Monday, January 26, 2015

Astounding Visakhapatnam Sea Erosion during 31st Dec to Jan 3rd and Mexico Papkutpetal Volcano on Tuesday 30th Dec.

trusciencetrutechnology@blogspot.com
Volume 2015, Issue No.1, January 10th,  2015, Time: 07h 08m AM.

Astounding Visakhapatnam Sea Erosion
during 31st Dec to Jan 3rd and
Mexico Papkutpetal Volcano on Tuesday 30th Dec.

                         by

Professor Dr. Kotcherlakota Lakshmi Narayana,
[Retd. Prof. of Physics, SU, Kolhapur-416004],
17-11-10, Narasimha Ashram, Official Colony,
Maharanipeta. P. O, Visakhapatnam-530002.
Cell no: 09491902867.

                                         ABSTRACT    
  
                A quantum leap in imaging technology scientists created a digital image less than one photon per pixel.  Mexico Papkutpetal Volcano on Tuesday 30th Dec. 2014, released 2.5km smoke and dust. At Visakhapatnam the sea surge was so sudden on the New Years day 2015, with ferocious waves close to foot path adjacent to museum, with soft soil beneath foot path eroded and soon there was a deep cut, for four days, till 3rd Jan 2015 it continued. Lamba Singha  in Andhra Pradesh, recorded 00C on Sunday 11th January, 2015 a second time of this season of Winter in AP. A cow yielded a record 62 kg of milk on Sunday January 11 at the ongoing national livestock championship in Punjab.  Nandigama Mandal in Srikakulam district several villages experienced on early morning, Earth Tremors around 2h55mAM of Monday January 12th. Visakhapatnam city had very cloudy weather on January 13, 2015 possibly sequel to the Earthquake disturbance in Srikakulam district. An unusual growth of 10.5feet Brinzal tree has stunned the Nellore city in Navalakula Thota Krishna Murthy with over crop of Brinzal each weighing about 400gms on the 12th January. In Blantyre of Malawi  flooding began last month and heavy rain continued, especially in the north and central parts of the country. Seven girls scaled Mount Everest of India, Kosciuszko in Australia, Elbrus in Europe, Kilimanjro in Africa, Aconcagua in South America, Denali or McKinley in North America and Vinson in Antarctica. Nimdoma Sherpa peaked all the hills with needle-like snow piercing on their faces. A unique map of enigmatic molecules in our galaxy, a diffuse interstellar bands in the Milky Way recorded. From 31 December 2014 to 15th January 2015 the world over disturbances, at Visakhapatnam, North and J&K, Flooding in Malawi etc events in the world from England to Philippines over India, seem to have deep terrestrial disturbances. In the entire period Visakhapatnam coast seems to have the solid unaccounted disturbances.

INTRODUCTION

                                                Astro-naughts celebrated 16 times since space station passed over a part of earth witnessing mid-night sixteen times. NASA rover begins approach to dwarf planet Ceres launched in 2007, scheduled to enter Ceres orbit in March 2015 and is currently 640,000kms from Ceres approaching it at 725 km per hour.

Dhyan Chand Legendry Athlete

             Hockey player Dhyan Chand helped India to win three Olympic Gold Medals in 1928, 1932 and 1936 should be honored with Bharat Ratna!


                    Fig.A Hockey Wizard of India Three Olympic Medals.

THURSDAY Kashmir Jan 1st, 2015

                                  

Fig.1  A tourist enjoys a sledge ride in Gulbarga Jammu & Kashmir
on Thursday  Jan 1st, 2015. Photo3059.

Fig.1a   Mexico Papkutpetal Volcano on Tuesday 30th Dec. 2014,
released 2.5km smoke and dust. Photo3049.

SEA EROSION

              Mexico Papkutpetal Volcano on Tuesday 30th Dec. 2014, released 2.5km smoke and dust.

