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Friday, June 15, 2012

A class 1 hurricane ‘Carlotta’ become in the Pacific


"Carlotta" a Category hurricane becomes in the Pacific and affecting northwest parallel to the Mexican west coast, said the National Meteorological Service (SMN) of Mexico. Meteorologist Bandala Erendira said at 10:00 local time (15:00 GMT) "Carlotta" became a hurricane and its danger rating went from "moderate" to "strong." The hurricane, the second this season in the Pacific, is located 195 kilometers south-southeast of Puerto Angel, Oaxaca state (southern Mexico), and 530 miles south of Acapulco, Guerrero. The sources of SMN, an agency of National Water Commission (Conagua), added that maintaining an alert for the coastal strip running from Tonala Bar, in the state of Chiapas, to Tecpan de Galeana, in Guerrero, southern Mexico.

Civilization is predictable to come into contact with outer space being in 20 years


A famous astronomer said that mankind will have contact with outer space bright being within 20 years (as reported on 4 "Daily Mail" Britain). The current discovery of Earth-like planets outside our solar system and an important job American NASA space by 2009 civilization will make a big step toward contact with outer space beings. In a BBC documentary screened in England tomorrow night, the American astrophysicist Frank Delaroix says: "It makes us more optimistic." Delaroix began in 1961 with a plan to seek extraterrestrial intelligent life. He said: "We are confident that within 20 years we know about the situation in extraterrestrial life.

A dying star points its gun gamma rays Sun


A star located 7,000 light years from Earth will generate a flow of poisonous gamma rays and is aim it seems that to our solar system, according to a team of physicists and astronomers. Within a few hundred thousand years, in short, as the clocks of cosmologists-Rayet star Wolf 104 (WR104), actually more of a binary system of two stars that revolve around a common center of gravity, will explode violently in a supernova
except it will not do since most huge stars, according to Peter Tut hill, a researcher at the School of Physics, University of Sydney (Australia), published this month in the important Astrophysical Journal work of several years leading a team of researchers.