Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Hurricane Sandy Batters U.S. East Coast


Hurricane Sandy moves along the U.S. East Coast and into the Mid-Atlantic and northeastern U.S.(right). Predicted storm surge probabilities in percentages across the cities in the East Coast (left). Courtesy: NASA/NOAA.
Hurricane Sandy slams densely populated East Coast of the United States virtually disrupting the life of nearly 75 million people in its path from North Carolina to New England.  Total shut down is reported in almost eight states including New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia.  Millions of people are without power. Atlantic City, New Jersey is the hardest hit as most of the city inundated with 3-5 ft flood water per latest reports.  New York City, the city that never sleeps, is completely shut down as nearly 8 million New Yorkers have been ordered to stay home and do nothing.  No local and international flights are going in and out of the city and so do train or bus services.  President Barak Obama cut short his scheduled presidential campaign and returns to White House to oversee the emergency operations.  President later signs the emergency disaster declaration for the eight affected states. Wall street will be shut down for Monday and Tuesday as the financial losses due to hurricane Sandy is estimated at $17.2b with most of the losses are expected from damages due to flooding and storm water inundation of the cities and boroughs across the coastline.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Endeavour's Final Journey


WOW! Here's an amazingly shot video, The Final Journey of Space Shuttle Endeavour from Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) to the California Science Center through the streets and alleyways of the City of Angels. Dubbed as Mission 26: The Big Endeavour, the space shuttle completed 123 million miles in space since it entered into service twenty years ago. The 75-tonne space shuttle was transported on a 160-wheel carrier traveling at a speed of 2 mph, took two days to cover the 12 miles from LAX to its final resting place as the people swarmed the city to witness the historic moment. Take a look!

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Father Of Innovation Steve Jobs Dies At 56

Father of modern technology/innovation, a visionary, a marketing genius, and a co-founder and former C.E.O of Apple Computers Steven P. Jobs dies at the age of 56 after a prolonged battle with pancreatic cancer.  Steve died peacefully today surrounded by his family.  The man who made the word "Apple" more synonymous with "computer" than the fruit that Adam and Eve supposedly shared in the Garden of Eden to create this humanity or the one that fell on Newton's head which unraveled the principle of gravity; is no doubt a great innovator and a visionary of modern era.  This is the man who transformed our lives with his innovative digital devices like iPod, iPhone, and iPad, which literally transformed the way we conduct our lives be it mobile communication, listening to music, or the industries of both mobile phones and music.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

It's Official-Cell Phone Radiation Is A Possible Carcinogen!

Yes indeed!  The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the branch of the World Health Organization (WHO) that specializes in cancer research has declared that cell phone radiation is a possible carcinogen.  After reviewing data from previous studies to determine links between radiation and cancer when using mobile devices like cell phones, IARC released a statement on Tuesday from Lyon, France after a week-long conference with international experts for the IARC stating that cell phone radiation is a possible carcinogen and that cell phones are possible carcinogenic towards humans.  This will surely have a far reaching implications as majority of legal decisions pertaining to the siting or dismantling of cell phone towers especially on health grounds have been hampered by the ambiguity in  the position of UN's august health body so far.  Now that WHO has taken a clear stance on this and has come out with a statement, more and more judges could now rule in favour of  the real victims of cell tower radiation i.e. the residents of the tower locality rather than cell tower companies.                                                                                                                       IARC Press Release

Monday, May 2, 2011

Bin Laden's Killing-A Trump Card Of Prime Importance!

The mastermind of 9/11 attacks and the chief of al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden has been killed in a mansion near Pakistani capital of Islamabad along with some of his family members in a high-precision surgical strike carried out by US Navy seals after an actionable US intelligence, according to CIA sources. This was later disclosed by the US President Barak Obama in his nationally televised address. The President said, "Today, at my direction, the United States launched a targeted operation against that compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. A small team of Americans carried out the operation with extraordinary courage and capability. No Americans were harmed. They took care to avoid civilian casualties. After a firefight, they killed Osama bin Laden and took custody of his body."  It is still unclear who else were killed in the operation and the fate of No. 2 in al-Qaeda Ayman  al-Zawahiri is not known. Soon after this new broke out, celebrations erupt across the American cities.  This surely gives a great sense of relief and closure to all Americans and especially to the families of those who were killed in the 9/11 attacks masterminded by the al-Qaeda chief. At least 2,752 people from more than 90 countries were killed in this attack. This surely will boost the prospects of Obama's re-election as the President of the United States and bin Laden's death is going to be Obama's trump card of prime importance in Campaign 2012.
New York City's World Trade Center on fire, September 11, 2001. As many as 2,752 people from more than 90 countries were killed in this world's most gruesome terrorist attack on US soil masterminded by the late al-Qaeda chief.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

The New Royal Couple, Kisses, and Ratings!


