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Arriving home after her part time job at burger king

Mars rover sends home movie of daredevil descent to landing on red planet

February 23, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

LOS ANGELES — NASA scientists on Monday unveiled first-of-a-kind home movies of last week’s’ daredevil Mars rover landing, vividly showing its supersonic parachute inflation over the red planet and a rocket-powered hovercraft lowering the science lab on wheels to the surface.

The footage was recorded on Thursday by a series of cameras mounted at different angles of the multi-stage spacecraft as it carried the rover, named Perseverance, through the thin Martian atmosphere to a gentle touchdown inside a vast basin called Jezero Crater.

Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA associate administrator for science, called seeing the footage “the closest you can get to landing on Mars without putting on a pressure suit.”

The video montage was played for reporters tuning in to a news briefing webcast from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles four days after the historic landing of the most advanced astrobiology probe ever sent to another world.

NASA also presented a brief audio clip captured by microphones on the rover after its arrival that included the murmur of a light wind gust – the first ever recorded on the fourth planet from the sun.

JPL imaging scientist Justin Maki said NASA’s stationary landing craft InSight, which arrived on Mars in 2018 to study its deep interior, previously measured seismic signals on the planet that were “acoustically driven” and then “rendered as audio.”

A portion of a panorama made up of individual images taken by the Navigation Cameras, or Navcams, aboard NASA?s Perseverance Mars rover shows the Martian landscape February 20, 2021. Images taken February 20, 2021. Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via Reuters

A portion of a panorama made up of individual images taken by the Navigation Cameras, or Navcams, aboard NASA?s Perseverance Mars rover shows the Martian landscape February 20, 2021. Images taken February 20, 2021. Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via Reuters

But mission deputy project manager Matt Wallace said he believed the Martian breeze represented the first ambient sound directly recorded on the surface of Mars and played back for humans.

The spacecraft’s mics failed to collect useable audio during descent to the crater floor. But they did pick up a mechanical whirring from the rover after its arrival. Wallace said he hoped to record other sounds, such as the rover’s wheels crunching over the surface and its robotic arm drilling for samples of Martian rock.

‘The stuff of our dreams’

But it was film footage from the spacecraft’s perilous, self-guided ride through Martian skies to touchdown – an interval NASA has dubbed “the seven minutes of terror” – that JPL’s team found particularly striking.

“These videos, and these images are the stuff of our dreams,” Al Chen, head of the descent and landing team, told reporters. JPL Director Mike Watkins said engineers spent much of the weekend “binge-watching” the footage.

The video, filmed in color at 75 frames a second, shows action in fluid, vivid motion from several angles, the first such imagery ever recorded of a spacecraft landing on another planet, Wallace said.

One of the most dramatic moments is of the red-and-white parachute being shot from a canon-like launch device into the sky above the rover as the spacecraft is hurtling toward the ground at nearly two times the speed of sound.

The surface of Mars directly below NASA's Mars Perseverance rover is seen using the Rover Down-Look Camera in an image acquired February 22, 2021. Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via Reuters

The surface of Mars directly below NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover is seen using the Rover Down-Look Camera in an image acquired February 22, 2021. Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via Reuters

The chute springs upward, unfurls and fully inflates in less than two seconds, with no evidence of tangling within its 2 miles (3.2 km) of tether lines, Chen said.

A downward-pointing camera shows the heat shield falling away and a sweeping vista of the butterscotch-colored Martian terrain, appearing to shift back and forth as the spacecraft sways under the parachute.

Seconds later, an upward-pointed camera captures the rocket-powered “sky-crane” vehicle, newly jettisoned from the parachute, its thrusters firing but the propellant plumes invisible to the human eye while lowering the rover to a safe landing spot on a harness of tethers.

A separate camera shows the lowering of the six-wheeled rover from the vantage point of the sky crane, looking downward as Perseverance dangles from its cable harness just over the surface with streams of dust billowing around it at touchdown. The sky crane is then seen flying up and away from the landing site after the harness cables are cut.

A single still photo of the rover suspended from the sky crane moments before landing was released by NASA on Friday amid much fanfare as a precursor to the video shown on Monday.

