” Curiosity Sees Prominent Mineral Veins on Mount Sharp, Mars…”

This View from the Mast Camera (Mastcam) on NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover shows a network of two-tone mineral veins at an area called “Garden City” on lower Mount Sharp.

The veins combine light and dark material. The veins at this site jut to heights of up to about 2.5 inches (6 centimeters) above the surrounding rock, and their widths range up to about 1.5 inches (4 centimeters). Figure 1 includes a 30-centimeter scale bar (about 12 inches).

Mineral veins such as these form where fluids move through fractured rocks, depositing minerals in the fractures and affecting chemistry of the surrounding rock. In this case, the veins have been more resistant to erosion than the surrounding host rock.

This scene is a mosaic combining 28 images taken with Mastcam’s right-eye camera, which has a telephoto lens with a focal length of 100 millimeters. The component images were taken on March 18, 2015, during the 929th Martian day, or sol, of Curiosity’s work on Mars. The color has been approximately white-balanced to resemble how the scene would appear under daytime lighting conditions on Earth.

Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego, built and operates the rover’s Mastcam. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the Mars Science Laboratory Project for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, Washington. JPL designed and built the project’s Curiosity rover.

Feature: Curiosity Eyes Prominent Mineral Veins on Mars
More information and image products

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS 

Source:::: http://www.nasa.gov

Natarajan

” Tips For Leading a Good Life ….”

40 Life Tips From Those Who’ve Been There

These 40 life tips were collected from men and women 85 or older. Some have been through wars, others through depressions, sickness, and even concentration camps. They are a generation that was unlike any other, and we can all benefit from their advice. Even those of us over 85 ourselves, because these days, it is never too late to get good advice.
Health

 
1. Drink lots of water.
2. Eat your breakfast like kings, your lunch like princes, and your dinner like beggars.
3. Eat more things that grow on trees and plants and less things that are made in factories. Remember your digestive system doesn’t know it’s the 21st century, so help it out by feeding it stuff it’s built for.
4. It’s always a good time for some TEE – Truth, Energy and Empathy!
5. Walk 10-30 minutes a day.
6. Get more actual games in your life, games that have no gain but the simple pleasure of playing them.
7. Read more books than you’ve read last year.
8. Sit silently (without a tv) for at least 10 minutes a day and take time to ponder things (for some – pray).
9. Invest at least 7 hours a night in your sleep. It’ll pay back big time later on.
Character
10. Smile while you walk those 10-30 minutes a day.
11. do not compare your life to those of others, it’s easy to see the good but the bad is as well hidden as yours, or better. You have no idea what their lives are really like or if they are happy inside, get on with yours instead.
12. Don’t waste time and energy thinking of things you will never be able to change. Instead, use that energy to works towards future positive moments. Make your spouse laugh for a moment, isn’t that better than feeling bad?
13. Don’t be extreme in any action. Remember that truth is mostly in the middle, and life is hardly black and white.
14. Accept the fact that you will sometimes lose the arguement, and that you were wrong. Or if you still think you are right, agree to disagree. Very few people have ever been shouted into true agreement.
15. Don’t waste your energy complaining about people you don’t know and their actions. You have no idea what motivates or what lead them to that decision. Judging is so easy even 4 year olds can do it. The driver honking at you might have had a horrible day, or is anxious to see his sick wife at the hospital while worried about making rent. We only see the behavior, never the events leading to it.
16. Dream more while you are awake.
17. Envy is a waste of time. You already have what you need, and being envy won’t create more for you.
18. Try to never again bring up your spouse’s past mistakes. It WILL destroy your present happiness, and even being right –  just isn’t worth it.
19. Life is too short to hate people. You should fear some and pity others, but hate is a bigger waste of time than any other emotion.
20. Make peace with your past, or it will make short work of your future.
21. No one controls your level of happiness but you.
22. Life is the school, remember that you are here to learn. Problems are like tests, and the lesson you take will help you solve the next one correctly.
23. Smile and laugh more with your entire face, including your
eyes. Find humor when you can.
24. Don’t take yourselves so seriously, no one else will!
Community
25. Call your family often enough so they feel like you are walking besides them in this life.
26. Every day – do at least one good thing for others that really helps them out. It will make you feel better about your own and later on – someone grateful will help you when you need it.
27. Try to forgive, it’s the hardest thing there is, much harder than hate, but it’s doable.
28. Spend some time with people over 70 and under 6 – it will teach you patience and empathy.
29. Try to make at least 3 people smile, every day.
30. What other people think of you is none of your concern, since they’ll never tell you! So why bother? Live your life and stop wondering what’s on the other side of their skulls, you will never know the complete truth!
31. Your work buddies won’t take care of you when you’re sick. Your family and friends will. Don’t let people that care about you out of your life. We all need help at some point, don’t throw caring away.

