Affichage des articles dont le libellé est The Big Science Blog. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est The Big Science Blog. Afficher tous les articles

NASA releases new ‘head-scratcher’ images of Pluto — Holy shit, basically

“Seeing dunes on Pluto — if that is what they are — would be completely wild, because Pluto’s atmosphere today is so thin,” said William B. McKinnon, a GGI deputy lead from Washington University, St. Louis, in a news release. “Either Pluto had a thicker atmosphere in the past, or some process we haven’t figured out is at work. It’s a head-scratcher.”

And this is just the beginning. Last weekend, the spacecraft New Horizons began it’s year-long download of data collected during it’s amazing-feat-of-engineering flyby of the famous dwarf planet.

The newest images have NASA scientists “reeling” …

They reveal new features as diverse as possible dunes, nitrogen ice flows that apparently oozed out of mountainous regions onto plains, and even networks of valleys that may have been carved by material flowing over Pluto’s surface. They also show large regions that display chaotically jumbled mountains reminiscent of disrupted terrains on Jupiter’s icy moon Europa.

“Pluto is showing us a diversity of landforms and complexity of processes that rival anything we’ve seen in the solar system,” said New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), Boulder, Colorado. “If an artist had painted this Pluto before our flyby, I probably would have called it over the top — but that’s what is actually there.”

Hurray! for getting off the planet and leading the way for what we can only hope will be the next great frontier of human exploration.

Zoomable versions:

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.

 



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1ihBXKO

“Seeing dunes on Pluto — if that is what they are — would be completely wild, because Pluto’s atmosphere today is so thin,” said William B. McKinnon, a GGI deputy lead from Washington University, St. Louis, in a news release. “Either Pluto had a thicker atmosphere in the past, or some process we haven’t figured out is at work. It’s a head-scratcher.”

And this is just the beginning. Last weekend, the spacecraft New Horizons began it’s year-long download of data collected during it’s amazing-feat-of-engineering flyby of the famous dwarf planet.

The newest images have NASA scientists “reeling” …

They reveal new features as diverse as possible dunes, nitrogen ice flows that apparently oozed out of mountainous regions onto plains, and even networks of valleys that may have been carved by material flowing over Pluto’s surface. They also show large regions that display chaotically jumbled mountains reminiscent of disrupted terrains on Jupiter’s icy moon Europa.

“Pluto is showing us a diversity of landforms and complexity of processes that rival anything we’ve seen in the solar system,” said New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), Boulder, Colorado. “If an artist had painted this Pluto before our flyby, I probably would have called it over the top — but that’s what is actually there.”

Hurray! for getting off the planet and leading the way for what we can only hope will be the next great frontier of human exploration.

Zoomable versions:

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.

 



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1ihBXKO

Elon Musk suggests nuking Mars to warm it up … the fast way

Mars is a fixer-upper of a planet from our perspective, as Elon Musk told Stephen Colbert Wednesday on Late Night. It’s got some of the basics: Water (both surface and subsurface ice), sunlight (naturally) …

Nuke it? (Getty Images)

Nuke it? (Getty Images)

As Universe Today adds: “Both planets have roughly the same amount of land surface area, sustained polar caps, and both have a similar tilt in their rotational axes, affording each of them strong seasonal variability.”

But, there’s a lot of problems … low gravity, low atmospheric pressure and it’s dang cold. Not to mention constant bombardment of solar radiation.

So, is it worth trying to go to Mars?  Or, are human Martians destined to live in shelters for however long they are on the Red Planet?

Musk thinks there’s a way to increase atmospheric pressure (necessary for liquid water) and temperature. Here’s the conversation between Musk and Colbert (from the video below):

Colbert: You sincerely think we should go to Mars, that men and women should go to Mars. Why do we want to go to Mars? It’s uninhabitable.

Musk: It’s very inhospitable, that’s true.

Colbert: You have to be in domes …

Musk: Initially.

Colbert: Really? How long before we can turn Mars into someplace where we can live.

Musk: It is a fixer-upper of a planet. So at first you’re going to have to live in transparent domes, but eventually you can transform Mars into an Earth-like planet. … You’d warm it up. … there’s a fast way and a slow way. The fast way is drop thermal nuclear weapons over the poles.

Colbert: You’re a super villain. That’s what a super villain does.

Ha, well. Basically, he’s saying we’d have to reverse the process that left Mars without much of an atmosphere. And blowing a lot of that frozen water, carbon and other stuff into the air might just do it. Otherwise, we’ll need to go the “slow way” of pumping those greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere though machines or microbes.


Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1KaYZZq

Mars is a fixer-upper of a planet from our perspective, as Elon Musk told Stephen Colbert Wednesday on Late Night. It’s got some of the basics: Water (both surface and subsurface ice), sunlight (naturally) …

Nuke it? (Getty Images)

Nuke it? (Getty Images)

As Universe Today adds: “Both planets have roughly the same amount of land surface area, sustained polar caps, and both have a similar tilt in their rotational axes, affording each of them strong seasonal variability.”

But, there’s a lot of problems … low gravity, low atmospheric pressure and it’s dang cold. Not to mention constant bombardment of solar radiation.

So, is it worth trying to go to Mars?  Or, are human Martians destined to live in shelters for however long they are on the Red Planet?

Musk thinks there’s a way to increase atmospheric pressure (necessary for liquid water) and temperature. Here’s the conversation between Musk and Colbert (from the video below):

Colbert: You sincerely think we should go to Mars, that men and women should go to Mars. Why do we want to go to Mars? It’s uninhabitable.

Musk: It’s very inhospitable, that’s true.

Colbert: You have to be in domes …

Musk: Initially.

Colbert: Really? How long before we can turn Mars into someplace where we can live.

Musk: It is a fixer-upper of a planet. So at first you’re going to have to live in transparent domes, but eventually you can transform Mars into an Earth-like planet. … You’d warm it up. … there’s a fast way and a slow way. The fast way is drop thermal nuclear weapons over the poles.

Colbert: You’re a super villain. That’s what a super villain does.

Ha, well. Basically, he’s saying we’d have to reverse the process that left Mars without much of an atmosphere. And blowing a lot of that frozen water, carbon and other stuff into the air might just do it. Otherwise, we’ll need to go the “slow way” of pumping those greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere though machines or microbes.


Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1KaYZZq

Ceres’ bright spots looking less like alien cities in new photo … oh, well

Highest resolution photos yet of the mysterious bright spots on the dwarf planet Ceres show a complex of material that looks a lot like reflective residue such as salt or something like it, though the agency hasn’t made a ruling yet.

Here’s the new higher-res photo in a zoomable format (details in gallery below):

However, the spots do look a lot less like ice lakes or “ice rinks” and they definitely look a lot less like our personal favorite: Alien civilization. But, as we said, NASA is waiting for more data

“Dawn has transformed what was so recently a few bright dots into a complex and beautiful, gleaming landscape,” said Marc Rayman, Dawn’s chief engineer and mission director based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. “Soon, the scientific analysis will reveal the geological and chemical nature of this mysterious and mesmerizing extraterrestrial scenery.”

 

The scale of the scene is pretty amazing. In some places, the rim of the “Occator crater is almost vertical in some places, where it rises steeply for 1 mile (nearly 2 kilometers).” That would be an amazing sight: Standing at the base of the rim and looking nearly straight up … for a mile. Cool.

The agency also published a 3D tour of the crater. Here are some stills and other 3D work by the agency and a citizen scientist we’ve been conversing with.

 

 

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1JTuNmB

Highest resolution photos yet of the mysterious bright spots on the dwarf planet Ceres show a complex of material that looks a lot like reflective residue such as salt or something like it, though the agency hasn’t made a ruling yet.

Here’s the new higher-res photo in a zoomable format (details in gallery below):

However, the spots do look a lot less like ice lakes or “ice rinks” and they definitely look a lot less like our personal favorite: Alien civilization. But, as we said, NASA is waiting for more data

“Dawn has transformed what was so recently a few bright dots into a complex and beautiful, gleaming landscape,” said Marc Rayman, Dawn’s chief engineer and mission director based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. “Soon, the scientific analysis will reveal the geological and chemical nature of this mysterious and mesmerizing extraterrestrial scenery.”

 

The scale of the scene is pretty amazing. In some places, the rim of the “Occator crater is almost vertical in some places, where it rises steeply for 1 mile (nearly 2 kilometers).” That would be an amazing sight: Standing at the base of the rim and looking nearly straight up … for a mile. Cool.

The agency also published a 3D tour of the crater. Here are some stills and other 3D work by the agency and a citizen scientist we’ve been conversing with.

 

 

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1JTuNmB

UFO sightings used to be ‘better’ — What happened?

Written by Seth Shostak, SETI Institute

UFOs: The Trail is Stale.

One thing that strikes me about claims of alien visitation is that so much of the evidence is musty and fusty.

Every day, I get stories and articles from people around the world who aggregate UFO news. But much of it is not news – it’s olds. The folks who think there’s good proof that Earth is a stomping ground for extraterrestrials are still hung up on the Roswell incident of 1947 or its British opposite number, the Rendlesham Forest event of 1980. They’re still citing the testimony of aging politicians, defense establishment types, and Apollo astronauts who “know something.”

 

The few alternatives to this vintage archive are contemporary photos and videos of vague lights in the sky, low-resolution and low-confidence material that isn’t likely to sway many scientists. The good stuff seems to be the old stuff.

To better judge if this is really true, I trawled the web for listings of “the best UFO cases.” I quickly collected nearly 100 events that were considered worthy, of which 60 were unique, in the sense of not being repeats (e.g., the Roswell incident appears on most of these lists).

I then plotted up the year in which each of these unique events took place, virtually all since 1940. And guess what? By far the majority occurred in the first half of the last 76 years.

The quality UFO evidence is getting long in the tooth.

So what’s going on?

Our technology for documenting alien spacecraft – if you assume they’re real – is substantially better than even a few decades ago. An Apple iPhone’s camera now boasts 8 megapixels, which I reckon is a hundred times as many as the 8 millimeter movie film we had in the 1960s. These fabulous cameras are in the hands of nearly two billion smartphone users world-wide. And yet the UFO photos are as blurry and muddy as ever. You’d think at least a few people could make snaps that aren’t ambiguous or hoaxed. And I haven’t mentioned the surveillance provided by the 1,100 active satellites in orbit above our heads.

 

Continued below … 

Related content: Here’s a UFO Seattle.com found. Does it fit the writer’s conceptual model?