The only previous moving footage produced of a spacecraft during a Mars landing was a comparatively crude video shot from beneath the previous rover, Curiosity, during its descent to the planet’s surface in 2012. That stop-motion-like sequence was shot at 3.5 frames per second from a single angle that showed the ground gradually getting closer but included no images of the parachute or sky-crane maneuvers.

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Hanoi people advised to stay at home to avoid corona infection

March 24, 2020 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – Hanoi is entering a more intense phase of the fight against the coronavirus and it challenges the city’s efforts if secondary transmission is not well managed.

Chairman Nguyen Duc Chung of the Hanoi People’s Committee has repeated the call on local residents to stay at home “as much as possible” to avoid contagion of the new coronavirus which is sweeping every part of the world.

Chairman Nguyen Duc Chung of the Hanoi People’s Committee. Photo: Thanh Nien

Locals should stay limit outdoor activities from now until April 5, and when out people need to wear facial masks, practice social distancing of at least two meters, and move in one way direction at supermarkets, the mayor said at a meeting late on March 23.

The reason is that Hanoi is at high risk of pandemic contagion in the next two weeks that is the incubation period (the time between exposure to the virus and the appearance of the first symptoms).

Vietnam has applied mandatory 14-day quarantine to all people, both Vietnamese and foreigners, coming from overseas since March 21. Before that, only people who came from or travelled across epidemic-hit areas, were infected with the virus or those in close contact with the infected were required to undergo quarantine, implying potential risks of transmission in the community.

The Ministry of Health has called on passengers of 21 flights carrying virus-infected people to contact health authorities for free tests and further instructions.

“This time is very important for the city to prevent secondary transmission or face multiple inflections if we failed to contain the virus,” Chung stressed.

Sources of contagion

Hanoi is facing three main sources of contagion namely those coming from China, South Korea, and Japan; foreigners and students from Europe and epidemic-hit countries; and foreigners and students who arrive in and return to Vietnam.

Hanoi is estimated to welcome around 20,000 people returning to the country and is preparing mass quarantine facilities.

Secondary transmission becomes serious as the identification of people who are connected with the infected ones remains difficult due to dishonest declaration.

So far, Hanoi has confirmed 39 people positive with the virus, including 30 coming by air from epidemic-stricken areas and 9 cases of secondary transmission.

More measures

The city’s leader asked local police to lock new detainees away from the existing prisoners in penitentiary centers. Meanwhile, authorities at quarantine facilities do not accept deliveries by relatives of people under quarantine to prevent disease transmission.

In addition, health authorities are asked to take samples of all people coming back to the country before March 21 for tests.

The Vietnamese government has called on its citizens to limit travel, wear masks at public places. In addition, entertainment facilities and restaurants are ask to shut temporarily.

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Resilient homes on flood plains giving hope to at-risk families

November 6, 2020 by www.vir.com.vn

resilient homes on flood plains giving hope to at risk families
The central region’s woes with natural calamities have badly affected locals’ way of life

Just a few hours prior to the October 28 arrival of the strongest storm seen in Vietnam in the last 20 years, Bui Thi Chin’s family in Binh Son district of the central province of Quang Ngai was completing the final stages of preparation for the incoming threat.

For the families of millions of people in other central coastal provinces, storms and floods have become a familiar part of their lives for many years. However, 2020 has brought disaster over disaster for the central region with some of the strongest storms ever experienced in recent weeks, on top of the difficulties that the global health crisis has brought in recent months.

Chin said that when she learned of storm Molave’s approach to the mainland, she was so worried and could not sleep for several nights. It was projected that the eye of the storm would most likely be located over Quang Ngai. “The wind began to blow so fiercely from the afternoon. However, my family had promptly reinforced my home’s resistance and moved our belongings to the attic, so I feel safer. My husband and I will also be in the attic for the next few days because heavy rains can lead to flooding,” said Chin.

The house of Chin’s family is one of more than 3,200 storm- and flood-resilient houses constructed in the central coastal provinces of Thanh Hoa, Quang Binh, Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Nam, and Quang Ngai jointly funded by the Green Climate Fund, the Vietnamese government, and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The partnership aims to improve the resilience of vulnerable coastal communities to climate change-related impacts in the central Vietnam.