Life
32. Do the right thing.
The kind that doesn’t leave anyone hurt, despite your personal feelings. It will be worth its while in the long run.
33. Get rid of anything that isn’t useful, beautiful, sentimental or brings you true pleasure in life.
34. Forgivness can heal more than you can ever imagine. It can revive relationships and rekindle love and true appreciation. Forgivness is way to show strength, and strength is impressive and attractive.
35. Doesn’t matter how good or bad the situation is – it will change at some point. So plan for either and don’t lose your head to overjoycing or over fearing.
36. Doesn’t matter how you feel at this particular moment – get up, get dressed and be there on time. A good start will help get rid of that feeling.
37. If actors can become huge successes in their 70’s, you can believe that the best is yet to come. And if it isn’t, then try to create the best for someone else, it will often be surprisingly great for you as well.
38. When you wake up alive in the morning, don’t take it for granted – embrace life!
39. The biggest secret is that anyone can be happy. But some decide they won’t be and then look for reasons to support that theory. Don’t fall for that! Assume you are happy and find reasons to support that claim! Keep creating these reasons, and you just might start believing it.
40. Enjoy yourself, every day. Remember, life is just a ride, and you are shown many different things, some wonderful, other awful. But you always continue and it is always just a ride. Enjoy it.
So remember! Enjoy yourself, it’s later than you think… enjoy yourself, while you’re still in the pink… The years go by… as quickly as a wink….
Natarajan

 

Image of the Day…Songbird Migrating 1500 Miles …Non Stop !!!

Photo credit: Greg Lasley

A little songbird known as the blackpoll warbler departs each fall from New England and eastern Canada to migrate nonstop in a direct line over the Atlantic Ocean toward South America. To track the birds’ migration route, scientists used miniaturized light-sensing geolocators attached to the birds like tiny backpacks.

 

According to the study, which appears in the March issue of Biology Letters, the birds complete a nonstop flight ranging from about 1,410 to 1,721 miles (2,270 to 2,770 km) in just two to three days, making landfall somewhere in Puerto Rico, Cuba and the islands known as the Greater Antilles, from there going on to northern Venezuela and Columbia. First author Bill DeLuca is an environmental conservation research fellow at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He said:

We’re really excited to report that this is one of the longest nonstop overwater flights ever recorded for a songbird, and finally confirms what has long been believed to be one of the most extraordinary migratory feats on the planet.

While other birds, such as albatrosses, sandpipers and gulls are known for trans-oceanic flights, most migratory songbirds that winter in South America take a less risky, continental route south through Mexico and Central America, the authors note. A water landing would be fatal to a warbler.

Blackpoll warbler fitted with a miniaturized light-sensing geolocator on its back that enabled researchers to track their exact migration routes from eastern Canada and New England south toward wintering grounds. Photo credit: Vermont Center for Ecostudies

Blackpoll warbler fitted with a miniaturized light-sensing geolocator on its back that enabled researchers to track their exact migration routes from eastern Canada and New England south toward wintering grounds. Photo credit: Vermont Center for Ecostudies

In the recent past, DeLuca explains, geolocators have been too large and heavy for use in studying songbird migration. The tiny blackpoll warbler, at around half an ounce (12 grams), was too small to carry even the smallest of traditional tracking instruments. Scientists had only ground observations and radar as tools.

But with recent advances have made geolocators lighter and smaller. For this work, the researchers harnessed miniaturized geolocators about the size of a dime and weighing only 0.5g to the birds’ lower backs like a tiny backpack. By retrieving these when the warblers returned to Canada and Vermont the following spring, then analyzing the data, DeLuca and colleagues could trace their migration routes.

So-called light-level geolocators use solar geolocation, a method used for centuries by mariners and explorers. It is based on the fact that day length varies with latitude while time of solar noon varies with longitude. So all the instrument needs to do is record the date and length of daylight, from which daily locations can then be inferred once the geolocator is recaptured.

Deuca said:

When we accessed the locators, we saw the blackpolls’ journey was indeed directly over the Atlantic. The distances travelled ranged from 2,270 to 2,770 kilometers.

