Sunday, May 10, 2020

Sailing around the world solo by roaring forties with Alain Kalita

Alain Kalita tried three times to the World Tour nonstop.
The third is good.
Despite the downturn in Naila will remain 40 minutes keel air and forced stopover in New Zealand that follows, Alain hit the road for the loop around Cape Horn and go to the end of his dream. 


"From an early age, the sea, the horizon and the boats captured my attention.
At the age of 14, reading Bernard Moitessier's La Longue Route was a revelation.
The odyssey of his single-handed, non-stop circumnavigation of the world anchored this project, this dream of a summit in my life.
The dream had to be built, starting with the boat.
So I learned the boilermaker's trade, the beginning of my fulfillment.
At the age of 20, I started to build Naïla (9.5 m), without having enough money to buy all the sheet metal, convinced that a dream must live on, otherwise it would be sclerotic.
Naïla asked me for four years of work, sheet after sheet, weld after weld.
Week-ends, holidays and evenings, he asked me for everything, I gave him everything.
Sometimes, an old school friend would come to see me with his girlfriend, his first child.
Then I thought of the sweet warmth of the home; nevertheless, I returned to my priesthood praying to keep the faith.
At the age of 25, in September 1988, I set out on my solo, non-stop, round-the-world trip.
No GPS, no emergency beacon, no radio, no means of communication with land, no experience of the sea. I was setting off into the unknown, I had the nerve of youth."

Saturday, May 9, 2020

70000 NM around the world

Martin Keruzoré: "70,000 nautical miles is the distance I've covered around the globe over the past three years. This 3-minute film is a tribute to the women and men with whom I have shared more than 200 days at sea and who have enabled me to produce these images. »
courtesy of V&V

Friday, May 8, 2020

252 days of solitude

Epic journey around the world and into the human soul.
Golden Globe Race is the unique sailing race where solo sailors make the non-stop journey around the world not using the modern technique.
Uku Randmaa is the first Estonian to pass this journey. 
This was his biggest dream to take this challenge even knowing that there might be no return.
Leaving his wife and twin babies home put his into biggest emotional journey where every day is a fight for life.
With intimate film material the film opens up the deepest layers of human limitations.

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Scientists explain magnetic pole's wanderings

The North Magnetic Pole has moved rapidly in recent years away from Canada towards Russia.

From BBC by Jonathan Amos 

European scientists think they can now describe with confidence what's driving the drift of the North Magnetic Pole.

It's shifted in recent years away from Canada towards Siberia.
And this rapid movement has required more frequent updates to navigation systems, including those that operate the mapping functions in smartphones.

A team, led from Leeds University, says the behaviour is explained by the competition of two magnetic "blobs" on the edge of the Earth's outer core.

Changes in the flow of molten material in the planet's interior have altered the strength of the above regions of negative magnetic flux.
"This change in the pattern of flow has weakened the patch under Canada and ever so slightly increased the strength of the patch under Siberia," explained Dr Phil Livermore.
"This is why the North Pole has left its historic position over the Canadian Arctic and crossed over the International Date Line.
Northern Russia is winning the 'tug of war', if you like," he told BBC News.

Artwork: Earth's magnetic field is generated in its fluid outer core 
ESA

Earth has three poles at the top of the planet.
A geographic pole which is where the planet's rotation axis intersects the surface.
The geomagnetic pole is the location which best fits a classic dipole (its position alters little).
And then there is the North Magnetic, or dip, Pole, which is where field lines are perpendicular to the surface.

It is this third pole that has been doing all the movement.

When first identified by explorer James Clark Ross in the 1830s, it was in Canada's Nunavut territory.

Back then it didn't wander very far, very fast.
But in the 1990s, it took off, racing to ever higher latitudes and crossing the date line in late 2017.
In the process, it came to within just a few hundred kilometres of the geographic pole.

Regions of negative magnetic flux have been in a "tug of war"

Using data from satellites that have measured the evolving shape of Earth's magnetic field over the past 20 years, Dr Livermore and colleagues have attempted to model the North Magnetic Pole's wanderings.

Two years ago when they first presented their ideas at the American Geophysical Union meeting in Washington DC, they suggested there might be a connection with a westward-accelerating jet of molten material in the outer core.
But the models were a complex fit and the team has now revised its assessment to align with a different flow regime.

"The jet is tied to quite high northern latitudes and the alteration in the flow in the outer core that's responsible for the change in the position of the pole is actually further south," Dr Livermore said.
"There's also a timing issue. The jet acceleration occurs in the 2000s, whereas the pole acceleration begins in the 1990s."


The team's latest modelling indicates the pole will continue to move towards Russia but will in time begin to slow.
At top speed, it's been making 50-60km a year.

"Whether or not it will move back again in the future is anyone's guess," the Leeds scientist told BBC News.

The pole's recent race across the top of the world prompted the US National Geophysical Data Center and the British Geological Survey to issue an early update to the World Magnetic Model last year.
This model is a representation of Earth's magnetic field across the entire globe.
It is incorporated into all navigation devices, including modern smartphones, to correct for any local compass errors.

Dr Livermore and colleagues lent heavily on the data acquired by the European Space Agency's Swarm satellites.
The team has published its research in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Links :

Wednesday, May 6, 2020