sábado, 30 de junio de 2007

Study inquiries

Looking into International relations study. In the Netherlands this is integrated into Politicology which can be studied at Leiden. That's the same place where they also have Egyptology! And a nice museum btw. Sent and email about the prices because it wasn't mentioned on the website. Also subsidies and stuff.

Also looked at doing the same abroad like the US. What i learned from that you are always referred to Fulbright on the State Department website. Where have i heard that name before? ;) More emails to them and to Fulbright Holanda to see what they have exactly for my situation. Maybe State department can offer other possibilities and name a few places where to study. After all it's in the line of their field.

If all fails? I'll email Sean McCormack with the advice to dump Tom Casey and take me! Haha!

iphone

Now the waiting is over in the US and these folks can wake up! The iphone has arrived!

Email, music, video, internet, photo's, calender, contacts and of course it works as a phone as well.

If you have a PDA, Blackberry or otherwise you may want to consider this thing. I know i will when it gets here!

Europe will have to wait a few more months before it's launched.

Want to read more? Rad the Apple site.

w00t!!!

Massa muscles to Magny Cours pole

Felipe Massa muscled his Ferrari into pole position for tomorrow's French Grand Prix, beating Lewis Hamilton by just 0.070s in a very close fought qualifying session at Magny Cours. Kimi Raikkonen qualified third ahead of Robert Kubica. Fernando Alonso's hopes were dashed by a suspected gearbox problem.

It was a warmer day at Magny Cours with air temperature at 24 degrees Centigrade and the track 43 degrees, a contrast with yesterday's very cool conditions.

Lewis Hamilton put down an early marker in the first session, but Kimi Raikkonen was less than a tenth off with Massa and Alonso third and fourth - pole position looking like a four-way fight. While the McLarens and Ferraris cruised through the first session Liuzzi, Wurz, Sato, Davidson, Albers and Sutil were knocked out.

In the second session Coulthard's Red Bull developed an electronics problem early on, putting him out of the action along with Ralf Schumacher, Button, Barrichello, Webber and Speed.

Disaster struck Fernando Alonso in the pole position shoot out as the reigning champion pulled into the pits with a gearbox problem after just one lap putting him out of the session and dashing his hopes for the weekend. On track it was a scrap between Massa, Hamilton and Raikkonen for pole.

Felipe Massa snatched pole from Hamilton by just 0.070s with Raikkonen third 0.150s further adrift. Kubica made an emphatic return in the BMW Sauber to take fourth ahead of Fisichella, Kovalainen, Heidfeld, Trulli and Rosberg.

Alonso was officially classified tenth.

Noctilucent clouds

For the first time ever, humans know what a noctilucent cloud (NLC) looks like--from above. NASA's AIM spacecraft took this composite UV-wavelength picture on June 11th from a vantage point 600 km over Earth's north pole: Launched on April 25, 2007, AIM is on a mission to study these mysterious clouds at the edge of space; the image above represents its first good look. For the next two years, AIM will monitor the life cycle of NLCs, assaying their chemistry and particulate content, and checking to see if space dust plays a role in their genesis.

When NLCs were first sighted in the 19th century, they were confined to polar latitudes, but lately they have intensified and spread with sightings in recent years as far south as Colorado and Utah. "It is clear that these clouds are changing, a sign that a part of our atmosphere is changing and we do not understand how or what it means," says AIM principal investigator James Russell III of Hampton University. Are NLCs a sign of global warming? Or something else? Researchers hope AIM will provide some answers. Stay tuned for updates.

June 2007 Noctilucent Cloud Gallery

It works!

Great! All works with headphones, mics and cams! Now only i have empty contact lists! That doesn't help! Haha!

About towns

Went out bought a webcam and headset. Setting that up now. Want to try Skype and other things as well. Wanted to look for a cheap cell phone but seems you have to go to the city for that these days! So that will have to be Monday also. Monday will be already a busy day. Official stuff like medical insurance, courses which i could take and jobs. But seriously i NEED to move to a city asap!

Long sleep!

Was woken up at 13.00! Dreams, dreams, dreams... Day is half over!

viernes, 29 de junio de 2007

Saturday?

Can't believe it's already after midnight here. Clock is totally off! I hope i can sleep because i don't feel tired and my mind is kinda busy.

Evening

After dinner shortly horizontal. Dumb! Slept for 2 hours! And the day is almost over! Probably a long night sleep but then the inner clock is probably ok again. Have to look ahead but right now can't really do that. Hopefully tomorrow.

Return

So there we are. Exactly 24 hours from door to door. After using the internet in Houston i took 2 coffees at Starbucks. One was a delicious White Chocolate Mocca. They knew how to get it right! We left Houston an hour late. The thunderstorms earlier in that day had put everything behind schedule. Flight itself was calm with barely turbulence. No interesting people around me this time! Boring! But listened to some nice Latino music while playing a game.We landed also later than scheduled. The luggage took a long time. In the meantime weather is absolutely blah! It took us more than twice the time to get to the house because of traffic. Seems the southern part of the country got it's holidays. So it was a mess. Not something you are waiting for after such a long day. Then at home had to see the wireless working. Which now works. Seems to be a 20Mbit line which is extremely fast! Let's hope it's reliable!

Had already 5 job offers in the mail but 4 were the same! Didn't look interesting though and bit awkward to get to without a car. But I'm surprised how many offers i've had already. Two from abroad even!

jueves, 28 de junio de 2007

Day 7 continued

I'm sitting at the same spot as a week ago, The Co-Presidents club outside for free internet!

So here is how things went. A short Starbucks breakfast. Part of a muffin and some licuado kinda stuff. Around 8.30 we left the house. Traffic was sort of busy. We said goodbye at the drop off point and from there on manage alone again. Check in. I had to pay 25$ because my suitcase was to heavy. Starbucks coffee. They did it right this time. They put me on an earlier flight but eventually that was just minutes earlier. We had to circle Houston for half an hour or so due to thunderstorms. So we came in around half an hour ago. I hear departures are delayed by about half an hour but my flight is at 7.10 pm. That's 3/1/2 hours from now. So maybe they cleared that up then. Will sit here for awhile. Just ate a garlic pretzel with coke. Nothing else to do so.

Bad thing was: Have a small cold and that hurt when we went down for landing! The pressure drop in the head cavities!

