Sunday, May 15, 2011

Barcelona WR photo contest : sailing racers but also artists

From Voile&Voiliers

Brilliant fifth of the Barcelona World Race, the crew of Neutrogena -
Germany's Boris Herrmann and American Ryan Breymaier - handily won the prize for the best photo but also video realized during this race.

Barcelona World Race 2010-2011 first price
for this great wave (as Hokusai)
© Boris Herrmann (Neutrogena/BWR)


Ryan Breymaier currently maneuvering, as seen through a porthole.
© Boris Herrmann (Neutrogena/BWR)


Dream lights at the boat's bow during sunrise
© Boris Herrmann (Neutrogena/BWR)


Albatros flying over the waves
© Boris Herrmann (Neutrogena/BWR)


Special mention for this autoportrait which also did a world tour,
2 days before the winning arrival
...
© Loïck Peyron (Virbac-Paprec/BWR)

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Swapping the boardroom for the seven seas


Inspiration to leave the corp rat-race & follow your dream; even...

A light-hearted but inspirational memoir about a remarkable couple who left behind the corporate rat-race to follow their dream of sailing around the world - a story that demonstrates the rewards of taking risks to follow one's star.

When Nancy Knudsen and her architect husband Ted Nobbs decide to escape their high-pressure corporate lives and follow a dream of sailing around the world together, little do they guess where their journey will lead them.

In 2003, Nancy Knudsen and her husband Ted decided to leave their stress-filled, time-poor corporate lives to spend three years sailing around the world.
What they thought would be a breeze turned out to be hugely challenging as well as life-transforming.

Nancy and Ted crossed the Indian, Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and visited 42 countries.
During their voyage they faced life-threatening dangers and made lifelong friendships.
And a surprise encounter in Turkey led them to set up home in Istanbul for two wonderful years.

Blackwattle sailing in Bora Bora lagoon

Their adventures are sometimes hilarious, sometimes life-threatening, and lead to the beginning of many life-long friendships.

As well as recounting the comedy of their cockpit disputes and the sheer breathtaking beauty of their five-year adventure, Shooting Stars and Flying Fish has deeper resonances : it shows how the couple's experiences both humble them and irrevocably change their attitudes, ethics and outlook on life, with neither returning to the corporate world on their return to Australia.

This book is a beautifully written, inspirational memoir that shows the rewards of taking a risk to follow one's dreams.

Links :

Friday, May 13, 2011

How does a country go about changing its time zone ?



From BBC
Samoa plans to move itself from one side of the international dateline to the other, redrawing this already wobbly line.
How does a country go about changing its time zone ?

Samoa sits in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, just 32km (20 miles) east of the international dateline.

On Samoa's side of this imaginary line that runs from pole to pole, it is Tuesday.
On the other side, it is already Wednesday.
And this makes it tricky to communicate with its key neighbours Australia and New Zealand, a day ahead on the other side.

So Samoa plans to reset its clocks and calendars when it shifts the dateline - probably on Thursday 29 December, Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi said.
Samoa will lose a day as it jumps straight from Thursday to Saturday.
Any residents with a birthday on Friday 30 December will have to celebrate a day early, or a day late, as that date will not exist in their country.

"There is no body that can say yes or no," says David Mumford, of Collins Bartholomew, which publishes the Collins and Times atlases for HarperCollins.
"The country decides for itself. Then it's just a matter of publicising it, informing the international community and the map-makers."

In mid-April, a Samoan official made contact with the cartographers at Collins Bartholomew, alerting them to the proposed change and asking who else might need to be informed.
"There have been various deviations and enclaves over the years, so we need to keep an eye out for proposed time zone changes. Once these go ahead, we update our atlases," says Mr Mumford.
 
Who set the time?

The dateline, and standard time zones in convenient hourly chunks, dates from 1884's International Meridian Conference.


It agreed upon a 24-hour clock for the world, with days starting at midnight at longitude 0º - a prize awarded to Greenwich, in London.
This meant longitude 180º - the imaginary dateline which separates two consecutive calendar days - would run through the Pacific Ocean.