Video by Jake Ellison
Bright UFO paces International Space Station
On Aug. 3, ”lights” or reflections of sunlight off an unidentified flying object appeared briefly near the International Space Station and caused a stir in media around the globe. The brief appearance of the bright and colorful unidentified object was first spotted by UFO enthusiasts and declared evidence of alien life watching Earth’s activities. The Seattlepi.com investigated and found more, much clearer video footage from Aug. 23 of a similar bright object keeping pace with the ISS for minutes at a time. Space junk? Aliens? NASA hasn’t commented. So, you decide. (Note: All video footage is taken directly — unaltered but zoomed in on and sped up — from raw recordings on the Ustream account of NASA TV’s live feed from the International Space Station.)

 

… SETI continued 

Now some people deflect these puzzling facts by stating that excellent evidence for cosmic visitors really exists, but is kept under wraps by the government. This may be reassuring to some, but it’s utterly goofy. Can anyone explain how beings from other worlds have managed to arrange their itineraries so that only governments are solidly aware of their presence?

Still, this idea seems to have a lot of appeal, even though it has led to a truly risible tactic by groups petitioning for “disclosure” – a maneuver that twists the burden of proof 180 degrees. These folks hope the government will make their case for them, urging the feds to come clean about what they supposedly know. “We can’t prove UFOs are alien craft, but you can!” Imagine if astronomers used this scheme to verify the existence of black holes.

But hold on: Maybe there are other explanations for why the so-called good evidence for visiting aliens is as stale as Gothic croutons.

One obvious possibility is that the extraterrestrials are just plain done with us. They’ve abducted enough folks to satisfy their curiosity about our anatomies. The Cold War has ended, and so has their fascination with our nuclear missile silos. They’ve tried visiting New Mexico, but that didn’t work out.

So maybe they’ve just declared “mission accomplished,” and gone away. That would be analogous to Charles Darwin’s visit to the Galapagos Islands – after he probed, bottled, and cataloged some of the natives, he weighed anchor and withdrew.

But here’s another possibility drawn from a similar experience with SETI (the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence). In the early days of SETI, scientists would record cosmic static on computer tape or even paper. They would then look at these recordings at leisure. In the 1970s, this ex post facto observing scheme produced many “candidate signals” – hits that looked good at first, and that might have been alien transmissions. (A famous example is the “Wow” signal, found at Ohio State in 1977.) However, none of these candidates could be found a second time. Consequently, they don’t qualify as solid detections. They’re ambiguous, at best.

However, many of today’s SETI experiments can weed out interference and other causes of false alarms immediately. And that has led to an interesting situation: When you have real-time ability to verify signals, you don’t end up with a drawer-full of “interesting” cases.

In other words, as technology improved, the number of enticing candidate signals went down. In science-speak, the false alarm rate decreased. It wasn’t because any aliens stopped broadcasting; it was because we stopped being fooled.

Maybe this phenomenon explains why, as our cameras have gotten better, the number of interesting UFO cases has lessened.

For SETI, the really compelling detection is still to come. One good signal detection could easily surpass the credibility of dozens of intriguing candidates from four decades ago.

The same should apply to the folks who argue that some UFOs are actually alien craft. They should come forward with a truly great piece of evidence, a trump card that would allow them to stop playing the weak hand of the past.

Seth Shostak is Senior Astronomer and Director, Center for SETI Research, and a contributor to SFGATE

Related: A UFO tale … over the Puget Sound:

Video by Jake Ellison
Film explores the Maury Island UFO mystery
Two filmmakers explore what they say could be the first recorded encounter with a ‘man in black’ of Ufology lore after a 1947 ‘flying disk’ sighting over Puget Sound. Was it a hoax as history records it? Check out what they have to say about it.

 



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1XmnzR6

Written by Seth Shostak, SETI Institute

UFOs: The Trail is Stale.

One thing that strikes me about claims of alien visitation is that so much of the evidence is musty and fusty.

Every day, I get stories and articles from people around the world who aggregate UFO news. But much of it is not news – it’s olds. The folks who think there’s good proof that Earth is a stomping ground for extraterrestrials are still hung up on the Roswell incident of 1947 or its British opposite number, the Rendlesham Forest event of 1980. They’re still citing the testimony of aging politicians, defense establishment types, and Apollo astronauts who “know something.”

 

The few alternatives to this vintage archive are contemporary photos and videos of vague lights in the sky, low-resolution and low-confidence material that isn’t likely to sway many scientists. The good stuff seems to be the old stuff.

To better judge if this is really true, I trawled the web for listings of “the best UFO cases.” I quickly collected nearly 100 events that were considered worthy, of which 60 were unique, in the sense of not being repeats (e.g., the Roswell incident appears on most of these lists).

I then plotted up the year in which each of these unique events took place, virtually all since 1940. And guess what? By far the majority occurred in the first half of the last 76 years.

The quality UFO evidence is getting long in the tooth.

So what’s going on?

Our technology for documenting alien spacecraft – if you assume they’re real – is substantially better than even a few decades ago. An Apple iPhone’s camera now boasts 8 megapixels, which I reckon is a hundred times as many as the 8 millimeter movie film we had in the 1960s. These fabulous cameras are in the hands of nearly two billion smartphone users world-wide. And yet the UFO photos are as blurry and muddy as ever. You’d think at least a few people could make snaps that aren’t ambiguous or hoaxed. And I haven’t mentioned the surveillance provided by the 1,100 active satellites in orbit above our heads.

 

Continued below … 

Related content: Here’s a UFO Seattle.com found. Does it fit the writer’s conceptual model?

Video by Jake Ellison
Bright UFO paces International Space Station
On Aug. 3, ”lights” or reflections of sunlight off an unidentified flying object appeared briefly near the International Space Station and caused a stir in media around the globe. The brief appearance of the bright and colorful unidentified object was first spotted by UFO enthusiasts and declared evidence of alien life watching Earth’s activities. The Seattlepi.com investigated and found more, much clearer video footage from Aug. 23 of a similar bright object keeping pace with the ISS for minutes at a time. Space junk? Aliens? NASA hasn’t commented. So, you decide. (Note: All video footage is taken directly — unaltered but zoomed in on and sped up — from raw recordings on the Ustream account of NASA TV’s live feed from the International Space Station.)

 

… SETI continued 

Now some people deflect these puzzling facts by stating that excellent evidence for cosmic visitors really exists, but is kept under wraps by the government. This may be reassuring to some, but it’s utterly goofy. Can anyone explain how beings from other worlds have managed to arrange their itineraries so that only governments are solidly aware of their presence?

Still, this idea seems to have a lot of appeal, even though it has led to a truly risible tactic by groups petitioning for “disclosure” – a maneuver that twists the burden of proof 180 degrees. These folks hope the government will make their case for them, urging the feds to come clean about what they supposedly know. “We can’t prove UFOs are alien craft, but you can!” Imagine if astronomers used this scheme to verify the existence of black holes.

But hold on: Maybe there are other explanations for why the so-called good evidence for visiting aliens is as stale as Gothic croutons.

One obvious possibility is that the extraterrestrials are just plain done with us. They’ve abducted enough folks to satisfy their curiosity about our anatomies. The Cold War has ended, and so has their fascination with our nuclear missile silos. They’ve tried visiting New Mexico, but that didn’t work out.

So maybe they’ve just declared “mission accomplished,” and gone away. That would be analogous to Charles Darwin’s visit to the Galapagos Islands – after he probed, bottled, and cataloged some of the natives, he weighed anchor and withdrew.

But here’s another possibility drawn from a similar experience with SETI (the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence). In the early days of SETI, scientists would record cosmic static on computer tape or even paper. They would then look at these recordings at leisure. In the 1970s, this ex post facto observing scheme produced many “candidate signals” – hits that looked good at first, and that might have been alien transmissions. (A famous example is the “Wow” signal, found at Ohio State in 1977.) However, none of these candidates could be found a second time. Consequently, they don’t qualify as solid detections. They’re ambiguous, at best.

However, many of today’s SETI experiments can weed out interference and other causes of false alarms immediately. And that has led to an interesting situation: When you have real-time ability to verify signals, you don’t end up with a drawer-full of “interesting” cases.

In other words, as technology improved, the number of enticing candidate signals went down. In science-speak, the false alarm rate decreased. It wasn’t because any aliens stopped broadcasting; it was because we stopped being fooled.

Maybe this phenomenon explains why, as our cameras have gotten better, the number of interesting UFO cases has lessened.

For SETI, the really compelling detection is still to come. One good signal detection could easily surpass the credibility of dozens of intriguing candidates from four decades ago.

The same should apply to the folks who argue that some UFOs are actually alien craft. They should come forward with a truly great piece of evidence, a trump card that would allow them to stop playing the weak hand of the past.

Seth Shostak is Senior Astronomer and Director, Center for SETI Research, and a contributor to SFGATE

Related: A UFO tale … over the Puget Sound:

Video by Jake Ellison
Film explores the Maury Island UFO mystery
Two filmmakers explore what they say could be the first recorded encounter with a ‘man in black’ of Ufology lore after a 1947 ‘flying disk’ sighting over Puget Sound. Was it a hoax as history records it? Check out what they have to say about it.

 



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1XmnzR6

Winter weather: Godzilla El Nino favored to beat NW Blob by a knockout

Scene: Godzilla El Nino walks into a bar and there sits smokin’ hot California with an empty glass. Always generous, Godzilla approaches the bar and orders a double for California … a bit more than Cal wants in one sitting, but what the hell. The bartender puts on a sheepish look and glances down the dark bar at the pub’s newest bully — The NW Blob (with Washington cowering behind it).

Godzilla in a scene from the film 'Godzilla VS. The Smog Monster', 1971. (Photo by Toho/Getty Images)

Godzilla in a scene from the film ‘Godzilla VS. The Smog Monster’, 1971. (Photo by Toho/Getty Images)

Godzilla and The Blob lock eyes and prepare to fight it out for control over the bar … (Hey, it’s a Western!)

Anyway, like all Hollywood movies, who will win is apparently a forgone collusion since Godzilla is almost always helping out humankind. And, that’s pretty much how climatologists are seeing the current match up playing out in the Pacific right now.

An “El Nino,” when the central and eastern area of the tropical Pacific are warmer than usual, is growing so strong that it’s been predicted to be the strongest in a generation:

“This definitely has the potential of being the Godzilla El Niño,” Bill Patzert, a climatologist with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory told the LA Times. “If this lives up to its potential, this thing can bring a lot of floods, mudslides and mayhem.”

“Places that are normally dry get extremely wet, and of course that would include the American west,” Patzert told CBC News. “So we’re kayaking down the street in Los Angeles, and they’re playing golf in February in Minneapolis.