Along with Quang Ngai, Quang Binh, Quang Tri, and Thua Thien-Hue have also been battered by persistent torrential rains, causing widespread flooding and landslides. Since October 5, prior to Molave’s arrival, nearly 150 people have been killed or gone missing, more than 270,000 houses have been flooded, over 37,500 homes have been damaged, and around 57,000 people have been evacuated to temporary shelters, as reported by the UNDP and the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development’s Vietnam Disaster Management Authority in Quang Binh, Quang Tri, and Thua Thien-Hue.

resilient homes on flood plains giving hope to at risk families
Storm- and flood-resilient housing is helping flood-hit families

Providing shelter

During the flooding, the storm- and flood-resilient houses like Chin’s begin to take effect in ensuring the safety of people’s lives and property. In the severely-flooded Thua Thien-Hue, nearly 600 such homes have withstood the recent relentless weather, including during historically high flooding over the past few weeks.

Meanwhile, in Quang Binh, many people have lost almost all of their household possessions to the floodwaters, but there are also those who are more fortunate because the storm- and flood-resilient houses are not only a safe shelter, but also act as food storage facilities.

Nguyen Van Duoc’s family in Son Thuy commune of Le Thuy district is one of the households in this case. He said his house is a meaningful asset of his life, and he decided to have it built after receiving advice and support from the UNDP as well as the local government.

Elsewhere Duong Thi Trinh, residing in Le Thuy commune in Quang Binh, also shared her gratefulness to own a solid house because it not only becomes a shelter for her family but has also been a common home for many neighbouring families in recent flooding days. “We are fortunate to have a cosy and safe place to live,” said Trinh.

According to Dao Xuan Lai, UNDP assistant resident representative, and head of Climate Change and Environment, storm- and flood-resilient houses must ensure criteria such as being resistant to both storms and floods and having flood-proof flooring, while construction cost is kept low.

“A qualified storm- and flood-resilient house must have a foundation made of reinforced concrete, brick, or stone, columns and beams made of reinforced concrete, wall built with brick or stone, flood-proof floors, and a roof that can withstand wind speeds about 100km per hour,” Lai explained. The foundation is relatively high compared to normal, and the flood-proof floor must be at least 1.5m above the 6-metre flood level of a historical flood which occurred in 1999. Flood-proof floors (Mezzanines) should have a minimum area of 10 square metres and are made of reinforced concrete or solid wood with safety floor railings made of sturdy iron, steel, or wood.

Flood-proof futures

The resilience of these important homes after major floods has illustrated the outstanding advantages of the buildings. Particularly, for households with difficult circumstances – the main beneficiaries of the project – such housing helps protects lives and assets, quickly stabilises livelihoods, contributes to building a safe community, and proactively mitigates the impacts of climate change.

As a result, there are calls for the model of storm- and flood-resilient houses to be replicated and scaled up in central coastal provinces that are severely damaged by natural disasters.

Nguyen Van Thuc, Chairman of the People’s Committee of Son Thuy commune in Quang Binh said, “In addition to poor and disadvantaged households, we should expand the scope to support near-poor households in order to build resilient houses in extremely difficult areas.”

The suggestion is already part of the plan for the UNDP project to replicate resilient housing models. According to Caitlin Wiesen, UNDP resident representative in Vietnam, it has mobilised $100,000 from its emergency resources to assist the government and vulnerable and flood-affected people in the central region through building such homes.

In addition to 600 storm- and flood-resilient houses in Thua Thien-Hue, more than 1,000 houses in Quang Binh and Quang Nam and thousands more in localities of Quang Ngai and Thanh Hoa have been gradually appearing since 2017 and will continue to be built until 2021. More than other 800 resilient houses are planned to be built in the next year.

“UNDP will continue to support vulnerable and flood-affected people by building resilient houses,” reaffirmed Wiesen.

A day after storm Molave directly ripped through Quang Ngai with wind speeds reaching 100km per hour, causing many houses to have their roofs blown off and large trees uprooted, Bui Thi Chin informed that her whole family was safe there, and her property had not suffered much damage. She and her husband felt safer than before, and the house did its job despite heavy rain and strong winds outside.