This is on the lighter side of the Royal Wedding though, of Prince William and Catherine Middleton.  To be honest, I am one of those so called republicans who question the very continuance of monarchy in this day and age whether in Britain or elsewhere and yet drawn to the occassion perhaps due to the very nature of it and the unfolding of history before your eyes, decided to watch the event, albeit intermittently on live television.  What caught my attention invariably was the  detailed analysis of some of the commentators  conveniently rating those flushes and kisses of the newly wedded couple.  "Prince William and Catherine apparently indulged in two kisses which blew over nearly two billion people that are watching the event on live television," says one analyst.  All the superlatives have been thrown into it such as, "one of the greatest kisses of all times," or "one of the most famous kisses of all times."  While CNN's Anderson Cooper rates the first at 6 and second at 8 out of 10; British-born Piers Morgan is more liberal towards the royal couple rating the first at 8 and the second at 10.  Uh! how do you rate a kiss though, especially when you are not a party to it?  Wait a minute, the first one scored a mere six, which means just pass or a fail per Royal Standards?  What does this mean to the royal couple?  Well, if Sheril Kirshenbaum of University of Texas is to be believed, fifty-nine percent of men and 66 percent of women say they have ended a budding relationship because of a bad kiss. Let's not jump to any conclusions just yet!

Saturday, April 2, 2011

A "Gambhir-India" Lifts Cricket World Cup

Mission Accomplished!
Kudos to team India!! The gem of an innings played by Gautham Gambhir (meaning 'serious' in Sanskrit) and Mahendra Singh Dhoni drove home the hosts in lifting the most coveted possession of the cricketing world, ICC cricket world cup beating Sri Lanka by six wickets in the finals. After 28 years of title drought, Indian cricket fans celebrated this win out in the streets with much pomp and joy.  Kudos to Indians who have once again proved they are the Number One in the world and the Champions of World Cricket. The true class of world's most pwerful batting lineup was in full display as nearly two billion people across the globe watched the event on live television. The hosts put up a near clinical performance while chasing a not-so-easy total of 274 in a crunch game like this one, the final of the world cup and in the process they not only smashed few bats as the ball is smacked over the rope, but also proved most illustrious of the 'cricket pundits' wrong, the so called orthodox Australian pundits whose gut feelings always sided with Sri Lanka.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Explosion At Fukushima Sends Jitters Across Japan-Is Another Chernobyl In The Offing?

Fukushima nuclear power plant,
Fukushima, Japan.
The vagaries of the great earthquake that struck northeast coast of Japan on Friday afternoon are not over yet.  After the horrendous tsunami following devastating earthquake, Japan is bracing for yet another catastrophe.  This time, it is the turn of nuclear explosion. Earlier today, there has been an explosion reported in the reactor No. 1 of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant sending jitters across Japan and the neighboring countries Russia, China, Korean peninsula and surrounding islands.  Though this explosion has been attributed to a minor hydrogen ignition, if the failure of the coolant system of the nuclear reactor as reported earlier is anything to go by and the ensuing high temperatures within the system are not brought under control, this could lead to a catastrophic event like nuclear meltdown.  Nuclear meltdown, a term used to describe the phenomenon of overheating of the nuclear fuel rods within the core reactor system in the absence of coolant causes fuel rods to meltdown like a molten mass, which in turn is susceptible to uncontrollable fission reaction and releases enormous amount of energy within the core system.  This triggers a series of massive explosions, breaches the steel containment vessel, and thereby releasing large amounts of radioactive nuclides such as plutonium, zirconium, cesium, and iodide among others into the atmosphere.

