Showing posts with label Japanese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japanese. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Japanese astronaut to command space station in March

Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata is seen on a monitor during a training exercise in a cetrifuge at the Star City space centre outside Moscow, August 9, 2013. REUTERS/Sergei Remezov


Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata is seen on a monitor during a training exercise in a cetrifuge at the Star City space centre outside Moscow, August 9, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Sergei Remezov

By Irene Klotz


CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida | Wed Aug 28, 2013 5:58pm EDT


CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - The first Japanese astronaut to live aboard the International Space Station is preparing for a return flight, this time to serve as commander, officials said on Wednesday.


Koichi Wakata of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, is due to leave in November with a pair of veteran astronauts from the United States and Russia.


Wakata, 50, is expected to take command of the orbital research outpost in March, marking the first time a Japanese astronaut will lead a human space mission.


"It means a lot to Japan to have its own representative to command the International Space Station," Wakata told a news conference broadcast from the Johnson Space Center in Houston.


"It's a big milestone for Japan ... to have this experience," he said.


In 2009, Wakata became the first astronaut from Japan to live aboard the $100 billion research laboratory that flies about 250 miles above Earth.


Japan, one of 15 nations participating in the project, provided the station's largest and most elaborate laboratory, named Kibo, as well as cargo resupply ships.


Wakata, who was part of two missions on NASA's now-retired space shuttles, is training for his fourth flight along with NASA astronaut Rick Mastracchio and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin, both 53.


Mastracchio, a veteran of three shuttle missions and one of NASA's most experienced spacewalkers, will be making his first long-duration flight. Tyurin will be living aboard the station for a third time.


Command of the station typically rotates between a U.S. astronaut and Russian cosmonaut. In 2009, Belgium astronaut Frank De Winne became the first European to command the station. Canada's first commander, Chris Hadfield, was in charge from March until May.


Wakata, a native of Saitama, Japan, holds a bachelor's degree in aeronautical engineering, a master's in applied mechanics and a doctorate in aerospace engineering from Kyushu University. Before being selected as an astronaut in 1992, he worked as an aircraft structural engineer for Japan Airlines.


Wakata's first two spaceflights, in January 1996 and October 2000, were aboard NASA space shuttles. He was Japan's first live-aboard space station resident from March to July 2009. Upon returning to the station in November, Wakata will serve as a flight engineer before taking over command in March.


(Reporting by Tom Brown,; Editing by Stacey Joyce)


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Monday, July 1, 2013

Mai style: Japanese singer Mai Kuraki does things her way

SINGAPORE — Pop music and fashion have always gone hand in hand, ever since Elvis Presley went onstage in that leather jacket-and-pants combo back in the 1950s. Through the years, we’ve seen how style and music have affected pop culture, whether it’s the Beatle mop top, the punk slap-dash look, Madonna’s lace underwear-as-outerwear, emo rock’s preppy look and of course, Lady Gaga’s just-go-extreme identity.

So it’s only natural that this weekend’s inaugural Asia Style Collection (ASC) show will also feature some of the brightest stars of pop music today, including Korean sensations Girls Generation and 2NE1, Japan’s Thelma Aoyoma, AKB48 and Mai Kuraki, as well as Singapore pop band The Sam Willows.

Organised by MediaCorp’s online fashion portal StyleXStyle, the ASC will see Asian fashion brands like Azul By Moussy, Murua, Jade and Qnigirls showcase their latest pieces.

Fashion has definitely played a part in Mai’s music career. “We pick the clothes to match the atmosphere of the song to sing that day at the time of recording,” she revealed in an email interview.

Mai, who made her debut in 1999 with the single, Love, Day After Tomorrow, is one of a few female singers in Japan to have her first four studio albums to debut at the top of the Oricon album chart (the Japanese pop charts). To date, she has had seven No 1 albums (including two compilations) and two No 1 singles.

What fans like about Mai-K, as she’s affectionate called, is her no-nonsense style. Unlike other J-Pop singers, who, like their Chinese pop contemporaries, tend to go all flashy with loads of stagecraft and occasionally over-the-top costumes to wow the crowd, Mai doesn’t wear flashy outfits, but keeps it simple and comfortable.

Indeed, the singer prefers to wear “casual basics” (“it will change depending on the situation at that time,” she added).

She added that style isn’t everything to a successful career. “I think many elements might also be important, but the most important thing of all is the musical element.”

