Thursday, May 8, 2014

Of old places and old friends



When the monsoon seems far, chasing the clouds will take you places. 
And if those are old places you often visited, the feeling is filled with nostalgia.
Even the barren Deccan landscape seems bright!
The winding roads seem adventurous and steep climb fun. Clouds hover, breeze blows and craziness takes over. 

Yes, you've made sure to take an old friend to old places.

<3



Sunday, May 4, 2014

Fossils : The Frozen Time


"No fossil is buried with its birth certificate" - Henry Gee, in Search of Deep Time: Beyond the Fossil Record to a New History of Life.

Fossils, the preserved remains, traces or impressions of life, are the physical evidences of past life and the environment. They freeze the time, many a times capturing the conditions a million years away from where any human began! These humble things speak volumes. A tiny shell can recite about the environment conditions and composition. Huge information is derived from them- past geologic time, mode of life, palaeoecology, how our Earth was, how life has evolved, and why we can relate or correlate one place to other. They even help us to 'categorise' or break the vast span of 4.6 billion years since Earth formed thus providing the 'Relative time'. The geological events are best described on basis of fossil content and a 'staircase' of time can be constructed. 

http://www.stratigraphy.org/index.php/ics-chart-timescale

The Hadean Eon is the 'hidden'portion of geologic time with negligible rock record or diagnostic fossils. The Archaen Eon often called as Eon of first life shows oldest know fossils. The first life forms probably arose around 3.8 billion years ago in the form of primitive organisms resembling bacteria and cyanobacteria. The Proterozoic saw multicellular life, colonial algae, sponges, and soft bodies invertebrates. The Ediacaran fauna dominated from 635 to 541 Ma.  The Phanerozoic came with complex life. The Palaeozoic Era saw a dramatic explosion of life, during Cambrian (Cambrian explosion), where most widespread diversification of life occurred, especially in oceans. Trilobites dominate the Cambrian fossil record. Life's quest on land too began by end of Ordovician. Plants began to colonize land. Jawless fishes, molluscs and corals flourished in oceans. First land plants, first amphibians, appearance of first reptiles characterizes Palaeozoic. Huge forest swamps occured in Carboniferous and Permian (that is how we get most of the coal from this strata).  What started with a great explosion of life ended with a dramatic extinction in Palaeozoic. The Permian extinction, the greatest extinction event in history of Earth, devastated marine biota-corals, echinoderms, graptolites, crinoids, trilobites. The lineages that survived went ahead in evolution and spread. 

Reptiles flourished and dominated the next era to come- Mesozoic. Dinosaurs ruled (remember Jurassic Park?) . Invertebrate life was dominated by the Ammonites and Belemnites along with Sponges, Crinoids, Echinoids. Crustaceans such as the first crabs made their appearance. Brachiopods declined, while Bivalves become more abundant. Amphibians were represented too. Flowering plants, or angiosperms also first appeared during this span. The famous Archaeopteryx, appeared in the upper Jurassic. The end of Cretaceous saw another huge event in geologic history with extinction. Dinosaurs were wiped out along with some marine invertebrates. The Cenozoic Era began with extinction of dinosaurs and is called "Age of Mammals". Whales, Saber tooth cats, horses, apes, elephants, giant sloths and finally humans appeared ~ 2-1.8 Ma. 

So, the way life has evolved and formed this complex staircase is extremely important in Palaeontology. The study of these fossils and their various aspects of formation, characteristics, types, evolution, etc. converges into a branch called Palaeontology. Fossils include everything from skeletons, teeth, impressions, parts preserved, cast or mold, tracks, bores, etc. From micro fossils to massive mammoths. A very small amount of life is preserved as fossils, as most of it decays. This process of preserving or fossilization in itself is complex yet wonderful. Rapid burial of the life form, undisturbed conditions, quick accumulation of sediments are some basic necessities. Best preserved in sedimentary rocks, on rare occasions unaltered remains or entire form may be preserved (extreme cold, dryness). Most of the times, it may be altered, or a cast or mould is formed. We  have mega fossils, which may be from animals or plants. Then there is Micropalaeontology, which deals with study of remains of micro organisms preserved as micro fossils. It is a 
huge weapon with numerous applications and scope. Summed beautifully as " The microscopic organisms are very inferior in individual energy to lions and elephants, but in their united influence they are far more important than all of these animals. " (Kennett, 1988). Ichnofossils, includes tracks & trails, bores-borings, footprints, coprolites, etc. 




 Fossils-the connecting links, the guiding tools, and literally a data chip holding information several 'GB' in a single place, maybe primitive but modern day geology and discoveries are still based on them. 

Some things last forever, no not just diamonds :) 
And Nature ensures it has created good impressions- the footprints in sands of time, the geologist's clock!




P.S: My love for fossils is pretty 'recent', ever since I own one gifted by a dear friend <3 Thanks!
 

Monday, April 7, 2014

Starry Starry Night


Astronomy, inarguably the oldest science known to us, is ever fascinating and ever mysterious! From the realms of our planet to the outer worlds, from the ocean of stars to the clouds where the stars themselves are born, astronomy is wide in its platform, having something for all. For me, it simply means the love for stars. Where these tiny twinkling points mean happiness and hope, a reason and beyond reasons. Most important, I feel, its extent and scope cannot be limited by human imagination or scientific definitions! Infinite, unlimited, unknown. Yes, it is indeed for those who don't work within boundaries!