Day 7

All good things come in 7. Well, not all! Travel day as said. Out in about an hour. Weather looks cloudy. Maybe some bumps when taking off. Houston i have no idea about yet. Good i have 4 hours of transfer time again. And i know where to go this time.

I hate leaving places!

Update later in the day probably. If not cya on Friday! I'm repeating myself from yesterday! Maybe that's because the coffee didn't sink in yet.

miércoles, 27 de junio de 2007

Day 6 end

Typing this outside on the porch. Lovely evening. And the last here. Airplanes are flying all over the place. Will see enough airplane into Friday. Yeah, will miss it here but it's time to move on again to the next phase. The good thing is that it never gets boring this way. And i assure you i will not allow it to get bored. I'm surely not the same as the last time i left the Netherlands last March. Much has changed since then. And surely it won't be the last time i travel. Next trip? We will see!

Tomorrow will short check email and then find the spot in Houston again i used when i got here. Maybe will do a quick update from there. And if not it'll be Friday somewhere. But times will change as well because suddenly I'll be 7 hours ahead of my current location and 5 hours ahead of Buenos Aires. Who cares! :)

Mystery mummy is lost female pharoah

Now that is what i call a find!

story image


The mummy of an obese woman, who likely suffered from diabetes and liver cancer, has been identified as that of Queen Hatshepsut, Egypt's most powerful female pharoah, Egyptian archaeologists said Wednesday.

Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt in the 15th century B.C., was known for dressing like a man and wearing a false beard. But when her rule ended, all traces of her mysteriously disappeared, including her mummy.

Discovered in 1903 in the Valley of the Kings, the mummy was left on site until two months ago, when it was brought to the Cairo Museum for testing, Egypt's antiquities chief Zahi Hawass said.

DNA bone samples taken from the mummy's pelvic bone and femur are being compared with the mummy of Queen Hatshepsut's grandmother, Amos Nefreteri, said molecular geneticist Yehia Zakaria Gad, who was part of Hawass' team.

The mummy identified as Hatshepsut shows an obese woman, who died in her 50s, probably had diabetes and is also believed to have had liver cancer, Hawass said. Her left hand is positioned against her chest, in a traditional sign of royalty in ancient Egypt.

Molar in queen's jar fits in mummy's mouth

The discovery, announced Wednesday at the museum in Cairo, has not been independently reviewed by other experts.

While scientists are still matching those mitochondrial DNA sequences, Gad said preliminary results were "very encouraging."

Hawass also said that a molar found in a jar with some of the queen's embalmed organs perfectly matched the mummy.

"We are 100 percent certain" the mummy is that of Hatshepsut, Hawass told The Associated Press.

Hawass has led the search for Hatshepsut since a year ago, setting up a DNA lab in the basement of the Cairo Museum with an international team of scientists. The study was funded by the Discovery channel, which is to broadcast an exclusive documentary on it in July.

Molecular biologist Scott Woodward, director of the Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation in Salt Lake City, was cautious ahead of Wednesday's announcement.

"It's a very difficult process to obtain DNA from a mummy," said Woodward, who has done such research. "To make a claim as to a relationship, you need other individuals from which you have obtained DNA, to make a comparison between the DNA sequences."

Such DNA material would typically come from parents or grandparents. With female mummies, the most common type of DNA to look for is the mitochondrial DNA that reveals maternal lineage, Woodward said.

"What possible other mummies are out there, they would have to be related to Hatshepsut," he said. "It's a difficult process, but the recovery of DNA from 18th Dynasty mummies is certainly possible."

Molecular biologist Paul Evans of the Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, said the discovery could indeed be remarkable.

"Hatshepsut is an individual who has a unique place in Egypt's history. To have her identified is on the same magnitude as King Tut's discovery," Evans told the AP by phone from Utah.

Hatshepsut is believed to have stolen the throne from her young stepson, Thutmose III. Her rule of about 21 years was the longest among ancient Egyptian queens, ending in 1453 B.C.

Hatshepsut's funerary temple is located in ancient Thebes, on the west bank of the Nile in today's Luxor, a multi-collonaded sandstone temple built to serve as tribute to her power. Surrounding it are the Valley of Kings and the Valley of the Queens, the burial places of Egypt's pharaohs and their wives.

But after Hatshepsut's death, her name was obliterated from the records in what is believed to have been her stepson's revenge.

She was one of the most prolific builder pharaohs of ancient Egypt, commissioning hundreds of projects throughout both Upper and Lower Egypt. Almost every major museum in the world today has a collection of Hatshepsut statuary.

British archaeologist Howard Carter worked on excavating Hatshepsut's tomb before discovering the tomb of the boy-king, Tutankhamun, whose treasure of gold has become a symbol of ancient Egypt's splendor.

Day 6

Last full day already. A week since i left BA. Time flies! And tomorrow Tim flies! :P Tim flies when you are having fun! That's not good for me! Staying in in the morning here. Do some internet stuff. Check a bit of the suitcase in advance. For the rest will see.

Regarding pics and movies. Since the pictures since i posted i barely made ones actually. There is some movie and pics but they still need to be processed and uploaded to YouTube which i don't want to do here. That will be after the Friday then. If i get the chance. It seems the weather is worse than here in the Netherlands. For Friday chances are rain and temperatures of 16 max in Celsius. that's almost a warm winter day in BA!

Day 5 end

We did make that pool. Possibly the last outing. Only one day to go here. Plans for tomorrow unknown. All are to bed now. Will see in the morning what to do.

martes, 26 de junio de 2007

Day 5 continued

Thunderstorm and network probs today. But got 2 sites done for work. Enormous amount you have to fill in and choose. Was enough for today.

Now is dry. Tonight probably pool.

Day 5 continued

Thunderstorm and network probs today. But got 2 sites done for work. Enormous amount you have to fill in and choose. Was enough for today.

Now is dry. Tonight probably pool.

Todays quote

Little break from job search:

The most effective way to do it, is to do it.

Amelia Earhart

She did it alright! Yet she has been missing for the last 70 years. I wrote before on the blog about her. See here.

Day 5 take 1

Another hot day. Temp is 83 F (what's that in Celsius?) and humidity 90%. That feels kinda sticky. Early evening and tomorrow probable thunderstorms. Thursday, the flying day should be cooler and good.

So what have i done so far. I'm busy applying to websites. So that means making profiles and filling in CV's etc. take quite a lot of time. I'm not looking just in Holanda. I'm applying to European sites as well. We will see!

