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Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika survive ng lahi ng Tao.

Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

up sa di pa nakakaalam.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

up up natin ulit.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

20 years Earth under water documentary
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9TX7aJQe6s
or IPCC http://www.ipcc.ch/
Ito mangyayari satin kaya kailangan paghandaan.
Ozone Hole wont heal until 2070.
http://m.livescience.com/41899-ozone-hole-wont-heal-until-2070.html
http://www.universetoday.com/105354/earth-and-climate-two-scenarios-of-our-planet-in-2100-ad/

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Tropical Vietnam first time snow
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/548019/vietnam-snowfall-damages-farms
Middle East 1st time snow
http://in.reuters.com/article/2013/12/13/life-idINRTX16FEH

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Earth and Climate: Two Scenarios of Our Planet in 2100 AD
http://www.universetoday.com/105354/earth-and-climate-two-scenarios-of-our-planet-in-2100-ad/

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up up up!!!

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Ito more reference for Scientific about Earth and Posible habitable Planet on Solar System.
http://blogs.agu.org/
 
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Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

View attachment 869863
Mga kasyb supportahan natin kalahin nating Filipino at para sating future survival.
PLEASE SUPPORT OUR MARS ONE PHILIPPINE ASTRONAUT CANDIDATE, NOW IN ROUND 2.....
MR. WILLARD SOLLANO DANIAC AND MISS. GABRIELLE ESPINA YBANEZ
1) www.mars-one.com
2) https://applicants.mars-one.com/profile/3722f1ca-af00-44a9-af0d-39d4e9a5d876
3) https://applicants.mars-one.com/profile/4e1ef8b9-8901-4b08-b41d-da361ad908ce
Paki add nalang sila sa facebook.
https://www.facebook.com/gabrielle.ybanez
https://www.facebook.com/willardsollano.daniac
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

napanuod ko na dati pa ung evacuate earth. . . naguguluhan ako kung kaya ba ng spaceship na un magkarga ng mga tao d2 sa earth?di ba ang dami kaya natin?sa palagay ko mga mayayaman lang makakasakay nun hehe. . . kung magsuccessful man yan, pano na lang kaya pagdating sa mars may hospital b kung magkakasakit ung mga tao? Lahat ng bagay sa mundo ay may katapusan. . .

may nabasa din ako d2 na hndi sya naniniwalang may dyos? magsimba ka lagi ts at magbasa ng bible...cnong tutulong sayo sa lahat ng problema mo eh db ang DYOS?!Sana magbago ang isip mo un lang po!
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Ano kaya mamanahin ng mga taong ito, kung mawawasak din lang ang Earth? - Matthew 5:5
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

napanuod ko na dati pa ung evacuate earth. . . naguguluhan ako kung kaya ba ng spaceship na un magkarga ng mga tao d2 sa earth?di ba ang dami kaya natin?sa palagay ko mga mayayaman lang makakasakay nun hehe. . . kung magsuccessful man yan, pano na lang kaya pagdating sa mars may hospital b kung magkakasakit ung mga tao? Lahat ng bagay sa mundo ay may katapusan. . .

may nabasa din ako d2 na hndi sya naniniwalang may dyos? magsimba ka lagi ts at magbasa ng bible...cnong tutulong sayo sa lahat ng problema mo eh db ang DYOS?!Sana magbago ang isip mo un lang po!
Sa ngayon posible na ang technology sa noon Space program 50's to ISS, at mga maraming space probe na pinadala na malaking tsansa di na pumalya habang tumatagal ang panahon dahil sa technology at experience.
Naniniwala ako my Diyos, sila mga supreme being na Powerfull kaysa sating tao silay mula sa langit na bumaba sa lupa. Aking paniniwala nakabatay din sa bible.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

napanuod ko na dati pa ung evacuate earth. . . naguguluhan ako kung kaya ba ng spaceship na un magkarga ng mga tao d2 sa earth?di ba ang dami kaya natin?sa palagay ko mga mayayaman lang makakasakay nun hehe. . . kung magsuccessful man yan, pano na lang kaya pagdating sa mars may hospital b kung magkakasakit ung mga tao? Lahat ng bagay sa mundo ay may katapusan. . .

may nabasa din ako d2 na hndi sya naniniwalang may dyos? magsimba ka lagi ts at magbasa ng bible...cnong tutulong sayo sa lahat ng problema mo eh db ang DYOS?!Sana magbago ang isip mo un lang po!

hindi pinanonood nang mabuti, kasi sabi sa documentary yung mga pinipili ay mga tao na my mga magagandang genes.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