Nor did the meridian conference specify the exact course of the dateline.

It zigs and zags as it crosses land or passes through island groups.
It kinks east to encompass Siberia within the same date as the rest of Russia, and west to bring Hawaii into line with the rest of the US.

Over the years, many countries have ignored this international standard and set their own time as a way to assert national identity, to make political connections, or to keep one time zone within their borders.

Some opt for local time based on the position of the sun, says Rebekah Higgitt, curator of the history of science and technology at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich.

In 2007, Venezuela's president Hugo Chavez shifted the entire country back 30 minutes.
And France used to be on Paris time, which is only nine minutes ahead of GMT.
But the country is now GMT+1.

"A switch can make historical records confusing, and may cause headaches for legal cases, but most people won't notice," says Ms Higgitt.

Swapping sides of the dateline is not a first for Samoa.
It, and neighbouring American Samoa, lay west of the dateline until 1892, when a US businessman convinced both to switch to the east for trading purposes.




and also the only Nation in all 4 hemispheres

The last country to shift the international dateline was Kiribati, which previously straddled the dateline, meaning a time difference of 23 hours between neighbouring islands.
So on New Year's Day 1995, it declared that it was adding a huge eastward bulge to its section of the dateline so all 33 of its islands would have the same date.
"It was an administrative convenience," says Michael Walsh, the Kiribati Honorary Consul to the UK.
"There were nine islands on the other [eastern] side of the international date line, and 20% of the population. An unintentional byproduct of this was that when the millennium came, we were the first to see the sun."

There were not so many practical problems with this move, he says.
The eastern-most islands were uninhabited, with no infrastructure.
"We just did it and told the world. Some atlases took a while to adjust."

Kiribati's decision did prove somewhat controversial, says Roger Pountain, of Collins Bartholomew, as some believe that the dateline is a global standard, and is therefore a matter for the international community to decide.

"It is still the case that some cartographers, website owners, and even public authorities continue to prefer to show the dateline as not diverted round Kiribati, while also acknowledging that Kiribati's time zone conflicts with that," says Pountain.

Samoa may yet find itself in a similar position.


Links :

  • BBC : Samoa to jump forward in time by one day
  • BBC : A brief history of time zones (interactive globe) / Confusing time zones :
    • China has one time zone - once it had five. Communists made this change in 1949 to streamline and unify this vast country
    • Last year, Russia whittled its 11 time zones down to nine
    • Indiana, in the US, has two time zones
  • From A History of the International Date Line : A similar adjustment of the date line occurred in 1892 when king Malietoa Laupepa of Samoa was persuaded by a major American business house trading in that region to adopt the American day reckoning instead of the Asian day reckoning.
    In a fine stroke of diplomatic flattery this was put into effect by ordaining that the 4th of July in that year would be celebrated twice.
    Margaret Isabella (Balfour) Stevenson (1829-1897), the mother of the Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) who had settled in Samoa in 1890, described the occurrence of the ‘second 4th July, 1892’ as follows in her Letters from Samoa:
    “Surely now I have been round the world, since at last I have done that to which I used to look forward, I have ‘gained a day.’ It seems that all this time we have been counting wrong, because in former days communication was entirely with Australia, and it was simpler and in every way more natural to follow the Australian calendar; but now that so many vessels come from San Francisco, the powers that be have decided to set this right, and to adopt the date that belongs to our actual geographical position. To this end, therefore, we are ordered to keep two Mondays in this week, which will get us straight.”
  • 24timezone : What Time Is It Around The World Right Now?

Zeroconf NMEA Wi-Fi interface for the iPad

For connecting serial devices (GPS, AIS, NMEA instruments...) to the iPad via 802.11b/g Wi-Fi, a lot of hardware interfaces exist on the market :

and more dedicated marine -but also more expensive products- such as :

But all these hardware interface use some manual configuration (web configuration via some Ethernet or Telnet/https/SSH interface, via specific utilities not cross-platform -Windows only-, via console), so no user-friendly way to connect your marine instruments directly to the iPad.