In case you ask: Is this your idea of vacation? Uhhhmm nope! But what's done is done. Saves me work next week.

Day 4 end and preview day 5

We went to a bar close by. the evening was great. Very nice temperature.

On Tuesday. Enrica has another job interview so i can nicely work on my own job searching. After that We'll see. Depends on time and stuff. Playing pool one more time would be great!

lunes, 25 de junio de 2007

Day 4 continued

Very hot and humid today. We went out for lunch. Had French toast on a plate with sauce of chocolate and on tot some fruit in Sabayon. And some other stuff on it as well. It looked more like a dessert actually. With it a glass of Malbec Roble from Argentina. A habit i will not break. There wines are just excellent. After lunch we tried the zoo. Parking was 14$ so we tried to find a spot for free which didn't work. So we went back. And i'm cooking! Will be tilapia with blue cheese sauce and salad of cucumber and mini tomatoes. And with some rice added. Tonight we may go for a drink. That is if people haven't died on my food!!!

Venus pillars

These are called Venus pillars, and they are caused by flat, six-sided ice crystals fluttering down from high clouds. The crystals reflect light from their horizontal faces, spreading a single point of light into a luminous column. Among all the objects in the heavens, only the Sun, Moon and Venus are bright enough to produce naked-eye pillars.

A new mayor for BA

The last few weeks before i left Buenos Aires there was much campaigning for the office of mayor of the city. Which is there quite an influential posts. Mauricio Macri and Gabriela Michetti with their Pro party were selected the next mayor and vice-mayor yesterday. And that was not the candidate supported by president Kirchner.

The Face That Launched an International Incident

Ok, one more time as a recap of events. For the record: In her own time she was already a trouble maker. She reminds me of Hillary Clinton actually! Look at the picture! Could be! Hahaha!

Queen Nefertiti's bust has been the jewel of Berlin's Egyptian Museum since 1913. It is also one of the iconic artifacts Egyptian authorities would like to borrow for the 2011 opening of their new museum now under construction near Giza. But when they recently asked to have the 3,300-year-old artifact for a three-month loan, German authorities turned them down cold.

The Egyptian response was immediate—and outraged. "We will make the lives of these museums miserable," threatened Zahi Hawass, director of the Supreme Council for Antiquities. "It will be a scientific war."

The Germans say a loan is out of the question. According to Egyptian Museum curator Dietrich Wildung, recent tests show the bust, once thought to be painted limestone, is actually a limestone core covered with a thin layer of plaster. "It's much too delicate for [the] journey," he says.

"With all the technology and means of transportation available now, the queen can travel anywhere in the world," says Egyptian Ambassador to Berlin Mohamed al-Orabi. "Nefertiti has spent 95 years [in Berlin], and we expect some appreciation. It's unacceptable to receive this denial."

If a compromise can not be found soon, German Egyptology might suffer—and a scientific war is something scholars in both countries can ill afford.

Editor's Note: In 2003, the 3,300-year-old bust was set atop a modern bronze body and videotaped for the Venice Biennale art show. In the face of Egyptian criticism then, both that the bust was too fragile for such actions and that the bronze body was inappropriate, Wildung defended the hybrid ancient-modern artwork as "a homage to Nefertiti by means of contemporary art."

Stars Have Earth-Like Weather

Maps mercuric weather above alpha Andromedae each year (top row) and the accumulative change in mercury surrounding the star (bottom row). Credit: Oleg Kochukhov/Uppsala University


The skies of stars might experience weather like that on planets, researchers now find.

The drifting clouds scientists have seen are wispy, "just like cirrus clouds on Earth"-except these are made of mercury, explained astrophysicist Oleg Kochukhov at Uppsala University in Sweden.

Investigating these metal clouds might shed light on how elements form inside stars.

Kochukhov and his colleagues spent seven years peering at alpha Andromedae, the brightest star in the Andromeda constellation. The bluish-white star lies about 100 light-years from Earth and is more than twice as hot as the Sun and roughly three times its mass and diameter.

Stars can develop spots on their surfaces, which are largely thought due to magnetic fields. These are how sunspots on the Sun are created, for instance. However, alpha Andromedae is not magnetic, so the spots Kochukhov and his colleagues discovered on it five years ago were an enigma.

Now the researchers find these spots are clouds in that form and disperse in alpha Andromedae's skies, following dynamics similar to weather patterns on planets, findings detailed online June 24 in the journal Nature Physics.

Such weather could be seen on stars that, like alpha Andromedae, are hot and massive. They also have to spin relatively slowly-alpha Andromedae completely rotates about once every 60 hours-as spinning too fast might destroy any clouds. Kochukhov noted a half-dozen or so other candidates have recently been seen already, including the star AR Aurigae, which might have clouds of strontium, yttrium and platinum as well.

Mystery process

What makes these metal clouds form remains uncertain. Kochukhov suggested random disturbances in alpha Andromedae's atmosphere could generate clouds, "a process similar to what is quite often seen in the atmosphere of our own planet," or perhaps the gravitational pull of alpha Andromedae's companion star helps perturb its sky.

The discovery of weather on stars could help solve a mystery concerning why startling discrepancies were seen in the levels of mercury and other heavy elements in stars like alpha Andromedae.

"These are all the same type of star, so you'd expect them all to have roughly the same abundances of mercury, but they could vary by a factor of 100 from one star to the next," explained George Preston, astronomer emeritus at the Carnegie Observatories, who did not participate in this study. "Now it turns out this variation could be due to weather. You might see different amounts of mercury at different times."

Alpha Andromedae and similar stars "are critical to understanding the origin of elements," Kochukhov said, as heavy elements are concentrated in them that are too faint to detect in sun-like stars. Stellar weather could shed light on how elements mix around in these stars, he added.

Three thousand year old mummy discovered

Archaeologists have discovered the 3,000-year-old mummy of a high priest to the god Amun in the southern city of Luxor, antiquities supremo Zahi Hawass told the official MENA news agency today.

The 18th Dynasty mummy of Sennefer was unearthed in a tomb in the Valley of the Kings - one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world - by a team from Britain's Cambridge University.

"The mummy was found in tomb 99 in the Valley of the Kings on the west bank of Luxor," Hawass said.

A high priest was considered to be the most important man after the king, performing duties, religious rituals and offerings on his behalf.