                    At Visakhapatnam, the sea surge was so sudden on the New Years day 2015, with ferocious waves close to foot path adjacent to museum, with soft soil beneath foot path eroded and soon there was a deep cut. Similar happened in March 2013. The Sea waters looked muddy and rough, and  the waves were cruel and continuously battered the side walls.

                                                                         4th News reveals that though rough waves noticed in the four days and calmed on Saturday 3rd January, Oceanography experts predict the situation may return in April-May. Fisher folk pointed out that Mangammaripeta, Yarada, Rushikonda, and Pudimandaka located 60km from Visakhapatnam are also facing the brunt of changed coastal front dynamics.  



Fig.1b Near Kursura the Sea caved on to the Road
In Visakhapatnam on Wednesday 31st December 2014.Photo3051.


Fig.1c Gone with the waves the boundary wall
of Beach Road in Visakhapatnam.Photo3060.
TURKEY

                          The 5000 years old underground city found in Turkey, actually a multilevel city in Derinkuyu, enough house thousands of people and their live stock. It has tunnel passages of seven kilometers and happens to be the world’s largest discovered located in central Turkey.


OZONE SHIELD

               Ozone affecting materials (ODS) the hydro-fluorocarbons  (HCFC) have in recent times reduced remarkably low, declared ‘Scientific Assessment of Ozone Depletion 2014’. About 2.2million metric tons have been removed due to Montreal Protocol, but still about 6.4lakh metric tons need to be removed. 

HARAPPAN CULTURE

      In Chandayan, of Baraut tehsil of Baghpat district, in Uttar Pradesh revealed burial site 150metres, away at a depth of 130cm, from residential area, and excavations brought to light about 21 pots (containing cereals, milk, butter and honey used in funeral ceremony), including deep bowls, dishes, flasks and lids with knobs and cylindrical agate beads. These along with a broken copper crown embedded with carnelian and faience beads. Orientation of burial ground was from north-west to south-east. The site could have existed before 4000 years ago.  



Fig.2    Broken copper crown with carnelian and faience beads
found at Chandayan village in UP.

IMAGE MADE 1 PHOTON/PIXEL


            A quantum leap in imaging technology scientists created a digital image less than one photon per pixel. Conventional technique uses 1,00,000 photons per pixel. An image of a wasp wing using just 50,000 particles of light none of which ever interacted directly with the wing itself was achieved. One photon illuminates the wasp wing while the other photon goes to the camera sensor! feels a graduate student at University of Glasgow. Photons are entangled and share quantum information on a quantum level, so image formed on the camera sensor by photons which have never seen the object for themselves!.

COASTAL TOWNS THREAT OF UNDERGROUND WELLS


          Coastal towns in India utilizing the underground water by several wells developed a threat of salt water incursion underneath. NGRI thought of studying 950km extent coastal areas in several villages where deep wells were struck in many villages. Extensive usage of water for irrigation and other purposes this water extracted from the deep sunk wells gave way to the underground sea water rushing to fill the vacancies man made under the ground. Environmental protection is the only method of stopping this undue development.

NAPALESE FOUR GIRLS SCALED SEVEN PEAKS

            The Nepalese seven girls Chuna Shresta, Nimdoma Sherpa, Pema Dikki Sherpa,  Maya Gurung, Asha Singh, and Shailee Basnet at Tribhuwan International Airport Kathmandu on Friday  January 9th, 2015 became the first all women group in the world to climb the peaks in seven continents. The first four girls climbed all the seven peaks. They scaled Mount Everest of India, Kosciuszko in Australia, Elbrus in Europe, Kilimanjro in Africa, Aconcagua in South America, Denali or McKinley in North America and Vinson in Antarctica. Nimdoma Sherpa peaked all the hills with needle-like snow piercing on their faces. Mount Vinson in Antarctica on December 23rd last year they scaled an achievement of unique feat.