To allow the interface between a marine sensor and the iPad without any manual operator intervention, the Marine GeoGarage team has lead an experimentation using
Zeroconf networking, which enables automatic discovery of devices on the iPad.

For that, we use a basic SoC (System on a Chip) AR2315 Atheros based
Wi-Fi router (also used in the Marine GeoGarage AIS experimentation).
(see also Altop Tech SW1001T wireless serial server or Open-Mesh mini router)

  • adding some RS-232 serial interface for direct connection to a NMEA0183 device
  • developing an embedded software (under OpenWRT) to broadcast the received NMEA sentences to a specific iPad application implementing zeroconf protocole.
The result is an iPad universal application which allows to display via this hardware Wi-Fi router the direction and the strength of the wind from a wireless ultrasonic wind sensor :

Marine iWind experimental iPad weather app
(design ©
Marine GeoGarage
allowing real-time querying of historical data stored in memory)
connected with CV7SF sensor from LCJ Capteurs

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Aquarius to Illuminate links between salt, climate


Sea surface salinity has a massive influence on Earth's climate.
With Aquarius, scientists will have a new way to measure that influence in a consistent way.
With its unprecedented accurate and consistent salinity measurements, Aquarius will help climate modelers to better understand the ocean-atmosphere processes that are changing Earth's climate.

From NASA

When NASA's salt-seeking
Aquarius instrument ascends to the heavens this June, the moon above its launch site at California's Vandenberg Air Force Base won't be in the seventh house, and Jupiter's latest alignment with Mars will be weeks in the past, in contrast to the lyrics of the song from the popular Broadway musical "Hair."
Yet for the science team eagerly awaiting
Aquarius' ocean surface salinity data, the dawning of NASA's "Age of Aquarius" promises revelations on how salinity is linked to Earth's water cycle, ocean circulation and climate.

Salinity – the concentration of salt – on the ocean surface is a key missing puzzle piece in satellite studies of Earth that will improve our understanding of how the ocean and atmosphere are coupled and work in tandem to affect our climate.
While satellites already measure sea surface temperature and
winds, rainfall, water vapor, sea level, and ocean color, measurements of ocean surface salinity have, until quite recently, been limited to sparse data collected from ships, buoys and a small number of airborne science campaigns.

From those limited data, we know ocean surface salinity varies by only about five parts per thousand globally.
Yet a change of just a fraction of one part per thousand can influence the circulation of the ocean.
Knowing the salinity of the ocean surface can also help scientists trace Earth's water cycle – the process that circulates freshwater from the ocean to the atmosphere to the land and back again to the ocean through rainfall, evaporation, ice melt and river runoff.
Aquarius, the primary science instrument on the Aquarius/Satélite de Aplicaciones Científicas (SAC)-D spacecraft built by Argentina's national space agency, Comision Nacional de Actividades Espaciales, will help scientists study these complex, interrelated processes and their link to climate.

Recent studies have shown Earth's water cycle is speeding up in response to climate change, which affects global precipitation patterns.
Currently, scientists study the water cycle by making inferences from measurements of how much water is discharged from rivers and by measuring precipitation and evaporation rates using satellites like NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission.

"About 80 percent of Earth's water cycle takes place over the ocean," said Aquarius Principal Investigator Gary Lagerloef of Earth & Space Research, Seattle. "
By measuring ocean surface salinity, Aquarius will be able to track how the water cycle is changing in response to climate change."

Salinity and the Deep Blue Sea

While surface winds drive currents in the upper ocean, deep below the surface, it's a different story.
There, ocean circulation is dominated by changes in the density of seawater.
These changes are determined by salinity and temperature.
The saltier and colder the water, the more dense it is.
In parts of the world, cool, high-salinity surface waters become so dense that they sink to great depths, where they become part of deep ocean currents.
Found in all ocean basins, these deep currents are interconnected and play an important role in regulating Earth's climate by transporting heat globally.

By revealing changes in patterns of global precipitation and evaporation and showing how these changes may affect ocean circulation, Aquarius will help improve predictions of future climate trends and short-term climate events, such as El Niño and La Niña.