Other mummies were found during the excavation, including one with a brain tumour, a foetus, a female mummy wrapped in plaster and others which appeared to have suffered from arthritis, Hawass said.

The Valley of the Kings was used as a burial site for royalty and nobles to the west of present day Luxor, some 700 kilometres south of Cairo.

Millions of foreign tourists come to see Egypt's pharaonic treasures each year, including hundreds of thousands making the long journey south from the capital to the Valley of the Kings.

Hawass said a report on the findings would be presented to Culture Minister Faruq Hosni, in order to allocate resources for continued excavations in the area.

Day 4

Days starts of nice. Sunny with 23 Celsius. One here is working, the other had an appointment so is out for awhile. Gives me a good opportunity to check some online work sites and subscribe. Will have to do that next week anyway. What can be done now is gained.

domingo, 24 de junio de 2007

Day 3 continued

We stay in this evening. All a bit tired and it's good to have a time out. And it's relaxed too! Doing some pc, talking, having a beer, pc, talking, having a beer, pc, talking, ........ ????

Day 3

Warmer today. Went out to a bar. Again? Yes, again! Bars are never boring :) It's now just after 6. Took a shower and some naps are being taken. No idea what follows after. We will see. Always a surprise here!

Optical illusion







OPTICAL ILLUSIONS!!!!(things that will make ur eyes boggle!)




this checkerboard is like any other. but if you stare hard enough you'll see little wave moving upon it!
Take this
quiz!








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Day 2 end

To end the day we went not too far away to a bar to play pool. Had been awhile for me! Was real fun :) Met some other folks as well. More like a mini United Nations session. We had Italy, Greece, Canada, Japan, India and the Netherlands playing pool. Maybe something for the real United Nations?

sábado, 23 de junio de 2007

Starsucks

Was always interested in trying Starbucks once. Well i got my chance yesterday and you know what? It sucks! Asked for 2 small cappuccino and ended up with one small cappuccino and one what tasted like warm chocolate milk????

Mac vs PC

Mac and PC in one room here. That asks for this movie! Only i'm loosing probably!

What's in the picture?

Now where would this be in Chicago??? I guess nowhere! Ever looked at clouds and imagined what the shape looked like?

Well the Hubble Space Telescope does the same thing but then on larger scale.
This image is called the Fairy of the Eagle Nebula. Can you see it?

Day 2 continued

We took it lazy in the morning. Weather is not that good actually. We went short to a botanical garden. And now we are figuring out the evening. We want to go play pool but the roommate needs the car too so they are settling that somehow. Haven't made any pictures yet today. Forgot to bring the cam to the garden.

Picture from day 1

Here is one picture from yesterday. This is taken from the area around Millennium Park. Quite different than BA right?

Day 1 continued and start Day 2

The city was very nice. Made some pictures and movies which still have to be processed. Walked quite a lot. Saw Millennium Square, went for a boat trip on the river, had a drink on the 96th floor looking over the city and much more. But was chilly. Had no sweater on me.

In the evening to a Jazz club and after that to a bar close by. Were not home so late but we had fun :)

Plans for today unknown yet. Just had breakfast. Weather seems to be cloudy again.

viernes, 22 de junio de 2007

Day 1

Slept until around 9. Enrica has a job interview. I'll be going downtown taking the train which is very close from the house and this train takes around half an hour i understand. Bringing the cam of course! At 1 pm we meet at that train station and then we'll see where we are going. The only time i was in downtown was a drive through a few years ago. We never got out. So now is the first exploration of town for me. Weather is cloudy with 21 Celsius.

jueves, 21 de junio de 2007

Arrived part 2

Leaving the city of Buenos Aires was not easy. I know I'll be back one day but yet that will take some time. 2 years of your life.

What i had not mentioned in the previous post. First part of the trip a very nice girl next to me. Pleasant talking and because of some tight connection schedules hanging out a bit on Houston Airport. It's great to have someone next to you to spend the long hours with. Thanks!

According to the red blip on the map I'm in unknown location but make that Chicago. Warm day. Second part went smooth and in time. Picked up by friend. Real nice persons both of them :) (And one of them of course reads this as well!) :P Went to buy some food and a short walk. Haven't slept really since leaving Argentina. Don' t know what's the plan for the rest of the day yet. We still need to eat which will be tilapia.

In the middle, sort of

Made it to Houston. Found a free WiFi spot. All goes as planned although security was tight. Of course. Will check in later in the day probably when i get at the final address.

miércoles, 20 de junio de 2007

Bye bye, fly fly

Today is travel day. Last post from this continent. Will be on the way later. Weather here is clouded. Temp 14 degrees Celsius. Wind speed is low around 5km/h and visibility 10km so that means that normally that should be no trouble flying out of here. There is a slow probability of drizzle in the evening. Weather forecast at destination partially clouded with possible thunderstorms later in the day on Thursday. But i should be in by then. Temp around 30 Celsius.

Maybe I'll be able to update on the move via WiFi but the last time i tried it didn't work. This is a different route so maybe i have a better chance. We'll see!

martes, 19 de junio de 2007

Tunnel vision

Another nice one. Black and white of a man walking in a tunnel. Gives the illusion that it's a dark evening outside and he walks towards a lighted doorway. Crossing over? :)

Puzzle?

One of these amazing images again. The inside of a sculpture. This is in Göttingen, Germany on the Platz der Synagoge. Looks a bit like a diaphragm but then in depth.

One day to go

Just one day left here. All things are about done. Last laundry is drying so it can be packed. Everything needed for tomorrow and traveling is prepared. Transportation to the airport has been arranged.

Here is the last movie i made on Sunday. Also the very last one here. Music is from the latest James Bond movie.

domingo, 17 de junio de 2007

Todays out

Today will be de Rio de la Plata. Was there about 2 years ago for the first time on that spot. But that was summer so would like to see it in winter with the sun out. Maybe you can even see Uruguay today! Excellent place for movie and pictures. So let's see what i can make! May well be my last outing here!

sábado, 16 de junio de 2007

Cool flying!

You know me and airplanes :) Look at this! This guy takes a remote model airplane and flies it through a tunnel while driving with the control behind it! Absolutely cool!

What would you see if only days left somewhere?

Ok, folks i have about 4 days left in Buenos Aires. 4 days to see things. Where would you go? I can't make up my mind! Not that that isn't new :P I'm open for suggestions. Probably I'll even take pictures for the blog here! or another movie!

