
Yellowstone

Moscow



Hostel in Vietnam

Hong Kong


Dubai

Wooden church in Norway

Winnipeg



Japan

New York City

British Columbia

Somewhere in Space

Tea field India. A few hazards?

Yosemite

Yellowstone

Moscow



Hostel in Vietnam

Hong Kong


Dubai

Wooden church in Norway

Winnipeg



Japan

New York City

British Columbia

Somewhere in Space

Tea field India. A few hazards?

Yosemite
This is what happens when there is no team salary caps. The teams that are located in markets where they haul in profits hand over fist can buy a championship. The Dodgers payroll is over 3 times that of Tampa Bay. Both of these teams are facing off in the World Series.
| 1 | New York Yankees | 0.550 | 28 | $77,215,694 | $9,920,725 | $21,482,977 | $6,593,300 | – | $109,439,081 |
| 2 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0.717 | 28 | $77,165,961 | $493,889 | $16,917,530 | $11,339,500 | – | $107,917,397 |
| 3 | Boston Red Sox | 0.400 | 28 | $34,811,788 | $17,903,483 | $15,053,004 | $19,962,928 | – | $83,710,390 |
| 4 | Houston Astros | 0.483 | 28 | $61,049,512 | $18,763,334 | $250,000 | $6,075,200 | – | $82,536,161 |
| 5 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0.467 | 28 | $57,105,401 | $13,236,891 | $7,762,073 | $6,399,500 | – | $78,643,547 |
| 6 | New York Mets | 0.433 | 28 | $46,017,813 | $15,399,881 | $14,418,790 | $4,947,000 | – | $77,603,005 |
| 7 | Chicago Cubs | 0.567 | 28 | $66,116,504 | $6,448,626 | $1,464,463 | $11,069,500 | – | $75,596,171 |
| 8 | San Francisco Giants | 0.483 | 28 | $40,474,622 | $1,428,006 | $13,996,618 | $22,631,250 | – | $73,321,225 |
| 9 | San Diego Padres | 0.617 | 28 | $54,293,958 | $3,531,020 | $13,971,215 | $6,086,600 | – | $72,597,954 |
| 10 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0.517 | 28 | $51,757,860 | $12,343,763 | $11,000,000 | $7,340,100 | – | $72,246,343 |
| 11 | Washington Nationals | 0.433 | 28 | $45,664,863 | $20,500,582 | $387,096 | $2,563,500 | – | $68,317,703 |
| 12 | Los Angeles Angels | 0.433 | 28 | $56,525,010 | $509,650 | $3,356,290 | $6,884,500 | – | $66,040,893 |
| 13 | Texas Rangers | 0.367 | 28 | $30,877,925 | $16,905,177 | $14,338,320 | $4,301,000 | – | $63,214,137 |
| 14 | Atlanta Braves | 0.583 | 28 | $50,458,292 | $7,255,497 | $500,284 | $17,610,000 | – | $63,061,931 |
| 15 | Colorado Rockies | 0.433 | 28 | $23,940,328 | $17,205,744 | $24,851,852 | $4,017,500 | – | $61,808,533 |
| 16 | Arizona Diamondbacks | 0.417 | 28 | $20,283,697 | $1,589,593 | $34,416,446 | $4,524,600 | $563,500 | $59,998,752 |
| 17 | Cincinnati Reds | 0.517 | 28 | $51,957,121 | $658,696 | $1,922,138 | $6,117,500 | – | $55,638,685 |
| 18 | Minnesota Twins | 0.600 | 28 | $45,057,558 | $6,876,058 | $7,063,300 | $6,669,000 | – | $55,429,689 |
| 19 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0.533 | 28 | $33,467,052 | $5,114,444 | $14,167,030 | $6,643,100 | – | $54,497,060 |
| 20 | Chicago White Sox | 0.583 | 28 | $43,034,329 | $1,819,815 | $6,562,642 | $6,821,500 | – | $52,415,251 |
| 21 | Seattle Mariners | 0.450 | 28 | $24,865,136 | $3,268,960 | $29,208,712 | $5,731,000 | – | $48,933,829 |
| 22 | Detroit Tigers | 0.397 | 28 | $29,636,694 | $6,108,631 | $6,488,226 | $5,099,700 | – | $43,164,880 |
| 23 | Milwaukee Brewers | 0.483 | 28 | $28,464,819 | $1,203,704 | $2,984,938 | $4,963,300 | – | $39,934,086 |
| 24 | Cleveland Indians | 0.583 | 28 | $34,471,070 | $209,630 | $1,519,241 | $4,642,500 | $564,800 | $37,549,107 |
| 25 | Oakland Athletics | 0.600 | 28 | $35,283,875 | $902,038 | $113,148 | $3,957,000 | – | $36,720,178 |
| 26 | Kansas City Royals | 0.433 | 28 | $25,320,148 | $7,093,210 | $1,464,114 | $6,818,450 | – | $34,812,194 |
| 27 | Miami Marlins | 0.517 | 28 | $14,721,932 | $2,897,429 | $12,110,262 | $10,427,000 | – | $31,330,593 |
| 28 | Tampa Bay Rays | 0.667 | 28 | $23,621,315 | $1,958,020 | $2,086,951 | $4,537,125 | – | $28,290,689 |
| 29 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0.317 | 28 | $12,738,842 | $8,462,127 | $2,187,508 | $2,817,500 | $5,750,000 | $25,087,837 |
| 30 | Baltimore Orioles | 0.417 | 28 | $10,252,278 | $11,102,531 | $1,264,595 |

Ronda is a town in the Spanish province of Málaga. It is located about 105 km (65 mi) west of the city of Málaga, within the autonomous community of Andalusia. Its population is about 35,000 inhabitants.
It now is one of the towns and villages that is included in the Sierra de las Nieves Natural Park.

