Friday, March 18, 2011

Moon bigger, brighter

    Lunar Perigee,Supermoon On 19 March 2011
    221,567 miles Away Is Moon May lead To Earthquake,Tsunami,Volcanic Eruptions Biggest Full Moon in 18 Years Occurs Saturday Night


Newstalk ZB and ABC Science Online, Newstalk ZB and ABC Science Online
March 19, 2011

If you notice the moon looks different this weekend ... that's because it is.

The moon will appear bigger and brighter for the next few days...the biggest in fact for almost 20 years.

It's called a perigee moon when it's closest to earth and its orbit. It's some 31 thousand miles closer than when it's farthest away, meaning it'll look bigger and brighter than it has since 1993.

The next perigee moon isn't until 2029.

But experts are discounting predictions of earthquakes associated with the event.

The moon's orbit is elliptical, and as it follows its path one side of the ellipse, known as perigee, passes about 50,000 kilometres closer than the on the other side - apogee.

A perigee full moon appears around 14 per cent bigger and 30 per cent brighter than an apogee full moon.

Moonageddon fears put to rest

Geoffrey Wyatt from the Sydney Observatory says the upcoming full moon - which NASA's website says will be of "rare size and beauty" - will rise about 08.00 pm (AEDT) on Saturday.

But it becomes full on Sunday morning at 05.10 am (AEDT), one hour before lunar perigee.

"So, Sunday morning, those people who are up early or getting home super late, look to the west and you'll see the biggest moon for 18 years," Mr Wyatt said.

The last time the full moon was so big and close to Earth was in March 1993.

"You've got two cycles here. You've got 29-and-a-half days between full moons and then you've got 27 and a half days from apogee to apogee," Mr Wyatt said.

"That difference builds up and although you get a perigee every month, to get it at minimum distance takes about 18 years."

Perigee full moons also usually bring extra-high tides, but Daniel Jaksa, co-director of the joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre, says they will probably be a fraction of one per cent higher than normal.

Earthquake predictions

Meanwhile an Auckland-based mathematician known as the "Moonman", Ken Ring, has warned the perigee moon will cause another major earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand.

Mr Ring claims he predicted Christchurch's deadly February 22 quake by studying the moon.

But Mr Wyatt says he would like to see some scientific proof to back the Mr Ring's claims.

"For a few weeks now we've been hearing people talk about 'Moonageddon'," he said.

"It's depressing to hear people saying this sort of thing. There is absolutely no evidence for a causal link between the phases of the moon and earthquake activity.

"It's something you might find in 'Tom's Backyard Mechanic's Book of Celestial Tomfoolery', but you're not going to find that in peer-reviewed journals."

Mr Jaksa agrees.

"You only have to look at the major energy source that's driving the tectonic process and it's not the moon," he said.

"It's the convection currents in the mantle as the Earth tries to cool down from its core outwards that drives plate tectonics."

Mr Wyatt says the claims are a symptom of the human condition.
"People blame things on the alignment of the planets because they want an explanation, but it's not the moon's fault," he said.



An enhanced image of the Moon taken with the NOAO Mosaic CCD camera
using two NSF telescopes at Kitt Peak National Observatory.
The Moon is superimposed on a separate image of the sky.


Learn what makes a big full moon a true 'supermoon' in this SPACE.com infographic.
Source: SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration


The dazzling full moon sets behind the Very Large Telescope in Chile's Atacama Desert in this photo released June 7, 2010 by the European Southern Observatory.
The moon appears larger than normal due to an optical illusion of perspective.



Man rescued eight days after Japan quake

AFP and Reuters
March 19, 2011


OSAKA, Japan (AFP) - Rescuers pulled a man from the rubble of a destroyed building in northeast Japan on Saturday, eight days after a massive earthquake and tsunami, media reports said.

Japanese rescuers search through debris for bodies in Kesennuma, Miyagi prefecture. Rescuers pulled a young man from the rubble of a destroyed building in northeast Japan on Saturday, eight days after a massive earthquake and tsunami, public broadcaster NHK reported.
Public broadcaster NHK reported the man was rescued from a wrecked house in Kesennuma, Miyagi prefecture, and in a stable physical condition, but in a state of shock and unable to speak.

He was identified as Katsuharu Moriya, aged in his 20s, Kyodo News agency quoted the Self-Defense Forces as saying.

Moriya was found trapped on the second floor of the house and had wrapped himself in a blanket, Kyodo news agency said. He was conscious and his blood pressure and pulse were stable.

An earthquake survivor is carried into the Kesennuma City Hospital / AP / NHT TV via Kyodo News
He was found a day after authorities said they had ended the rescue phase of the post-earthquake operation and would be concentrating on clearing rubble and restoring limited services.

It was not immediately clear how the man survived in an area where overnight temperatures have plunged below freezing.

Nearly 7,000 people have been confirmed killed in the double natural disaster, which turned whole towns into waterlogged and debris-shrouded wastelands.

Another 10,700 people are missing with many feared dead.


U.S. accuses Gaddafi of violating U.N. resolution

Maria Golovnina and Michael Georgy
Reuters March 19, 2011


TRIPOLI (Reuters) - The United States accused Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi on Friday of defying international demands for an immediate cease-fire, hours after President Barack Obama said he faced military action if he did not comply.

A U.S. National Security official said Gaddafi's forces were continuing to advance towards the eastern rebel stronghold of Benghazi, despite a cease-fire announcement by the Libyan government earlier in the day.

