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Northwest Passage

tomahawk6

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070915/ap_on_sc/northwest_passage_8

PARIS - Arctic ice has shrunk to the lowest level on record, new satellite images show, raising the possibility that the Northwest Passage that eluded famous explorers will become an open shipping lane

The European Space Agency said nearly 200 satellite photos this month taken together showed an ice-free passage along northern Canada, Alaska and Greenland, and ice retreating to its lowest level since such images were first taken in 1978.

The waters are exposing unexplored resources, and vessels could trim thousands of miles from Europe to Asia by bypassing the Panama Canal. The seasonal ebb and flow of ice levels has already opened up a slim summer window for ships.

Leif Toudal Pedersen, of the Danish National Space Center, said that Arctic ice has shrunk to some 1 million square miles. The previous low was 1.5 million square miles, in 2005.

"The strong reduction in just one year certainly raises flags that the ice (in summer) may disappear much sooner than expected," Pedersen said in an ESA statement posted on its Web site Friday.

Pedersen said the extreme retreat this year suggested the passage could fully open sooner than expected — but ESA did not say when that might be. Efforts to contact ESA officials in Paris and Noordwik, the Netherlands, were unsuccessful Saturday.

A U.N. panel on climate change has predicted that polar regions could be virtually free of ice by the summer of 2070 because of rising temperatures and sea ice decline, ESA noted.

Russia, Norway, Denmark, Canada and the United States are among countries in a race to secure rights to the Arctic that heated up last month when Russia sent two small submarines to plant its national flag under the North Pole. A U.S. study has suggested as much as 25 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas could be hidden in the area.

Environmentalists fear increased maritime traffic and efforts to tap natural resources in the area could one day lead to oil spills and harm regional wildlife.

Until now, the passage has been expected to remain closed even during reduced ice cover by multiyear ice pack — sea ice that remains through one or more summers, ESA said.

Researcher Claes Ragner of Norway's Fridtjof Nansen Institute, which works on Arctic environmental and political issues, said for now, the new opening has only symbolic meaning for the future of sea transport.

"Routes between Scandinavia and Japan could be almost halved, and a stable and reliable route would mean a lot to certain regions," he said by phone. But even if the passage is opening up and polar ice continues to melt, it will take years for such routes to be regular, he said.

"It won't be ice-free all year around and it won't be a stable route all year," Ragner said. "The greatest wish for sea transportation is streamlined and stable routes."

"Shorter transport routes means less pollution if you can ship products from A to B on the shortest route," he said, "but the fact that the polar ice is melting away is not good for the world in that we're losing the Arctic and the animal life there."

The opening observed this week was not the most direct waterway, ESA said. That would be through northern Canada along the coast of Siberia, which remains partially blocked.

Sat image.
http://news.yahoo.com/photo/070915/photos_bs/2007_09_15t015818_450x450_us_arctic_passage
 
The record only runs for 30 years which really isn't very long and they also skip that similar measurements show the ice at the south pole set records the other way - for greatest extent of ice. Leaving that fact out and making statements like "polar regions could be virtually free of ice by the summer of 2070" seems deceitful to me.
 
DBA said:
The record only runs for 30 years which really isn't very long and they also skip that similar measurements show the ice at the south pole set records the other way - for greatest extent of ice. Leaving that fact out and making statements like "polar regions could be virtually free of ice by the summer of 2070" seems deceitful to me.

Keeping the message popular is how they sell air time and avoid controversy.
Ever seen this?
http://www.mediaright.ca/MSMbias.htm

Expect deceit, I do  ;)

 
While it seems the Earth is undergoing one of it's periodic and natural warming cycles, the North West Passage may be irrelevant if there is anything to this:

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/08/0818_040818_teleportation.html

Teleportation Takes Quantum Leap

Stefan Lovgren
for National Geographic News
April 18, 2004

It sounds like something out of Star Trek.

Austrian researchers have teleported photons (particles of light) across the Danube River in Vienna using technology that calls to mind Scotty beaming up Captain Kirk in the science fiction series.

"We were able to perform a quantum teleportation experiment for the first time ever outside a university laboratory," said Rupert Ursin, a researcher at the Institute for Experimental Physics at the University of Vienna in Austria.

