March 29, 2011

Daylight saving time


This weekend we swapped to daylight saving time, or summer time, as we call it. I assumed my new cell phone automatically adjusted the clock, like my old phone did.

I'm using my cell phone as alarm clock, and Monday morning we got up when the alarm went off at 7am. We had breakfast and I sent little boy off to school, before driving to work at 8:15, I thought.

Little boy thought so too. He rang the door bell of the house next door, where one of his friends lives. They walk to school together every morning. He got an early warning when his friend's mom opened the door and said that his friend left an hour ago. He was embarrassed when he came to school and had to tell the teacher that we had messed up the time.

Little boy was annoyed when he called me after school. Sorry about that. My fault.

I told him that it will be less embarrassing in the fall, when we switch the clocks back. Then he will be one hour too early >:D

(I found this picture on the internet. When I was young, I had several Swatch'es, in all kinds of weird patterns and colors. Now it's more than 10 years since I carried a watch. Maybe I should get one?)

March 27, 2011

Powder to the people


We had a really heavy blizzard this week, lasting for five days.

This weekend was the time to harvest, from the heavy snow fall. We went up to the mountains, and had a great time skiing in all the fresh powder.

The wind calmed down, but the snowfall continued throughout the weekend. I was off-piste skiing in the sparse birch forest with the kids. Today, it was powder all over the place, even on slopes that are normally groomed. Great! The white gold >:)

(I forgot my camera at home. The picture above was taken about a month ago. It's Little Boy skiing in the birch forest. This seemed to be the weekend when we forgot almost everything. When we stopped on a gas station on the way to the mountains, I found that I had forgotten my wallet and my cell phone at home. I asked my old lady to pay, but she had forgotten her wallet too. Fortunately, Little Boy had some cash that he got for his birthday a couple of weeks ago. He was kind enough to let me borrow his money >:D )

March 24, 2011

Blizzard


I'm working late again tonight.

I took a break at 5pm, and went home to feed the kids (my old lady has been out traveling last 3 days, on a business trip to the south). The kids were hungry, so we made some quick and simple stuff; pizza from the supermarket.

Then I went back to the office, to prepare my lecture for tomorrow morning. The subject this week is simultaneous joint inversion, the Holy Grail of inverse problems. It's about throwing all different kinds of geophysical measurements into a big computer, at the same time. Then, after a while, a unified picture of the earth pops out, we hope. I'm not actually gonna do it. I just teach the theory behind the method. It's like a mathematical concrete mixer.

Teaching is great fun, but the preparations take quite some time, because I always want to be well prepared. I try to imagine that I'm on the students side of the classroom. What kind of lecture would I liked to get? A systematic and comprehensible presentation. That's what I try to make. It's my last week lecturing this semester. Next Thursday I can do something else.

There's a really bad blizzard outside. It's been snowing and blowing like Hell for 3-4 days now. I have to dig the car out of the snow for the 4th time today. If the wind calms down we may get some good powder skiing this weekend.

Now I'm going home, in the white inferno. At least I will try ... >:)

(Sorry, I didn't have a good picture at hand. Above is our weather forecast for the next 24 hours. Doesn't look too good, does it? Maybe it's getting better for the weekend >:) )

March 14, 2011

Delusional doom blogfest


Obituary

The graveyard is full of irreplacable people. He was one of them, one of the best.

Rest in peace.

The world moves on >:)

(I made the drawing above using the freeform function in Powerpoint. Quick and easy, takes just a minute. But I don't claim to be a good artist >:D )

March 9, 2011

The big magnet


I'm working late again tonight, preparing a lecture for Friday morning. Tomorrow night I'm taking Little Boy to skiing practice, so I have to prepare the lecture one day in advance. It doesn't mean I've got better habits, starting early. It's just because I have to.

The subject this week (for the lecture, not the skiing practice) is magnetotellurics. It's a crazy word composed of two parts:
o Magnet; everyone knows what a magnet is.
o Tellus, which is the The Earth.
The Earth (Tellus) acts like a huge magnet. That's why such things as an old-fashioned compass works. The arrow points towards the magnetic north pole of The Earth. The magnetic north pole is different from the geographic North Pole. So if you're very close to the geographic North Pole, your compass would point to some place in Canada rather than towards north (you better use GPS in that case).

Furthermore (and this is where the fun starts), our dear Sun sends out so-called solar winds, continuously. A swarm of electric charges is raining over The Earth, and pushing the magnetic field out of equilibrium.

Just relax. It's not dangerous, and there's no way to stop it. This will go on until the sun stops burning (which will be really dangerous, but it's still some billion years into the future).

When the earth-magnet is disturbed like this (by the solar storms), The Earth sends back an echo which reveals it's inner secrets, not all the details, but more like a rough sketch. If we put down some sensors and measure the echo, we can compute an image of the earth and it's inner structure, many kilometers below the surface.

Cool isn't it? Do you wanna know how to do it? Then you have to come to my lecture on Friday morning. We're starting at 9am, after a cup of hot coffee >:)

(The picture above is an illustration of solar winds distrubing the magnetic field of The Earth. I took it from a report written by a former MSc student of mine. He (the student) probably stole it on the internet. I don't steal stuff; I just borrow it.)

March 4, 2011

Gone but not forgotten


I apologize for being late. In my place we're already half an hour into the 5th March. The "Gone but not forgotten" blogfest was scheduled for yesterday.

I don't watch many TV shows, nor TV in general. Most TV shows I have watched are gone. There are few I haven't forgotten, and even fewer I miss. Here are five past shows I enjoyed. Not sure if they're completely gone, but they're gone from the TV channels we have.

1. Headbanger’s Ball. An MTV classic. TV is full of crap pop music. More metal, please.

2. Downton Abbey. Great British drama series, watched it very recently (this year) in public broadcasting. Confilct, conflict, conflict.

3. UEFA Champions League. Great football, still on TV, but mostly on pay channels we don't have.

4. Stingers. Cool Australian under cover series. First seasons were best, when Anita Hegh was still in the lineup.

5. M*A*S*H. Just unforgettable.

(Heavy metal is cool on TV but a lot better live. I took the picture above on a concert with Mayhem in May last year)

March 2, 2011

Swiss chocolate


My mission is completed. I’m going back, from Milano to the far North. I will spend two days in our office beyond the Arctic Circle, before I go home.

It’s a long journey, first over the white peaks of the Alps with Swiss Air. They serve free Swiss chocolate. Very good. I have a connection in Zurich, and then heading Northward.

I’m tired, tried to read a couple of geophysics articles, and prepare some slides for tomorrow. But I'm too tired. I think I rather try to sleep for a while >:)

My old cell phone was almost falling apart. I needed a rubber band around it to keep it together. I got a new one last week, with flight mode. I pulled up my phone and took the picture through the window of the air plane, the Swiss Alps.
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