"Sarcophagus" of Chernobyl 4
Nuclear Reactor, Ukraine.
This, no doubt reminds one of what happened on that fateful Friday night of April 25, 1986 and the worst man-made tragedy that shook the world when two catastrophic steam explosions occurred in the Reactor Number 4 of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant located in the erstwhile Soviet Union (now in Ukraine) resulting in fire, a series of additional explosions and a nuclear meltdown releasing large amounts of radioactive elements including plutonium, iodine, strontium, and cesium into the atmosphere, the repercussions of which are being felt even today.  More than one hundred types of radioactive nuclides have been detected in the atmosphere days after the accident, says IAEA report. Nearly 200,000 people are believed to have been relocated as a result of this accident.  More than 30 firemen and emergency clean-up workers died within three months of the accident due to Acute Radiation Sickness and nearly 1800 cases of thyroid cancer have been documented in children.  Many more developed psychological disorders became addicted to widespread drinking and suicides. The effect of Chernobyl radiation was felt much of Belarus, Russia, Ukraine,  much of northern hemisphere and as far as Sweden and Finland due to northerly wind patterns.  According to IAEA, the accident at Chernobyl was approximately 400 times more potent than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.  It is the sheer magnitude of nuclear explosion that is frightening and a cause for much concern. 

Radioactive cloud (Red & yellow) seen
days after Chernobyl accident spreads
across much of northern hemisphere and
Europe.
There are already several reports indicating that the radiation levels are reaching more than one thousand times above the normal near the plant site in Fukushima though the Japanese authorities later trounced these reports.  Yet the manner in which the evacuation zone is being extended from the initial 5 km to now 20 km zone certainly gives a reason for suspicion. The official communiqué of Japanese government however puts the radiation levels at about eight times to that of the normal level near ground zero. Some scientists argue that the security systems at Fukushima nuclear power plant are far more advanced than that in Chernobyl at the time of the accident and a protective dome will cover the Fukushima plant in the event of any catastrophic incident, thereby preventing any radioactive material leakage into the atmosphere.  However, it should also be noted that the more sophisticated Fukushima plant is one hundred times more powerful than the one at Chernobyl and therefore the devastation could also be huge should security systems fail.  As of now, there is very little information that is coming out of Fukushima and that the situation is still unclear.  We all pray and hope the damage will be contained and minimal if any.


Friday, March 11, 2011

Great Earthquake Strikes Japan, Tsunami Follows!!!

A great earthquake, one of the largest measuring 8.9 on the Richter scale hit northern Japan throwing life into virtual chaos in Tokyo and surrounding areas.  A massive wave of mud and water from the Pacific was seen reaching  the coastal towns of northern Japan completely submerging the buildings and sweeping the cars, ships, or anything in its way. A massive fire broke out in an oil refinery in Chiba in north eastern Tokyo. Looking at the devastataion, casualites could be huge. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre has issued Tsunami warning with tidal waves anywhere between two to four meters above sea level to many countries including  US state of Hawaii, Australia, New Zealand and the entire coast of Central and South America.  The tsunami travels at about 800 kilometers per hour.  A great earthquake is the one which measures 8.0 and up on the Richter scale and can cause tremondous damage across several thousand miles.  According to USGS, on an average there will be one great earthquake occurring every year.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Egypt: A Nation Liberated

After 30 years of oppression, Egyptians breathes freedom. Take a look…

The jubilant Egyptians celebrate in the streets of Cairo
soon after the resignation of President Mubarak was
announced on live television.
Another dictator falls and a nation is liberated from the clutches of its own favorite son!  What an irony indeed for President Hosni Mubarak, sorry, no longer the president, simply Mubarak.  I grew up watching him rule Egypt with an iron fist as he used to don the newspaper headlines almost every other day during my student days, though I kind of lost track thereafter as my priorities changed and my career shifted to different avenues of science.  But then, as a vivid follower of the current events as anybody else and being a political animal myself, I thought I share some of my observations on this historic occasion of The Egyptian Revolution of 2011, the most disgraceful exit of Mr. Mubarak and his 30-year autocratic rule as President of the most populous Arab nation, and the power of information age and the internet on the recent and ongoing modern day revolutions in Middle East, North Africa and Southeastern Mediterranean .