Chin said emotionally, “Vietnamese people have a saying about settling down and thriving. Hopefully many people in Quang Ngai from my hometown as well as people in other central provinces will have warm, safe houses like ours so that floods and storms will no longer become an obsession and bring heavy losses.”

As fact, in Vietnam, there are already many varying designs of resilient houses such as floating homes, and buildings with concrete pillars that are being constructed in several provinces in the central and south of the country.

“Most of the houses built under this programme are very sturdy and beyond the standard requirements. They are very durable,” said Nguyen Manh Khoi, deputy director of the Housing and Real Estate Market Management Agency under the Ministry of Construction.

These houses have not only been built through contributions from the UNDP initiative but also from policy bank loans and support from international donors, commune resources, and other social resources.

“We have developed a project to build 4,000 resilient houses for poor people who are vulnerable to disasters. As we have been implementing this project, we received much appreciation from the locals, who were very excited. Currently, the provinces are implementing the project, and while its budget is not particularly large, we think that it has had a real practical effect so far,” said Tran Quang Hoai, director general of the Vietnam Disaster Management Authority.

Equipping localities in climate fight Insurance gap adding risk to families Escaping poverty via breed initiative Beekeepers buzzing with initiative’s enhancements Hopes for continued aid for at-risk families Quality breeds aiding rural families Modern technology complementing flood-resilient home creations Flood-proof homes saving the day for central coast families Poorest areas offered helping hand with breeding initiative Storm-hit families grasping the knowledge to overcome Livelihoods transformed with mangrove forest protection Storm-proof home initiative transforming living conditions Resilient homes on flood plains giving hope to at-risk families Resilient homes rescue those in storm- and flood-hit areas

By Hoang Oanh

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Vietnam Airlines brings stranded citizens home from Myanmar

March 4, 2021 by sggpnews.org.vn

Taking off at Noi Bai Airport in Hanoi at 9 am, the first plane landed in Yangon Airport at 10:30 am. The return flight started at 12:30 pm, expected to arrive in Da Nang City at 3:10 pm on the same day.
Departing from Hanoi at 10 am, the second one arrived in Yangon at 11:30 am. The return flight started at 1:30 pm, expected to land in Da Nang City at 4:10 pm.
According to the Embassy of Vietnam in Yangon, the Myanmar’s military government has imposed an 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew for areas of Yangon and issued a ban on gatherings in public places in response to people carrying out unlawful actions that harm the rule of law. Protesters also rallied at a major downtown intersection in the country’s largest city.
The Vietnamese embassy advised citizens to complete e-health declaration forms at home and get to the airport early before the scheduled departure time.
Passengers must wear masks on board and take a new one after a 4-hour wearing time, be covered from head to toe in personal protective gears and comply with preventive measures for Covid-19 pandemic. All passengers have to take body temperature measurements before boarding. Anyone with a body temperature of 37.5 degrees or higher, cough and difficulty in breathing would be denied from getting aboard.
Vietnam Airlines brings stranded citizens home from Myanmar ảnh 1 The Vietnam Airlines’ flight crew

By Bich Quyen – Translated by Kim Khanh

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The first 117,600 doses of Covid-19 vaccines arrive in Vietnam

February 24, 2021 by vietnamnet.vn

A plane carrying the first batch of 117,600 doses of COVID-19 vaccine landed at HCM City-based Tan Son Nhat international airport at 10.40am this morning.

The first 117,600 doses of Covid-19 vaccines arrive in Vietnam

Deputy Health Minister Truong Quoc Cuong at the delivery ceremony (Photo: VNA)

The vaccine was jointly studied and produced by AstraZeneca pharmaceutical company and the UK’s Oxford University.

Deputy Health Minister Truong Quoc Cuong highlighted the significance of the vaccine delivery at a time when the COVID-19 pandemic is erupting in Hai Duong, Hai Phong and Quang Ninh.

With the delivery, Vietnam has become one of the first countries in Asia to access a prestigious vaccine in the world.

In order to achieve the dual goal of fighting the pandemic and developing the economy, it is necessary to increase vaccination to reach community immunity, he said.