Fig.2a Top of world seven sisters of Nepal scaled seven peaks
with Nimdoma Sherpa peaked all peaks Photo3062.


Diffuse interstellar bands in the Milky Way 

T W Lan, G Zasowski, B.Meacutenard: Johns Hopkins University: NASA
Fig.3. A unique map of enigmatic molecules in our galaxy

January 9, 2015  

Astronomers have created a unique map of enigmatic molecules in our galaxy that are responsible for puzzling features in the light from stars. These puzzling features in the light from stars, which astronomers call "Diffuse Interstellar Bands" (DIBs), have been a mystery ever since they were discovered by astronomer Mary Lea Heger of Lick Observatory in 1922. While analyzing the light from stars, she found unexpected lines that were created by something existing in the interstellar space between the stars and Earth. Further research showed that these mysterious lines were due to a variety of molecules. But exactly which of many thousands of possible molecules are responsible for these features has remained a mystery for almost a century. This new map, based on SDSS data that reveals the location of these enigmatic molecules, was compiled from two parallel studies. Zasowski, a postdoctoral fellow, led one team that focused on the densest parts of our galaxy, using infrared observations that can cut through the dust clouds and reach previously obscured stars. Johns Hopkins graduate student Ting-Wen Lan led the other study, which used visible light to detect the mysterious molecules located above the plane of the galaxy, where their signatures are very weak and harder to measure
Optically addressable nuclear spins in a solid with a six-hour coherence time.


Received 25 July 2014 Accepted 28 October 2014 Published online 07 January 2015

A proposal to overcome this range limitation is the quantum repeater protocol, which involves the distribution of entangled pairs of optical modes among many quantum memories stationed along the transmission channel. To be effective, the memories must store the quantum information encoded on the optical modes for times that are long compared to the direct optical transmission time of the channel. Here we measure a decoherence rate of 8 × 10−5 per second over 100 milliseconds, which is the time required for light transmission on a global scale. The measurements were performed on a ground-state hyperfine transition of europium ion dopants in Yttrium Ortho-silicate (151Eu3+:Y2SiO5) using optically detected nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. The observed decoherence rate is at least an order of magnitude lower than that of any other system suitable for an optical quantum memory. Furthermore, by employing dynamic decoupling, a coherence time of 370 ± 60 minutes was achieved at 2kelvin. It has been almost universally assumed that light is the best long-distance carrier for quantum information. However, the coherence time observed here is long enough that nuclear spins travelling at 9km per hour in a crystal would have a lower decoherence with distance than light in an optical fiber. This enables some very early approaches to entanglement distribution to be revisited, in particular those in which the spins are transported rather than the light.

Cow sets record with 62-kg milk yield

Chandigarh, Jan 12, 2015 DHNS:

A cow yielded a record 62 kg of milk on Sunday at the ongoing national livestock championship in Punjab. The high milk yield officially set a new national livestock record. The previous record was 58.8 kg of milk. The cow is of the Holstein Friesians (HF) breed. They are high-yield dairy animals, often called Friesians in Europe and Holsteins in North America.


Fig.4  Cow yielded a record 62 kg of milk on Sunday.

DELHI WEATHER

It was cold, windy on Saturday 10th morning here. There was dense fog in the morning with the visibility dropping to 500metres at 8.30 am The day will be partly cloudy," an India Meteorological Department official said. The day's minimum temperature settled one notch below the season's average at 6.8 degrees Celsius. Humidity at 8.30 am was recorded 91 per cent. Friday's maximum temperature was recorded four notches below the season's average at 16.3 degrees Celsius, while the minimum was 6.8 degrees Celsius, a notch below the season's average.


DENSE FOG IN SIMLA ON SATURDAY

            Fig.4a      Dense fog in Shimla on Saturday 10th.Photo3055.