Then again, things don’t always go according to plan, just because you’re one of the top female performers in Japan. While she hasn’t experienced any wardrobe malfunctions on stage, she has encountered the odd faux pas now and again, like when she was supposed to issue a birthday greeting live onstage.

“By mistake, I went on and instead said ‘A Happy New Year!’”

According to Mai, the key to success is to learn from those mistakes and “believe in yourself and do not give up the dream, even if you experience a hard time”.

And what would she like her legacy to be? “(That my) music will be able to inspire hope and courage,” she said.

Considering that she and her fan base are still going strong, after almost 15 years in the business, that could very well happen indeed.

Asia Style Collection happens on June 22 at the Singapore Expo Halls 3 and 4. The carnival starts at 3pm, while the concert and fashion show starts at 6pm. Tickets from EventClique (https://tickets.eventclique.com/stylexstyle/Online/default.asp).

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Fear is potent risk of Japanese nuclear crisis

When it comes to the nuclear power disaster unfolding in Japan, there is far more to fear than fear itself. But fear is one of the biggest - and could turn out to be the most potent - dangers.

Although radiation escaping from a nuclear power plant catastrophe can increase the risk of many cancers and other health problems, stress, anxiety and fear ended up in many ways being much greater long-term threats to health and well-being after Chernobyl, Three Mile Island and other nuclear accidents, experts said Monday.

"The psychological effects were the biggest health effects of all - by far," said Fred Mettler, a University of New Mexico professor emeritus and one of the world's leading authorities on radiation, who studied Chernobyl for the World Health Organization. "In the end, that's really what affected the most people."

Fears of contamination and anxiety about the health of those exposed and their children led to significantly elevated rates of suicidal thinking and anxiety disorders, and rates of post-traumatic stress disorder and depression about doubled, Mettler and others said.

"The effect on mental health was hugely important," said Evelyn Bromet, a professor of psychiatry at Stony Brook University who studied the aftermath of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. "People's fears about getting cancer, or their children getting cancer, and family and friends dying from radiation exposure were very intense."

In the unprecedented disaster in Japan, where an earthquake triggered a tsunami that was followed by a major nuclear power plant emergency, all those negative psychological effects are being magnified in ways that no one can predict.

"You can imagine: There was an earthquake, and I survived that. And then here comes a tsunami, and I survived that. And then comes a nuclear reactor," said Mettler, the U.S. representative to the United Nations who studied Chernobyl. "With that kind of triple whammy, you can only imagine someone is going to be saying, 'What did I do? What's wrong with me?' "

Survivors of the bombings at Nagasaki and Hiroshima in 1945, Chernobyl and other nuclear accidents in Japan and Brazil were stigmatized by their societies, which caused discrimination that intensified emotional distress.

"After almost every radiological emergency, anyone or anything seen as or perceived as associated with the emergency came to be seen by others as tainted or something to be feared and even the object of discrimination," said Steven Becker of the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Such stigmatization can interfere with victims receiving care and recovering from the event, said Becker, who studied the psychological and social impact of a much less severe nuclear accident in 1999 in Tokaimura, Japan. In that case, people in other parts of Japan refused to buy products from that region, and travelers were turned away from hotels and asked not to use public baths and swimming pools. Similar discrimination occurred after a 1987 radiation exposure event in Goiania, Brazil.

In the long run, such incidents can negatively transform entire cultures. In the areas affected by the 1986 Chernobyl accident, a crippling sense of hopelessness set in and was passed down through generations.

"What we know from experience is the psychological footprint from a nuclear disaster can not only be massive but in many ways greater than the effect of radiation," Becker said. "On an individual level, these range all the way from anxiety disorders, depression and substance abuse to a kind of culture of fatalism and hopelessness that has gripped the population in many areas, and it continues today, decades later."

Among all the threats humans face today, radiation consistently ranks near the top of the list of what people fear and the emotional reaction it produces.

"As soon as we hear anything about 'nuclear,' our brain goes very quickly looking for danger and says, 'Alert?' " said David Ropeik, an instructor at Harvard University who studies risk perception and wrote "How Risky Is It, Really? Why Our Fears Don't Always Match the Facts." "That's just how we do it psychologically."

