its exact time and location is unknown. Scientists that predict the reentry of orbital objects like this one – damaged satellites and other space debris – have calculated that the Progress 59 may reenter around May 8, but the time uncertainty of some predictions may be +/- 24 hours.

Because over 70% of the surface of Earth is covered by water, there is a high probability that the Progress 59P, also known as Progress M-27M, will reenter over an ocean. But the spacecraft’s orbital inclination also causes it to pass over land areas, so this may slightly increase the chance of reentry over populated areas. The European Space Agency (ESA), which is in close contact with Russian and U.S. authorities regarding the Progress M-27M / 59P mission situation, said on April 30:

In an uncontrolled reentry, the vessel in principle could reenter over any point of land or sea between approximately 51 deg N and 51 deg S latitudes, corresponding to its current orbit.

… We cannot exclude the chance that some portion of (Progress 59) structure, for example the heavy docking mechanism or tanks and thrusters, could survive reentry to reach the surface.

However, according to ESA, disintegration over the oceans is still the most likely scenario.

 

Progress 59 launch on April 28, via ESA

Progress 59 launch on April 28, via ESA

The Progress 59 spacecraft was launched from Kazakhstan on April 28 and was heading to the International Space Station (ISS) with food, fuel and supplies. An unexpected incident occurred during the spacecraft separation, and video sent back by the spacecraft showed it was spinning out of control.

Russian officials declared on April 29 that they were unable to regain the spacecraft control. It was clear that the doomed spacecraft would return fall back into Earth’s atmosphere. Normally, after delivering its cargo to the ISS, Progress spacecraft would be undocked from the orbital laboratory and then a command is sent to purposely send it to reenter the atmosphere and disintegrate over the South Pacific area, so that any surviving debris would not pose a danger to populated areas.

What observers might see when the spacecraft re-enters. You can track the location of Progress 59 as its orbits is decaying, and even verify predictions to see if it the spacecraft can be seen on its final orbits from your location. Track Progress 59 prior to reentry here.

Or just keep an eye on your skies in the next few days, just in case you happen to be in the spacecraft’s reentry area. The Russian cargo spacecraft should disintegrate around May 8 (+/- 24 hours), as soon as it enters the densest part of our atmosphere, about 70 – 75 miles (112-120 km) high.

A disintegrating spacecraft will look like a spectacular meteor, or fiery streak, across Earth’s sky. It may be visible in daytime. One way of identifying it as a possible manmade object, and not a natural meteor, is that reentering manmade objects appear considerably slower upon reentry than natural space rocks. The re-entry might appear slow enough to allow you to quickly grab a camera and take pictures or video, something that usually is very difficult with much faster natural meteors.

Also, reentering spacecraft have shown significant fragmentation. It is possible to see chunks – possibly in varying colors – creating bursts of light as they fly off the main meteor.

A reentry trajectory from southwest to northeast – as well as from northwest to southeast – is consistent with the orbit of this type of spacecraft.

Before the Progress vehicle reenters the atmosphere, the spacecraft may be visible to the unaided eye from some (unknown) locations as it is still orbiting Earth. Remember that orbiting objects and satellites appear as slowly “moving stars” in our sky. During the last days of the Progress M-27M / 59P mission, the craft should appear to move somewhat faster than other satellites – faster than the apparent speed of ISS – because you are looking at an object that is more than twice as close as other orbiting objects.

While still in orbit, it may show show variations of brightness, which would confirm the object is still tumbling in space and thus reflecting sunlight intermittently.

If you see a slow and bright, fragmenting “meteor” as described here, please share your sighting reports and location in the comments below, or visit EarthSky communities on Facebook, Twitteror Google+.

By the way, according to NASA, the ISS crew is not in danger of running out of food or supplies. SpaceX already had a scheduled launch to bring more supplies to the ISS on June 19.

Bottom line: A Progress 59 re-supply craft, launched from Kazakhstan on April 28, quickly lost control. Soon it will fall from space and may produce a fiery streak in our sky. ESA, NASA and Russian authorities cannot rule out the possibility that some portion of the craft survive reentry to reach Earth’s surface. This post contains information on how to track the spacecraft before re-entry, and on what you might see if you are in the reentry area.

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Imagine you are diving, and suddenly …..Watch this Video clip …!!!

Amazing video of whales surfacing – open-mouthed – under a diving expedition.

This 2013 video shows divers near Souza Rock on the central California coast, having a close call with two humpBack whales. Via Biologia com o Prof. Jubilut

Source…….www.earthsky.org and You tube

Natarajan

 

Mathematics in Nature …!!!

Nature Creates the Most Beautiful Geometry…

I used to hate math when it was taught to me at school. It just never seemed to have a connection to real life. I forgot, you see, that the natural world makes use of mathematics all the time, and these fractal plants are just the proof of that. The language of God, as they say, is math. And so these beautiful plants (and one animal) represent both a real and a mathematical beauty.

Dahlia 

plant geometry

Hoya Aldrichi

plant geometry

Aloe Polyphylla

plant geometry

Romanesco Broccoli

plant geometry

Crassula Buddha’s Temple Plant

plant geometry

Amazon Lily Pad

plant geometry

Jeweled Carpet…

plant geometry

Fractal Cabbage

plant geometry

Sunflower

plant geometry

Spiraling Succulent

plant geometry

The Thinking Cactus

plant geometry

Camelia

plant geometry

Viola Sacculus

plant geometry

Chameleon Tail

plant geometry

Hoya Pubicalyx

plant geometry

Spiral Begonia

plant geometry

Hoya kerrii

plant geometry

Gorgeous Symmetry

plant geometry

Source…www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Incredible Images of Macro Photography ….