The researchers read the "blueprints" of the photons they wanted to teleport. They then broke up the photons into smaller particles called quantum bits and sent these bits, along with the blueprints, through a fiber-optic cable in a sewage pipe under the river.

At the other end, replicas of the original photons were created. The original photons ceased to exist once the replicas were created.

Quantum teleportation may have progressed from science fiction to reality. But don't look for a Star Trek transporter anytime soon. This science has little to do with beaming people from one place to another.

Instead, scientists hope the technology could become crucial for quantum computing and quantum cryptology, areas that promise to make computing much faster and 100 percent secure.

The research is reported in this week's issue of the science journal Nature.

Disappearing Act

Teleportation involves dematerializing an object at one point and transferring the precise details of its configuration to another location, where the object is then reconstructed.

In quantum teleportation tiny units of computer information, called quantum bits, are transferred from one place to another. The technology is called teleportation because the information moved behaves more like an object than normal information.

"If you're writing an e-mail, you're sending [something] into a cable where it will travel and then come out at the other end," Ursin said. "But with quantum teleportation, you will not find the [full] information that you sent inside the cable. It's taken apart and put back together at the other end."

Teleportation was long considered impossible because it violates the so-called uncertainty principle of quantum mechanics. As the principle goes, the act of measuring a tiny particle destroys it. So theoretically, an exact replica of a particle can never be made.

But in 1993 scientists showed a way around the problem by using a complex concept known as entanglement, an area of physics that Albert Einstein referred to as "spooky action at a distance."

Since then, numerous experiments using photons have proved that quantum teleportation is possible. Scientists have teleported quantum bits along more than a mile (1.6 kilometers) of fiber-optic wire inside laboratories.

The science is not new, said Mark Kuzyk, a physics professor at Washington State University in Pullman. But this is the first time "researchers have demonstrated that teleportation works in the kinds of real-life conditions that are found in telecom applications."

No Eavesdropping

The most obvious practical application for quantum teleportation is in cryptology. Scientists say quantum physics can provide a completely secure method of communication between two distant correspondents. Sending photons entangled in a quantum state makes it impossible for an eavesdropper to intercept a message.

"There is no copy [of the information], so there is nothing to intercept," Ursin said.

The problem, for now, is that the quantum technology only works over limited distances. Physicists are now laying the groundwork for so-called quantum repeaters. Used in regular communications, these devices would allow messages to be transmitted around the world.

Commercial applications remain far off. "But this is really the step toward a real-world implementation of a long-distance quantum teleportation protocol," Ursin said.

So what are the chances of developing a transporter that can beam people from one location to another, Star Trek-style?

"Nothing we do will help us build Scotty's apparatus," Ursin said. "The reason is very simple: A human body contains too much information to scan and build all replicas."

For a human to be teleported, a machine would have to pinpoint and analyze the trillions and trillions of atoms that make up the human body. Only recently have scientists taken preliminary steps toward teleporting even a single, whole atom.
 
a_majoor said:
While it seems the Earth is undergoing one of it's periodic and natural warming cycles, the North West Passage may be irrelevant if there is anything to this:

Nice to see that not everybody believes it is a man-made disaster...
 
Was there not a theory out there a few years back about exactly the scenerio we are going through now?

One of the polar ice caps dimishes, the other builds....thus increasing the earth's "wobble", until it reaches such a point that the poles literally relocate.....it was suggested that the tilt would be around 23 degrees.....intead of Mammoths frozen with grass in their mouths in Siberia, we would, in the future, find brightly colored bipeds reclining under a beach umbrella frozen into the "new" poles' icecap.
 
The infamous 'Orange Peel' theory?  Where the mantle could potentially slip across the surface of the underlying molten core of the planet?
 
GreyMatter said:
The infamous 'Orange Peel' theory?  Where the mantle could potentially slip across the surface of the underlying molten core of the planet?

I know which one you are referring to, but I think it was the one where the magnetic poles moved. (don't have a specific name for it, but I am sure you have heard it)
 
What about the northwest passage made in 1944?
http://www.damianpenny.com/archived/010065.html

Mark
Ottawa
 
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