Anonymous commenting is allowed so go ahead if you read this! And no dumb comments please! Unless they are hilarious! haha

viernes, 15 de junio de 2007

Went out

Sun came through end of the morning and although cold and windy made it to the haircut. Actually it's shorter than i normally do. But going Northern Hemisphere and that means summer!

Tomorrow should be sunny with a max of 12 Celsius. Night will be cold. Last weekend en last good chance for pictures. Will see where to go.

Mood: Calm and somewhat nervous

Cold again!

It's 4 degrees Celsius! Still need to go for that haircut. Is also rainy and windy. Really makes you want to stay indoors!

jueves, 14 de junio de 2007

Situation Report

This term SITREP would be more for the other blog!

6 days and a few hours left. The majority of things is done. What needed to be sent has been sent. What needed to be packed is already packed. What is left is some of those small things you'd get when you go on vacation. Little things to buy, last-minute laundry and that kind of stuff.

The 19th will be my last working day. I leave actually on the 20th late in the afternoon. The flight is in the evening and there are several reasons not to be late. 1. traffic at that time. 2. Ezeiza airport still deals with a radar problem of 3 months ago due to lightning hit. Seems it's Air Force who owns it and that is strange because especially then you'd expect it to be done the next day! Seems to be a money issue more. But that's not uncommon here. 3. Flying to the US with a US carrier. You simply need to be earlier there. Extra checks maybe, possibly face a few questions.

Chicago can be extremely hot and humid is my experience so probably it'll be quite a change of temperature. Fortunately i do have some summer things packed. I'm glad to be able to go. Keeping my mind on something else than leaving here and all that i need to do in Holanda. Vacation first! How i feel after that is not for now. And i am certain it's not going to be boring. I'll be seeing more of the city than my previous two trips together probably!

For today? Shower and then in the afternoon probably a haircut. It's 10 times cheaper than in Holanda. I don't really have to yet, has not been a month but I'll go anyway.

The weekend? Friday will be a rain day probably but the weekend should be dry. Good chance to see something! And bring the cam! I don't promise any movies because lately the line is very bad. Uploading something could be hours or fail even. I'll see what I'll do with that.

martes, 12 de junio de 2007

Some blog changes

Slowly changing the blog a bit already. Went to Red-White-Blue. Title changed, Argentina links are out. Time stays for as long as i am still here. Looking for a nice replacement for the weather radar map.

lunes, 11 de junio de 2007

All good things

This is the title of the final episode of Star Trek The Next Generation. So why do i choose it?

I came here for the best reason you can have to come here in my opinion. That is love. But what to do if the love is no longer there? You can do 2 things. You stay and move out and try to pick up your life here or you return to The Netherlands in my case. Looking at all the options i opt for the latter. Long term i have little future here unless i find someone else.

And that is the news i was referring to in Saturdays post. I wanted to wait with posting here before some things had been set in motion and the appropriate folks had been notified. And this is now the case.

Obviously this will direct influence on the blog. The 20th of this month i am leaving the country. So after that no more pictures or movies from here I'm afraid.

But i will not delete the blog. I will keep the same URL but the title obviously will change. Also the content on the right side will. Like the clock, weather map and links related to here. I'm going to find a nice title and keep posting Formula 1, images, astronomy and Egyptology stuff and probably a few new things next to how things are picking up after returning.

What is on the blog regarding Argentina of course will stay in the archive. So with the labels people can still look at articles, pictures and movies related to here.

That's life folks!

domingo, 10 de junio de 2007

Boring sunday

Didn't do much today. Tomorrow much work since i missed the Friday because of Colonia. After that I'd like to see to by a bag for my laptop. Now i use a backpack when i take it with me and that's not really ideal. Further i have to mail a few things from the post office.

For the rest? It could be raining for the first time in weeks!

O yes i had not mentioned it. I'm writing again. It is an Ancient Egyptian story i once started on and decided to continue with it. As with all books this will take a lot of time. Who knows one day someone will be interesting in publishing! And i already have an idea for a second book! Also AE. And then there is still a SciFi story waiting to be written. One at the time please!

sábado, 9 de junio de 2007

Saturday!

Don't we just love this day? That is if you don't have to work! Had been out all the time last week so today only for the necessary shopping and that's it. Next week surely I'll have to go out again.

Also next week there is some news. Quite astounding i think. Don't you see i want to try to get you back here to find out what it is? haha Check for it Tuesday or Wednesday!

Part of it then? It's directly responsible for my not being as active here as i used to be let's say 2 weeks ago. I intend to pick that up again soon.

viernes, 8 de junio de 2007

Back

That was a nice day in Colonia. Was not cold and foggy at all. And then you have to imagine that Buenos Aires Intl Airport Ezeiza had major problems with fog. Relaxed day. And another 90 Días in the passport. BUT the cam was in use so no pictures or movies. Sorry folks!

miércoles, 6 de junio de 2007

Travel plans

Friday is going to be visa extension day. I'm going to Colonia, Uruguay for a 3rd time already. And maybe you remember President George W. Bush visited there as well recently. So let's see if anything remained of that visit. It is Fall and I've not been there yet in this month. Last time was in Spring. So should be nice. Weather promises to be fair and 19 degrees although i think there at the water will be a bit cooler. Plan is to make a movie again that day. And that will normally be visible here on Saturday.

A Fall day in Buenos Aires

Another movie for today!

Taken on June 6th 2007. That's D-Day (1944)isn't it? I made a round on foot through downtown. Started at Plaza de Mayo which was foggy. Special effects one could say! From there via Florida Street (didn't film because i already made a film there last April) to Túcuman. You will see the crossing with Leandro N. Alem and then straight towards Puerto Madero. Some Puerto Madero North side parts and then back towards Plaza de Mayo. You see a nice square in between with the Casa Rosada. And then the Plaza de Mayo again, now in bright sunshine, with fountains, the Cathedral and again the Casa Rosada.

Music is from the Pearl Harbor Soundtrack.


martes, 5 de junio de 2007

Taxi drive

Here is the earlier promised movie already!

Took the cab from Avenida Directorio in the Flores area all the way to almost Retiro station. Nice views of the city in drive by as well as familiar spots for tourists occasionally. And it was a beautiful fall day as you can see!