Ronda is situated in a mountainous area about 750 m (2,460 ft) above mean sea level. The Guadalevín River runs through the city, dividing it in two and carving out the steep, 100-plus-meter-deep El Tajo canyon above which the city perches. The Spanish fir (Abies pinsapo) is endemic to the mountains surrounding Ronda.






Hungry now?
MacLean & MacLean were a Juno Award nominated, Canadian musical-comedy duo. They performed regularly in Canada between 1972 and 1998, and recorded seven albums. The duo consisted of brothers Gary MacLean (25 June 1944 – 5 December 2001) and Blair MacLean (2 December 1942 – 29 October 2008). The MacLeans were originally from Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, but were later based in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Wired
How is it possible that a dozen different motorists around the Russian city of Chelyabinsk were able to capture video of a massive meteor flying through the sky? Because almost everyone in Russia has a dash-mounted video camera in their car.
The sheer size of the country, combined with lax — and often corrupt — law enforcement, and a legal system that rarely favors first-hand accounts of traffic collisions has made dash cams all but a requirement for motorists.
“You can get into your car without your pants on, but never get into a car without a dash cam,” Aleksei Dozorov, a motorists’ rights activist in Russia told Radio Free Europe last year.
Do a search for “Russia dash cam crash” in YouTube — or even better, Yandex.ru, the county’s equivalent of Google — and you’ll find thousands of videos showing massive crashes, close calls and attempts at insurance fraud by both other drivers and pedestrians.
A combination of inexpensive cameras, flash memory and regulations passed by the Interior Ministry in 2009 that removed any legal hurdles for in-dash cameras has made it easy and cheap for drivers to install the equipment.
And it’s turned into an online phenomenon.
YouTube content policing means some of the most disturbing videos get pulled from U.S. video sites almost immediately, but as Marina Galperina reported at Animal New York last year, sites like the Ru CHP LiveJournal community are filled with disturbing videos of profanity-laden fist-fights, massive crashes and gruesome deaths, all captured on camera and shared for the world to see.
But then there are times like today, when dash cams catch a once-in-a-lifetime meteor falling from the sky, from every possible angle — something that couldn’t have happened just a few years ago.
Halley VI Research Station is the first fully relocatable research station in the world. It was commissioned in 2006 and its unique and innovative structure was the result of an international design competition in collaboration with the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). The state-of-the-art research facility is segmented into eight modules, each sitting atop ski-fitted, hydraulic legs. These can be individually raised to overcome snow accumulation and each module towed independently to a new location.
The station took four years to build and delivered its first scientific data in 2012. Its iconic design houses a cutting-edge science platform and modern, comfortable accommodation.
The central red module contains the communal areas for dining, relaxation etc., while the blue modules provide accommodation, laboratories, offices, generators, an observation platform and many other facilities. Remote scientific equipment, set up for long-term monitoring, is housed in a number of cabooses around the perimeter of the site, which also contains numerous aerials and arrays for studying atmospheric conditions and space weather.
Science at Halley VI provides vital information for a global understanding of ozone depletion, polar atmospheric chemistry, sea-level rise and climate change. Since it was first established in 1956, meteorological and atmospheric data has been continually collected at Halley, providing an unbroken record.
The station operates throughout the year with a maximum population of 70 in the summer and an average of 16 over winter. The Emperor penguin colony near Halley, which is present from May to February, is a special attraction, while other recreational trips take members further inland towards the “hinge zone” where the floating ice shelf is joined to the continent.
There have been six Halley bases built so far. The first four were all buried by snow accumulation and crushed until they were uninhabitable. Various construction methods were tried, from unprotected wooden huts to steel tunnels. Halley V had the main buildings built on steel platforms that were raised annually to keep them above the snow surface. However, as the station’s legs were fixed in the ice it could not be moved and its occupation became precarious, having flowed too far from the mainland to a position at risk of calving as in iceberg.
See also: https://markozen.com/2017/01/15/how-antarctic-bases-went-from-wooden-huts-to-sci-fi-chic/
The Sukhoi Su-34 (Russian: Сухой Су-34) (export designation: Su-32, NATO reporting name: Fullback) is a Russian twin-seat fighter-bomber. It is intended to replace the Sukhoi Su-24. The jet has a different look to it as it has a duck-billed nose.
| Role | Fighter-bomber |
|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Sukhoi |
| First flight | 13 April 1990 |
| Introduction | 2012 (plan) |
| Status | In production |
| Primary user | Russian Air Force |
| Produced | 2006–present |
| Number built | 136 of plus 7 prototypes |
| Unit cost | US$36 million |
| Developed from | Sukhoi Su-27 |
General characteristics
Performance

This jet has really nice sleek lines.