 

In fact, he says, it could be bigger than the El Nino of 1997 … which brought floods, mudslides and hurricanes to California (and slightly warmer and drier winter to Washington). NOAA predicts there “is a greater than 90 percent chance that El Niño will continue through Northern Hemisphere winter 2015-16, and around an 85 percent chance it will last into early spring 2016.”

The only thing standing in its way is The NW Blob, the big pool of warm water off Washington’s coast that has been wreaking havoc in the NW: Hotter then normal this … drier than normal that … and, as a kicker, wildfires and a troubled Puget Sound (see video at bottom of story).

If The Blob and the high pressure system that sustains it remains over the winter, it could push all that moisture (possibly more than even California wants in one winter, but better than a continued drought) north leaving California and the NW with empty glasses.

Cliff Mass, regional weather guru and University of Washington scientist, is betting on Godzilla and so are others.

“Just like in the movies, Godzilla will become our ally. And it makes sense that the mighty Godzilla will prevail,” he wrote in a blog post this morning (Sept. 2).

He explains:

The BLOB, as documented in a nice paper by State Climatologist Nick Bond and colleagues was the stepchild of a huge area of high pressure along and east of the West Coast of the U.S. High pressure resulted in less wind and mixing of the upper ocean layers, leading to reducing mixing of cooler sub-surface water to the surface. Thus, the ocean surface was warmer than normal. …

Here is the typical sea level pressure anomaly associated with El Nino (the difference of pressure from normal). Pressures are LOWER THAN NORMAL over the eastern Pacific (purple colors). A BLOB KILLER. Why? Because it is exactly opposite of the pattern that produced the BLOB— high pressure in the same area.

slp.e.all.a.w (1)

A scientists blogger for The California Weather Blog agrees:

…  in the hypothetical case where the persistent region of warm water in the North Pacific associated with “The Blob” stuck around through the winter, it’s plausible that this could modulate the atmospheric effects of the powerful El Niño event in the tropics. But that hypothetical situation is rather unlikely to actually occur this winter. That’s primarily because “The Blob” itself is thought to largely be a side-effect of the multi-year persistence of the Ridiculously Resilient Ridge, which suppressed the North Pacific storm track and prevented the vertical mixing of colder subsurface ocean waters toward the surface.

It’s certainly possible that there has been some degree of self-reinforcement in this situation—where the Triple R triggered The Blob in the first place, but the Triple R was later sustained by it, and so on … (but) that warmth is rapidly disappearing as El Niño strengthens rapidly. The take-home message here: a primary cause of the Triple R is no longer in place, and so it’s unlikely that we’ll see yet another winter of persistent anomalous ridging over the northeastern Pacific Ocean.

So, there you have it. Godzilla will win by a knockout.

But but but … What about poor cowering Washington, who is suffering so much at the villainous hands of The Blob? Mass says …

A strong El Nino brings modestly warmer than normal temperatures, with a snowpack about 20 percent below normal. Much better than last winter. (!)

In other words, a strong El Nino is normally not great for us, but since The Blob has been such a bastard we’re going to be better off under the rule of Godzilla.

Video by Jake Ellison
Hot Puget Sound: A new view of climate change
Washington state scientists came together in Seattle on July 30 to tell the tale of a hot Puget Sound. What we learned was that temperatures in Puget Sound are the warmest recorded in the past 25 years and the conditions are increasing harmful algae blooms, increasing shellfish closures, lowering dissolved oxygen, and creating unfavorable conditions for salmon and other cold-loving marine species. Is this the stagnant future of climate change?

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.

from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1IKQ542

Scene: Godzilla El Nino walks into a bar and there sits smokin’ hot California with an empty glass. Always generous, Godzilla approaches the bar and orders a double for California … a bit more than Cal wants in one sitting, but what the hell. The bartender puts on a sheepish look and glances down the dark bar at the pub’s newest bully — The NW Blob (with Washington cowering behind it).

Godzilla in a scene from the film 'Godzilla VS. The Smog Monster', 1971. (Photo by Toho/Getty Images)

Godzilla in a scene from the film ‘Godzilla VS. The Smog Monster’, 1971. (Photo by Toho/Getty Images)

Godzilla and The Blob lock eyes and prepare to fight it out for control over the bar … (Hey, it’s a Western!)

Anyway, like all Hollywood movies, who will win is apparently a forgone collusion since Godzilla is almost always helping out humankind. And, that’s pretty much how climatologists are seeing the current match up playing out in the Pacific right now.

An “El Nino,” when the central and eastern area of the tropical Pacific are warmer than usual, is growing so strong that it’s been predicted to be the strongest in a generation:

“This definitely has the potential of being the Godzilla El Niño,” Bill Patzert, a climatologist with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory told the LA Times. “If this lives up to its potential, this thing can bring a lot of floods, mudslides and mayhem.”

“Places that are normally dry get extremely wet, and of course that would include the American west,” Patzert told CBC News. “So we’re kayaking down the street in Los Angeles, and they’re playing golf in February in Minneapolis.

 

In fact, he says, it could be bigger than the El Nino of 1997 … which brought floods, mudslides and hurricanes to California (and slightly warmer and drier winter to Washington). NOAA predicts there “is a greater than 90 percent chance that El Niño will continue through Northern Hemisphere winter 2015-16, and around an 85 percent chance it will last into early spring 2016.”

The only thing standing in its way is The NW Blob, the big pool of warm water off Washington’s coast that has been wreaking havoc in the NW: Hotter then normal this … drier than normal that … and, as a kicker, wildfires and a troubled Puget Sound (see video at bottom of story).

If The Blob and the high pressure system that sustains it remains over the winter, it could push all that moisture (possibly more than even California wants in one winter, but better than a continued drought) north leaving California and the NW with empty glasses.

Cliff Mass, regional weather guru and University of Washington scientist, is betting on Godzilla and so are others.

“Just like in the movies, Godzilla will become our ally. And it makes sense that the mighty Godzilla will prevail,” he wrote in a blog post this morning (Sept. 2).

He explains:

The BLOB, as documented in a nice paper by State Climatologist Nick Bond and colleagues was the stepchild of a huge area of high pressure along and east of the West Coast of the U.S. High pressure resulted in less wind and mixing of the upper ocean layers, leading to reducing mixing of cooler sub-surface water to the surface. Thus, the ocean surface was warmer than normal. …

Here is the typical sea level pressure anomaly associated with El Nino (the difference of pressure from normal). Pressures are LOWER THAN NORMAL over the eastern Pacific (purple colors). A BLOB KILLER. Why? Because it is exactly opposite of the pattern that produced the BLOB— high pressure in the same area.

slp.e.all.a.w (1)

A scientists blogger for The California Weather Blog agrees:

…  in the hypothetical case where the persistent region of warm water in the North Pacific associated with “The Blob” stuck around through the winter, it’s plausible that this could modulate the atmospheric effects of the powerful El Niño event in the tropics. But that hypothetical situation is rather unlikely to actually occur this winter. That’s primarily because “The Blob” itself is thought to largely be a side-effect of the multi-year persistence of the Ridiculously Resilient Ridge, which suppressed the North Pacific storm track and prevented the vertical mixing of colder subsurface ocean waters toward the surface.

It’s certainly possible that there has been some degree of self-reinforcement in this situation—where the Triple R triggered The Blob in the first place, but the Triple R was later sustained by it, and so on … (but) that warmth is rapidly disappearing as El Niño strengthens rapidly. The take-home message here: a primary cause of the Triple R is no longer in place, and so it’s unlikely that we’ll see yet another winter of persistent anomalous ridging over the northeastern Pacific Ocean.

So, there you have it. Godzilla will win by a knockout.

But but but … What about poor cowering Washington, who is suffering so much at the villainous hands of The Blob? Mass says …

A strong El Nino brings modestly warmer than normal temperatures, with a snowpack about 20 percent below normal. Much better than last winter. (!)

In other words, a strong El Nino is normally not great for us, but since The Blob has been such a bastard we’re going to be better off under the rule of Godzilla.

Video by Jake Ellison
Hot Puget Sound: A new view of climate change
Washington state scientists came together in Seattle on July 30 to tell the tale of a hot Puget Sound. What we learned was that temperatures in Puget Sound are the warmest recorded in the past 25 years and the conditions are increasing harmful algae blooms, increasing shellfish closures, lowering dissolved oxygen, and creating unfavorable conditions for salmon and other cold-loving marine species. Is this the stagnant future of climate change?

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.

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Fireballs erupt over Hawaii as space debris hits atmosphere

Looking a lot like how Hollywood might portray an invasion by space aliens, videos began surfacing Sunday of strange fireballs streaking across the night sky over Hawaii islands.

News reports from the Honolulu TV station KHON2 and news source MauiNow.com peg the light source as space debris burning up in the atmosphere.

MauiNow reported:

According to information released by the DoD’s Joint Space Operations Center at Vandenberg AFB in CA, the object was likely the Cosmos 1315 payload launched in 1981. Gene Stansbery, Program Manager for NASA’s Orbital Debris Program Office confirmed the report with Maui Now this morning.

Great light show! But how do they know the source of the space junk that burned up? Well, NASA tracks as much of it as they can locate because …

More than 500,000 pieces of debris, or “space junk,” are tracked as they orbit the Earth. They all travel at speeds up to 17,500 mph, fast enough for a relatively small piece of orbital debris to damage a satellite or a spacecraft.

The rising population of space debris increases the potential danger to all space vehicles, but especially to the International Space Station, space shuttles and other spacecraft with humans aboard.

But, not all sources of “lights” in space are as well understood. For instance:

Video by Jake Ellison
Bright UFO paces International Space Station
On Aug. 3, ”lights” or reflections of sunlight off an unidentified flying object appeared briefly near the International Space Station and caused a stir in media around the globe. The brief appearance of the bright and colorful unidentified object was first spotted by UFO enthusiasts and declared evidence of alien life watching Earth’s activities. The Seattlepi.com investigated and found more, much clearer video footage from Aug. 23 of a similar bright object keeping pace with the ISS for minutes at a time. Space junk? Aliens? NASA hasn’t commented. So, you decide. (Note: All video footage is taken directly — unaltered but zoomed in on and sped up — from raw recordings on the Ustream account of NASA TV’s live feed from the International Space Station.)

And …

Video by Jake Ellison
‘UFO’ bombs NASA video of ISS repair
Oct. 7th started out as just another day in space with astronauts fixing things on the rickety old International Space Station … until …

Of course some of those fireballs in the sky are not as harmless as small space junk!

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



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Looking a lot like how Hollywood might portray an invasion by space aliens, videos began surfacing Sunday of strange fireballs streaking across the night sky over Hawaii islands.

News reports from the Honolulu TV station KHON2 and news source MauiNow.com peg the light source as space debris burning up in the atmosphere.