Update

Kept y'all waiting haven't i? A bit too busy doing other things at the moment. Why? I'm certain that soon I'll write a bit more about it.

But there is a nice post coming. I made another 5 minute movie and when it's all set later in the day I'll post it.

sábado, 2 de junio de 2007

Almost at the house

Now 2 blocks away. This is the crossing Varela and Avenida Directorio. It's kind of a small playground. it's sort of a triangle. I often walk this stretch. you also see busstations for Linea 126 and 180.

And that was the last one for today!

Basílica San José de Flores

Also made earlier about this one. See search for it. This shot is from the side stairs. As you can read last year it existed 200 years. The doors on the right often displays the Immaculate Heart. You see often people pray there. I thought it would not be appropriate to go in for a picture.

Plaza Flores 2

One more from close to the ground. You are looking almost Westbound again. The crossing is Pedernera y Avenida Rivadavia. That would about 5 blocks from my house.

Note the guy taking a nice nap on the left.

Plaza Flores 1

Very close to home now we come at plaza Flores. I already described a bit about it and the Básilica which is also here. I tried to be symmetrical but the pole was not exactly in the middle. Still makes a nice shot. And again lovers on benches.

Avenida Rivadavia 5

Now you think probably did a Lourdes picture come in between? Well this is also something on Avenida Rivadavia. There is a Colegio de Lourdes on it (obviously a Catholic school). Next to it is a paroquia dedicated to the Virgin Mary. This is a kind of a shrine outside dedicated to her. You always find people there for a prayer. I was lucky there was no one there at that specific moment.

What is also nice to mention. If you are in the bus and you pass for example this spot you will see people making a cross. Also folks walking buy or in cars.

Avenida Rivadavia 4

Just a nice view Westbound on Avenida Rivadavia. My guess is that this is about 15 blocks from the house.

Avenida Rivadavia 3

This is the girls school (the overexposure behind the tree :P) called Dr. Dámaso Centeno. It's a social-military institute. This doesn't mean military drills and that kind of stuff but it has connections to the military. That expresses itself in outings to military facilities sometimes. It also in a way gives a more stricter set of rules in the school to be able to deal better with the future. And yes it happens often that it is an entry for children to enter the military. But also many go absolute different ways.

Avenida Rivadavia 2

This is Primera Junta. A small square and you are looking at the entrance to the Subway. This is also the End or beginning (depends of point of view) of Linea A. In not so long this will not be the end point. Probably this will be ready in 2007. Some stations have been added Westbound. I believe the last one will end at Avenida Nazca. This is not so far from home. This also means the option to choose Line A or Line E to go downtown. More choice.

Avenida Rivadavia 1

We go back in the direction of home (Westbound) on Avenida Rivadavia. This is a new mall and includes C&A. A fashion chain you find in many countries.

Parque Rivadavia 8

A last shot at the park from Avenida Rivadavia. As you can see there is much to buy as well. You will find these kind of merchandise along most of the Avenue actually. Some spots more pronounced than others. People have to eat don't they?

Parque Rivadavia 7

At the entrance at the Avenida Rivadavia side there is this remarkable tree. I have no idea what it is but it's supposedly pretty old. And it looks nice. You always find people sitting around it. It was surprising to see so few today. But maybe that is because of the temperature. It's nice weather but not so warm.

Parque Rivadavia 6

Statue of Simon Bolívar. One of South Americas hero's. He is more related to the Northern part of South America. Venezuela, Panama, Colombia etc. He did have a pronounced influence because he met with San Martin one of the founders of Argentina and thus was responsible in helping to shape and form Peru and Bolivia.

Parque Rivadavia 5

Another one of the yellow tree. The sky seized to be blue because the sun was directly behind the tree. Sort of overexposure.

Parque Rivadavia 4

This fountain made a nice picture with the white, the blue sky and the yellow colored tree. It's Fall after all here.

Parque Rivadavia 3

Taken from one of the green benches. Still a miracle there were spots left.

Parque Rivadavia 2

As you can see I'm not the only one. Families, lovers and pigeons.

Parque Rivadavia 1

Beautiful weather so another outing. To Parque Rivadavia today. As you can see the park looks great in this light.

Millennium Square

This is Bristol. To be precise the Millennium Square at night. Great photo again!

Antelope Canyon

This is Antelope Canyon in Utah, USA. Amazing colored photo.

Boom!

No this is not a depthcharge going off. It's a geyser erupting in Iceland.

Dutch mission discovers ancient tomb

An ancient tomb dates back some 3,500 years ago has been unearthed in Egypt by a Dutch mission, the official MENA news agency reported Friday.

The ancient tomb, located in Giza's Saqqara area in southwest of Cairo, belongs to a priest called Meri Neet, who had become known as the chief superintendent of god Aton at the time, the report said.

The huge tomb, discovered by the Dutch mission from Leiden Museum, dates back to the era of King Akhenaton, the 19th dynasty of ancient Egypt.

The Dutch experts found the burial chamber, but without finding the mummy.

According to the report, the tomb contained utensils on which the names of the four sons of god Horus are engraved.

The Dutch mission also discovered a rare stone slab bearing the image of a woman holding a bunch of flowers, which follows the design of ancient Egyptian art known in Menya at the time.

The Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities has prepared to refer the new discovery to Culture Minister Farouq Hosni to endorse the finances needed for further digging operations around the area.

Source

viernes, 1 de junio de 2007

Daily Star Trek

Has been awhile. Here is one. A cartoon and short. Family Guy in Star Trek costume

Star-Vault

No it's not SciFi. Not from Star Gate or anything like it. This is St. Johns church in Toruń (Poland). The ceiling what you are looking at is called the Star-Vault. You start wondering how they got up there in the first place!

Creative at school?

What you can't do with paper and glue! But not quite! This is a complex molecule actually of Purine Nucleoside Phosphorylase or PNP. This image was computer-generated.

Stromboli

Volcanoes always make nice pictures. This is Stromboli in Italy erupting. When? No idea!

The Dutch Royal Family: Prince Pieter Christiaan of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven

Prince Pieter Christiaan Michiel of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven (in English: Peter Christian Michael) (b. 22 March 1972), is the third son of HRH Princess Margriet of the Netherlands and Pieter van Vollenhoven. His godparents are his paternal grandfather, Pieter van Vollenhoven, Archduke Michael of Austria-Este, Jkhr. Mr. J. Reuchlin, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, and M. Drabbe.