10,000 yrs pa nman bago sumabog ang araw natin so wala rin tayong maggawa kung d na tayo buhay sa mga panahong un. Yung henerasyon cguro ng tao sa hinaharap ang mas mammoblema nyan. Baka nga mas mappadali pa ang pagkawasak ng mundo dahil sa gnagawa ng tao sa kalikasan. Mining, illegal logging, pollution etc. Kung destined tlga na ma extinct ang tao & all living creatures as well e lets jst accept it or gagawa mismo ang tao ng ways to protect our nature sa pagkasira.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Mars Space Colony Rockets Could Be Ready In 10 Years: SpaceX CEO
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is a huge fan of Mars exploration and Mars colonies, and in a new interview he says a launch system to send people to the Red Planet could be available in 10 to 12 years. Requirements: it has to be big, and it has to be launched frequently to send millions of people and tons of cargo spaceward.

“We need to develop a much larger vehicle, which would be a sort of Mars colonial transport system, and this would be, we’re talking about rockets on a bigger scale than has ever been done before. It will make the Apollo moon rocket look small,” said Musk in a recent CBS interview, referring to the 363-foot (110-meter) behemoth that was the Saturn V.
In the short term, Musk said he is focused on making a crew transportation system that will reduce NASA’s reliance on Soyuz vehicles to bring astronauts into space (a situation that arose in 2011 after the agency retired the shuttle.) SpaceX is one of three companies funded by NASA to develop a spacecraft able to launch people (with the other two being Boeing and Sierra Nevada.)

Musk said SpaceX’s Dragon should be ready to do that in a couple of years. Meanwhile, there are abort tests to perform and other steps this year to get the spacecraft ready for that milestone.

Check out the entire Musk interview on the CBS website. Naturally, he doesn’t have the only vision for human Mars exploration out there, as private ventures Mars One and Inspiration Mars demonstrate.

http://www.universetoday.com/108966/mars-space-colony-rockets-could-be-ready-in-10-years-spacex-ceo/

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Ginawa ko na pdf Ebook http://www.symbianize.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=878657&d=1391587610
 
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Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Loss of Antarctic Glacier is Irreversible, NASA Scientists Say | Animation
After 40 years of observation, NASA and University of California researchers agree that melting of the West Antarctic Glacier has past the point of no return. It contains enough ice to raise sea levels ~4 feet, but could take centuries to melt.





http://www.space.com/25841-loss-of-...reversible-nasa-scientists-say-animation.html

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'Nothing can stop retreat' of West Antarctic glaciers
By Jonathan Amos
Science correspondent, BBC News
Thwaites
Thwaites Glacier is a huge ice stream draining into the Amundsen Bay
Continue reading the main story
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Big glacier's retreat 'irreversible'
Data to expose 'sleeping ice giant'
Satellite detects Antarctic ice loss
Key glaciers in West Antarctica are in an irreversible retreat, a study team led by the US space agency (Nasa) says.

It analysed 40 years of observations of six big ice streams draining into the Amundsen Bay and concluded that nothing now can stop them melting away.

Although these are abrupt changes, the timescales involved are likely measured in centuries, the researchers add.

If the glaciers really do disappear, they would add roughly 1.2m to global sea level rise.

The new study has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union, but Nasa held a teleconference on Monday to brief reporters on the findings.

Prof Eric Rignot said warm ocean water was relentlessly eating away at the glaciers' fronts and that the geometry of the sea bed in the area meant that this erosion had now entered a runaway process.

Continue reading the main story
image of David Shukman
Analysis
David Shukman
Science editor, BBC News
West Antarctica is one of the least accessible parts of the planet and it takes a huge effort to research the changes under way there. Nearly a decade ago, I joined a flight on an old US Navy patrol plane that made a gruelling 11-hour round trip from the southern Chilean city of Punta Arenas to Pine Island Glacier, which lies among the glaciers featured in these latest studies.

There was no possibility of landing and, if the worst were to happen, there was no-one close enough to offer any kind of rescue. This is research at its most daring. On board was a team from Nasa whose instruments were measuring the elevation and thickness of the ice below us. Even at this stage, it was clear that the glacier, far larger than anything you might see in Europe or North America, was speeding up.

Now the scientists have the benefit of repeated flights, copious satellite images and data from field trips. There is still a lot they do not understand about the pace of change and therefore the speed with which the melt will contribute to sea level rise. But the more detailed the research, the sharper the picture of rapid change.

Read more from David
"We present observational evidence that a large section of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet has gone into a state of irreversible retreat; it has passed the point of no return," the agency glaciologist explained.

"This retreat will have major consequences for sea level rise worldwide. It will raise sea levels by 1.2m, or 4ft, but its retreat will also influence adjacent sectors of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet which could triple this contribution to sea level."

