Monday, January 10, 2011

Earth's magnetic field shifts

From LiveScience

The magnetic north pole is currently hovering over the North Sea and moving toward Siberia.
This means two Florida airports are renumbering their runways.

Odd as this connection may appear on the surface, the
adjustments under way at Tampa International Airport and beginning next week at Peter O'Knight Airport are the result of a natural, ongoing process.

The Earth has an iron core, and movement within its outer part is likely responsible for sustaining a
magnetic field, which constitutes much of what we measure at the Earth's surface.
As a result, the Earth resembles something of a giant magnet with two poles: magnetic north and magnetic south.
However, its field is not perfectly symmetrical and has undulations that are always moving around, according to Jeffrey Love, a research scientist with the
U.S. Geological Survey's Geomagnetism Program.

The magnetic poles don't line up with the geographic ones, and the difference between them is an angle called declination.
As if this wasn't enough of a nuisance for navigators, the
Earth's magnetic field drifts, causing the angle of declination to change over time.

In fact, it drifts about one-fifth of a degree a year at lower latitudes, such as Florida.
"So that means if you wait five years, the compass will be off by one degree," Love said.

For long-distance air travel, an error of only a couple of degrees could translate to arriving in the wrong airport, Love said.

Declination also varies depending on location.
At high latitudes, it tends to become larger, and a compass becomes increasingly unreliable.
If you were to stand over a magnetic pole, and tried to use your compass, it would not know where to point, Love said.
Longitude also factors in.

As the patterns of motion of the molten iron in the Earth's core changes, so does the shape of the magnetic field, he said.

Right now, the magnetic north pole, where the field is vertical, is located at 84.97 degrees North and 132.35 degrees West, above the North Sea and drifting generally north-northwest toward Siberia at about 55 kilometers (34.2 miles) per year, according to Love.

What's going on in Florida?

Travelers have struggled with the complexity of
navigating by compass for centuries, and modern American travelers are no exception.

Runways are designated according to the points on a compass, and the drifting magnetic north means that they, periodically, need to be renamed.

"Recently, the drift has caused our runways' orientations to be closer to the next increment on the magnetic compass," Tampa International Airport spokeswoman Brenda Geoghagan told LiveScience in an e-mail.

For example, the west parallel runway, which was named 36Left —18Right to designate compass points of 360 degrees and 180 degrees, is being renamed to 1Left — 19Right, to indicate 10 degrees and 190 degrees, since the runway designations are separated into 10-degree increments.

Adjustments to runways like this and to navigational aids are ongoing, according to Kathleen Bergen, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration's Southern Region.
A third airport is scheduled to rename its runways in October; however, the changes aren't necessary for all airports in the Tampa Bay area, she said.

Every five years, federal agencies tabulate and publish a value called
magnetic variation, which varies by location.
Similar to declination, it correlates true direction to the magnetic compass readings needed for navigation.

These values are used to update navigational aids, such as instrument landing systems and beacons, she said.
If there is a change of more than three degrees at any given airport, then runways need to be renumbered, as is happening at the Florida airports, Bergen said.

While aviation in the United States still relies on ground-based radar, which is calibrated to the local magnetic variation, it is moving toward a satellite-based system.

"Runways are still aligned toward magnetic poles. That’s not going to change," she said.

Magnetic variations - Bellin (1765)
 
A Much Bigger Change?

The same forces that cause the magnetic poles to drift can also cause a more
dramatic change by switching the magnetic north pole to magnetic south pole, and vice versa, Love said.

In fact, the physics behind the activity in the Earth's core could just as easily generate a polarity opposite of what exists today, he said.

The
poles last reversed themselves 780,000 years ago, and the reversals typically take 10,000 years or more to happen.

"In terms of what kind of havoc it could wreak or effects on humankind, we can't really say because we haven't experienced it," he said. 
"I don't think it will be the end of the world."

