MITRA MANDAL GLOBAL NEWS

Your ebook bargains for Wednesday

Your Deals: OMEGA Exile by Stephen Arseneault. A heart-stopping sci-fi adventure! As the intergalactic Alliance crumbles, veteran detective Knog struggles just to survive — but with chaos spreading like wildfire, his fight has only just begun…
Your Deals  
OMEGA Exile by Stephen Arseneault OMEGA Exile
By Stephen Arseneault
 
A heart-stopping sci-fi adventure! As the intergalactic Alliance crumbles, veteran detective Knog struggles just to survive — but with chaos spreading like wildfire, his fight has only just begun…

Free! ₹300.00
Amazon   Kobo
 
Science Fiction
Invite Your Friends
Do your friends love to read? Invite them to join BookBub today!
  Send Invitation

Outstanding Opportunity Rover Making ‘Amazing New Discoveries’ 13 Years After Mars Touchdown

Authentic news,No fake news.


Ken Kremer à¤¦्वारा
13 Years on Mars!
On Christmas Day 2016, NASA’s Opportunity rover scans around vast Endeavour crater as she ascends steep rocky slopes on the way to reach a water carved gully along the eroded craters western rim. This navcam camera photo mosaic was assembled from raw images taken on Sol 4593 (25 Dec. 2016) and colorized. Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell/Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/Marco Di Lorenzo
NASA’s truly outstanding Opportunity rover continues “making new discoveries about ancient Mars” as she commemorates 13 Years since bouncing to a touchdown on Mars, in a feat that is “truly amazing” - the deputy chief scientist Ray Arvidson told Universe Today exclusively.
Resilient Opportunity celebrated her 13th birthday on Sol 4623 on January 24, 2017 PST while driving south along the eroded rim of humongous Endeavour crater - and having netted an unfathomable record for longevity and ground breaking scientific discoveries about the watery environment of the ancient Red Planet.
“Reaching the 13th year anniversary with a functioning rover making new discoveries about ancient Mars on a continuing basis is truly amazing,” Ray Arvidson, Opportunity Deputy Principal Investigator of Washington University in St. Louis, told Universe Today.
Put another way Opportunity is 13 YEARS into her 3 MONTH mission! And still going strong!
Indeed she is 51 times beyond her “warrantied” life expectancy of merely 90 Sols promised at the time of landing so long ago - roving the surface of the 4th rock from the Sun during her latest extended mission; #10.
How was this incredible accomplishment achieved?
“Simply a well-made and thoroughly tested American vehicle,” Arvidson responded.
The six wheeled rover landed on Mars on January 24, 2004 PST on the alien Martian plains at Meridiani Planum -as the second half of a sister act.
Her twin sister Spirit, had successfully touched down 3 weeks earlier on January 3, 2004 inside Gusev crater and survived more than six years.
As of today, Jan 31, 2017, long lived Opportunity has survived 4630 Sols (or Martian days) roving the harsh environment of the Red Planet.
Opportunity has taken over 216,700 images and traversed over 27.12 miles (43.65 kilometers) - more than a marathon.
See our updated route map below.
The rover surpassed the 27 mile mark milestone early last month on November 6 (Sol 4546).
The power output from solar array energy production is currently 414 watt-hours, before heading into another southern hemisphere Martian winter in 2017.
Meanwhile Opportunity’s younger sister rover Curiosity traverses and drills into the lower sedimentary layers at the base of Mount Sharp.
Stay tuned here for Ken's continuing Earth and planetary science and human spaceflight news.
13 Year Traverse Map for NASA’s Opportunity rover from 2004 to 2017. This map shows the entire 43 kilometer (27 mi) path the rover has driven on the Red Planet during more than 13 years and more than a marathon runners distance for over 4614 Sols, or Martian days, since landing inside Eagle Crater on Jan 24, 2004 - to current location at the western rim of Endeavour Crater. After descending down Marathon Valley and after studying Spirit Mound, the rover is now ascending back uphill on the way to a Martian water carved gully. Rover surpassed Marathon distance on Sol 3968 after reaching 11th Martian anniversary on Sol 3911. Opportunity discovered clay minerals at Esperance – indicative of a habitable zone - and searched for more at Marathon Valley. Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell/ASU/Marco Di Lorenzo/Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com

Energyworld

Authentic news,No fake news.