The Amundsen Bay sector includes some of the biggest and fastest moving glaciers on Earth.

Pine Island Glacier (PIG), over which there has been intense research interest of late, covers about 160,000 sq km, or about two-thirds the area of the UK.

Like the Thwaites, Smith, Haynes, Pope, Smith and Kohler Glaciers in this region - the PIG has been thinning rapidly.

And its grounding line - the zone where the glacier enters the sea and lifts up and floats - has also reversed tens of km over recent decades.

What makes the group vulnerable is that their bulk actually sits below current sea level with the rock bed sloping inland towards the continent.

This is a geometry, say scientists, that invites further melting and further retreat.

The new study includes radar observations that map the underlying rock in the region, and this finds no ridge or significant elevation in topography that could act as a barrier to the glaciers' reverse.

"In our new study, we present additional data that the junction of the glaciers with the ocean - the grounding line - has been retreating at record speeds unmatched anywhere in the Antarctic," said Prof Rignot.

Thinning rate
Recent European Space Agency satellite data has also recorded the glaciers' thinning and retreat
"We also present new evidence that there is no large hill at the back of these glaciers that could create a barrier and hold the retreat back. This is why we conclude that the disappearance of ice in this sector is unstoppable."

The researcher, who is also affiliated to the University of California, Irvine, attributed the underlying driver of these changes to global warming.

This, together with atmospheric behaviours influenced by a loss of ozone in the stratosphere, had created stronger winds in the Southern Ocean that were now drawing more warm water towards and under the glaciers.

Dr Tom Wagner, the cryosphere program scientist with Nasa, said it was clear that, in the case of these six glaciers, a threshold had been crossed.

"The results are not based on computer simulations or numerical models; they are based on the interpretation of observations," he told reporters.

"And I think this is an important point because this sometimes can get lost on the general public when they're trying to understand climate change and the implications."

Prof Rignot and colleagues put no real timescales on events, but a paper released by the journal Science to coincide with the Nasa media conference tries to do just this.

It does include computer modelling and was led by Dr Ian Joughin, a glaciologist at the University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory. The study considers the particular case of Thwaites Glacier.

In the model, Dr Joughin's team is able to reproduce very accurately the behaviour of the glacier over the past 20 years.

The group then runs the model forwards to try to forecast future trends.

This, likewise, indicates that a collapse of the glacier is inevitable, and suggests it will most likely occur in the next 200 to 500 years.

Prof Andy Shepherd, from Leeds University, UK, is connected with neither Rignot's nor Joughin's work.

He told BBC News: "[Joughin's] new simulations are a game changing result, as they shine a spotlight on Thwaites Glacier, which has until now played second fiddle to its neighbour Pine Island Glacier in terms of ice losses.

"There is now little doubt that this sector of West Antarctica is in a state of rapid retreat, and the burning question is whether and how soon this retreat might escalate into irreversible collapse. Thankfully, we now have an array of satellites capable of detecting the tell-tale signs, and their observations will allow us to monitor the progress and establish which particular scenario Thwaites Glacier will follow."

Prof Shepherd said the EU's newly launched Sentinel-1a radar satellite would have a unique capability to assess the glaciers' grounding lines.

"As soon as the satellite reaches its nominal orbit, we will turn its eye on Thwaites Glacier to see whether it has indeed changed as predicted."

[email protected] and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos
Key glaciers in West Antarctica are in irreversible retreat, scientists say in a new study led by NASA. They analysed 40 years of observations of six big ice streams draining into the Amundsen Bay and concluded that nothing now can stop them melting away http://bbc.in/1gw9qsY
 
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Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Hindi suitable habitat for life ang Mars. Wala dung tubig, thin ang atmosphere at weak ang magnetic field. Lol. Millions of light years ang distance ng pinakamalapit na earth-like planet.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

NASA May Put Greenhouse on Mars in 2021
By Mike Wall, Senior Writer | May 06, 2014 07:01am ET
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Mars Plant Experiment (MPX)
Pin It A rendition of the proposed location of the Mars Plant Experiment (MPX) on top of a Curiosity rover image. MPX would be affixed to NASA's next Mars rover, which is due to launch in 2020.
Credit: Chris McKay and the MPX Proposal Team
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Plant life may touch down on Mars in 2021.

Researchers have proposed putting a plant-growth experiment on NASA's next Mars rover, which is scheduled to launch in mid-2020 and land on the Red Planet in early 2021. The investigation, known as the Mars Plant Experiment (MPX), could help lay the foundation for the colonization of Mars, its designers say.