Links :

Sunday, January 9, 2011

"Solemates", a superyacht controlled by iPad

From CNN

What do you get when you combine the latest superyacht with an Apple iPad?
Answer: The world's most exclusive app.

Custom-made software from German luxury yacht firm
Lurssen gives passengers control of everything but the captain's steering wheel -- all with the most leisurely brush of their iPad.
"Solemates," the first pleasure yacht to carry the technology, is currently playing host to flamboyant rap tycoon Sean "P. Diddy" Combs, girlfriend Kim Porter and their daughters D'Lila and Jessie, confirmed the yacht's charter firm.

Using complimentary iPads, the millionaire mogul and his family will have control of all the shipboard entertainment and climate systems, the blinds and lights in their cabins, and could even have their Pina Coladas topped-up at the tap of an icon.

"You won't find this app for download in the Apple store any time soon," said Rupert Connor, central agent from chartering firm the Luxury Yacht Group.
"The captain hands each guest their own iPad when they board, which they get to keep for the entirety of their trip."

Connor, whose company is responsible for leasing "Solemates" on behalf of its owner, says that guests are given the option to customize the app's homepage to suit their preferences.
"For instance, if we have a client who we know is a music industry bigwig, then we'll program the app's homepage to have a prominent shortcut to our high-speed media server's music library, and we'll do our research to make sure we have all the music they'd want to listen to."

At $690,000 a week, plus expenses (which Connor conservatively puts at a further $150,000), the super-rich certainly get more than a glorified remote control when they step on board.
Aside from ultra-lux furnishings, a bounty of Jacuzzis and enough flat-screen LCD panels to tile a roof, Connor says "Solemates" also lets guests keep fit in style.
"We've a top-of-the-range al-fresco gym on board, but if you prefer keeping in shape on the dance floor then it converts into a disco, with an $80,000 integrated light and sound system," he said.
And that's not all.
After a round on the inflatable floating trampoline, jet-powered surfboards or James Bond-style underwater "sea bobs," whoever's lucky enough to commandeer the master cabin can wash off in what Connor believes is the world's first yacht-board aromatherapy shower.
"This is aromatherapy direct from the shower-head," said Connor. "It comes in four different flavors: eucalyptus, pine needle, citrus, and peppermint."

However, beyond the high-tech toys and luxury linens, the gizmo-clad superyacht's greatest asset is its crew, says Connor.
"We've an amazingly experienced crew which includes a chef who's worked in some of the best restaurants in Paris and England, a stewardess who speaks five languages and another who is also a cardiothoracic nurse."
After blowing just shy of $1 million in a week, let's hope she's on standby when Diddy sees the bill.

Links :

Saturday, January 8, 2011

The Ocean bookshelf


From
DeepSeaNews

After consulting a
crack team of specialists the Deeplings at DSN, here are the books, in no certain order, we feel should provide the backbone of the essential ocean reading collection.
There are many others I am sure we are missing.

Feel free to add any you think should have been here below in the comments and I will add them into the grand list.