Ryan Norris of the University of Guelph was the Canadian team leader. He said that to prepare for the flight, the birds build up their fat stores.

They eat as much as possible, in some cases doubling their body mass in fat so they can fly without needing food or water. For blackpolls, they don’t have the option of failing or coming up a bit short. It’s a fly-or-die journey that requires so much energy.

These birds come back every spring very close to the same place they used in the previous breeding season, so with any luck you can catch them again. Of course there is high mortality among migrating songbirds on such a long journey, we believe only about half return.

DeLuca added:

It was pretty thrilling to get the return birds back, because their migratory feat in itself is on the brink of impossibility. We worried that stacking one more tiny card against their success might result in them being unable to complete the migration. Many migratory songbirds, blackpolls included, are experiencing alarming population declines for a variety of reasons, if we can learn more about where these birds spend their time, particularly during the nonbreeding season, we can begin to examine and address what might be causing the declines.

As for why the blackpoll undertakes such a perilous journey while other species follow a longer but safer coastal route, the authors say that because migration is the most perilous part of a songbird’s year, it may make sense to get it over with as quickly as possible. However, this and other questions remain to be studied.

Bottom line: According to a study in the March issue of Biology Letters, the blackpoll warbler completes a nonstop migration over the Atlantic ocean, ranging from about 1,410 to 1,721 miles (2,270 to 2,770 km), in just two to three days.

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

Natarajan

 

Innocent Joy and Magic of Childhood …!!!

The Innocent Joy & Magic of Childhood

Joseph Chilton Pearce, a British author, once said: “Play is the only way the highest intelligence of humankind can unfold.” Playing is an ingrained behavior shared by all mammals. Playing expand the mind and imagination, it trains the muscles and instincts, and it adds copious amounts of joy to our lives. Just looking at these kids playing all around the world made me want to go outside and run in the sun.

Indonesia
Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Burkina Faso 

Kids Around the World

Estonia 

Kids Around the World

Ghana 

Kids Around the World

Peru 

Kids Around the World

Ethiopia 

Kids Around the World

 

India 

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Italy

Kids Around the World

Myanmar 

Kids Around the World

Israel 

Kids Around the World

Romania

Kids Around the World

Thailand

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Uganda 

Kids Around the World

South Africa 

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Vietnam 

Kids Around the World

Tajikistan 

Kids Around the World

Russia

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

Kids Around the World

U.S.A.

Kids Around the World

Source:::::www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

 

Image of the Day…” Simutaneous view of Eclipsed Moon and Sun in the Sky…”

Who will see a selenelion – the eclipsed moon and sun in the sky simultaneously – for the April 4, 2015 total eclipse of the moon? Charts and info here.

Tonight's sunset and moonrise - September 19, 2013 - as seen by EarthSky Facebook friend Andy Somers in Noumea, New Caledonia.  One of the characteristics of the Harvest Moon is that it rises around the time of sunset for several evenings in a row.  Thank you, Andy.

This photo does not show an eclipsed moon, but it does show a simultaneous sunset and (nearly) full moonrise as captured byEarthSky Facebook friend Andy Somers in Noumea, New Caledonia in September 2013. On Saturday, April 4, 2015 – from just the right spot on Earth – you might see something like this … but the moon will be in eclipse!

In case you haven’t heard, there’s a total lunar eclipse coming up this Saturday, April 4, 2015. North Americans will see the eclipse Saturday morning. Australians and Asians will see it Saturday evening.Read more about the April 4 eclipse here.

If you’re in just the right spot on Earth, you might observe the eclipsed moon setting while the sun rises – or the eclipsed moon rising while the sun sets. This is called a selenelion. Celestial geometry says this should not happen. After all, in order for an eclipse to take place, the sun and moon must be exactly 180 degrees apart in the sky, in a perfect alignment known as a syzygy. Such perfection – needed for an eclipse to take place – would seem to make it impossible to view the sun and eclipsed moon above your horizon simultaneously.

But – thanks to atmospheric refraction, the same effect that causes a spoon in a glass of water to appear broken in two – you might actually see images of the sun and totally eclipsed moon, both above your horizon at once, lifted up by the effect of refraction.

You need to be positioned in just the right spot on Earth’s surface to see a selenelion.

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

Natarajan

” Dear Pilots of the Plane …Who are Taking Me Home…”

WE’RE in the midst of one of aviation’s darkest times.

