Happy New Year 2021

WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY, HEALTHY, PROSPEROUS AND PURPOSEFUL NEW YEAR 2020

Friday, August 08, 2025

TECH WATCH


*Revolutionary Underwater Battery: Norway's Saltwater-Powered Innovation Could Transform Ocean Technology* 

Researchers at SINTEF Ocean in Norway have achieved a remarkable engineering breakthrough with the development of an underwater battery that operates entirely on saltwater, potentially revolutionizing how we power marine technology.

This innovative energy storage device represents a paradigm shift from conventional battery technology. Rather than relying on rare earth materials or hazardous chemicals, the Norwegian team's creation utilizes readily available aluminum and carbon-based electrodes within a seawater electrolyte system.

The battery's operation is elegantly simple yet highly effective. When the aluminum electrode contacts saltwater, it initiates a chemical reaction with ionic particles that generates a continuous electrical current. The device becomes operational the moment it touches ocean water and continues producing power throughout its underwater deployment.

What makes this technology particularly appealing is its inherent safety and simplicity. The battery requires no protective casing, complex wiring systems, or safety mechanisms to prevent explosive failures—hazards commonly associated with traditional battery technologies in marine environments.

Unlike conventional rechargeable batteries, this system follows a disposable, recyclable model designed for extended deployment in harsh marine conditions. Target applications include autonomous marine sensors, emergency flotation devices, underwater robotics, and covert naval operations requiring silent, reliable power sources.

The battery demonstrates exceptional resilience across extreme operating conditions, maintaining functionality in sub-freezing temperatures, high-pressure deep-sea environments, and contaminated waters without performance degradation.
SINTEF Ocean is currently developing modular configurations that can be scaled from compact sensor applications to large-scale ship-based power systems, offering flexibility across diverse marine applications.

The technology's sustainability credentials are particularly impressive, utilizing two of Earth's most abundant resources—seawater and aluminum—while producing zero environmental toxicity. This combination of environmental safety and operational reliability positions the battery as an ideal solution for expanding ocean exploration and developing autonomous coastal energy infrastructure.

Wednesday, August 06, 2025

REMEMBERING HISTORY: Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum: A Message to the World

Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum: Memory, Mourning, and a Message to the World


      The main building of the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, designed by Kenzō Tange in 1955.
                          Photo by Fg2, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons


Established in 1955, within Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park — designed to document the atomic bombing and advocate for nuclear disarmament and world peace.

Main building was designed by Kenzō Tange, with the East Wing added in 1991 and renovated (2017–2019) to include immersive, emotionally powerful exhibits such as projection mapping on a city model.

Over 50 million people visited between 1955 and 2005.

Exhibition Highlights:

Personal effects of victims (clothing, watches, a twisted tricycle)

The Human Shadow etched in stone — the imprint of a person vaporised by the blast

Chronological narrative of Hiroshima before, during, and after the bombing, plus global nuclear age context in the East Wing  .

Contextual insights into the global nuclear age (in the East Wing)

Total visitors since opening in 1955 exceeds 80 million (as of 2025), 
averaging more than one million annually — an educational pilgrimage for students and international visitors alike.

🔥 Flame of Peace

               View of the Flame of Peace and the Pond of Peace in Hiroshima Peace Park.
                               Photo by Fg2, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Designed by renowned architect Kenzō Tange in 1964. The base resembles two hands pressed together in prayer — symbolizing comfort for the dying and a universal plea for the abolition of nuclear weapons and was inaugurated on: August 1, 1964.

The flame has burned continuously since, and will continue until all nuclear weapons are eliminated from the Earth.

Positioned just north of the Memorial Cenotaph, in perfect alignment with the Peace Museum and the A‑Bomb Dome, forming the Park’s symbolic north–south peace axis.


🌊 Pond of Peace

    Pond of Peace reflecting the Memorial Cenotaph — a space of silence and solemn remembrance.
                       Photo by Mstyslav Chernov, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons


A reflective rectangular pond at the center of the Peace Memorial Park, encircling the Memorial Cenotaph so that the cenotaph and flame appear to float above the calm waters.

Originally a narrow water feature, the pond was expanded in 1964 with the installation of the Flame of Peace.

Dimensions: 17 m wide × 70 m long.

Its shallow, pristine water serves as a mirror, creating an atmosphere of tranquility and solemn reflection.


🧭 Spatial & Symbolic Layout

Visitors entering from the Museum move along the Peace Axis, encountering this sequence:

Museum → Cenotaph → Pond of Peace → Flame of Peace → A‑Bomb Dome

Each monument is deliberately aligned to guide the visitor through a journey of remembrance, reflection, and hope.


🕯️ In Summary

The Flame of Peace stands as a beacon of resilience and hope, refusing to be extinguished until humanity achieves a nuclear-free world.

The Pond of Peace serves as a mirror of tranquility and contemplation, deepening the emotional impact of the Park’s message.

Together, they form Hiroshima’s living testimony — a place where the past speaks to the present with a single, urgent message:

"PEACE OR PERISH."