MauiNow reported:

According to information released by the DoD’s Joint Space Operations Center at Vandenberg AFB in CA, the object was likely the Cosmos 1315 payload launched in 1981. Gene Stansbery, Program Manager for NASA’s Orbital Debris Program Office confirmed the report with Maui Now this morning.

Great light show! But how do they know the source of the space junk that burned up? Well, NASA tracks as much of it as they can locate because …

More than 500,000 pieces of debris, or “space junk,” are tracked as they orbit the Earth. They all travel at speeds up to 17,500 mph, fast enough for a relatively small piece of orbital debris to damage a satellite or a spacecraft.

The rising population of space debris increases the potential danger to all space vehicles, but especially to the International Space Station, space shuttles and other spacecraft with humans aboard.

But, not all sources of “lights” in space are as well understood. For instance:

Video by Jake Ellison
Bright UFO paces International Space Station
On Aug. 3, ”lights” or reflections of sunlight off an unidentified flying object appeared briefly near the International Space Station and caused a stir in media around the globe. The brief appearance of the bright and colorful unidentified object was first spotted by UFO enthusiasts and declared evidence of alien life watching Earth’s activities. The Seattlepi.com investigated and found more, much clearer video footage from Aug. 23 of a similar bright object keeping pace with the ISS for minutes at a time. Space junk? Aliens? NASA hasn’t commented. So, you decide. (Note: All video footage is taken directly — unaltered but zoomed in on and sped up — from raw recordings on the Ustream account of NASA TV’s live feed from the International Space Station.)

And …

Video by Jake Ellison
‘UFO’ bombs NASA video of ISS repair
Oct. 7th started out as just another day in space with astronauts fixing things on the rickety old International Space Station … until …

Of course some of those fireballs in the sky are not as harmless as small space junk!

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



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NASA video: Bright, colorful UFO paces International Space Station

“‘The ISS is being monitored by aliens': Conspiracy theorists spot yet another UFO hovering above the space station” … That’s from the Daily Mail.

 

The baseline story is this: A recorded archive on NASA’s Ustream channel of the Aug. 3 live video feed from the International Space Station shows a pinkish, bright something or other floating above the Earth near the station. The ISS camera captured the image (all visible in the video above and gallery below) as it was panning right.

That’s it. The video was posted to YouTube and certain social media characters bandied it about as evidence that we’re being watched by aliens and NASA is covering it up. A few news orgs also picked up the story. Here’s what the UFO enthusiast said about the video on YouTube.

‘NO COLOURS HAVE BEEN ALTERED IN THIS OR ANY OF MY VIDEOS ! ‘ THE NEWS MEDIA ARE TRASHING THIS. ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS CHECKOUT THIS NASA LINK – AT 7 minutes in – UFO http://ift.tt/1LEq3GZ a period when the camera is moving for a few minutes, Nasa captures a distant pink and gold object. Caught August 3rd, 2015. We need them to maybe start pointing the ISS cameras outward and stop treating people like children.

We wondered, how easy is it really to find these images of lights — zooming and blinking — in videos recorded live from the space station. After a couple hours of scrubbing through dozens of hours of footage, we found our own UFO on footage from Aug. 23 and it looks a lot like the one discovered on Aug. 3.

The footage is from around midday. In it a “light” or reflection of sunlight appears near the International Space Station and stayed in an exact relative position with the station for minutes at a time, appearing and brightening and then disappearing several times. Remember, the ISS is traveling at roughly 17,000 mph. (The images and video in this story have not been altered or brightened, only zoomed in and portions sped up in the video.)

That’s all we know. We pinged NASA and haven’t heard back. So, is it aliens? Or, sunlight reflecting off a bit of space junk or a satellite?

You decide.

Here’s a video we made of a previous UFO sighting around the ISS. 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1hiNUP6

“‘The ISS is being monitored by aliens': Conspiracy theorists spot yet another UFO hovering above the space station” … That’s from the Daily Mail.

 

The baseline story is this: A recorded archive on NASA’s Ustream channel of the Aug. 3 live video feed from the International Space Station shows a pinkish, bright something or other floating above the Earth near the station. The ISS camera captured the image (all visible in the video above and gallery below) as it was panning right.

That’s it. The video was posted to YouTube and certain social media characters bandied it about as evidence that we’re being watched by aliens and NASA is covering it up. A few news orgs also picked up the story. Here’s what the UFO enthusiast said about the video on YouTube.

‘NO COLOURS HAVE BEEN ALTERED IN THIS OR ANY OF MY VIDEOS ! ‘ THE NEWS MEDIA ARE TRASHING THIS. ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS CHECKOUT THIS NASA LINK – AT 7 minutes in – UFO http://ift.tt/1LEq3GZ a period when the camera is moving for a few minutes, Nasa captures a distant pink and gold object. Caught August 3rd, 2015. We need them to maybe start pointing the ISS cameras outward and stop treating people like children.

We wondered, how easy is it really to find these images of lights — zooming and blinking — in videos recorded live from the space station. After a couple hours of scrubbing through dozens of hours of footage, we found our own UFO on footage from Aug. 23 and it looks a lot like the one discovered on Aug. 3.

The footage is from around midday. In it a “light” or reflection of sunlight appears near the International Space Station and stayed in an exact relative position with the station for minutes at a time, appearing and brightening and then disappearing several times. Remember, the ISS is traveling at roughly 17,000 mph. (The images and video in this story have not been altered or brightened, only zoomed in and portions sped up in the video.)

That’s all we know. We pinged NASA and haven’t heard back. So, is it aliens? Or, sunlight reflecting off a bit of space junk or a satellite?

You decide.

Here’s a video we made of a previous UFO sighting around the ISS. 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



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Is that a ‘pingo’ mountain on dwarf planet Ceres?

The last time we wrote about “pingos” they were popping open in Siberia (see gallery below). Then we saw the latest photo from the Dawn spacecraft flying around the dwarf planet Ceres and thought: Pingo!

Here’s that sharper closer image in zoomable format:

This is what NASA said about it:

NASA’s Dawn spacecraft spotted this tall, conical mountain on Ceres from a distance of 915 miles (1,470 kilometers). The mountain, located in the southern hemisphere, stands 4 miles (6 kilometers) high. Its perimeter is sharply defined, with almost no accumulated debris at the base of the brightly streaked slope. (Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA)

We wrote about this mounting in these two stories:

So, we had some experience with NASA’s work on this strange mountain that has cropped up in the middle of no-where … well, just not as part of a mountain range or anything else the space agency can point to as a related cause. Instead, it sits all cozy right next to a giant crater. Odd.

But then we saw the above photo with the white streaks down its side and slowly got our mind to remember the bright spots (in gallery below) that NASA is also wondering about. The bright spots are sun reflection probably off something like salt, though many still think it’s ice.

We also remember that Cere’s is suspected of having water deep under its surface … and, being science fiction lovers, we thought what if the bright spots are what’s left over from a pingo? And that pyramid mountain is an “active” Pingo? (We emailed NASA and they say they’re hunting for someone who will take the time to tell us that we’re stupid and should stop smoking weed, which is unfair since they are just assuming we do because we live in a legal weed state.)

So, we theorize. Here’s what a pingo is:

open-pingo

Here’s what “active” pingos look like:

Pingos near Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada

Pingos near Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada

Here’s what a popped pingo looks like (in theory):

We will stop the presses as soon as NASA (or Hollywood) calls. Meanwhile, here’s more theorizing about odd features of the dwarf planet Ceres (with NASA response).

And now the full gallery of all the weird shit on Ceres.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.

 



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1EWM5gp

The last time we wrote about “pingos” they were popping open in Siberia (see gallery below). Then we saw the latest photo from the Dawn spacecraft flying around the dwarf planet Ceres and thought: Pingo!

Here’s that sharper closer image in zoomable format:

This is what NASA said about it:

NASA’s Dawn spacecraft spotted this tall, conical mountain on Ceres from a distance of 915 miles (1,470 kilometers). The mountain, located in the southern hemisphere, stands 4 miles (6 kilometers) high. Its perimeter is sharply defined, with almost no accumulated debris at the base of the brightly streaked slope. (Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA)

We wrote about this mounting in these two stories:

So, we had some experience with NASA’s work on this strange mountain that has cropped up in the middle of no-where … well, just not as part of a mountain range or anything else the space agency can point to as a related cause. Instead, it sits all cozy right next to a giant crater. Odd.

But then we saw the above photo with the white streaks down its side and slowly got our mind to remember the bright spots (in gallery below) that NASA is also wondering about. The bright spots are sun reflection probably off something like salt, though many still think it’s ice.

We also remember that Cere’s is suspected of having water deep under its surface … and, being science fiction lovers, we thought what if the bright spots are what’s left over from a pingo? And that pyramid mountain is an “active” Pingo? (We emailed NASA and they say they’re hunting for someone who will take the time to tell us that we’re stupid and should stop smoking weed, which is unfair since they are just assuming we do because we live in a legal weed state.)

So, we theorize. Here’s what a pingo is:

open-pingo

Here’s what “active” pingos look like:

Pingos near Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada

Pingos near Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada

Here’s what a popped pingo looks like (in theory):

We will stop the presses as soon as NASA (or Hollywood) calls. Meanwhile, here’s more theorizing about odd features of the dwarf planet Ceres (with NASA response).

And now the full gallery of all the weird shit on Ceres.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.

 



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NASA’s most amazing flight photo possibly ever, based on an 1864 technique

This is our world … you just can’t see it without Superman vision or this photo technique from 1864. Check it out in this zoomable format:

And this one …


Photo caption from NASA:

This schlieren image dramatically displays the shock wave of a supersonic jet flying over the Mojave Desert. Researchers used NASA-developed image processing software to remove the desert background, then combined and averaged multiple frames to produce a clear picture of the shock waves.

And …

NASA is using a 21st century version of schlieren imagery, invented by a German physicist in 1864, to visualize supersonic flow phenomena with full-scale aircraft in flight.

The agency is doing more than making cool photos though. Here’s some of what it had to say in a writeup:

NASA researchers in California are using a modern version of a 150-year-old German photography technique to capture images of shock waves created by supersonic airplanes. Over the past five years scientists from NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base and Ames Research Center at Moffett Field have teamed up to demonstrate how schlieren imagery, invented in 1864 by German physicist August Toepler, can be used to visualize supersonic flow phenomena with full-scale aircraft in flight. The results will help engineers to design a quiet supersonic transport. Although current regulations prohibit unrestricted overland supersonic flight in the United States, a clear understanding of the location and relative strength of shock waves is essential for designing future high-speed commercial aircraft.