"In order to do a long-term, sustainable base on Mars, you would want to be able to establish that plants can at least grow on Mars," MPX deputy principal investigator Heather Smith, of NASA's Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California, said April 24 at the Humans 2 Mars conference in Washington, D.C. "This would be the first step in that … we just send the seeds there and watch them grow." [The Boldest Mars Missions in History]


The MPX team — led by fellow Ames scientist Chris McKay — isn't suggesting that the 2020 Mars rover should play gardener, digging a hole with its robotic arm and planting seeds in the Red Planet's dirt. Rather, the experiment would be entirely self-contained, eliminating the chance that Earth life could escape and perhaps get a foothold on Mars.

Graphic Illustrating the Mars Plant Experiment
Pin It Graphic illustrating the Mars Plant Experiment (MPX) concept, which aims to send a tiny greenhouse to the Red Planet along with NASA's next Mars rover in 2021.
Credit: Chris McKay and the MPX Proposal teamView full size image
MPX would employ a clear "CubeSat" box — the case for a cheap and tiny satellite — which would be affixed to the exterior of the 2020 rover. This box would hold Earth air and about 200 seeds of Arabidopsis, a small flowering plant that's commonly used in scientific research.

Available to Populate Mars T-shirtSpace.com Exclusive T-shirt. Available to Populate Mars. Buy Now
Credit: Space.com StoreView full size image
The seeds would receive water when the rover touched down on Mars, and would then be allowed to grow for two weeks or so.

"In 15 days, we'll have a little greenhouse on Mars," Smith said.

MPX would provide an organism-level test of the Mars environment, showing how Earth life deals with the Red Planet's relatively high radiation levels and low gravity, which is about 40 percent as strong as that of Earth, she added.

"We would go from this simple experiment to the greenhouses on Mars for a sustainable base," Smith said. "That would be the goal."

In addition to its potential scientific returns, MPX would provide humanity with a landmark moment, she added.

"It also would be the first multicellular organism to grow, live and die on another planet," Smith said.

The 2020 Mars rover is based heavily on NASA's Curiosity rover, which landed in August 2012 to determine if the Red Planet has ever been capable of supporting microbial life. Curiosity has already answered that question in the affirmative, finding that a site called Yellowknife Bay was, indeed, habitable billions of years ago.

Mars Myths & Misconceptions: QuizNo planet is more steeped in myth and misconception than Mars. This quiz will reveal how much you really know about some of the goofiest claims about the red planet.Start the Quiz
The original 'Face on Mars' image taken by NASA's Viking 1 orbiter, in grey scale, on July, 25 1976. Image shows a remnant massif located in the Cydonia region. 0 of 10 questions complete
NASA wants the 2020 rover to search for signs of past Mars life, and collect rock and soil samples for eventual return to Earth. But the space agency is still working out the details of the robot's mission — for example, figuring out what instruments it will carry.

NASA received 58 instrument proposals for the rover during its call for submissions, which lasted from September 2013 until January of this year. Final selections should be made by June or so, NASA officials have said.

Curiosity totes 10 instruments around Mars, so the 2020 rover may end up with a similar amount of scientific gear.

http://www.space.com/25767-nasa-mars-greenhouse-rover-plant-experiment.html

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To Combat Climate Change, Humanity Must Act Now, NASA Chief Says
By Mike Wall, Senior Writer | May 08, 2014 06:43pm ET
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NASA Chief Charles Bolden Discuss 3rd National Climate Assessment
Pin It NASA Administrator Charles Bolden discusses the Third U.S. National Climate Assessment at the space agency's Ames Research Center in California on May 8, 2014.
Credit: Mike Wall/Space.com
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MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Humanity must act now if it hopes to stave off the worst impacts of climate change, NASA chief Charles Bolden says.

Climate change is not some far-off, nebulous issue that future generations will have to confront, Bolden told reporters Thursday (May 8) during a discussion of the Third U.S. National Climate Assessment report here at NASA's Ames Research Center. Rather, it's happening right now, and people all over the world are already feeling the effects.

"The world is different from the way it used to be," Bolden said. "Climate change is a problem we must deal with right now." [8 Ways Global Warming Is Already Changing the World]


The latest National Climate Assessment (NCA), which was released by the White House on Tuesday (May 6), is the most comprehensive and authoritative document ever written about how climate change is affecting the United States, Bolden added.

The report doesn't paint a pretty picture.

"Precipitation patterns are changing, sea level is rising, the oceans are becoming more acidic and the frequency and intensity of some extreme weather events are increasing," the NCA states. "The observed warming and other climatic changes are triggering wide-ranging impacts in every region of our country and throughout our economy."

Bolden spoke in front of Ames' "hyperwall," a 23-foot-wide (7 meters) visualization system that helps scientists analyze and display huge and complicated datasets.