 
Thousands of protesters gather at Tahrir Square in Cairo demanding
the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak.
At last, after 18 days of furious anti-government protests by the people of Egypt and a toll of nearly 300 (as some estimates put it), as the dusk sets in soon after the Friday evening prayers on 11th day of February 2011, the Vice President of Egypt Omar Suleiman announced the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak on national television.  A history was made and the Egypt erupts into celebration.  From Cairo to Alexandria across the  country people started jumping with joy, dancing, and honking from their cars wherever they may be.  “This is a triumph of democracy,” said one protester on live TV camera at Tahrir Square in Cairo, as I turned  my television set on to embrace the moment of history.  And they have a reason to celebrate too, for Egyptians have long been disillusioned by their rulers with their most draconian policies of the government, the tough bureaucracy, growing unemployment, the falling income levels, and rising food prices. What has really changed for Mubarak in the past two weeks is surely a warning sign for many more nervous dictators out there in the Arab world who may be watching the events unfold in Egypt and thinking one step ahead of the crowd, opined CNN’s Wolf Blitzer.   "What made this Egyptian revolution unique is that this is the most genuine, homegrown, and spontaneous uprising of people among them mostly youth and there is no involvement of any outside elements," said one television analyst. The ample television coverage provided by the international media as they always do in times of crisis when history is being made despite heavy crackdown, also helped in sending the message across to the foreign governments, especially to the West, in not backing Mubarak anymore, in gazing the public mood, in rethinking their strategies while taking positions and the position they took, and it’s loud and clear - “Step-down Mubarak.” This is also a revolution of its kind, where the internet has been used to the hilt by the demonstrators for  the first time in its history. The unfiltered access to the internet in Egypt, thanks to the CIA and the  all pervasive social networking sites like facebook and twitter further the cause as thousands of young Egyptians swamped the sites and posted impromptu messages, though the sites were later shutdown by the dictator’s regime. Interestingly, Mr Wael Ghonim, a Cairo-born Egyptian techie from Google Inc. has become a sort of figurehead of this revolution and whose facebook pages have been credited with triggering this very popular uprising.  Some even dubbed it as  a Revolutionary Revolution while Ghonim called it a Revolution 2.0. Internet thus became the virtual weapon of the demonstrators and in a way signified the furtherance of democracy, a great step forward in the region marred by decades of oppression.

Skeletal remains of victims recovered from the mass graves of the
Killing Fields of Cambodia.
Ironically, 11th  February was also the day of 32nd anniversary of the ghastly 1979 Islamic revolution of Iran, which saw the overthrow   of Iran’s monarchy under Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and replaced it with an Islamic republic under the leadership of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini after months of protests and blodshed.  Various estimates put the death toll of Iranian revolution anywhere between 3000 to 60,000 depending on whether the estimates used are those of Islamic government or those of historians from western nations (Wikipedia). The 18- day-long Egyptian revolution comes close on the heels of 23 days long popular Tunisia’s Jasmine revolution that removed Ben Ali’s decade-old oppressive regime, which claimed more than 50 lives. Interestingly, the modern day revolutions of Egypt and Tunisia have been able to successfully replace the dictatorial regimes in rather relatively short span of time with lot less bloodshed, thanks to the information age and the internet.  In contrast, the  revolutions of the pre-internet and pre-cable era, as was the aforementioned 1979 Iranian revolution or the ruthless execution of millions of Cambodians by the Khmer Rouge regime, what was aptly termed as the Killing Fields of Cambodia during the unique Cambodian revolution between 1975 and 1979, the death toll was even higher.  According to the Mapping Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam) and Yale University estimates, the death toll in this massacre was at least 1,386,734 (Wikipedia). This further shows the  power of information age and internet, which is instrumental in propagating the  democratic winds of change in some of the most oppressed societies in the Arab world as well as North Africa and Southeastern Mediterranean.

The then-President Hosni Mubarak shaking hands
with US President Barak Obama during hay days
in office.
One possible successor to Mubarak if and when the elections are held could be the Egyptian opposition leader Mohammad ElBaradei, a Nobel Laureate and English speaking former head of United Nation’s nuclear watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency  (IAEA).  Mr. ElBaradei had a long and distinguished career spanning more than 30 years in the United States and has the full backing of US, whose support Egypt needs the most in rebuilding its democratic institutions, stymied by the successive dictatorial regimes.  Reports indicate Mubarak fled from Cairo with booty of US$70 billion to a Red Sea resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh. The immediate priority of the successive government should be to bring this money back to the nation’s exchequer where it belongs.  According to the latest reports, Swiss government is freezing the assets owned there by Hosni Mubarak to avoid any risk of mis-appropriation of state-owned Egyptian assets. You can’t fool all of the people all of the time, Mr. Mubarak!