There are many reasons why humans fear radiation so intensely. One reason is because radiation is silent, invisible and odorless. Another is because radiation is associated with cancer, which itself is one of the most feared words. Another reason is that in accidents, as opposed to medical treatments, exposure to radiation is involuntary. Other reasons are the searing images of victims of Nagasaki and Hiroshima, a generation raised fearing Cold War-mushroom-cloud annihilation and the way radiation is portrayed by popular culture.

"In the movies and in comic books, people getting exposed to radiation turn into monsters," said John Boice Jr., a radiation expert at the International Epidemiology Unit in Rockville.

In fact, radiation is a far less potent carcinogen than other toxic substances. Studies of more than 80,000 survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki blasts have found that about 9,000 people subsequently died of some form of cancer. But only about 500 of those cases could be attributed to the radiation exposure the people experienced.

The average amount of radiation that victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were exposed to would increase the risk of dying from lung cancer by about 40 percent, Boice said. Smoking a pack of cigarettes a day increases the risk of dying of lung cancer by about 400 percent.

"Radiation is a universal carcinogen, but it's a very weak carcinogen compared to other carcinogens," Boice said. "Even when you are exposed, it's very unlikely you will get an adverse effect. But fear of radiation is very strong."


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Thursday, April 18, 2013

Japanese fish survive 5,000-mile trip across Pacific in tsunami boat

By Elaine Porterfield

SEATTLE | Fri Apr 12, 2013 10:55am EDT

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Scientists are baffled as to how a group of small fish native to Japan survived a journey across the Pacific after they were found on a boat swept away by the 2011 tsunami and washed up last month on the coast of Washington state.

The batch of striped beak fish - five in all - were discovered submerged in the hold of the 20-foot-long fishing skiff, dubbed the Sai-shou-maru, on Long Beach in southwestern Washington.

The vessel, found beached right-side-up, was confirmed this week to have originated from the region of northern Japan devastated in the immense tidal surge generated by the March 2011 Fukushima earthquake.

Other boats carried away by the tsunami have previously washed up along the U.S. Pacific Northwest and Alaska, as have chunks of piers and large quantities of other debris. But the fish found aboard the Sai-shou-maru are the first vertebrates - animals with backbones - known to have made the voyage.

Marine biologists studying the phenomenon are puzzled over precisely how striped beak fish, natural denizens of warmer, shallow southern Japanese waters, ended up as live stowaways in the well of the boat, and how they endured a two-year journey across the ocean.

"It is quite remarkable," Curt Hart, a spokesman for the Washington state Department of Ecology, told Reuters. "Everyone is very amazed that these fish survived for two years in that hold."

The fish were apparently swept up with the skiff as it was washed down the coast of Japan and out into the Pacific.

Scientists surmise that the fish made their home beneath the boat for much of the trip as it drifted upside down and partially submerged, feeding on other organisms that became encrusted or otherwise attached to the inverted vessel. Then they might have been scooped up into the skiff's hold when wind or waves righted the vessel, Hart said.

NOURISHMENT MYSTERY

The middle of the Pacific is far less rich in nutrients than coastal waters, raising questions of how the fish found enough food to survive the trip, said Jeff Adams, an expert at Washington Sea Grant, an agency supporting marine research.

The 6-inch-long striped beak fish, named for their protruding mouths and black-and-white striped markings, were the most surprising of an estimated 30 to 50 species of marine organisms that hitchhiked across the Pacific with the skiff.

Other stowaways included various types of algae, anemones, crabs, marine worms and shellfish.

Many were believed to be non-native species, and all were treated as potentially invasive - capable of displacing native organisms and disrupting the natural ecological balance if allowed to escape into the environment and propagate.

As a precaution, state officials swiftly removed the Sai-shou-maru from the shoreline before samples of organisms were collected for study, and the boat was scraped and steam-cleaned, Hart said.

Four of the fish found alive in the boat on March 22 have since died, and the lone surviving specimen has been moved to an aquarium in Seaside, Oregon.

The Sai-shou-maru is not the only Noah's ark of potential invasive species carried to the U.S. West Coast by the tsunami. Several more Japanese boats have washed ashore since last year in Washington, Oregon and California, and a fishing vessel found drifting off Alaska was scuttled by the Coast Guard.

Dozens of non-native and potentially invasive species - more than hitched a ride aboard the Sai-shou-maru - were previously found attached to two large hunks of piers that washed up, one in Oregon and one in Washington, Hart said.

(Editing by Steve Gorman, Cynthia Johnston and Patrick Graham)


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