Over Bolden's right shoulder, the hyperwall showed a map of the continental United States depicting average July temperatures in 1950. Over his left shoulder was a prediction of how this map would look in July 2100 in a "business as usual" scenario, with no meaningful action taken to curb emissions of the heat-trapping gas carbon dioxide.

On the 1950 map, only a small corner of the southwestern U.S. blushes dark red, indicating average July temperatures of at least 105 degrees Fahrenheit (41 degrees Celsius). But this color covers about one-third of the 2100 map — including some of today's prime agricultural land in the Midwest and Great Plains.

"We don't want to be there," Bolden said, gesturing toward the July 2100 map. "We think we can do something about it."

Earth Quiz: Do You Really Know Your Planet?You live here, so we figure you ought to be well grounded in Earth facts. But you might find these questions a little tough and tricky. Good luck!Start the Quiz
The image of Earth in space like a blue marble highlighted the planets fragility and the beauty of Earth. 0 of 10 questions complete
Taking steps to reduce the use of fossil fuels such as coal and petroleum would indeed make a difference, helping the nation and the world mitigate some of climate change's most dramatic effects, the NCA states. But impacts are unavoidable (and ongoing) at this point, because carbon dioxide stays in Earth's atmosphere for decades.

"The amount of warming projected beyond the next few decades is directly linked to the cumulative global emissions of heat-trapping gases and particles," the NCA report states. "By the end of this century, a roughly 3-degree F to 5-degree F rise is projected under a lower emissions scenario, which would require substantial reductions in emissions (referred to as the 'B1 scenario'), and a 5-degree F to 10-degree F rise for a higher emissions scenario assuming continued increases in emissions, predominantly from fossil fuel combustion (referred to as the 'A2 scenario')."

NASA scientists and satellites contributed greatly to the NCA report, Bolden said, and the space agency will continue to keep tabs on the planet from above. NASA has already launched one Earth-observation mission in 2014 — the Global Precipitation Measurement core observatory, which blasted off in February — and will loft four more before the calendar flips over.

"I am calling this — in fact, NASA now calls it — the year of Earth," Bolden said. "We're focusing on trying to put instruments up, whether they're on the International Space Station or free flyers, that will help us get more information to help us understand more about what's happening on our Earth."
http://www.space.com/25811-climate-change-action-nasa-chief.html

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Seven Pinoys still in the running for life on Mars program
May 7, 2014 3:27pm
2264 70 1 2474
Mars may soon have Filipino colonizers hopping along its bright red surface building constructs, after seven Filipinos made it through Mars One's third screening process.

Four more Filipinos have been added to three previous candidates, three of them currently abroad while one works in Pasig. The seven are:

Michael Theodore L. Pias
Profession: Physician in an oilfield
Current Location: Oman

Willard Sollano Daniac
Profession: Electrical inspector at KAHRAMAA-Qatar General Electricity and Water Corporation
Current Location: Qatar

Catherine Jane Franco
Profession: Pre-production engineer in a PCB manufacturing company
Current Location: Singapore

Jaymee del Rosario
Profession: President of International Metal Source
Current Location: USA

Duane Locsin
Profession: I.T. support and hauler
Current Location: Australia

Gabrielle Angeli

Minerva (no last name given)

Daniac has earlier cited his “knowledge of Astronomy [and] Physics,” as well as of the characteristics of Mars, as his advantage.

For Pias, it's his “good head for observation and analysis.”

Del Rosario, meanwhile, said: “As the owner of my own company, I can clearly work well with others and be a team leader.

“Being born in the Philippines, I know that I can easily adapt to any new surroundings and work with any available resources,” he added.

In a statement, Mars One said only 705 candidates remain in the running. A panel interview will decide who gets to colonize Mars on 2024. Each selected person will undergo astronaut training before they take off for the red planet.

The "Balitanghali" report said whoever goes to Mars will be there for good. —Rie Takumi/KBK/TJD, GMA News

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/stor...still-in-the-running-for-life-on-mars-program

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The Rise of Carbon Dioxide in a Single Video


I’m always amazed by the power of data visualization. In this case a video shrinks the rising levels of carbon dioxide over the course of 800,000 years to just under two minutes.


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The motivation is simple: April set a carbon dioxide milestone by averaging 400 parts per million for the entire month. That’s uncharted territory over the course of human history.

Screenshot from the video showing the variations in the amount of CO2 in Earth atmosphere for the last 800,000 years.
Screenshot from the video showing the variations in the amount of CO2 in Earth atmosphere for the last 800,000 years.
The levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are monitored from a site atop Hawaii’s Mauna Loa volcano, where they have been measured continuously since 1958. Previous to this date scientists measure ice cores, which contain air bubbles and therefore snapshots of carbon dioxide levels.