More cool stuff from the agency (which needs backing from Congress!!)

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1EUEUFt

This is our world … you just can’t see it without Superman vision or this photo technique from 1864. Check it out in this zoomable format:

And this one …


Photo caption from NASA:

This schlieren image dramatically displays the shock wave of a supersonic jet flying over the Mojave Desert. Researchers used NASA-developed image processing software to remove the desert background, then combined and averaged multiple frames to produce a clear picture of the shock waves.

And …

NASA is using a 21st century version of schlieren imagery, invented by a German physicist in 1864, to visualize supersonic flow phenomena with full-scale aircraft in flight.

The agency is doing more than making cool photos though. Here’s some of what it had to say in a writeup:

NASA researchers in California are using a modern version of a 150-year-old German photography technique to capture images of shock waves created by supersonic airplanes. Over the past five years scientists from NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base and Ames Research Center at Moffett Field have teamed up to demonstrate how schlieren imagery, invented in 1864 by German physicist August Toepler, can be used to visualize supersonic flow phenomena with full-scale aircraft in flight. The results will help engineers to design a quiet supersonic transport. Although current regulations prohibit unrestricted overland supersonic flight in the United States, a clear understanding of the location and relative strength of shock waves is essential for designing future high-speed commercial aircraft.

More cool stuff from the agency (which needs backing from Congress!!)

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



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Ancient pre-mammal ‘Scarface’ fossil discovery into human ancestors

It’s been 255 million years since an animal now known as Ichibengops munyamadziensis, or “Scarface of the Munyamadzi River” walked the Earth. Researchers originally unearthed two partial skulls of this small “pre-mammal” creature in the Luangwa Basin in Zambia in 2009, but announced their findings in a report in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology at the end of July.

150814-science-ichi_holotype_specimen_4ee0095244984354859883861bace1b3.nbcnews-ux-600-480

The “Scarface of the Munyamadzi River,” a Dachshund-sized, potentially venomous mammal-like reptile was discovered in Zambia.

“Discoveries of new species of animals like Ichibengops are particularly exciting because they help us to better understand the group of animals that gave rise to mammals,” said senior report author Kenneth Angielczyk of Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History, in a news release.

The Ichibengops is said to have been a mammal-like reptile — referred to as a therocephalian, or “beast-head” — roughly the size of a Dachshund, with a large head and long teeth. The word “Ichibenga” is the Bemba word for “scar,” and refers to the animals strange upper jaw groove that may have functioned as a transport channel for venom.

If it really did have venomous capabilities, this would make it an anomaly among mammals or mammal-like creatures including therocephalians. Only one other type of therocephalian has been discovered that showed indications of being venomous. Today, only a few types of mammals posses this poisonous quality, such as the duck-billed platypus.

“Another surprising aspect of Ichibengops is that it had a bony bridge on the roof of the mouth separating the oral and nasal cavities,” said lead author of the report, Adam Huttenlocker, in a news release. “This is a feature found in all mammals today that permits us to chew our food and breath at the same time …  indicating that a bony ‘hard palate’ evolved many times in mammals’ extinct relatives.”

A large portion of therocephalians were wiped out from the Permian Period in which they lived when the Earth’s largest mass extinction occurred about 252 million years ago. It is estimated that about 10 percent of species, including some therocephalians, survived into the following Jurassic Period, also known as the age of the dinosaurs, according to UW biology professor and curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Christian Sidor.

Sidor was one of the researchers from the discovery team, who with help from the University of Utah’s Natural History Museum and the Integrative Research Center from the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago revealed this find.

While therocephalians were lucky enough to avoid extinction during such a cataclysmic event, they did go extinct about 8 million years later, and their process of recovery post-mass extinction is still somewhat of a mystery today.

The discovery of this “Scarface” creature provides insight into the diversity of the therocephalians group, which had not previously been studied extensively in this region, according to the findings report.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1Eekxbe

It’s been 255 million years since an animal now known as Ichibengops munyamadziensis, or “Scarface of the Munyamadzi River” walked the Earth. Researchers originally unearthed two partial skulls of this small “pre-mammal” creature in the Luangwa Basin in Zambia in 2009, but announced their findings in a report in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology at the end of July.

150814-science-ichi_holotype_specimen_4ee0095244984354859883861bace1b3.nbcnews-ux-600-480

The “Scarface of the Munyamadzi River,” a Dachshund-sized, potentially venomous mammal-like reptile was discovered in Zambia.

“Discoveries of new species of animals like Ichibengops are particularly exciting because they help us to better understand the group of animals that gave rise to mammals,” said senior report author Kenneth Angielczyk of Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History, in a news release.

The Ichibengops is said to have been a mammal-like reptile — referred to as a therocephalian, or “beast-head” — roughly the size of a Dachshund, with a large head and long teeth. The word “Ichibenga” is the Bemba word for “scar,” and refers to the animals strange upper jaw groove that may have functioned as a transport channel for venom.

If it really did have venomous capabilities, this would make it an anomaly among mammals or mammal-like creatures including therocephalians. Only one other type of therocephalian has been discovered that showed indications of being venomous. Today, only a few types of mammals posses this poisonous quality, such as the duck-billed platypus.

“Another surprising aspect of Ichibengops is that it had a bony bridge on the roof of the mouth separating the oral and nasal cavities,” said lead author of the report, Adam Huttenlocker, in a news release. “This is a feature found in all mammals today that permits us to chew our food and breath at the same time …  indicating that a bony ‘hard palate’ evolved many times in mammals’ extinct relatives.”

A large portion of therocephalians were wiped out from the Permian Period in which they lived when the Earth’s largest mass extinction occurred about 252 million years ago. It is estimated that about 10 percent of species, including some therocephalians, survived into the following Jurassic Period, also known as the age of the dinosaurs, according to UW biology professor and curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Christian Sidor.

Sidor was one of the researchers from the discovery team, who with help from the University of Utah’s Natural History Museum and the Integrative Research Center from the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago revealed this find.

While therocephalians were lucky enough to avoid extinction during such a cataclysmic event, they did go extinct about 8 million years later, and their process of recovery post-mass extinction is still somewhat of a mystery today.

The discovery of this “Scarface” creature provides insight into the diversity of the therocephalians group, which had not previously been studied extensively in this region, according to the findings report.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1Eekxbe

Paul G. Allen Ebola Program unveils containment units to reduce biohazard risks

The Paul G. Allen Ebola Program, the U.S. Department of State, and MRIGlobal have announced the release of a unique biocontainment unit that aims to improve preparedness for Ebola treatment or other global health threats.

Seattle-local Paul Allen is at the forefront of the biohazard container innovation, working with the Department of State to cull a $5-million public-private partnership to create the latest defense against contagious pathogens.

The Containerized Bio-Containment System is intended to reassure medical workers that they could be safely evacuated if infected while working in the field. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program.

The Containerized Bio-Containment System is intended to reassure medical workers that they could be safely evacuated if infected while working in the field. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program.

The recent worldwide Ebola outbreak created an urgent need for a way to transport patients and evacuate medical staff who fell ill while working in the field. And Allen was not the only one from Seattle who was coming to the world’s aid. Harborview Medical Center announced publicly in 2014 that it would accept Ebola patients, despite there being no local cases of the disease.

While the staff at Harborview never saw an actual case of Ebola, the Containerized Bio-Containment Systems that are now available would have been of interest in order to keep health care workers safe. The units can be rolled onto planes and flown in, using improved medevac capabilities for the safe transport of up to four patients to clinics where they will be treated.

Ebola-scare articles have quieted drastically in the last year since the outbreak in West Africa began. However, the disease’s effects are far from over, something that Paul Allen’s continuous donations (towards his pledge of $100 million) demonstrate.

The extent of Allen’s involvement is a different direction for the philanthropist, who previously has worked with the Allen Institute for Brain Science. His diverse interests, which range from the Seattle Seahawks to Vulcan Productions media company, make his quick immersion in the Ebola fight less surprising, but his remarkable pledge is just one part of his multifaceted approach to the issue.

View of the interior of the biocontainment units. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program

View of the interior of the biocontainment units. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program

Allen told the New York Times in Oct. 2014, “Everybody feels called sometimes to really pursue a certain thing that resonates with them, and this has resonated with me.”

The use of several strategies has lead to these biohazard containers, in an effort to help with recruitment of medical workers who may be deterred by the risk of falling ill themselves.

“This is really more about trying to attack every element of this problem,” Allen told the Times. “This disease expands at an exponential rate, so there is a need for exponentially more health care workers.”

According to the Times, previous experience with vaccine development with Kansas State University struck a chord with him and may have led him into further interest and involvement with Ebola.

“There was a vaccine that got developed and was tried in chimps, but its efficacy was never tested,” he said. “It was a bit of a dead end, but it planted a seed in my consciousness.”



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The Paul G. Allen Ebola Program, the U.S. Department of State, and MRIGlobal have announced the release of a unique biocontainment unit that aims to improve preparedness for Ebola treatment or other global health threats.

Seattle-local Paul Allen is at the forefront of the biohazard container innovation, working with the Department of State to cull a $5-million public-private partnership to create the latest defense against contagious pathogens.

The Containerized Bio-Containment System is intended to reassure medical workers that they could be safely evacuated if infected while working in the field. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program.

The Containerized Bio-Containment System is intended to reassure medical workers that they could be safely evacuated if infected while working in the field. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program.

The recent worldwide Ebola outbreak created an urgent need for a way to transport patients and evacuate medical staff who fell ill while working in the field. And Allen was not the only one from Seattle who was coming to the world’s aid. Harborview Medical Center announced publicly in 2014 that it would accept Ebola patients, despite there being no local cases of the disease.

While the staff at Harborview never saw an actual case of Ebola, the Containerized Bio-Containment Systems that are now available would have been of interest in order to keep health care workers safe. The units can be rolled onto planes and flown in, using improved medevac capabilities for the safe transport of up to four patients to clinics where they will be treated.

Ebola-scare articles have quieted drastically in the last year since the outbreak in West Africa began. However, the disease’s effects are far from over, something that Paul Allen’s continuous donations (towards his pledge of $100 million) demonstrate.

The extent of Allen’s involvement is a different direction for the philanthropist, who previously has worked with the Allen Institute for Brain Science. His diverse interests, which range from the Seattle Seahawks to Vulcan Productions media company, make his quick immersion in the Ebola fight less surprising, but his remarkable pledge is just one part of his multifaceted approach to the issue.

View of the interior of the biocontainment units. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program

View of the interior of the biocontainment units. Photo courtesy of the Paul G. Allen Ebola Program

Allen told the New York Times in Oct. 2014, “Everybody feels called sometimes to really pursue a certain thing that resonates with them, and this has resonated with me.”

