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Thursday, September 9, 2010
Belgian Setting Chip Making Record
A Belgian maker of French fries, the country's proud national dish, has set a new world record for non-stop chip-making after frying mountains of potato strips for 83 consecutive hours.
The record by 53-year-old Chris Verschueren, owner of a French fries business, beat by 11 hours a previous record of 72 hours set in 1987 by a Briton chip chef.
"My fingers are burnt, my feet are sore and my wrist is painful," he told Belga national news agency. "But it doesn't matter, I'm going to party now."
From the time he turned on the heat Friday morning in his village of Kastel till he ran out of steam Monday night, Verschueren cooked up 1,500 kilos of chips, taking a 100-minute break after 20 hours for a shower and a stretch.
His bid to set a new record for the amount of chips sold -- 1,500 bags -- failed however.
The new world record-holder embarked on the challenge in order to raise funds for a children's hospital as his own five-year-old has been ill since birth.
Source : ABS-CBN News
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Chocolate Bath
Dark chocolate bathroom Recipe products and chocolate Spa treatments for chocoholics How about bathing with it? That’s exactly what a hot springs Spa Resort in Geneva, Switzerland. A woman tastes chocolate while enjoying the chocolate bath in the beauty saloon If you recall, this spa also offers wine. green tea and coffee baths. The water in the bath is mixed with cacao and fragrant bath powders while chocolate in its liquid form is poured over the bodies of the bathers. Couples can have fun smearing the chocolate seduction over each other’s bodies or lick it off.
White Diamond
A 196-carat white diamond recovered from the Letseng mine in Lesotho. Price Offers for the stone, sold as a rough diamond, could come in at between $7.8 million and $11.8 million (up to £7.7 million), Alison Turner, a London-based analyst at Panmure
If diamonds are a girl’s best friend, then most women’s eyes will be sparkling at the prospect of this latest find.
Stretching a dazzling 3cms in width, this 196-carat rough white stone will fetch a ‘substantial’ price when it is sold by Gem Diamonds.
The magnificent rock was found at the company’s mine in Lesotho, a small kingdom in South Africa, and is expected to produce top colour and clarity polished diamonds.
This remarkable rough diamond is expected to achieve a substantial price per carat as preliminary examinations indicate that it is expected to produce top colour and top clarity polished diamonds,' the company said in a statement.
London-listed miner Gem has found three of the world’s 20 largest diamonds since it acquired the mine in 2006 including the 603-carat Lesotho Promise, which sold for $12.4million (£8m).
The Lesotho government owns a 30 per cent stake in the mine.
The find comes a year after fellow Southern Africa diamond miner Petra unearthed a 507-carat stone near Johannesburg.
The Cullinan Heritage, the 19th largest diamond ever found, was sold to a Hong Kong jeweller in February for $35.3m (£22.9m).
The find is still dwarfed by the Cullinan Diamond which was discovered in 1905.
At 3,106 carats it was the largest gem-quality rough diamond ever found but the biggest polished stone produced from it, the Great Star of Africa - 530 carats - is a teardrop shape.
The Koh-i-Noor diamond, which is part of the Crown Jewels, dates back to 1306.
The gem is a round cut but at 105 carats, it originated in India but was seized by Britain as a spoil of war in 1849.
It supposedly brings good luck to female owners and misfortune or death to any male who wears or owns it.
Source : Diamonds
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Spacecraft to Fly Into The Sun
Flying into the sun's corona is suicidal to be sure, but scientists want to find out how the sun's atmosphere is heated.
Why the sun's atmosphere is nearly 200 times hotter than its visible surface is a long-standing mystery. A new spacecraft, called Solar Probe Plus, aims to find some answers.
Flying directly into the sun's corona is a suicidal mission to be sure, but scientists and engineers at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab in Baltimore, which is developing Solar Probe Plus for NASA, plan to keep the spacecraft alive as long as possible.
It's not going to be easy. For starters, the probe will need to withstand temperatures up to about 2,600 degrees Fahrenheit. Plus, its heat shield can't ablate, or boil away like the shields on capsules returning through Earth's atmosphere are designed to do. That would pollute the particles and measurements Solar Probe Plus is being dispatched to gather.
"The whole point of the mission is to do particle detection and in situ measurements. If you're measuring part of your shield that's not going to work," Andy Dantzler, Solar Probe Plus project manager at Johns Hopkins University, told Discovery News.
The spacecraft also needs to be extremely lightweight so that it can fly.
"You need a lot of speed to go against the direction of the Earth," said Dantzler.
Eight weeks after launch, Solar Probe Plus will arrive at the sun to begin the first of 24 orbits using flybys of Venus to gradually shrink its distance to the sun. Eventually, it will come as close as about 4 million miles, which is inside the orbit of Mercury and about eight times closer than any previous spacecraft.
NASA is in the process of reviewing proposals for instruments to be included on the probe, but the overall mission goals are to figure out the sun's heating mechanism and determine how it whips up the solar wind -- the continuous blast of charged particles that permeate the solar system and define its boundaries.
"We want to know what it is that accelerates the plasma," Dantzler said. "We know it has to do with magnetic fields, but we don't really know how that comes about."
Various incarnations of Solar Probe Plus have been at the top of solar physicists' wish lists for more than 50 years, but until recently the technical problems exceeded the available budget to solve them.
"Solar Probe will be an extraordinary and historic mission, exploring what is arguably the last region of the solar system to be visited by a spacecraft," a NASA science oversight team headed by David McComas with the Southwest Research Institute in Texas, wrote in a report recommending the mission.
In addition to answering some basic science questions, information gathered by Solar Probe Plus could have some practical impacts by helping to improve space weather forecasts. Solar storms and magnetic disturbances from the sun can disrupt satellites and radio transmission, as well as take out power grids on Earth.
"Right now, predicting space weather is kind of like trying to predict hurricanes without knowing the acceleration effects of the oceans. Without that, you really can't understand them at all," Dantzler said.
Solar Probe Plus, which will cost more than $1 billion, initially was to launch in 2015, but has been bumped to 2018 to spread out the cost. NASA is expected to select the probe's science instruments this month.
Source : Discovery News
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