  • Sylvia Earle and Linda Glover’s Ocean: An Illustrated Atlas. This volume is so much more than a compilation of maps but a treasure trove of information provided through essays and photos. For the scientist and the layperson alike.
  • Helen Rozwadoski’s Fathoming the Ocean is admittedly dry but no other book provides the level of historical detail and insight into the exploration of the deep oceans. The book provides a wonderful account of how we determined the depths of the oceans.
  • The Civilization and the Limpet is a classic. Wells is masterful story teller and weaves 25 essays on a broad range of topics including cephalopods.
  • Cindy Lee Van Dover’s Deep Ocean Journeys was a major inspiration for me to become a deep-sea biologist. One part science and one part an excellent account of a woman in science and the only woman and scientist pilot of the Alvin submersible.
  • Koslow’s The Silent Deep has become the new bible of deep-sea biology. A great accessible read for everyone and vital reference for the marine biologist.
  • The most AWESOME marine theme photographic album ever published has to be Nouvain’s The Deep. Purchase it and prepare to spend a weekend consuming a well designed and compiled masterpiece. Add to it Reef and make a week of it.
  • The Search for the Giant Squid by Ellis will provide everything you wanted to know about the gargantuan beast from the deep. Ellis is a masterful story teller. The book covers all giant squid from historical accounts of Kraken attacks to the basic biology of giant squid. An engaging must read quickly consumed in a weekend.
  • Matsen’s Descent is an absolutely glorious and harrowing tale of Beebe and Barton’s and the events surrounding the Bathysphere dives. The book is well researched and provides both the heroic and non-heroic that allowed these two men to climb into a hollow sphere and descend deeper than any other human at the time. I would also check out Half Mile Down by William Beebe where he describes his and Otis Barton’s 1934 descent to 3,028 feet off Bermuda. And of course I also loved Matsen’s Jacques Cousteau: The Sea King. Add the latter so you know where so much of marine science started at.
  • Song for the Blue Ocean by Carl Safina is one of the few books that has made me weep. Safina’s experience as a scientist and a conservationist yields the most thoughtful marine conservation book yet produced. He simultaneously writes about his passion for conservation but is concern for the fisherman and cultures threatened as well. He truthful discusses when fisherman, scientists, nonprofits, and governments have failed and prospered.
  • World Atlas of Coral Reefs like Ocean: An Illustrated Atlas is best described as an “atlas plus” providing a comprehensive and detailed account of all the world’s coral reef.
  • Between Pacific Tides by Ed Ricketts is the classic text that introduced as all to intertidal ecology and the rich biology of system so near to many of us.
  • The ultimate source for everything invertebrate…Brusca and Brusca
  • Heal the Ocean by Fujita is the ying to the yang of Song for a Blue Ocean. By focusing on success stories it instills in us that we can still protect and save the ocean.
  • The Rise of Fishes is for everything you wanted to know about the evolution of fishes with numerous illustrations and photographs. If you want to know just about one fish…try the excellence that is Cod.
  • Mitchell’s Seasick is the Silent Spring for the oceans. Enough said.
  • The Wave by Susan Casey is a must read. A brilliant mix of science and surfing to explain waves.
  • Only in Saltwater Buddha would you find the eclectic mix of science, Zen Buddhism, Hawaiian culture, and surfing. As a religion and biology double major I found this to be the book that brought peace to my conflicting sides.
  • Of course you need to own both The Log from the Sea of Cortez and The Voyage of the Beagle. If you don’t own them then stop what you are doing and proceed to the nearest bookstore.
  • “In 1820, the Nantucket whaleship Essex, thousands of miles from home in the South Pacific, was rammed by an angry sperm whale.” The accounts of the tragedy that ensued are provided in The Loss of the Ship Essex, Sunk by a Whale. Of course this story also provided the inspiration for Moby Dick. Read both
  • And speaking of classics no list would be complete without 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
  • Not for a general audience, but AMAZING for marine scientists: Dynamics of Marine Ecosystems
  • Patrick O’Brian Aubrey-Maturin novels…read all of them
  • David Dobb’s Reef Madness is the book I wish I would have written. An excellent account of how Darwin spread controversy in more than one field of science. An excellent narrative with painstaking detail.
  • I finish with a Marlinspike Sailor a cult classic for its wonderful illustrations and The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Knots and Ropework for its shear breadth.
Links :

Friday, January 7, 2011

Huge coral reefs discovered off Puerto Rico

Paraguera sea squirts (credit: H. Ruíz)

From LiveSciences

A new discovery of thriving coral reefs off the coast of
Puerto Rico may offer hope for other shallower reefs.

Scuba diving scientists discovered sprawling and diverse coral reefs at 100 to 500 feet (30 to 150 meters) below the ocean surface within a 12-mile (19-kilometer) span off the southwestern coast near La Parguera, Puerto Rico.
-> location in the Marine GeoGarage

With the overall health of shallow coral reefs and the abundance of reef fish in Puerto Rico in decline, this finding brings hope that deeper fish stocks may help to replenish stocks on shallower reefs.

