India to Launch geo-imaging satellite GISAT to Monitor Long Border

A grant of INR 50 crore has been sanctioned for developing India’s geo-imaging satellite or GISAT. The 1,000-kg satellite will be put in space by a PSLV rocket. GISAT will provide images of the areas of interest on near real time basis. It will also keep a watch over the country’s sensitive borders.

GISAT will be fixed in a geo-stationary orbit, always looking over the same region and synchronised to the earth’s 24-hour rotation. GISAT will provide images every five minutes unlike other remote-sensing satellites, which view a particular area for barely ten minutes and do not visit the same place for the next one, three or five days

read here and here

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urbanculturalstudies's avatarurbanculturalstudies

[reblogged from http://www.futureofny.org/medalists/omar-freilla]

Jane Jacobs Medalists

Omar Freilla

Photo of Omar Freilla
Photo by Rob Bennett

Even though only 34, Omar Freilla has already brought fresh hope and new ideas to the South Bronx, an area that was a national icon of urban decay in the 1970s and 1980s. Ironically, the reason for this blighted image can be traced back to many of the issues that Jane Jacobs fought against: the construction of highway projects that tore through neighborhoods, cold and imposing housing projects, and slum clearance. Omar and his parents, Zoraida Martez and Jose Freilla, who settled in the Bronx after emigrating from the Dominican Republic in 1960s, were firsthand witnesses to this deterioration and the burning of the Bronx.

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Magma

Magma is molten, liquid rock found under the surface of the Earth. Magma can also contain crystals, rock fragments and dissolved gases. The liquid part of magma is called the melt.

Earth is divided into three areas. The core is the superheated center, the mantle is the thick, middle layer, and the crust is the top layer on which we live. Magma originates in the lower part of the Earth’s crust and in the upper portion of the mantle. There, high temperatures and pressure cause some rocks to melt and form magma.

Magma is extremely hot—between 700 and 1,300 degrees Celsius (1,292 and 2,372 degrees Fahrenheit). When magma rises to the surface of the Earth through vents or during volcanic eruptions, it becomes lava. When lava stops flowing and cools, it hardens into igneous rock.

Magma can rise through breaks in the solid rocks of the crust and accumulate in large underground reservoirs called magma chambers. Heat from magma chambers can warm groundwater, which sometimes rises to the surface and forms hot springs.

Magma wells up through cracks in the seafloor and hardens into crust. Islands can be created this way. The Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific Ocean were formed by a series of underwater volcano eruptions whose lava hardened and eventually built up into the island chain.Magma is molten, liquid rock found under the surface of the Earth. Magma can also contain crystals, rock fragments and dissolved gases. The liquid part of magma is called the melt. Earth is divided into three areas. The core is the superheated center, the mantle is the thick, middle layer, and the crust is the top layer on which we live. Magma originates in the lower part of the Earth’s crust and in the upper portion of the mantle. There, high temperatures and pressure cause some rocks to melt and form magma. Magma is extremely hot—between 700 and 1,300 degrees Celsius (1,292 and 2,372 degrees Fahrenheit). When magma rises to the surface of the Earth through vents or during volcanic eruptions, it becomes lava. When lava stops flowing and cools, it hardens into igneous rock. Magma can rise through breaks in the solid rocks of the crust and accumulate in large underground reservoirs called magma chambers. Heat from magma chambers can warm groundwater, which sometimes rises to the surface and forms hot springs. Magma wells up through cracks in the seafloor and hardens into crust. Islands can be created this way. The Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific Ocean were formed by a series of underwater volcano eruptions whose lava hardened and eventually built up into the island chain.

Linnks and Sources:

National Geographic

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sharonstjoan's avatarEchoes in the Mist

The book, Underworld, the Mysterious Origins of Civilization, by Graham Hancock, has some fascinating chapters about Dwarka, in the state of Gujarat on the Kathiawar Peninsula by the Arabian Sea. There, a team of marine archaeologists, led by S. R. Rao, discovered a very large submerged site. Dr. Rao has led excavations of a vast number of important Indian sites, including many Indus Valley sites.

 

Graham Hancock and his wife, Santha, traveled there in 1992. Though British, he was not a stranger to India, having spent part of his childhood in Vellore, in Tamil Nadu. Santha’s family background is Tamil.

 

Hancock describes the Indian concept of cyclical time and the four yugas or four ages: the Krita Yuga, which is the “golden” age; the Treta Yuga, in which virtue has begun to decline and is less perfect than before; the Davapara Yuga, in which there is dishonesty…

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