A thousand grateful thanks to ChatGPT for its wonderful help in creating this blogpost  and  Wikimedia Commons for the beautiful photos


DARK PAGES OF HISTORY: HIROSHIMA: A WARNING IGNORED

                                                     Photo: Hiroshima Peace Memorial
                  Photo by Hidetoshi Tsuge, via Wikimedia Commons, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.


HIROSHIMA: A WARNING IGNORED — The Horrors of War and the Silence of Humanity

“The unleashed power of the atom has changed everything except our way of thinking.”
— Albert Einstein

On August 6, 1945, a single atomic bomb named Little Boy was dropped on the city of Hiroshima, Japan, from the U.S. B-29 bomber Enola Gay. In an instant, the city was reduced to ashes. Over 70,000 people died instantly, and tens of thousands more succumbed later to severe burns, injuries, and radiation sickness.

Many of the victims were children walking to school, mothers feeding their babies, and innocent civilians simply going about their daily lives.

Yet, nearly eight decades later, what has humanity truly learned?

The Unending Curse of War

Hiroshima was not the first tragedy — and sadly, it wasn't the last. From the Korean War, Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq, to the ongoing Gaza crisis and Ukraine conflict, war continues to ravage the lives of innocent civilians, particularly women and children. Every war, regardless of its justification, leaves behind:

Ruined cities

Displaced people

Broken families

Unimaginable grief

Each bomb dropped, each bullet fired, is a failure of dialogue, of diplomacy, and above all — of compassion.

A World Addicted to Violence

We live in a world where military spending surpasses that of healthcare, education, or poverty alleviation. Nations speak of “strategic interests” while turning a blind eye to the human cost. The lives of ordinary people — farmers, shopkeepers, schoolchildren — become mere collateral damage.

Even peace has become a political slogan, rarely a global priority.

Can We Still Dream of Peace?

We must.

Because if Hiroshima taught us anything, it is that science without humanity is dangerous, and power without conscience is lethal. The mushroom cloud over Hiroshima is not just history — it is a warning. A mirror to our darkest capabilities.

Let us not wait for another Hiroshima to wake up.

💔 Let Us Remember... and Act

Remember the innocents who perished not only in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but in every war since.

Speak up for peaceful solutions, not military interventions.

Teach the next generation the value of dialogue over destruction.

Support leaders and movements that prioritize human life over political gain.

“When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace.”
— Jimi Hendrix


🔥 A Personal Conviction

Let me share a thought that has long lived in my heart — a truth that has only deepened with time:

All wars are bad. All wars are evil. Never glorify any war.

No matter the cause, no matter the justification, war is always a failure of humanity. There is no honour in destruction, no greatness in killing, and no heroism in making others suffer. The glorification of war — through statues, speeches, or schoolbooks — only perpetuates a cycle of violence.

Let us honour not warriors, but peacemakers.
Not conquest, but compassion.
Not flags soaked in blood, but hands extended in friendship.


Let Hiroshima not be a forgotten memory — but a constant reminder.
Let it be a cry for peace in a deafening world of war.

A thousand grateful thanks to ChatGPT for its wonderful help in creating this blogpost and Hidetoshi Tsuge and  Wikimedia Commons for the beautiful photo.



Monday, August 04, 2025

DIGITAL WATCH

LAUGHTER THE BEST MEDICINE

ENVIRONMENT

GOOD PARENTING

SCIENCE WATCH

BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS

SELF-IMPROVEMENT

HEALTH WATCH

TECH WATCH

FACTS AND FIGURES

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY

Friday, August 01, 2025

HEALTH WATCH

SCIENCE WATCH

TECH WATCH

Thursday, July 31, 2025

FACTS AND FIGURES : GRAND CANYON HIT BY A MASSIVE METEORITE


Scientists have found evidence of a massive paleolake in the Grand Canyon, which was likely formed around 56,000 years ago due to a giant meteorite impact. This impact, which created the Meteor Crater in Arizona, is believed to have triggered a massive landslide that dammed the Colorado River, creating a lake approximately 50 miles long and 300 feet deep.

*Key Findings:*

- *Paleolake Existence*: Driftwood and lake sediments found in Stanton's Cave, located 150 feet above the current river level, suggest that a massive lake once existed in the area.
- *Meteorite Impact*: The impact of the meteorite is estimated to have generated an earthquake equivalent to a magnitude 5.4 to 6.0, causing shockwaves that shook loose unstable cliffs in the Grand Canyon.
- *Landslide and Dam*: The resulting landslide likely blocked the Colorado River, forming a natural dam that created the paleolake.

*Evidence and Research:*

- Researchers dated the driftwood to around 56,000 years ago, correlating it with the timing of the meteorite impact.
- Similar caves throughout the Grand Canyon region were examined, and ancient beaver tracks were found in areas inaccessible to water-dwelling animals today, further supporting the paleolake theory ¹ ².

*Implications:*

- This discovery provides new insights into the geological history of the Grand Canyon and the potential consequences of massive meteorite impacts on Earth's landscape.
- The study highlights the significance of considering the impact of such events on the environment and the potential hazards they pose ³.

Grateful thanks to WhatsApp Meta AI 

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY

Monday, July 28, 2025

PAINTING OF THE DAY