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2009/6/6 Heavenly Hawaii!
Heavenly HawaiiOahu: Makapuu Beach Park on Oahu is an idyllic beach setting. URL: http://guides.travel.msn.com/Guides/MSNTravelSlideShow.aspx?destinationid=13656&cp-documentid=412449 "...Hawaii hotels are offering unprecedented discounts, freebies and other incentives..." Quote MSN Travel Articles 2007/6/15 Pu'u 'O'o Crater & Petunia Flow |
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Philly trades Forsberg to Nashville After weeks of speculation, the Flyers have traded Peter Forsberg to the Predators for Scottie Upshall, Ryan Parent, along with a first and third round pick. ...more |
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NHL.com - News
Microsoft has unveiled a public beta of its MSN Soapbox video-upload service, its competitor to Google's popular YouTube service.
The service, which Microsoft unveiled last September, has been available to beta testers only by invitation for several months. But now anyone can test out the service by going to this Web site, reports the the LiveSide blog, which tracks Microsoft's Windows Live Internet services...
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Computerworld - Microsoft's YouTube rival arrives in public beta
President Bush Welcomes Stanley Cup Champion Carolina Hurricanes
President George W. Bush receives a personalized team sweater from the Carolina Hurricane's team captain, Rod Brind'Amour, as the team was honored Friday, Feb. 2, 2007, at the White House for winning the 2006 Stanley Cup. White House photo by Paul Morse
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President Bush Welcomes Stanley Cup Champion Carolina Hurricanes
Agenda Set For Upcoming Planetary Defense Conference
"Some believe that all of this is science fiction," Dr. William H. Ailor stated, "but we know that an asteroid (Apophis) 300 meters in diameter, large enough to cause serious damage, will pass within 20,000 miles of Earth-closer than our weather satellites-in 2029, and an impact by the same asteroid in 2036 cannot be ruled out. This conference will help improve our readiness should we need to defend our planet in the future."
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Agenda Set For Upcoming Planetary Defense Conference
HONOLULU - NASA astronaut Edward Lu is campaigning for a new spacecraft that would divert asteroids on a path to slam into Earth.
The small space tractor, costing between $200 million and $300 million, would hover near an asteroid to exert enough gravitational pull that the space rock's orbit would change and a collision with our planet would be averted, Lu told an audience at the University of Hawaii-Manoa Monday night.
"We're only trying to get a really tiny change in the velocity of the asteroid to prevent an impact," said Lu, a former University of Hawaii solar physicist.
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Astronaut touts asteroid-bumping mission - Space News - MSNBC.com
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http://www.hawaiisuperferry.com/
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starbulletin.com | News | /2007/01/20/
Posted: January 19,2007 04:48 PM
Jim Mendoza - jmendoza@kgmb9.com
Hawaii Superferry's ticket to interisland travel is still 4,000 miles away in Mobile, Alabama. But it's closer to setting sail for home port...
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Superferry Out of Dry Dock - KGMB9 - Hawaii's Severe Weather Station | KGMB9 Top Stories
Since it formed over 4.5 billion years ago, Earth has been hit many times by asteroids and comets whose orbits bring them into the inner solar system. These objects, collectively known as Near Earth Objects or NEOs, still pose a danger to Earth today. What can be done if one of these surveys finds an asteroid on a collision course with the Earth? Scientists and engineers are looking at ways of using a spacecraft to gently change the orbit of an asteroid. One promising approach is the "gravity tractor" invented by NASA astronauts Ed Lu and Stan Love. Hear from UH Institute for Astronomy researchers David Tholen, Robert Jedicke, Nick Kaiser, and NASA astronaut Ed Lu as they discuss the potential threat of Killer Asteroids and what we can do about them.
Asteroids: What are they?
Dr David Tholen is a planetary astronomer at the UH Institute for Astronomy and the discoverer of Apophis, an asteroid that will pass within 20,000 miles of the Earth in 2029.
Asteroids: How Dangerous are they?
Dr Robert Jedicke is an astronomer at the UH Institute for Astronomy, following an earlier career as a particle physicist. He is responsible for designing the software that will determine the orbits of any new asteroids that Pan-STARRS discovers.
Asteroids: How can we find then?
Dr Nick Kaiser is a cosmologist at the UH Institute for Astronomy. He is the director of the Pan-STARRS telescope project in Hawaii that will soon be the world's most powerful instrument for discovering moving objects such as asteroids.
Asteroids: How could we protect ourselves from them?
Dr Ed Lu used to be a solar physicist at the UH Institute for Astronomy before becoming a NASA astronaut in 1995. He spent six months aboard the International Space Station in 2003. More recently he has proposed a "gravity tractor" that could alter the orbit of a dangerous asteroid if necessary.
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AstroTalk - Killer Asteroids
Panoramic telescope could provide early warning
by Bobby Command
West Hawaii Today
bcommand@westhawaiitoday.com
Saturday, January 6, 2007 9:02 AM HST
A system designed to survey the skies for potentially threatening objects near Earth is being proposed for the summit of Mauna Kea.
The Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System involves a wide-field imaging facility being developed at the University of Hawaii's Institute for Astronomy.
It will be the subject of 6 p.m. scoping meetings on Jan. 23 at Kealakehe Intermediate School, Jan. 24 at the Waimea Civic Center and Jan. 25 at the University of Hawaii at Hilo Campus Center.
By combining relatively small mirrors with very large digital cameras, the Institute for Astronomy would develop and deploy an economical observing system able to observe the entire available sky several times each month.
The immediate goal of the system, funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, would search for and characterize Earth-approaching objects, both asteroids and comets, that might pose a danger to our planet.
A huge volume of images produced by this system would also provide valuable data for many other kinds of scientific programs, including large-scale mapping of the universe.
According to the Institute for Astronomy, the threat posed by these objects is small, but the projected outcome of such a collision could range from local devastation to an extinction-level event.
Many scientists agree that an asteroid about 10 miles in diameter struck the Yucatan area about 65 million years ago, helping cause the extinction of dinosaurs. Another collision about 50,000 years ago caused the Barringer Meteor Crater near Flagstaff, Ariz., and released energy estimated to be equivalent to that of a large thermonuclear device.
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University of Hawaii at Manoa
UH System Current News, HI - 5 hours ago
HAWAII - Replacing a University of Hawaii telescope atop Mauna Kea with one that can spot Earth-threatening asteroids and comets is the subject of public ...
Sponsors of Pan-STARRS project seeking support
KPUA, HI - 12 hours ago
By AP. HILO, Hawaii (AP) _ Sponsors of the Pan-STARRS project are trying a new approach to win public support for the latest astronomy project on Mauna Kea. ...
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Hawaii astronomers say Mauna Kea is the preferred site for the new ...
Honolulu Star-Bulletin, HI - 20 hours ago
By Helen Altonn. Mauna Kea would be the best place scientifically for a proposed telescope to track potentially dangerous near-Earth asteroids and comets, ...
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