Top Stories
Economic Survey: Rising energy prices could stoke inflation going ahead
Economic Survey: Indias high petroleum taxation helped gain edge on climate front
Power ministry working on mega push for village electrification next fiscal
Shell offloads $4.7 billion of energy assets after BG deal to become leaner
REC lends Rs 6,890 crore to Tamil Nadu for setting up power plant
OPINION: How should the government revive the thermal power sector? - by Ravi Uppal
aahar
Oil & Gas
Indian Oil Corp third quarter net jumps 29% on more margins, inventory gain
Oil markets range-bound as supplies remain plentiful amid OPEC-led cuts
OPEC achieves 82 percent of pledged oil output cut in January - Reuters surveyReuters.com
Oil spill near Kamarajar Port arrested with no considerable spillage, claim authorities
After slump in energy deals, hints of recovery: Advisory firm EY
EXCLUSIVE: Glencore challenges Trafigura by ramping up Russian oil Reuters.com
Valero Energy quarterly profit beats estimates on higher ethanol margins
Renewable
India ranks fourth globally in wind power installation: Economic Survey
US researchers develop solar-powered water purifier
India business partnership summit to take place in Bahrain next week
Russia's nuclear giant Rosatom pushes into wind energy joing with a Dutch firm
Brazil solar energy drive stalled by high costs, strict rules on local components
European Union set to meet green energy goal; UK trails - document
UK second-biggest energy supplier SSE loses another 50,000 customers
Development of workable models in renewable energy is a must: Nagpur University VC
Power
India's core industries output rises 5.6 per cent in December
NCLT clears way for Tata Sons to hold EGM on February 6 to consider Mistry removal
Economic survey paints a bleak picture of power sector
Economic Survey: Highways construction, cargo, power generation record growth
Economic Survey: Public Sector Asset Rehabilitation Agency may be set up to buy bad loans
Power tariff in Tamil Nadu to stay steady
French hydro reservoirs at lowest level in at least 10 years, says grid operator RTE
Coal
CIL unions seek Rs 20 per tonne levy for company's pension fund
Economic Survey: India's industrial growth rate to slip to 5.2 per cent current fiscal
SC asks CBI to file chargesheet in coal scam cases by February
NALCO to form JV with Neelachal Ispat to produce coal tar pitch
Consol Energy plans to sell or spin-off coal business to shareholders

Deutsche Bank pulls out of coal projects to meet Paris climate pledge

Authentic news,No fake news.

Deutsche Bank, the biggest bank in Germany, has said it will stop financing coal projects as part of its commitments under the Paris agreement to tackle global warming.
“Deutsche Bank and its subsidiaries will not grant new financing for greenfield thermal coal mining and new coal-fired power plant construction,” it said in a statement.
Existing exposure to such projects will be gradually reduced, it added.
The lender said the decision was in line with the pledges it made at last year’s Paris climate conference, along with 400 other public and private companies, to help fight global warming.
The bank pulled out of a deal to finance the controversial expansion of a coal port in Australia in 2014 because it said there was no consensus about how it would impact the Great Barrier Reef.
Green groups claimed then that Deutsche Bank had bowed to public pressure after 180,000 Germans signed a petition urging the bank not to fund the expansion at Abbot Point in Queensland.
A study last month by the legal group Arabella Advisors found that global funds were increasingly signalling plans to pull out of fossil fuel investments, one year on from the Paris climate agreement.
The accord, signed by 192 countries, is the world’s first universal, legally binding climate deal.
It sets out a plan to limit global warming to below 2C (3.6F) over pre-industrial levels.
The new US president, Donald Trump, has vowed to withdraw his country, the world’s second-largest greenhouse-gas polluter after China, from the agreement.
report released in December 2016 said the total value of fossil fuel divestments had doubled to $5 trillion.

Mitra-mandal Privacy Policy

This privacy policy has been compiled to better serve those who are concerned with how their  'Personally Identifiable Inform...