Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Now Space Station forced to DODGE flying Japanese junk - Register [fornadablog.blogspot.com]

Now Space Station forced to DODGE flying Japanese junk - Register [fornadablog.blogspot.com]

Question by Johnny Kong: What does "bowl for mixing wine with water" mean in the etymology explanation of crater? 1610s, from L. crater, from Gk. krater "bowl for mixing wine with water," from kera- "to mix," from PIE base *kere-. Used in Latin for bowl-shaped mouth of a volcano. Applied to features of the Moon since 1860. As a verb, from 1884. Best answer for What does "bowl for mixing wine with water" mean in the etymology explanation of crater?:

Answer by Richard English
It means that the original Greek word, Krater, meant a bowl into which you put wine and water in order to mis them. What's unclear about that?

Answer by oikos
I don't know about the Greeks but the Romans used to mix water with their wines to dilute them. I don't know if they preferred them weaker or whether the wine was so bad they had to cut it.

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[fornadablog.blogspot.com], Now Space Station forced to DODGE flying Japanese junk - Register

The International Space Station is due to swerve tomorrow morning to avoid a debris cloud from a Japanese satellite, the Russian Flight Control Centre said.

A Russian Zvezda service module will fire booster rockets to shift the station out of the path of the space junk if the agency is certain it's necessary.

The dodge is provisionally planned for 10.22am BST (9.22 GMT, 00.01 PST), a source in the centre told Russian news agency RIA Novosti, but it could be cancelled or postponed.

The ISS only swerves out of the way if the chance of collision is more than one in 10,000, but experts are starting to worry that could happen more often with the amount of space junk in orbit round the Earth.

NASA estimates that there are more than 21,000 fragments bigger than 10cm (3.9 inches) circling around our planet, posing problems for further space launches and re-entries. The US space agency has started tests on its extraterrestrial rubbish-collector, the NanoSail-D, a teeny satellite which will latch onto debris and then float it in on a solar sail to burn up in the atmosphere. ®

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