Biertan is a destination.
Biertan, Romania (by Emilia Morariu)
Nice photography!
2012年、築地本願寺。
本格的に盆踊りが始まる前の櫓。和太鼓がある時を待つ。
Beauty may be dangerous. But, intelligence is lethal.
Smooth magic!
141020
An axial piston contraption to complement the radial one. Rigging this was a gigantic pain…
#Covid #ChinaCovid #flying
To understand how risky it may be to board a flight now, start with how air circulates in a plane.
More people are flying every day, as Covid restrictions ease and vaccinations accelerate. But dangerous variants have led to deadly new outbreaks, raising questions about just how safe it is to travel now.
In most single-aisle models, you are constantly breathing a mixture of fresh and recirculated air.
The high exchange rate on planes forces new and existing cabin air to mix evenly, with the goal of minimizing pockets of air that could become stale or linger for too long.
As more people fly — nearly 1.5 million people passed through U.S. airports on Friday — congestion and crowding in parts of the airport can make physical distancing a greater challenge.
Airports vary in size and passenger volume, configurations and on-location businesses, Harvard researchers found. That could increase the chances of exposure depending on where people linger and for how long.
Going to in-terminal restaurants, for example, can be risky because masks are routinely removed and kept off to eat.
The Harvard researchers found that many airports were not designed to mitigate the airborne spread of respiratory pathogens. Although some airports have installed new or additional filtration systems, distancing, vigilance and other safety practices are still crucial.
“The challenge isn’t just on a plane,” said Saskia Popescu, an epidemiologist specializing in infection prevention. “Consider the airport and the whole journey.”
Methodology
The particle air flow simulation was conducted using a later version Boeing 737NG as the model for the cabin interior, which only has side air inlets. The model accounted for passengers occupying all of the seats. A computational-fluid dynamics code system known as FEFLO was then used to simulate the flow of more than 2.5 million particles. A large number of very small particles were introduced at the cabin inflow ducts, in part to ascertain the movement of pathogens that may have passed through the HEPA filters without being caught. The simulation showed that the air close to passengers’ heads had been in the cabin for less than 50 seconds. The first 10 frames of the particle flow animation were slowed down for clarity.
Different positions of sneezes were simulated as part of the modeling, and only smaller particles were used to estimate what may become airborne. This assumed face coverings could block larger particles expelled during a sneeze that can otherwise land on surfaces and body parts. Particles in this visualization were scaled up for presentation purposes. Sources: Airbus; Boeing; Rainald Löhner, George Mason University, Center for Computational Fluid Dynamics. By Mika Gröndahl, Tariro Mzezewa, Or Fleisher and Jeremy White (The New York Times).
A clip from Anthony Bourdain’s Parts Unknown Singapore episode has resurfaced where he challenges the Singaporean hosts for exploiting domestic labour. The Vice article links to https://besthousekeeper.sg/domestic-helpers-in-singapore/ and the way they describe the different ethnic groups is frankly disgusting. See for example, these are from the website:
This is shameful.
To be understood maybe first to be transparent.
“There’s nothing more intimate in life than simply being understood.”
— Brad Meltzer
Renovated loft by @TienTung_Nguyen
Get Inspired, visit www.myhouseidea.com
Oh, how sweet!
I saw this on my Facebook feed and it made me think of @berrysweetboutique and her sims Lacey and Merlot. I miss having them in my crazy saves lol
Nice setting for a little brunch
capaseccayacht via instagram