A Tiny Wonderland in the Backyard

While studying for a degree in neuroscience, Nadav Bagim (A.K.A. Aimishboy) went through a period of introspection. He wasn’t sure whether he wanted to continue with his studies, leaving him in somewhat of an existential impasse. When his father gave him an SLR-like camera, Nadav’s life went in an entirely different direction.

Nadav taught himself how to use the camera and became fascinated with macro photography. He says that he only uses Photoshop to perform minor tweaks in his images and that his tiny models do the real work.

The Celestial Conductor 

Tiny Photoshoot

Moon River

Tiny Photoshoot

The Offering

Tiny Photoshoot

Life Inside a Snowglobe

Tiny Photoshoot

Swirling

Tiny Photoshoot

Winged Shadows

temp

Piggy-Back Ride

temp

Tickle Me

Tiny Photoshoot

Hey There!

Tiny Photoshoot

Waiting for the Princess

temp

Sunrise Friends

Tiny Photoshoot

Make Slime, Not War

Tiny Photoshoot

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Nine Indians Who have Planets Named after Them….

Viswanathan Anand just had a planet named after him. The Chess Grandmaster, once nicknamed the “Lightning Kid”, famous for his rapid tactical calculations has been immortalized with planet Vishyanand, the main asteroid belt minor planet between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

But Indians are no strangers to having planetary bodies named after them – these whiz kids have had their own planets for a while now.

Hamsa Padmanabhan

hamsa planet

At 16, Hamsa Padmanabhan had a minor planet 21575 named ‘Hamsa’, after her. She was then a second-year B.Sc student of Fergusson College, when she made a presentation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) Lincoln lab for the Intel International Science and Engineering Fir (ISEF) in 2006. Today at 21, she is doing her post graduation in Physics from Pune University, after which she plans to do her doctoral research in theoretical physics.

Sainudeen Pattazhy

sainuddin planet

NASA named a minor planet (5178 No CD4) after Kerala zoology professor Sainudeen Pattazhy for his environmental research and campaigns, including red rain, health hazard of mobile phone towers, biological control of mosquitoes and the eco-biology of trees of religious importance.

Vishnu Jayaprakash

vishnu fuel cell

In 2010, Vishnu Jayaprakash, then a Chennai Class XII student of Chettinad Vidyashram demonstrated a microbial fuel cell that runs on cow dung and inexpensive graphite electrodes. The minor planet named after him is called 25620 Jayaprakash. He aimed to reduce power costs for India’s 700,000 villages. Today, he has done extensive research on renewable energy technologies, and is now focussing on Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) technology.

Anish Mukherjee

anish intel award planet

When Anish Mukherjee and Debarghya Sarkar were only 16 years old, they noticed the large scale bottle tampering rampant in India. They took the idea of autodisposable syringes—which, once used, cannot be used again—and implemented that for one-time use bottle cap. Their design enabled customers to know if the the bottle had been tampered with. For this, planet 2000 AH52 he was renamed 25629 Mukherjee.

Debarghya Sarkar

sarkar intel award planet

In 2010, Sarkar and his school classmate Anish Mukherjee worked on an innovative design that would make bottle-caps completely tamper proof. For his contribution to electrical and mechanical engineering, 25630 Sarkar (previously 2000 AT53) is named after him. Debarghya Sarkar is currently a Ph.D. student at the University of Southern California. He plans to take his interest in bottle cap design towards a larger goal – design, fabrication and integration of devices that modulate photons and electrons.

Hetal Vaishnav

hetal planet

When class X student Hetal Vaishnav saw that ragpickers were not picking up waste packets made up of multilayer plastic, she found that recycling companies avoided buying multilayer film plastic waste from them as it cannot be reused or recycled. Hetal then spent months to innovate upon a process to deliver an innovative material that is “sustainable to water, has good nail- and screw-holding capacity, and has features that are better than MDF (Medium-density fibreboard) and plywood.”. This let her use multilayered and metallised plastic used for packaging wafers and chewing tobacco. “I got a certificate from Lincoln Lab a few days ago,” Hetal said on telephone from Rajkot. Planet 25636 Vaishnav was named for her contribution to the environment.

Akshat Singhal

akshat planet

After Akshat found how annoying it was to index documents in a computer, he developed a system to automatically categorise documents, and also find relations between them, using artificial intelligence. The planet named after him, 12599 Singhal, is in the same region of planets that has 8749 Beatles, 2001 Einstein and 7000 Curie.

Madhav Pathak

madhav pathak

Madhav Pathak has changed the conventional Braille slate, making writing easier for the visually impaired. After Madhav Pathak found that his uncle could not easily write in Braille, the system of six raised dots, he decided to change it. Braille  has a steep learning curve: Blind children have to memorise more than 300 combinations of dots, since they need one set of combinations for reading, and another set for writing! Madhav has modified the Braille slate (used for writing the language), which lets students easily read and write the language. For this, he has 12509 Pathak named after him.

Viswanathan Anand

vishwanatan anand

Named Vishyanand, the main belt minor planet is between the orbits of planets Mars and Jupiter. The planet was discovered in 1988 by Kenzo Suzuki in Toyota, Japan and was nameless until now. A minor planet is usually named after the person who discovered it but if it remains nameless, then it’s in the hands of the committee members to name it. Hence Micahel Rudenko, a minor planet committee member and an ardent fan of Viswanathan Anand’s knack for chess decided to name the planet ‘Vishyanand’. He is only the third chess player in the world after Alexander Alekhine and Anatoly Karpov to be honored in this fashion.

With inputs from Mensxp.com

Source…..www.indiatimes.com

Natarajan