Apart from stepping up the trial and production of vaccines at home, the Health Ministry is working to import more vaccines from other producers as directed by the Government while preparing for vaccination in the priority list, he added.

Vu Thu Ha, Director of the Vietnam Vaccine JSC (VNVC) – importer of the vaccine, said the batch will be brought to the VNVC’s super cold facilities for storage in line with the Government and Health Ministry’s regulations.

Result from clinical trials showed that 22 days after the first shot, AstraZeneca vaccine could fully protect people from serious illness, hospitalisation and death caused by the novel coronavirus. Within 90 days, the vaccine’s potency could reach 76 percent.

Analyses showed that the vaccine could reduce infection risk by two thirds for cases without symptoms.

Cận cảnh 117.600 liều vắc xin Covid-19 đầu tiên đã về đến Việt Nam

First batch of COVID-19 vaccine arrives at Tan Son Nhat airport

Cận cảnh 117.600 liều vắc xin Covid-19 đầu tiên đã về đến Việt Nam
Cận cảnh 117.600 liều vắc xin Covid-19 đầu tiên đã về đến Việt Nam

Health Ministry officials and the British Consul in HCM City welcome the first batch of vaccine at Tan Son Nhat airport.

Cận cảnh 117.600 liều vắc xin Covid-19 đầu tiên đã về đến Việt Nam
Cận cảnh 117.600 liều vắc xin Covid-19 đầu tiên đã về đến Việt Nam

The vaccine will be preserved in cold storages of VNVC and AstraZeneca in HCM City.

Cận cảnh 117.600 liều vắc xin Covid-19 đầu tiên đã về đến Việt Nam

The vaccine will be kept in modern cold refrigerators.

VietNamNet/VNA

Photo: Thanh Tung

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MoneyGram launches first real-time P2P payment solution to Vietnam using Visa Direct

February 4, 2021 by www.vir.com.vn

moneygram launches first real time p2p payment solution to vietnam using visa direct
Consumers can transfer money digitally through the MoneyGram mobile app or website to arrive almost instantly to any Visa cardholder in Vietnam

This latest integration in the partnership between MoneyGram, Visa, Sacombank, and other leading banks across the country enables customers to transfer money from the US, UK, and 18 European countries to Vietnam quickly and securely through Visa Direct.

Consumers can transfer money digitally through the MoneyGram mobile app or website to arrive almost instantly to any Visa cardholder located in Vietnam.

“We’ve already hit the ground running in 2021, and this latest integration with Visa Direct further improves our leading customer experience and will help execute our strategy to scale digital growth in one of the largest remittance markets in the world,” said Grant Lines, global chief revenue officer at MoneyGram. “We’ve built a modern, mobile, and API-driven company that has enabled MoneyGram to become the preferred partner for cross-border transfers, and we’re excited to continue to expand our real-time transfer capabilities with Visa Direct.”

From now until June 30, 2021, consumers can send money to a Visa debit card in Vietnam without incurring a transfer fee.

“Our digital solution will enable MoneyGram consumers to quickly and conveniently receive money directly into their bank accounts via Visa Direct,” said Dang Tuyet Dung, country manager at Visa Vietnam and Laos. “Cardholders can use any Visa debit or prepaid card to receive cross-border payments via Visa’s real-time push payment solution. This partnership with MoneyGram will support Vietnam’s economic growth and streamline the remittance transferring process, which is vital to our customers’ digital experience and helps introduce our innovations to consumers.”

Vietnam is deemed one of the top-10 remittance recipients in the world. The millions of Vietnamese living and working abroad will now be able to use MoneyGram to send money seamlessly and conveniently to families and friends back at home.

“In this digital age, we believe it is important to introduce solutions that can improve our cardholders’ lives,” said Nguyen Minh Tam, deputy general manager at Sacombank. “We’re excited to once again be at the forefront of innovation with Visa Direct making cross-border remittances hassle-free and efficient to any Sacombank account holder in Vietnam using their Visa card on Sacombank Pay application.”

With Visa Direct, customers can now transfer up to $2,500 per transaction and $10,000 per day. From now until June 30, 2021, consumers can send money to a Visa debit card in Vietnam without incurring a transfer fee.

By Visa

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