The use of several strategies has lead to these biohazard containers, in an effort to help with recruitment of medical workers who may be deterred by the risk of falling ill themselves.

“This is really more about trying to attack every element of this problem,” Allen told the Times. “This disease expands at an exponential rate, so there is a need for exponentially more health care workers.”

According to the Times, previous experience with vaccine development with Kansas State University struck a chord with him and may have led him into further interest and involvement with Ebola.

“There was a vaccine that got developed and was tried in chimps, but its efficacy was never tested,” he said. “It was a bit of a dead end, but it planted a seed in my consciousness.”



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1hu0Z96

The real NASA science behind the science fiction of ‘The Martian’

“I’m going to have to science the shit out of this.” — Watney

Mark Watney is a science fiction character from the novel and upcoming movie “The Martian.” He’s stuck on Mars some 20 years in our future — a time when human are making regular exploratory trips to the Red Planet. And, he has to apply all his engineering and botany education, training and skills in the day-by-day struggle to stay alive on the inhospitable surface.

What’s great about the novel and, we hope, the movie is that much of the challenges Watney faces are fairly realistic (though still, obviously, futuristic) and so are the high-risk, duct-tape-based solutions he engineers for survival.

Consequently, the novel’s semi-realism have NASA’s talented public relations people trying to bridge the gap from fiction to real NASA science in order to coattail the wildly popular, dramatic story. The space agency has put together a list of “Nine real NASA technologies” in the story. Here’s the list as well as stills from the movie:

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1WHtSi2

“I’m going to have to science the shit out of this.” — Watney

Mark Watney is a science fiction character from the novel and upcoming movie “The Martian.” He’s stuck on Mars some 20 years in our future — a time when human are making regular exploratory trips to the Red Planet. And, he has to apply all his engineering and botany education, training and skills in the day-by-day struggle to stay alive on the inhospitable surface.

What’s great about the novel and, we hope, the movie is that much of the challenges Watney faces are fairly realistic (though still, obviously, futuristic) and so are the high-risk, duct-tape-based solutions he engineers for survival.

Consequently, the novel’s semi-realism have NASA’s talented public relations people trying to bridge the gap from fiction to real NASA science in order to coattail the wildly popular, dramatic story. The space agency has put together a list of “Nine real NASA technologies” in the story. Here’s the list as well as stills from the movie:

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1WHtSi2

Half of US population could be harmed by earthquakes, see where Washington ranks

Half the United States population is at risk of being harmed by earthquakes, and tens of millions are in the bull’s-eye of much stronger earthquakes.

That’s the grim outlook of a U.S. Geological Survey report published earlier this month that focused on answering the great and terrible question: How devastating can earthquakes actually be to Americans and what should we do about it?

The report states matter-of-factly:

More than 143 million Americans living in the 48 contiguous states are exposed to potentially damaging ground shaking from earthquakes. When the people living in the earthquake-prone areas of Alaska, Hawaii and U.S. territories are added, this number rises to nearly half of all Americans.

And the punchline is?

“This new research helps us better understand the scale of earthquake hazards and ultimately strengthen the nation’s ability to protect Americans against future events,” said Kishor Jaiswal, a USGS research structural engineer as well as the lead author of the study. “Of particular concern is the significant amount of critical infrastructure located in high earthquake-hazard areas, ranging from private and public schools to health care facilities and fire stations. The USGS is dedicated to continuously updating research on population and infrastructure exposure as communities change and new science is available on earthquake behavior.”

This in the shadow of the attack on our peace of mind by the New Yorker that blew up the Internet. What we said, “The New Yorker takes a deep-dive into the coming megathrust earthquake along the Cascadia Subduction Zone that’s guaranteed to smash the hell out of everything west of the Cascades.”

Tsunamis! 

So, earthquakes also lead to tsunamis, and just in case we’re not freaked out enough by the shaking, the University of Washington has sent out a Q and A with researchers who model tsunamis that would be generated by the great and terrible “mega-thrust Cascadia killer quake” due in the next couple of hundred years.

Here’s some of that exchange, which you can read in full on the UW site.

 

Two University of Washington scientists — applied mathematics professor Randy LeVequeand affiliate professor of Earth and space sciences Frank Gonzalez — recently talked about how they model tsunami hazards along the Northwest coast. …

How would a tsunami from a large offshore earthquake affect Puget Sound?

LeVeque: The tsunami would be coming from the open ocean, so it would come in through the Strait of Juan de Fuca and come down to Puget Sound. We’re just starting to look down there. But by the time the tsunami gets down into Puget Sound it will be smaller than on the coast.

Gonzalez: But in the case of a big magnitude-9 offshore earthquake, that will create shaking severe enough in Puget Sound to trigger small to moderate landslides, and they’ll create tsunamis as well.

So, is the tsunami danger in Puget Sound not as bad as the open coast?

LeVeque: Not nearly as much danger during an earthquake along the Cascadia subduction zone. But there’s also the Seattle Fault, which runs right across the Sound, and others like the Tacoma Fault and the South Whidbey Island Fault. These faults are actually under Puget Sound and can have big earthquakes and cause tsunamis.

Gonzalez: That Seattle Fault tsunami has been modeled by others. That wave is quite severe, quite high. And the magnitude used to generate that wave is only about 7.5, as opposed to a magnitude-9 earthquake off the coast. And since those models for the Seattle Fault were published, there’ve actually been many more Puget Sound faults discovered.

How useful can your models be for communities in tsunami hazard areas?

Gonzalez: People take the kind of information Randy and I provide about tsunami hazard and assess the vulnerability of communities, and emergency management officials assess preparedness efforts.

LeVeque: In Westport they just had their groundbreaking in January to build a new vertical evacuation structure for tsunamis at Ocosta Elementary. It happens to sit on a relatively high part of that peninsula. From the modeling that we did, it looks like under a worst-case scenario that the area right around the school would have only a couple of feet inundation.

.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1TSgatH

Half the United States population is at risk of being harmed by earthquakes, and tens of millions are in the bull’s-eye of much stronger earthquakes.

That’s the grim outlook of a U.S. Geological Survey report published earlier this month that focused on answering the great and terrible question: How devastating can earthquakes actually be to Americans and what should we do about it?

The report states matter-of-factly:

More than 143 million Americans living in the 48 contiguous states are exposed to potentially damaging ground shaking from earthquakes. When the people living in the earthquake-prone areas of Alaska, Hawaii and U.S. territories are added, this number rises to nearly half of all Americans.

And the punchline is?

“This new research helps us better understand the scale of earthquake hazards and ultimately strengthen the nation’s ability to protect Americans against future events,” said Kishor Jaiswal, a USGS research structural engineer as well as the lead author of the study. “Of particular concern is the significant amount of critical infrastructure located in high earthquake-hazard areas, ranging from private and public schools to health care facilities and fire stations. The USGS is dedicated to continuously updating research on population and infrastructure exposure as communities change and new science is available on earthquake behavior.”

This in the shadow of the attack on our peace of mind by the New Yorker that blew up the Internet. What we said, “The New Yorker takes a deep-dive into the coming megathrust earthquake along the Cascadia Subduction Zone that’s guaranteed to smash the hell out of everything west of the Cascades.”

Tsunamis! 

So, earthquakes also lead to tsunamis, and just in case we’re not freaked out enough by the shaking, the University of Washington has sent out a Q and A with researchers who model tsunamis that would be generated by the great and terrible “mega-thrust Cascadia killer quake” due in the next couple of hundred years.

Here’s some of that exchange, which you can read in full on the UW site.

 

Two University of Washington scientists — applied mathematics professor Randy LeVequeand affiliate professor of Earth and space sciences Frank Gonzalez — recently talked about how they model tsunami hazards along the Northwest coast. …

How would a tsunami from a large offshore earthquake affect Puget Sound?

LeVeque: The tsunami would be coming from the open ocean, so it would come in through the Strait of Juan de Fuca and come down to Puget Sound. We’re just starting to look down there. But by the time the tsunami gets down into Puget Sound it will be smaller than on the coast.

Gonzalez: But in the case of a big magnitude-9 offshore earthquake, that will create shaking severe enough in Puget Sound to trigger small to moderate landslides, and they’ll create tsunamis as well.

So, is the tsunami danger in Puget Sound not as bad as the open coast?

LeVeque: Not nearly as much danger during an earthquake along the Cascadia subduction zone. But there’s also the Seattle Fault, which runs right across the Sound, and others like the Tacoma Fault and the South Whidbey Island Fault. These faults are actually under Puget Sound and can have big earthquakes and cause tsunamis.

Gonzalez: That Seattle Fault tsunami has been modeled by others. That wave is quite severe, quite high. And the magnitude used to generate that wave is only about 7.5, as opposed to a magnitude-9 earthquake off the coast. And since those models for the Seattle Fault were published, there’ve actually been many more Puget Sound faults discovered.

How useful can your models be for communities in tsunami hazard areas?

Gonzalez: People take the kind of information Randy and I provide about tsunami hazard and assess the vulnerability of communities, and emergency management officials assess preparedness efforts.

LeVeque: In Westport they just had their groundbreaking in January to build a new vertical evacuation structure for tsunamis at Ocosta Elementary. It happens to sit on a relatively high part of that peninsula. From the modeling that we did, it looks like under a worst-case scenario that the area right around the school would have only a couple of feet inundation.

.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1TSgatH

Mystery ‘light’ on Mars appears to move around in Curiosity photos

Another day, another fun mystery brought to you by the creatures on Mars! Well, that or NASA’s rover Curiosity just experienced a little glitch … in two cameras … that make it seem like there’s a light on the surface of the Red Planet that’s moving around!

Check out the main image with close ups first, and then click through to the other images taken by Curiosity’s Front Hazard Avoidance Cameras that show the “light” in different locations. (H/T Astronation). The “light” also shows up in the previous day’s camera shots.

Here are more of the mysteries of Mars … as seen by enthusiasts of such things in the photos of the Mars rover Curiosity.

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1fiFSVh

Another day, another fun mystery brought to you by the creatures on Mars! Well, that or NASA’s rover Curiosity just experienced a little glitch … in two cameras … that make it seem like there’s a light on the surface of the Red Planet that’s moving around!

Check out the main image with close ups first, and then click through to the other images taken by Curiosity’s Front Hazard Avoidance Cameras that show the “light” in different locations. (H/T Astronation). The “light” also shows up in the previous day’s camera shots.

Here are more of the mysteries of Mars … as seen by enthusiasts of such things in the photos of the Mars rover Curiosity.