This animation from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences makes clear that while there have been some variations over time, the current rise is unparalleled by geological scales.

Prior to the Industrial Revolution CO2 levels stayed roughly around 280 ppm. But then with the kickstart of carbon emissions, levels were driven exponentially higher. They soared past 350 ppm — the level scientist James Hansen said was the safe upper limit of CO2 — in October 1989.

The first measurement in excess of 400 ppm was made on May 9, 2013. This year, the level rose above that mark two months earlier, and has remained above 400 ppm steadily since the beginning of April. Levels will peak in May and then drop back down throughout the summer months as trees and plants soak up some CO2.

Once the northern hemisphere spins into fall, the instrument on Mauna Loa will again read higher CO2 levels. Next year will probably see an even earlier onset of levels above 400 ppm. It likely won’t be long before levels never drop lower than 400 ppm, even throughout the summer months.

Also, today the U.S. Global Change Research Program released a report that has been five years in the making, providing an overview of observed and projected climate change. It’s a lengthy document, but you can see an overview here. In sum, the report shows how the world is already experiencing the effects of climate change and the impacts are playing out before our eyes.

“We’ve seen a lot in the last five years,” said Andrew Rosenberg of the Union of Concerned Scientists, one of the lead authors on the report’s oceans chapter, in a press release from The Daily Climate. “So what we’ve tried to do is be quite comprehensive on what our observations have been, as opposed to just modeling projections.”

“Five years ago, ocean acidification and species movement was already happening, but the observational record wasn’t as clear,” Rosenberg said. “Now it really is quite clear. It’s not theory-based or model-based.”

Global temperatures measured by decades since the 1880's. The period from 2001-2012 was the warmest on record globally. Every year was warmer than the 1990s average. Credit: U.S. Global Change Research Program.
Global temperatures measured by decades since the 1880′s. The period from 2001-2012 was the warmest on record globally. Every year was warmer than the 1990s average. Credit: U.S. Global Change Research Program.
This report is unique in that it not only includes data from scientists, but also has input from local groups and industries facing climate impacts. Corn producers in Iowa, oyster growers in Washington, and maple syrup producers in Vermont are all experiencing climate-related issues. So, too, are coastal planners in Florida, water managers in the Southwest, and Native Peoples on tribal lands from Louisiana to Alaska.

Human beings are already being impacted by climate change.
http://www.universetoday.com/111719/the-rise-of-carbon-dioxide-in-a-single-video/

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Mars after 100 years of terraforming
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Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Ang Mars isang planeta na my malaking oportinidad satin sa future. Walang bagyo, lindol at kung makagawa tayo ng sustainable habitat at ma terraformed maige , ito simula ng New World natin.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

NASA Mars Program
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEte1Nm1pa4&feature=youtu.be

PLANET SUICIDE | Study says Earth on brink of mass extinction event
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/...-says-earth-on-brink-of-mass-extinction-event

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Tunnel vision: Plan to put Fukushima on ice hits snag: Failed, radiation continues spread to Pacific Ocean.
http://rt.com/news/166412-fukushima-ice-wall-failing/

China's 'Lunar Palace' for Space Research Tested on Earth
By Leonard David, Space.com’s Space Insider Columnist | June 16, 2014 05:56pm ET
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China's Lunar Palace 1 Layout
Pin It Layout of China's Lunar Palace 1, an Integrative Experimental Facility for Permanent Astrobase Life-Support Artificial Closed Ecosystem (PALACE) Research.
Credit: CMSE
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Three volunteers stepped out of China's Lunar Palace 1 last month after a 105-day shakeout mission — not on the moon, but on Earth.

Munching on protein-rich mealworms and other delicacies, the trio of Chinese biospherians carried out the first long-duration multicrew sealed cabin research in the country at the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

China's Lunar Palace 1, developed by researchers at Beihang University in Beijing, is short for the Integrative Experimental Facility for Permanent Astrobase Life-support Artificial Closed Ecosystem (PALACE) Research. [Learn more about China's space program]


Experimental crops

China's Lunar Palace 1 PlantsPin It No moon pies grown in China's Lunar Palace 1. Shown here are plants cultivated within the test facility
Credit: CMSEView full size image
The facility is a 500-cubic-meter capsule that covers an area of 160 square meters and consists of one integrated module and two plant cultivation modules. The integrated module includes a living room, a work room, a bathroom and a waste-disposal room.

Experimental crops, such as corn and peanuts, were grown during the test, as were lentils and cucumber vine plants.

Human waste was handled within the Lunar Palace 1 by a biofermentation process. Food residue and other byproducts were treated by biotechniques and were used for plant cultivation.

