Japan's Hayabusa-2 spacecraft has departed from the asteroid Ryugu with samples of its soil and begun its year-long journey back to Earth. |
Sunday, December 1, 2019
Hayabusa heading home
Friday, November 1, 2019
The last two races of 2019
Porto Rafti’s nautical club Ν.Α.Σ.Π.Ο.Ρ organizes several sailboat races during the summer every year with the last two crossing to the second largest of the Greek Islands, Eboia (Εὔβοια,) or Evia. Eboea derives its name from the words εὖ "good", and βοῦς "ox", meaning "the land of the well-fed oxen. An interesting vignette is that the philosopher Aristotle died on the island of Eboea in 322 BC. |
The race on September 29, 2019 was to the coastal town of Karystos in the south coast of Evia. In antiquity Karystos’ name was Chaeronea and was famous for its wealth. |
The medieval Castello Roso overlooks Karystos. The impressive Venetian castle was built in the 13th century, and is offering a panoramic view of the town.
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The overall winner of the race to Karystos was the legendary Okyrhoe. In the picture we see the boat maneuvering near the starting line with my brother Nikos at the helm.
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The last race was to little port of Marmari in the southeast coast of Evia. The boats are jockeying at the starting line.
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Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Achilles Island
In this Attic lekythos c. 510 BC we see Ajax carrying the body of Achilles. It is exhibited at Staatliche Antikensammlungen in Munich.
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In 1840s the island was visited again. Unfortunately a lighthouse was built in the same spot and resulted in the complete destruction of the temple and the surrounding structures. (Image from Wikiwands)
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Labels:
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Sunday, September 1, 2019
Epic Journeys
In Ernest Shackleton’s epic journey to the Antarctica after their boat Endurance was trapped, he and five of his crew set sail on a 22-foot boat from Elephant island to South Georgia 800 miles away. Alfred Lansing in his novel Endurance p 278 writes that the sea is a different kind of enemy. Unlike the land, where courage and the simple will can often see a man, through, the struggle against the sea is an act of physical combat, and there is no escape. It is a battle against a tireless enemy in which man never actually wins; the most he can hope for is not to be defeated. Their struggle to survive became a testament of the human spirit and how much adversity humans can endure. |
We did our sailboat crossing from Spain to Greece, one hundred years after Shackleton's epic voyage. Although we use the word Epic when we refer to our journey it was in the Mediterranean a benign Sea comparing to South Atlantic. We battled storms after we left the strait of Bonifacio heading south in the Tyrrhenian Sea and later in the Ionian Sea. Because of my fellow mariners' skill and tenacity against the elements we were able to complete our crossing in the summer of 2015.
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Thursday, August 1, 2019
The Ultimate Journey
Although black holes have been studied for decades, all the images you’ve ever seen of them have been computer simulations or artist’s conceptions, until now. |
Monday, July 1, 2019
Paulet island
Saturday, June 1, 2019
The Hurricane Season Starts
The Atlantic hurricane season begins June 1 and ends November 30. NOAA's National Hurricane Center predicts and tracks these massive storm systems, which occur, on average, 12 times a year in the Atlantic basin. One of the most destructive hurricanes was Katrina that made landfall in the Gulf States in 2005. Picture by NASA
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Tropical cyclones are called either Typhoons or Hurricanes and are rotating rotating low-pressure weather systems that form over tropical waters. “Cyclone" refers to their winds moving in a circle,whirling round their central clear eye with their winds blowing counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. Tropical cyclones with maximum sustained surface winds of less than 39 mph are called tropical depressions. Those with maximum sustained winds of 39 mph or higher are called tropical storms. When a storm's maximum sustained winds reach 74 mph, it is called a Hurricane or Typhoon or Medicanes based on its location. Picture by NASA on BBC
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Tropical cyclones out at sea cause large waves and high winds, disrupting international shipping and, at times, causing shipwrecks.
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The word typhoon, is likely derived from the Greek Typhon (Τυφών) a feared monster in Greek mythology that had the head of a man and a lower body of thousands serpents and was associated with storms.
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The word Hurricane, is likely derived from huracán, the Spanish word for storm god, Juracan. This god is likely the Mayan creator god Huracan who the Mayans believed created dry land out of the turbulent waters. The god was also credited with later destroying the "wooden people", the precursors to the “maize people”, with an immense storm and flood.
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Labels:
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Wednesday, May 1, 2019
Notre Dame de Paris
Notre Dame is a medieval Catholic cathedral that was built in 1163 on the ground where a temple to the Jupiter pre-existed. The cathedral is considered to be one of the finest examples of French Gothic architecture. Its sculptures, the rib vault and its huge rose windows make it unique. Photo by Eduard Valdus exhibited at The Met |
The April 15, 2019 fire started at the vault and the spire during work of restoration and renovation. The cause of the fire is unknown and the event is currently under investigation.
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The Notre Dame cathedral had been damaged several times in the past with a major damage in 1793 during the French Revolution when subsequently was used as a warehouse.
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In 1801 restoration work was started and in 1804 it was used for Napoleon’s coronation as an Emperor.
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On 26 August 1944 a special mass was held in the cathedral to celebrate the liberation of Paris; the Generals De Gaulle and Leclerc and other dignitaries attended it. Just as General de Gaulle was about to enter the Cathedral of Notre Dame, firing started all over the place.
General de Gaulle walked straight ahead in what appeared to me to be a hail of fire from somewhere inside the cathedral. But he went straight ahead and walked right down the central aisle, even while the bullets were pouring around him. It was the most extraordinary example of courage that I’ve ever seen Bob Reid from the BBC reported. Photo from the Mussee de la Resistance en ligne.
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Monday, April 1, 2019
The Boeing 737 MAX
Friday, March 1, 2019
Oumuamua
On October 19, 2017, astronomers at Hawaii’s PanSTARRS telescope detected an object in the sky that was moving unusually fast and likely had originated from another solar system. As it was the first interstellar object to be detected within our solar system, they named it Oumuamua, the Hawaiian word for a scout or messenger. (Artist depiction in Wikipedia)
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An article at Scientific American describes six unusual facts about Oumuamua. The first one being that astronomers didn’t expect such an object to exist but the most unusual fact about it is that it deviates from an orbit that is shaped by the gravitational force of our sun. As the object is moving, in a hyperbolic trajectory, the question arises what gives it the extra acceleration. As Oumuamua’s acceleration has not been seen with asteroids astronomers wandered whether the object may be an Unidentified Foreign Object sent to our solar system by an alien civilization.
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Friday, February 1, 2019
A Trilogy
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Dawn of a New Day and a New Year
Parker Solar Probe acquired the first ever photo taken from inside the sun’s corona. The bright streak is a coronal streamer. Up to now, all photos of the sun have been taken from a great distance, either from ground or from telescopes in space given the sun’s extreme heat. The sun is a magnificent, hot, glowing ball of gas with its enormous hot plasma and bright coronal streamers streaking out into the surrounding blackness that matches Homer’s magnificent descriptions of sun’s rays at Dawn in both the Iliad and Odyssey.
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Today, at the dawn of the New Year, my favorite description of Dawn by Homer is… Dawn appeared with her rosy fingers. I wish you all a Happy New Year.
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