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1fiFSVh

What our cities could be like in 2050, if we tackled climate change

Okay, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray blinked last month when it came to taking a big step forward in building into Seattle and opening the way for an evolution from single-family housing to density (aka condo land).

Was he wrong to back down? What will urban and suburban life be like in, say, 40 years?

Well, if we do nothing to curb our green house gas emissions … they’ll look a lot like they do now but warmer, drier and probably very very expensive to live in or buy into. After all, climate change will drive people from the southwest north into Oregon and Washington.

But what would our cities and outlying areas look like if we flipped a switch and started today weaning ourselves from fossil fuels? We’d also have to develop the new technologies for running a modern world as well as the political will to get there.

The science website ResearchGate dug up a study from 2010 called “A sustainable energy scenario for the United States: Year 2050” and recently interviewed the lead researcher, Bruce Edward Tonn, a professor in the department for political science at the University of Tennessee.

ResearchGate was digging deeper into sustainability after President Obama announced his Clean Power Plan. Tonn summarized his “positive scenario” paper for ResearchGate:

This paper started with a question: is a fossil fuel free world imaginable and plausible. The answer is yes.

Our scenario has a mix of energy sources, including solar, wind, nuclear, biomass, geothermal, and biomass and includes a pathway for how these energy sources can replace fossil fuels over time. The scenario also includes substantial assumptions about the improvement of energy efficiency and major changes in land use and transportation. Gone would be the typical American suburb, replaced by sustainable low density developments and high density urban cores. The scenario envisions that meeting future energy needs demands these kinds of changes in addition to the changes in energy sources.

Life would be quite different for many Americans. The suburban lifestyle of living in single family homes with manicured (and unproductive) lawns, driving to work, to school, to everywhere would be gone. For these individuals, their world would become much more self-sufficient and sustainable (and place demands upon their time and habits) if they continued to live in their transformed subdivisions, or they would need to adapt to an urban lifestyle. Those already living in major cities would find life easier, quieter, less polluted, and healthier.

Now, here is a glimpse of some of the local ramifications of a hotter planet:

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1DO1LYq

Okay, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray blinked last month when it came to taking a big step forward in building into Seattle and opening the way for an evolution from single-family housing to density (aka condo land).

Was he wrong to back down? What will urban and suburban life be like in, say, 40 years?

Well, if we do nothing to curb our green house gas emissions … they’ll look a lot like they do now but warmer, drier and probably very very expensive to live in or buy into. After all, climate change will drive people from the southwest north into Oregon and Washington.

But what would our cities and outlying areas look like if we flipped a switch and started today weaning ourselves from fossil fuels? We’d also have to develop the new technologies for running a modern world as well as the political will to get there.

The science website ResearchGate dug up a study from 2010 called “A sustainable energy scenario for the United States: Year 2050” and recently interviewed the lead researcher, Bruce Edward Tonn, a professor in the department for political science at the University of Tennessee.

ResearchGate was digging deeper into sustainability after President Obama announced his Clean Power Plan. Tonn summarized his “positive scenario” paper for ResearchGate:

This paper started with a question: is a fossil fuel free world imaginable and plausible. The answer is yes.

Our scenario has a mix of energy sources, including solar, wind, nuclear, biomass, geothermal, and biomass and includes a pathway for how these energy sources can replace fossil fuels over time. The scenario also includes substantial assumptions about the improvement of energy efficiency and major changes in land use and transportation. Gone would be the typical American suburb, replaced by sustainable low density developments and high density urban cores. The scenario envisions that meeting future energy needs demands these kinds of changes in addition to the changes in energy sources.

Life would be quite different for many Americans. The suburban lifestyle of living in single family homes with manicured (and unproductive) lawns, driving to work, to school, to everywhere would be gone. For these individuals, their world would become much more self-sufficient and sustainable (and place demands upon their time and habits) if they continued to live in their transformed subdivisions, or they would need to adapt to an urban lifestyle. Those already living in major cities would find life easier, quieter, less polluted, and healthier.

Now, here is a glimpse of some of the local ramifications of a hotter planet:

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1DO1LYq

Holy sh*t! Rose from the Titanic spotted on Mars!

Hehehehe … ahhhh…*dabs tears from eyes*

I love the Internet. And, Mars! Especially since the creatures who run that planet have a very good sense of humor. Check out the Victorian-era woman on Mars … looks like Rose from the Titanic to us.

And here’s the just previous hysterical thing seen on Mars (our story here):

One news outlet (okay, our sister paper in Houston) burned down the Internet by tying the cave-crab in with this movie association:

'Alien' face-hugger seen on Mars? A strange shape seen on a NASA Mars Rover camera is being compared to the image of the face-hugger creature from the 1979 horror movie "Alien," directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver. See the NASA image ... Photo: Twentieth Century Fox

‘Alien’ face-hugger seen on Mars? A strange shape seen on a NASA Mars Rover camera is being compared to the image of the face-hugger creature from the 1979 horror movie “Alien,” directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver. Photo: Twentieth Century Fox

Man! NASA better get to finding life on the Red Planet before we all lose our minds!

Here are NASA’s legit(!) artsy-fartsy views of Mars:

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1L0YHHQ

Hehehehe … ahhhh…*dabs tears from eyes*

I love the Internet. And, Mars! Especially since the creatures who run that planet have a very good sense of humor. Check out the Victorian-era woman on Mars … looks like Rose from the Titanic to us.

And here’s the just previous hysterical thing seen on Mars (our story here):

One news outlet (okay, our sister paper in Houston) burned down the Internet by tying the cave-crab in with this movie association:

'Alien' face-hugger seen on Mars? A strange shape seen on a NASA Mars Rover camera is being compared to the image of the face-hugger creature from the 1979 horror movie "Alien," directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver. See the NASA image ... Photo: Twentieth Century Fox

‘Alien’ face-hugger seen on Mars? A strange shape seen on a NASA Mars Rover camera is being compared to the image of the face-hugger creature from the 1979 horror movie “Alien,” directed by Ridley Scott and starring Sigourney Weaver. Photo: Twentieth Century Fox

Man! NASA better get to finding life on the Red Planet before we all lose our minds!

Here are NASA’s legit(!) artsy-fartsy views of Mars:

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1L0YHHQ

How to watch: Perseid meteor shower peaks Thursday

They going off across the sky right now … but it’s light out and they’re a little sparse. That said, we’re in the thick of the Perseid meteor shower of 2015!

If you want to see the celestial fireworks, you’ll have a great chance Wednesday and Thursday mornings … a pre-dawn sort of thing.

Here’s the nuts and bolts from EartSky.org:

The Perseid meteor shower is perhaps the most beloved meteor shower of the year for the Northern Hemisphere. Fortunately, the slender waning crescent moon rising at or near dawn will not obtrude on this year’s shower. The Perseid shower builds gradually to a peak, often produces 50 to 100 meteors per hour in a dark sky at the peak, and, for us in the Northern Hemisphere, this shower comes when the weather is warm. The Perseids tend to strengthen in number as late night deepens into midnight, and typically produce the most meteors in the wee hours before dawn.

They radiate from a point in the constellation Perseus the Hero, but, as with all meteor shower radiant points, you don’t need to know Perseus to watch the shower; instead, the meteors appear in all parts of the sky. They are typically fast and bright meteors. They frequently leave persistent trains.

Every year, you can look for the Perseids to peak around August 10-13. Predicted peak mornings in 2015: August 11, 12 and 13. The Perseids combine with the Delta Aquarid shower … to produce a dazzling display of shooting stars on what are, for us in the N. Hemisphere, warm summer nights. In 2015, as always, the Perseid meteors will be building to a peak from early August until the peak nights; afterwards, they drop off fairly rapidly. With little or no moon to ruin the show, this is a great year for watching the Perseid meteor shower.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1EkuIpr

They going off across the sky right now … but it’s light out and they’re a little sparse. That said, we’re in the thick of the Perseid meteor shower of 2015!

If you want to see the celestial fireworks, you’ll have a great chance Wednesday and Thursday mornings … a pre-dawn sort of thing.

Here’s the nuts and bolts from EartSky.org:

The Perseid meteor shower is perhaps the most beloved meteor shower of the year for the Northern Hemisphere. Fortunately, the slender waning crescent moon rising at or near dawn will not obtrude on this year’s shower. The Perseid shower builds gradually to a peak, often produces 50 to 100 meteors per hour in a dark sky at the peak, and, for us in the Northern Hemisphere, this shower comes when the weather is warm. The Perseids tend to strengthen in number as late night deepens into midnight, and typically produce the most meteors in the wee hours before dawn.

They radiate from a point in the constellation Perseus the Hero, but, as with all meteor shower radiant points, you don’t need to know Perseus to watch the shower; instead, the meteors appear in all parts of the sky. They are typically fast and bright meteors. They frequently leave persistent trains.

Every year, you can look for the Perseids to peak around August 10-13. Predicted peak mornings in 2015: August 11, 12 and 13. The Perseids combine with the Delta Aquarid shower … to produce a dazzling display of shooting stars on what are, for us in the N. Hemisphere, warm summer nights. In 2015, as always, the Perseid meteors will be building to a peak from early August until the peak nights; afterwards, they drop off fairly rapidly. With little or no moon to ruin the show, this is a great year for watching the Perseid meteor shower.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1EkuIpr

Blood Moon, Super Moon combine for one spectacularly bright lunar eclipse this fall

By Brandon M. Mercer at SFGate.com

Moon gazers, mark your calendars. A “Blood Moon” and “Super Moon” combine on September 28 for a spectacularly large total lunar eclipse with the Moon passing Earth at the closest distance all year–just 221,753 miles away.

What makes the September event so exciting for astronomers is the simultaneous eclipse during perigee–marking the fourth and final event in the lunar tetrad sequence of “Blood Moons.” It will all happen at a time when the moon already appears 30 percent brighter and 14 percent larger than normal.

The Sun will line up opposite Earth on September 28. As the Moon passes into Earth’s shadow it will loom larger than at any other point in the year, while also taking on the signature blood-red glow that gives eclipses their now popular nickname, Blood Moon.

The moment of full eclipse should begin just after 7 p.m., with the maximum eclipse at 7:47 p.m. By 10:22 p.m., TimeandDate.com reports the last rosy glow of earth’s shadow will fade from the Moon’s glow.

Because it’s a Blood Moon and a Super Moon, stronger tides will also accompany the celestial phenomenon as the gravitational tug of the Moon strengthens the closer it gets to Earth.

That marks the sixth Super Moon orbit or “perigee” of the year, with the fifth just a few weeks earlier, August 29, according to EarthSky.org.

February 18 was the second closest Super Moon of the year, slightly smaller than next month’s appearance.