'A Spoon of Salt in a Lake'

Gautama Siddhartha
, the founder of Buddhism, once said, "A spoon of salt in a glass of water makes the water undrinkable. A spoon of salt in a lake is almost unnoticed."

Such is the challenge faced by the scientists who designed Aquarius.
Since ocean surface salinity generally averages just 32 to 37 parts per thousand around the globe, it's very hard for a satellite to detect its signal.
The salinity differences between El Niño and La Niña are very small – only about one part per thousand.

Aquarius employs new technologies to be able to detect changes in ocean surface salinity as small as about two parts in 10,000, equivalent to about one-eighth of a teaspoon of salt in a gallon of water.
Its unique, advanced design combines three radiometers, which measure the salinity signal, with a scatterometer that compensates for the effects of ocean surface "roughness" (waves).
The result is expected to be the most accurate salinity data ever measured from space.

Scientists will combine Aquarius' maps of global ocean surface salinity with in-ocean salinity measurements to generate routine maps of ocean salinity distribution.
Later in the mission, Aquarius data will be inter-calibrated and combined with complementary data from the European Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity satellite.

Peering Into a Crystal Ball (of Salt)

Scientists believe Aquarius will lead to exciting and unexpected new discoveries — a "mind's true liberation" of sorts.
They will be able to accurately calculate the rate at which surface ocean circulation transports freshwater.
They'll see how salinity is affected by melting ice, freshwater flowing into the ocean, and fluxes of freshwater to and from the atmosphere from rainfall and evaporation.
They'll be able to better study how ocean waters mix vertically.
And they'll greatly reduce uncertainties in calculating the ocean's freshwater budget (the net difference between freshwater lost in the ocean through evaporation and freshwater added to the ocean by precipitation and runoff).

Perhaps nowhere is the potential for discovery from Aquarius higher than in the Southern Ocean.
"Today's salinity maps don't show many features in the Southern Ocean," said Yi Chao, Aquarius project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., which jointly built Aquarius with NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
"This is because data there are so sparse. Yet the Southern Ocean is one of the key deepwater formation areas in the world and is one of the key drivers of deep ocean circulation and heat transport."

Other areas of particular interest to Aquarius researchers include:
  • the Central North Atlantic, where salinity has been observed to be increasing, and the region has been getting more arid.
  • the Nordic and Labrador Seas, where dense water forms at the surface and sinks to deep layers in the ocean. Aquarius should be able to observe the year-to-year effects of ice melting on the circulation between Greenland and Iceland.
  • the Indian Ocean and Bay of Bengal, which have a very large salinity signal but have been less frequently measured than the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
And then there's the Arctic Ocean, which has seen significant changes in sea ice cover in recent years.
Aquarius will provide some salinity measurements over the Arctic during its ice-free seasons, though the Aquarius signal is less sensitive over cold water.

Simulated ocean salinity data for NASA's Aquarius instrument.
Aquarius, launching this June aboard the international Aquarius/SAC-D observatory, will map the salinity of the surface of the global ice-free ocean every seven days for at least three years, providing data on a key missing variable in Earth satellite studies that links ocean circulation, the water cycle and climate.


Aquarius' prime mission will last at least three years, long enough to map year-to-year variations in salinity that will allow researchers to develop the methodology for and demonstrate the usefulness of salinity as a climate data record.

Aquarius data will eventually be used to improve the accuracy of climate forecast models.
Ocean surface salinity is not currently well represented in models used by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in its assessment reports.

Lagerloef likened Aquarius to an explorer of an unexplored frontier.
"We'll see the ocean in a whole different light. When the first Earth science satellites launched in the 1970s, we saw ocean eddies for the first time and got our first glimpse of the tremendous turbulence of the ocean. With Aquarius, we're going to see things we don't currently see. It's as though the blinders will be removed from our eyes."

Links :
  • YouTube : Aquarius satellite & data pre-launch beauty shot
  • NASA : Aquarius studies ocean and wind flows
  • NASA : Salinity data (education)
  • ESR : Aquarius /SAC-D satellite mission