LAMBASINGHA in AP


              Recorded 00C on Sunday 11th January, 2015 a second time of this season of Winter in AP, Chintapalli recorded 30C both a repeat occurrence of  December 21st, 2014.
               [News of Jan 12th, 2015]. For another four days cool winds blowing over the state would continue resulting in lowering of night temperatures. Mornings from 2 to 60C lower temperatures recorded in several cities of Telangana and AP.



ANDHRA PRADESH RIVER LINK MAP


                                                            Fig.5a  River link Map of AP state.Photo3047.       

    
EAST INDIA RIVER LINK MAP



                                                            Fig.5b River link Map of East India.Photo3048.


                           Minister Madam Uma Bharati announced on January 12th that cultivation waters of rivers wouldn’t be disturbed for interconnecting the rivers in India. Some states are agitated and she elaborated that only the waters that are left to join the Sea would be utilized for this purpose of diversion to other regions.


Three new plants


                        SNM College Maliankara research team reported a discovery of three flowering new plant species from Poonyakutty-Edamalayar region a biodiversity of Western Ghats. The shrub named Thottea adichilthottiana fron a tribal colony and the other two (grass family) are Arundinella pradeepiana and Garotia variyamensis. Report on Monday Jan., 12th 2015.


SRIKAKULUM EARTH TREMORS


         Nandigama Mandal in Srikakulam district several villages experienced on early morning of Monday January 12th, earth tremors around 2h55m AM. Nandigama, Pratapviswanadhapuram, Peddatamarapalli, Gollavur, Devalabhadhra, Kavittiagraharam, Kottha Agraharam, and Pedda Naidu Peta and other villages experienced the tremors. Visakhapatnam city had very cloudy weather on January 13, 2015 possibly sequel to the Earthquake disturbance in Srikakulam district.


FOOD COURT AT MUMBAI UNIVERSITY



Fig.6a taken on 4th Jan at 7h32mPM at Food Court in
Mumbai University ISC meet Photo2948.

Fig.6b The Moon splendor of Spectra at 7h33m PM 
on 4th Jan 2015 at ISC food court Photo2949.


BRINJAL TREE

       An unusual growth of 10.5feet Brinzal tree has stunned the Nellore city in Navalakula Thota Krishna Murthy with over crop of Brinzal each weighing about 400gms gave a tremendous surprise and wish to have recorded it in Guineas world record. [News Dt. Jan 13 eenadu Paper].

Fig.7 Brinzal tree 10.5feet in Krishna Murthy thota at Nellore city
weighing 400gm each bumper crop Photo3065.


North shivers despite rise in temperature
New Delhi /Srinagar /Jaipur /Shimla/Lucknow: Jan 14, 2015, DHNS:

              Rain and snow in some places may have ended dry, cold spell, but north India largely continued to shiver under cold conditions with minimum temperature in Delhi recording the lowest in a month and fog affecting visibility early on Tuesday 13th January 2015 morning. The maximum temperature in Delhi settled two notches below the season’s average at 18.3 degrees Celsius while the minimum was 4 degrees Celsius, four notches below normal, making it the coldest day of the month so far.

Flooding in Malawi kills 48, leaves thousands displaced

Jan 14, 2015, 01.15AM IST APhttp://images.photogallery.indiatimes.com/images/spacer.gif

                    BLANTYRE, Malawi:  Flooding began last month and heavy rain continued, especially in the north and central parts of the country, according to the Director of Meteorological services and climate change. Heavy flooding in Malawi has killed 48 people, and left another 23,000 displaced, the country's president said on Tuesday 13th January 2015. President declared 10 out of 28 districts in the country disaster zones.

COASTAL AP COLD DAYS

            It is conjectured that cold day conditions prevail in Andhra and appreciably lower at most places in Rayalaseema. Lowest minimum temperature recorded on Tuesday January 13th, at Nandigama as 110C, Kalingapatnam 150C, Visakhapatnam 190C, and Kakinada 170C.


