New Layer in Google Earth will Show Astronomical Events in Real Time

 Even with some of the best telescopes, it’s hard to make out all the planets. But now, there’s a new way for you to explore space — traveling through the final frontier on your PC.Astronomers have added an application to Google Earth that allows users to not only look at detailed pictures of the night sky at their convenience, but to observe unfolding cosmic events in real time. This application is an extra layer to the Google application and it will show both explosive gamma-ray bursts and shiny gravitational microlensing events…

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World’s largest solar park planned in Greece

Greece plans to build the world’s largest solar park over depleted coal mines in the northern city of Kozani.Estimated to cost 600 million euros ($807 million) and with a capacity of 200 megawatts (MW), the project’s electricity output will be “greater than any other photovoltaic park operational in the world until now.

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Carbon Sequestration in Oceans Makes them More Acidic

Carbon sequestration is “The process of removing carbon from the atmosphere and depositing it in a reservoir.” When carried out deliberately, this may also be referred to as carbon dioxide removal, which is a form of geoengineering. The term carbon sequestration may also be used to refer to the process of carbon capture and storage, where CO2 is removed from flue gases, such as on power stations, before being stored in underground reservoirs. The term may also refer to natural biogeochemical cycling of carbon between the atmosphere and reservoirs, such as by chemical weathering of rocks. Using seawater and calcium to remove carbon dioxide (CO2) in a natural gas power plant’s flue stream, and then pumping the resulting calcium bicarbonate in the sea, could be beneficial to the oceans’ marine life or states a new research report.

The oceans contain around 36,000 gigatons of carbon, mostly in the form of bicarbonate ion (over 90%, with most of the remainder being carbonate).

Inorganic carbon, that is carbon compounds with no carbon-carbon or carbon-hydrogenbonds, is important in its reactions within water. This carbon exchange becomes important in controlling pH in the ocean and can also vary as a source or sink for carbon. Carbon is readily exchanged between the atmosphere and ocean. In regions of oceanic upwelling, carbon is released to the atmosphere. Conversely, regions of downwelling transfer carbon (CO2) from the atmosphere to the ocean.

In addition to global warming effects, when carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere, a significant fraction is passively taken up by the ocean in a form that makes the ocean more acidic. This acidification has been shown to be harmful to marine life, especially corals and shellfish.

If the carbon dioxide reacted with crushed limestone and seawater, and the resulting solution was released to the ocean, this would not only sequester carbon from the atmosphere, but also would add ocean alkalinity that would help buffer and offset the effects of ongoing marine acidification. Again, this speeds up the natural CO2 consumption and buffering process offered by carbonate weathering.

There are many potential techniques to control or reduce CO2 air emissions such as growing new forests, underground injection, and even a newly developed cement type that can absorb CO2 from ambient air during hardening.

Links and Sources:

ENN(Main Source)

Carbon Sink

Image Link

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Opening and Closing of Ocean Basins

No rock is accidental. 

No idea in geology is more profound than this; it runs from the center to the whole of geology and influences every sub-discipline of the field. Genuine understanding of the science of geology begins with one’s ability to understand and explain why no rock is accidental.It Is concerned with deformation in the earth and the forces that produce deformation. Plate tectonics is the theory that the earth’s      Plate tectonics is one of the great unifying theories in geology. Virtually every part of the earth’s crust, and every kind of rock and every kind of geology can be related to the plate tectonic conditions that existed at the time they formed. 

Nothing in geology makes sense except in terms of plate tectonic theory.

One of the most important messages of modern understanding of plate tectonics and the Wilson cycle is that beginning with a parent igneous rock of mafic/ultramafic composition all the other rocks now on the earth can be generated. The most important message of the plate tectonic rock cycle is that each and every rock forms only under a specific set of tectonic conditions.

Divergent boundaries where plates are moving apart, and new crust is being created,

Convergent boundaries where plates are moving together and crust is being destroyed, and

Transform boundaries where plates slide past one another

There are two models summarizing earth evolutionary processes.
(1)   The Wilson Cycle and

2 )Tectonic Rock Cycle, a more theoretically abstact model of how rocks and the earth evolve.

Wilson Cycle model follows the series of cross sections constituting the Wilson cycle. It begins with a hypothetical geologically (tectonically) quiet continent. The model is divided into nine stages, but the stages are arbitrary and do not exist naturally. The earth is an ongoing series of processes so it is much more important to understand the processes, how they are related, and how one process leads naturally to the next process.

Wilson Cycle is a simple, ideal model. The earth has many continents, which migrate across its spherical surface in very complex ways. Just about any scenario you can think of, and any exception you can imagine is quite possible – and has probably happened during some point in the earth’s history.

Lithosphere (outer rigid shell) is composed of several dozen “plates”, or pieces, which float on a ductile mantle, like slabs of ice on a pond. In plate tectonic theory earth history, at its simplest, is one of plates rifting into pieces diverging apart and new ocean basins being born, followed by motion reversal, convergence back together, plate collision, and mountain building. This cycle of opening and closing ocean basins is the Wilson Cycle.

Source::http://csmres.jmu.edu/geollab/Fichter/Wilson/Wilson.html

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