Thursday, July 23, 2009

70th Birth Day Volume Year 2009 to 2010 of Prof Dr Kotcherlakota Lakshmi Narayana

ARTICLE No.1 by krj.srikanth@gmail.com dated 23rd July 2009



















































Birth Day Volume of the year 2009-2010 of trusciencetrutechnology@blogspot.com

ARTICLE No.1 Dated 23rd July 2009.

Respected,
The Pictures collected by me at early hours of am 6:30 to 7:30.It was to be the phenomenon of the century. But hordes geared up to view the celestial drama only to be let down by the thick cloud cover which played spoilsport. Only a lucky few were able to get a sneak peek of the eclipse for a few seconds. “I woke up at five am and drove to the temple veiw of sri venugopla located at Bobbili which is so ancient builted by Rajashab of bobbili, The most specturlarthing that it has seven slites , the sun rises up from those, splites in to rays. and waited for an hour in the hope of catching a glimpse of the eclipse, but in vain.” The clouds covered, even though i got spectrum of the sun from my Nookie express series with 2 MP camera, in different views which is very near to temple of Bobbili. What i heard Regarding this eclipse. VARANASI/WUHAN: A total solar eclipse on Wednesday swept across a narrow swathe of Asia, where hundreds of millions of people watched the skies darken, though in some places thick summer clouds blocked the sun. The longest total solar eclipse of the 21st century cut through the world’s most populous nations, India and China, as it travelled half the globe. It was visible along a roughly 250 km-wide corridor, U.S. space agency NASA said. In India, where eclipse superstitions are rife, people snaked through the narrow lanes of Varanasi and gathered for a dip in the Ganga, an act believed to bring release from the cycle of life and death. The eclipse next swept through Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar and over the crowded cities along China’s Yangtze River, before heading to the Pacific. In Hindu-majority Nepal, the government declared a public holiday and thousands headed for water. In central China, crowds gathered along the high dykes of the industrial city of Wuhan, roaring and waving goodbye as the last sliver of sun disappeared, plunging the city into darkness, although clouds cheated them of part of the spectacle. “As soon as the totality happened, the clouds closed in, so we couldn’t see the corona. That’s a pity,” said Zhen Jun, a man whose work unit had given him the day off to enjoy the spectacle. But eclipse viewers in central China were luckier than those in the coastal cities near Shanghai, where vercast skies and rain in some places blocked the view of the sun entirely. It lasted up to a maximum of 6 minutes, 39 seconds over the Pacific Ocean, according to NASA. The dark shadow of the moon — the conical shaped umbra —made its landfall in Gujarat at 6.30 a.m. and raced across the country within a span of a few minutes spreading darkness in the path of totality. VARANASI/WUHAN: A total solar eclipse on Wednesday swept across a narrow swathe of Asia, where hundreds of millions of people watched the skies darken, though in some places thick summer clouds blocked the sun. The longest total solar eclipse of the 21st century cut through the world’s most populous nations, India and China, as it travelled half the globe. It was visible along a roughly 250 km-wide corridor, U.S. space agency NASA said. In India, where eclipse superstitions are rife, people snaked through the narrow lanes of Varanasi and gathered for a dip in the Ganga, an act believed to bring release from the cycle of life and death. The eclipse next swept through Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar and over the crowded cities along China’s Yangtze River, before heading to the Pacific. In Hindu-majority Nepal, the government declared a public holiday and thousands headed for water. In central China, crowds gathered along the high dykes of the industrial city of Wuhan, roaring and waving goodbye as the last sliver of sun disappeared, plunging the city into darkness, although clouds cheated them of part of the spectacle. “As soon as the totality happened, the clouds closed in, so we couldn’t see the corona. That’s a pity,” said Zhen Jun, a man whose work unit had given him the day off to enjoy the spectacle. But eclipse viewers in central China were luckier than those in the coastal cities near Shanghai, where overcast skies and rain in some places blocked the view of the sun entirely. It lasted up to a maximum of 6 minutes, 39 seconds over the Pacific Ocean, according to NASA. The dark shadow of the moon — the conical shaped umbra —made its landfall in Gujarat at 6.30 a.m. and raced across the country within a span of a few minutes spreading darkness in the path of totality.(Soucrce from The hindu 23/july/09)

The entire work done by me under the guidance of Prof. Dr. Kotcherlakota Lakshmi Narayana

krj.srikanth, Assistant Professor of Engineering College, Bobilli.

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