US Space Society : ISRO mission

            Headed in Washington DC the society announced on Monday 12 January that ISRO mission would be awarded for two significant achievements. An Indian Space craft has gone into orbit around Mars on the very first try on September 24, 2014. The second achievement to get two full disk images which have ever been taken in the past that would aid planetary scientists.

WEATHER ON WEDNESDAY 14 Jan 2015

                   For Wednesday, though, the effects of the biting cold wave were not felt as much because of overcast skies. Srinagar recorded a minimum temperature of 2.7 degrees Celsius while ski resort Gulmarg and hill resort Pahalgam witnessed minus 3.6 and 0.4 degrees respectively. In Leh town of the Ladakh region, the minimum temperature rose remarkably to minus 3.4 degrees Celsius from the previous night’s minus 7.4.  The neighboring Kargil town recorded minus 9 degrees Celsius, as against minus 10 degrees the previous night. Jammu city recorded a maximum temperature of 9.8 degrees Celsius on Wednesday. To the south of Jammu and Kashmir, there was fresh snowfall in Himachal Pradesh and Shimla, which in turn worsened the cold weather conditions Punjab and Haryana. Chandigarh and other parts of the two states witnessed moderate to heavy rainfall, leading to the overall temperature of the region falling below normal. The capital city shivered at a low of 5.8 degrees Celsius.


SOLAR PHOTO-VOLTAIC CELL DOUBLED

                Paired up photo-voltaic polymers produce two units of electricity per unit of light on a single molecular polymer chain. News on 15th January 2015.

Fig.8 Solar cell doubled efficiency Photo3066.


GERMAN RESEARCHERS

German researchers have built shoe-sized devices that harvest power from the act of walking. The technology could be used to power wearable electronic sensors without the need for batteries. The devices were characterized under different motion speeds and with two test subjects on a treadmill. An average power output of up to 0.84 mW is achieved with the swing harvester. With a total device volume including the housing of 21 cm3 a power density of 40μW cm−3 results. The shock harvester generates an average power output of up to 4.13 mW. The power density amounts to 86μW cm−3 for the total device volume of 48 cm3.


RAIN AND HAILSTORM Wednesday


                  Rain and hailstorm hit Agra on Wednesday evening as a result of which the minimum temperature dipped to 70C causing hardship for the devotees who thronged the banks of the Yamuna for a holy dip on the occasion of “Makar Sankranti”. The district administration has ordered closure of schools till January 18. Over 200 people have lost their lives owing to cold related incidents this season so far. As many as 14 people died in cold related incidents in the eastern districts in the last 24 hours.  Mount Abu remained coldest with a temperature of 3.40C followed by Jaisalmer at 70C and Ganganagar at 7.40C. Jaipur recorded a night temperature of 7.80C. Minimum temperatures dropped again in Kashmir Valley, but settled above the freezing point in Srinagar for the third consecutive night following rain and snowfall across two days ago. Srinagar witnessed minimum temperature of 0.50C, down by over two degrees from the previous night’s low of 2.70C.  Pahalgam hill resort recorded minimum night temperature of minus 3.60C while the mercury in ski resort of Gulmarg settled at 7.40C


Jan 15th  Feat

          India’s Open water swimmer Bhakti Sharma conquered World Record swimming 1.4 miles in 52 minutes across waters of Antarctic ocean at temperatures of 10C. She already swam five Oceans of the World.


UNEXPLAINED DISTURBANCES

From 31 December 2014 to 15th January 2015 the world over disturbances, at Visakhapatnam, North and J&K, Flooding in Malawi etc events in the world from England to Philippines over India, seem to have deep terrestrial disturbances. In the entire period Visakhapatnam coast seems to have the solid unaccounted disturbances.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENT



            I am indebted to Late Professor K. R. Rao D.Sc. (Madras) D.Sc. (London) of Andhra University, Waltair, for his interest in my research and it was his enthusiasm that sustained me to-date. 

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