The “Blood Moon” lunar tetrads, or a series of four eclipses have been written about as the stuff of biblical prophecy or celestial foretelling of coming events.

The last “Blood Moon” came over Easter weekend this past April, occurring on the same night Christian observe the miracle described in the New Testament of Jesus rising from the dead. End Times Ministries and other apocalypse preachers like John Hagee, author of “Four Blood Moons: Something Is About To Change,” capitalize on the interest in the astronomical events, pointing to Biblical references and finding historical events to correlate with the phenomenon.

The September Blood Moon and Super Moon happens to fall on the annual Jewish Feast of Tabernacles or Sukkot, beginning at sundown on September 27, 2015.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1N3K1dk

By Brandon M. Mercer at SFGate.com

Moon gazers, mark your calendars. A “Blood Moon” and “Super Moon” combine on September 28 for a spectacularly large total lunar eclipse with the Moon passing Earth at the closest distance all year–just 221,753 miles away.

What makes the September event so exciting for astronomers is the simultaneous eclipse during perigee–marking the fourth and final event in the lunar tetrad sequence of “Blood Moons.” It will all happen at a time when the moon already appears 30 percent brighter and 14 percent larger than normal.

The Sun will line up opposite Earth on September 28. As the Moon passes into Earth’s shadow it will loom larger than at any other point in the year, while also taking on the signature blood-red glow that gives eclipses their now popular nickname, Blood Moon.

The moment of full eclipse should begin just after 7 p.m., with the maximum eclipse at 7:47 p.m. By 10:22 p.m., TimeandDate.com reports the last rosy glow of earth’s shadow will fade from the Moon’s glow.

Because it’s a Blood Moon and a Super Moon, stronger tides will also accompany the celestial phenomenon as the gravitational tug of the Moon strengthens the closer it gets to Earth.

That marks the sixth Super Moon orbit or “perigee” of the year, with the fifth just a few weeks earlier, August 29, according to EarthSky.org.

February 18 was the second closest Super Moon of the year, slightly smaller than next month’s appearance.

The “Blood Moon” lunar tetrads, or a series of four eclipses have been written about as the stuff of biblical prophecy or celestial foretelling of coming events.

The last “Blood Moon” came over Easter weekend this past April, occurring on the same night Christian observe the miracle described in the New Testament of Jesus rising from the dead. End Times Ministries and other apocalypse preachers like John Hagee, author of “Four Blood Moons: Something Is About To Change,” capitalize on the interest in the astronomical events, pointing to Biblical references and finding historical events to correlate with the phenomenon.

The September Blood Moon and Super Moon happens to fall on the annual Jewish Feast of Tabernacles or Sukkot, beginning at sundown on September 27, 2015.



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Tragic journey ends Friday in Seattle for tons of tsunami debris from Japan

For most of the debris filling more than 3,000 “super sacks” stacked on a barge that will dock in Seattle on Friday, it’s been a long tragic journey.

A “significant amount” of the hundreds of tons of marine debris collected off the remote coasts of Alaska and Canada was carried into the ocean by the 2011 tsunami that devastated much of the Japanese coastline.

It’s estimated that more than 5 million tons of debris was carried into the Pacific by the earthquake-caused tsunami. NOAA estimates that 70 percent of the debris sank just off the coastline but some 30 percent drifted out to sea.

“Tsunami debris began arriving on U.S. shores in the winter of 2011-2012 and has continued washing ashore in a scattered fashion ever since, mixing in with chronic marine debris,” NOAA reports.

The cleanup effort in Alaska and Canada was primarily funded by the government of Japan.

The Associated Press reported Thursday:

The barge arrived in Kodiak July 15, and made its way down the coastline, stopping to pick up debris loaded by helicopter from rocky beaches. The last stop in Alaska was at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve. A stop also was made in British Columbia.

The effort is being funded partly with $900,000 from Alaska’s share of a $5 million gift from the Japanese government for states affected by tsunami debris.

According to a news release by Waste Management:

A two-year, multi-national shoreline cleanup project comes to one of its final stops during its month long round-trip journey on Friday, August 7, 11:00am. The football field sized barge … will arrive and unload the super sacks of marine debris on Waste Management’s Seattle dock.

In a few weeks, local environmental volunteer groups will sort the material for recycling at an event coordinated by Parley for the Oceans, a national non-profit focused on addressing threats to the world’s oceans. Material Innovation company, Bionic Yarn will then transform the sorted marine debris plastic into high-performance textiles and polymers. All remaining debris will travel via train to the Columbia Ridge landfill.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1Ury1Vb

For most of the debris filling more than 3,000 “super sacks” stacked on a barge that will dock in Seattle on Friday, it’s been a long tragic journey.

A “significant amount” of the hundreds of tons of marine debris collected off the remote coasts of Alaska and Canada was carried into the ocean by the 2011 tsunami that devastated much of the Japanese coastline.

It’s estimated that more than 5 million tons of debris was carried into the Pacific by the earthquake-caused tsunami. NOAA estimates that 70 percent of the debris sank just off the coastline but some 30 percent drifted out to sea.

“Tsunami debris began arriving on U.S. shores in the winter of 2011-2012 and has continued washing ashore in a scattered fashion ever since, mixing in with chronic marine debris,” NOAA reports.

The cleanup effort in Alaska and Canada was primarily funded by the government of Japan.

The Associated Press reported Thursday:

The barge arrived in Kodiak July 15, and made its way down the coastline, stopping to pick up debris loaded by helicopter from rocky beaches. The last stop in Alaska was at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve. A stop also was made in British Columbia.

The effort is being funded partly with $900,000 from Alaska’s share of a $5 million gift from the Japanese government for states affected by tsunami debris.

According to a news release by Waste Management:

A two-year, multi-national shoreline cleanup project comes to one of its final stops during its month long round-trip journey on Friday, August 7, 11:00am. The football field sized barge … will arrive and unload the super sacks of marine debris on Waste Management’s Seattle dock.

In a few weeks, local environmental volunteer groups will sort the material for recycling at an event coordinated by Parley for the Oceans, a national non-profit focused on addressing threats to the world’s oceans. Material Innovation company, Bionic Yarn will then transform the sorted marine debris plastic into high-performance textiles and polymers. All remaining debris will travel via train to the Columbia Ridge landfill.

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



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NASA, citizen scientist cast Ceres features in 3D; bright-spots mystery survives

The mystery of what exactly is causing all those bright spots/reflections on the dwarf-planet Ceres remains solidly in place … even after NASA and a citizen scientist created high-resolution 3D images of the features.

The debate centers on whether the reflective stuff is water/ice or some other substance such as salt. NASA said,

In examining the way Occator’s bright spots reflect light at different wavelengths, the Dawn science team has not found evidence that is consistent with ice. The spots’ albedo -­ a measure of the amount of light reflected -­ is also lower than predictions for concentrations of ice at the surface.

However, NASA said the mystery will survive at least until mid-August when the spacecraft Dawn resumes “its observations of Ceres in mid-August from an altitude of 900 miles (less than 1,500 kilometers), or three times closer to Ceres than its previous orbit.”

(You can see a zoomable image of the Occator crater as well as the 4-mile high “pyramid-shaped” mountain below.

NASA remarked in its news release on the 3D images:

“The science team is continuing to evaluate the data and discuss theories about these bright spots at Occator,” said Chris Russell, Dawn’s principal investigator at the University of California, Los Angeles. “We are now comparing the spots with the reflective properties of salt, but we are still puzzled by their source. We look forward to new, higher-resolution data from the mission’s next orbital phase.”

About “Pyramid Mountain” (3D renderings are also in the above gallery), NASA stated:

A prominent mountain with bright streaks on its steep slopes is especially fascinating to scientists. The peak’s shape has been likened to a cone or a pyramid. It appears to be about 4 miles (6 kilometers) high, with respect to the surface around it, according to the latest estimates. This means the mountain has about the same elevation as Mount McKinley in Denali National Park, Alaska, the highest point in North America.

“This mountain is among the tallest features we’ve seen on Ceres to date,” said Dawn science team member Paul Schenk, a geologist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston. “It’s unusual that it’s not associated with a crater. Why is it sitting in the middle of nowhere? We don’t know yet, but we may find out with closer observations.”

 

Rise of the citizen scientist 

We’ve been having a great email exchange with Mark Burginger, an architect, NASA aficionado and citizen scientist, about the bright spots and his own 3D model of the Occator Crater. Check out this gallery for that part the story:

Here are those zoomable images we mentioned:

 

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1KTlFkg

The mystery of what exactly is causing all those bright spots/reflections on the dwarf-planet Ceres remains solidly in place … even after NASA and a citizen scientist created high-resolution 3D images of the features.

The debate centers on whether the reflective stuff is water/ice or some other substance such as salt. NASA said,

In examining the way Occator’s bright spots reflect light at different wavelengths, the Dawn science team has not found evidence that is consistent with ice. The spots’ albedo -­ a measure of the amount of light reflected -­ is also lower than predictions for concentrations of ice at the surface.

However, NASA said the mystery will survive at least until mid-August when the spacecraft Dawn resumes “its observations of Ceres in mid-August from an altitude of 900 miles (less than 1,500 kilometers), or three times closer to Ceres than its previous orbit.”

(You can see a zoomable image of the Occator crater as well as the 4-mile high “pyramid-shaped” mountain below.

NASA remarked in its news release on the 3D images:

“The science team is continuing to evaluate the data and discuss theories about these bright spots at Occator,” said Chris Russell, Dawn’s principal investigator at the University of California, Los Angeles. “We are now comparing the spots with the reflective properties of salt, but we are still puzzled by their source. We look forward to new, higher-resolution data from the mission’s next orbital phase.”

About “Pyramid Mountain” (3D renderings are also in the above gallery), NASA stated:

A prominent mountain with bright streaks on its steep slopes is especially fascinating to scientists. The peak’s shape has been likened to a cone or a pyramid. It appears to be about 4 miles (6 kilometers) high, with respect to the surface around it, according to the latest estimates. This means the mountain has about the same elevation as Mount McKinley in Denali National Park, Alaska, the highest point in North America.

“This mountain is among the tallest features we’ve seen on Ceres to date,” said Dawn science team member Paul Schenk, a geologist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston. “It’s unusual that it’s not associated with a crater. Why is it sitting in the middle of nowhere? We don’t know yet, but we may find out with closer observations.”

 

Rise of the citizen scientist 

We’ve been having a great email exchange with Mark Burginger, an architect, NASA aficionado and citizen scientist, about the bright spots and his own 3D model of the Occator Crater. Check out this gallery for that part the story:

Here are those zoomable images we mentioned:

 

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



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