Prince Pieter Christiaan has three brothers: Prince Maurits, Prince Bernhard and Prince Floris.

He married Anita van Eijk in a civil ceremony on 25 August 2005 at the Het Loo Palace, Apeldoorn which was followed by a religious ceremony on 27 August 2005 at the Grote of St. Jeroenskerk in Noordwijk. Since he did not seek parliamentary approval for his marriage, due to the remote chance of his succession to the throne, Pieter Christiaan lost his place is the succession to the Dutch throne when he married Anita.

On the 9th of June, 2006, Prince Pieter-Christiaan and Princess Anita announced that Princess Anita was expecting their first child. The Princess gave birth to a daughter, Emma Francisca Catharina van Vollenhoven, on November 28, 2006. The baby was born at 6:00 pm at the Onze Lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis in Amsterdam and weighed 3970 grams (8 lbs, 7 ounces).[1] Like her cousins, the baby will most likely be christened in the chapel of Het Loo palace in Apeldoorn.

Pieter Christiaan resides in Amsterdam where he currently works for the ICT company Shopservices.

Source

Ancient Egytian beer brewery of 5.000 years old

Did you say beer? Would that be why i like Ancient Egypt so much? :))

Rough translation of content text below: A Polish archaeological mission, working in the northeast Delta, has discovered the remains of a brewery and a richly decorated tomb dating to around 5000 years ago. According to information provided by Professor Krzysztof Cialowicz of the University of Cracow, the discovery was made by scientists from the Archaeolgoical Museum of Poznan and the Archaeological Instutites of Cracow and Warsaw, which have worked in the area of Tel el Farkha for 10 years. "We excavated in an area named the Hill of the Chicken where we discovered an ancient village from the times of the first Pharaohs" stated Cialowicz. Already in the same area the scientists had excavated two gold statuettes around 50cm tall, representing a sovereign and his son. In the same struture they found numerous figures of wood and bone, as well as utensils made of stone, like a spoon with the handle in the form of a crocodile.

(translation source)

Un equipo de arqueólogos polacos ha descubierto en Egipto, en el nordeste del delta del Nilo, los restos de una cervecería y una tumba ricamente adornada de hace 5.000 años. Según informó este jueves, el profesor Krzysztof Cialowicz, de la Universidad de Cracovia, el descubrimiento fue realizado por los científicos del Museo de Arqueología de Poznan y de los institutos de arqueología de Cracovia y Varsovia que trabajan en la zona de Tell el Farcha desde hace diez años.

"Excavamos en una zona llamada "la Colina del Pollo" donde descubrimos un antiguo poblado de los tiempos de los comienzos del reino de los faraones", declaró Cialowicz. Ya antes en la misma zona los científicos desenterraron dos estatuillas de oro de una altura de medio metro cada una que representaban a un soberano y a su hijo. En el mismo asentamiento se encontraron numerosas figuras de madera y de hueso e incluso utensilios de piedra, como una cuchara con el mango en forma de cocodrilo.

Los científicos opinan que todos los objetos hallados eran ofrendas depositadas en homenaje a algún dios o soberano de hace, por lo menos 5.000 años. En Tell el Farcha se encuentra asimismo el mayor centro de producción de cerveza del antiguo Egipto, con una cervecería recientemente hallada de hace 5.000 años.

Otro gran hallazgo fue una tumba datada hace 4.900 años y construida de ladrillos en la que se encontraron decenas de recipientes de diverso tipo, arpones de cobre y joyas de diferentes metales. "En una tumba tan amplia, porque tenía una superficie de 72 metros cuadrados, y con tantos objetos valiosos dentro que tuvo que pertenecer a alguien muy importante de la élite de hace cincuenta siglos que tenía que ver con la pesca y con el comercio", concluyó el profesor Cialowicz.

Source

Consistency is the key - Massa

For many, finishing third and securing a podium position is a dream result. When you are coming off back to back wins however the result is rather less satisfactory.

Felipe Massa finished the Monaco Grand Prix in that third position, just over a minute behind race winner and championship rival Fernando Alonso. While the result was not great by Massa's high standards, he was nonetheless pretty happy with the weekend as a whole.

"I am really happy with my personal performance over the weekend," Massa began. "However, we were not so happy with our car performance at this track. If you look at how McLaren started on the first day, we knew it would not be so easy to be in front of them. But we managed to limit the damage and third place is not a disaster, when you look at how close and competitive the championship battle is at the moment."

"But certainly, we cannot be a hundred percent happy with the result, given that our rivals filled the top two places. They have some elements of their package that worked better at this circuit than ours. But my personal opinion and I don't know if it is right, is that it was not just McLaren being impressive in Monaco, it was also Ferrari being weak."

"If you look at the difference between McLaren and Renault in Monaco and compare it to the gap between them in Barcelona at the Spanish Grand Prix, there was not much difference.
In Monte Carlo Renault's pace was similar to ours which shows that something in our package, something related to our team, did not work at this track. What we can be sure of is that this situation will not continue, because our car is better than that, which in itself is further motivation to do well at the next race, where our car should have a good package."

Massa is just five points behind Alonso and Lewis Hamilton and looking at the big picture ahead of the Canadian and US races, feels he is very much still in contention for the title.

"I have won two races and Fernando has done the same and the difference as I said is five points," Massa said. "So consistency is what matters over the rest of the season and that is why it is always important to be on the podium. My worst result this year is a sixth place, which is actually not that bad, but you have to make sure you are always in the top three."

Source

Scientist Devises Way to Forecast Solar Storms

Artist's concept of a radiation storm approaching Earth. Credit: NASA

A scientist using the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) has found a way to forecast solar radiation storms. The new method offers as much as one hour advance warning, giving astronauts time to seek shelter and ground controllers time to safeguard their satellites when a storm is approaching.

"Solar radiation storms are notoriously difficult to predict-they often take us by surprise," says physicist Arik Posner who developed the technique. "But now we've found a way to anticipate these events."

Posner is a member of the research staff of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas; he also works at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC. His study, Up to one-Hour Forecasting of Radiation Hazards from Solar Energetic Ion Events, appears in the journal Space Weather.

