08 abril 2015

Full Moon in Earth's Shadow



Last week the Full Moon was completely immersed in Earth's dark umbral shadow, just briefly though. The total phase of the April 4, 2015 lunar eclipse lasted less than 5 minutes, the shortest total lunar eclipse of the century. In fact, sliding just within the Earth's umbral shadow's northern edge, the lunar north stayed relatively bright, while a beautiful range of blue and red hues emerged across the rest of the Moon's Earth-facing hemisphere. The reddened light within the shadow that reaches the lunar surface is filtered through the lower atmosphere. Seen from a lunar perspective it comes from all the sunsets and sunrises around the edges of the silhouetted Earth. Close to the shadow's edge, the bluer light is still filtered through Earth's atmosphere, but originates as rays of sunlight pass through layers high in the upper stratosphere. That light is colored by ozone that absorbs red light and transmits bluer hues. In this sharp telescopic view of totality from Auckland, New Zealand, planet Earth, the Moon's north pole has been rotated to the top of the frame.



from NASA http://ift.tt/1c6EOCJ

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Source for more facts follow NowYouKno





Source for more facts follow NowYouKno


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cherry blossom at sundown, photographed by me, april 2015.10...





cherry blossom at sundown, photographed by me, april 2015.


10 frames.


image & animation credit: ageofdestruction.


age
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This notebook, handwritten by Einstein and found after his...





This notebook, handwritten by Einstein and found after his death, has been put online for anyone to read. Check it out here!


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pbstv:COMING TO PBS THIS FALL: American Epic, a three-part...





pbstv:



COMING TO PBS THIS FALL: American Epic, a three-part series exploring the 1920s era when the music of everyday Americans was recorded for the first time.


Get a first look, here.



Presented by T Bone Burnett, Robert Redford and Jack White? Yes please.


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Source for more facts follow NowYouKno





Source for more facts follow NowYouKno


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Source for more facts follow NowYouKno





Source for more facts follow NowYouKno


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nychealth:Join our campaign: Talk to Your Baby. Their Brain...









nychealth:



Join our campaign: Talk to Your Baby. Their Brain Depends on It.


NYC Health is excited to announce the launch of NYC’s new campaign, Talk to Your Baby. For more information and tips about talking, reading, and singing to help build your baby’s brain:


Visit our website: Talk to Your Baby


Join us on Facebook at Our Littlest New Yorkers


To receive timely tips on talking to your baby, text TALK to 877877.


Para recibir consejos de cómo hablarle a su bebé, envíe el texto HABLE al 877877.



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These are five intriguing facts about space!Join us for more...





















These are five intriguing facts about space!


Join us for more inspiring facts here.


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Darwin Comes To China

“Thomas Huxley’s Evolution and Ethics took China by storm — phrases such as the strong are victorious and the weak perish resonated in the national consciousness and “spread like a prairie fire, setting ablaze the hearts and blood of many young people,” noted philosopher Hu Shih.


People even adopted Darwin’s ideas as names. “The once famous General Chen Chiung-ming called himself ‘Ching-tsun’ or ‘Struggling for Existence.’ Two of my schoolmates bore the names ‘Natural Selection Yang’ and ‘Struggle for Existence Sun.’


“Even my own name bears witness to the great vogue of evolutionism in China. I remember distinctly the morning when I asked my second brother to suggest a literary name for me. After only a moment’s reflection, he said, ‘How about the word shih [fitness] in the phrase “Survival of the Fittest”?’ I agreed and, first using it as a nom de plume, finally adopted it in 1910 as my name.”


(Hu Shih, Living Philosophies, 1931.)


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April 8th 1953: Kenyatta sentencedOn this day in 1953, future...



Jomo Kenyatta (1889-1978)





Children hold signs calling for Kenyatta's release





Kenyatta celebrating his release in 1963



April 8th 1953: Kenyatta sentenced


On this day in 1953, future Kenyan President Jomo Kenyatta was sentenced to imprisonment for his alleged role in the Mau Mau rebellion. Kenyatta was born in around 1889 to a Kikuyu family, leaving home at a young age to study and work at a Church of Scotland mission, and from there later moved to Nairobi. The young Kenyatta became involved in the burgeoning independence movement that sought to throw off British colonial rule in Kenya. He entered politics full-time, and became general secretary of the Kikuyu Central Association, which fought against policies it felt harmful to Kenyan interests. Kenyatta notably helped to organise the fifth Pan-African Congress in 1945, which discussed mass nationalist and independence movements across African countries. In 1947, he was elected president of the Kenya African Union and took a leading role in the nationalist movement. The early 1950s saw Kenya rocked by the Mau Mau rebellion, which was a bloody campaign led by Kikuyu against British settlers, in retaliation to the violence committed by the British against the Kenyan people. While there was little evidence linking Kenyatta to the movement, he was considered a subversive presence and was thus arrested for supposed involvement in the violence. In April 1953, he was sentenced to seven years imprisonment, and his condition remained a key issue of the Kenyan independence movement, with frequent calls for his release. He was finally released in August 1963, and immediately joined negotiations for Kenyan independence. The new republic elected Kenyatta as first their prime minister and later as president, making him Kenya’s first president and founding father. Under his leadership, Kenya had favourable relations with the West and the economy boomed, though most of this wealth was concentrated in the elites. Jomo Kenyatta died at Mombasa in 1978, and was succeeded by Daniel arap Moi.


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(From WHO Europe)





(From WHO Europe)


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Via: http://ift.tt/1eWNk1f VISIT TODAY for free...





Via: http://ift.tt/1eWNk1f VISIT TODAY for free psychology information & resources.


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