The three-person team comprised two women — Xie Beizhen and Wang Minjuan — and one man, Dong Chen, all from the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

The Lunar Palace 1 project started in March 2013 with system construction, followed by the commissioning of the facility, leading up to the 105-day mission that ended May 20.

Wang Minjuan, Chinese 'Biospherian
Wang Minjuan, one of three Chinese "biospherians" to live 105 days within the Lunar Palace 1.
Credit: CMSEView full size image
Ecological life support

Officials from the China Manned Space Engineering (CMSE) office said, "The success of the experiment has laid [a] good foundation to CELSS [the controlled ecological life support system] flight demonstration tests for China's space station, which will be helpful for China's astronauts to get fresh vegetables, improve their living conditions and relieve their mental stress."

The core of Lunar Palace 1 is the world's most advanced closed-loop life-support technology so far: a Bioregenerative Life Support System that is essential for astronauts to live and work in space for long-duration missions, thus making it possible for lengthy spaceflights and planetary exploration, representatives wrote on the CMSE website.

A story posted on the CMSE website says Lunar Palace 1 is the first bioregenerative life-support base developed in China, and the third overall in the world.

"The success of Lunar Palace 1 research indicates that China has been among the most advanced in the field of bioregenerative life-support research, which will play a significant role in China's future missions like [a] manned moon landing, lunar base establishment, Mars exploration," the website states.

Chief Architect of Lunar Palace 1, Liu HongPin It Chief architect of Lunar Palace 1, Liu Hong of the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
Credit: CMSEView full size image
"I think the biggest significance of this system is the ability to provide the necessary theoretical basis and technical support for a lunar base," Liu Hong, chief architect of Lunar Palace 1 and a professor of biological and medical engineering at Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, said.

Long journey ahead

MIT's Larry Young is a research scientist that has been focused on life support issues facing astronauts on long-duration space travel, particularly the use of artificial gravity. Last year, Young took part in a China-sponsored space life sciences meeting and got a first-hand look at what that country's top experts are considering in terms of their future space exploration activities.

"China's Lunar Palace 1 gives an entirely new meaning to 'Chinese takeout,'" said Larry Young, Apollo program professor of astronautics and professor of health sciences and technology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass.

Only with an efficient, fully closed biologically regenerative life-support system can we seriously move forward with an anticipated human Mars exploration, Young told Space.com.

"We still have a long way to go before space crews can live entirely on food raised in their onboard gardens," Young said, "but this long journey has, as Confucius might have said, started with the first step."
http://www.space.com/26267-china-lunar-palace-space-research-mission.html

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How Much Warmer Will Your Future Be?
This NASA visualization for the National Climate Assessment released on May 6 shows how average temperatures in the U.S. will increase 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit by the end of the century if carbon dioxide emissions continue current trends. It is based on a NOAA analysis of climate model data.
The National Climate Assessment is specifically focused on providing information about the impacts of climate change on the U.S. NASA supports this effort and contributes a global perspective through its satellite missions and science. NASA scientists study global and U.S. influences on temperature, including greenhouse gases, clouds, fine particle pollution and solar activity.
NASA scientists are also studying how rising temperatures in the U.S. and around the world will impact agriculture, extreme summer heat waves and public health.
Increasing carbon dioxide emissions from human activities remains the primary driver of Earth’s rising temperatures. This summer NASA will launch the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2), to make continuous global measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
To read the National Climate Assessment’s take on U.S. temperature trends, visit: http://nca2014.globalchange.gov/report/our-changing-climate/recent-us-temperature-trends
To learn more about the OCO-2 mission, visit: http://oco.jpl.nasa.gov
To learn more about other NASA missions that contribute to understanding global temperature, visit: http://climate.nasa.gov
To see a visualization of temperature changes projected by the National Climate Assessment, visit: http://go.nasa.gov/1on08V4
To learn more about NASA’s Earth science activities in 2014, visit: www.nasa.gov/earthrightnow
#earthrightnow #actonclimate
http://www.nasa.gov/content/how-much-warmer-will-your-future-be/#.U5wHrtT4LEo

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BABAHA BA? DOST’s DREAM program can answer that
Jose Bimbo F. Santos, InterAksyon.com · Monday, June 9, 2014 · 12:23 pm



MANILA, Philiipines — As the rainy season is expected to officially hit the country anytime soon, accurate and timely weather information will again be central to the public, something that can and will be delivered by the DREAM program (Disaster Risk and Exposure Assessment Mitigation) of the Department of Science and Technology (DOST).