In Benghazi, rebels said they feared an attack by Gaddafi's forces, while in the western rebel-held city Misrata, residents said they had faced a day of heavy bombing.

"All attacks against civilians must stop," Obama said, a day after the U.N. Security Council passed a resolution authorising international military intervention to protect civilians in Libya.

Underlining a commitment to provide protection to people across the country -- and not just in the rebel-held east -- Obama also specifically called on Gaddafi's forces to pull back from the western cities of Zawiyah and Misrata, as well as the eastern town of Ajdabiya:

"Gaddafi must stop his troops from advancing on Benghazi, pull them back from Ajdabiya, Misrata and Zawiyah, and establish water, electricity and gas supplies to all areas. Humanitarian assistance must be allowed to reach the people of Libya ...

"Let me be clear, these terms are not negotiable ... If Gaddafi does not comply ... the resolution will be enforced through military action."

His comments were echoed in a statement that Paris issued on behalf of the United States, Britain, France and Arab states.

GADDAFI TROOPS ADVANCING, OFFICIAL SAYS

In Washington, a national security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the troop movements by Gaddafi's forces towards Benghazi were "purposeful".

The assessment was based on official reporting reaching U.S. national security agencies in Washington, he said.

Asked by CNN whether Gaddafi was in violation of the U.N. resolution, the U.S. envoy to the United Nations, Susan Rice, said: "Yes, he is."

In Tripoli the government said there had been no bombing since it announced the cease-fire.

"We have had no bombardment of any kind since the cease-fire was declared," Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim told journalists when asked about reports of continued government operations in Misrata and other parts of the country.

Kaim said Libya was asking China, Germany, Malta and Turkey to send observers to monitor its adherence to the cease-fire.

A doctor in Misrata contacted by phone in the evening said there had been heavy bombing through the day.

"Now they are on the outskirts of the city and I can still hear bombing from time to time," he said.

Rebels in Benghazi dismissed Gaddafi's cease-fire declaration as a ruse.

"He is lying. His troops are advancing. We don't believe what Gaddafi says," said Mohammed Ishmael al-Tajouri, from the rebel coalition in Benghazi. "When he comes to Benghazi he will be fighting. There is no negotiating with Gaddafi."

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said everything was ready to launch military strikes in Libya. France and Britain have both been strong advocates of military action.

After embarking on wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the United States had insisted it would participate in rather than lead any military action. Obama said the United States would not deploy ground troops in Libya.

(Additional reporting by a Reuters reporter in Benghazi, Mariam Karouny and Tarek Amara in Tunisia, Louis Charbonneau and Patrick Worsnip at the United Nations and John Irish in Paris; writing by Myra MacDonald; Editing by Kevin Liffey)


Phan Châu Trinh





1872-1926

Phan Chu Trinh (Phan Châu Trinh) tự Tử Can, hiệu Tây Hồ, biệt hiệu Hy Mã, quê quán Quảng Nam sinh tháng 8 năm 1872.

Đậu Phó Bảng năm 1901, Cụ được bổ làm quan ở Huế, nhưng đã từ quan theo đuổi cuộc cách mạng cải tiến dân sinh và dân trí với chủ trương “bất bạo động”. Cụ đã vận động và cổ súy phong trào Duy Tân, mở trường dạy học, truyền bá Quốc Ngữ, mở mang công thương nghiệp, theo nếp sống văn minh Âu Tây.

Năm 1906, Cụ trốn qua Nhật theo phong trào Đông Du, nhưng bất đồng chính kiến với chủ trương bạo động của nhà Cách Mạng Phan Bội Châu, Cụ về nước tiếp tục hoạt động, bị Pháp bắt, bị triều đình Huế kết án tử hình, nhưng sau đó được giảm án đầy ra Côn Đảo.

Năm 1911, sau khi được tha, Cụ Phan Chu Trinh sang Pháp.

Cụ Phan bị bệnh mất ngày 24 tháng 3 năm 1926 tại Sài Gòn.



Chí Thành Không Thành Thánh
Phan Châu Trinh

志誠通聖

世事迴頭已一空,
江山無淚泣英雄。
萬民奴隸強權下,
八古文章醉夢中。
長此百年甘唾罵,
不知何日出勞籠。
諸君未必無心血,
請向斯文看一通。

潘周楨


Thế sự hồi đầu dĩ nhất không,
Giang sơn vô lệ khấp anh hùng.
Vạn dân nô lệ cường quyền hạ,
Bát cổ văn chương tuý mộng trung.
Trường thử bách niên cam thoá mạ,
Bất tri hà nhật xuất lao lung?
Chư quân vị tất vô tâm huyết,
Thỉnh hướng tư văn khan nhất thông.
ooOoo

Thế sự quay đầu chỉ thấy không,
Giang sơn nào khóc anh hùng được đâu.
Vạn dân nô lệ cho người dắt,
Tám vế văn chương gửi giấc mòng.
Nếu mãi chịu cam lời thoá mạ,
Ngày nào ra khỏi chốn lao lung?
Các anh đâu phải không tâm huyết,
Xin đọc mấy lời chút cảm thông!
***
Danh Sơn Lương Ngọc

Việc đời ngoảnh lại thành không
Còn đâu giọt lụy non sông khóc người
Muôn dân luồn cúi tôi đòi
Văn chương bát cổ say hoài giấc mơ
Mặc ai chửi rủa tha hồ,
Xích xiềng này biết bao giờ tháo xong?
Anh em còn chút máu nồ
Hãy đem văn ấy đọc cùng nhau nghe.