Astronomers Without Borders is a global astronomy community where astronomy lovers and educators interact and participate in observing, outreach and arts in astronomy. One People, One Sky is what they believe in. 

http://astronomerswithoutborders.org/

The ongoing Global Astronomy Month is its annual celebration and their Global Star Party the ultimate observing event! April 5th was the set date for the event. It means that on this day people all over the world come out under the stars and skywatch! A wonderful concept of connecting and true to 'Astronomers Without Borders' theme that boundaries vanish when we look skyward. As a part of this Global celebrations and monthly scheduled public skywatching event, India's oldest amateur astronomy association and Pune's one of the most active- Jyotirvidya Parisanstha (JVP) organised a star party. 

http://www.jvp.org.in/

The event saw a great response with curious Punekars participating in it. It was held at Karandi village, near Nasrapur. JVP, equipped with it telescopes and a team of enthusiastic volunteers did an excellent show. Sky show, constellation identification, star lores, comet presentation, astro antakshari and of course telescopic viewing of Moon, Mars (with polar caps visible), Saturn (rings a stunner as usual), Jupiter (and its 4 huge moons) and the Orion Nebula, until the clouds played a spoil sport! It doesn't dampen the spirit, in fact it gives a reason to go the next time too! Its exciting as much as informative to attend the public star parties, with fun, friends and stars!

Go out, look up, appreciate the beauty!
You are bound to connect. 




Clear skies :)
On a lighter note, 



Thursday, April 3, 2014

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Poetry & Painting



The genius couldn't have said it better! 

For all the poetry and painting lovers <3

Monday, January 20, 2014

Straying away from Science



Move a bit away from the Science that fills your day! Let creativity take over and see what happens :) 

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Planetary Exploration...........Rewind 2013

Humans by nature are a curious lot. Always exploring, always setting a limit, crossing it and further setting a new limit. Space is a canvas for humans to sketch their ideas, play with technologies, overcome challenges and create wonderful mean machines capable of venturing astronomical distances where no human has ever gone! It comes with a lot of allied applications in defence, aeronautics, navigation, material sciences and even medical, apart from the enormous science! 

Planetary exploration began in 1960s with Venera, Mariner, and Apollo missions (to Venus, Mars and Moon) which distinguished the exploration fraternity as those who are not satisfied being limited by the spatial extent of the Earth. Everyday newer discoveries are made and old bench marks are being shifted. Better resolution (spectrally and spatially) data are available. There is a need for better understanding the other known yet mysterious lands, distant and near and at the same time comprehending the analogous processes on the Earth. With so little been done and so much to do, these are exciting times!

Japan's AKASTUKI a.k.a Venus Climate Orbiter is bravely travelling as a recovery effort to study the harsh and hellish Venus (Venus arrival 2015). The curious CURIOSITY celebrated its first birthday of landing on Mars in August 2013. It investigates the geology finding larger answers of past Martian environment. It zaps the rocks through its laser eyes. It is well equipped with gas chromatograph, mass spectrometer, laser spectrometer (suite called Sample Analysis at Mars), X-ray diffraction and fluorescence (CheMin), Mars Hand Lens Imager, Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer, Mast Camera, ChemCam to vaporize fine thin layers from Martian surface and identify the excited atoms using spectrometer and not to forget the Radiation Assessment Detector. Curiosity is a true geologist. Apart from this, MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) launched in November, aims to investigate what went wrong with Mars-its lost atmosphere and water. It is devoted to study the upper atmosphere and the loss of atmospheric gases.  

DAWN scanning one of the most interesting asteroid Vesta (a close-up like never before, its extreme terrain images released in an Atlas in 2013) and now on the way to the largest one Ceres. Studying these protoplanets DAWN would take us back in time, as it would throw some light on early solar system (the dawn of solar system), its evolution and processes. JUNO en route to unlock the Giant Jupiter's secrets (Jupiter arrival July 2016). It had a gravity assist Earth flyby in October 2013. JUNO aims to study in depth the atmosphere, its composition, clouds, and magnetosphere, magnetic field and auroras. 

On July 19, 2013, in an event celebrated the world over, CASSINI went into Saturn's shadow and imaged the planet, its seven moons, inner rings and our home Earth, in the background. The image released was a mosaic of 1600 images and a stunner. Hope you did wave at Saturn that time! Cassini continues to provide intriguing information about the Saturn system since 2004. As we entered a new year 2014 on our Earth, Cassini had a Titan flyby at 1400 kilometres altitude on the 1st. The New Horizons spacecraft already crossed Uranus orbit and awaits to unravel long standing mysteries of the newer horizons of Pluto (Pluto arrival July 2015). 

Coming closer to home, the nearest neighbour Moon too has visitors- NASA's LADEE (Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer) entered the Moon orbit around its equator on November 20th 2013, has begun to study the extremely thin atmospheric structure and composition along with the dust, through three main instruments- the Ultraviolet & Visible Light Spectrometer, Neutral Mass Spectrometer and Lunar Dust Experiment. 
The Chinese CHANG'E 3 landed on the desolate magnificent Moon on December 14th and a little rover YUTU was deployed. YUTU carries a ground penetrating radar that aims to provide the structure below. The LRO (Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter) already orbiting the Moon sent back a picture of the lander and rover on Christmas, to us Earthlings. 

The icing on the cake not to be forgotten, is with India entering the elite club of a handful nations attempting inter planetary mission on 5th November. The PSLV shot like firework from Sriharikota shooting hopes sky high of all Indians. The Mars Orbiter Mission is eight months and 600 million kilometres away from the Red Planet. Other than the technological demonstration it aims for scientific objectives of exploration of Martian surface, morphology, mineralogy and methane gas. 

With years to come, the challenges are plenty. To achieve what has never been attempted before, planet to planet! 

Image Credit:Olaf Frohn, 2012
Must see: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/whycassini/jpl/cassini20131112.html#.UsWcmfQW1bY

*P.S: Past and present NASA planetary data archived and distributed via http://pds.nasa.gov/