Using technology called Light Detection and Ranging or LiDAR, DREAM produces highly detailed maps that can predict during times of rain if there will be a flood and how high it will possibly be. Aside from the elevation data, DREAM also maps out the country’s river systems by flying LiDAR scanners over them. Through their database, DREAM sends out flood warnings with a lead time of as early as six hours.

Last month, DOST received the Geospatial World Policy Award in Switzerland for the DREAM program. To help the public better appreciate the flood visualization offered by DREAM, you can find embedded below part of the presentation given by DREAM to InterAksyon.com.



The flood visualization is derived by DREAM using data gathered through LiDAR technology, which is done by flying small aircraft with LiDAR scanners over bodies of water. The technology is able to gather detailed elevation data by plotting digital surface models, which covers the ground including structures and other above ground features, and the digital terrain model, which only maps out the bare earth. The data is then used to simulate rainfall conditions over specific periods of time and the possible effect it may have on nearby communities.



John Louie Fabila, chief science research specialist at the DOST-DREAM project, said that they are also open to sharing their data to various local government units.


http://www.interaksyon.com/infotech/babaha-ba-dosts-dream-program-can-answer-that

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28 Signs That The West Coast Is Being Absolutely Fried With Nuclear Radiation From Fukushima
http://www.globalresearch.ca/28-sig...with-nuclear-radiation-from-fukushima/5355280
Martian Soil Suitable For Growing Plants, Researchers Find
http://m.ibtimes.co.uk/martian-soil-suitable-growing-plants-researchers-find-1432658

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This Ice Sheet Will Unleash a Global Superstorm Sandy That Never Ends
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http://www.motherjones.com/environm...inds-richard-alley-antarctica-greenland-sandy

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Antarctic ice melt has doubled to 159 GIGATONNES (that's 430,000 Empire State Buildings) a year since 2010, satellite reveals


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...e-State-Buildings-year-satellite-reveals.html

NASA: West Antarctic ice sheet collapse 'unstoppable'
http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/stor...west-antarctic-ice-sheet-collapse-unstoppable

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Up up up up!

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Itong pagmulat sa impormasyon ay libre lang at walang hinihinging kapalit. Aanhin mo kayamanan kung wala na ang lahat lahat at ang mundo.
 

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Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Next 20-30 years 1.5 to 2C rise in temp is more catastrophic doom for habitable in Earth.
Middle East and Indian maximum temp. is 50C to 100C .
South East Asia 78C in after 30yrs if we cant stop CO2 emission .
Co2 reaching the tipping point 400ppm more worse and ozone cant heal.
Ready for ever changing world, Earth Under Water, billions of tons Ice melting per year in North Pole and South Pole.
 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Malakas parin yung pwersa nang mga lobbyist oil companies, tinitira nila sa politika yung mga pro climate change...


Sa ngayun meron panibagong problema, yung methane emission due to melting ice/glaciers.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150917091306.htm

"Changes in the Arctic Ocean can affect ecosystems located far away on land, " says Dr. Frans-Jan Parmentier, the study's lead author and researcher at the Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science, Lund University.

Bright sea ice reflects most sunlight, while open water absorbs most sunlight. Less sea ice, therefore, leads to more absorbed heat, and higher temperatures throughout the North Pole region. This stimulates the production of methane by microorganisms in permafrost soils, which also drives the change towards a warmer climate.

"While numerous studies have shown the effects of sea ice loss on the ocean, there are only a few that show how this oceanic change affects ecosystems on the surrounding land. Our research shows that to understand the impact of climate change on the Arctic, the ocean and land cannot be viewed separately," Frans-Jan Parmentier explains.

Dr. Parmentier, together with researchers from the United States and the Netherlands, explored the connection between methane emissions and loss of sea ice by using advanced computer models. Models can simulate how methane emissions respond to the effects of sea ice decline, such as higher temperatures and altered rainfall.

"Sea ice decline is one of the most visible consequences of climate change, and has a tremendous impact on the Arctic climate. Since the 1990's, the Arctic has been losing sea ice at a tremendous rate -- about 14 percent per decade. The expectation is that with further sea ice decline, temperatures in the Arctic will continue to rise, and so will methane emissions from northern wetlands," says Frans-Jan Parmentier.

The next step is to assess the extent of sea ice's influence on methane emissions by measurements in the field. The results of this research could improve predictions of how climate change affects our planet.

 
Re: Spaceship , multi Planet Species, Spacestation para ika

Malakas parin yung pwersa nang mga lobbyist oil companies, tinitira nila sa politika yung mga pro climate change...


Sa ngayun meron panibagong problema, yung methane emission due to melting ice/glaciers.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/09/150917091306.htm



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LclL5oPB-kM
Matagal na merong emission na ito mga since ice age hanggang matunaw hanggang ngayon .
Organic decaying mga natural na emission.
 
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