The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is an astronomical interferometer of 66 radio telescopes in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile, which observe electromagnetic radiation at millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths. The array has been constructed on the 5,000 m (16,000 ft) elevation Chajnantor plateau – near the Llano de Chajnantor Observatory and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment. This location was chosen for its high elevation and low humidity, factors which are crucial to reduce noise and decrease signal attenuation due to Earth’s atmosphere. ALMA is expected to provide insight on star birth during the early Stelliferous era and detailed imaging of local star and planet formation.
ALMA is an international partnership among Europe, the United States, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and Chile. Costing about US$1.4 billion, it is the most expensive ground-based telescope in operation. ALMA began scientific observations in the second half of 2011 and the first images were released to the press on 3 October 2011. The array has been fully operational since March 2013.
The initial ALMA array is composed of 66 high-precision antennas, and operates at wavelengths of 3.6 to 0.32 millimeters (31 to 1000 GHz). The array has much higher sensitivity and higher resolution than earlier submillimeter telescopes such as the single-dish James Clerk Maxwell Telescope or existing interferometer networks such as the Submillimeter Array or the Institut de Radio Astronomie Millimétrique (IRAM) Plateau de Bure facility.
The antennas can be moved across the desert plateau over distances from 150 m to 16 km, which will give ALMA a powerful variable “zoom”, similar in its concept to that employed at the centimetre-wavelength Very Large Array (VLA) site in New Mexico, United States.
The high sensitivity is mainly achieved through the large numbers of antenna dishes that will make up the array.
The telescopes were provided by the European, North American and East Asian partners of ALMA. The American and European partners each provided twenty-five 12-meter diameter antennas, that compose the main array. The participating East Asian countries are contributing 16 antennas (four 12-meter diameter and twelve 7-meter diameter antennas) in the form of the Atacama Compact Array (ACA), which is part of the enhanced ALMA.
The complex was built primarily by European, U.S., Japanese, and Canadian companies and universities. Three prototype antennas have undergone evaluation at the Very Large Array since 2002.
General Dynamics C4 Systems and its SATCOM Technologies division was contracted by Associated Universities, Inc. to provide twenty-five of the 12 m antennas, while European manufacturer Thales Alenia Space provided the other twenty-five principal antennas (in the largest-ever European industrial contract in ground-based astronomy). Japan constructed 16 Antennas. The first antenna was delivered in 2008, the last in 2011.
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of Europe, North America and East Asia in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded in Europe by the European Southern Observatory (ESO), in North America by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science Council of Taiwan (NSC) and in East Asia by the National Institutes of Natural Sciences of Japan (NINS) in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan. ALMA construction and operations are led on behalf of Europe by ESO, on behalf of North America by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), which is managed by Associated Universities, Inc (AUI) and on behalf of East Asia by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ). The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of the construction, commissioning and operation of ALMA. Its current director since February 2018 is Sean Dougherty.
What is ALMA?
Half of all light in the universe is in millimeter-wavelength light between the far infrared and radio waves. ALMA can detect this light, which is emitted by cool objects and distant objects. It’s possible thanks to the telescope’s location at 16,400 feet in the driest desert on Earth, and because of the incredible precision of its 66 antennas.
All telescopes are limited in their angular resolution by the ratio of their aperture to the wavelength they observe, explained Michael Thornburn, head of the ALMA department of engineering. ALMA is an aperture synthesis telescope.
“We cannot make a single aperture 15 kilometers across, so we do it in pieces,” he said. “The signals from individual dishes are combined to build up the image from a single large aperture.”
Radio signals from distant cosmic sources arrive at each dish at ever-so-slightly different times, and these are combined with the signals from every other antenna. This technique, interferometry, allows ALMA to operate like a single huge dish with an adaptable radius.
In a carefully choreographed ballet, each dish moves in unison with the others to change the telescope’s observing area. Along with moving in place, giant transporter trucks, specially designed for the dishes, can pick them up and cart them across the Chajnantor Plateau to one of 192 concrete pads. At their greatest distance apart–16 kilometers–ALMA’s angular resolution will be equivalent to the Hubble Space Telescope, Peck said.
ALMA is observing sources that are 10 times weaker than those observed with other arrays, explained Pierre Cox, ALMA’s incoming director. This is key to ALMA’s capability for observing phenomena like star formation, he said.
“Future observations should allow us to detect dark matter substructure and shed light on its nature,” he added.
There’s much more to learn about how ALMA works, and why astronomers are so excited about it–stay tuned for more dispatches from the Atacama.



Wanda Lavonne Jackson (born October 20, 1937) is a retired American singer, songwriter, pianist and guitarist who had success in the mid-1950s and 1960s as one of the first popular female rockabilly singers, and a pioneering rock-and-roll artist. She is known to many as the “Queen of Rockabilly” or the “First Lady of Rockabilly”.