Solar radiation storms are swarms of electrons, protons and heavy ions accelerated to high speed by explosions on the sun. Here on Earth we are protected from these particles by our planet's atmosphere and magnetic field. Astronauts in Earth orbit are fairly safe, too; Earth's magnetic field extends out far enough to shield them. The danger begins when astronauts leave this protective cocoon. The Moon and Mars, for instance, have no global magnetic fields, and "astronauts working on the surface of those worlds could be at risk," says Posner.

"A one hour warning would reduce the odds of an astronaut being caught in a solar storm outside of a lunar habitat, where astronauts are most vulnerable," notes Francis Cucinotta, chief scientist for NASA's Space Radiation Program.

Spacecraft and satellites would also benefit. Subatomic particles striking CPUs and other electronics can cause onboard computers to suddenly reboot or issue nonsense commands. If, say, a satellite operator knows that a storm is coming, he can put his craft in a protective "safe mode" until the storm passes.

The type of particle most feared by astronaut safety experts is the ion, that is, an atom which has lost one or more of its charge-balancing electrons. "Energetic ions can damage tissue and break strands of DNA, causing health problems ranging from nausea to cataracts to cancer," says Cucinotta.

So the goal is to predict when the ions will arrive. The key to that, it turns out, is electrons. "Electrons are always detected ahead of the more dangerous ions," says Posner. This has been known for years, but only recently has Posner's research turned the "electrons first" aspect of radiation storms into a tool for forecasting.

Every radiation storm is a mix of electrons, protons and heavier ions. The electrons, being lighter and faster than the others, race out ahead. They are like heralds proclaiming the ions are coming! Posner realized that by measuring the "rise time and intensity of the initial electron surge" he could tell how many ions were following and when they would arrive.

The key to the breakthrough was the COSTEP instrument onboard SOHO. COSTEP is short for "Comprehensive Suprathermal and Energetic Particle Analyzer." Essentially, the device counts particles coming from the sun and measures their energies.

Posner looked at hundreds of radiation storms recorded by COSTEP between 1996 and 2002, and he was able to construct an empirical, predictive matrix: "Plug electron data into the matrix, and an ion forecast pops out."

The next step was to test his results. He decided to try out the matrix on COSTEP data gathered in 2003, a year he hadn't yet analyzed and which formed no part of the matrix itself. "I applied the matrix to the electron data; it successfully predicted all four major ion storms of 2003 with advance warnings ranging from 7 to 74 minutes."

Posner says the method is not yet perfect. He points out, for instance, the brief seven minute warning for one storm in 2003. "I'd like to improve that," he says. "The matrix also generated three false alarms for 2003-that is, storm alerts followed by weak storms or no storms at all." In those few cases, astronauts would have dashed to safety unnecessarily.

Improvements will come as Posner works his way through even more of COSTEP's rich dataset: "Launched with SOHO in 1995, COSTEP has been operating through an entire solar cycle including the solar maximum in 2001-and it is still going strong," says Prof. Bernd Heber, COSTEP's principle investigator at the University of Kiel in Germany.
The method is currently being considered by planners at the Johnson Space Center in their design of future lunar missions.

"Posner's technique reduces the odds of exposure by more than 20 percent compared to current methods, allowing astronauts to venture farther from their outpost," says Cucinotta. "That's good news for both science and exploration."

Source

Loner Black Holes Lurk in Cosmic Voids

This slice of the universe shows the distribution of voids (blue circles) and their galaxies (blue circles). Scientists found void galaxies harbor actively accreting black holes, like the one shown in the image (right). Credit: John Parejko, Danny Pan, Anca Constantin/Drexel University

Monster black holes can be loners, lurking in cosmic voids where stellar food is somewhat unavailable and neighbors seem nonexistent, a team of scientists announced.

The dark leviathans have adapted to their recluse lifestyles by growing at slower rates than their city-dwelling relatives.

The results shed light on the formation and evolution of both supermassive black holes-weighing millions to hundreds of millions times that of the Sun-and galaxies. In recent years astronomers have found evidence that black holes and their host galaxies can interact and affect one another's evolution.

Cosmic voids

The cosmic voids are regions containing few galaxies and span hundreds of millions of light-years across, filling up half the universe. Only 5 percent of all galaxies reside in these bubble-like regions, with 95 percent of galaxies packed together in clusters, akin to celestial cities.

Anca Constantin of Drexel University in Philadelphia and her colleagues studied more than 1,000 void galaxies within a 700-million light-year slice of the universe using the Sloan Digital Survey (SDSS-II), finding that supermassive black holes are just as common in void galaxies as they are in so-called walls, which are tightly packed groups of galaxies that form a sort of wall structure.

"Interestingly, we see actively accreting black holes in all phases of evolution in these sparse regions," said Constantin, who presented the research here this week at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society.

Black holes are thought to begin their lives as voracious feeders, sucking in, or accreting, nearby material and continuing to bulk up. "They grow and grow and at some point they either get lazy or they just run out of fuel," Constantin told SPACE.com.

Finding black holes all along this growth continuum "means that the black hole growth process is quite similar in what could be compared to the most reclusive country sides and in the crowded urban regions of the universe," Constantin said.

Different lifestyles

However, Constantin and her team did find some subtle differences between black holes within the "rural" and "city" galaxies. They found more black holes at earlier stages in their evolutionary process within void galaxies, meaning the black holes were still in the active-feeding stages of their life cycle.

In crowded galactic regions, they identified more supermassive black holes at later stages in their evolutionary process, suggesting "cities" are conducive for faster accretion rates.

"The void galaxy black holes might take longer to reach the mature, low accretion rate phase, which might explain why the most massive, lazy black holes are less frequent in voids," Constantin said.

It could be that galaxies in "void" areas have less food around. However, recently scientists found that void galaxies support higher star-formation rates, which would suggest there's more gas and dust around-the same food that fuels black hole growth.

"This is strange given that these reclusive galaxies are forming stars at higher rates than their counterparts in denser regions," said co-researcher Fiona Hoyle, an astronomer at Widener University in Delaware. "This means there is plenty of fuel, but it is not efficiently channeled toward the central engine."

So perhaps interactions between galaxies could explain the different accretion rates, the scientists said. Interactions among galaxies can act to "knock" some of the gas and dust into the nuclear region where it's free fare for a central black hole. In less populated regions of the universe, such galactic get-togethers are much less frequent, which could lead to less fuel for black holes.

"These interactions are not as frequent in voids, so the 'feeding' of the black hole is slower," Constantin said.

Source