These
mesophotic ecosystems — 'meso' for middle and 'photic' for light — are the deepest of the light-dependent coral reefs.
Too deep for exploration with traditional scuba gear, these reefs have until recently remained largely unexplored because of the cost and technical difficulty of reaching them.
Advances in diving techniques allowed scientists to safely dive and conduct the new survey.

"We had no idea how extensive, vibrant and diverse these mesophotic coral ecosystems are off La Parguera," said
Richard Appeldoorn, the study team leader from the University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez.

"At mesophotic depths in Puerto Rico, scientists are seeing fish species that were once common inhabitants of shallow reefs such as groupers, snappers and reef sharks," said
Kimberly Puglise of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the organization that funded the study. "These reefs stand in stark contrast to declining shallow water reefs in the same area."

Because of the potential of mesophotic reefs to restore depleted fish stocks, local managers are looking carefully at adding protections for these coral ecosystems.

"We recognize the need to extend protections to mesophotic coral ecosystems in Puerto Rico, and the information being provided by this research is key to making that happen," said Ernesto Diaz, director of
Puerto Rico's coastal management (NOAA).

Links :
  • OurAmazingPlanet : Huge coral reefs discovered off Puerto Rico
  • NOAAnews : Thriving 'middle light' reefs found in Puerto Rico
  • USCRTF : United States Coral Reef Task Force
  • ReefCentral online community
  • NOAA NCCOS coral reefs: Center for Sponsored Coastal Ocean Research
  • Coral reefs journal : volume 29 / number 2 / June 2010

Thursday, January 6, 2011

The new International Buoyage System


Boat safety 4 beacons IALA System A (Europe/Australia/NZ)

From BIMCO

Despite the availability of satellite navigation systems, and ships that are awash with electronics,
maritime buoyage still matters, particularly in pilotage waters where visual aids provide the best possible way of marking a channel or identifying obstructions.
These days, buoys can be “intelligent” in that they have radar reflectors to help them show up on ship radars, possibly fitted with electronic beacons that show up on
electronic charts and even made individually identifiable through their own Automated Identification System signatures.
Buoys still remain very useful indeed.

It is the
International Association of Marine Aids to Navigation and Lighthouse Authorities which provides the global pattern for the maritime buoyage system.
It established an internationally-accepted system in 1970 which set the colours, shapes, topmarks , lights etc for buoys, so that seafarers can use them around the world, even though there remain some differences between the two geographical zones with which history has left the industry.


IALA maritime buoyage system (source) :
different from regions A and regions B

IALA buoyage System A

IALA buoyage System B

The mariner uses buoys much as he always has, as an indication of his position and to show him the extent of a navigable channel, or to mark an isolated hazard, such as a wreck over which his ship should not pass.
Buoys use distinguishing colours, marks and shapes to assist the navigator in their use.
The new system provides for a newly designed wreck marking buoy, and clearer distinguishing marks, along with provisions for more use of electronics and some ingenious new methods of lighting.

One problem with channel buoys in particular is that when viewed against a well-lit coastline, they are hard to distinguish from lights ashore in the background.
This is a particular problem approaching a coast or port.
However, it is now possible to synchronize the flashes of lights along a channel, so that they either flash together, or in sequence, which makes them far easier to distinguish from others.
Confusion can also be reduced by the use of “flickering” lights, rather than the traditional signals which provide for long, short or quick-flashing signals.

The new system which was agreed by
IALA earlier this year is given wide promulgation through the International Maritime Organization and is very much a system that will permit future electronic developments.
These might include provisions for more electronic navigation and even the use of
“virtual” buoys that would be shown on an electronic chart.

With any changes to navigation systems, great care has to be taken to ensure that changes are minimal, and do not cause confusion in an international industry.

Links :