Truth about mystery flights between China and Myanmar during coup d etat
23 Feb, 2021 09:12 PM
4 minutes to read
It s been revealed that unregistered, mysterious nightly flights between China and Myanmar are carrying goods and people, possibly linking Beijing to the coup. Photo / Twitter
It s been revealed that unregistered, mysterious nightly flights between China and Myanmar are carrying goods and people, possibly linking Beijing to the coup. Photo / Twitter
news.com.au
Every night for more than a week, unregistered planes have been carrying unknown goods and people between China and its conflict-ravaged neighbour Myanmar – and experts believe they might know why.
The southeast Asian nation – which shares a sprawling border with China to its northeast – is currently effectively cut off from the world as a new military regime cracks down hard on those who opposed its takeover from a democratically elected government in a brutal coup three weeks ago.
(Photo : mrganso)
The University of California, Davis (UC Davis) has been developing a prototype, according to Robologic Lab, by integrating thermoradiative panels so that they can generate energy due to radiative cooling.
The parallels between a conventional solar panel and the proposed new night ones were observed by Jeremy Munday, an electrical and computer engineer from UC Davis. You have to use different materials, but the physics is the same, he added.
A regular solar cell produces electricity by absorbing sunlight, allowing a voltage to appear around the system and flow for current, Science Daily said. Light is generated instead in these modern devices, and the current and voltage go in the opposite direction, but you still produce electricity.
Waitangi Tribunal lawyer teaches Kiwi kids about Te Tiriti
22 Feb, 2021 01:07 AM
2 minutes to read
Waitangi Tribunal lawyer Roimata Smail has developed an online Te Tiriti of Waitangi education programme to help teachers share the basics with five to 12-year-olds. Photo / Supplied
Waitangi Tribunal lawyer Roimata Smail has developed an online Te Tiriti of Waitangi education programme to help teachers share the basics with five to 12-year-olds. Photo / Supplied
A lawyer at the Waitangi Tribunal by day, by night a Napier-based woman is helping teach schools about the Te Tiriti of Waitangi (the Treaty of Waitangi) through an online workshop. Roimata Smail, a Waitangi