We have been left shocked and heartbroken time after time again over the past year with a series of unimaginable flight tragedies, the latest seeing 150 people killed on board Germanwings Flight 9525.

So it’s to be expected that we’re all looking for answers, hoping to prevent another tragedy from happening in our skies. And as more and more harrowing information comes to light of the terrifying final moments on board the doomed Germanwings jet, many flyers are on edge at the thought of taking to the skies.

So imagine this pilot’s surprise when a passenger decided to share some kindness in a rather unexpected way.

The pilot and airline cannot be named for security reasons.

The pilot and airline cannot be named for security reasons. Source: Supplied 

The pilot, who is unnamed for security reasons, was handed a note from the passenger during a flight from Spain to the south of England on Monday.

Instead of being a complaint or criticism, the glowing note voiced appreciation for the incredible job pilots do, ultimately seeking to inject kindness into a shocked world.

Pilot handed incredible note

The letter doing the rounds Source: Supplied 

The thrilled pilot shared the note with a colleague, Jai Dillon, who then posted it onto Twitter where it has already been shared thousands of times.

Dillon, a pilot based in the UK who has been flying commercially for the past three years, told news.com.au his co-worker wanted to share the letter that had touched his heart.

“They were incredible happy,” Dillon, 23, said. “I feel that the positive message is worth spreading.”

It’s a good reminder that thousands of pilots and crew get millions of people safely from point A to B every year. To you all, we say thank you.

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

Natarajan

” Go Back to the Year 90s…” !!!

Everyone talks about how technology has taken over our lives and about how it has its downsides, despite having made our lives easy. And I’d have to say, it holds quite a bit of truth.

So, if you’re feeling tired of all the advanced, digital life you’re leading, you could always try going old school for a bit, and take yourself back to simpler times. Here are a few things you could do that might seem simple, but are guaranteed to have a big impact in transporting you back in time.

 Send a letter to a loved one and start a long conversation

 

 

B1

Tell them about your day, week, and subsequently about your life in general, without the help of any other mode of communication.

Make use of your old landline, and call someone on theirs

 

Make someone a mixed tape or a CD with all their favourite songs…

To make it better, put old songs in them, exclusively.

Listen to music with your old walkman/CD man

B5

Carry all your favourite cassettes and CDs, and change them when necessary. :D

Spot an ice-cream cart, and relish on some yummy ice-cream

B7

They’re surely going to be around children’s parks. Enjoy an ice-cream cone in a children’s park! :D

 Go to a cyber cafe close by, and spend an hour surfing the net on a PC

Some of the computers might even still have Windows XP. :D

 

 Pay a visit to your old school, and reminisce

Who knows, you might end up meeting some old teachers there.

 

 Fix an old radio at home….

B10

And listen to a few cassettes after you do. :)

 

Check the time- not on your phone, but on your wrist watch, for a week

B13

There still are a lot of us who wear watches, but not all of us really use it to tell the time. Take an entire week and just go by the time of your watch, and soak in the feeling of not constantly checking your phone for every little thing.

Even if time flies by, there are these little things we’ll have that we can go back to whenever we feel like everything is changing. Change is good, but going back to what it was before once in a while is great. :)

Source::::: http://www.storypick.com

Natarajan

 

Shortest Lunar Eclipse of the Century…. on 4 April 2015….

Total lunar eclipse in 2004 by Fred Espenak

The total eclipse of the full moon on April 4, 2015 will last less than five minutes, making it the shortest total lunar eclipse of the 21st century. It’s perfect for short attention spans! The total lunar eclipse will be visible from western North America, eastern Asia, the Pacific, Australia and New Zealand. At North American time zones, that means the greatest eclipse happens before sunrise on April 4 – the morning of April 4, not the evening. From the world’s Eastern Hemisphere – eastern Asia, Indonesia, New Zealand and Australia – the greatest eclipse takes place after sunset April 4. Follow the links below to learn eclipse times and more:

Eclipse times in Universal Time

Eclipse times for for North American time zones

Is this the third of four Blood Moon eclipses?

Who will see a partial lunar eclipse?

What causes a lunar eclipse?

Time lapse of October 8, 2014 lunar eclipse as reflected in a pond in central Illinois, by Greg Lepper.

Time lapse of October 8, 2014 lunar eclipse as reflected in a pond in central Illinois, by Greg Lepper 

source:::::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

 

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